Trump may have answers to his wiretap mystery
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
If Donald Trump wants to know whether he was the subject of surveillance by the U.S. government, he may be uniquely positioned to get an answer.
A series of weekend tweets by the president focused public attention on intelligence collection efforts long shrouded in secrecy.
He accused former President Barack Obama of ordering wiretaps on his phones but offered no proof to back the claim, and the White House then called on Congress to investigate the allegations.
But former government lawyers say Trump hardly needs Congress to answer this question.
“The intelligence community works for the president, so if a president wanted to know whether surveillance had been conducted on a particular target, all he’d have to do is ask,” said Todd Hinnen, head of the Justice Department’s National Security Division during the Obama administration and a National Security Council staff member under George W. Bush.
The Justice Department, not the president, would have the authority to conduct such surveillance, and officials have not confirmed any such action. Through a spokesman, Obama said neither he nor any White House official had ever ordered surveillance on any U.S. citizen.
Obama’s top intelligence official, James Clapper, also said Trump’s claims were false, and a U.S. official told The Associated Press that the FBI asked the Justice Department to rebut Trump’s assertions.
Why turn to Congress, Trump spokesman Sean Spicer was asked Monday.
“My understanding is that the president directing the Department of Justice to do something with respect to an investigation that may or may not occur with evidence may be seen as trying to interfere,” Spicer said.
He indicated that Trump was responding to media reports rather than any word from the intelligence community.
Other officials have suggested the president was acting on other information.
43
