WASHINGTON — Congressman Adam
Schiff, increasingly the Democratic point man on the investigation into
allegations of overly cozy ties between President Trump and Russia, is a
soft-spoken former federal prosecutor and a critic of government
surveillance who may be the only lawmaker ever to draw blood from comic
Stephen Colbert — literally.
Now Schiff is locked in a tense, headline-making
standoff with the Republican chairman of the House Intelligence
Committee, Rep. Devin Nunes, over how to proceed with a multi-tiered
investigation into Russia’s alleged interference in the 2016 election, a
probe that the White House sees as a dagger aimed at Trump’s legitimacy
even though Schiff hasn’t drawn blood yet.In the mid-1980s, fresh out of Harvard Law School and working as an assistant U.S. attorney in Los Angeles, Schiff prosecuted the first-ever FBI agent to be indicted for espionage in a bizarre sex-and-cash-for-secrets case. Richard Miller was accused of scheming with Soviet agents — one of whom, “Svetlana,” was his lover — to share U.S. national security secrets in return for $65,000 in cash and gold.
“I learned a lot of the tradecraft of the Russians — back then, the Soviets — how they recruited people, what they were interested in obtaining in terms of U.S. classified information, how the KGB worked with assets in the United States,” Schiff told Yahoo News by telephone on Friday.
Nearly 15 years after that case, Schiff won what was the most expensive House race in the 2000 cycle,
beating Republican Jim Rogan, one of the “managers” of the impeachment
trial against President Bill Clinton not quite two years earlier.
Rep. Adam Schiff, R-Calif., and his wife celebrated beating incumbent Rep. James E. Rogan in 2000. (Photo: Mark J. Terrill/AP)
In Congress, Schiff served as a top Democrat on the special Benghazi Committee and is the ranking member on the House Intelligence Committee — a job that puts him in the “Gang of Eight” senior lawmakers privy to the nation’s deepest secrets.
He has emerged as one of his party’s leading voices on questions of national security. In the aftermath of revelations made possible by Edward Snowden, Schiff worked to curtail government surveillance inside the United States. He has also repeatedly called for Congress to debate and vote on authorizing the use of force against the Islamic State, rather than rely — as former President Barack Obama did — on the resolution adopted nearly 16 years ago to go after the perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks.
Recently,
Schiff has become House Democrats’ go-to resource in the complex
investigation into Russia’s alleged interference in the 2016 election.
Last Wednesday, he sharply criticized Nunes for cutting out Schiff and
the other members of the committee by going directly to the White House
with supposed evidence that conversations involving associates of Trump
may have been intercepted by American intelligence or law-enforcement
agencies.
Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif. (Photo: Jim Bourg/Reuters)
In his public remarks, Schiff more often sounds like he’s trying to talk a potential jumper down from a ledge — he’ll lay out what he sees as the most persuasive arguments in a soothing near-monotone. His Twitter persona is more combative.
But back in September, he and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, sounded the alarm about alleged Russian interference in the election.
“Based
on briefings we have received, we have concluded that the Russian
intelligence agencies are making a serious and concerted effort to
influence the U.S. election,” they said in a joint statement.
“At the least, this effort is intended to sow doubt about the security
of our election and may well be intended to influence the outcomes of
the election — we can see no other rationale for the behavior of the
Russians.”
Schiff is a triathlete and marathon runner
who in 2014 became the first member of Congress to participate in a
seven-day charity bike ride from San Francisco to Los Angeles to raise
money for the fight against HIV/AIDS.In 2009, he introduced the Daniel Pearl Freedom of the Press Act, named after the Wall Street Journal reporter beheaded by terrorists in Pakistan. His only co-sponsor in the House of Representatives? Then-congressman Mike Pence. The measure became law in 2010.
In the aftermath of controversies over the treatment of killer whales in captivity, Schiff has also backed legislation meant to prohibit the marine mammals from being used in public displays.
President
Barack Obama, with family members of murdered journalist Daniel Pearl,
signed the Daniel Pearl Freedom of the Press Act in the Oval Office, May
17, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza
“He had this idea that he was going to provoke a fight to end the skit. I was supposed to hit him over the head with a stunt bottle. The assistant bringing it over slipped and dropped and it shattered. And they said, ‘Don’t worry, I have another,’” Schiff recalled. The assistant brought another bottle, which Colbert asked to examine. “I said, ‘Are you afraid I’ll hit you with a real bottle?’ And he said, ‘Actually, I am,’” Schiff said with a chuckle. “I hit him over the head with it and made him bleed.”
Colbert wasn’t seriously hurt, but required help from a nurse.
Schiff jokes that he’s gotten good mileage from the fact that his wife’s name is Eve. “Yep, Adam and Eve,” he said. Early in their relationship, they went to a used car dealership together. The “typically enthusiastic” salesman introduced himself. But when he heard his prospective buyers give their names, Schiff recalled, “He said, ‘I don’t have time for this,’ and basically turned around and walked away.”
Now, as
he looks back on his groundbreaking espionage prosecution and ponders
his role in the burgeoning congressional investigation into Russia’s
actions in 2016, Schiff told Yahoo News that he can’t help but see a
connection: “I feel like I’ve come full circle.”
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