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  1. #50526
    wrong about pizzagate TSA's Avatar
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    Exposing the hoax

    By Andrew C. McCarthy
    May 28, 2020 - 11:00 PM

    No need to build to a crescendo — let’s just say it: The Trump-Russia investigation was a politically driven fraud from beginning to end. It was opened on false pretenses, sustained by investigative abuses, and will undoubtedly end in recriminatory angst, which is what happens when the kind of accountability the victims demand does not, indeed cannot, come to pass.

    Worst of all is the damage wrought, though even that isn’t fully understood. Obama administration officials exploited the awesome national security powers that we trust our government to use for counterintelligence operations that safeguard America from jihadists and other foreign hostiles. Because of the abuse, and the growing awareness that few of the abusers will be held to meaningful account, those powers have lost the solid cons uency they had maintained in Congress for nearly two decades. Thus, this episode will prove to be a catastrophe for American national security.

    Last August, I released Ball of Collusion. As a former longtime federal law enforcement official who is proud of that service, I had come reluctantly to the realization that the Trump-Russia escapade was less an investigation than a political narrative — hence the book’s sub le, The Plot to Rig an Election and Destroy a Presidency. In fact, it would be more accurate to say I had been dragged to it, kicking and screaming. In the early days, friends of mine, both pro-Trump and Trump-skeptic, asked me if it was possible that the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Justice had brought an uncorroborated screed of innuendo (under the guise of campaign opposition research) to the secret federal tribunal that issues foreign-intelligence surveillance warrants, in order to monitor the Trump campaign. Confidently, I assured them that that was inconceivable.

    Turns out, by trusting that such a thing could never happen, I was the guy wearing the tinfoil hat.

    Still, until recently, it was perilous to draw anything but tentative conclusions. There was no doubting that irregularities riddled the Trump-Russia inquiry through the tumultuous months of the 2016 election campaign. Yet, law enforcement and intelligence agencies stonewall because it works. Despite the fact that the executive branch had been under President Trump’s control, at least nominally, since 2017, the Justice Department, the FBI, and the rest of the 17-agency sprawl known as the U.S. “intelligence community” are notoriously adept at closing ranks and closing the information spigot good and tight, but for the occasional, strategic leak. They are hardwired to claim that disclosures of information involving misfeasance and worse would do irreparable harm to national security.

    The Trump-Russia inquiry was ingeniously designed. If the president demanded that his subordinates unveil the intelligence files that would reveal the prior administration’s political spying, he stood to be accused of obstructing investigators and seeking to distract the country from his own alleged criminality.

    On that score, an underappreciated aspect of the saga is that Trump came to office as a novice. His unhinged Twitter outbursts obscure an abiding uncertainty about the extent of the president’s power to direct the intelligence bureaucracy. A more seasoned Beltway hand would have known what he could safely order reluctant bureaucrats and Obama holdovers to produce for him or disclose to the public. Trump, however, was at sea. That is why it was so vital for his antagonists to sideline Michael Flynn and Jeff Sessions, Trump loyalists with deep experience in intelligence and law enforcement, who could have put a stop to the farce if they’d remained, respectively, national security adviser and attorney general.

    Due to the stonewalling, only recently has the paper trail finally begun to catch up to — and, inevitably, verify, and then some — the worst su ions of “Trump collusion with Russia” naysayers.

    We have known for over a year of the special counsel’s finding that there was no evidence of espionage conspiracy, no criminal pact of any kind, between Trump’s campaign and the Kremlin. In fact, long before its final report, the Mueller inquiry’s bottom line was already inescapable from the indictments filed by its team of activist Democratic prosecutors. None of them charged Trump associates with any kind of Russian “collusion” (a weasel word invoked to obfuscate the lack of conspiracy).

    Since then, the floodgates have begun to open. Justice Department inspector general reports have illuminated shocking FBI misconduct in submissions to the FISA court. There were serial misrepresentations about the strength of evidence; flat-out lies about the veracity of the seminal informant, former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele; and overarching claims that, consistent with Justice Department policy and FISA court rules, each factual assertion in the four warrant submissions against former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page was “verified,” when, in fact, virtually nothing of consequence had been corroborated.

