Comey Defends FBI: ‘We Are Not Weasels’
Partisan sparks fly at House Judiciary oversight hearing

An oversight hearing of the FBI on Wednesday largely turned into a proxy fight over the Nov. 8 presidential election, with Director James B. Comey defending his agency.
“You can call us wrong but don’t call us weasels,” Comey told the House Judiciary Committee when asked about criticism of the FBI investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server when she was secretary of State. “We are not weasels, we are honest people.”
Republicans questioned Comey on the FBI’s investigation and recommendation to not prosecute the Democratic presidential nominee, something they have pressed for since the director announced his decision in July.
Democrats called the questions pure political maneuvering, but asked Comey if the FBI is probing whether a foreign policy adviser of GOP nominee Donald Trump was communicating with Russian officials about possibly lifting economic sanctions if he becomes president.
Comey mainly stuck to two themes: defending the FBI’s investigation on Clinton, and not commenting on whether the FBI is investigating Trump. He said it wasn’t fair to imply that the FBI was dishonest or conducted the Clinton investigation unprofessionally.
“We do not carry water for one side or the other,” Comey testified. “That’s hard for people to see, because so much of our country, we see things through sides. We are not on anyone’s side.”
[Chaffetz Has More Questions for FBI on Clinton Emails]
The hearing came ahead of a House Rules meeting set for Wednesday afternoon to formulate a rule for floor consideration of a resolution that would recommend the House find Bryan Pagliano, a former technology aide to Clinton, in contempt of Congress for refusing to testify about the private email setup.
Committee Chairman Robert W. Goodlatte said new documents show Clinton had hundreds of emails with classified information, and that President Barack Obama used a pseudonym in email communications with Clinton.
“It seems clear that former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton committed multiple felonies involving the passing of classified information through her private email server,” the Virginia Republican said. “The FBI, however, declined to refer the case for prosecution on some very questionable bases.”
[House Panel Lays Out Case That Clinton Perjured Herself]
Michigan Democratic Rep. John Conyers Jr. criticized Republicans for focusing on the Clinton investigation instead of recent terrorist attacks in Minnesota, New York and New Jersey or on the reports of Trump’s adviser speaking with Russian officials.
“Let me be clear: If true, this allegation represents a danger to our national security and a clear violation of federal law — which expressly prohibits this type of back-channel negotiation,” Conyers said about Trump’s adviser Carter Page.