A former FBI agent at the center of the Trump-Russia investigation said in a new court filing that the FBI and the Department of Justice (DOJ) violated his rights as he tried to convince a court not to dismiss his suit against the agencies.
Peter Strzok, a key figure in the FBI’s probe into Russian interference in the 2016 election and possible collusion between Trump’s campaign and Russia, filed the document on Dec. 30.
Strzok’s lawyer, Aitan Goelman, tried in a new court filing to rebut the DOJ’s allegation that Strzok’s role in multiple high-profile probes meant he was held to a higher standard when it came to speech.
“Nearly every aspect of a modern workplace, and for that matter nearly every non-workplace aspect of employees’ lives, can be monitored,” it added. “The fact that a workplace conversation can be discovered does not render it unprotected.”
Strzok’s firing was a “politically motivated achievement of President Trump and his political allies,” the filing stated.
Strzok’s suit, filed in August, claimed that the FBI violated his rights to express protected political speech and that the DOJ violated his privacy.
The department said that the firing of Strzok didn’t infringe on his rights.
“It is because of those text messages, and the paramount importance of preserving the FBI’s ability to function as a trusted, nonpartisan institution, that Plaintiff was removed from his position, and not because of any alleged disagreement with Plaintiff’s viewpoints on political issues or Tweets from the President,” DOJ lawyers said in a filing.
In her complaint, the former FBI lawyer said she had suffered, among other damages, “permanent loss of earning capacity due to reputational damage,” and “the cost of therapy to cope with unwanted national media exposure and harassment.”
The lawsuit alleged that “DOJ and/or FBI officials” leaked the messages “for multiple improper reasons, including to elevate the DOJ’s standing with the president.”