Author Topic: The Russian conspiracy, Comey, Mueller, Durham, Mar a Lago and related matters  (Read 202759 times)

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
Re: The Russian conspiracy, Comey, Mueller, Durham, Mar a Lago and related matters
« Reply #1400 on: September 01, 2022, 05:56:39 AM »
"Very strange how different those two posts are."

Indeed!!!  Which is why I reposted the second one with it as I posted the AMcC piece.  I like AMcC's legally informed and analytical mind, but our GM is not wrong when he complains of blind spots that tend to favor the Deep State.

The basic principle is that prosecutors should not discuss/leak about investigations because to do so is inherently to the accused, who is not getting a trial to defend his name.

Clearly that has gone by the wayside here-- we are seeing a massive and purposeful campaign to smear Trump with trial by leak.

The most recent example is the photo of the documents that they strew upon the floor.   Adding to the inappropriateness is that the world now knows what the jackets of secure and secret documents look llike.  WTF?!?
=================

WT

FBI chooses Mar-a-Lago raid to jolt critic Kash Patel

The knives are out in this ongoing battle

By Rowan Scarborough

In 2017, Kash Patel and his boss, Rep. Devin Nunes, then chair of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, launched an unprecedented challenge to the FBI’s 7th-floor hierarchy and to its ballyhooed counterintelligence division. They wanted to see how the bureau had targeted the new president, Donald Trump, in its Russia collusion investigation. More particularly, they asked if the bureau was relying on a Democrat-financed gossipy unverified bundle of anti-Trump claims that had circulated through Washington as the goods that would vanquish the hated “Orange Man.”

The Nunes/Patel team read and double-checked and then issued a bombshell memo in January 2018. The FBI had in fact relied on the Christopher Steele dossier to obtain warrants for electronic surveillance against a Trump campaign person. The FBI asserted to judges that the allegations against Carter Page were golden. They were not.

Spring forward to Aug. 8 and another unprecedented event in the history of Mr. Trump and his nemesis, the FBI. FBI agents, led by the Washington field office and specifically authorized by Attorney General Merrick Garland, raided Mr. Trump’s Palm Beach, Florida, home, including his hangout, “45 Office,” a storage room and his wife Melania’s closets.

The objective was to collect top secret and other classified documents Mr. Trump took from the White House and kept at Mar-a-Lago. An FBI search warrant affidavit said the entire chain of events was illegal. It mentions Mr. Trump eight times.

There is only one other insider whose name appears in the otherwise heavily censored pages — Kash Patel, Mr. Trump’s trusted aide in 2019-20 and now part of his social media company.

“This same FBI has been investigating death threats made against me due to baseless political overreach by government gangsters and in their greed for political vengeance, have threatened my safety again,” Mr. Patel says.

Here is what the unnamed Washington field office agent told the judge: “I am aware of an article published in Breitbart on May 5, 2022 … which states that Kash Patel, who is described as a former top FPOTUS [former president of the United States] administration official, characterized as ‘misleading’ reports in other news organizations that [National Archives] had found classified materials among records that FPOTUS provided to [National Archives] from Mar-a-Lago. Patel alleged that such reports were misleading because FPOTUS had declassified the materials at issue.”

There it is. The FBI decided to leave Mr. Patel’s name an open secret, subjecting him to the immediate destructive Washington speculation grinder because he expressed an opinion that is the same as Trump legal team’s.

What message do you think the FBI is sending? Peter Strzok says he knows. Mr. Strzok headed the FBI’s Russia probe, known as Crossfire Hurricane, when the Nunes/Patel team in 2017 began pressing him and his upper echelon for access to highly classified documents. He is best remembered for the series of texts he exchanged with his then-lover, Lisa Page, the counsel for FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe. Mr. Strzok pledged to Ms. Page that the bureau would “stop” the Trump candidacy.

The Nunes-Patel January 2018 memo, declassified by Mr. Trump, brought scorn from the Washington press corps. But it has passed the test of time. The memo asserted the FBI abused its wiretap authority by misleading the courts. A subsequent 2019 Justice Department inspector general report confirmed this. Judges later made two of the four warrants invalid.

The Nunes-Patel memo said, “Our findings raise concerns with the legitimacy and legality of certain DOJ and FBI interactions with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC), and represent a troubling breakdown of legal processes established to protect the American people from abuses related to the FISA process.” For example, none of the FBI’s four warrant applications told judges that the Steele dossier was financed by Democrats including the Hillary Clinton campaign.

Mr. Strzok was so delighted to see his former bureau colleagues feature the Patel name that he all but convicted him in a tweet.

“Never great to see your unredacted name in a search warrant affidavit,” he said.

“To borrow from Eric Hirschman, ‘I’m going to give you the best free legal advice you’re ever getting in your life. Get a great F’ing criminal defense lawyer — you’re going to need it.’” Mr. Strzok cited the famous quote from Trump impeachment attorney Hirschman in his testimony to the Jan. 6 House committee. He recounted how he gave blunt advice to lawyer John Eastman who sold the outgoing president on a convoluted strategy to overrun the 2020 election. Asha Rangappa, another anti-Trump ex FBI agent (a good number are on liberal cable news stations) openly wished for a conviction. “Kash Patel going to jail could be the silver lining of this entire fiasco,” she tweeted. To Patel supporters, the Mar-a-Lago raid is starting to take on the hallmarks of the original 2016-19 Russia probe. That investigation nailed some Trump people for not paying taxes. Its big fish, retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, was later exonerated via new court filings. The FBI itself never thought he had lied to agents. But in the Mar-a-Lago probe, there were in fact classified documents housed at Mr. Trump’s home. He is making a legal argument: He had the power, as U.S. government chief executive officer, to declassify them and take possession. He is essentially doing his own “Russiagate” investigation as his separate civil lawsuit against dossier traffickers plays out in U.S. District Court.

It is the fiery Mr. Patel who has carried Mr. Trump’s stance to podcast/cable news airways.

And then the Justice Department released the search warrant affidavit, with the FBI highlighting his name, framed by thick lines of ominous black ink.

Mr. Patel refers to FBI agents as “gangsters” who are still trying to cover up “Russiagate.”

He calls the unmasking “another vicious attack from DoJ/FBI who intentionally jeopardized my safety by un-redacting my name in the most reviewed search warrant in the history of the United States,” he says.

Rowan Scarborough is a columnist with The Washington Times.

« Last Edit: September 01, 2022, 06:10:03 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
Trump lawyer may have walked into a perjury trap
« Reply #1401 on: September 06, 2022, 07:06:47 PM »
Trump Lawyer May Have Walked Into DOJ Perjury Trap, New Documents Suggest
Hans Mahncke
August 31, 2022


In a late-night filing on Aug. 30 in response to former President Donald Trump’s motion for an independent party to scrutinize documents seized from his Mar-a-Lago estate, the Department of Justice (DOJ) urged a judge not to grant the motion.

Much attention has focused on a photograph attached to the DOJ’s filing. The photograph shows a number of documents marked “Top Secret” laid out on a carpet at Mar-a-Lago. The DOJ’s accompanying filing claims that the items in the photograph were recovered from the “45 office,” which it defines as “the former President’s office space at the Premises.”

Trump and his legal team have insisted that he declassified the documents in his possession and, therefore, it doesn’t matter what the markings on the papers are. The DOJ appears to have been prepared for that argument.

While the photograph was likely included in the filing for its PR value—evidenced by the fact that it’s currently on the front page of every news outlet—the DOJ’s real focus appears to be elsewhere, specifically on a grand jury subpoena dated May 11 and a certification signed by a Trump lawyer on June 3. Both of these documents are included in the new filing.

The subpoena demands that “Donald J. Trump and/or the Office of Donald J. Trump” hand over “any and all documents … bearing classification markings, including but not limited to the following.”

The subpoena goes on to specify the various classification markings used by the U.S. government.

When Trump received the subpoena in May, he had two options. Comply or challenge the subpoena. He chose to comply. One of Trump’s lawyers, whose name has been redacted in the new filings, certified in June that “any and all responsive documents” had been handed over and that none were withheld.

It now appears that the statement was untrue, as many documents marked classified were still at Mar-a-Lago.

It bears repeating that the DOJ didn’t ask for classified documents but rather for documents that bear classification markings. Thus, the actual status of the documents is moot.

The certification by Trump’s attorney appears problematic in other regards as well. While the subpoena addresses documents held by Trump and his office, the certification only mentions Trump’s office. The certification also appears to attempt to narrow the scope of what should be handed over by using word games, for instance by referring to documents in “boxes” as opposed to documents generally. The problem for Trump’s attorneys is that all efforts at trying to create wiggle room are nullified by the statement that all “responsive documents” had been handed over.

A far bigger problem is that the use of lawyerese or word games—for instance, leaving out Trump himself and only referring to his office—could have immediately raised red flags at DOJ, practically begging for the matter to be investigated further.

There was no benefit from playing word games. It only invited further scrutiny. If Trump wasn’t willing or able to hand over all documents, his legal team should have challenged the subpoena.

Instead, they attested that all documents marked classified had been returned, when that appears not to have been the case. Notwithstanding that the DOJ photograph appears to show originals, some have argued that the documents retained were merely copies and that all original documents were returned. The problem with that argument is that Trump’s attorney also attested that no copies remained at Mar-a-Lago.

It may well turn out that the lawyer’s certification was the result of incompetence, a case of poor lawyering, and of the left hand not knowing what the right hand was doing. But to a DOJ that has already shown that it’s determined to get Trump, these arguments won’t hold sway.

It’s likely that the DOJ will now target Trump’s attorney to find out the details behind the certification. Who authorized the lawyer to sign the certification? Who told the lawyer to say that everything had been handed over? Did anyone tell the attorney to lie?

The bottom line is that a lawyer for Trump might have walked into a perjury trap by attesting to something that wasn’t true. In the first instance, this is a problem for the lawyer. But it may become Trump’s problem if the lawyer implicates him, truthfully or not, as we have already seen happen in the case of Michael Cohen, Trump’s former attorney.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: Trump lawyer may have walked into a perjury trap
« Reply #1402 on: September 06, 2022, 07:18:47 PM »
If the law doesn't have moral authority, all they have is force.

Trump Lawyer May Have Walked Into DOJ Perjury Trap, New Documents Suggest
Hans Mahncke
August 31, 2022


In a late-night filing on Aug. 30 in response to former President Donald Trump’s motion for an independent party to scrutinize documents seized from his Mar-a-Lago estate, the Department of Justice (DOJ) urged a judge not to grant the motion.

Much attention has focused on a photograph attached to the DOJ’s filing. The photograph shows a number of documents marked “Top Secret” laid out on a carpet at Mar-a-Lago. The DOJ’s accompanying filing claims that the items in the photograph were recovered from the “45 office,” which it defines as “the former President’s office space at the Premises.”

