With very little time left in the nearly 3 year investigation, let's look back through time

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
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This is a very important one. Afterall, Hillbag had it in the ary


He knew Obama’s Justice Department would sweep Hillary’s violations under the rug, so he played along.

While promoting his memoir, A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership, former FBI director James Comey sat for what turned out to be a tough but fair and refreshingly civil interview by Bret Baier, host of Fox News’s Special Report. (See Part 1 and Part 2.) Owing to President Trump’s comparatively unhinged interview earlier in the day on Fox & Friends, the Trump–Comey feud over alleged leaking of classified information is drawing most of the media attention. But something more important is less apparent: Comey has implicitly confirmed what we’ve been saying here for well over a year: In the Clinton emails caper, the fix was in.

Before we turn first to leaking, some disclosure. I am fond of Jim Comey and have been for 30 years. I vigorously disagree with both his handling of the Clinton emails investigation and the manner in which the FBI has conducted what is supposed to be a classified, counterintelligence probe of Russia’s interference in the 2016 election — not a public, government-orchestrated campaign of insinuation that Trump was complicit in Russian perfidy.

observed that they were unlikely to be classified because Comey, who is smart and careful, would avoid including such information. Well, the memos were made public about a week ago, and we now know that the one in question is not classified. (See here, pp. 10–11.) Obviously, unless information is classified, the criminal laws against unauthorized disclosure of such information are inapposite.

regardless of what Comey was telling him in their face-to-face conversations — was a subject of FBI investigations. Palpably, that’s why the director shared his notes with the team running the investigations — even asking, in the first memo, whether in designating it “SECRET” he had chosen “the proper classification.” (The first memo (“1/16/17”), which was not leaked to the media, is classified and contains redactions.)

The fact that the memos were government property is important because the former director has posited a Clintonesque objection to accusations that he “leaked” information. He had already been fired when he gave the February 14 memo to Richman with instructions to pass it on to the Times. Thus, his theory goes, he was merely a private citizen passing along his personal aide-mémoire.

unauthorized disclosure of classified information.” No, that is a classified leak. Other unauthorized disclosures to the media of non-public government information may not be quite as serious, but they are still leaks.

As a matter of fact, most non-public investigative information the FBI generates is not classified, yet its unauthorized disclosure is forbidden — and rightly so: A great deal of non-classified information is highly sensitive, and its disclosure could endanger lives and destroy investigations. No surprise, then, that the FBI employment agreement outlines several categories of information (I count 13 of them besides classified information) that officials are prohibited from disclosing without authorization. As of the moment he was fired, the former director was no longer empowered to authorize the dissemination of non-public government information outside the government. Absent permission from a qualified official, he simply was not authorized to cause the release to the media of an FBI-generated memo about a meeting between the president and the FBI director (even though he wrote the memo and was the director in question). To his credit, Comey conceded to Baier that, while the claim that he leaked classified information is frivolous, the question of whether he violated his employment agreement is not.

Moreover, all high executive-branch officials know that conversations with the president about official business are potentially covered by executive privilege. That is why executive officials typically refuse in congressional testimony to answer questions about conversations with the president — the privilege belongs to the president. An executive official who discloses without authorization deprives the president the opportunity to assert the privilege lawfully.

Comey was not without his reasons. Trump had ominously and falsely suggested that there were secret recordings of his conversations with the former director. Although the president’s intimation was that Comey might lie about these conversations, Comey believed any tapes would corroborate his version of events. So, he reasonably figured that, by disclosing his account of the Flynn meeting, he might force disclosure of any recordings Trump had — perhaps through a special-counsel investigation of whether the Flynn conversation amounted to obstruction. As it happens, after a special counsel was appointed, the president admitted there were no recordings.

publicly stated that he did not want his party’s inevitable nominee charged with a crime.

In making that assertion, Obama distorted the Espionage Act, falsely implying that it required proof of intent to harm the United States before someone could be convicted of mishandling classified information. To the contrary, the law holds that a person is guilty (1) if she willfully causes the unauthorized transmission of classified information — meaning if she understands the wrongfulness of the action and intentionally performs it anyway — or (2) if through “gross negligence” she permits the information to be removed from its proper place or to be otherwise mishandled (see Section 793(d), (e), and (f) of Title 18, U.S. Code). The Justice Department adopted Obama’s erroneous intent standard, as, ultimately, did Comey.

The former director’s statements in the Brett Baier interview firmly establish that the decision not to indict Mrs. Clinton was based on Obama Justice Department standards, not on the terms of the statute.

For example, when asked why he was confident, long before Clinton was even interviewed, that she would not be charged, Comey said the investigators working the case told him, “Look boss, on the current course and speed, it looks like it’s not gonna get to a place where the prosecutors would bring it.” It was not that the evidence was insufficient under the law; it was that the Justice Department would not indict.

