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Senate confirms Wray as next FBI director

August 2, 2017 by  
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The Senate on Tuesday voted overwhelmingly to confirm Christopher A. Wray as the next FBI director, filling the critical post that has remained vacant since President Trump fired James B. Comey in May.

Trump’s firing of Comey immediately led to accusations that he was trying to impede the bureau’s investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election and ultimately led to the appointment of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III. Comey later testified that Trump asked him for a “loyalty” oath and to drop an inquiry of former national security adviser Michael T. Flynn’s contacts with Russian officials.

Wray, a former senior Justice Department official known for his low-key demeanor, told lawmakers during his confirmation hearing that he would never pledge loyalty to the president and that if Trump ever pressured him to drop an investigation, he would push back or resign. This pledge appeared to gain him the confidence of Senate Judiciary Committee members, who unanimously approved his nomination and urged their colleagues to vote in favor of his confirmation.

The vote was 92 to 5; the lawmakers who voted against his nomination are all Democrats.

“He told the committee that he won’t condone tampering with investigations, and that he would resign rather than be unduly influenced in any manner. Mr. Wray’s record of service, and his reputation, give us no reason to doubt him,” Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa), the panel’s chairman, said Tuesday. “He made no loyalty pledges then, and I expect him never to make such a pledge moving forward.”

Trump’s firing of Comey and his continued criticism of the Russia investigation have raised concerns in both parties about his respect for the historic independence of the FBI and its continuing counterintelligence probe of potential ties between his campaign and Kremlin officials.

Wray, 50, worked with Comey at the Justice Department during the George W. Bush administration, running the criminal division at the same time Comey was serving as deputy attorney general. Mueller — the special counsel in charge of the Justice Department’s investigation of alleged links between the Trump operation and the Kremlin — was serving as FBI director at the time.

During his confirmation process, Wray refrained from commenting directly on the Russia inquiry but did come to the defense of Mueller, who has been criticized by Trump and some of his supporters, saying he did not think he was on a “witch hunt,” as the president has said.

Wray also refrained from commenting on Comey’s tenure as FBI director but did offer him a nod of respect. He discussed the now famous 2004 episode in which Comey threatened to resign over the Bush administration’s warrantless surveillance program and said he was prepared to join him.

“Knowing those people, and that they were hardly shrinking violets in the war on terror, there was no hesi­ta­tion in my standing with them,” Wray said. He said he told Comey to let him know if they were about to resign, “and I’ll resign with you.”

But Wray was indirectly critical of Comey’s handling of an investigation of Hillary Clinton’s emails, telling senators that “I can’t imagine a situation where, as FBI director, I would be giving a news conference on an uncharged individual, much less talking in detail about it.”

Wray was also critical during his confirmation hearing of the Bush administration’s reliance on enhanced interrogation techniques, which critics call torture, disavowing 2008 testimony from former legal counsel John Yoo that Wray would have reviewed the memos approving those techniques.

“I have no recollection of that, and I think it’s the kind of thing I’d remember,” Wray said.

The clarification was critical in earning Wray the support of Sen. Dianne Feinstein (Calif.), the Judiciary Committee’s ranking Democrat.

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Inmates Who Used Peanut Butter, and Guile, to Escape an Alabama Jail Are Caught

August 2, 2017 by  
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With tips and help from the public, most were recaptured in the Jasper area, and at least two were picked up at the Flying J Travel Plaza service area near Interstate 65, officials said.

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“We’ve got some evil people down here,” Sheriff Underwood said. “They scheme all the time to con us and our employees here at the jail. You have to stay on your toes. This is one time we slipped up. I’m not going to make any excuses. It was a human error that caused this to happen.”

Built in 1998, Walker County Jail holds about 240 inmates and is surrounded by a razor-wire fence. As part of their “well laid out” plan, the sheriff said, the inmates threw their blankets over the wire so they could get over it. Two escapees were cut by razor-wire as they fled; one of those inmates was hospitalized so that he could “have his thumb sewn back on,” the sheriff said.

The inmates, who discarded their orange jumpsuits, had taken advantage of a “young fellow who hasn’t been here very long,” the sheriff added. The guard had been monitoring about 140 inmates in the jail’s “control area” and had “violated policy,” Sheriff Underwood said. He would not specify how the guard would be disciplined, but he said, “We’re going to take care of that matter.”

Sheriff Underwood also said civilians outside the jail could be charged with crimes for assisting the escape.

On Monday, the search for the last missing inmate — Brady Andrew Kilpatrick, 24 — expanded to Shelby County, about 70 miles southeast of Walker County. Deputies were pursuing a woman they had understood to be the escapee’s girlfriend when a fatal crash occurred, the Shelby County coroner, Lina Evans, said in a telephone interview on Tuesday night.

The woman had a male passenger in her vehicle, Ms. Evans said, but he did not turn out to be Mr. Kilpatrick.

When deputies tried to stop the vehicle, the woman began driving “erratically” and fast in an effort to get away, Ms. Evans said. A four-vehicle crash ensued, killing the male passenger, Michael Francis Xavier Lee, a 34-year-old county resident, Ms. Evans said.

The authorities later searched the woman’s home and did not find the inmate, Ms. Evans added.

The Shelby County sheriff’s office did not respond to a phone message seeking comment Tuesday night.

The female driver, whom Ms. Evans did not identify, was injured and was in “very serious condition” at a hospital, she said, adding that she did not know whether the woman had been taken into custody.

Correction: August 1, 2017

An earlier version of this article misstated what time Brady Andrew Kilpatrick was captured on Tuesday. He was captured at 6:30 p.m. Central time, not Eastern time.


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