Intel documents offer no evidence of spying on Trump Tower

WASHINGTON (AP) — The top two lawmakers on the House intelligence  committee said Sunday that documents the Justice Department and FBI  delivered late last week offered no evidence that the Obama  administration had wiretapped Trump Tower, but the panel’s ranking  Democrat says the material offers circumstantial evidence that American  citizens colluded with Russians in Moscow’s efforts to interfere in the  presidential election.

“There was circumstantial evidence of collusion; there is direct  evidence, I think, of deception,” Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., said.  “There’s certainly enough for us to conduct an investigation.”

The House intelligence committee is to begin hearings Monday into  Russia’s role in cybersecurity breaches at the Democratic National  Committee, as well as President Donald Trump’s unsubstantiated claim  that his predecessor had authorized a wiretap of Trump Tower. FBI  Director James Comey and Mike Rogers, the director of the National  Security Agency, are slated to testify.

Full story from Associated Press on WOODTV.com.


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