    This inspector general report readily complemented the one completed two years earlier, in connection with the Hillary Clinton emails escapade, which do ented rampant anti-Trump bias among key investigators assigned to the Clinton and Trump inquiries — as well as the unusually deep involvement in both cases of the bureau’s highest echelon, then-Director James Comey and then-Deputy Director Andrew McCabe. Also falling into place was another inspector general report, centering on McCabe. He had first orchestrated a leak of investigative information involving a dispute between the FBI and the Obama Justice Department over scrutiny of the Clinton Foundation; then, he made repeated misrepresentations to investigators, including under oath.

    Irate, the FISA court forced the Justice Department to conduct a more sweeping internal inquiry. The results have been stunning. While the Trump-Russia investigation stands out for its politicization of surveillance authority, it turns out not to be an outlier in terms of the FBI’s derelictions of investigative duty. In a high percentage of cases, the bureau’s “verified” submissions are never verified, in spite of curative procedures adopted in the 9/11 era, as well as required sign-offs by top FBI and DOJ officials. In short, the FBI and Justice Department have been exploiting the convenience that, contrary to what happens in criminal cases, classified counterintelligence inquiries have no discovery, no defense lawyers, and no one checking the investigators’ work. Rather, there are sloppy representations, made to a judicial monitor that is neither ins utionally competent nor practically equipped to investigate the submissions.

    Meanwhile, there was the collapse of Robert Mueller’s ill-conceived prosecution of Russian s companies said to have been instrumental in the “troll-farm” conspiracy. That, we’d been assured, was the social media campaign that, along with hacking, was the one-two punch by which the Putin regime attacked our election.

    Mueller’s two Russia indictments, of the troll-farmers and hackers, were always better understood as press releases than criminal prosecutions because everyone knew no Russian would ever be extradited to face the music. But Mueller botched the narrative exercise by charging businesses, evidently not foreseeing that they bore no risks of imprisonment or (as Moscow-based s s) ruinous fines. They retained experienced counsel, who showed up in court, demanded to be given all the discovery, and vowed to take the matter to trial. Ultimately, after first grudgingly conceding that they could not connect the social media ads to the Russian government (though an oligarch said to be close to Vladimir Putin was complicit), prosecutors dismissed the case rather than chance an embarrassing rout at trial. In the run-up, their theory of prosecution was shown to be untenable, and the social media ads themselves were ludicrous — childish, mostly legal under campaign rules, and costing just pennies (the defense claimed the few arguably actionable ones amounted to about $5,000 in expenditures). The suggestion that the troll-farm operation had any effect on the multibillion-dollar ocean of U.S. campaign spending was laughable.

    Hacking has taken a hit, too. That is largely because Trump finally dispatched a pit bull to take on the intelligence community. The president eased out acting National Intelligence Director Joseph Maguire, installing in the post Richard Grenell, his hard-charging ambassador to Germany.

    Grenell staged a showdown to force Trump nemesis Adam Schiff, the House Intelligence Committee chairman, to disclose hearing testimony from dozens of witnesses that had been kept under wraps for over a year. Among the most startling revelations was the testimony of Shawn Henry, president of CrowdStrike. That is the private cybersecurity firm retained by Democrats to conduct forensic analysis on the party’s servers, whose hacking by Moscow is the collusion narrative’s ne plus ultra. The Obama Justice Department and the FBI could have compelled production of the servers to conduct their own examination. Instead, they delegated to the private firm with deep Democratic ties, notwithstanding the latter’s motive to blame Russia and, derivatively, Trump’s campaign. No wonder Schiff did not want the testimony to see the light of day: Henry admitted — under oath, more than two years ago — that CrowdStrike has no solid evidence that Russian government-directed hackers stole the emails.

    More brazen still were the admissions by official after official that they had no proof of any Trump campaign conspiracy with Russia. Publicly, former CIA Director John Brennan intimated that Trump was guilty of treason; former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper suggested he was a Putin asset; McCabe bragged of opening a criminal investigation against the president (for obstruction) after Comey’s firing. But in quiet hearing rooms, under oath, they had nothing. No evidence of conspiracy. The pundits knew that. Schiff and the Democrats who choreographed their testimony knew it. They went on for years, though, encouraging the public and foreign governments to believe the president of the United States could possibly be a Kremlin mole. So did Comey, in bracing public testimony in March 2017, by which time it was already patent that there was no case against Trump and his campaign.