Baier then played a now-familiar recording of Comey, under questioning by Representative Trey Gowdy (R., S.C.), conceding that Clinton had made various false claims about her emails (no emails “marked ‘classified,’” no classified emails sent or stored, all work-related emails returned to the State Department). Baier then asked why, despite this pattern, Comey had made his decision against charges even before Clinton was questioned. While denying that he had made a final decision at that point, he said he had a “general sense” that the evidence was “unlikely to get us to a place where they would prosecute at the Justice Department.

Comey is trying to have it both ways: He wants you to accept that he made the decision not to prosecute on his own, out of fear that the Justice Department was tainted by bias in Clinton’s favor. Yet, when dismissing critics’ claims that the proof was more than adequate under the applicable law, he shrugs his shoulders and says, in effect, “What could I do? I was constrained by the Justice Department’s interpretation of the law.” That is, his hand was forced by the same pro-Clinton bias that he was supposedly thwarting.

This became excruciatingly apparent when Baier pointed out the care Comey took to describe Clinton’s conduct as “extremely careless” rather than “grossly negligent” — the state of mind criminalized by the Espionage Act. Though these terms are substantively indistinguishable, this semantic ploy enabled Comey to obscure the inconvenience that Clinton was guilty under the statute as written. Comey’s retort was telling:

I was struggling with the fact that we thought it was not mere sloppiness but didn’t rise to the level of criminal misconduct that the Justice Department would prosecute. So, how do you describe that? I probably should have said “really sloppy.” I wanted to be honest and say, “It’s above ‘sloppy.’ It doesn’t add up to what the 1917 statute meant when it said, “‘Grossly negligent’ is a felony.”

No, to be honest, the FBI just has to describe what she did. If what she did was extremely careless, then that does add up to “grossly negligent” under the 1917 statute — but it is for the Justice Department to connect those legal dots. If Obama’s Justice officials fail to do so, that’s politics, not law enforcement, so why let the non-partisan FBI get dragged into it? It is not the FBI’s job to make pronouncements on the law. It is not the FBI’s burden to pull out the thesaurus and don Mrs. Clinton’s misconduct in just the right lexical finery until it finally fits the Obama Justice Department’s misinterpretation of a clear criminal statute.

Again, Comey would have us see him, simultaneously, as the stalwart check on potential Justice Department corruption and the helpless slave of Justice Department direction. But he can’t be both. The simple fact is: Nothing obliged him to exercise prosecutorial discretion in the emails investigation. The FBI’s job was to investigate, not to decide whether the evidence was sufficient to support an indictment. If he was worried that Attorney General Loretta Lynch was conflicted, the upright move was to advise her to step aside — and to do it not at the end but at an earlier point, when it might have helped the FBI get out from under the irregular constraints her Justice Department was imposing on investigators. And a prosecutor’s conflict is not a basis for the FBI to appropriate her authority — Lynch had a deputy and other subordinates who could have acted as attorney general if her recusal was warranted.

More to the point, there was no need to say anything. There is no requirement that the FBI or the Justice Department ever announce that an investigation has been closed. The former director keeps asking, “What was I to do” under these difficult circumstances? The answer is: nothing. The government speaks in court, when a person is formally accused of a crime and has the full pallet of due-process rights to defend herself. Unless and until that happens, no one is entitled to know whether an investigation exists or what its status may be.

investigation of the Clinton Foundation. It was not Comey’s fault that the Democrats nominated someone under criminal suspicion, but neither was it Comey’s duty to remove the suspicion. Indeed, Comey repeatedly told Trump that the FBI could not publicly say Trump was not a suspect: If new evidence ever emerged that turned Trump into a suspect, Comey explained, he would be obliged to correct the misimpression.

So why not the same rules for Clinton? After all, those are the rules. When the Democrats nominated Clinton, they were knowingly running the risk that the investigation might explode her candidacy. If the country had elected her, we would have been running the risk (however minimal) that a Clinton Justice Department might someday indict her. It was not the FBI’s task to manage Mrs. Clinton’s risks or defend the Obama Justice Department’s politicized enforcement standards.

Director Comey took it upon himself to do both. It was not possible simultaneously to do that and to protect the FBI from the fallout.
 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
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Comey colluded with Mueller et. al. after firing, with his testimony before Congress.

https://saraacarter.com/former-fbi-director-comey-consulted-with-mueller-on-russia-testimony/

A government watchdog group revealed Thursday that former FBI Director James Comey was advised by senior FBI officials to seek Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s advice prior to testifying before “any congressional committee” about President Donald Trump’s campaign and its alleged collusion with Russia’s meddling in the 2016 presidential election, according to new emails obtained by Judicial Watch.

