I considered that, but I doubt Bill's cigars and Hillary ever interacted.Secolobo said:
I'll bite......Cigars?
I considered that, but I doubt Bill's cigars and Hillary ever interacted.Secolobo said:
I'll bite......Cigars?
Not humid enough.Ellis Wyatt said:I considered that, but I doubt Bill's cigars and Hillary ever interacted.Secolobo said:
I'll bite......Cigars?
Quote:
He alternately defended his involvement, expressed remorse at the tumult it unleashed, said the White House had manipulated him, fumed how the news media had portrayed the events and said the full story would vindicate him, said the people, who in recent weeks described the previously undisclosed episodes.
Quote:
In the months since, Mr. Rosenstein has reached out to people including in late-night texts to discuss how his reputation has fared and his frustrations with the White House and members of Congress who have targeted him, according to people who spoke to him.
Quote:
Mr. Rosenstein's conversations last spring offer new insights into the tumultuous week that followed Mr. Comey's firing.
In a series of meetings at the Justice Department, senior F.B.I. officials argued for Mr. Rosenstein to appoint a special counsel to run the Russia investigation and investigate Mr. Comey's firing, according to people briefed on the matter. Some of Mr. Rosenstein's own allies turned on him, accusing him of sullying his reputation by allowing himself to be used by the president.
LINKQuote:
On the afternoon that Mr. Mueller's appointment was announced, Mr. Sessions was in the Oval Office with the president discussing candidates to be F.B.I. director when they both learned that Mr. Rosenstein had made his decision. Mr. Trump erupted in anger, saying he needed someone overseeing the investigation who would be loyal to him. Mr. Sessions offered to resign.
Mr. Sessions felt blindsided by Mr. Rosenstein's decision. After leaving the White House, Mr. Sessions's chief of staff, Jody Hunt, confronted Mr. Rosenstein, demanding to know why he had not given them advance warning, according to a lawyer briefed on the exchange. Mr. Rosenstein has told others that he was worried at the time he would be fired by the president.
Andrew C. White, a former federal prosecutor who worked with Mr. Rosenstein and remains close to him, said he believed Mr. Rosenstein "had every right to be furious."
"The White House put Greyhound tire tracks on his back," Mr. White said. "They threw him under the bus."
RoscoePColtrane said:
This is a key point in Q&A that really needs to be focused on. I think my crappy transcribing of it is close to dead on. Rosey slurs sometimes and it throws me off.
Gaetz: Let's get to the FISA renewal you signed list for me the people who briefed you on the substance of that FISA renewal to spy on people.
Rosenstein: Here's one thing that's important for you to understand. People can make all kinds of allegations publicly. I am quite confident about my conduct throughout this investigation. That matter is under review by the Inspector General. We'll see what the Inspector General finds.
Gaetz: Did you read the FISA application before you signed it?
Rosenstein: I won't comment about any FISA application.
Gaetz: You won't say to the committee whether or not you read the document you signed that authorized spying on people associated with the Trump campaign.
Rosenstein: I dispute your characterization of what that FISA is about, sir.
Gaetz: Did you read it or not?
Rosenstein: I'll be happy to discuss details with her.
Gaetz: Did Peter Strzok brief you on it?
Rosenstein: No.
Gaetz: Did Lisa Page brief you on it?
Rosenstein: No.
Gaetz: Did Sally Moyer brief you on it?
Rosenstein: Let me explain the process if I may.
Gaetz: Did Trisha Anderson brief you on it?
Rosenstein: No FBI personnel briefed me on it. The process, sir, that these FISA applications or renewals first come up through the FBI chain of command. They are sworn under oath by a career federal agent. I'm not the affiant.
Let's unpack that for a moment.Quote:
Rosenstein: No FBI personnel briefed me on it. The process, sir, that these FISA applications or renewals first come up through the FBI chain of command. They are sworn under oath by a career federal agent. I'm not the affiant.
We don't know which warrant renewal application Rosenstein is actually referring to in that exchange. My spidey senses tell me there was a Title 1 FISA warrant on Manafort from 2016-2018.RoscoePColtrane said:
Correct the affiant comment was fodder and Gaetz called him on it, he signed it, that abolutely makes him an affiant.
My real main point of the exchange is the "Characterization" of the warrant itself. That warrant Rosey signed is 180 of what everyone is being told in the press and twitter.
