Hours before the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee announced his shocking claims about surveillance of the Trump transition team on Wednesday morning, he practically disappeared.
Rep. Devin Nunes was traveling with a senior committee staffer in an Uber on Tuesday evening when he received a communication on his phone, three committee officials and a former national security official with ties to the committee told The Daily Beast. After the message, Nunes left the car abruptly, leaving his own staffer in the dark about his whereabouts.
By the next morning, Nunes hastily announced a press conference. His own aides, up to the most senior level, did not know what their boss planned to say next. Nunesā choice to keep senior staff out of the loop was highly unusual.
The Republican chairman had a bombshell to drop.
āThe intelligence community incidentally collected information about U.S. citizens involved in the Trump transition,ā Nunes told reporters Wednesday morning.
Nunes reviewed ādozens of reportsā produced by the U.S. intelligence community that showed this, he added. Though the surveillance was done legally, Nunes said he was āalarmedā that information about transition officials was widely disseminated throughout the government, and that in some cases their names were āunmasked,ā meaning not hidden as is usually the case when when a U.S. personās information is collected through foreign surveillance.
Immediately after the press conference, Nunes went to the White House to brief the president. Afterwards, Trump said he felt āsomewhatā vindicated by the briefing for his false claim that President Obama āwiretappedā him during the election. (Nunes has maintained this is not true.)
Asked to explain why he decided to brief the president, Nunes told Sean Hannity on Thursday he had done so because the information concerned him and that the president was receiving criticism from the press.
"Itās clear that I would be concerned if I was the president, and thatās why I wanted him to know, and I felt like I had a duty and obligation to tell him because, as you know, heās taking a lot of heat in the news media," Nunes said.
Democrats and Republicans were taken by surprise by Nunesā actions.
Rep. Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, hinted at the unusual circumstances Friday during a press conference, criticizing the chairman for āwhat appears to be a dead of night excursion.ā It appears Schiff was being literal.
āAll of us are essentially in the dark,ā Schiff told reporters Friday. āItās not just that he hasnāt shared them with Democrats on the committee, he hasnāt shared them with Republicans on the committee.ā
āIām the only one whoās seen the documents, as far as I know,ā Nunes said Friday.
Nunesā office had no comment for this story.
āThereās all kinds of speculation like this floating around about his source, his whereabouts, the circumstances of his announcement, etc. Iām not going to comment on it,ā his spokesman said.
Where Nunes went and who his source was for this informationāwhich he said was still incompleteāis now a mystery with serious repercussions for the independence of his investigation into Russian interference with U.S. elections.
āThis information was legally brought to me by sources who thought that we should know it,ā Nunes added.
Nunes said the documents involved ālegally collected foreign intelligence under FISA,ā the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, and they confirmed U.S. persons were incidentally collected during surveillance. This information would have been classified, by the very nature of its contentsāand would have needed to be reviewed in a special location.
āIf weāre assuming in good faith that the chairman of the intelligence committee made sure to conduct himself within the bounds of the law, then any classified material reviewed by him would have needed to be reviewed in a secure facility,ā explained Bradley Moss, a lawyer specializing in national security clearances. āThere are a very small number of them in the general area of the District of Columbia. And there are log entries to enter any SCIF [Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility]. Assuming that whoever gave it to him was authorized to have that information, he would have had to have visited a SCIF.ā
Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee have suggested that Nunesā source was the White House, looking to distract from FBI Director James Comeyās revelation Monday that the bureau is investigating whether members of Trumpās campaign colluded with Russia.
āWhere did [Nunes] receive this information? From our knowledge, no one on his staff and no other members were a part of this,ā Rep. Eric Swalwell said on MSNBC on Thursday. āSo that means it had to be outside of the Capitol. So, did he go to another agency? And does that mean that the White House was a part of this? It sure seems like the White House after what came out on Monday was scrambling to do anything it could to put another smoke bomb into this investigation.ā
Even before this controversy, Nunesā independence had been questioned. Nunes had been a member of the presidentās transition team, and his office had previously acknowledged that he had, at the request of the White House, spoken to a reporter to challenge reports of links between Trump associates and Russia.
The White House denied any knowledge of Nunesā source.
āIām not aware of where he got the documents from. I donāt know,ā said Press Secretary Sean Spicer said Friday. āI donāt know where he got them from. [Nunes] didnāt state it. So I donāt have anything for you.ā
āWe donāt talk about sources at this committee. We want more people to come forward,ā Nunes added Friday.
The president did, however, promise evidence supporting his wiretap claim would be given to the House or Senate intelligence committee. Trump told Fox News that he would ābe submitting things before the committee very soon.ā
āWe will be submitting certain things, and I will be, perhaps, speaking about this next week,ā Trump said last week. This has not yet occurred, as far as the public knows.
On Friday, Nunes also announced that the committee controlled by Republicans had indefinitely postponed a scheduled open hearing Tuesday with former national security officials, replacing it with a closed hearing with the heads of the FBI and NSA.
āFor House Republicans and the White House, this is about obstruction and distraction,ā Rep. Mike Quigley told The Daily Beast. āAnd this week there were three: that Obama wiretapped Trump tower, number two, this middle of the night excursion, and number three, canceling the open hearings. I just tell my colleagues that we have to keep up the pressure so they donāt turn the lights out.ā