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Trump’s FBI Director Contradicts White House Timeline About Aide Accused of Abusing His Wives

White House chief of staff John Kelly, left, walks with staff secretary Rob Porter, center, and White House senior advisor Stephen Miller, before boarding Marine One to depart from the White House with President Donald Trump, on Feb. 1, 2018, in Washington, D.C. (Credit: Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

FBI Director Chris Wray upended the White House’s timeline about when it learned of domestic abuse allegations leveled against disgraced aide Rob Porter.

Wray testified Tuesday that the FBI repeatedly briefed the White House on its investigation into the aide last year, despite how the White House has presented their timeline.

The FBI submitted information to the White House on its background investigation into the former White House staff secretary that uncovered allegations of domestic abuse four times before those allegations became public, Wray told the Senate Intelligence Committee on Tuesday. The FBI director’s testimony raises fresh questions about why Porter remained in a senior position after the White House learned of the allegations of domestic abuse leveled by two of Porter’s ex-wives to the FBI — extending a controversy the White House has struggled to shake.

“I can’t get into the content of what was briefed to the White House … What I can tell you is that the FBI submitted a partial report on the investigation in question in March. And then a completed background investigation in late July. That soon thereafter, we received request for follow-up inquiry and we did the follow-up and provided that information in November and that we administratively closed the file in January,” Wray said in response to questions from Sen. Ron Wyden, a Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee.

Wray added that the FBI “received some additional information” earlier this month and “passed that along as well.”

Wray’s timeline contradicts the White House’s accounting of when it learned of the allegations against Porter and the status of the FBI’s background check investigation to determine whether Porter could be granted a permanent security clearance.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders claimed on Monday that the background investigation into Porter was still ongoing when the allegations became public and he later resigned.

“We let the process play out. It was ongoing. It hadn’t been completed,” Sanders said.

The White House began making that claim last Thursday when deputy press secretary Raj Shah claimed that the FBI’s background investigation into Porter was “ongoing.”

“His background investigation was ongoing,” Shah said. “In this instance, in the case of Rob Porter, we relied on the background check investigative process. That process hadn’t been completed, so we were relying on the information that we had.”

White House legislative affairs director Marc Short on Sunday also claimed on NBC’s “Meet the Press” that the FBI “have not completed that investigation.”

As recently as Monday, Sanders also claimed that the White House did not learn “of the extent of the situation involving Rob Porter” until last Tuesday, when the allegations became public.

“We’ve learned of this situation involving Rob Porter last Tuesday evening,” Sanders said.

While Wray declined to say what information was provided to the White House, each of the FBI’s updates to the White House came after agents first interviewed at least one of Poerter’s ex-wives in January 2017, when she claimed Porter had physically abused her.

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