LINKQuote:
Judicial Watch announced U.S. District Court Judge Reggie B. Walton instructed the Justice Department to immediately begin producing records about DOJ communications with Nellie Ohr, the wife of senior DOJ official Bruce Ohr. Nellie Ohr worked for Clinton campaign vendor Fusion GPS on the anti-Trump Dossier campaign document.
Judge Walton rejected a Justice Department request to begin producing documents six months from now and ordered the DOJ to begin producing documents immediately on a rolling basis over the next two months. Judge Walton also rejected DOJ's efforts to restrict their search to only 2016.
Judge Walton repeatedly criticized the Justice Department during a June 14 hearing:
I think if it's been almost, since December when the initial request was made more should have been done by now. And it seems to me if you have someone who's going to come into office and they say they're going to be a disrupter, that they should appreciate there's going to be a lot of FOIA requests and therefore, should gear up to deal with those requests. So I'm not real sympathetic to the position that you have limited staff and therefore, you can't comply with these requests. So I think you're going to have to get some more people.
***
I mean FOIA is considered to be very important. I keep getting from the government, from various agencies we can't do this, we can't do that because we don't have the resources. I'm not real sympathetic to that. FOIA is important. Open government is important, and government has to comply with FOIA in order to make it an open government.
This is a 100% planted story by the oval, to start the cover for Mueller and his mission. Almost simultaneously NPR drops this.Quote:
Washington (CNN) President Donald Trump interviewed Robert Mueller as a potential replacement for fired FBI Director James Comey the day before the former FBI director was named special counsel, a White House official said Tuesday.
The official who preferred to remain anonymous, would not detail what the two discussed during the interview, said it took place on May 16. If Mueller knew he was going to be named special counsel, it is unlikely he divulged that information to Trump. CNN has reported at the time that the White House was given only a brief heads up that Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein was naming Mueller to oversee Russian interference in the 2016 election and potential collusion from Trump's campaign associates.
Now there are two sources that the left lives and breathes on, and they are both pointed at that meeting to highlight it, and NPR flaunts Mueller's impeccable reputation that anyone outside of the people that really study his career, he seems like their savior. They have defended Mueller from day one, with everything in their arsenal including articles of impeachment literally. And now they have done the same with Rosenstein.Quote:
The Trump White House had been considering Robert Mueller as a top candidate to lead the FBI before the deputy U.S. attorney general changed course and tapped Mueller to serve as special counsel investigating Russian interference in last year's election, two sources familiar with the process told NPR.
Mueller had gone so far as to meet with Justice Department leaders and White House officials about the FBI job, which opened after President Trump fired Director James Comey on May 9. But that idea went by the wayside after Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein instead reached out to Mueller to run the politically sensitive Russia probe, which is examining ties between Russians and Trump campaign aides, the sources said.
Mueller has long been considered one of Washington's most indispensable men. He served in top roles at the Justice Department and became President George W. Bush's FBI director only days before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks devastated the country.
President Barack Obama asked Mueller to continue to serve for two more years past the director's normal 10-year term, a move that required Congress to pass special legislation. Congress cited "the critical need for continuity and stability at the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the face of ongoing threats to the United States and leadership transitions at the Federal agencies charged with protecting national security."
Quote:
Sean Spicer said: "Mr. Ruddy never spoke to the President regarding this issue. With respect to this subject, only the President or his attorneys are authorized to comment."
And deputy White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said simply: "Chris speaks for himself."
Ruddy disputed Spicer's comments.
"Spicer issued a bizarre late night press release that a) doesn't deny my claim the President is considering firing Mueller and b) says I didn't speak to the President about the matter -- when I never claimed to have done so. Memo to Sean: focus your efforts on exposing the flim-flam Russian allegations against POTUS and highlighting his remarkable achievements! Don't waste time trying to undermine one of your few allies."
Ruddy also told CNN Spicer called him last night to ask him to issue a statement saying he didn't speak with Trump personally, but he refused. Asked to respond, Spicer said he called "and asked him to clarify that his statement was not based on any meetings or conversations with the president."
https://www.cnn.com/2017/06/12/politics/ruddy-robert-mueller-white-house/index.html
Quote:
"The most qualified person man or woman to ever run for the POTUS. ~ Barak Obama
aggiehawg said:LINKQuote:
Judicial Watch announced U.S. District Court Judge Reggie B. Walton instructed the Justice Department to immediately begin producing records about DOJ communications with Nellie Ohr, the wife of senior DOJ official Bruce Ohr. Nellie Ohr worked for Clinton campaign vendor Fusion GPS on the anti-Trump Dossier campaign document.
