The U.S. Justice Department’s internal watchdog said he expects to be able to release on December 9 a long-awaited report on the origins of investigations into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential  election.Â
In a letter sent on Thursday to Senate Judiciary CommitteeÂ
Chairman Lindsey Graham, Justice Department Inspector GeneralÂ
Michael Horowitz said that he expected his office to be able toÂ
release the report next month ”barring unforeseen circumstances.”
Supporters of President Donald Trump have claimed the reportÂ
will raise questions about the legitimacy of FBI investigationsÂ
into alleged links to Russia by Trump and some of his campaignÂ
advisers.
A central issue the inspector general’s office said theÂ
report would examine is how closely the FBI stuck to the law andÂ
rules when it went to a secret Foreign Intelligence SurveillanceÂ
Court beginning in 2016 to obtain authorization to conductÂ
electronic monitoring of “a certain U.S. person.”
Lawsuit by Page
Carter Page, a one-time foreign policy adviser to Trump’sÂ
2016 campaign, recently sued the Justice Department, accusing itÂ
of violating his privacy by failing to give him an opportunityÂ
to examine the report before publication.
As of Wednesday, Page told Reuters he had not been allowedÂ
to examine a draft of the document.
Another individual questioned at length last summer byÂ
representatives of the inspector general’s office in connectionÂ
with the forthcoming report was Christopher Steele, a formerÂ
British intelligence officer who compiled a controversialÂ
“dossier” on alleged links between Trump and Russia forÂ
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and DemocraticÂ
Party lawyers.Â
The FBI cited reporting by Steele in documents sent to theÂ
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court when it sought permission to monitor Page, though other information used by the FBI in such applications remains classified.Â
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Source: VOA News: বিষয়
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