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d-34728House OversightOther

Allegations of DOJ policy breach and politicized Counterintelligence Investigation into Trump‑Russia collusion

The passage claims the FBI’s Crossfire‑Hurricane probe was launched in violation of a DOJ presumption against election‑year investigations and suggests it was intended to influence the 2016 election. Reference to a 2012 Eric Holder memo prohibiting election‑year investigative timing Claim that Crossfire‑Hurricane was a counterintelligence probe lacking evidence of collusion at laun Comparison to

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #026480
Pages
1
Persons
1
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage claims the FBI’s Crossfire‑Hurricane probe was launched in violation of a DOJ presumption against election‑year investigations and suggests it was intended to influence the 2016 election. Reference to a 2012 Eric Holder memo prohibiting election‑year investigative timing Claim that Crossfire‑Hurricane was a counterintelligence probe lacking evidence of collusion at laun Comparison to

Tags

policy-violationrussiapolitical-influenceelection-interferencedoj-policytrump-campaigninvestigative-timingmoderate-importancehouse-oversightfbi-counterintelligence

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EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
It was initiated in defiance of a longstanding Justice Department presumption against investigating campaigns in an election year. And while impartiality 1s always required, a 2012 memo by then- Attorney General Eric Holder emphasizes that impartiality 1s “particularly important in an election year,” and “politics must play no role in the decisions of federal prosecutors or investigators regarding any investigations. ... Law enforcement officers and prosecutors may never select the timing of investigative steps or criminal charges for the purpose of affecting any election, or for the purpose of giving an advantage or disadvantage to any candidate or political party.” Strong evidence of a crime can overcome this policy, as was the case with the bureau’s investigation of Mrs. Clinton’s private email server, which began more than a year before the 2016 election. But Crossfire was not a criminal investigation. It was a counterintelligence investigation predicated on the notion that Russia could be colluding with the Trump campaign. There appears to have been no discernible evidence of Trump-Russia collusion at the time Crossfire was launched, further reinforcing the notion that it was initiated “for the purpose” of affecting the presidential election. The chief evidence of collusion is the hacking of the Democratic National Committee’s servers. But nothing in the public record suggests the Trump campaign aided that effort. The collusion narrative therefore hinges on the more generic assertion that Russia aimed to help Mr. Trump’s election, and that the Trump campaign reciprocated by embracing pro-Russian policies. Yet despite massive surveillance and investigation, there’s still no public evidence of any such exchange—only that Russia attempted to sow political discord by undermining Mrs. Clinton and to a lesser extent Mr. Trump. Some members of the Trump team interacted with Russians and advocated dovish policies. But so did numerous American political and academic elites, including many Clinton advisers. Presidential campaigns routinely seek opposition research and interact with foreign powers. The Clinton campaign funded the Steele dossier, whose British author paid Russians to dish anti-Trump dirt. The Podesta Group, led by the brother of Mrs. Clinton’s campaign chairman, received millions lobbying for Russia’s largest bank and the European Center for a Modern Ukraine, both with deep Kremlin ties. The Clinton Foundation and Bill Clinton took millions from Kremlin-connected businesses. No evidence has emerged of Trump-Russia collusion, and Mr. Mueller has yet to bring collusion- related charges against anyone. Evidence suggests one of his targets, George Papadopoulos, was lured to London, plied with the prospect of Russian information damaging to Mrs. Clinton, and taken to dinner, where he drunkenly bragged that he’d heard about such dirt but never seen it. These circumstances not only fail to suggest Mr. Papadopoulos committed a crime, they reek of entrapment. The source of this information, former Australian diplomat Alexander Downer, admits Mr.

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