Can Comey have an attorney client privilege with Fitzgerald or his first attorney if he gave them classified information?
Depends on the timing.coyote68 said:
Can Comey have an attorney client privilege with Fitzgerald or his first attorney if he gave them classified information?
aggiehawg said:Number 2 is highly unlikely.drcrinum said:
Two immediate thoughts:
1) Richman could now be in big trouble -- he's no longer just a friend, he's implicated as a government employee mishandling/leaking classified materials...an accomplice in criminal behavior.
2) I wonder if Richman ever performed 702 Queries at the FBI? I think someone needs to find out if Richman was also a friend of Glenn Simpson at Fusion GPS or the former FBI chap at Crowdstrike.
Number 1 earns him jail time. Well maybe not, because Hillary will get him to a country with no extradition treaty,
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...Wait, let's look at something here. From the article the benefits included: "Sources familiar with Richman's status at the FBI told Fox News that he was assigned to "special projects" by Comey, and had a security clearance as well as badge access to the building. Richman's status was the subject of a Memorandum of Understanding."Quote:
"I did indeed have SGE status with the Bureau (for no pay)," Richman wrote in an email.
Richman emerged last year as the former FBI director's contact for leaking memos documenting his private discussions with President Trump memos that are now the subject of an inspector general review over the presence of classified material. Sources familiar with Richman's status at the FBI told Fox News that he was assigned to "special projects" by Comey, and had a security clearance as well as badge access to the building. Richman's status was the subject of a Memorandum of Understanding. (read more)
A few paragraphs later, this: "Richman's portfolio included the use of encrypted communications by terror suspects."
Oh my. Well, well, well You see what's being described here. There's only one way to gain access to "encrypted communications" and that means having access to the FBI and NSA database.
Accepting he obviously had such access. what would be the probability that Daniel Richman was one of these?
Yeah. Heard that, too.mrad85 said:
Didn't she also say that The memos didn't just go to Richman, but possibly Fitz as well?
Strange if true, since Comey didn't mention that during his testimony
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Giuliani reopens negotiations about presidential interview with Mueller, but cautions SC that President remains Resistant
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On March 18, 2016, Strzok wrote -- "Thought of the perfect person D (Director Comey) can bounce this off of."
Page: "Who?"
Strzok: "Pat (redacted) You gotta give me credit if we go with him. (redacted) And delay briefing him on until I can get back and do it. Late next week or later."
Page: "We talked about him last night, not for this, but how great he is. He's in private practice though, right? Suppose you could still bring him back. And yes, I'll hold."
Strozk identifies Fitzgerald's law firm as "Skadden in Chicago", and then continues "Don't forget that Dad Comey appointed him as special counsel in the Plame matter, and that he was there for Comey's investiture. I could work with him again (redacted) And damn we'd get sh*t DONE.
Page: "I know. Like I said, we discussed boss and him yesterday."
Actually, it's probably always been there but the Trump admin is the first to shine the spotlight on the swamp, mostly self inflicted by swamp critters themselves.RoscoePColtrane said:
The web of conflicts in this thing is unlike ever seen before.
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A copy of the little-publicized second dossier in the Trump-Russia affair, acquired by RealClearInvestigations, raises new questions about the origins of the Trump investigation, particularly about the role of Clinton partisans and the extent to which the two dossiers may have been coordinated or complementary operations.
The second dossier -- two reports compiled by Cody Shearer, an ex-journalist and longtime Clinton operative -- echoes many of the lurid and still unsubstantiated claims made in the Steele dossier, and is receiving new scrutiny. On Sunday, Rep. Devin Nunes, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said in a TV interview that his panel is shifting its investigative focus concerning the origins of the Russia investigation from the FBI to the State Department. This probe will include the Shearer dossier.
In late September 2016, Sidney Blumenthal, a close Clinton confidant and colleague of Shearer's, passed Shearer's dossier on to State Department official Jonathan M. Winer, a longtime aide to John Kerry on Capitol Hill and at Foggy Bottom.
According to Winer's account in a Feb. 8, 2018 Washington Post op-ed, he shared the contents of the Shearer dossier with the author of the first dossier, ex-British spy Christopher Steele, who submitted part of it to the FBI to further substantiate his own investigation into the Trump campaign. Steele was a subcontractor working for the Washington, D.C.-based communications firm Fusion GPS, which was hired by Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign and the Democratic National Committee to compile opposition research on her Republican opponent.
RoscoePColtrane said:
Decent read on Dossier #2Quote:
A copy of the little-publicized second dossier in the Trump-Russia affair, acquired by RealClearInvestigations, raises new questions about the origins of the Trump investigation, particularly about the role of Clinton partisans and the extent to which the two dossiers may have been coordinated or complementary operations.
The second dossier -- two reports compiled by Cody Shearer, an ex-journalist and longtime Clinton operative -- echoes many of the lurid and still unsubstantiated claims made in the Steele dossier, and is receiving new scrutiny. On Sunday, Rep. Devin Nunes, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said in a TV interview that his panel is shifting its investigative focus concerning the origins of the Russia investigation from the FBI to the State Department. This probe will include the Shearer dossier.
In late September 2016, Sidney Blumenthal, a close Clinton confidant and colleague of Shearer's, passed Shearer's dossier on to State Department official Jonathan M. Winer, a longtime aide to John Kerry on Capitol Hill and at Foggy Bottom.