Trump and his legal team have insisted that he declassified the documents in his possession and, therefore, it doesn’t matter what the markings on the papers are. The DOJ appears to have been prepared for that argument.

While the photograph was likely included in the filing for its PR value—evidenced by the fact that it’s currently on the front page of every news outlet—the DOJ’s real focus appears to be elsewhere, specifically on a grand jury subpoena dated May 11 and a certification signed by a Trump lawyer on June 3. Both of these documents are included in the new filing.

The subpoena demands that “Donald J. Trump and/or the Office of Donald J. Trump” hand over “any and all documents … bearing classification markings, including but not limited to the following.”

The subpoena goes on to specify the various classification markings used by the U.S. government.

When Trump received the subpoena in May, he had two options. Comply or challenge the subpoena. He chose to comply. One of Trump’s lawyers, whose name has been redacted in the new filings, certified in June that “any and all responsive documents” had been handed over and that none were withheld.

It now appears that the statement was untrue, as many documents marked classified were still at Mar-a-Lago.

It bears repeating that the DOJ didn’t ask for classified documents but rather for documents that bear classification markings. Thus, the actual status of the documents is moot.

The certification by Trump’s attorney appears problematic in other regards as well. While the subpoena addresses documents held by Trump and his office, the certification only mentions Trump’s office. The certification also appears to attempt to narrow the scope of what should be handed over by using word games, for instance by referring to documents in “boxes” as opposed to documents generally. The problem for Trump’s attorneys is that all efforts at trying to create wiggle room are nullified by the statement that all “responsive documents” had been handed over.

A far bigger problem is that the use of lawyerese or word games—for instance, leaving out Trump himself and only referring to his office—could have immediately raised red flags at DOJ, practically begging for the matter to be investigated further.

There was no benefit from playing word games. It only invited further scrutiny. If Trump wasn’t willing or able to hand over all documents, his legal team should have challenged the subpoena.

Instead, they attested that all documents marked classified had been returned, when that appears not to have been the case. Notwithstanding that the DOJ photograph appears to show originals, some have argued that the documents retained were merely copies and that all original documents were returned. The problem with that argument is that Trump’s attorney also attested that no copies remained at Mar-a-Lago.

It may well turn out that the lawyer’s certification was the result of incompetence, a case of poor lawyering, and of the left hand not knowing what the right hand was doing. But to a DOJ that has already shown that it’s determined to get Trump, these arguments won’t hold sway.

It’s likely that the DOJ will now target Trump’s attorney to find out the details behind the certification. Who authorized the lawyer to sign the certification? Who told the lawyer to say that everything had been handed over? Did anyone tell the attorney to lie?

The bottom line is that a lawyer for Trump might have walked into a perjury trap by attesting to something that wasn’t true. In the first instance, this is a problem for the lawyer. But it may become Trump’s problem if the lawyer implicates him, truthfully or not, as we have already seen happen in the case of Michael Cohen, Trump’s former attorney.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
Re: The Russian conspiracy, Comey, Mueller, Durham, Mar a Lago and related matters
« Reply #1403 on: September 08, 2022, 03:10:01 AM »
So, the law applies only to Trump?

Agents give instances of FBI leaders’ lax security

Breaches rampant in no-phone zone

BY KERRY PICKET THE WASHINGTON TIMES

An FBI whistleblower has told the House Judiciary Committee that he witnessed the bureau’s deputy director violating security policies and putting classified information at risk.

The special agent told lawmakers that Paul Abbate, who oversees all FBI domestic and international investigative and intelligence activities, used his smartphone in an FBI sensitive compartmented information facility, or SCIF, which is a violation of bureau security protocols.

Just bringing a phone into the SCIF is a security breach.

The senior agent accused Mr. Abbate of walking around in the SCIF while talking on the smartphone and sending text messages and emails.

Another FBI whistleblower said senior FBI officials routinely break the no-cellphone rule in SCIFs.

The Washington Times viewed a letter the whistleblowers’ attorney sent to Judiciary Committee Republicans that described the accusations against Mr. Abbate. It is part of a flood of FBI whistleblower complaints about politicized investigations and misconduct at the bureau. This time, the subject of the complaint is in the top tier of FBI leadership.

The FBI bristled when asked about the whistleblowers’ accusations. “This reporting is categorically false,” the FBI said in a statement to The Times.

The whistleblowers’ attorney, Kurt Siuzdak, who is also a former FBI

Exclusive

agent, said he sent the disclosures to the FBI’s office of general counsel but was rebuffed.

“The technical and operational secrets in the United States lie within SCIFS. They are the place where the most important information regarding the security of the US is. And the fact that this number of executives would just violate the requirements is outrageous,” Mr. Siuzdak said.

The FBI’s office of general counsel said in a series of email exchanges with Mr. Siuzdak that the whistleblower complaints were not submitted properly.

The disclosure of SCIF security breaches was presented to Congress just weeks after the FBI raided former President Donald Trump’s residence in Florida to investigate suspected mishandling of classified material.

The search warrant said the agents were investigating a reported violation of the Espionage Act. This World War I-era law covers crimes beyond spying, including the refusal to return national security documents upon request or mishandling or destroying classified government documents.

“I appreciate that people are heeding my call and coming forward to restore integrity to their agencies — in this case, the FBI. We encourage more to come forward. The only way to restore credibility to these agencies is if we expose the corruption and hold people accountable,” Sen. Ron Johnson, Wisconsin Republican and member of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs committees, told The Times.

“It’s always dangerous when leaders believe rules don’t apply to them but then enforce those rules against everyone else. It is particularly dangerous when federal law enforcement believes it is above the law and then proceeds to apply the law unequally in a highly partisan fashion. This has created the multi-tier system of justice that is unacceptable in America. It must be exposed and stopped.”

Mr. Abbate is not the first highranking FBI official accused of using a cellphone inside a SCIF. In 2018, The Daily Caller reported that Peter Strzok, the FBI agent who ran the investigation into former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s email server, texted his thenlover, FBI lawyer Lisa Page, from inside a SCIF.

The reckless practice is widespread, another senior FBI agent told members of Congress in a separate whistleblower complaint.

The second agent said executivelevel FBI officials have been bringing cellphones into the SCIFs at field offi ces across the country and at a facility in McLean, Virginia, known as LX1, an X-shaped building that houses the National Counterterrorism Center and the National Counterproliferation Center.

Although all FBI personnel are prohibited from bringing electronic devices into SCIFs, FBI senior executives wore cellphones in the SCIFs in front of their subordinates, the second whistleblower said.

According to the agent, some executives would walk in and out of the SCIFs numerous times wearing cellphones on their belts. Although some would leave the SCIF to answer their phones, others would not, the agent said.

Some executives wore multiple cellphone belt holders, indicating they were also wearing their cellphones in the SCIFs, according to the agent.

The agent said that FBI executives who prepare daily briefings for FBI Director Christopher A. Wray or participate in FBI headquarters daily briefings have brought classified materials to their residences without properly packaging them for transport or storage in their homes.

The second anonymous FBI agent said that although the bureau is investigating people not currently employed by the FBI for mishandling of classified materials, he cannot recall an FBI Senior Executive Service official who was ever reprimanded for these violations unless they involved incidents in which the classified material was found in public


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
AMcC reminds Dems of their history
« Reply #1405 on: September 10, 2022, 11:26:40 AM »
A New Salvo against the Trump Justice Department

Then-President Donald Trump speaks during the coronavirus response daily briefing at the White House, April 10, 2020.(Yuri Gripas/Reuters)
Share
232 Comments
Listen to article
By ANDREW C. MCCARTHY
September 10, 2022 6:30 AM

The Russiagate ‘collusion’ context seems conveniently absent.

The New York Times had a big article Thursday on the release of a memoir by Geoffrey Berman about his tenure leading the U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York. The book, called Holding the Line, was released this week. (I was an SDNY prosecutor for many years and overlapped with Berman when he was a prosecutor in the early Nineties. I don’t know him well.)

The memoir is the latest salvo against the Trump Justice Department, an odd crusade in light of that department’s (a) controversial appointment of a special counsel to investigate the then president, and (b) key role in dispelling Trump’s “stolen election” balderdash.

Berman was never a Senate-confirmed U.S. attorney. He was nominated after volunteering to work on the 2016 Trump campaign, and appointed on an acting basis by Trump’s then attorney general, Jeff Sessions. In 2018, when the position had gone for many months without a confirmed U.S. attorney, the SDNY judges appointed Berman under a statute that enables the court to fill a vacancy pending Senate confirmation of a presidential nominee. Berman was in the news in June 2020 because Trump fired him, at the behest of then attorney general Bill Barr, when Berman rebuffed Barr’s request that he resign and take a different high-level Justice Department post so the administration could try to install a different nominee. (Barr instead ended up installing Audrey Strauss, Berman’s deputy at the time, as the acting U.S. attorney.)

The most explosive allegation in Berman’s book appears to be that Trump wanted former Obama secretary of state John Kerry to be prosecuted over his discussions with Iranian officials. These talks were seen, with abundant reason, as undermining Trump’s foreign policy of abandoning President Obama’s Iran nuclear deal and implementing sanctions pressure.

Berman relates that he was pressured by the Trump Justice Department in 2018 to pursue that investigation. The impetus was the theory that Kerry had violated the Logan Act. Berman appears to have believed, rightly, that such a prosecution would have been absurd. He also says he does not know what prompted Trump’s Justice Department to pursue a Kerry investigation — it appears to him simply to have been a matter of “the conduct that had annoyed the president was now a priority of the Department of Justice.”

Absent from this account is some salient context. One needn’t delve too deep to become skeptical about Berman’s reported mystification.

A little over a year earlier, Trump had been induced to fire his first national-security adviser, retired Army general Michael Flynn. In late 2016, while Flynn was a Trump transition official, and after it was clear that he was to be Trump’s top White House adviser on national-security matters, he famously engaged in discussions with Russia’s ambassador to the United States, Sergey Kislyak. Though that made Flynn just one of countless political figures to rub elbows with the Kremlin’s envoy, a glib man-about-town, this was the era of Democrat-fabricated Trump–Russia “collusion” hysteria. In the spirit of the times, the Obama administration, its Justice Department, and the FBI conducted an investigation of Flynn. The essential basis for suspecting Flynn of criminal wrongdoing was . . . yes  . . . the Logan Act.

As I recounted in Ball of Collusion (in an excerpt we published here):

On January 12, 2017, The Washington Post’s David Ignatius published a leak from an unidentified “senior U.S. government official,” describing Flynn’s communications with Kislyak after Obama announced the anti-Russia sanctions. Naturally, the classified leak was not the crime that interested the journalist. Ignatius instead focused on an imaginary crime — one that just happens to have been under consideration at that very time in the top tier of the Obama Justice Department: Flynn’s flouting of the Logan Act.

