Donald Trump's Justice Department secretly surveilled politicians involved in Russia probe

Analysts called the collection of politicians' phone data one of the most egregious abuses by a president since Richard Nixon's early 1970s Watergate scandal.

Former US President Donald Trump.

Former US President Donald Trump. Source: AP

Democrats have erupted in outrage over news that Donald Trump's Justice Department secretly surveilled politicians probing possible collusion with Russia, reaping the phone records of top political foes in what they called an unprecedented abuse of power.

Democrats Adam Schiff and Eric Swalwell on Friday said they were recently told by Apple that during 2017-2021 the company had been ordered to hand over records of their phone communications, as well as those of family members including a child, as Mr Trump fought a flow of damaging leaks on his 2016 election campaign's links to Russia.

No proof they were the sources of leaks was ever presented, yet the probe stayed alive for as long as Mr Trump remained in office, to January 2021.

Mr Schiff called it "the weaponisation of law enforcement by a corrupt president."
"The politicisation of the department and the attacks on the rule of law are among the most dangerous assaults on our democracy carried out by the former president," he said in a statement.

Senate leaders threatened to subpoena two Trump attorneys general, Jeff Sessions and Bill Barr, who oversaw the surveillance, to testify on the issue.

"This is a gross abuse of power and an assault on the separation of powers," said Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Dick Durbin in a statement.

The Justice Department, now led by Attorney General Merrick Garland, appointed by Democratic President Joe Biden, said Friday that its inspector general would investigate the use of subpoenas and other powers to probe lawmakers and journalists under Mr Trump.

Echoes of Watergate

Analysts called the collection of politicians' phone data one of the most egregious abuses by a president since Richard Nixon's early 1970s Watergate scandal.

The secret surveillance took place as Mr Trump faced investigations by special counsel Robert Mueller and by the House Intelligence Committee - where Mr Schiff was then the top Democrat - into whether his campaign colluded with Russian election meddling and whether Mr Trump tried to obstruct those investigations.

As they progressed and the threat of impeachment intensified, Mr Trump accused Mr Schiff and other Democrats of leaking classified intelligence to reporters.
It was not known if Mr Trump explicitly told the Justice Department to investigate Mr Schiff and Mr Swalwell.

But he repeatedly accused Mr Schiff of leaks, tweeting some 350 times about the senior Democrat, who became chairman of the Intelligence Committee in 2019 and led Mr Trump's first impeachment trial in January 2020 - which ultimately saw the president acquitted by the Republican-led Senate.

Under Justice Department order, Apple handed over the metadata records of calls and texts - essentially the phone numbers of those in contact with the subjects of the probe - though not the content of those communications.
The surveillance remained secret because Apple was placed under a "gag order" that was renewed three times between 2017 and 2020, even though no charges were generated.

Mr Swalwell and Mr Schiff only learned of the surveillance in May after the last gag order on Apple expired.

'Fishing expedition'

Collecting a politician's phone records is virtually unheard of, except in corruption investigations. And even then the Justice Department handles the cases gingerly. 

Surveilling members of Congress - particularly rivals of the president's Republican party - is an extreme case that would demand strong justification and top-level approval in the department.

With some 100 people covered, it appeared to be a poorly justified "fishing expedition," Mr Schiff said.

The revelation came on the back of Justice Department admissions that under Mr Trump it collected the phone records of a number of high-profile journalists in leak investigations.
The US Department of Justice is seen on 11 June, 2021 in Washington, DC.
The US Department of Justice is seen on 11 June, 2021 in Washington, DC. Source: Getty Images
The surveillance came, Mr Swalwell said, because the House Intelligence investigation turned up information "that the president didn't like. We showed that the president sought help from Russia, benefitted from help from Russia" in the 2016 election.

"This is about everyday Americans who don't want government to weaponise law enforcement against them because of their political beliefs," he said.

Politicians urged Mr Garland to clean house and remove and Trump allies who participated in the surveillance.

Patrick Toomey the American Civil Liberties Union said weak laws enable abuses.

"This is what happens when broad and secretive spying powers are left to the discretion of the executive branch," he said.

"Our laws should prevent this from happening, not enable abuses of power that trample on people's rights and threaten our democracy.”


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5 min read
Published 12 June 2021 9:51am
Source: AFP, SBS


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