Attorney General William Barr said the release of an internal watchdog investigation into whether the FBI followed its own policies and the law when it applied for a warrant to surveil President Trump’s campaign starting in 2016 is “imminent.”
Inspector General Michael Horowitz, who is leading the investigation, told Congress in a letter in October that he is looking to make as much of the report as public as possible with few redactions.
The release of the report comes at a critical time for the Trump presidency as House Democrats have launched an impeachment inquiry into whether Trump pressured Ukraine while withholding aid to the Eastern European country.
Trump has often said the investigation as to whether Russia had ties with his campaign is “a hoax,” a “witch hunt,” and has assailed the current impeachment inquiry as a Democrat-led continuation of that “sham” process. Former special counsel Robert Mueller, who investigated whether Trump had ties to Russia, concluded that there was no collusion.
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) on Wednesday suggested that the report could come out before the month’s end.
At the core of the scandal is the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrant the FBI obtained to spy on Trump campaign associate Carter Page. The bureau used an unverified dossier of opposition research in the FISA warrant application, without mentioning that the dossier was funded by Clinton’s campaign and the Democratic National Committee (DNC).
Republicans have alleged that the Department of Justice and FBI officials under the Obama administration misled the FISA court system by using an unverified dossier compiled by former UK spy Christopher Steele to get warrants to monitor Page. Democrats and FBI officials have dismissed their allegations.
Last week, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), the chairman of the powerful Senate Judiciary Committee, said he received an update from Barr on the coming report.