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Rosenstein Denies That He Discussed Recording Trump, Invoking 25th Amendment

Then-FBI Acting Director Andrew McCabe, right, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, second from left, and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein have been political targets of President Trump.

Updated at 3:16 p.m. ET

Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein denied an explosive report on Friday that he discussed secretly recording President Trump at the White House and that he might seek to recruit members of the Cabinet to invoke the 25th Amendment in order to remove Trump.

Rosenstein called the story "inaccurate and factually incorrect."

He continued: "I will not further comment on a story based on anonymous sources who are obviously biased against the department and are advancing their own personal agenda. But let me be clear about this: Based on my personal dealings with the president, there is no basis to invoke the 25th Amendment."

Other reports on Friday suggested that Rosenstein had discussed wearing a wire to talk with the president — but that he was being sarcastic or facetious.

A New York Times story cites, among other reporting, memoranda by former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe about his dealings with the White House and other Justice Department officials.

An attorney for McCabe acknowledged on Friday that McCabe did write those memos, but that he has given them to special counsel Robert Mueller and that he doesn't know how the New York Times may have gotten them.

"Andrew McCabe drafted memos to memorialize significant discussions he had with high level officials and preserved them so he would have an accurate, contemporaneous record of those discussions," said his lawyer, Michael Bromwich. "He has no knowledge of how any member of the media obtained those memos."

Tension up and down Pennsylvania Avenue

The report about Rosenstein follows months of ill will between Trump, his Republican supporters and the leadership of the Justice Department. Trump said earlier this week that "I don't have an attorney general," underscoring his antipathy toward Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Rosenstein also has been a political target for his role in appointing Mueller and for signing an application for surveillance of Carter Page, a former foreign policy adviser to Trump's 2016 campaign.

Antagonists in the House also have targeted Rosenstein as they have tried to investigate the Justice Department's investigation of the Russian attack on the 2016 election.

House Judiciary Committee chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va.; House intelligence committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif.; and other have scourged Rosenstein over what they call his foot-dragging in producing documents related to the early phases of the probe.

Trump and Republicans say the Russian investigation is the product of "biased" conspirators deep within federal law enforcement and they have picked away at a number of targets at all levels.

Trump's son, Donald Trump Jr., picked up that theme on Friday in a Twitter post that grouped Rosenstein with those, in this view, who are out to get the president.

The FBI and Justice Department leaders also have been censured from within.

McCabe was fired after an internal investigation found he "lacked candor" in terms of dealing with investigators. Former FBI Director James Comey — fired by Trump — was upbraided by a big internal report for his handling of the Hillary Clinton email investigation.

Others — a former special agent, Peter Strzok, and a former FBI lawyer, Lisa Page — embarrassed the bureau when internal investigators discovered they had sent each other scores of highly political text messages, including those that criticized Trump.

The early days

The Times story focused on the early part of Rosenstein's tenure at the Justice Department. Trump had just fired Comey based partly on rationale that Rosenstein had agreed to develop, which the Times said Rosenstein found jarring.

As Trump searched for a replacement, Rosenstein discussed the idea that FBI officials going to meet him could secretly record their interactions, according to the Times.

McCabe may have recorded those discussions in his memos, which followed the series of memos Comey also had written since his first meeting with Trump.

Comey has since said that his first encounter with Trump in New York City so unsettled him — because of a fear that Trump might later lie about their conversations — that he felt compelled to begin writing down accounts each time they talked.

McCabe, who succeeded Comey as acting FBI director in May of 2017, evidently did the same. Both men had bad relationships with Trump. In McCabe's case, he had been the subject of criticism by Trump and Republicans for months over his month's political connections with Democrats in Virginia, where she had unsuccessfully sought political office.

Comey's own memos recount him defending McCabe to Trump and trying to assure the president that McCabe could be professional and continue to serve in the leadership of the bureau even after the political attacks of the campaign.

McCabe's memos likely will form part of his book about his time at the FBI, which is scheduled to published in December.

Trump denies the account of events that Comey has given in his memos and to Congress, including Comey's description of Trump asking him for his loyalty and to ease up on former national security adviser Mike Flynn.
Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org/.