House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes (R-CA), who said he was stepping back from leading his committee's Russia inquiry while under investigation for ethics violations, has issued a subpoena for Fusion GPS' financial records from TD Bank.
Fusion GPS is the firm that hired Christopher Steele, the former British intelligence officer whose memos became the anti-Trump dossier. Fusion is fighting the subpoena which is asking for two years' worth of information.
CNN:
On Saturday, a judge on the US District Court for the District of Columbia, Tanya Chutkan, extended the bank's deadline to respond to the subpoena for its records until Wednesday. Chutkan also told the intelligence committee to file its response to a request by Fusion GPS for a restraining order from the court by 6 p.m. Monday.
Last Wednesday, two of Fusion's partners refused to answer questions before the committee, invoking their Fifth Amendment rights.
President Trump tweeted about the dossier on Saturday, saying the Department of Justice or FBI should release the name of who paid for it.
Read more: Fusion GPS asks court to stop lawmakers from seeing financial records (CNN)
Firm behind Trump-Russia dossier fights Republican demand to open its books (ABC News)