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FBI director’s top aide was told of Petraeus affair week before elections

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The New York Times on Monday reported that the FBI didn’t conclude that Petraeus hadn’t committed a crime until after interviewing Broadwell for a second time on Nov. 2. Bureau officials then informed Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, who oversees the 16 U.S. intelligence agencies, of the affair about 5 p.m. on Election Day.

Clapper asked Petraeus on the following day to resign. The former general submitted his resignation on Thursday to Obama, who took until the following day to accept it.

The federal government was closed Monday for Veterans Day, but the White House, the Justice Department and the FBI were expected to come under intense pressure from Congress, the news media and the public on Tuesday about when they first learned of the affair.

Some senior lawmakers want to know why they weren’t told about the matter until Friday. Legal requirements mandate that congressional oversight committees be kept informed of all intelligence activities, including possible compromises of national security and classified information.

“This is something … that could have had an effect on national security. I think we should have been told,” Senate Intelligence Committee Chairwoman Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif, told Fox News on Sunday. “There is a way to do it.”

The FBI and the Justice Department, however, also are subject to privacy considerations and rules protecting people involved in investigations who have been found not to have violated any laws.

Senior CIA and FBI officials were expected to meet with Feinstein and other lawmakers on Wednesday to discuss Petraeus’ affair.

Kelley, the woman to whom Broadwell sent emails, and her husband are “big supporters of the military” and became friends with Petraeus and his wife when Petraeus served as CENTCOM commander from October 2008 until June 2010, Boylan said.

Asked why Petraeus resigned when the FBI probe found no evidence that he had broken the law, Boylan replied, “He felt that based on his personal beliefs and his own ethics and values, he could not lead an organization with this having occurred. He felt the right thing was to step down.”

Numerous questions, however, remained unanswered. They included whether CIA staff working close to Petraeus were aware of the affair.

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