Comey was also advised to seek Mueller’s counsel on the circumstances surrounding his firing by Trump before providing testimony to Congress, the Department of Justice emails obtained by Judicial Watch reveal. It is the first time evidence reveals there was coordination between the Special Counsel and Comey in the long drawn out controversial Mueller investigation.

“These documents show that James Comey, who was fired by the president, nevertheless had easy, friendly access to the FBI as he prepped his infamous anti-Trump testimony to the Senate,” said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton, in a press release. “This collusion led to Comey’s attacking President Trump and misusing FBI records as part of a vendetta against the president.”

“The emails, along with news reports, also reveal that Comey met with Mueller prior to his June 8, 2017, testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee…”

In one of the email chains dated May 19, 2017, shortly after Comey was fired by Trump, his then Chief of Staff James Rybicki sends an email chain to then FBI Deputy Director McCabe, FBI Deputy Director David L. Bowdich, former FBI General Counsel James A. Baker, among others and says, “Please see a DRAFT response to Director Comey (below). I will hold pending further direction….”

The email states:

In response to your emails below we have consulted with executive management here, including the General Counsel, and recommend the following

  1. That your counsel convey any acceptance or declinations to invitations to testify directly to the Committees.
  2. That your counsel consult with Special Counsel Mueller to determine the timing of any such testimony and, [Emphasis added]
  3. The Office of General Counsel stands ready to discuss with you in consultation with the Department of Justice and the Special Counsel, institutional privileges or prerogatives that may be presented by any such testimony.
The emails, along with news reports, also reveal that Comey met with Mueller prior to his June 8, 2017, testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee and, according to Judicial Watch, that testimony was coordinated with Mueller.


During Comey’s June 8, 2017 testimony before the Senate he revealed that he had leaked information from memos he created on his meetings with Trump while he was still director of the FBI. He gave those memos to his friend, Columbia law professor Daniel Richman, who then leaked them to The New York Times. Comey admitted that he leaked the memos with the intention that they be leaked to the news organization with the hope that it would lead to a special counsel investigation of the President.

“I asked a friend of mine to share the content of the memo with a reporter. Didn’t do it myself, for a variety of reasons,” Comey told the Senate Intelligence Committee. “But I asked him to because I thought that might prompt the appointment of a special counsel.”

The former embattled FBI director has fought back against accusations that he leaked classified memos but lawmakers contend that Comey did leak property of the FBI in violation of Bureau protocol. They also contend that some of the memos contained classified information and issued a criminal referral on Comey last month citing the leaks and the extraordinary circumstances surrounding the nature of the investigation, as first reported.

JUDICIAL WATCH TIMELINE PER PRESS RELEASE:

  • May 17, 2017 — Comey was notified to appear before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence the Senate Judiciary Committee, and the House Oversight and Government AffairsCommittee.
  • On May 18 and 19, 2017, an email chain with the subject line “Future testimony” shows former Comey FBI Chief of Staff James Rybicki, former Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe and Assistant Director Gregory Brower, Comey and others discussing Comey’s upcoming testimony
  • May 18 at 6:30 pm, Comey sent an email to Rybicki confirming that he had accepted the invitation to testify before the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.
  • In that same email chain Comey noted that he declined the invitations from the Senate Judiciary Committee and House Oversight and Government Affairs Committee.
In an email dated May 19, 2017, which was apparently to Rybicki, Comey says, “I just got off a call with Senators Burr and Warner. They would like to have a hearing next Wednesday at which I testify, first in open session and then in closed, if necessary. I asked them not to announce it until I check with FBI/DOJ to see if you want to discuss anything before they do that. I told them I had asked for guidance on any institutional prerogatives and for the opportunity to review any documents FBI has produced that relate to me. I told them I would communicate with them by the end of the day to either ask them to hold announcing the Wednesday hearing or go ahead.
 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
The only two political figures to see the Rosenstein altered memo.

 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
Other facts from January 2018

It's not entirely conspiracy, these are facts:
  • We know Page and Strokz and their text messages, and their leaking
  • We know Comey lied to congress and leaked classified material
  • We know the original Clinton email drafts contained the verbiage "grossly negligent" (a legal term), but FBI brass changed it to "extremely careless" (not a legal term)
  • We know Obama decided Hillary's fate in March 2017
  • We know Comey reaffirmed Obama's decision in June 2017
  • We know that decision became public in July 2017
  • We know Nellie Ohr went to work for Fusion GPS to work on the dossier
  • We know A crap-ton of items were unmasked by the Obama administration, particularly DOJ staff and Susan Rice
  • We know a FISA warrant was denied in July 2017. We know another was applied for in September 2017
  • We know Clapper has denied knowing about any accepted FISA warrant for Trump nor associates, twice, 6 months apart
  • We know nothing has been corroborated except that Page went to Russia, whereabouts during trip unknown
  • We know Admiral Rogers went to Trump Tower without telling his boss, and Trump moved their operation out of Trump Tower the next day
  • We know intel derived from the FBI was leaked to Slate and Hillary. Slate published and article and Hillary a statement on the exact same date/time.
  • We now know Steele was given information from the FBI as to what they were investigating
  • We know McCabe had personal issues with Flynn that should've been enough for him to recuse himself from the investigation
  • We know Mueller has so many interdependencies with FBI staff that he should not have been considered for IC, and should recuse himself on most
  • We know Nunes saw something in a SCIF that impacted him enough to go to the president about it
And more, but that's off the top of my head. Given those facts, there's not much left to fill in.
 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
Dead men can't talk, McCain was the leaker, and had a huge hand in the dodgy dossier #1.