    Finally, there is the Flynn prosecution.

    Since entering office in 2019, Attorney General William Barr has become increasingly troubled by the Trump-Russia investigation, which he describes, without exaggeration, as “one of the greatest travesties of American history.” Besides assigning Connecticut U.S. Attorney John Durham to conduct what is a criminal investigation of the inquiry, Barr has also taken to assigning other experienced federal prosecutors from outside Washington to examine the resulting prosecutions. Thus was Jeffrey Jensen, the U.S. attorney for St. Louis, given the ticket to scrutinize the Flynn case. His findings, accompanied by the rollout of previously redacted do ents, resulted in the DOJ’s decision to dismiss the case, regardless of Flynn’s guilty plea to a false-statements charge (apparently elicited under the threat that Mueller’s team might otherwise indict his son on a dubious charge of failing to register as a foreign agent, due to work Flynn’s private intelligence firm did for Turkey).

    In a nuts , in July 2016, the FBI opened a counterintelligence investigation of Flynn on the baseless theory that he might be a clandestine agent of Russia. Not surprisingly, they were poised to close the case in late December, when Flynn engaged in perfectly appropriate, if ill-fated, communications with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. Though Flynn had done nothing wrong, the bureau used the contacts as a pretext to continue the investigation.

    Though it had a predicate for neither a counterintelligence nor a criminal investigation, the FBI conducted an ambush interview of Flynn at the White House — Comey has bragged about violating protocol, which would have called for approvals from the attorney general and the White House counsel. The session was an obvious perjury trap. In blatant violation of FBI procedures, the bureau edited the interview notes (the “302 report”) for weeks — a complication necessitated by the facts that, while the agents did not believe Flynn had lied to them, the point of the exercise was to lay the groundwork to get him removed as national security adviser. That plan worked when Trump fired Flynn (for allegedly misleading Vice President Mike Pence about whether he had spoken to Kislyak about Obama-imposed sanctions against Russia). The bureau seemed to drop the matter, but it was revived months later by Mueller’s prosecutors, who were obviously hoping to build an obstruction case against Trump, and to squeeze Flynn into cooperating. The newly disclosed do ents demonstrate that the prosecutors withheld exculpatory evidence, made misrepresentations to the defense about the genesis of the 302 report, and withheld from the court their agreement not to indict Flynn’s son if he agreed to plead guilty.

    Concurrently, Grenell forced the disclosure of do ents showing that Flynn’s iden y had been “unmasked” an astounding 53 times by 39 different Obama officials in just the few weeks between Trump’s election and his inauguration. (“Unmasking” is the revealing in intelligence reporting of the iden ies of Americans incidentally intercepted in foreign intelligence monitoring; they are supposed to be concealed, and their revelation facilitates classified leaks.) Ironically, the one time Flynn was not unmasked appears to have been in connection with his Kislyak call in late December. There, the FBI, then consulting directly with the Obama White House, opted not to “mask” him at all, despite FISA procedures calling for doing so. The call was leaked to the Washington Post.

    That’s an appropriate note on which to bring us back to the crescendo. Given the brass knuckles Barack Obama’s investigators used on Trump and company, the president’s supporters are unsurprisingly baying for blood. In law enforcement, and especially in foreign counterintelligence, investigative judgments are based on broad discretion, not bright-line rules. It is a far easier thing to spot the abuse of that discretion, especially when all judgments cut in the same politicized direction, than to fit it into an offense of the penal code. Durham is conducting a serious criminal investigation, and we could see some prosecutions, particularly of officials who can be shown to have actionably lied or obstructed justice. But those dreaming of the big indictment of Obama and his top minions will be sorely disappointed.

    There are two lessons to be drawn from all this.

    First, Barr could not be more right that the malfeasance in our government today is the politicization of law enforcement and intelligence. The only way to fix that is to stop doing it. That cannot be accomplished by bringing what many would see as the most politicized prosecution of all time. The imperative to get the Justice Department and the FBI out of our politics discourages the filing of charges that would be portrayed as banana-republic stuff. Yet, even if Barr succeeds in this noble quest, there is no assurance that a future administration would not turn the clock back.

    Second, when wayward officials are not called to account, the powers they have abused become the target of public and congressional ire. The problem is that the powers are essential. Without properly directed foreign counterintelligence, supplemented by legitimate law enforcement, the United States cannot be protected from those who would do her harm.

