That's the thing. There's just SO much to deal with. At least start on the major items and work your way down the list.
Thanks for linking that article. It is fascinating and the author makes some excellent points.drcrinum said:
https://spectator.org/nellie-ohr-woman-in-the-middle/Quote:
Is it a surprise to find a Stalin apologist at the center of the Steele dossier scandal?
LINKQuote:
"Unmasking" refers to the revelation of American identities in intelligence reports. These are Americans who, though not targeted as foreign agents, are incidentally intercepted in surveillance. In marked contrast, we are talking here about a FISA warrant application, not an intelligence report. In a warrant application, it is the DOJ's honorable practice, and the judiciary's expectation, that the court must be informed about the material biases of the sources of the factual allegations that the DOJ claims amount to probable cause.
As the Democrats' own excerpt from the FISA application illustrates, unmasking has nothing to do with it, because there is no need to use names at all: Note that Simpson is referred to as "an identified U.S. person"; Perkins-Coie is referred to as "a U.S.-based law firm." The dispute here is not about the failure to use the words "Hillary Clinton." They could have referred to "Candidate #2."To state that "Candidate #2" had commissioned Steele's research would have been just as easy and every bit as appropriate as the DOJ's reference to a "Candidate #1," who might have "ties to Russia." Had DOJ done the former, it would not have "unmasked" Hillary Clinton any more than Donald Trump was unmasked by DOJ's description of him as "Candidate #1"; but it would have been being "transparent" with the FISA court. By omitting any reference to Clinton, the DOJ was being the opposite of transparent.
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The much-hyped Obama intelligence report that determined "Vladimir Putin ordered" Hillary Clinton's campaign emails hacked and leaked "to help Trump's chances of victory" has been accepted as gospel among DC punditry and given the investigations besieging the Trump presidency their legs. To date, no evidence has publicly emerged to corroborate the report, and the reason may have a lot to do with that sketchy dossier bought and paid for by Clinton.
Suspiciously, Barack Obama's Intelligence Community Assessment matches the main allegations leveled by the Clinton-paid dossier on Trump, which wormed its way into intelligence channels, in addition to the FBI, Justice Department and State Department, during the 2016 campaign.
In fact, the shady dossier makes exactly the same claim that Putin personally "ordered" the cyberattacks on the Clinton campaign and leaked embarrassing emails to "bolster Trump," as part of "an aggressive Trump support operation." Like Obama's ICA, Clinton's dossier provides no concrete evidence to back up the claim.
After learning Obama Justice and FBI officials relied heavily on unsubstantiated rumors in the dossier to wiretap a Trump adviser during the election, congressional leaders now suspect the dossier also informed Obama intelligence officials who compiled the ICA.
The report was released Jan. 6, 2017 the same day intelligence officials attached a written summary of the dossier to a highly classified Russia briefing they gave Obama about the dossier, and the day after Obama held a secret White House meeting to discuss the dossier with his national security adviser and FBI director.
Staff investigators for GOP Rep. Devin Nunes' intelligence committee, for one, are now going over "every word" of the ICA including classified footnotes to see if any of the analysis was pre-cooked based on the dossier. On Tuesday, Nunes sent letters to Obama intel officials responsible for the report. He demanded former top spook John Brennan and intel czar James Clapper provide answers about how they used the dossier in intel reports and when they learned the Clinton camp paid for it....
His criticism immediately gives Horowitz legitimacy in the eyes of the media. Trump has been playing the media like this from day one. The only thing odd about the criticism is that people can't see what he's doing.BMX Bandit said:
The job of the OIG is to investigate fraud abuse etc in the DoJ. Wouldn't make any sense for Sessions to use "normal" DoJ lawyers.
Very odd criticism from Trump.
Agree it seems odd. Why I speculated a Special Counsel could be appointed, if it appears Sessions can't do it.BMX Bandit said:
The job of the OIG is to investigate fraud abuse etc in the DoJ. Wouldn't make any sense for Sessions to use "normal" DoJ lawyers.