 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
Boom thought PapaD was the lynchpin, I corrected him.

I think the SC office indicated that Papadopoulos was a small part of a much larger investigation. I don’t think that indicates he’s finished and just throwing haymakers here. I think this is a lead punch, make sure you don’t underestimate what gets thrown next. I could be wrong though, Mueller is doing a good job not revealing his game plan.

There's a whole lot of hope there, and not much substance.
 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
Boom thought I hacked him. *snicker*

I’m not a writer for the Washington Post, mr administrator, you are falsely attributing article words to me in your post. Please don’t use your special editing abilities for these purposes.
 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
Wrong. Just wrong.

2016, typo, you know what I meant.

Flynn lied about Russian payments, duh. That deal wasn't about some contacts between election and inauguration. I think you are one of the most gullible people. You think trump asked Comey to "let Flynn go" was over some phone call between election and inauguration? That's funny.

http://www.businessinsider.com/michael-flynn-security-clearance-investigation-russia-payments-2017-5

Manafort and Gates not related to the campaign? You have to be kidding. You think the Russians were helping trump out of the goodness of their heart? You think they just wanted to throw money at trump campaign people because they were swell guys? Mueller has followed the money trail. They thought they could get away with it by the shady overseas accounts and money laundering.

LMAO!

I honestly feel sorry for you.
 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
Next up: a special counsel to probe Team Obama’s obstruction of justice
It appears Comey has some document that describes the fact that DOJ under Lynch would put the kibosh on Hillary's investigation. Hmmmmm!


By Paul Sperry

June 20, 2017 | 7:22pm | Updated


By using fired FBI Director James Comey to attack the new Republican administration, Democrats have opened up a legal can of worms for the Obama administration.

Under sworn questioning, Comey has veered off the topic of President Trump and Russia and revealed several damning incidents in which his predecessor’s administration politically interfered in the Hillary Clinton email investigation. And now the Senate will investigate Team Obama for obstruction of justice.

Specifically, the Senate Judiciary Committee announced last week it will hold hearings to “examine then-Attorney General Loretta Lynch’s involvement in the Clinton email server investigation.”

The findings of the powerful panel, which has oversight of the Justice Department and FBI, could lead to a separate criminal investigation and the naming of another special counsel — exactly what Trump needs to distract attention from his growing legal woes.

What Lynch did reeks of obstruction. According to Comey, his ex-boss:
  •  Ordered him to mislead the public about the criminal investigation of Clinton by calling it a “matter” rather than an investigation. (He complied with her wish, even though it made him feel “queasy.”)
  •  Refused to recuse herself from the case after Comey confronted her about a secret June 2016 meeting she had with former President Bill Clinton — five days before his wife was scheduled to be interviewed by the FBI. (Hillary was cleared three days later.)
There are also concerns, raised by a New York Times report, that Lynch privately assured the Clinton campaign she would keep FBI agents in check and wouldn’t let their investigation “go too far,” according to a message the FBI intercepted involving then-Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz.

Worried his boss had a “conflict of interest” overseeing the Clinton investigation, Comey testified he “considered whether I should call for the appointment of a special counsel” to take over the case. That would’ve been the right move. Curiously, Comey instead shut down the probe and let Clinton off the hook — three weeks before her presidential nomination.

How compliant was Comey? Here’s how he responded to Lynch’s demand he “align” his rhetoric with the Clinton camp: “I just said, OK.” What other Lynch meddling did he go along with during the yearlong Hillary probe, which was marred by suspiciously generous immunity deals, favorable ground rules, a near-absence of grand jury subpoenas and a rushed closure ahead of the DNC convention?

These are questions the Senate judiciary panel, chaired by GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley, might like to ask Comey, along with: Who else was in the room during your meetings with Lynch, and did you take notes?

Any notes could be subpoenaed, along with the Wasserman Schultz document, which, contrary to recent media reports, isn’t fake. (Comey testified such reports are “nonsense.”) So might the NSA recording of Lynch’s chat with Clinton, which took place on board a government plane.