    The Trump-Russia farce has destroyed the bipartisan consensus on counterterrorism, and on the need for aggressive policing against cyberintrusions and other provocations by America’s enemies. There is an implicit understanding: The public endows its national security officials with sweeping secret authorities, and those officials solemnly commit that these authorities will only be used to thwart our enemies, not to spy on Americans or undermine the political process.

    That understanding has been fractured. In counterintelligence, government operatives have to be able to look us in the eye and say, “You can trust us.” Americans no longer do. The sentiment is justified. That will not make our consequent vulnerability any less perilous.

    https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/o...mpression=true

  2. #50527
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    There is no Trump-Russia farce.

    It's Trash/Repug collusion with a much smarter adversary who has been and is working for the degradation of USA

  3. #50528
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    Exposing the hoax

    By Andrew C. McCarthy
    May 28, 2020 - 11:00 PM

    No need to build to a crescendo — let’s just say it: The Trump-Russia investigation was a politically driven fraud from beginning to end. It was opened on false pretenses
    ting all over horowitz tbh

  4. #50529
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    He didn’t randomly and unprompted bring it up...he was literally just talking about it. Did you not read the transcript?
    Yes. I’ve been posting it.

    Flynn - hey, about the diplomats, keep it reciprocal

    Kislyak - i hear you. Now what about this GRU and FSB stuff, does that mean the US isn’t going to work with us

    Flynn - yeah yeah (going along with him, not literally claiming we won’t be working with them)

    kisylak - because that’s our real enemy

    flynn - yup

    kislyak - but i hear what you’re saying (don’t escalate) and I’ll to get Moscow to understand it

    Flynn - yup. And whatever you do, just keep it reciprocal don’t escalate. If we send back 30 people, don’t send back 60. Also brings up that they do have a common enemy in the Middle East


    so you read that to mean Flynn abandoned to gru/fsb talk and specifically went back to only talking about diplomats despite the exchange directly leading up to that? That’s just absurd. Especially when in the follow up call kislyak said Russia’s decision not to escalate (referring to sanctions, not just diplomats) was in part thanks to their dialogue about it

  5. #50530
    Veteran Th'Pusher's Avatar
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    There’s a huge gap between Russia hacked the DNC and we think Russia hacked the DNC but have no proof.
    You’re such a dishonest person. Was there evidence that Russia hacked the DNC? I’m no lawyer but I’m pretty sure people are convicted on exclusively cir stantial evidence all the time.

  6. #50531
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    You’re such a dishonest person. Was there evidence that Russia hacked the DNC? I’m no lawyer but I’m pretty sure people are convicted on exclusively cir stantial evidence all the time.

    Russians lie for fun

    putin is proud of trump and all his troops who disinform, misinform, and spew propaganda 24/7

    tsa is just doing what he was brainwashed/trained to do: swallow lies until he believes the lies and believes the truth is just a matter of red vs blue

  7. #50532
    wrong about pizzagate TSA's Avatar
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    You’re such a dishonest person. Was there evidence that Russia hacked the DNC? I’m no lawyer but I’m pretty sure people are convicted on exclusively cir stantial evidence all the time.
    I’m dishonest? I’m not the one who claimed Russia hacked the DNC.

  8. #50533
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  9. #50534
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    most of this rebuttal is nonsensical tbh

    i mean at the very end he outright claims that rule 48 requires Sullivan to dismiss, which is patently untrue with a plain reading of the text of rule 48. rule 48 expressly state that the government can dismiss an indictment with leave of court. leave of court = permission from court. nothing in rule 48 states that the court is required to grant leave

    court of appeals may grant the writ for all i know, but undercover huber's rebuttals wont be the reason tbh

  10. #50535
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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  11. #50536
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    Interesting that Mr Flynn is also apparently a serial liar... also admitted lying to the DOJ about his FARA violations wrt Turkey, which are not addressed at all in the motion to dismiss.

    That's going to be problematic.

  12. #50537
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    damn... dunking from the 3 point line tbh

    the argument that a writ is improper before a decision has even been reached on a motion appears to be fairly bulletproof imho

  13. #50538
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    Nothing differs in the Rule 48 context. On the contrary, the Third Circuit denied a similar request for mandamus where a district court sched- uled a hearing on a Rule 48 motion rather than immediately granting it. See In re Richards, 213 F.3d 773, 787 (3d Cir. 2000) (noting that the trial judge “should have the opportunity to consider and issue its order”).






