Acting
FBI Director Andrew McCabe is under mounting scrutiny and increasing calls for
him to step aside amid allegations of politicized leadership, conflicts of
interest and significant investigative missteps at the nation’s top law
enforcement agency.
McCabe’s
close alliance with Trump nemesis and former director James Comey, the
well-chronicled fact his wife took a huge campaign donation from Virginia Gov.
Terry McAuliffe and a general suspicion of the Obama intelligence community
brass are all leading to pressure on FBI Director-Nominee Christopher Wray to
not keep him around, according to former FBI insiders.
The
latest challenge is coming from a former FBI agent who told Fox News that
McCabe has created an overly politicized environment at the bureau, and her
career suffered because of it.
“There is no
way McCabe can survive. I’d be surprised."
- Former FBI Assistant
Director James Kallstrom
“McCabe
is vicious to anyone who either stands up to him or is a threat to his ‘power’
and [he] is a screamer,” said former Supervisory Special Agent Robyn Gritz, who
lost her job after 16 years with the FBI investigating some of the most high
profile terrorist incidents in recent history, after getting tangled up with
her superiors, who pushed her out and pulled her security clearance.
Kallstrom
believes McCabe won't last at the FBI.
One
of those superiors was McCabe.
“He
saw me as a real threat to his climb because I knew my stuff and had been close
to John Pistole, the prior deputy director. Andy resented that big time,” Gritz
told Fox News.
According
to Circa News,
Gritz's sexual discrimination and retaliation complaint is one of three
such administrative inquiries faced by McCabe.
Perhaps
more damning, former FBI Assistant Director James Kallstrom said McCabe, who
President Trump interviewed for the top job after firing Comey, may not have
the bureau's rank and file behind him.
McAuliff
was a big donor to McCabe's wife's failed Virginia legislative campaign. (Associated
Press)
“McCabe
is where he’s at because he’s very good at relating up the chain of command,
but not down the chain of command, and that’s very typical of bureaucracies,”
Kallstrom said. “McCabe told Congress FBI morale is high. I have not heard one
person from the bureau tell me the FBI is happy because the investigative unit
was thrown in front of the bus.”
Kallstrom
was referring to McCabe’s reported role in several controversial probes during
the 2016 election. According to the Wall Street Journal, it was McCabe who told
lower-level FBI investigators to “stand down” in their inquiry into whether
illegal influence-peddling or financial crimes were being committed at the
Clinton Foundation. Meanwhile, McCabe did not recuse himself from the
investigation into presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s emails, despite an
apparent conflict of interest involving his wife.
Jill
McCabe’s losing campaign for a Virginia state Senate seat reportedly received
$700,000 from Clinton allies at the same time that McCabe was second-in-command
at the FBI during the investigation into her use of a personal email server for
State Department business and alleged mishandling of classified
information.
Comey
declined to bring charges after determining that Clinton “lacked criminal
intent.” Comey’s handling of the case was sharply criticized by Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein in the memo outlining the rationale for firing
Comey earlier this year. Kallstrom believes McCabe should have recused himself
from any decisions involving the Clinton probe.
“I’ve
talked to numerous agents that have some knowledge of what’s going on inside the
FBI,” said Kallstrom. "The appearance of conflict of interest is
substantial, and you can’t have a high position in the bureau and have even the
apparent conflict of interest.”
Sen.
Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, believes McCabe also has a conflict of interest in
the ongoing probe into alleged Trump collusion with Russia in the 2016
election. The probe already cost retired U.S. Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn his
job as Trump's national security adviser.
But
even before the FBI eyed Flynn, he and McCabe had a history together, at the
center of which was Gritz.
Grassley
has questions for the Department of Justice, and they involve McCabe's role in
the Russia probe. (Reuters)
“McCabe
wrote false and nasty comments on numerous documents about me when he had not
one bit of proof of any lack of performance,” Gritz told Fox News, “I was
always rated in the top two ratings.”
Flynn
spoke out in her defense at the time, since the two had worked together when he
led the Defense Intelligence Agency.
“I
thought she was a real pro,” Flynn told NPR. Flynn was one of several top
generals, including Stanley McChrystal and Keith Alexander, who wrote
commendations for her counter-terrorism work, said Gritz.
In
a June 29 letter addressed to Rosenstein, Grassley, who chairs the Senate
Judiciary Committee, asked why McCabe did not recuse himself from the probe
into Flynn’s connections to Russia. Justice Department protocol advises
employees to recuse themselves from investigations if their involvement creates
even the appearance of a conflict of interest.
With
Flynn a potential witness for Gritz, Grassley wondered in his letter if McCabe
“had any retaliatory motive against Flynn for being an adverse witness to him
in a pending proceeding.”
Flynn
came to the defense of Gritz, and was later targeted by an FBI probe that
involved McCabe. (Associated Press)
The
FBI, DOJ and the government’s Office of Special Counsel would not comment for
this report.
With
all of the various controversies swirling and President Trump under pressure to
"drain the swamp" and fight back against the so-called "deep
state," Kallstrom is not betting on McCabe lasting much longer at the
bureau. Wray, who was formally advanced by the White House this week, is
expected to be confirmed when the Senate takes up his nomination.
“There
is no way McCabe can survive," Kallstrom said. "I’d be
surprised."
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