Deputy Attorney General [Sally] Yates was theorizing that it might be possible to prosecute Flynn under this vestige of the John Adams administration (1797–1801), a dark time for free-speech rights. The statute purports to criminalize “any correspondence or intercourse” with agents of a foreign sovereign conducted “without authority of the United States” — an impossibly vague phrase that probably means permission from the executive branch. No court has had an opportunity to rule that the Logan Act is unconstitutional because, realizing its infirmity, the Justice Department never invokes it. In its 219-year history, the Logan Act has not resulted in a single conviction; indeed, there have been only two indictments, the last one in 1852.

Yet, the Logan Act appears to have been what the Justice Department had in mind. In later Senate testimony, Yates recounted that, in the first days of the new administration, she and Mary McCord (then-chief of Justice’s National Security Division) brought their ongoing concerns about Flynn to the attention of Don McGahn, then the White House counsel. According to Yates, “the first thing we did was to explain to Mr. McGahn that the underlying conduct that General Flynn engaged in was problematic in and of itself.” The “underlying conduct,” of course, was Flynn’s communication with Kislyak — his temerity to engage in talks with foreign officials without approval from the Obama administration.

The Wall Street Journal later scathingly recounted Yates’s bout of amnesia when she was asked, in Senate testimony, whether then vice president Joe Biden had raised the Logan Act during a January 5, 2017, Oval Office discussion about Flynn between Obama and some top administration security officials. Though Yates said she could not remember, the Journal’s editorial board provided a refresher:

The Logan Act was the main premise that Justice Department officials and the FBI cited for going after Gen. Flynn for his conversations with Russia’s ambassador to the U.S. Notes taken by the FBI head of counterintelligence, Bill Priestap, ask if the goal of the bureau’s interview with Mr. Flynn was to “get him to admit to breaking the Logan Act.” Notes about the Jan. 5, 2017, Oval Office meeting taken by FBI agent Peter Strzok have Mr. Biden bringing up the Logan Act. And the leak to the Washington Post that ginned up all the hysteria against Gen. Flynn tied his calls to Russia’s ambassador to the Logan Act.

Ms. Yates is rewriting history. While she testified that the Flynn investigation was all about counterintelligence, her argument that Gen. Flynn had “neutered” the sanctions President Obama had imposed on Russia is also an implicit Logan Act argument.

We’re delighted everyone now agrees that prosecuting Mr. Flynn under this statute would have been ridiculous. In many ways the Logan Act has become the new Steele dossier, something that was taken very seriously by the FBI and Justice and the press—but is now so discredited that everyone wants to run away from it. Including Sally Yates and Joe Biden.

I could not agree more with what I take to be Berman’s contention that the Justice Department should never use the Logan Act as a pretext for weaponizing law enforcement against an administration’s political opponents. But the suggestions that Trump invented this ploy, or that it’s hard to imagine how Trump could possibly have come up with the idea of applying the Logan Act to Kerry, is a bit rich, no?

Berman also recounts what he took to be Trump Justice Department pressure to prosecute Greg Craig, the former Obama White House counsel, on crimes related to the Foreign Agent Registration Act. FARA prosecutions are only slightly less rare than the Logan Act prosecutions: just seven (and only three successful) in the half century prior to the Trump administration. But then — what a surprise! — everything changed, as FARA became the backbone of the Mueller investigation’s unsuccessful attempt to establish a Trump–Russia conspiracy.

After being convicted in a separate trial, former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort agreed to Special Counsel Mueller’s offer to settle the rest of the case by pleading guilty to, among other things, a conspiracy to violate FARA — in connection with Ukraine, not Russia. Meanwhile, Elliott Broidy, a Trump and GOP fundraiser, pled guilty to conspiring to violate FARA on behalf of Malaysia and China (but was eventually pardoned by Trump).

In light of Berman’s suggestion that the FARA prosecution of Craig seems to have been a political hit job from out of the blue, we should recall that Mueller induced a false-statements guilty plea from Alex van der Zwaan, formerly a junior lawyer at Craig’s firm, Skadden Arps. The plea arose out of work for Ukraine that van der Zwaan did in collaboration with the firm, Manafort, Manafort’s partner Rick Gates, and . . . yes . . . Greg Craig.

In a nutshell, Craig and a Skadden team prepared a report for the purpose of defending former Ukrainian president (and Manafort political-consultancy client) Viktor Yanukovych from allegations that he persecuted a political rival. In 2019, Skadden entered an agreement with the Justice Department that required it to disgorge the $4.6 million in fees it earned on the Ukraine project. The firm admitted that (a) it should have registered as an agent of Ukraine under FARA, and (b) Craig, a firm partner, had “made false and misleading oral and written statements” six years earlier (in 2013) that caused the Justice Department’s FARA unit to conclude the firm need not register. Meantime, Craig was indicted, not for failing to register under FARA but for providing false statements to the Justice Department’s FARA unit. While the statements were sufficiently lawyerly that jurors probably would have had a tough time convicting Craig in any event, his quick acquittal may be explained by the technical nicety that the prosecution faced significant statute-of-limitations hurdles (for most federal crimes, the statute of limitations is five years; Craig was indicted in 2018 for conduct that occurred from 2012 to 2013).

Berman may be right that the Craig prosecution was a mistake, but it was a closer call than he suggests. More to the point, the lesson of the episode is that the Mueller team’s zeal to nail Trump on something — anything — took the Justice Department to the extreme of pouring immense prosecutorial resources and invoking rarely used laws to scrutinize a transaction that had utterly nothing to do with Russia . . . or Trump.

The Times report features a provocative story drawn from Berman’s book, one that close reading finds inconclusive — and one that is odd if one happens to know the players involved. Berman writes that in September 2018, his deputy Rob Khuzami reported that he’d gotten a call from Ed O’Callaghan, then a top official at Main Justice. (Khuzami is my longtime friend and former trial partner; I’ve always thought highly of O’Callaghan, with whom I overlapped in the SDNY in the late Nineties.) According to the Times’ account, Berman’s book says O’Callaghan asked that the SDNY “‘even things out’ by charging Mr. Craig before Election Day” — translation: indict a prominent Democrat to settle the score for all the Trump-related prosecutions.

O’Callaghan is a very smart guy, so I have a hard time imagining him saying something so stupid and so at odds with what I take to be his conception of proper law enforcement. Reached for comment, he told the Times it was “categorically false” that he’d made such statements. Perusing the report, I note that the Times does not claim that Khuzami quoted O’Callaghan as making such a statement — just that “the book” portrays O’Callaghan as having done so. There is, however, no suggestion that Berman heard O’Callaghan say such a thing.

I have no idea what happened, but it is easy to surmise that someone who held Trump and his Justice Department in low esteem, and who was thus inspired to put the worst spin on things, deduced that Trump officials politicized the investigation of Craig — eager to show that a notable Democrat was somehow spared from being put through the Mueller wringer, despite being implicated in the same Ukraine misadventure over which Mueller nailed Manafort, Gates, and van der Zwaan.

To sum up, no, Craig and Kerry should not have been hounded. Let’s not forget, though, that when it came to rationalizing bogus claims of Trump collusion with Russia, the nation’s top prosecutors didn’t seem too terribly upset about abusive Justice Department resort to FARA and the Logan Act.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
Dershowitz on Executive Privilege
« Reply #1406 on: September 14, 2022, 10:54:07 AM »
Is This the End of Executive Privilege? Or Only for Trump?
by Alan M. Dershowitz
September 14, 2022 at 5:00 am

Send   
Print
[L]et's see how this would have played out if the shoe were on the other foot.

What if Obama had been called by a congressional committee to turn over all internal communications — written and oral — regarding his decision, and he claimed executive privilege? And what if then President Trump were to have waived Obama's privilege?

One thing we know to be certain: many of the academic "experts" and media "pundits" who now support the argument that an incumbent president can waive the executive privilege of his predecessor would be making exactly the opposite argument. They would be saying — as I am saying now— that presidents would be reluctant to have confidential communications with their aides if they knew these communications could be made public by their successor in order to gain partisan electoral advantage. It would essentially mark the end of executive privilege, which is rooted in Article II of the Constitution.

Accurate predictions today require us to know which persons or parties will be helped or hurt by particular outcomes. Hypocrisy reigns. And those who engage in it are not even embarrassed when their double standards are exposed. The current "principle" is that the ends justify the means, especially if the end is the end of Trump.

"Because we can" has become the current mantra of both parties. Neutral principles, which apply equally without regard to partisan advantage, is for wimps, not party leaders or other government officials. "They do it too" has become the excuse de jure. Both parties do it, but that is not a valid excuse even in hardball politics. Two constitutional violations do not cancel each other. They only make things worse.

Executive privilege is important to both parties -- and to the constitutional rule of law. Today's partisan victory for Democrats, if their waiver argument is accepted, will soon become their loss should Republicans take control.

So beware of what you wish for. Today's dream may well become tomorrow's nightmare.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: Dershowitz on Executive Privilege
« Reply #1407 on: September 14, 2022, 10:56:30 AM »
The dems do not plan on ever losing power.

Is This the End of Executive Privilege? Or Only for Trump?
by Alan M. Dershowitz
September 14, 2022 at 5:00 am

Send   
Print
[L]et's see how this would have played out if the shoe were on the other foot.

What if Obama had been called by a congressional committee to turn over all internal communications — written and oral — regarding his decision, and he claimed executive privilege? And what if then President Trump were to have waived Obama's privilege?

One thing we know to be certain: many of the academic "experts" and media "pundits" who now support the argument that an incumbent president can waive the executive privilege of his predecessor would be making exactly the opposite argument. They would be saying — as I am saying now— that presidents would be reluctant to have confidential communications with their aides if they knew these communications could be made public by their successor in order to gain partisan electoral advantage. It would essentially mark the end of executive privilege, which is rooted in Article II of the Constitution.

Accurate predictions today require us to know which persons or parties will be helped or hurt by particular outcomes. Hypocrisy reigns. And those who engage in it are not even embarrassed when their double standards are exposed. The current "principle" is that the ends justify the means, especially if the end is the end of Trump.

"Because we can" has become the current mantra of both parties. Neutral principles, which apply equally without regard to partisan advantage, is for wimps, not party leaders or other government officials. "They do it too" has become the excuse de jure. Both parties do it, but that is not a valid excuse even in hardball politics. Two constitutional violations do not cancel each other. They only make things worse.

Executive privilege is important to both parties -- and to the constitutional rule of law. Today's partisan victory for Democrats, if their waiver argument is accepted, will soon become their loss should Republicans take control.

So beware of what you wish for. Today's dream may well become tomorrow's nightmare.


