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Fed's Yellen says met firm at heart of leak probes

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen delivers remarks at the Federal Reserve's ninth biennial Community Development Research Conference focusing on economic mobility in Washington April 2, 2015. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

By Douwe Miedema and Jonathan Spicer

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen met with a research firm that later published confidential information from the central bank, she said on Monday.

Yellen met with Medley Global Advisors in June 2012, she said in a letter, months before the firm unveiled details of a September Fed meeting a day ahead of the publication of the central bank's own record of the discussions.

The Justice Department is investigating Medley over a possible leak of information from the Fed.

"Nothing Medley Global Advisors reported in October ... could have been conveyed in June, and let me assure you that, in any case, I did not convey any confidential information," Yellen said in the letter to two Republican members of the House of Representatives, Jeb Hensarling and Sean Duffy.

Yellen said she would also disclose the names of other staff members who had been in touch with the firm.

Yellen in March said that the central bank's internal watchdog, the office of the inspector general, was investigating the matter. She also said that she did not know where the information had come from.

At the policy-setting meeting, Fed officials laid the groundwork for the massive bond-buying stimulus they were to roll out later that year. Early knowledge of that discussion could have given traders an unfair edge.

The probe comes as politicians such as Hensarling boost pressure on the Fed to tell the public more about its inner workings, including its decisions about monetary policy.

Jeb Hensarling, head of the House Financial Services Committee, wrote to Yellen in March to express his concern about lack of response to an earlier letter by Duffy, who heads the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.

In that letter, Hensarling said that an internal probe by the Fed's general counsel was dropped at the request of several members of the Federal Open Market Committee, the group that sets the central bank's interest rate policy, and that a criminal investigation into the matter was pending.

(Reporting by Douwe Miedema and Jonathan Spicer; editing by Andrew Hay)