WASHINGTON—The FBI is probing the alleged withholding of exculpatory information during the series of investigations into Donald Trump and his campaign known collectively as Crossfire Hurricane, it was revealed in federal court.
Agent Curtis Heide said on the stand on May 24, during trial testimony, that he’s being investigated as part of an internal FBI inquiry into Crossfire Hurricane for not including exculpatory information, or information that negates an allegation or allegations, in an application to the secretive Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court.
He described the information as “various consensual recordings.”
George Papadopoulos, a former Trump campaign associate who was spied on by an FBI confidential source before the 2016 election, during an appearance on Fox News called the disclosure of the FBI probe an “incredible twist.”
“Did the FBI willfully take information that they knew was tainted to obtain these fraudulent warrants, or were they duped?” he asked.
The FBI received permission from the court just weeks before the 2016 election to spy on Carter Page, another Trump campaign associate. The bureau also received three renewals, which enabled it to keep spying on Page for months.
Durham has since brought charges against two others, including former Hillary Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann. Heide was testifying during the trial of Sussmann, who was charged with lying to the FBI when he said he was bringing claims about Trump and Russia to the bureau on his own accord but later acknowledged he was doing so on behalf of a client.
“That is a serious allegation, that you intentionally withheld information that could help prove an individual’s innocence,” Sean Berkowitz, a lawyer for Sussmann, told Heide at the E. Barrett Prettyman Courthouse.
Heide denied under oath that he intentionally withheld exculpatory information from the surveillance court.
The FBI, which doesn’t comment on ongoing investigations, stated after that audit was released that it has already made “significant changes” to how the applications are handled in light of the issues uncovered by Horowitz’s office.