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The Justice Department should consider prosecuting former FBI director James B. Comey for actions that “were improper and likely could have been illegal,” White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Tuesday.
“I think if there’s ever a moment where we feel someone’s broken the law, particularly if they’re the head of the FBI, I think that’s something that certainly should be looked at,” Sanders said.
She said that recommending such a prosecution is “not the president’s role,” and that the White House is not encouraging it.
“That’s the job of the Department of Justice, and something they should certainly look at,” Sanders said.
Asked to clarify, Sanders said this:
“Anybody that breaks the law, whatever that process is that needs to be followed, should certainly be looked at,” Sanders said. “If they determine that that’s the course of action to take, then they should certainly do that, but I’m not here to ever direct DOJ in — in the actions that they should take.”
[A guide to the past year in James Comey news and scoops]
Nonetheless, Sanders ticked through a list of actions or alleged actions by Comey that she said justified his firing by Trump, in May, and some of which, she said, may be illegal.
[Legal experts say Comey’s leaks don’t make him a criminal]
“The president is proud of the decision that he made. The president was 100 percent right in firing James Comey. He knew at the time that it could be bad for him politically, but he also knew and felt he had an obligation to do what was right, and do what was right for the American people, and certainly the men and women at the FBI,” Sanders said at a White House press briefing.
“I think there’s no secret. Comey, by his own self-admission, leaked privileged government information weeks before President Trump fired him. Comey testified that an FBI agent engaged in the same practice, they’d face serious repercussions,” Sanders continued. “I think he set his own stage for himself on that front. His actions were improper, and likely could have been illegal.”
Comey leaked memos to the New York Times, and “politicized an investigation by signaling he would exonerate Hillary Clinton before he ever interviewed her or other key witnesses,” Sanders added. She also asserted that Comey had given false testimony to Congress.
Trump has complained that Comey let Clinton off the hook last year when the FBI closed an investigation into the handling of classified information on the private email server Clinton used as secretary of state. Comey said Clinton had been sloppy, but had not acted criminally. The announcement came days after Clinton was interviewed by the FBI, and Comey critics have alleged that he had already decided to shutter the investigation before going through the formality of interviewing her.
[Comey: White House lied about me, FBI]
Comey has maintained that he acted lawfully in preserving notes from meetings with Trump that he testified had made him uncomfortable, and acknowledged that he allowed accounts of the meetings drawn from those notes to become public.
A Justice Department spokeswoman declined to comment. A lawyer for Comey did not immediately comment.
Sanders’ comments left unclear what federal law she thought the former FBI director might have violated. She mentioned the disclosure of a memo by Comey to a law professor friend, but at the time that happened the memo was not classified.
She also cited his apparent preparation of remarks explaining his decision not to charge anyone in the case months before that decision was announced, and before Clinton herself had been interviewed about the matter. It was unclear from Sanders’ comments what about that conduct might constitute a crime.
[Bannon: Trump firing of Comey was the biggest mistake ‘maybe in modern political history’]
Reporters had asked Sanders about comments from former chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon, who told “60 Minutes” that canning Comey may have been the worst political mistake in “modern political history,” since it led to the creation of a special counsel to investigate potential ties between Russia and Trump’s campaign.
-Devlin Barrett contributed to this report.
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“I noticed all the water around us had a sheen,” Mr. Lutzen said. “I need a tetanus shot and a booster Hep A shot, probably.”
Mayor Lenny Curry said 356 people were rescued in total on Monday, and Randy Wyse, the president of the Jacksonville Association of Firefighters, said 15 patients were evacuated from St. Vincent’s Medical Center after the water began to rise.
At one point, Mr. Lutzen realized Sherwood’s, an old watering hole owned by his family, had flooded up to the tabletops. On Tuesday, he was back there in a headlamp and a soaked shirt. A sign urging patrons to “buy the bar a round of cheer” swayed in the breeze of a fan drying the place out.
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Jacksonville, which has a metropolitan area of 1.4 million people, is built up right along the St. Johns River, leaving it with little natural shoreline that to help absorb floodwater. When storm drains get clogged, Mr. Lutzen said, “it’s like a bathtub with a plug in.”.
Georgia was not spared even as the storm weakened
“This is a different kind of natural disaster,” Gov. Nathan Deal of Georgia said on Tuesday. ”We have not had one like this in the state of Georgia for a very long time.”
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“This is one where the entire state of Georgia has been affected by this hurricane-slash-tropical storm, and as a result of that, recovery is going to be a little more slow.”
The state lifted an evacuation order that had been in effect for coastal areas east of Interstate 95 after inspections confirmed the bridges there were safe to cross.
Homer Bryson, the director of the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency, said that fuel shortages were being reported throughout the state.
Officials with the state’s two largest electric utilities reported that at least 1.2 million customers were without power on Tuesday.
“This has been a path of destruction, not only through Florida but also all of Georgia,” said Paul Bowers, the president and chief executive of Georgia Power.
A SWAT vehicle was used to rescue a stroke victim in Miami
Mayor Tomás Regalado of Miami shared an account of an extraordinary rescue.
As the storm hit the city, 911 operators received a call requesting help for a woman who had had a stroke in the Flagami neighborhood, on the city’s west side, Mr. Regalado said at a news conference on Tuesday. But with winds exceeding 45 miles per hour, the emergency response teams were prohibited from going out.
“A decision was made by fire and police to use an armored car of the SWAT team to pick up the firefighters at the station; pick up the lady at the house, in the middle of the storm; and take the lady to the hospital,” Mr. Regalado said. “So SWAT was used to save the life of a City of Miami resident.”
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“I think it’s important that one life mattered,” he added, saying that such a rescue had never been executed before.
The Miami region was shifting toward recovery, with some trash pickups and flights out of Miami International Airport resuming and public transit expected to come back online throughout the week.
Local tap water was safe to drink, Mayor Carlos Gimenez of Miami-Dade County said. But with temperatures in the mid-80s and little air conditioning to speak of, Mr. Gimenez warned residents against the temptation of ocean swimming, saying it would take several more days to assess the safety of local waters.
In Charleston, S.C., ‘things are a lot better today than yesterday,’ the mayor said
In Charleston and the surrounding coastal communities, residents were taking stock of a storm and flooding that exceeded local expectations. Irma’s effects coincided with high tide there, causing some of the worst flooding since Hurricane Hugo, which devastated the area in 1989.
Still, “things are a lot better today than yesterday,” Mayor John Tecklenburg said. “I expect us to be fully back in business tomorrow. There’s a certain level of control you can have, but at some point you’ve got to realize, water is a powerful force. That means tough decisions on how high you build, how strong you build and where you can build.”
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