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Ex-White House Security Clearance Official Meets US Lawmakers 


FILE - Ivanka Trump, daughter of President Donald Trump, and her husband, presidential senior adviser Jared Kushner, attend a news conference with the president and German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the White House, March 17, 2017.
FILE - Ivanka Trump, daughter of President Donald Trump, and her husband, presidential senior adviser Jared Kushner, attend a news conference with the president and German Chancellor Angela Merkel at the White House, March 17, 2017.

The former head of White House security clearances spoke with U.S. congressional investigators on Wednesday, after a dispute about his appearance on an issue that sources have said involves President Donald Trump's daughter and son-in-law.

After days of conflict over whether he would appear, Carl Kline talked with investigators from the House of Representatives Oversight Committee, chaired by Democrat Elijah Cummings of Maryland. Details of the discussion were not immediately known.

The committee is looking into the issuance of high-level security clearances to some staffers in the Trump White House, despite recommendations from career officials that those officials should not receive them. Two congressional sources familiar with the matter said Trump's daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband, Jared Kushner, were among the two dozen or so staffers who got those clearances.

Kline was in charge of White House clearances at the time. He has since left the White House and is now a Defense Department employee.

'Fighting all the subpoenas'

The committee voted on April 2 to subpoena Kline for testimony on the matter. The Trump administration initially told Kline to ignore the subpoena. Last week, Trump told reporters, "We're fighting all the subpoenas."

After Republican committee member Jim Jordan of Ohio intervened, Cummings three days ago said he was putting off holding Kline in contempt of Congress after an agreement was reached permitting him to meet with investigators.

The clearances investigation was triggered earlier this year by a whistle-blower. It is one of multiple probes being pursued by House Democrats into Trump, his presidency and his businesses. Some of the inquiries are expected to run into the 2020 presidential election season.

FILE - House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Md., speaks during a committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 14, 2019.
FILE - House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Md., speaks during a committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, March 14, 2019.

Before the Wednesday meeting, in a letter to Cummings, White House counsel Pat Cipollone said Kline had agreed to appear for a closed-door committee interview, despite the subpoena.

Cipollone indicated in the letter that Kline would most likely decline to answer questions from the Democratic-controlled House panel about clearances issued to specific individuals.

"No employee of the executive branch is or has been authorized to disclose to the committee information about individual security clearance files or background investigations," Cipollone said in the letter.

Cummings sought testimony from Kline after Tricia Newbold, a career White House security official, alleged that clearances initially were denied to at least two dozen Trump administration officials over concerns about possible foreign influence, conflicts of interest, questionable or criminal conduct,
financial problems or drug abuse.

In a letter to the White House last month, Cummings referred to three unnamed "senior White House officials" whose clearance histories were addressed in some detail by Newbold. Information obtained by the committee said two of those three senior officials were Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner.

The White House has declined to comment on issues related to the couple's clearances.

Different views

Cipollone said there are no legitimate grounds or precedents for sharing individual security clearance records with Congress.

"It has long been recognized on both sides of the political aisle that there is no legitimate need for access to such sensitive information about individuals," he told Cummings.

Cummings condemned the White House's stance, saying Cipollone's letter "ignores past precedent when the committee obtained security clearance documents, it disregards previous testimony ... from White House officials in the past, and it makes the startling and false claim that Congress has no right to obtain information from whistle-blowers."

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