UN Jeff Sessions fires the FBI’s Andrew McCabe - A little more than 24 hours before he could retire

FBI’s Andrew McCabe is fired a little more than 24 hours before he could retire

By Matt Zapotosky March 16 at 10:02 PM

Attorney General Jeff Sessions late Friday night fired former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, a little more than 24 hours before McCabe was set to retire.

Sessions announced the decision in a statement just before 10 p.m., noting that both the Justice Department Inspector General and the FBI office that handles discipline had found “that Mr. McCabe had made an unauthorized disclosure to the news media and lacked candor — including under oath — on multiple occasions.”

He said based on those findings and the recommendation of the department’s senior career official, “I have terminated the employment of Andrew McCabe effective immediately.”

The move will likely cost McCabe a significant portion of his retirement benefits, though it is possible he could bring a legal challenge. McCabe has been fighting vigorously to keep his job, and on Thursday, he spent nearly four hours inside the Justice Department pleading his case.

McCabe has become a lightning rod in the political battles over the FBI’s most high-profile cases, including the Russia investigation and the probe of Hillary Clinton’s email practices. He has been a frequent target of criticism from President Trump.

His firing — which was recommended by the FBI office that handles discipline — stems from a Justice Department inspector general investigation that found McCabe authorized the disclosure of sensitive information to the media about a Clinton-related case, then misled investigators about his actions in the matter, people familiar with the matter have said. He stepped down earlier this year from the No. 2 job in the bureau after FBI Director Christopher A. Wray was briefed on the inspector general’s findings, though he technically was still an employee.

McCabe disputes that he misled anyone.

[FBI disciplinary office recommends firing former deputy director Andrew McCabe]

Some in the bureau might view McCabe’s termination so close to retirement as an unnecessarily harsh and politically influenced punishment for a man who spent more than 20 years at the FBI. The White House had seemed to support such an outcome, though a spokeswoman said the decision was up to Sessions.

“We do think that it is well documented that he has had some very troubling behavior and by most accounts a bad actor,” White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Thursday.

Trump and McCabe’s relationship has long been fraught. The president has previously suggested that McCabe was biased in favor of Clinton, his political opponent, pointing out that McCabe’s wife, who ran as a Democrat for a seat in the Virginia legislature, received hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations from the political action committee of Terry McAuliffe, then the state’s governor and a noted Clinton ally. During an Oval office meeting in May, Trump is said to have asked McCabe whom he voted for in the presidential election and vented about the donations.

Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz put McCabe in his crosshairs during a broad look at alleged improprieties in the handling of the Clinton email case. In the course of that review, Horowitz found that McCabe had authorized two FBI officials to talk to then-Wall Street Journal reporter Devlin Barrett for a story about the case and another investigation into Clinton’s family foundation. Barrett now works for The Washington Post.

Background conversations with reporters are commonplace in Washington, though McCabe’s authorizing such a talk was viewed as inappropriate because the matter being discussed was an ongoing criminal investigation. The story ultimately presented McCabe as a somewhat complicated figure — one who some FBI officials thought was standing in the way of the Clinton Foundation investigation, but who also seemed to be pushing back against Justice Department officials who did not believe there was a case to be made.

McCabe, who turns 50 on Sunday and would have then been eligible for his full retirement benefits, had quickly ascended through senior roles to the No. 2 leadership post. He briefly served in an interim capacity as the FBI director, in the months between when Trump fired James B. Comey from the post and Wray was confirmed by the Senate.

Source: The Washington Post (Archive).
 
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Excuse me for a minute, I need to go have a good, long laugh at this idiot for getting jack-slapped that hard in less than a day.
 
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Well which one is it?
 
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Damn...that shit is harsh. And really unfair, how many ex bush cia guys who fudged information and deliberately lied got nice plush pensions. All the 80s cartel connections guys got paid..
 
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Sounds like this guy was just Comey mk. II. He spied on and kept notes on Trump like Comey, he possibly was one of the sources of leaks coming out against Trump and did questionable and shady stuff with his power as well as lie to Congress about all of it. The statement after he was fired he almost immediately released a statement blaming Trump, throwing out the "this is a distraction because Russia investigation and war on FBI" that's been used by other Trump haters in the past almost confirms his biases. Being pissed because he just lost his 20+ year pension would be an explanation but he knew this firing was coming and most likely had this statement prepared in advance.
 
Sounds like this guy was just Comey mk. II. He spied on and kept notes on Trump like Comey, he possibly was one of the sources of leaks coming out against Trump and did questionable and shady stuff with his power as well as lie to Congress about all of it. The statement after he was fired he almost immediately released a statement blaming Trump, throwing out the "this is a distraction because Russia investigation and war on FBI" that's been used by other Trump haters in the past almost confirms his biases. Being pissed because he just lost his 20+ year pension would be an explanation but he knew this firing was coming and most likely had this statement prepared in advance.
It's very telling that both he and the media have flipped the blame to Trump, too, considering that this was entirely an internal conflict within the FBI itself. The FBI's Office of Personal Responsibility recommended to Jeff Sessions that McCabe be fired. This decision did not come from nor was it recommended from or to Donald Trump. The fact that he's gone on to outline in his statement that he, "has unfailing faith in the men and women of the FBI" is just flat-out one of the most fork-tongued things he could have possibly said, since he absolutely knows that this decision was entirely separated from Trump, and it's just his desperate attempt to throw the ball into an entirely different court. Since the FBI itself determined that McCabe should be fired, and since McCabe has unfailing faith in the FBI, that means he agrees that firing him was the the right thing to do.

It's that part of his statement where he goes on to talk about how attacking him is "attacking the whole FBI" that really rubs me the wrong way, though. That sort of thing should be an enormous red flag to anyone paying any modicum of attention, because it's nothing more than a flimsy attempt to shield his own failings and his own corruption behind the reputation of an entity as a whole, and it's an incredibly dishonest attempt to manipulate the public in general. No institution is above reproach, and certainly not the individuals of those institutions. If a police officer is corrupt, are you attacking the entire police force if you "single them out" for reprehensible behaviour? It's a deflection and I absolutely do not trust anyone who tries to employ that sort of defense by insinuating that their station alone places them above reproach and above examination.
 
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Damn...that shit is harsh. And really unfair, how many ex bush cia guys who fudged information and deliberately lied got nice plush pensions. All the 80s cartel connections guys got paid..
Ideally they would all be left penniless on the street but one guy losing his pension is a good start.
 
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