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
NRO: Russian source for Steele dossier on FBI payroll for three years
« Reply #1409 on: September 14, 2022, 05:36:35 PM »
By BRITTANY BERNSTEIN
September 14, 2022 8:10 AM
Igor Danchenko, a primary contributor to the Steele dossier, was hired by the FBI as a confidential informant in 2017, Special Counsel John Durham revealed in a new court filing.

The Russian national was ultimately charged in 2021 as part of Durham’s probe of the Trump-Russia investigation; he is accused of lying to the FBI regarding his sources for some claims in the Steele dossier. The charges focus on statements Danchenko made related to the sources he used in providing information to an investigative firm in the United Kingdom.

The new filing reveals the FBI hired Danchenko as a confidential informant in March 2017 after having interviewed him about his work on the dossier months earlier. Danchenko is accused of having made false statements regarding the sources of some information that he provided to a U.K. investigative firm in 2017 that was later passed to the FBI.

Long before Danchenko’s involvement in the Steele dossier, he was the subject of an FBI counterintelligence investigation in 2009 as an analyst at the Brookings Institute after one of his colleagues alleged that Danchenko asked if he would be willing to sell him classified information. In 2011, the FBI closed the probe after Danchenko left the U.S.

It is not clear whether Danchenko worked as an informant to provide information about the dossier or as part of the investigation into the Trump campaign, the Washington Free Beacon reports.

The allegation that Trump colluded with Russia and “accepted a regular flow of intelligence from the Kremlin, including on his Democratic and other political rivals,” stemmed from the dossier by former British intelligence agent Christopher Steele. After the 2016 election, the dossier was found to have included a number of unverified or erroneous claims and Steele was accused of peddling the Russian election interference hoax to undermine Trump’s campaign with his dossier, which was funded by the Clinton campaign through its law firm Perkins Coie.

During an interview with the FBI, Danchenko suggested that even he was skeptical of some of the contents included in the dossier.

“Even raw intelligence from credible sources, I take it with a grain of salt,” Danchenko said. “Who knows, what if it’s not particularly accurate? Is it just a rumor or is there more to it?”

However, the FBI reportedly did not share Danchenko’s concerns with the Justice Department. The DOJ inspector general found in 2019 that the FBI had relied on information from the dossier despite Danchenko casting doubt on its contents.

The FBI ended its relationship with Danchenko in October 2020.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: NRO: Russian source for Steele dossier on FBI payroll for three years
« Reply #1410 on: September 14, 2022, 05:59:51 PM »
The FBI knew he was lying before they started paying him.

By BRITTANY BERNSTEIN
September 14, 2022 8:10 AM
Igor Danchenko, a primary contributor to the Steele dossier, was hired by the FBI as a confidential informant in 2017, Special Counsel John Durham revealed in a new court filing.

The Russian national was ultimately charged in 2021 as part of Durham’s probe of the Trump-Russia investigation; he is accused of lying to the FBI regarding his sources for some claims in the Steele dossier. The charges focus on statements Danchenko made related to the sources he used in providing information to an investigative firm in the United Kingdom.

The new filing reveals the FBI hired Danchenko as a confidential informant in March 2017 after having interviewed him about his work on the dossier months earlier. Danchenko is accused of having made false statements regarding the sources of some information that he provided to a U.K. investigative firm in 2017 that was later passed to the FBI.

Long before Danchenko’s involvement in the Steele dossier, he was the subject of an FBI counterintelligence investigation in 2009 as an analyst at the Brookings Institute after one of his colleagues alleged that Danchenko asked if he would be willing to sell him classified information. In 2011, the FBI closed the probe after Danchenko left the U.S.

It is not clear whether Danchenko worked as an informant to provide information about the dossier or as part of the investigation into the Trump campaign, the Washington Free Beacon reports.

The allegation that Trump colluded with Russia and “accepted a regular flow of intelligence from the Kremlin, including on his Democratic and other political rivals,” stemmed from the dossier by former British intelligence agent Christopher Steele. After the 2016 election, the dossier was found to have included a number of unverified or erroneous claims and Steele was accused of peddling the Russian election interference hoax to undermine Trump’s campaign with his dossier, which was funded by the Clinton campaign through its law firm Perkins Coie.

During an interview with the FBI, Danchenko suggested that even he was skeptical of some of the contents included in the dossier.

“Even raw intelligence from credible sources, I take it with a grain of salt,” Danchenko said. “Who knows, what if it’s not particularly accurate? Is it just a rumor or is there more to it?”

However, the FBI reportedly did not share Danchenko’s concerns with the Justice Department. The DOJ inspector general found in 2019 that the FBI had relied on information from the dossier despite Danchenko casting doubt on its contents.

The FBI ended its relationship with Danchenko in October 2020.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
Re: The Russian conspiracy, Comey, Mueller, Durham, Mar a Lago and related matters
« Reply #1411 on: September 14, 2022, 06:12:27 PM »
If I have this right, the FBI knowingly paid a Russian agent for three years to get Russian lies to use against the American president.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: The Russian conspiracy, Comey, Mueller, Durham, Mar a Lago and related matters
« Reply #1412 on: September 14, 2022, 06:18:36 PM »
If I have this right, the FBI knowingly paid a Russian agent for three years to get Russian lies to use against the American president.

Yes.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: The Russian conspiracy, Comey, Mueller, Durham, Mar a Lago and related matters
« Reply #1413 on: September 14, 2022, 07:43:41 PM »
If I have this right, the FBI knowingly paid a Russian agent for three years to get Russian lies to use against the American president.

Yes.

https://thehill.com/opinion/white-house/442944-fbis-steele-story-falls-apart-false-intel-and-media-contacts-were-flagged/

Notes and testimony from senior Justice Department official Bruce Ohr make clear Steele admitted early on that he was “desperate” to get Trump defeated in the election, was working in some capacity for the GOP candidate’s opponent, and considered his intelligence raw and untested. Ohr testified that he alerted FBI and other senior Justice officials to these concerns in August 2016.

Steele eventually was fired by the FBI for leaking to the press — in violation of his source agreement with the bureau — and lying about it. But that did not happen until Nov. 1, 2016 — after the FISA warrant was secured. And, even then, the court wasn’t notified until a few months later, well after Election Day.

Steele’s admission of media contacts on Oct. 11, 2016, and the mere existence of his meeting at the State Department likewise violated his confidentiality agreement with the bureau and clearly were discoverable well before the FISA warrant was secured Oct. 21, 2016.

If the State Department and Ohr could figure out that Steele was a partisan, paid by a political client and facing an Election Day deadline to broadcast raw intelligence that in some cases probably was false, the FBI should have done the same before it ever envisioned taking his evidence to a FISA court.

Igor Danchenko, a primary contributor to the Steele dossier, was hired by the FBI as a confidential informant in 2017, Special Counsel John Durham revealed in a new court filing.


https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/justice/who-is-igor-danchenko-steele-dossier-source-john-durham

The FBI knew Steele was full of shiite and knew Danchenko was his primary source. They made Danchenko a CI to hide him. "We cannot reveal sources and methods".


Utterly corrupt.


DougMacG

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18252
    • View Profile
Re: The Russian conspiracy, Comey, Mueller, Durham, Mar a Lago and related matters
« Reply #1414 on: September 15, 2022, 05:04:56 AM »
"Utterly corrupt."

Great post.  We usually think of corrupt motive as enriching yourself or your family, friends with money, but in this case the motive is for the powerful deep state to undermine the Democratic system and take over the country.

I can't think of a criminal charge for that short if treason punishable by life in prison, or I would hope, fair trial followed by plenty of appeals and then lethal injection, if we care about the future of the republic.

Yes, the agency that organized this should be dismantled.

Never again.



Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
POTP: Oathkeeper prosecution
« Reply #1417 on: October 03, 2022, 02:06:51 PM »

Stewart Rhodes, founder of the citizen militia group known as the Oath Keepers. (Susan Walsh/AP)
By Rachel Weiner, Tom Jackman and Spencer S. Hsu
Updated October 3, 2022 at 4:34 p.m. EDT|Published October 3, 2022 at 10:17 a.m. EDT

Listen
2 min
Add to your saved stories
Save

Gift Article

Share
Opening statements are underway in the trial of Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes and other members of the extremist group who face seditious conspiracy and other charges in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Rhodes and four co-defendants — Kelly Meggs, Kenneth Harrelson, Jessica Watkins and Thomas Caldwell — have pleaded not guilty to felony charges alleging that they conspired for weeks after the 2020 presidential election to unleash political violence to oppose the lawful transfer of power to Joe Biden.

The defendants came from Texas, Florida, Ohio and Virginia, and allegedly led a group that traveled to Washington and staged firearms nearby before forcing entry through the Capitol Rotunda doors in combat and tactical gear.

In his opening statement, Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Nestler highlighted violent rhetoric in Oath Keepers’ text messages, video and recorded conversations from before, during and after the Capitol riot to present the group as bent on keeping President Donald Trump in office “by whatever means necessary.” He described Rhodes as a “general overlooking the battlefield,” who oversaw those who broke into the building and encouraged them afterward to keep up an armed rebellion against Biden.

Rhodes and his co-defendants have said their actions were defensive, taken in anticipation of what they believed would be a lawful order from Trump deputizing armed groups under the Insurrection Act.

Rhodes’s attorney Phillip Linder said in court Monday that the evidence would show the “Quick Reaction Forces” of armed Oath Keepers stationed at hotels outside D.C. on Jan. 6 were “not offensive” and for use only “if Trump called them in.”

More coverage:

Oath Keepers sedition trial could reveal new info about Jan. 6 plotting
FAQ: What you need to know about the Oath Keepers trial
Who are the Oath Keepers going to trial on seditious conspiracy charges?
28 minutes ago

These 7 Oath Keepers have pleaded guilty to Jan. 6 conspiracy charges
Return to menu
By Spencer Hsu
Members of the Oath Keepers on the East Front of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Members of the Oath Keepers on the East Front of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. (Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP)
Three Oath Keepers members have already pleaded guilty to seditious conspiracy, and four others to conspiring to obstruct Congress’s confirmation of the presidential vote on Jan. 6, 2021.

Joshua James, 34, of Arab, Ala., and Brian Ullrich, 44, of Guyton, Ga., were charged with seditious conspiracy with Stewart Rhodes. William Todd Wilson, 45, of Newton Grove, N.C., was charged separately. All are cooperating with U.S. prosecutors.

In plea papers, James said that Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes “instructed [him] and others to be prepared and called upon to … use lethal force if necessary” to keep Trump in office. After Jan. 6, James said he spent several weeks with Rhodes in Texas, where he said they gathered weapons, burner phones and tactical gear, then returned to Alabama where he “awaited Rhodes’s instructions,” according to his plea.

Show more

1 hour ago

FBI agent investigating Oath Keepers guarded crying senators on Jan. 6
Return to menu
By Rachel Weiner
On Jan. 6, 2021, FBI special agent Michael Palian was working from home on a health-care fraud squad, he testified as the first witness at the trial of Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes and four others.