Congressional sources say Lynch will almost certainly be called to answer Comey’s allegations under oath. What did she and Bill Clinton discuss? Did the investigation come up? Why didn’t she recuse herself, despite admitting it looked bad? And did she in fact promise the Clinton campaign a whitewash?

Also on the potential witness list are Wasserman Schultz and Amanda Renteria, the senior Clinton campaign staffer with whom Wasserman Schultz claimed Lynch had been in communication.

Democrats will have a hard time dismissing the inquiry as partisan. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the ranking Democrat on the Judiciary panel, is on record saying Lynch’s suspicious actions are a legitimate avenue of inquiry. Those remarks provide Republicans the political cover they need to aggressively pursue Comey’s leads, and refer evidence to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution.

Because Attorney General Jeff Sessions would recuse himself from that probe, too, the case could end up in the hands of a special prosecutor, who, like Robert Mueller, would have wide-ranging authority to poke around.

That’s a nightmare scenario for Democrats, who are betting the 2018 midterms on convincing voters of Trump graft. Much to their chagrin, Comey’s testimony has given Republicans grounds to shift focus from the Russia probe back to Clinton-Obama corruption.

Witch-hunting Democrats may soon learn that turnabout is fair play.

Paul Sperry is a former Hoover Institution fellow and author of “The Great American Bank Robbery.”
 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
Comey leaked

Public Accounts by Friends Show James Comey Leaked While FBI Director




James Comey may have misled senators on May 3, when he testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee that he had never been an anonymous source in news reports related to the Russia investigation.

By that time, he had already leaked several private conversations he had with President Trump to his friend Benjamin Wittes, editor-in-chief of the blog Lawfare and former editorial writer for the Washington Post.

Wittes wrote in a piece on May 18, only nine days after Comey was fired, that the former FBI director had shared those conversations “over the previous few months.” He wrote:

Comey never told me the details of the dinner meeting; I don’t think I even knew that there had been a meeting over dinner until I learned it from the Times story. But he did tell me in general terms that early on, Trump had ‘asked for loyalty’ and that Comey had promised him only honesty. He also told me that Trump was perceptibly uncomfortable with this answer.

Wittes also wrote that he had lunch with Comey on March 27, and that they discussed a phone call that Trump had made to him earlier in the day.

Wittes denied those conversations were leaks but were “just conversations between friends, the contents of which one friend is now disclosing.”

However, a leak is the release of unauthorized information, according to a definition by George Washington University professor and legal scholar Jonathan Turley. Incidentally, there is no condition that the information may be published or distributed via physical memo.

And Wittes is arguably a member of the news media. In January, Wittes published a pieceon Comey in Lawfare, and he writes and publishes pieces regularly.

It would not have been unreasonable for Comey to think Wittes could publish a piece on their conversations in the future — which is exactly what happened.

Wittes not only wrote about the “loyalty” conversation with Trump in his May 18 blog post, titled: “What James Comey Told Me About Donald Trump,” he but he also wrote about contacting the New York Times as a source to share what Comey had told him. He also discussed contacting the New York Times in a Buzzfeed interivew.

The fact that Wittes did so only after Comey was fired does not change the fact that Comey shared his communications with Trump while he was still FBI director.

Comey’s leaking while still FBI director appears to have extended beyond Wittes.

Comey told senators on June 8 that he decided on May 12 to release his memos of his conversations with Trump to friend Daniel Richman so that he could leak them to the media to prompt a special counsel.

But that doesn’t explain who leaked to the New York Times the conversation about the “loyalty request” on May 11 — a day before Comey said he gave Richman memos of the conversation to leak to media outlets.

That Times story cited “associates,” or “two people who have heard” Comey’s account of the dinner and agreed to keep it quiet while Comey was director.

The Associated Press reported that a day before the New York Times story broke, Comey friend Daniel Richman had commented to the AP that the president had removed “somebody unwilling to pledge absolute loyalty to him.”

From those reports, it appears that Comey told both Wittes and Richman about the conversations while he was FBI director, potentially for the purpose of later leaking to the media.

Despite the leaking, Comey told the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 3, six days before he was fired, that he had “never” been an anonymous news source on “matters relating to” the investigation on the Trump campaign.

Here is a transcript of an exchange between Comey and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-IA) on May 3:

GRASSLEY: Director Comey, have you ever been an anonymous source in news reports about matters relating to the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation?

COMEY: Never.

GRASSLEY: …have you ever authorized someone else at the FBI to be an anonymous source in news reports about the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation?

COMEY: No.

GRASSLEY: Has any classified information relating to President Trump or his associates been declassified and share with the media?

COMEY: Not to my knowledge.

What Comey didn’t say was that he had by then already discussed confidential conversations with the president to “friends” — who would later write about those conversations or act as conduits to the media.

