House Judiciary Committee Chairman Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.) issued a subpoena on Friday commanding FBI agent Peter Strzok to testify before the committee next week, despite Strzok's offer to testify voluntarily.
Strzok's testimony is scheduled to take place on Wednesday at 10:00 a.m., according to a press release from the Judiciary Committee.
"The Committees have repeatedly requested to interview Mr. Strzok regarding his role in certain decisions, but he has yet to appear," the statement said. The committee was referring to the joint investigation between the Judiciary Committee and the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee examining the FBI's conduct during the 2016 presidential election.
Strzok was one of two FBI officials removed from special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into alleged ties between the Trump campaign and Russia after it was revealed that he and his colleague, Lisa Page, had sent text messages that were highly critical of then-candidate Trump.
In a statement to The Hill on Friday, Strzok's lawyer Aitan Goelman wrote that his office found the committee's decision to subpoena Strzok regrettable.
"We regret that the Committee felt it necessary to issue a subpoena when we repeatedly informed them that Pete was willing to testify voluntarily."
Goelman wrote to Goodlatte days earlier, telling him that a subpoena was "wholly unnecessary" and that Strzok would comply voluntarily with the Judiciary panel's request for testimony.
"While you are, of course, free to continue pursuing this process, it is wholly unnecessary," Goelman wrote in the letter.
"Special Agent Strzok, who has been fully cooperative with the [Justice Department] Office of Inspector General, intends to voluntarily appear and testify before your committee and any other Congressional committee that invites him," he added.
Committee member Rep. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio) had said earlier on Friday that a subpoena would likely be "necessary" to compel Strzok to comply with the Judiciary panel.
“It’s my understanding that Chairman Goodlatte will be subpoenaing him very soon,” Chabot said on Hill.TV’s "Rising." “Maybe a subpoena won’t be necessary, but it looks like it probably will.”
In an interview with The Washington Post published Sunday, Goelman indicated that Strzok was willing to testify before Congress without immunity in an effort to clear his name. Goelman told the post that Strzok felt his "position, character and actions" had been maligned.
The former FBI agent and Page, with whom he had been romantically involved when the text messages were exchanged, were top targets of Republicans after the revelation that they had been removed from Mueller's investigation.
The text exchange was made public in a scathing report released earlier this month from the Justice Department's (DOJ) internal watchdog. The report, which examined FBI and DOJ conduct during the investigation into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server, set off a firestorm among Republicans who said the text messages between Strzok and Page were evidence of anti-Trump machinations at the FBI.
“[Trump’s] not ever going to become president, right? Right?!” Page asked in a text to Strzok in August 2016.
http:// thehill.com/policy/national-security/393737-house-judiciary-committee-subpoenas-fbi-agent-who-sent-anti-trump