Palian was called to the Capitol at 3:30 p.m. that day and was eventually asked to go to the undisclosed location nearby where U.S. senators had relocated.

“It was chaotic,” he said. The senators were in “shock,” he said, and some were crying. At 7:30 p.m., he and about 70 other FBI agents walked the senators back to the Capitol building and into the Senate chamber.

Show more

1 hour ago

Two defendants defer opening statements; testimony to start
Return to menu
By Tom Jackman
A demonstrator wears an Oath Keepers anti-government organization badge on a protective vest during a protest outside the Supreme Court on Jan. 5, 2021.
A demonstrator wears an Oath Keepers anti-government organization badge on a protective vest during a protest outside the Supreme Court on Jan. 5, 2021. (Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg)
After attorneys for Stewart Rhodes, Thomas Caldwell and Jessica Watkins made their opening statements Monday, attorneys for two defendants — Kelly Meggs and Kenneth Harrelson — chose to defer their case introductions to the jury. So prosecutors are now readying their first witness of the trial.

Defense lawyers have the option of giving their opening statement after the prosecution has rested its case or at the outset of the defense case. Defense lawyers are of varying opinions on whether to lay out the defense before the prosecutors start or after they’ve finished. Some believe it is best to get the defense side in before evidence is presented. Some believe it’s better to respond to that evidence after the jury has heard it.

Show more

1 hour ago

Ohio bar owner was a ‘protest junkie’ just ‘there to help,’ lawyer says
Return to menu
By Tom Jackman
Jessica Marie Watkins (second from left) on the east front steps of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Jessica Marie Watkins (second from left) on the east front steps of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. (Jim Bourg/Reuters)
The lawyer for Jessica Watkins, the Ohio bar owner who is accused of leading one of the assaults on the Capitol on Jan. 6, said she became involved with the Oath Keepers out of her compulsion to protect people and had no role in planning for any attack on the Capitol.

Watkins had served in the Army but was discharged early, then served as a firefighter, her attorney Jonathan Crisp said. She started the Ohio State Regular Militia, Crisp said, because “she was a protest junkie. She wanted to go to protests and help law enforcement. She was a medic, she was there to help. She followed protest to protest to protest, that was her thing.”

Watkins joined the Oath Keepers in 2019 and first assisted them in their security actions during the protests in Louisville following the police killing of Breonna Taylor, Crisp said. “You will learn her desire to serve and protect ultimately is what took her to D.C. this day,” Crisp said. “What you will also learn is that Jessica is a transgender woman, and that has impacted who she is and the Oath Keepers around her. A lot of things she did that day was because she tried to fit in.”

Crisp said that he was not arguing that Watkins entering the Capitol on Jan. 6, as part of a stack of Oath Keepers members, was appropriate, and that she said things that would be offensive to some. But he also noted that some of Watkins’s actions, involving recruiting and training members, occurred well before President Donald Trump announced in December that there would be a rally in D.C. on Jan. 6, and so couldn’t have been preparing specifically for the attack on the Capital. Crisp said Watkins did not meet or speak with Stewart Rhodes, the leader of the Oath Keepers, until the day of the Jan. 6 riot.

Prosecutors have said that Watkins helped lead a stack of Oath Keepers up the east side of the Capitol, and helped break open the doors on that side of the building, then encouraged rioters trying to overwhelm police. Crisp claimed that happened after the doors had already been breached.


1 hour ago

Who is Stewart Rhodes, what has he said about Jan. 6 and why does he wear an eye patch?
Return to menu
By Spencer Hsu and Hannah Allam
Stewart Rhodes, founder of Oath Keepers.
Stewart Rhodes, founder of Oath Keepers. (Aaron Davis/The Washington Post)
Would-be paramilitary commander or couch-surfing grifter? Stewart Rhodes has been described as both and more as he has risen to become one of the most visible leaders of the right-wing “Patriot/militia” movement.

A former Army paratrooper and Yale Law School graduate, Rhodes founded the Oath Keepers in 2009 with the what he said was the mission of preventing a “full-blown totalitarian dictatorship,” and drawn recruits from the military and law enforcement. In practice, analysts say, it is a collection of local chapters with a similar, disinformation-fueled ideology about what they view as the inevitable collapse of the U.S. government into tyranny.

Rhodes in interviews with The Washington Post after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, initially denied staging any armed “Quick Reaction Force” teams around Washington, described those who entered the building as having “gone stupid” and “totally off mission,” and said of his communication with members, “I wanted to make sure my guys didn’t get into trouble.”

But his talk before and after the 2020 election was apocalyptic, predicting “open warfare with Marxist insurrectionists by Election Day,” declaring that “civil war is here, right now,” and calling on members to prepare for doomsday scenarios by stocking up on arms, supplies and going to ground for a long battle with authorities.

Rhodes wears an eye patch due to an accident with a firearm. His wife and other associates have previously told The Washington Post that he shot himself while cleaning his gun.

Read what Rhodes and other defendants have said since the 2020 election:

Calls, texts by Oath Keepers founder contain ‘substantial evidence’ of Capitol conspiracy, prosecutors allege
Oath Keepers founder, associates exchanged 19 calls from start of Jan. 6 riot through breach, prosecutors allege
DOJ seeks to build large conspiracy case against Oath Keepers for Jan. 6 riot

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
VDH writes :

"The once American, isolationist, and antiwar Left is now mimicking the old, interventionist, neocon Right. After the failure of the Russian collusion hoax and the various impeachments, it wishes to construct the war as proof that it was right all along about demonic Vladimir Putin—as if anyone ever doubted that he was a dangerous adversary who should never have been appeased by the embarrassing “resets” of Hillary Clinton, John Kerry, Barack Obama—and Joe Biden."

and lets not forget to add this Obama speak that was 100% dead wrong:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1409sXBleg

of. course this is bleached bitted out of our memories by the MSM

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
NRO: MAL
« Reply #1419 on: October 04, 2022, 03:54:30 PM »
By CAROLINE DOWNEY
About Caroline Downey
Follow Caroline Downey On Twitter
October 4, 2022 5:14 PM
In a filing made by his lawyers on Tuesday, former president Donald Trump asked the Supreme Court to overturn the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit’s decision to allow the Department of Justice to continue its review of classified records seized by the FBI at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in August.

Last month, the Eleventh Circuit granted the Justice Department’s request to use the confidential documents in its ongoing criminal investigation into the former president, and instituted a stay on District Court Judge Aileen Cannon’s appointment of a special master, a court-appointed third party adjudicator. Three judges including two Trump appointees and a Barack Obama appointee handed down the ruling. They ruled that the DOJ was no longer required to present the confiscated materials to special master Ray Dearie for his review.

In their filing, Trump’s legal team argued that contra the Eleventh Circuit, the special master should be permitted to survey the documents seized from the Florida property. The application was submitted to Justice Clarence Thomas for consideration, although he is expected to refer the petition to the full court.

“The Eleventh Circuit lacked jurisdiction to review, much less stay, an interlocutory order of the District Court providing for the Special Master to review materials seized from President Trump’s home, including approximately 103 documents the Government contends bear classification markings. This application seeks to vacate only that portion of the Eleventh Circuit’s Stay Order limiting the scope of the Special Master’s review of the documents bearing classification markings,” Trump’s attorneys wrote.

Trump’s legal team wants the documents that were originally exempted from the special master review for the DOJ’s investigation to be brought back in for Dearie to examine. “Any limit on the comprehensive and transparent review of materials seized in the extraordinary raid of a President’s home erodes public confidence in our system of justice,” they said in the filing.

The case was sent to the Eleventh Circuit after the DOJ appealed the ruling of U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon — which first temporarily blocked the government from accessing the documents — arguing that the move jeopardized an ongoing national security risk assessment being conducted by the intelligence community.

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Remember when Trump gave UK nuclear secrets to Russia?
« Reply #1420 on: October 06, 2022, 07:01:37 AM »

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
Obama certainly is a menace
« Reply #1421 on: October 06, 2022, 07:42:40 AM »
"The reports that the Obama administration has told the Russians certain British nuclear secrets in order to secure a New START promotes him from being a mere irritant for the Special Relationship to a downright menace"

WOW
I didn't recall this at all.

also amazing this article is published in the LEFT wing 'Daily Beast'!

he led to the rise of ISIS - the JV team
he helped Iran fund nuclear research and build the impenetrable underground bunkers
he said Cold War is "over"
he made racism far worse in US
he did as little as he could to secure border
his economic policies slowed growth
I am hard pressed to think of anything good other then giving the green light to the Osama raid

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
Nice haul up from the Memory Hole!


ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
this I remember

love how Brock reaches out and grabs Medvedev's hand

as the latter says "I understand"

probably thinking you dope

you think you can charm me ?

laughing but not "out loud


ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
Kash Patel

is a virtual deep state slaying warrior  :-D

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
ET
« Reply #1427 on: October 17, 2022, 02:22:24 AM »
Will James Comey and Robert Mueller Be Prosecuted for Lies John Durham Uncovered?
By Hans Mahncke October 16, 2022

News Analysis

While special counsel John Durham’s prosecution of Steele dossier source Igor Danchenko appears to be headed toward acquittal, Durham has used the trial to make public a number of revelations that cast the entire Trump-Russia collusion narrative in a fresh light.

Most prominently, Durham revealed that on Oct. 3, 2016, the FBI had offered dossier author Christopher Steele up to $1 million to provide any information, physical evidence, or documentary evidence that could back up the claims in his dossier. But despite the huge reward on offer, Steele did not provide any such information.

Crucially, despite Steele’s failure to back up his dossier, a mere 18 days later the FBI proceeded to obtain a FISA warrant against Trump 2016 presidential campaign adviser Carter Page. In its application to the FISA court, the FBI used the Steele dossier—specifically, its claim that Page was acting as an agent of Russia—as evidence.

Then, after Donald Trump won the presidential election on Nov. 8, 2016, the U.S. intelligence community, which included the FBI, began drafting an intelligence community assessment (ICA) on Russian interference in the election. The ICA was issued in early January 2017, claiming that Russia had helped Trump win the election.

The assessment included a summary of the dossier, claiming that it had been partly corroborated. The inclusion of Steele’s dossier in an official U.S. intelligence community product gave the dossier the credibility it had lacked up until that point.

It also gave the media, which had held back from reporting on the dossier between July 2016 and January 2017, the excuse it needed to start doing so. For the next several years, the dossier and its lurid claims became the centerpiece of the media’s campaign against Trump. As Durham has now made public, the inclusion of the dossier in the ICA was based on a lie.

