https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/polit...Kkk?li=BBnb7Kz
WASHINGTON — Federal prosecutors have recommended bringing criminal  charges against Andrew McCabe, the former deputy director of the FBI and  a frequent target of criticism by President Donald Trump, a person  familiar with the decision said Thursday.
   
 McCabe was fired from the FBI just before his retirement in March  2018 after the Justice Department's internal watchdog concluded that he  had improperly authorized a leak about a federal investigation into the  Clinton Foundation in the final weeks of the 2016 presidential campaign.  Investigators also concluded that he displayed a lack of candor when  asked about the leak. 
McCabe's lawyers had asked the Justice  Department's principal deputy attorney general to overrule the  recommendation that he be indicted, according to the person, who was not  authorized to comment publicly on the communications. The department  rejected that request, clearing the way for a criminal charge. 
The Justice Department did not immediately respond to questions about the case. 
Then-Attorney  General Jeff Sessions fired McCabe after a Justice Department Inspector  General’s report found he misstated his involvement in a leak to The  Wall Street Journal days before the election about an FBI investigation  into the Clinton Foundation. He was ousted days before he could begin  collecting retirement benefits. 
McCabe, who became acting FBI  director temporarily after President Donald Trump fired former FBI  Director James Comey in May 2017, has been the target of the president's  attacks on law enforcement officials he says launched partisan  investigations of him, his campaign and his administration. Those probes  have led to charges against a half-dozen of Trump's onetime aides and  advisers. 
Trump applauded the decision to fire McCabe in March  2018, calling it "a great day for democracy.” Trump has called McCabe a  "major sleazebag" and argued that his conduct was akin to treason for  favoring Clinton, Trump's Democratic rival in 2016.
The  decision caps a series of accusations of wrongdoing by the FBI's top  leaders in 2016. Internal investigators have faulted both McCabe and  Comey for violating Justice Department rules in the final months of a  campaign in which federal agents were investigating both major-party  candidates. Lower-level staffers were fired or reassigned.
The  Justice Department announced Aug. 29 that Comey had violated bureau  policies for keeping private memos about his conversations with Trump  and then having a friend describe the contents of one memo to the New  York Times for a story. But the department didn't charge Comey  criminally.
McCabe's firing came after the Inspector General  investigated the information behind a Wall Street Journal story about  the Clinton Foundation, to determine whether it was an unauthorized leak  and if so, who was the source. The story appeared online Oct. 30, 2016  and in print Oct. 31, which was a week after another story reported that  McCabe terminated the foundation probe under pressure from the Justice  Department.
Investigators determined that McCabe, in order to  promote his impartiality, authorized associates to disclose an Aug. 12  call between McCabe and the principal associate deputy attorney general  to the Wall Street Journal. The call effectively confirmed the existence  of the Clinton Foundation investigation, which Comey had refused to do.
The  inspector general found McCabe “lacked candor” when he said he hadn't  authorized the disclosure and didn't know who did while talking to  Comey, when questioned under oath by FBI agents and then when questioned  under oath by investigators for special counsel Robert Mueller.
McCabe filed  a lawsuit in August challenging his dismissal, alleging that Justice  Department officials demoted him in January 2018 and fired two months  later to cater to Trump’s “unlawful whims.” McCabe's abrupt termination  came after he had already announced his intention to resign and days  before his retirement benefits would have set in.
Trump's  political accusations against McCabe stemmed from his wife running  unsuccessfully for state Senate as a Democrat in Virginia. Trump had  seized on contributions Jill McCabe received from a political action  committee tied with Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, a Clinton ally.
Trump called Andrew McCabe “a major sleazebag” and said he took “massive amounts of money” for his wife’s campaign.
But  internal FBI documents stated that McCabe didn't oversee the Clinton  investigation while his wife was running for office and that he didn't  have a conflict of interest. McCabe has argued in television interviews  that top congressional leaders were notified about the  counterintelligence inquiry into Russian influence on Trump's campaign  and nobody objected.
The decision about McCabe comes amid several  investigations of how the Justice Department and the FBI began  investigations into Russian interference in the 2016 election. Attorney  General William Barr assigned one internal probe in May.
Inspector  General Michael Horowitz’s review launched in March 2018 focuses on an  FBI wiretap of Carter Page, a former policy adviser to Trump's campaign.  The inspector general looked into whether the FBI violated the Foreign  Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, when it sought court-ordered  surveillance of Page in late 2016. Horowitz also examined the FBI's  relationship and communications with Christopher Steele, a former  British intelligence officer who was hired by a research firm working  for Clinton's campaign and who compiled a now-infamous "dossier"  alleging links between Russia and the Trump campaign.
Republicans  have complained that the FBI concealed its reliance on Steele's findings  in the surveillance applications for Page. But copies of those  applications released after USA TODAY and others sued showed  investigators disclosed to judges that Steele was seeking information to  "discredit" Trump, and that investigators had broader suspicions about  Page's ties to the Russian government.
Mueller took over the  Russia investigation in May 2017, after Trump fired Comey.   Mueller's report, released in April, detailed a "sweeping and  systematic" effort by the Russian government to intercede in the  election to help Trump win, but said neither the president nor his  campaign conspired with Russians.
The fallout from the DPST criminality begins!!!!
A great number of DPST's are very afraid of consequences of their actions. 
LOL