Yep. "The memo's assertion that the Yahoo article was key seems dubious, too.  The argument is that the FBI used circular logic to make its case for a  warrant. According to the memo, the agency presented the dossier as  evidence against Page, then presented the Yahoo article as additional  evidence — even though the dossier and the article were based on the  same source, Steele. The accusation is that the FBI used Steele to  corroborate Steele. In reality, the article made was not “derived” from Steele. Isikoff,  citing “multiple sources,” reported that U.S. intelligence officials had  briefed senior members of Congress on Page's activities in Russia.  Isikoff cited a “congressional source familiar with the briefings” to  report that “some of those briefed were 'taken aback' when they learned  about Page's contacts in Moscow, viewing them as a possible back channel  to the Russians that could undercut U.S. foreign policy.” Isikoff also quoted a “U.S. official who served in Russia at the  time” when Page, a few years earlier, first attracted attention for  being “a brazen apologist for anything Moscow did.” Steele does  not match the descriptions of these sources. He does match the  description of a “well-placed Western intelligence source” cited in the  last two paragraphs of the article, whose claims about meetings  involving Page also appeared in the dossier.  It is wrong to say  that this “Western intelligence source,” presumably Steele, formed the  foundation of an article in which at least three other sources featured  more prominently."