Danchenko on FBI’s Payroll
Another major revelation exposed by Durham in a pre-trial motion was that Danchenko had been on the FBI’s payroll between March 2017 and October 2020 as a confidential human source (CHS). By bestowing this coveted status on Danchenko, the FBI was able to conceal the existence of Danchenko from congressional and other investigators. This was crucial, as Danchenko had told FBI investigators in January 2017 that the dossier was based on rumors and gossip made in jest. The admission that the Steele dossier was nothing more than bar talk needed to be concealed if the FBI was to continue its investigation of Trump.

Appointing Danchenko as a CHS had another benefit for the FBI. As Danchenko’s handler, FBI agent Kevin Helson, confirmed in court last week, because he was an incoming CHS, Danchenko was directed to scrub his phone. Conveniently, that also meant scrubbing evidence of Danchenko’s alleged lies to the FBI, evidence that Durham now lacks.

Comey’s Lies
In March 2017, then-FBI Director James Comey briefed congressional leaders, the so-called Gang of Eight, on his investigation of the Trump campaign. As Comey’s briefing notes reveal, members of Congress were not told about Steele’s failure to back up his dossier, despite the huge reward on offer, nor were they told that Danchenko had disavowed the dossier.

Additionally, Comey told congressional leaders that the dossier was “derived primarily from a Russian-based Sub-Source” and that the “FBI has no control over the Russian-based Sub-Source.” The same wording was also used by the FBI in the Page FISA warrant application. And it was entirely false. Danchenko was not “Russian-based,” he was a former Brookings Institution analyst based in Virginia. And not only did the FBI have control over him, but he was working for them.

Comey’s lies successfully ratcheted up the pressure and in May 2017, acting Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appointed former FBI Director Robert Mueller as special counsel to investigate claims of collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia.

Mueller’s Lies
Mueller has denied having investigated the Steele dossier. In congressional testimony on July 24, 2019, Mueller repeatedly stated that the dossier was outside his purview. However, evidence elicited by Durham last week from two counterintelligence agents, Brittany Hertzog and Amy Anderson, paints a very different picture.

Hertzog and Anderson were assigned to Mueller’s special counsel office in the summer of 2017. Hertzog testified last week that she was assigned the task of investigating the Steele dossier, a task that Mueller claimed was outside the purview of his investigation. According to Anderson’s testimony, Mueller’s dossier team comprised at least five agents.

As part of their assignment, Hertzog and Anderson investigated two of Danchenko’s alleged sub-sources, Olga Glakina, a Russian national living in Cyprus, and Charles Dolan, a public relations executive with decades-long ties to Bill and Hillary Clinton. Illustrating the depths to which Mueller’s team went to investigate the dossier, Anderson flew to Cyprus to personally interview Galkina.

According to Anderson’s testimony last week, Galkina admitted that Dolan was a source for the dossier. Given Dolan’s longstanding ties to the Clintons, this presented a huge problem for Mueller’s team. When Anderson additionally found out that Dolan was well connected in the higher echelons of the Russian government, she recommended that an investigation into Dolan be opened. However, according to her testimony, Mueller’s team blocked the investigation from going forward and destroyed her memo on the matter.

Mueller’s false statements do not end there. A central alleged figure to the dossier, Sergei Millian, now claims on Twitter that he was in touch with Mueller’s office from 2017 to 2019. Mueller’s report claims that Millian refused to meet with investigators. Millian claims that he offered to meet Mueller’s team in various locations, including in the United Kingdom and Switzerland. Mueller’s team could easily have arranged such a meeting if it had wanted to, as illustrated by the fact it was willing and able to interview Galkina in Cyprus.

It appears that the reason Mueller did not want to talk to Millian—and later lied about this fact—is that Millian is central to the dossier. According to Steele, Millian was the originator of the dossier’s key allegations, including that there was a “well-developed conspiracy of cooperation” between Trump and the Kremlin, the infamous pee tape story, and that Russia had helped Trump by passing hacked Democratic National Committee emails to Wikileaks.

However, there was a snag. Millian never spoke to Steele or Danchenko. Danchenko later admitted to the FBI that he had told Steele otherwise. This was not only a problem for Danchenko, but also for Mueller and the FBI. Without Millian, the dossier’s main allegations would have collapsed. That is why Mueller could not afford to talk to Millian.

While Durham’s revelations explain crucial aspects of the false witch hunt against Trump, they do not amount to much unless those responsible are held to account.

Durham himself has shown a marked disinterest in pursuing key government actors such as Comey or Mueller, focusing instead on private actors. A possible reason for this may be that Durham’s hands were tied by Biden’s Department of Justice. If that is the case, Durham’s final report, which will likely be issued in the next few months, should detail instances of such obstruction.

Whatever the reasons for Durham’s failure to pursue FBI leadership and Mueller’s team, he has now left a trail of evidence for others to pursue.

For instance, Mueller’s untrue statement that he did not investigate the Steele dossier is still within the statute of limitations until 2024 for charges to be brought. The concealment of Danchenko behind CHS status carried on until 2020, meaning that the statute of limitations on related charges does not expire until 2025. Durham may be nearing the end of his work, but there is plenty left for others to pick up.

==========================================


Agent says FBI ignored request to examine Democrat linked to dossier

BY JEFF MORDOCK THE WASHINGTON TIMES

An FBI agent who served on special counsel Robert Mueller’s team has revealed that her request to interrogate a Democratic operative involved in the anti-Trump dossier was scuttled by top officials at the bureau.

FBI agent Amy Anderson took the stand Friday in the trial of Russian analyst Igor Danchenko. Mr. Danchenko was charged with lying to the FBI about how he obtained information for former British spy Christopher Steele’s dossier.

Ms. Anderson, who was part of Mr. Mueller’s team investigating purported Trump-Russia collusion, said she asked in 2017 to interview Democratic operative Charles Dolan about the dossier but FBI officials ignored and then deep-sixed her requests.

“I wanted to look into him,” Ms. Anderson testified in the federal courtroom in Alexandria, Virginia. “The job at the time was to verify if statements in the dossier were valid or not, so if the witness had knowledge of those statements, that would have been an important part of the job.”

Ms. Anderson was the second witness Friday to testify that an FBI supervisor stymied efforts to look into Mr. Dolan, a longtime Democratic operative with ties to Hillary Clinton.

It was the latest evidence of FBI failures to scrutinize claims of collusion when investigating Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign and then his presidency. The trial, however, is focused on claims of Mr. Danchenko’s dishonesty in what is likely the last act of special counsel John Durham’s three-year investigation into the origins of the FBI’s hunt for Trump-Russia collusion.

Mr. Durham’s case sustained a setback Friday when the judge tossed out one of the five counts of lying to the

FBI. The dismissed count claimed Mr. Danchenko lied when he told FBI Special Agent Kevin Helson that he “talked” with Mr. Dolan in 2016 about information that ended up in the Steele dossier. Rather than talking directly, Mr. Danchenko and Mr. Helson exchanged emails. U.S. District Judge Anthony J. Trenga said that nuance undermined the case.

Mr. Danchenko faces up to four years in prison on each of the remaining four counts.

Earlier Friday, Brittany Hertzog, a former FBI intelligence analyst who worked on Mr. Mueller’s inquiry, testified that she also pressed to interview Mr. Dolan and made that recommendation to the FBI’s headquarters and Washington field office.

“I believe it needed to be acted on,” Ms. Hertzog testified.

Despite pressure from Ms. Anderson and Ms. Hertzog to open an investigation into Mr. Dolan, nothing happened, they said. They blamed the FBI’s chain of command, but they did not provide further details.

Ms. Anderson said her request to take “investigative steps” against Mr. Dolan sat in the FBI system for three to four weeks before she deleted it. She said she erased the request because it couldn’t remain in the FBI’s computer system if no one was going to take action on it.

Investigative steps would include subpoenaing Mr. Dolan for testimony and executing a search warrant for his phone and email records.

Ms. Anderson and Ms. Hertzog said they don’t know why investigators ignored their requests.

On Thursday, Mr. Dolan testified that he lied to Mr. Danchenko in 2016 when he claimed to have information from a Republican insider about why Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort resigned from the campaign. That information, pulled from a cable news talking head, made its way into Mr. Steele’s compilation of unverified and salacious claims against Mr. Trump.

The accusations surrounding Mr. Manafort’s departure from the Trump campaign appear in the Steele dossier and are attributed to “an American political figure associated with Donald Trump.”

That information came from Mr. Dolan, who said he learned it by having drinks with “a GOP friend who knows the players.” Under oath, Mr. Dolan testified that he never spoke with a Republican source and acknowledged that the information came from an analyst on a cable news talk show.

Ms. Anderson said they started suspecting that Mr. Dolan contributed the Manafort information after traveling to Cyprus and interviewing Olga Galkina, a childhood friend of Mr. Danchenko’s.

“She was slightly hesitant. She asked me to remove my sunglasses so she could look me directly in the eye and confirmed it was Mr. Dolan,” Ms. Anderson said. She said Mr. Dolan would have been of interest to Mr. Mueller’s team because of his connections to the Russian government. Mr. Dolan had done public relations work for the Kremlin and developed a strong connection with Dimitry Peskov, a spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“Anyone who had access to the Kremlin would have been very valuable,” she said.
« Last Edit: October 17, 2022, 02:28:02 AM by Crafty_Dog »




ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
Re: The Russian conspiracy, Comey, Mueller, Durham, Mar a Lago and related matters
« Reply #1431 on: November 01, 2022, 08:25:10 AM »
kind of ironic how pompous Weissmann tries to clever his way out of insulting the DOJ attorneys
by saying the are not the big guns needed to take down Trump .  And saying how smart it is to have  Jamie Raskin and Merrick Garland leading the case.

ironic , since Weissmann FAILED to bring down Trump with the phony Russian Collusion senile Mueller mob.

he himself is the big loser .

He claims it is so smart a  strategy  to indict /convict a "lower level" government employee for mishandling classified documents to then be able to argue :

we got this low level gov. employee so how can we not go after the vastly more dangerous Trump who is guilty (in his mind - the same or worse crimes )?

then add to this the  laughable left wing :

"NO ONE IS ABOVE THE LAW!"




 

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
Re: The Russian conspiracy, Comey, Mueller, Durham, Mar a Lago and related matters
« Reply #1433 on: November 05, 2022, 01:49:19 PM »
 :x :x :x :x :x :x :x :x :x

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
AG Barr: There will be no accountability for FBI
« Reply #1434 on: November 05, 2022, 02:00:45 PM »
Given the ostentatious integrity he showed in going against Trump, this is sure to get a lot of coverage.

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/former-ag-barr-there-will-be-no-fbi-accountability-after-russiagate-debacle


ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
Durham report
« Reply #1436 on: May 15, 2023, 02:09:32 PM »
perhaps the final post here

after years all Durham can do is come out with a written note to the principal scolding
those involved

the principal will simply throw in the recycle bin

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/katiepavlich/2023/05/15/durham-n2623276

who would have thought this would be the result ?
 :roll:

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
"perhaps the final post here"

??? :-o :-o :-o




G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
Another chance for GM to take a win with AMcC
« Reply #1442 on: May 19, 2023, 10:44:44 AM »
By ANDREW C. MCCARTHY
May 16, 2023 2:16 PM
The bureau expected Clinton to be the next president. So her Trump strategy became the FBI’s Trump strategy.

