Schiff subpoenas DHS over whistleblower complaint

House Intelligence Chair Adam Schiff on Tuesday issued a pair of subpoenas to the Department of Homeland Security to try and force the department to turn over documents and compel testimony related to a whistleblower complaint that the administration sought to downplay evidence of Russian election interference and white supremacist violence.

In a letter to Joseph Maher, acting head of DHS’ Office of Intelligence and Analysis, Schiff (D-Calif.) ordered Maher to testify before the committee this Friday “as to why DHS is preventing a lawful Intelligence Community whistleblower — your own predecessor — from providing classified testimony to the Committee by delaying security clearances for his attorneys.”

Schiff accused the department of “unlawfully obstructing” the panel’s probe into allegations leveled by Brian Murphy, who was Maher’s predecessor but was demoted this summer.

In a statement, a DHS spokesperson said: “Adam Schiff’s claims about DHS stonewalling his committee or obstructing the clearance process are completely false. DHS is doing no such thing and Chairman Schiff, despite the obvious political theater of this subpoena, knows this. In fact, the department has produced nearly 3,000 pages of documents and has provided two briefings and three transcribed interviews to date.”

Neither DHS nor Maher immediately responded to a request for comment.

The subpoenas issued Tuesday also give DHS until Oct. 6 turn over previously requested documents relevant to the Intelligence Committee’s investigation of Murphy’s complaint.

In a complaint provided to the congressional Intelligence committees earlier this month, Murphy accused acting DHS Secretary Chad Wolf and acting deputy Ken Cuccinelli of pressuring him to ignore or water down evidence of Russia’s malign activity in the United States and play up evidence pertaining to Iranian and Chinese efforts to meddle in November’s election.

Murphy also alleged that political appointees in the department sought to play down white supremacist violence to reinforce President Donald Trump’s emphasis on left-wing extremism.

According to the complaint, Murphy says he was demoted from his post leading the Intelligence and Analysis office, a branch of the intelligence community, as retribution for raising concerns about the alleged political pressure.

DHS and the White House have forcefully denied Murphy’s claims, but Schiff has accused the department of intentionally slow-walking the approval of security clearances for one of Murphy’s attorneys, therefore forcing his testimony to be delayed twice.

Murphy himself was already under investigation by Schiff’s committee for allegations that he deployed the department’s intelligence resources to track journalists covering protests in Portland, Ore., earlier this summer.

Daniel Lippman contributed to this report.

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