Comey also ironically testified that leaks are “always a problem:”

GRASSLEY: You testified before the House Intelligence Committee that a lot of classified matters have ended up in the media recently. Without getting into any particular article, I want to emphasize that, without getting into any particular article, are there any leaks of classified information relating to Mr. Trump or his associates?

COMEY: I don’t want to answer that question, Senator, for reasons I think you know. There have been a variety of leaks — leaks are always a problem, but especially in the last three to six months.

Comey admitted later to the Senate intelligence committee on June 8 that he wrote his memos in a way so that they would not be classified. He said he did that so the memos could be shared more easily among investigators and within the government.

Yet, instead of giving the memos to investigators, he gave them to a friend to leak to the media first, prompting Senate intelligence committee Vice Chairman Mark Warner (D-VA) to say he hoped to get them at some point.

WARNER: I found it very interesting that, that in the memo that you wrote after this February 14th pull-aside, you made clear that you wrote that memo in a way that was unclassified. If you affirmatively made the decision to write a memo that was unclassified, was that because you felt at some point, the facts of that meeting would have to come clean and come clear, and actually be able to be cleared in a way that could be shared with the American people?

COMEY: Well, I remember thinking, this is a very disturbing development, really important to our work. I need to document it and preserve it in a way, and this committee gets this, but sometimes when things are classified, it tangled them up.

If I write it such a way that doesn’t include anything of a classification, that would make it easier for to us discuss within the FBI and the government, and to hold onto it in a way that makes it accessible to us.

WARNER: Well again it’s our hope particularly since you are a pretty knowledgeable guy and wrote this in a way that it was unqualified this committee will get access that unclassified document. I this I it will be important to our investigation.

President Trump’s legal team is now preparing to file complaints against former FBI Director James Comey, as early as next week, with the Department of Justice’s Office of the Inspector General and the Senate Judiciary Committee, according to a source close to the team.

Their case against Comey may include conversations Comey had with Wittes and Richman, among other “friends.”

Trump attorney Marc Kasowitz has alleged that Comey’s leaks of privileged information“began no later than March 2017, when friends of Mr. Comey have stated he disclosed to them the conversations he had with the President during their January 27, 2017 dinner and February 14, 2017 White House meeting.”

It’s not clear what consequences Comey might face for sharing those conversations with Wittes and Richman, but legal scholars say that leaking the physical memos recalling those conversations has put him in hot water.

While Comey has said he considered the memos his own personal documents, Turley has argued that the memos are FBI property, and that Comey violated federal laws by releasing them without informing the Justice Department.

“These were documents prepared on an FBI computer addressing a highly sensitive investigation on facts that he considered material to that investigation. Indeed, he conveyed that information confidentially to his top aides and later said that he wanted the information to be given to the special counsel because it was important to the investigation,” he wrote in The Hill on June 12.

The DOJ IG already has one review of Comey open on his handling of the Clinton email investigation and whether the new complaints will lead to an expansion of that review, a new review, or an investigation is unclear.

A spokesman for the DOJ IG told Breitbart News that it would depend on the “scope” of the review or investigation, and any public acknowledgment would depend on whether there is “intense public interest.”

Grassley has also indicated that he will follow up on whether there are ongoing investigations into leaks from the FBI. His office did not respond to several inquiries as to where that stands.
 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
OAC can't even count to the number of wrongs in this post.

1. Even Chrissy "Tingles" Mathews says the Trump/Russian collusion is over. -

Wrong. Special counsel is investigating and they have lots of work to do.

2. Almost everyone acknowledges that Trump did not obstruct justice. -

Wrong. Many in the legal community have said this is a textbook case.

3. Comey lost some credibility because of his leaking. -

Wrong. Do you honestly think people believe the dimwit that founded trump University over James Comey? Let's get trump on the stand under oath.

4. Comey still comes across as a pretty credible guy, but has lost the luster he once had. DOJ caught him in a pretty big lie yesterday. -

Wrong. He never lied. He was under oath. Lost luster? Do tell.

5. Flynn likely not under investigation for Russian collusion but may be under investigation for lying to investigators, and for not registering as a Foreign Agent and accepting money from Russia and Turkey. -

May be under investigation? Ya think? LOLZ! You are the most gullible person on the face of this earth if you think Flynn is not under investigation for Russian collusion. You are precious.

6. Kushner is a nothing burger. Nothing to see here, move along. -

Wrong. The Senate is currently requesting and receiving documents from him. They are scheduling a secure session for testimony by him.

7. The media has been played. big time. All of them, ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, MSNBC and the NY Times and Wash Post. Their use of anonymous sources have come back to bite them -

Wrong. 99% of what they have reported has turned out to be true. It was anonymous sources that informed the media which reported the private meeting between trump and Comey before Comey or trump made it known. Hmmm.

8. This is now political theatre. The Dems trying to hurt Trump and the GOP trying to help Trump. Hearings will go on, but will produce more theatre and little substance. -

We shall see.