Among the most troubling conclusions in special counsel John Durham’s Russiagate report is that the FBI — even as it relied on Clinton-campaign-funded opposition research against Donald Trump that it failed to verify — ignored strongly supported intelligence that Hillary Clinton was intentionally smearing Trump as a Putin puppet.


To my mind, Durham is being too kind.

Perusing the report, I find it impossible to draw any other conclusion than that the FBI, and the Obama administration more broadly, did not ignore the intelligence about Clinton’s strategy but rather that the law-enforcement and intelligence apparatus of the United States government knowingly abetted Clinton’s implementation of the strategy.

Here is what Durham recounts about American spy agencies’ covert discovery in late July 2016: Their Russian counterparts had assessed that Clinton had approved a campaign plan “to stir up a scandal against U.S. Presidential candidate Donald Trump by tying him to [Russian President Vladimir] Putin and the Russians’ hacking of the Democratic National Committee.”

One objective of this demagoguery was to distract from Clinton’s own email scandal, which was far more consequential to the 2016 election than the DNC emails. Clinton was not a meaningful participant in the DNC emails; they factored into the election only as a prop to portray Trump as complicit in a Russian-hacking conspiracy.

Clinton and her campaign staffers scoffed, in interviews by Durham’s office, that the Russian intelligence analysis was “ridiculous” and “disinformation.” But the analysis was obviously true, regardless of whether the Russians truly believed it or were floating it to confuse our spies.

The Clinton campaign sponsored the bogus “dossier” prepared by former British spy Christopher Steele. It alleged that “there was a well-developed conspiracy of co-operation between [the Trump campaign] and Russian leadership.” This was a fabrication: Steele’s source, Igor Danchenko, never actually spoke to Sergei Millian, to whom this “intelligence” was attributed. Millian never made the claim.


FBI Whistleblower Testifies Bureau ‘May Have’ Had Confidential Human Sources in the Capitol on J6

It was in the context of this nonexistent “conspiracy of cooperation” that Steele claimed Russia had hacked the DNC emails to help Trump win the election. Through Steele, his Fusion GPS confederates, and the campaign’s lawyers, Clinton’s Trump–Russia “collusion” smear was peddled to friendly media and sympathetic government officials.

With equal fervor, moreover, the Clinton campaign concocted the farcical claim that Trump had established a communications back channel with Putin through servers at Alfa Bank, an important Russian financial institution.

After succeeding in getting this nonsense publicized less than two months before Election Day, Clinton herself tweeted: “Computer scientists have apparently uncovered a covert server linking the Trump Organization to a Russian-based Bank.” Jake Sullivan, one of Clinton’s top aides (and now President Biden’s national-security adviser) breathlessly proclaimed that Alfa Bank “could be the most direct link yet between Donald Trump and Moscow”; that “this secret hotline may be the key to unlocking the mystery of Trump’s ties to Russia”; and that “we can only assume that federal authorities will now explore this direct connection between Trump and Russia as part of their existing probe into Russia’s meddling in our elections.”


Clearly, there was a Clinton campaign strategy to frame Trump. Yet the most sensible interpretation of the evidence Durham has amassed is not that the FBI, in evaluating its collusion evidence, failed to weigh intercepted Russian intelligence about that strategy. It is that the FBI was well aware of Clinton’s strategy, fully expected Clinton to be the next president, and helped implement the strategy, regardless of what Russian spies may or may not have thought about it.

The FBI knowingly treated Clinton with kid gloves. FBI lawyer Lisa Page warned the bureau’s senior intelligence investigator, Peter Strzok, to tread lightly in interviewing Clinton about the email scandal — fearful that, upon winning the election, Clinton would otherwise be vengeful against the FBI.

The special counsel elaborates on attempts by two foreign governments to buy influence with Clinton by making donations to her campaign. Contrary to the zealousness with which the FBI opened a full-blown investigation of Trump’s campaign based on risibly thin information in the stretch run of the 2016 race, the bureau sat on the Clinton information for months — even though the first foreign scheme commenced in 2014, before Clinton had even formally announced her candidacy. Clinton’s campaign was given a defensive briefing to ensure she was not placed in a compromising position. Trump’s campaign, by contrast, was immediately subjected to a full-court press, including eavesdropping and the deployment of informants — which persisted for a year, even though the evidence gathered was exculpatory.

Durham documents that President Obama, Vice President Biden, top intelligence officials, Attorney General Loretta Lynch, and FBI director Comey were fully briefed by CIA director John Brennan on Russia’s assessment of Clinton’s plan to frame Trump.

According to Durham, it appears that FBI headquarters withheld the information from some investigators who should have had it. No surprise there. We learned during Durham’s unsuccessful prosecution of Clinton lawyer Michael Sussmann that headquarters concealed from the bureau’s own investigators that Sussmann was the source of the Alfa Bank data. But this information about a Clinton strategy to smear Trump wasn’t ignored. Rather, it was echoed. At the same time that the FBI had this information, the bureau nevertheless went to the FISA court and swore under oath to the Steele dossier claim that Trump and Putin were in a “conspiracy of cooperation.”

To make Trump look like Putin’s puppet, which is exactly what Clinton wanted, the FBI departed from the most elementary investigative steps, especially the duty to verify information before presenting it to a court. FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith (who later pled guilty) altered a document that would have undercut false claims the FBI was making to the FISA court. As the FBI gathered information proving that the allegations it had made to the FISA court were false, it concealed that information from the judges and kept re-alleging the false claims.

There is not a chance that the FBI — or anyone in America — was unaware that the Clinton campaign wanted Trump to be seen as a Russian operative. But the bureau expected Clinton to be the next president. That was her Trump strategy, so it became the FBI’s Trump strategy.

ccp

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 18510
    • View Profile
AM : Durham being too kind
« Reply #1443 on: May 19, 2023, 11:05:35 AM »
AM rehabilitated

in my mind

 :-D

G M

  • Power User
  • ***
  • Posts: 26643
    • View Profile
Re: Another chance for GM to take a win with AMcC
« Reply #1444 on: May 19, 2023, 02:47:18 PM »
In this episode of “Weak tea with Deep State Andy” Andy begrudgingly restates what we all know already as gingerly as possible without actually articulating the many federal crimes committed or any suggestion that they be prosecuted.

 :roll:

By ANDREW C. MCCARTHY
May 16, 2023 2:16 PM
The bureau expected Clinton to be the next president. So her Trump strategy became the FBI’s Trump strategy.

Among the most troubling conclusions in special counsel John Durham’s Russiagate report is that the FBI — even as it relied on Clinton-campaign-funded opposition research against Donald Trump that it failed to verify — ignored strongly supported intelligence that Hillary Clinton was intentionally smearing Trump as a Putin puppet.


To my mind, Durham is being too kind.

Perusing the report, I find it impossible to draw any other conclusion than that the FBI, and the Obama administration more broadly, did not ignore the intelligence about Clinton’s strategy but rather that the law-enforcement and intelligence apparatus of the United States government knowingly abetted Clinton’s implementation of the strategy.

Here is what Durham recounts about American spy agencies’ covert discovery in late July 2016: Their Russian counterparts had assessed that Clinton had approved a campaign plan “to stir up a scandal against U.S. Presidential candidate Donald Trump by tying him to [Russian President Vladimir] Putin and the Russians’ hacking of the Democratic National Committee.”

One objective of this demagoguery was to distract from Clinton’s own email scandal, which was far more consequential to the 2016 election than the DNC emails. Clinton was not a meaningful participant in the DNC emails; they factored into the election only as a prop to portray Trump as complicit in a Russian-hacking conspiracy.

Clinton and her campaign staffers scoffed, in interviews by Durham’s office, that the Russian intelligence analysis was “ridiculous” and “disinformation.” But the analysis was obviously true, regardless of whether the Russians truly believed it or were floating it to confuse our spies.

The Clinton campaign sponsored the bogus “dossier” prepared by former British spy Christopher Steele. It alleged that “there was a well-developed conspiracy of co-operation between [the Trump campaign] and Russian leadership.” This was a fabrication: Steele’s source, Igor Danchenko, never actually spoke to Sergei Millian, to whom this “intelligence” was attributed. Millian never made the claim.


FBI Whistleblower Testifies Bureau ‘May Have’ Had Confidential Human Sources in the Capitol on J6

It was in the context of this nonexistent “conspiracy of cooperation” that Steele claimed Russia had hacked the DNC emails to help Trump win the election. Through Steele, his Fusion GPS confederates, and the campaign’s lawyers, Clinton’s Trump–Russia “collusion” smear was peddled to friendly media and sympathetic government officials.

With equal fervor, moreover, the Clinton campaign concocted the farcical claim that Trump had established a communications back channel with Putin through servers at Alfa Bank, an important Russian financial institution.

After succeeding in getting this nonsense publicized less than two months before Election Day, Clinton herself tweeted: “Computer scientists have apparently uncovered a covert server linking the Trump Organization to a Russian-based Bank.” Jake Sullivan, one of Clinton’s top aides (and now President Biden’s national-security adviser) breathlessly proclaimed that Alfa Bank “could be the most direct link yet between Donald Trump and Moscow”; that “this secret hotline may be the key to unlocking the mystery of Trump’s ties to Russia”; and that “we can only assume that federal authorities will now explore this direct connection between Trump and Russia as part of their existing probe into Russia’s meddling in our elections.”


Clearly, there was a Clinton campaign strategy to frame Trump. Yet the most sensible interpretation of the evidence Durham has amassed is not that the FBI, in evaluating its collusion evidence, failed to weigh intercepted Russian intelligence about that strategy. It is that the FBI was well aware of Clinton’s strategy, fully expected Clinton to be the next president, and helped implement the strategy, regardless of what Russian spies may or may not have thought about it.

The FBI knowingly treated Clinton with kid gloves. FBI lawyer Lisa Page warned the bureau’s senior intelligence investigator, Peter Strzok, to tread lightly in interviewing Clinton about the email scandal — fearful that, upon winning the election, Clinton would otherwise be vengeful against the FBI.

The special counsel elaborates on attempts by two foreign governments to buy influence with Clinton by making donations to her campaign. Contrary to the zealousness with which the FBI opened a full-blown investigation of Trump’s campaign based on risibly thin information in the stretch run of the 2016 race, the bureau sat on the Clinton information for months — even though the first foreign scheme commenced in 2014, before Clinton had even formally announced her candidacy. Clinton’s campaign was given a defensive briefing to ensure she was not placed in a compromising position. Trump’s campaign, by contrast, was immediately subjected to a full-court press, including eavesdropping and the deployment of informants — which persisted for a year, even though the evidence gathered was exculpatory.

