FBI
Director James Comey, days before President Donald Trump fired him, told
lawmakers he sought more resources for his agency's probe into possible
collusion between Trump's presidential campaign and Russia to sway the
2016 U.S. election, a congressional source said on Wednesday.
With
the Republican president facing a storm of criticism from many
Democratic lawmakers and some in his own party, the Trump administration
accused Comey of "atrocities" on the job and denied his firing was
related to the FBI's Russia investigation.
Trump,
who met Russia's foreign minister at the White House on Wednesday,
lashed out at critics, calling Democrats "phony hypocrites," and
defended his decision to abruptly oust Comey on Tuesday from the law
enforcement post he held since 2013.
In
a farewell letter to staff seen by CNN, Comey, who was appointed by
Trump's predecessor, Democratic President Barack Obama, said he had
"long believed that a president can fire an FBI director for any reason,
or for no reason at all."
Comey added he would not spend time dwelling on Trump's decision "or the way it was executed."
But
Democrats ramped up accusations that Comey's removal was intended to
undermine the Federal Bureau of Investigation probe and demanded an
independent investigation into the alleged Russian meddling, with some
calling the firing an attempt to cover up wrongdoing related to Russia.
A
congressional source with knowledge of the matter said Comey told
lawmakers within the past few days he had asked the Justice Department
to make additional resources available - mainly more staffing - for the
Russia probe.
Comey informed
lawmakers of that request after the Senate Intelligence Committee,
conducting its own investigation, had asked the FBI to speed up its
Russia inquiry, the source said.
Democrat
Dianne Feinstein, the Senate Judiciary Committee's top Democrat, told
reporters she understood Comey was seeking more resources for the FBI
investigation.
Responding to media
reports that Comey had asked Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein last
week for a significant boost in resources for the agency's probe,
Justice Department spokesman Ian Prior said in an email: "Totally
false."