9. Since no crimes likely committed (except for possibly Flynn), no collusion and no obstruction, Meuller likely ends the investigation in the Fall. -

Dream on Alice. Mueller will end the investigation when it is appropriate. You know that Flynn has already asked for a plea deal, several times? You do know Sessions lied under oath at his confirmation hearing? Remember him attempting to go back and correct the record? Do you always come to conclusions before all evidence is even gathered, much less presented?

10. The vote in 2018 all depends on what the GOP gets done. Tax reform, Obamacare repeal, immigration, the economy, jobs, will determine who wins and who loses. -

The GOP has a lot of wounds to lick. At 38% approval (trump), how many Republicans risk sticking it out with him and how many abandon ship?

11. It will be interesting if an investigation into the White House/DOJ collusion with the Hillary campaign gets underway. A respected news outlet said last evening, more Comey/Lynch shoes to drop in the next two weeks. We shall see. -

So because someone asked Comey to use the term "matter" instead of "investigation" it is collusion. BTW, that had nothing to do with the WH, Obama wasn't even there and didn't ask anyone to do anything. It involved the DOJ only. The AG and the FBI both fall under the DOJ. Your ignorance is pretty impressive....and you are not shy at all about displaying it. Tell us more about how "leaking" a MFR is a crime, Matlock.

[laughing][laughing][laughing][laughing][laughing][laughing][laughing]
 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
Comey lied about Sessions

Seems pretty obvious to anyone that can comprehend.


POLITICS
DOJ Says Comey Wasn’t Honest In Senate Hearing


ALEX PFEIFFER
Reporter



7:32 PM 06/08/2017
TOP

A Department of Justice spokesman denied several claims made by former FBI Director James Comey in a Senate hearing Thursday.

“Given Attorney General Sessions’ participation in President Trump’s campaign, it was for that reason, and that reason alone, the Attorney General made the decision on March 2, 2017 to recuse himself from any existing or future investigations of any matters related in any way to the campaigns for President of the United States,” DOJ spokesman Ian Prior said in a Thursday night statement.

Comey testified during the hearing that there is an undisclosed reason that might’ve been behind the attorney general’s recusal from the investigation into Russian election interference and possible collusion with the Trump campaign.

“We also were aware of facts that I can’t discuss in an open setting that would make his continued engagement in a Russia-related investigation problematic,” the former FBI director said.

The statement from the DOJ also pointed to testimony from Comey that he wasn’t aware of “any kind of memorandum issued from the Attorney General or the Department of Justice to the FBI outlining the parameters of [the Attorney General’s] recusal.”

However, Sessions’ chief of staff sent an email on March 2 to Comey and several other officials that said: “After careful consideration following meetings with career Department officials over the course of the past several weeks, the Attorney General has decided to recuse himself from any existing or future investigations of any matters related in any way to the campaigns for President of the United States.”

The email continued on to say that Sessions shouldn’t be involved or briefed on those matters and that Acting Attorney General Dana Boente will perform the functions of the attorney general in those investigations.

Comey also testified that when he told Sessions that he should prevent any “future direct communication between the President and me,” the attorney general didn’t reply.

Prior said in his statement, “The Attorney General was not silent; he responded to this comment by saying that the FBI and Department of Justice needed to be careful about following appropriate policies regarding contacts with the White House.”
 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
ATL and the WSJ are dead on

With Comey's self inflicted testimony wounds now being licked by Media scribes who were depending on him to deliver "collusion" and "obstruction" goods on Trump, they are now forced to try and get him 'FIRED' by alleging he's committed "impeachable" offenses.

That might yet work but the Russians they've been relying on to try & prove Trump is treasonous haven't been very cooperative...leading both Comey and the Media down one way rabbit holes so far as this article brilliantly points out.

excerpt:
"his (Trump's) behavior will also increasingly appear in a new light if it turns out Washington’s tail-chasing has been partly driven by Russian fabrications"

It's a good piece on why the Media keeps losing out to Trump, and the answer may indeed be those devilishly devious "Russians"

link:
https://www.wsj.com/articles/why-trump-wins-1497037343

(full story)
By
Holman W. Jenkins, Jr.
June 9, 2017 3:42 p.m. ET

Ex-FBI chief James Comey played well to the audience he cares about in Thursday’s hearing, the media and bicoastal elites. Donald Trump may well have scored a win among the audience he cares about, Trump’s America.

Much was made of Mr. Comey saying he didn’t trust Mr. Trump not to “lie” about what transpired in their private meetings. Yet despite our president’s dubious relation with veracity, Mr. Trump was shown to be the source of important truths. Mr. Comey had indeed told him he was not under personal investigation in the Russia “collusion” matter. As Sen. Marco Rubio, not a big Trump fan, noted, this fact was remarkable for also being widely known among Senate colleagues and yet the one fact that never leaked to the media.

