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White House Reeling After Twin Allegations Related to Russia

by Ken Bredemeier

   WASHINGTON --

   U.S. President Donald Trump's White House was left reeling Wednesday
   following the stunning allegation that he sought to derail a criminal
   investigation into links his former national security adviser had with
   Russian officials on top of reports that Trump disclosed highly
   classified intelligence to two Moscow diplomats last week.

   "Nobody knows where this really goes from here," one White House
   official told Politico, a Washington political news site. "What is
   next?"

   A growing number of Trump's Republican colleagues in Congress, along
   with Democrats, called for a special prosecutor or commission to
   examine ties between Trump and his aides to Russia, an investigation
   going beyond those already being conducted by the Federal Bureau of
   Investigation and the intelligence committees in both the Senate and
   House of Representatives.

   "Now is the time to put party considerations aside and do what is right
   for the country," by appointing an independent special prosecutor not
   beholden to the White House, Senate Democratic leader Charles Schumer
   said.

   But the House Republican leader, Speaker Paul Ryan, said the three
   probes already under way were sufficient.

   "There's plenty of oversight going on," Ryan told a news conference.
   "We need to follow the facts wherever they may lead."

   The new willingness to investigate the Trump-related links to Russia
   came after associates of former FBI Director James Comey, whom Trump
   abruptly fired last week while he was heading the agency's Russia
   probe, said that Comey wrote notes after a February meeting with the
   president saying that Trump had asked him to drop a probe of former
   National Security Adviser Michael Flynn.

   The Comey-Trump meeting came a day after Trump had fired Flynn, a
   retired Army general, for lying to Vice President Mike Pence about his
   contacts with the Russian ambassador to Washington.

   House Oversight Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz, a Trump loyalist,
   demanded that acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe produce within a week
   all information it has related to the Comey-Trump meeting at the White
   House. Other lawmakers called on Comey to testify publicly about his
   recollection of the meeting. Ryan questioned why Comey did not disclose
   Trump's request to end the Flynn probe shortly after their
   conversation.

   The New York Times broke the story late Tuesday, reporting that Comey
   had written a memo detailing his conversation with Trump. The Times
   story said the memo was part of a paper trail Comey created to document
   his perception that the president's request was improper.

   Several legal analysts have argued that any such request could be
   considered obstruction of justice, an impeachable offense.
   Representative Adam Schiff of California, ranking Democrat on the House
   Intelligence Committee, said at a news conference Tuesday, "If true,
   this is yet another disturbing allegation that the president may have
   engaged in some interference or obstruction of the investigation."

   The Times reported that an FBI agent's contemporaneous notes are widely
   held up in court as credible evidence of conversations. A spokeswoman
   for the FBI declined to comment on the details of the Comey memo

   The Trump White House swung into crisis mode after the story broke. A
   statement issued Tuesday evening did not directly refer to The Times
   report, but denied that Trump had asked Comey or anyone else to end the
   Flynn probe.

   "While the president has repeatedly expressed his view that General
   Flynn is a decent man who served and protected our country, the
   president has never asked Mr. Comey or anyone else to end any
   investigation, including any investigation involving General Flynn,"
   the statement said. "The president has the utmost respect for our law
   enforcement agencies, and all investigations. This is not a truthful or
   accurate portrayal of the conversation between the president and Mr.
   Comey."

   In a separate statement issued at the same time, the administration
   pointed out that McCabe had told a Senate committee last week that the
   White House has not interfered with the Russia investigation.