Very odd criticism from Trump.
Trey Gowdy. I'm telling you. Book it.aggiehawg said:
There is a conflict for DOJ investigating itself on FISA abuse, since the highest levels of the DOJ have to sign off on FISA warrants. Dana Boente and Rod Rosenstein each signed off on the Page warrant applications.
Remember, before Sessions was confirmed, Yates was Acting Attorney General. She thwarted IG Horowitz from any investigation of the National Security division of DOJ (the unit responsible for FISA applications.) Sessions has now reversed that, if he hadn't done it before.
This might wind up with another Special Counsel being appointed. We'll see.
I'm not sure Gowdy would take it, though.jjeffers1 said:Trey Gowdy. I'm telling you. Book it.aggiehawg said:
There is a conflict for DOJ investigating itself on FISA abuse, since the highest levels of the DOJ have to sign off on FISA warrants. Dana Boente and Rod Rosenstein each signed off on the Page warrant applications.
Remember, before Sessions was confirmed, Yates was Acting Attorney General. She thwarted IG Horowitz from any investigation of the National Security division of DOJ (the unit responsible for FISA applications.) Sessions has now reversed that, if he hadn't done it before.
This might wind up with another Special Counsel being appointed. We'll see.
I don't think Gowdy would work. Democrats would cry foul, he's too political, too biased in favor of Republicans. Needs to be non-partisan.aggiehawg said:I'm not sure Gowdy would take it, though.jjeffers1 said:Trey Gowdy. I'm telling you. Book it.aggiehawg said:
There is a conflict for DOJ investigating itself on FISA abuse, since the highest levels of the DOJ have to sign off on FISA warrants. Dana Boente and Rod Rosenstein each signed off on the Page warrant applications.
Remember, before Sessions was confirmed, Yates was Acting Attorney General. She thwarted IG Horowitz from any investigation of the National Security division of DOJ (the unit responsible for FISA applications.) Sessions has now reversed that, if he hadn't done it before.
This might wind up with another Special Counsel being appointed. We'll see.
He'd be fabulous since he's already up to speed and could hit the ground running, convene a grand jury and start handing down subpoenas like Halloween candy. He already knows who to target, where the bottlenecks are thwarting the Congressional investigations. As Special Counsel, backed by a grand jury, those same bottlenecks could face contempt of court instead of just contempt of Congress.
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What is needed?
Attorney General Sessions must find muscular, ambitious, and combative prosecutors (preferably from outside Washington, D.C., and preferably existing federal attorneys), direct them to call a Grand Jury, and begin collating information from congressional investigations to get to the bottom of what is likely one of gravest scandals in post-war American history: the effort to use the federal government to thwart the candidacy of an unpopular presidential candidate and then to smear and ruin his early tenure as president.
Only another prosecutorial investigation, one way or another, will lead to resolution, take the entire mess out of the partisan arena, and keep the anemic Mueller investigation honest with the full knowledge that if its own investigators have violated laws or used tainted evidence or in the past obstructed justice, then they too will be held to account.
Not for lack of trying on Mueller's part to get something on Trump.hbtheduce said:
I know hawg believes that Mueller is working against Trump. But there is still the possibility that he is white hat. None of his moves have jeopardized Trump while still building a case/investigating.
The media has borderline anointed the guy. He is the messiah to lead them to impeachment. It would be Armageddon in DC if he started dropping indictments against the Podesta wing of the scandal.
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1) Expect the OIG report to drop ASAP, this is the usual 'plausible deniability' play. If everyone sees a wedge between Horowitz, Sessions, and Trump, they can't scream that Trump is using the DoJ to go after political adversaries.
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2) People seem to like Q so much. So fine. F*** it. Let's read this like a Q post.
3) Why IS Sessions asking the OIG to investigate FISA abuses with no prosecutorial power? Why remind us the OIG is from the Obama administration? Because the OIG can recommend prosecution to the DoJ. The OIG's impartiality is basically unquestionable.
