An early version of this story was corrected to reflect the gathering of information was done by U.S. intelligence, not foreign intelligence.

U.S. intelligence gathered information on President Donald Trump before he was sworn in—and the monitoring had nothing to do with Russia, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee said Wednesday.

“I know there was incidental collection regarding the president-elect and his team. I don’t know if it was actually physically a phone call,” said Rep. Devin Nunes, a California Republican, at a press conference.

Nunes said the intelligence collection was done in November, December and January.

“None of this surveillance was related to Russia or the investigation of Russian activities,” he said, later saying it wasn’t part of a criminal investigation.

He said it was “a lot of information” on Trump, the transition team and what they were doing.

“I believe it was all done legally. I believe it was all obtained legally,” Nunes said, later calling it “normal, foreign surveillance.” The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act allows for the collection of intelligence on foreign officials.

He said he was concerned about why the information was disseminated widely.

Nunes added there is still no evidence of a “wiretap” of Trump Tower, as the president has tweeted.

But the president has subsequently taken to giving a wider interpretation of what “wiretap” means.

Trump was asked at a pool spray if he felt vindicated.

“I somewhat do,” Trump replied.