Durham documents that President Obama, Vice President Biden, top intelligence officials, Attorney General Loretta Lynch, and FBI director Comey were fully briefed by CIA director John Brennan on Russia’s assessment of Clinton’s plan to frame Trump.

According to Durham, it appears that FBI headquarters withheld the information from some investigators who should have had it. No surprise there. We learned during Durham’s unsuccessful prosecution of Clinton lawyer Michael Sussmann that headquarters concealed from the bureau’s own investigators that Sussmann was the source of the Alfa Bank data. But this information about a Clinton strategy to smear Trump wasn’t ignored. Rather, it was echoed. At the same time that the FBI had this information, the bureau nevertheless went to the FISA court and swore under oath to the Steele dossier claim that Trump and Putin were in a “conspiracy of cooperation.”

To make Trump look like Putin’s puppet, which is exactly what Clinton wanted, the FBI departed from the most elementary investigative steps, especially the duty to verify information before presenting it to a court. FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith (who later pled guilty) altered a document that would have undercut false claims the FBI was making to the FISA court. As the FBI gathered information proving that the allegations it had made to the FISA court were false, it concealed that information from the judges and kept re-alleging the false claims.

There is not a chance that the FBI — or anyone in America — was unaware that the Clinton campaign wanted Trump to be seen as a Russian operative. But the bureau expected Clinton to be the next president. That was her Trump strategy, so it became the FBI’s Trump strategy.

Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
Entirely plausible/probable-- but substance is needed to really run with this.


Crafty_Dog

  • Administrator
  • Power User
  • *****
  • Posts: 69397
    • View Profile
AMcC replies to GM: How thin the collusion case really was
« Reply #1449 on: May 20, 2023, 07:37:15 AM »
The Durham Report Exposes How Thin the Collusion Case Really Was

Special Counsel John Durham departs the U.S. Federal Courthouse after opening arguments in the trial of Attorney Michael Sussmann in Washington, D.C., May 17, 2022. (Julia Nikhinson/Reuters)
By ANDREW C. MCCARTHY
May 20, 2023 6:30 AM

Even FBI officials working the case admitted that it had been opened on the flimsiest of grounds.

The vaporousness of the predication for the FBI’s Trump–Russia investigation, “Crossfire Hurricane,” was described Tuesday in our editorial on the Durham Report (and in my post the same day). For years, I have maintained that the probe was opened on false pretenses. But now that we have Special Counsel John Durham’s careful and comprehensive account of the debacle, the bureau and its allied Russiagate agonistes ought to be humiliated. They deranged the country for years over what, at the time they opened the case, FBI leaders knew was a grossly irresponsible basis for commencing any serious investigation, let alone for intruding the bureau into the politics of a presidential election. The damage this sordid affair has done to the FBI as an institution may not be reparable.


It is totally predictable and in character that “collusion” cheerleaders, including some of the former FBI officials who were fired, are now mewling that Durham’s report is a “nothing burger.” But it’s still tough to abide.

As we’ve noted, amid the media–Democratic-complex hysteria resulting from the publication of hacked DNC emails during the 2016 Democratic Convention, the FBI opened the investigation in late July 2016. This was not a normal case, so the decision was made by top officials at headquarters, based on a strained interpretation of casual comments made two months earlier by George Papadopoulos to a pair of Australian diplomats at a bar in London.

Papadopoulos was a green, unpaid Trump campaign aide. At the time they were made, his remarks were sufficiently incomprehensible — and un-comprehended — that the Aussies thought little of them. In summarizing what Papadopoulos said in a contemporaneous memo, the best one of the diplomats could come up with was that he’d made a suggestion of some kind of suggestion:

[Papadopoulos] also suggested the Trump team had received some kind of suggestion from Russia that it could assist this process [of exploiting the “baggage” of Hillary and Bill Clinton] with the anonymous release of information during the campaign that would be damaging to Mrs Clinton (and President Obama).

Papadopoulos did not claim to know what, if anything, Russian intelligence had on Hillary Clinton. He did not use the word “emails” or even “dirt.” The diplomats were not intelligence agents, but they knew enough to be dismissive. (As I detailed in Ball of Collusion, one of them, Alexander Downer, had intriguing relationships with both British intelligence officers and such American politicians as the Clintons, to whose foundation he had arranged a $25 million Australian contribution.) Any competent intelligence analyst would have known that, if Trump actually were in some kind of “conspiracy of cooperation” with Vladimir Putin, the last person in the world who’d have known anything about it was George Papadopoulos. It’s unlikely Trump could have picked Papadopoulos out of a line-up. (Sure, they once sat at the same crowded table, and there’s a photograph of it; but there’s also a photograph of Trump chatting with a woman who accused him of rape, and at a deposition he mistook her for his second wife.)

Russian intelligence is very capable. Donald Trump, by contrast, has exhibited neither awareness nor habits of intelligence craft through his half-century in public life. If the Aussie diplomats had been intelligence agents, they would have realized that Moscow’s spies would hardly have needed the chaotic Trump campaign’s help to gather or disseminate kompromat on Hillary Clinton. More to the point, though, if the kind of cryptic speculation attributed to Papadopoulos were a sufficient rationale for opening a counterintelligence investigation, the FBI might as well have opened one on its own then-director.

Recall that Director Jim Comey held a July 5, 2016, press conference at which he laid out the evidence against Clinton that the FBI had uncovered during the emails investigation — flouting Justice Department guidelines against public statements about misconduct by uncharged persons. As recounted in DOJ inspector general Michael Horowitz’s eventual report, Comey’s statement was months in the making: He had started drafting it in late April and early May — i.e., even before Papadopoulos’s mid-May meeting with the Aussie diplomats (but, as I’ve previously pointed out, only shortly after President Obama’s nationally televised assertion that he did not want Clinton charged with a crime).

This means that prior to Papadopoulos’s supposed “suggestion of some kind of suggestion,” there were already internal discussions at FBI headquarters about how former secretary Hillary Clinton, all by herself, had given the Russians all the help they needed to undermine her presidential bid. Specifically, Comey had been briefed that, because she recklessly used a homebrew email server to do her State Department work, Clinton was uniquely vulnerable not just to hacking, but to hacking that could capture her sensitive communications with Obama while she was in Russia.

It is not enough to say that Clinton’s private-server system was so non-secure that it could easily have been penetrated by competent foreign intelligence services. The FBI assessed that it probably had been penetrated. By the time of Comey’s press conference, that embarrassing finding had been massaged into this portion of his script:

With respect to potential computer intrusion by hostile actors, we did not find direct evidence that Secretary Clinton’s personal email domain, in its various configurations since 2009, was successfully hacked. But, given the nature of the system and of the actors potentially involved, we assess that we would be unlikely to see such direct evidence. We do assess that hostile actors gained access to the private commercial e-mail accounts of people with whom Secretary Clinton was in regular contact from her personal account. We also assess that Secretary Clinton’s use of a personal e-mail domain was both known by a large number of people and readily apparent. She also used her personal e-mail extensively while outside the United States, including sending and receiving work-related e-mails in the territory of sophisticated adversaries. Given that combination of factors, we assess it is possible that hostile actors gained access to Secretary Clinton’s personal e-mail account.

As scathing as that was, Comey’s earlier drafts (described in Horowitz’s report) were even more damning. The director had been planning to say that Clinton

also used her personal email extensively while outside the United States, including from the territory of sophisticated adversaries. That use included an email exchange with the President while Secretary Clinton was on the territory of such an adversary.” [Emphasis added.]

This express mention of Obama was veiled in a subsequent draft, which referred instead to “another senior government official.” Realizing this would only draw unwanted attention to Clinton’s communications with Obama, which had very possibly been hacked by Russian or other hostile intelligence services, Comey and his advisers completely omitted any allusion to Obama from the remarks he finally delivered on July 5. (Prior to leaving office, Obama quietly directed that his email communications with Clinton be sealed.)

Remember, the FBI opened Crossfire Hurricane in late July 2016 as a full-throttle investigation — without interviewing Papadopoulos, the Aussie diplomats, or a single relevant witness — because of the supposition that Papadopoulos might have been saying that the Trump campaign believed the Russians had compromising information that they might use against Clinton. Yet, less than four weeks earlier, the FBI’s top official had openly speculated that hostile actors (obviously the Russians, among others) had compromising material that they might use against Clinton.

To put it another way, in reading what Comey told the world at his presser, one could easily detect a “suggestion of a kind of suggestion” that the Russians had hacked Clinton’s communications and were in a position to disseminate them at a time that could have been maximally harmful to her presidential campaign, revealing both (a) private conversations that Clinton would understandably have wanted kept confidential, and (b) her gross negligence in conducting sensitive government business this way — which Trump or any other political rival would inevitably argue demonstrated her unfitness to be president.

If that’s what the FBI’s own director was saying publicly, what else would you expect from George Papadopoulos?

Not much. And thanks to Durham, we now know that’s what the FBI agents working the case thought of the vaunted predication for the case: not much. Less than that, really.


As noted above, the bureau opened a full-scale investigation against a presidential campaign based on information from the Aussie diplomats before even interviewing them (just as the bureau failed to interview Christopher Steele’s main source, Igor Danchenko, until after twice swearing under oath to his allegations in FISA-court warrant applications). The bureau got around to this apparently lower priority of actually talking to witnesses on August 2, 2016. Because the interview was to be done in London, the FBI had to consult with its British intelligence counterparts.

As Durham details, to pave the way, the bureau’s legal attaché (leg-at) in London (whose name is not given in the report) was dispatched to discuss the opening of the investigation with the Brits. Their reaction was one of “real skepticism.” They told the leg-at that the sketchy statements attributed to Papadopoulos by the Aussie diplomats were “not assess[ed]” to be “particularly valuable intelligence.” In fact, the leg-at added, “the British could not believe the Papadopoulos bar conversation was all there was,” so they assumed the FBI must have more information that it was holding back.

It didn’t. By that first week in August, the FBI had assigned a first case agent (also not named in the report) to work under the direction of Agent Peter Strzok and help interview the Aussies. In an August 11 conversation, the leg-at and the case agent had this exchange:

Leg-at: Dude, are we telling [British intelligence] everything we know, or is there more to this?

Case agent: That’s all we have. Not holding anything back.

Leg-at: Damn, that’s thin.

Case agent: I know.

The one who knew the most at the time about bureau headquarters’ thinking was Strzok. The leg-at recalled that as the agents taxied to the Australian High Commission in London, Strzok muttered, “There’s nothing to this, but we have to run it to ground.”

Grounded nothing, I think, is what’s often called a “nothing burger.” Here, the nothing burger is actually the FBI’s Trump–Russia “collusion” investigation, not the Durham Report.