Judicial Watch Obtains Carter Page FISA Court Documents
JULY 21, 2018
(Washington, DC) – Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton made the following statement regarding today’s release of 412 pages
of documents about FISA (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act)
warrants targeting Carter Page, who had been a Trump campaign adviser:
These documents are heavily redacted but
seem to confirm the FBI and DOJ misled the courts in withholding the
material information that Hillary Clinton’s campaign and the DNC were
behind the “intelligence” used to persuade the courts to approve the
FISA warrants that targeted the Trump team. Given this corruption,
President Trump should intervene and declassify the heavily redacted
material.
The documents were due to Judicial Watch yesterday but were emailed around 5:30 pm today.The warrants are controversial because the FISA court was never told that the key information justifying the requests came from a “dossier” that was created by Fusion GPS, a paid agent of the Clinton campaign and Democratic National Committee. The initial Carter Page warrant was granted just weeks before the 2016 election. Today’s document release supports criticisms by Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee who released a memo that criticized the FISA targeting. The memo details how the “minimally corroborated” Clinton-DNC dossier was an essential part of the FBI and DOJ’s applications for surveillance warrants to spy on Page.
The document production comes in a February 2018 Judicial Watch Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit filed after the DOJ rejected a July 19, 2017, FOIA request (Judicial Watch v. U.S. Department of Justice (No. 1:18-cv-00245)). The lawsuit is seeking:
Copies of all proposed and all final
signed FISA applications submitted to the FISC relating to Russian
interference in the 2016 election, allegations of collusion between
people associated with the Trump campaign and Russia, and any known
Trump associates regardless of context;
Copies of all FISC responses to the
above-mentioned applications in which the Court notified the FBI or
Justice Department that it would not grant the proposed applications or
recommended changes. If any such FISC responses were provided orally,
rather than in writing, please provide copies of FBI or Justice
Department records memorializing or otherwise referencing the relevant
FISC responses;
Copies of all FISC orders relating to the
above mentioned applications, whether denying the applications and
certifications, denying the orders, modifying the orders, granting the
orders, or other types of orders.
In April, the DOJ told the court it
was “processing for potential redaction and release certain FISA
materials related to Carter Page,” and agreed to a production schedule
for responsive records to be completed July 20, 2018.###
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