HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026492.jpg
Extracted Text (OCR)
It makes no difference how honorable he 1s. His investigation 1s tainted by the bias that
attended its origin in 2016.
By
David B. Rivkin Jr. and
Elizabeth Price Foley
June 22, 2018 6:38 p.m. ET
414 COMMENTS
Special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation may face a serious legal obstacle: It is tainted by
antecedent political bias. The June 14 report from Michael Horowitz, the Justice Department’s
inspector general, unearthed a pattern of anti-Trump bias by high-ranking officials at the Federal
Bureau of Investigation. Some of their communications, the report says, were “not only indicative of a
biased state of mind but imply a willingness to take action to impact a presidential candidate’s
electoral prospects.” Although Mr. Horowitz could not definitively ascertain whether this bias
“directly affected” specific FBI actions in the Hillary Clinton email investigation, it nonetheless
affects the legality of the Trump-Russia collusion inquiry, code-named Crossfire Hurricane.
Crossfire was launched only months before the 2016 election. Its FBI progenitors—the same ones
who had investigated Mrs. Clinton—deployed at least one informant to probe Trump campaign
advisers, obtained Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court wiretap warrants, issued national security
letters to gather records, and unmasked the identities of campaign officials who were surveilled. They
also repeatedly leaked investigative information.
Mr. Horowitz is separately scrutinizing Crossfire and isn’t expected to finish for months. But the
current report reveals that FBI officials displayed not merely an appearance of bias against Donald
Trump, but animus bordering on hatred. Peter Strzok, who led both the Clinton and Trump
investigations, confidently assuaged a colleague’s fear that Mr. Trump would become president: “No
he won’t. We’ll stop it.” An unnamed FBI lawyer assigned to Crossfire told a colleague he was
“devastated” and “numb” after Mr. Trump won, while declaring to another FBI attorney: “Viva le
resistance.”
The report highlights the FBI’s failure to act promptly upon discovering that Anthony Weiner’s laptop
contained thousands of Mrs. Clinton’s emails. Investigators justified the delay by citing the “higher
priority” of Crossfire. But Mr. Horowitz writes: “We did not have confidence that Strzok’s decision to
prioritize the Russia investigation over following up on [the] investigative lead discovered on the
Weiner laptop was free from bias.”
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026492
Extracted Information
Dates
Document Details
| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_026492.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 2,493 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:59:12.796823 |