Former Representative Mike Rogers (R-MI), seen as one of the contenders to head President-elect Donald J. Trump’s Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), argued that documents related to the 2016 Russia hoax should be kept secret. Rogers, a former FBI special agent, told NPR in February 2018 that he did not believe the Nunes Memo should have been released to the public.
The Nunes Memo, created for then-House Intelligence Committee chairman Devin Nunes, criticized the FBI for using politically motivated and unreliable sources as part of the Russia hoax investigation against Trump. Part of this was the infamous Steele Dossier, created by disgraced former British spy Christopher Steele, which was used as a basis for Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrants against Trump ally Carter Page.
Speaking to NPR, Rogers argued that anything related to FISA warrants should be handled in a “classified setting.” Additionally, Rogers contended: “[R]eleasing it at the angst of all of the intelligence community and the FBI, I argue, is probably not the best way for the public to figure out what in the heck is going on.”
Rogers, who lost his Senate election bid in Michigan earlier this month, met with the Trump transition team last week in Mar-a-Lago, Florida. Some believe he is being considered to head the FBI.
His main rival for the position is former Director of National Intelligence adviser Kash Patel, a Trump loyalist and major critic of the people in politics and media who spread the Russia collusion hoax. At least one former FBI hatchet man has expressed concern about Patel replacing current FBI director Christopher Wray, claiming Patel may do “massive damage” to the agency’s “interior.”