Judge Walton rejected a Justice Department request to begin producing documents six months from now and ordered the DOJ to begin producing documents immediately on a rolling basis over the next two months. Judge Walton also rejected DOJ's efforts to restrict their search to only 2016.
Judge Walton repeatedly criticized the Justice Department during a June 14 hearing:
I think if it's been almost, since December when the initial request was made more should have been done by now. And it seems to me if you have someone who's going to come into office and they say they're going to be a disrupter, that they should appreciate there's going to be a lot of FOIA requests and therefore, should gear up to deal with those requests. So I'm not real sympathetic to the position that you have limited staff and therefore, you can't comply with these requests. So I think you're going to have to get some more people.
***
I mean FOIA is considered to be very important. I keep getting from the government, from various agencies we can't do this, we can't do that because we don't have the resources. I'm not real sympathetic to that. FOIA is important. Open government is important, and government has to comply with FOIA in order to make it an open government.
Quote:
The lawsuit seeks:
- All records of contact or communication, including but not limited to emails, text messages, and instant chats, between DOJ officials in the Attorney General's Office and Fusion GPS employee or contractor Nellie Ohr.
I made this same argument 200 +/- pages ago, Dixie remembers we had a long talk about it. 5-16-16 is a sticking point for me.tsuag10 said:
I saved your post for future reference Roscoe.
Also, FWIW, Q has made reference to the fact that we are "watching a movie" several times over the past year.
However this turns out, it's gonna make a hell of a book and movie some day.
Put the kool-aid down. This isn't all kabuki theater and Rosenstein is not that accomplished of an actor. He was genuinely pissed during his appearance on the hill. If there were some master plan with ulterior motives that he was a part of, he wouldn't have been that angry.Quote:
I'm back on the crazy train Dixie, I still holding on to that pause I had when Mueller and Rosey met with Trump. I just can't shake it.
Okayaggiehawg said:Put the kool-aid down. This isn't all kabuki theater and Rosenstein is not that accomplished of an actor. He was genuinely pissed during his appearance on the hill. If there were some master plan with ulterior motives that he was a part of, he wouldn't have been that angry.Quote:
I'm back on the crazy train Dixie, I still holding on to that pause I had when Mueller and Rosey met with Trump. I just can't shake it.
I think Trump was meeting with people he was told to meet with, regarding the new FBI Director and Mueller was consulted for his thoughts on the subject.
woah. I've only been on this thread for about the last 100 pages, so I had to play catch up.RoscoePColtrane said:I made this same argument 200 +/- pages ago, Dixie remembers we had a long talk about it. 5-16-16 is a sticking point for me.tsuag10 said:
I saved your post for future reference Roscoe.
Also, FWIW, Q has made reference to the fact that we are "watching a movie" several times over the past year.
However this turns out, it's gonna make a hell of a book and movie some day.
Quote:
Note that Gowdy asked NO questions. He simply delivered an emotional statement: Whatever you got finish it the hell up. Because this country is being torn apart.
Gowdy probably knows as much as anyone. He was assigned by Nunes to view items even Nunes hasn't seen directly.
So why didn't Gowdy ask questions.
Why did he simply encourage everyone to hurry the hell up?
Quote:
Why Did DOJ And FBI Ignore Lack Of Evidence For Russiagate? They Fell In Love With Their Source
That's why they are busy chasing Russian red herringsaggiehawg said:
Such an operation, even if tightly held to a small number of people, would have to be a surgical strike against former Obama administration officials. And it would have been accomplished in a year or less.
Besides, Team Mueller would not be going along with any targeting of Democrats.
Unless Trump was so sure there would be nothing that could come back on him thatMueller himself is being dupedwhile Huber is amassing sealed indictments. Let Team Mueller chase his tail while the real work is happening elsewhere.
And the flaw in that hypothesis is that Sessions has kept Rosey in the loop on what Huber is doing which would require Rosenstein to be lying through his teeth to Mueller, his former boss.