According to Winer's account in a Feb. 8, 2018 Washington Post op-ed, he shared the contents of the Shearer dossier with the author of the first dossier, ex-British spy Christopher Steele, who submitted part of it to the FBI to further substantiate his own investigation into the Trump campaign. Steele was a subcontractor working for the Washington, D.C.-based communications firm Fusion GPS, which was hired by Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign and the Democratic National Committee to compile opposition research on her Republican opponent.
https://www.realclearinvestigations.com/articles/2018/04/25/test.html
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The inaccuracies in Shearer's account fuel suspicions that he misidentified the source of the information on who was funding the Steele dossier. What matters is that Shearer knew who was paying for Fusion GPS's work on Trump. More important, if Steele received both of Shearer's reports in September 2016, that would contradict the information in the FBI's warrant application that said Steele didn't know who was paying for his work. The source of the funding was right there in Shearer's first memo. The FBI's warrant application, however, says Simpson "never advised Source No. 1 [Mr. Steele] as to the motivation behind the research into candidate's #1 [Mr. Trump's] ties to Russia." If Steele had both of Shearer's reports, he knew he was being paid by the DNC.
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The U.S. and U.K. are part of an intelligence-sharing arrangement known as the "Five Eyes," which includes the three other major English-speaking world powers: Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. The arrangement is premised on trust. All five members trust each other not only to share information vital to their national security but also to not collect intelligence against each other by spying on officials, or businessmen and each other's citizens. When former British spy Christopher Steele brought his memos to Winer, one senior U.S. intelligence official explained to RCI, "Steele was violating the fundamental premise of the Five Eyes relationship."
Further, even if Winer had no idea who was funding Steele's work or that it was opposition research, Steele was a foreign national spying on a fundamental American political institution, a presidential campaign. If he had possession of the Shearer memo disclosing that the DNC had hired Simpson and Fritsch, Winer knew at the very least that there was a politically funded campaign to find dirt on the Republican candidatea campaign that certainly resembled Steele's research. This appears not to have bothered Winer, who turned Shearer's memos over to Steele.
RoscoePColtrane said:
Haven't yet, Judicial Watch is after it, but I've yet to see it
Once you go down the road of corruption with the Clintons you have to see it to the end because they have you. "In for a penny, in for a pound" as it were.coyote68 said:
I'm not a lawyer, but it appears that there was a group within the FBI and DOJ who were conspiring to influence the presidential election and after the election to overturn the results. It appears that some are still using the DOJ and FBI to overturn the results.
I am trying to understand what is so important that these people willingly and knowingly commit crimes that you can go to prison for a long time?
The reporting has been mixed, whether Fusion approached Perkins, Coie or the other way around but I think Fusion was looking for funding and they approached Perkins. Reason being that once Manafort became attached to the Trump campaign (first in a lower capacity then elevated to campaign manager) Simpson and his wife had an ax to grind against Manafort.Quote:
Wouldn't it be something if the Shearer Dossier was the primary source for parts of the Steele Dossier? In other words, Steele was acting as a cutout to give credentials/credibility to the oppo research that had been performed by Shearer/DNC. Oh my....and throw in Nellie Ohr & some 702 Query info for icing effect on the cake. You couldn't make this stuff up...if it is true.
There may be more to the story. Steele was consulting with Dearlove and prossibly other persons related to MI6/GCHQ, so British Intel may have made a few contributions as well...which ups the credibility issue, not to mention what Hannigan was feeding to Brennan. This may not be Russian collusion at all...it may be HRC/DNC collusion with British Intel (former & current). Remember that business in the Strzok-Page texts about not wanting to embarrass a certain country? I had always assumed that text referenced Downer & the Aussies, but now...maybe it was a reference to Hannigan & UK Intel = Brits.aggiehawg said:The reporting has been mixed, whether Fusion approached Perkins, Coie or the other way around but I think Fusion was looking for funding and they approached Perkins. Reason being that once Manafort became attached to the Trump campaign (first in a lower capacity then elevated to campaign manager) Simpson and his wife had an ax to grind against Manafort.Quote:
Wouldn't it be something if the Shearer Dossier was the primary source for parts of the Steele Dossier? In other words, Steele was acting as a cutout to give credentials/credibility to the oppo research that had been performed by Shearer/DNC. Oh my....and throw in Nellie Ohr & some 702 Query info for icing effect on the cake. You couldn't make this stuff up...if it is true.
I have never fully subscribed to the notion that Fusion was one of the government contractors with access to NSA metadata that Admiral Rogers discovered. Just can't wrap my head around how that would be possible for a self-branded oppo research firm would be allowed such access and on whose authority. Rogers sure as hell didn't know about it in advance.
But you raise a good point, what came first? The Shearer Dossier? Or the Steele Dossier? If it was the Shearer one, then it would make sense that they needed a cut out with some level of credibility to peddle it to news outlets. Particularly since Shearer was getting no traction with the press on his own. Enter from stage left, Christopher Steele.
Hence my comment earlier about the swamp, swamp critters and self-inflicted woundsMouthBQ98 said:
This makes Mueller look more like a cleanup guy for a desperate last ditch coverup attempt instead of a legitimate investigator. If not for the OIG and a handful of honest good faith actors like Adm. Rodgers, we might not know any of this, and it might have been efficiently buried by an ongoing intervention against Trump until the Dems could retake some or all of Congress and take more definitive action to suppress corruption investigations.