AG Jeff Sessions has just officially named a prosecutor (not Special) who will be investigating the FBI for bias and abuse on a range of issues, from Uranium One to the handling of Hillary Clinton’s email case to claims of FISA abuse and likely more.

JUST IN: Attorney General Jeff Sessions reveals a top federal prosecutor is examining Republican-driven accusations against the FBI and has decided that no second special counsel is needed — at least for now https://t.co/k3xijaOj8P pic.twitter.com/7pXZrjDnMG

Here’s more:

JUST IN: Attorney General Jeff Sessions reveals a top federal prosecutor has been examining Republican-driven accusations against the FBI and has decided that no second special counsel is needed -- at least for now https://t.co/bWQMSU5rpG pic.twitter.com/amdYbLEKPi

CNN – Attorney General Jeff Sessions revealed Thursday that Utah’s top federal prosecutor, John Huber, has been examining a cluster of Republican-driven accusations against the FBI and has decided that no second special counsel is needed — at least for now.

Huber has been looking into allegations that the FBI abused its powers in surveilling a former Trump campaign adviser, and more should have been done to investigate Hillary Clinton’s ties to a Russian nuclear energy agency, but his identity had remained a secret.

But Sessions’ decision to stop short of formally appointing a special counsel like Robert Mueller, detailed in a lengthy written response to three Republican chairmen on Capitol Hill, will likely anger those in the GOP who have recently ramped up calls to investigate claims of political bias at the nation’s top law enforcement agencies.

It also comes one day after the Justice Department’s internal watchdog office confirmed it would review how the FBI obtained a warrant to monitor Trump foreign policy aide Carter Page, as well as the bureau’s relationship with Christopher Steele, the author of the Trump dossier.

Huber, who currently serves as the US attorney in Utah, may now find himself thrust into the middle of a fierce partisan struggle — with Republicans arguing anything short of a special counsel is insufficient because the Justice Department cannot investigate its own people, and Democrats maintaining that any allegations of bias are an unfounded ploy to distract from Mueller’s investigation into possible coordination between Trump campaign associates and Russian officials.

Originally appointed by President Barack Obama in 2015, Huber, along with many other US attorneys, resigned after President Donald Trump took office early last year, but was reappointed by Trump shortly thereafter.