  14. #50539
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    its over as it relates to this writ*

    for all we know the writ is denied and sullivan ends up granting the motion to dismiss

  15. #50540
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    its over as it relates to this writ*

    for all we know the writ is denied and sullivan ends up granting the motion to dismiss
    yeah, and the other interesting tidbit is towards the end, when it says the appeals court might want to hold on to review the entire case, as further disciplinary actions for lying under oath to the court are a possibility too...

    And lol @ ignorance of calling out Sullivan not signing this filing. He's basically a defendant in this motion, defendants don't sign motions unless they're representing themselves. Undercover Huber

  16. #50541
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    Sullivan telling barr to go himself
    and

    trump too!

  17. #50542
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    yeah, and the other interesting tidbit is towards the end, when it says the appeals court might want to hold on to review the entire case, as further disciplinary actions for lying under oath to the court are a possibility too...

    And lol @ ignorance of calling out Sullivan not signing this filing. He's basically a defendant in this motion, defendants don't sign motions unless they're representing themselves. Undercover Huber
    actual visual representation of sullivan's response


  18. #50543
    wrong about pizzagate TSA's Avatar
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    its over as it relates to this writ*

    for all we know the writ is denied and sullivan ends up granting the motion to dismiss







  19. #50544
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
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    Honestly I've never seen the DOJ begging so hard to lose a case they already won.

    Have you?

  20. #50545
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    Doesn't really matter how the DOJ feels, tbh... they're part of the executive. It actually makes sense they would throw a tantrum.

  21. #50546
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    In a sign of how important DOJ views the underlying cons utional issues in the case, the formal brief to the appellate court wasn’t just signed by the line attorney managing the government’s case. Instead, it was signed by Noel J. Francisco, the Solicitor General of the United States who is tasked with representing the U.S. government in the most important appellate cases across the country; Brian A. Benczkowski, the Assistant Attorney General and head of DOJ’s entire criminal division; Deputy Solicitors General Jeffrey B. Wall and Eric J. Feigin; assistants to the Solicitor General Frederick Liu and Vivek Suri; Michael R. Sherwin, the acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia; Kenneth C. Kohl, the acting Principal Assistant United States Attorney for D.C.; and Jocelyn S. Ballantine, the line prosecutor handling the Flynn case at trial.

  22. #50547
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    you arent more likely to get the relief sought just because you really really want it

  23. #50548
    wrong about pizzagate TSA's Avatar
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    you arent more likely to get the relief sought just because you really really want it
    “The Cons ution vests in the Executive Branch the power to decide when—and when not—to prosecute potential crimes,” DOJ argued in its brief. Rules of federal criminal procedure, cited by Sullivan in support of his gambit to appoint himself both judge and prosecutor in the inquisition against Flynn, “do[] not authorize a court to stand in the way of a dismissal the defendant does not oppose, and any other reading of [those rules] would violate both Article II and Article III” of the cons ution, DOJ wrote.

    “Nor, under the cir stances of this case, may the district court assume the role of prosecutor and initiate criminal charges of its own,” the brief continued. “Instead of inviting further proceedings the court should have granted the government’s motion to dismiss.”

  24. #50549
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    The problem for the DOJ is that the court hasn't actually denied the motion. And it may very well rule to accept the motion and close the case in the long run.

  25. #50550
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    “The Cons ution vests in the Executive Branch the power to decide when—and when not—to prosecute potential crimes,” DOJ argued in its brief. Rules of federal criminal procedure, cited by Sullivan in support of his gambit to appoint himself both judge and prosecutor in the inquisition against Flynn, “do[] not authorize a court to stand in the way of a dismissal the defendant does not oppose, and any other reading of [those rules] would violate both Article II and Article III” of the cons ution, DOJ wrote.

    “Nor, under the cir stances of this case, may the district court assume the role of prosecutor and initiate criminal charges of its own,” the brief continued. “Instead of inviting further proceedings the court should have granted the government’s motion to dismiss.”
    what they're saying sounds great but is completely contradictory to rule 48, which expressly requires leave of court

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