4) Horowitz' OIG was straight up BLUEBALLED by the Obama Administration from investigating ANYTHING in the DoJ. heritage.org/crime-and-just
5) There is no love lost between Horowitz and Obama. THAT'S why the OIG is investigating. Why are DoJ lawyers not being used for this investigation?
6) Because they CAN'T without getting reamed for being partisan actors. Also, there might still be a few bad actors within the DoJ. So, go to the OIG, who were sidelined and had their power diminished/ignored.
7) The OIG has no prosecutorial power, correct. What power DO they have? law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/us
8) "to have access to all records, reports, audits, reviews, documents, papers, recommendations, or other material available to the applicable establishment which relate to programs and operations with respect to which that Inspector General has responsibilities under this Act"
9) "to make such investigations and reports relating to the administration of the programs and operations of the applicable establishment as are, in the judgment of the Inspector General, necessary or desirable"
10) "to require by subpoena the production of all information, documents, reports, answers, records, accounts, papers, and other data in any medium and documentary evidence necessary in the performance of the functions assigned by this Act"
11) "to administer to or take from any person an oath, affirmation, or affidavit, whenever necessary in the performance of the functions assigned by this Act, which oath, affirmation, or affidavit when administered or taken by or before an employee of an OIG"
12) The OIG get access to EVERYTHING. They can subpeona G****MN EVERYTHING. They can take oaths from G****MN ANYONE.
13) Then, they get to drop that report into the public. Follow @OversightGov, the Inspector General twitter page where they drop public reports. Holy s*** the swamp blasting these guys do.
14) The Office of the Inspector General is the big brother of big brother. The Batman of government. They're the ones who are the first responders to corruption. And @realDonaldTrump just gave us a heads up on where the next volley against the Swamp is coming from. /end
Rockdoc said:
These interactions between the AG and president are getting confusing to me. I hope outward appearances are just part of the plan, but getting concerned.
I think Mueller wears a Mueller hat and will shift whichever the way the winds are blowing. I believe he is having a hard time reading which way to go at the moment. In the end, he will chose the way that makes him look the best IMO.aggiehawg said:Not for lack of trying on Mueller's part to get something on Trump.hbtheduce said:
I know hawg believes that Mueller is working against Trump. But there is still the possibility that he is white hat. None of his moves have jeopardized Trump while still building a case/investigating.
The media has borderline anointed the guy. He is the messiah to lead them to impeachment. It would be Armageddon in DC if he started dropping indictments against the Podesta wing of the scandal.
Meanwhile there is proof of Hillary conspiring with Russians to affect the election and not a peep nor a perp walk.
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To better understand the tactics Mueller may have employed to obtain a Flynn guilty plea, let's look at a typical scenario in the Mueller system to see how accusations of lying were used to decide disciplinary cases.
When "Agent Smith" made a headline-grabbing appearance at a dinner party with a guest list that included an individual connected to the defendant in a major case he was supervising, a conflict-of-interest was suggested. Subsequently, a disciplinary case was opened.
Now, let's say Mueller wanted the option to dismiss Smith even if the facts of the case did not support dismissal. To make this possible, after an investigation, the centerpiece of which would be Smith's testimony, a proposal would be made by Mueller's surrogate charging Smith with lying.
The charge would likely hinge on something as indistinct from each other as the color "scarlet" and the color "red." The charge also would be likely to misrepresent the significance of supporting evidence or omit contradicting evidence, or both.
Hence, the charge might be worded like this:
"When asked to describe the vehicle you drove to the dinner party, you said the vehicle's color is red. However, the manufacturer lists the color as scarlet. Since you attended a university whose official color is scarlet, you should have known the difference between scarlet and red. I, therefore, charge you with 'lying under oath,' and if found to be true, that you be dismissed from the FBI."
While defending himself, Smith might request to have someone from the car company explain that scarlet is just a marketing term for red. But this commonsense request would be denied.