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ABC: 'Secret society' text may have been a joke

ABC: 'Secret society' text may have been a joke
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A text message between two FBI agents that launched days of speculation of a "secret society" plot against President Donald Trump may have been a joke, ABC News reported.

Conservatives have seized on the exchange between FBI lawyer Lisa Page and FBI agent Peter Strzok, which was sent after the 2016 presidential election, as potential evidence of an anti-Trump bias at the FBI. Strzok was a member of the FBI team investigating Hillary Clinton's email server and, later, a member of Robert Mueller's special counsel operation looking into Russia's attempted interference in the 2016 election.

"The day after the election, the day after what they really, really didn't want to have happen, there's a text exchange between these two FBI agents, these supposed to be objective, fact-centric FBI agents, saying perhaps this is the first meeting of the 'secret society,'" House Oversight Committee Chairman Trey Gowdy, R-South Carolina, said on Fox News this week.

 

 

But ABC News reported Wednesday night that it got a copy of the text message Republicans appear to be referring to. The report said that from the message, it's not clear whether the reference to a "secret society" was a joke.

"Are you even going to give out your calendars? Seems kind of depressing. Maybe it should just be the first meeting of the secret society," Page wrote to Strzok, according to ABC. The report said the text had no relation to others sent before or after it, which makes it harder to decipher the context.

Strzok was reassigned to the FBI's human resources office after the discovery of the messages. Page completed her detail with Mueller's team before the special counsel's office was made aware of the texts.

 

More text exchanges

 

In another text message obtained by ABC News, sent the day after the November 2016 presidential election, Strzok told Page: "Omg I am so depressed."

Those texts are among messages provided to House and Senate committees after reports that Strzok was fired from Mueller's team for allegedly sending anti-Trump messages, according to ABC News. CNN could not independently verify the messages.

As lawmakers from several committees continue to sift through the trove of text messages between the two, GOP lawmakers have released details of some of the text exchanges.

In one, Strzok, the former No. 2 counterintelligence official at the FBI, seemed to suggest he didn't think there was any "'there' there" to the special counsel investigation into Russian interference in the US election, according to Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson, the chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee.

In others, the pair discussed ways to "fix" damage done by the FBI's investigation into Clinton's email server, according to Johnson and Gowdy.

"That is a level of bias that is stunning among law enforcement officers," Gowdy said Tuesday on Fox News. "It is manifest bias not just against Trump, but against his kids, against his business interests."

Johnson -- who on Tuesday suggested bias and potential corruption "at the highest levels of the FBI" -- appeared to temper his outrage over the "secret society" text Wednesday on Fox, saying informants regularly come to his committee.

Leading Republicans have questioned the FBI over a missing series of exchanges between the two officials, with some Republicans suggesting there could be a nefarious motive behind the gap.

Trump referred to the missing texts late Tuesday night, asking about the whereabouts of the "50,000 important text messages." That figure, however, refers to the total number of texts between Strzok and Page that the Justice Department inspector general has reviewed on FBI servers. The number of missing texts, which span a five-month period, is not known.

'No stone unturned'

Attorney General Jeff Sessions promised Monday to "leave no stone unturned" in an investigation to determine how the messages, sent on bureau-issued phones, were not collected by the FBI's retention software.

Republican and Democratic lawmakers atop the Senate Intelligence Committee, which is conducting its own probe into Russian election interference, downplayed the possibility of any wrongdoing behind the missing texts.

"I don't know that I read anything into it other than that there may be a technical glitch at the bureau," North Carolina Republican Sen. Richard Burr, the Republican chairman, told CNN's Manu Raju. "The fact that they have provided the rest of them certainly doesn't show an intent to try to withhold anything. We've just got to wait until we find out."

Added the committee's top Democrat, Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia: "At this point I accept the FBI's word."

In a cover letter accompanying the delivery of the messages, Assistant Attorney General Stephen Boyd explained that technical issues with the FBI's retention software prevented the bureau from capturing messages sent between the two employees on their agency-issued Samsung 5 phones from December 14, 2016, to May 17, 2017.

Timeframe contradictions

The Republican chairs of the Senate Judiciary Committee and Senate Homeland Security Committee also sent a letter to the Justice Department's inspector general Tuesday requesting more information on the missing texts.

In the letter, Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and Johnson wrote that the IG told them last month that the IG's office had received all text messages between Strzok and Page from November 30, 2016, to July 28, 2017, contradicting the gap reported in the cover letter.

"These statements ... need to be reconciled," the senators wrote.

House and Senate investigators are going through 384 pages of text messages. They were turned over Friday evening by the Justice Department.