Mr. Comey made much of conflicting statements about why he was fired. But it was Mr. Trump who, belying his own White House flackery, stated candidly it was because of the “Russia thing.” Even a non-Trump fan listening to the hearing could readily gather that Mr. Trump had reason to be frustrated that his administration was being hobbled by insinuations of treason for which there is zero evidence.

As a rule, when there is no evidence of a particular act, the FBI does not investigate. The FBI is investigating now only because Democrats and Trump opponents so filled the airwaves with unsubstantiated speculation.

Now here’s a secret: Most Democrats understand the hunt will come a cropper. If a Trump associate brushed shoulders with a Russian-looking individual on the way to the men’s room, it has leaked. The U.S. government sucks up and archives vast gobs of communication data.

Yet the earnestly desired evidence of collusion has not materialized, so Democrats have turned instead to charging “obstruction of justice,” with many already baying for impeachment.

Here’s another secret: Such “process” crimes don’t impress voters when there is no underlying crime. If Mr. Trump leaned on his intelligence officials to remove the Russian cloud, this was ill-advised on the part of a president whose specialty is the ill-advised. But his behavior will also increasingly appear in a new light if it turns out Washington’s tail-chasing has been partly driven by Russian fabrications.

The Washington Post and CNN reported late last month that the single most shattering series of events for the Hillary Clinton campaign—the events that began with FBI chief Comey’s intervention in the race—were partly influenced by planted Russian fake intelligence.

Likewise the dossier of repulsive Trump allegations, assembled by a retired British spy supposedly tapping his Russian intelligence sources, also appears to have been a Russian plant and yet may have played a role in justifying the Obama administration’s decision to launch an intelligence investigation of the Trump campaign.

Think about it: To the extent the fruitless hunt for collusion has been promoted by planted Russian intelligence, Russian fiddling is playing a bigger role in shaping our politics today than it did during the campaign.

By the way, we’re not alleging supercompetence on Russia’s part. Planting fake information is routine intelligence work. The World War II battle of Midway was won partly with fake information about water filtration on Midway Island.

Mr. Comey ducked questions on these subjects, saying he would address them only in classified briefings. President Obama’s former national intelligence director, James Clapper, in Australia this week gave a speech that again put the question of Trump collusion, for which he admitted he had no evidence, at the center of investigation despite the multifarious ways Russia meddled for which there’s actually evidence.

No surprise here: The FBI, CIA and NSA are eager to pose as scrupulous, disinterested arbiters of Russian meddling. They are not eager to be seen as victims and patsies of Russian meddling. To use Mr. Comey’s phrase, the performance of our national intelligence directorate is the one rock that hasn’t been turned over.

So here’s a question for Special Counsel Robert Mueller, a former FBI chief himself. Will he accept the current framing that his Russia investigation is about everything except whether his former agency was semi-wittingly duped into some of its interventions by Kremlin danglings—there’s nothing to see here, move along.

Or will he have the courage to ask the requisite questions the FBI, CIA and NSA don’t want asked about their own, perhaps, gullibility and overeagerness to play in domestic politics because of their dislike of Mr. Trump?

Washington’s desire to get to the bottom of Russian meddling is probably less than you imagine. If not, the places to start are the Trump dossier and the role of Russian disinformation in promoting Mr. Comey’s intervention in the Hillary Clinton email matter.

Appeared in the June 10, 2017, print edition.
 

TarHeelEer

Freshman
Dec 15, 2002
89,338
59
48
It will be a failure then. You're going to get Page or Manafort on money laundering, or something like that. They messed up and didn't know all of the rules. You might get a few deep state peeps on classified disclosure charges. But that's going to be about it. But we won't know this for certain for years, because they'll need to drag it out to give it credence.

Yes, I'm that jaded.

I was wrong, Manafort is flat out dirty.
 

atlkvb

All-American
Jul 9, 2004
83,365
7,347
113
I think they are going to try to make Trump out to be "unwitting" dupe or Russian asset. Or they will attempt to prove he obstructed the investigation through firing Comey and trying to intimidate witnesses.

Only problem is they have McCabe's testimony that Trump wasn't a suspect until after his election (so why the FISA warrants?) and Comey's testimony also insisting he told Trump he wasn't a suspect when in fact apparently he was! So half their argument is self defeating if he was "unwitting" or a dupe because clearly they suspected him well before his election if that story is going to hold water. On the obstruction angle, Comey himself admits to leaking which is the reason he was canned, and both he and McCabe contradict each other saying neither were aware of the FBI investigation which had been ordered on Trump based on the fake dossier. They have some explaining to do because someone is lying through their teeth.
 

dave

Senior
May 29, 2001
60,608
838
113
Everyone pray for kkkuntry. This is a devastating loss for his frail ego.