Soo, Mr Cohen, were you lying then? Or are you lying now?Quote:
Trying to keep his miserable ass out of prison, or get an early release.
And since when do federal inmates get to have twitter accounts?
Soo, Mr Cohen, were you lying then? Or are you lying now?Quote:
Trying to keep his miserable ass out of prison, or get an early release.
Let's take another look at why FARA had never truly been enforced until the Obama administration (and even the one case that is actually being tried, Rafekian and Alpetkin case is in trouble) and that is the revolving door between government work and lobbying work. Not to mention how many members of Congress have spouses that work in the lobbying business.ruddyduck said:
it feels like dc is just one big game of a bunch of lawyers playing "gotcha" with interpretations of the law.
don't want to pile on lawyers but some of y'all are really good at making messes.
I hope the case crumbles. What a **** show. Hopefully, Mueller's reputation will be destroyed when this is all over.aggiehawg said:
This case is going from bad to worse for the government.
Broken record on this but absent espionage or terrorism, counter-intel operations are lousy for making criminal cases.
If so, they're finding a lot more dirt.will25u said:
More waiting.
Quote:
.....Vladimir Putin: I do not think that this could be interpreted as interference by Ukraine. But it is perfectly obvious that Ukrainian oligarchs gave money to Trump's opponents. I do not know whether they did this by themselves or with the knowledge of the authorities......
Vladimir Putin: I did not interfere then, I do not want to interfere now, and I am not going to interfere in the future.....
Vladimir Putin: To change anything. If you want to return to US elections again look, it is a huge country, a huge nation with its own problems, with its own views on what is good and what is bad, and with an understanding that in the past few years, say ten years, nothing has changed for the better for the middle class despite the enormous growth of prosperity for the ruling class and the wealthy. This is a fact that Trump's election team understood. He understood this himself and made the most of it......
Oliver Stone: Well, you are not disagreeing. You are saying that it was quite possible that there was an attempt to prevent Donald Trump from coming into office with a soft, I will call it a soft coup d'tat?
Vladimir Putin: In the USA?
Oliver Stone: Yes.
Vladimir Putin: It is still going on.
Oliver Stone: A coup d'tat is planned by people who have power inside.
Vladimir Putin: No, I do not mean that. I mean lack of respect for the will of the voters. I think it was unprecedented in the history of the United States.
Oliver Stone: What was unprecedented?
Vladimir Putin: It was the first time the losing side does not want to admit defeat and does not respect the will of the voters......
Quote:
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff said Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz got roped into a politically-motivated scheme to protect President Trump, laying the groundwork to discredit the government watchdog's work as he nears completion of a report on alleged surveillance abuses by the DOJ and FBI.
At the Aspen Security Forum this weekend, Schiff accused top Justice Department officials of pandering to Trump by instigating a "fast track" report last year about former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe. His comments came as part of a broader answer to a question about whether he has concerns about Attorney General William Barr's review of the origins of the Russia investigation.
Schiff claimed the president wanted McCabe, who briefly took over as acting FBI director after Trump fired James Comey in May 2017, investigated and his pension taken away and suggested someone such as former Attorney General Rod Rosenstein obliged the president by making a referral.
"The inspector general found that McCabe was untruthful. He may very well have been untruthful," the California Democrat said, but noted that is not where main his concern lies.
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.....Now an answer is emerging. Sources tell RealClearInvestigations that Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz will soon file a report with evidence indicating that Comey was misleading the president. Even as he repeatedly assured Trump that he was not a target, the former director was secretly trying to build a conspiracy case against the president, while at times acting as an investigative agent.
Two U.S. officials briefed on the inspector general's investigation of possible FBI misconduct said Comey was essentially "running a covert operation against" the president, starting with a private "defensive briefing" he gave Trump just weeks before his inauguration. They said Horowitz has examined high-level FBI text messages and other communications indicating Comey was actually conducting a "counterintelligence assessment" of Trump during that January 2017 meeting in New York.
In addition to adding notes of his meetings and phone calls with Trump to the official FBI case file, Comey had an agent inside the White House who reported back to FBI headquarters about Trump and his aides, according to other officials familiar with the matter.
Although Comey took many actions on his own, he was not working in isolation. One focus of Horowitz's inquiry is the private Jan. 6, 2017, briefing Comey gave the president-elect in New York about material in the Democratic-commissioned dossier compiled by ex-British intelligence officer Christopher Steele. Reports of that meeting were used days later by BuzzFeed, CNN and other outlets as a news hook for reporting on the dossier's lascivious and unsubstantiated claims......
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The status of the Eastern District of Virginia case against former partner of Michael Flynn, Bijan Rafiekian is bizarre.
Apparently U.S. Attorney General Bill Barr has not engaged into this case, and the current status is a mess.
The head-scratching FARA case was tenuous from the outset as the prosecution was arguing a rather odd legal interpretation of FARA statutes; and now the DOJ could be handed a dismissal, even if the jury returns a guilty verdict.
Yes, when you stretch legal interpretation beyond evidence, it's a mess.
The current arguments surround jury instructions where the DOJ is requesting their earlier claims of Rafiekian as an "agent of a foreign government" be dropped (because there is no evidence); and simultaneously arguing that Rafiekian didn't have to break the law surrounding FARA in order to be found guilty of breaking the DOJ interpretation of the law surrounding FARA.
Confused? You should be.
Sundance quotes technofog here:Quote:
Suffice to say the DOJ is arguing the Flynn Intel Group (FIG) is guilty of doing something even though the DOJ can't prove the FIG intended to do something unlawful.
The argument around "mens rea" is intent. "Mens rea" is the mental element of a person's intention to commit a crime; or knowledge that one's action or lack of action would cause a crime to be committed.
In oral arguments (about jury instructions) the DOJ says they don't need to prove the Flynn Intel Group was guilty of intent.
Indeed, the DOJ position is that Rafiekian did something wrong, without intending to do something wrong, in filing information about their Foreign Agent Registration Act (FARA) compliance forms.
The DOJ also admits the government took no action as an outcome of the accidentally wrong information; simply that the information itself was accidentally false and therefore unlawful.
So the judge ("The Court") is asking questions:
Now to the transcript of what is being argued in court over jury instructions.Quote:
My biggest takeaway is the DOJ's position that the conduct need only be "prohibited."
I'm assuming this is consistent with how they've applied Section 951 in the past. (If the 951/FARA/FISA theory is correct.) That would have included all the lobbyists doing work on behalf of foreign countries, foreign individuals, or foreign corporations who didn't have airtight FARA paperwork. Not just the material omissions/lies alleged in the Rafiekian case.
The DOJ prosecutor basically admits this: "any conduct that was in violation of the FARA statute, whether or not prosecuted or prosecutable, renders that conduct not a legal commercial transaction." [Key point being "whether or not prosecutable"]
I wish there was the backbone to take down Comey and by extension, Mueller, who became an accessory after the fact. Even if Mueller is just labeled an unindicted co-conspirator, there is little question there was a conspiracy at the top of the FBI and it continued within the Office of Special Counsel.drcrinum said:
Quote:
"Between the election and April 2017, when Ferrante finally left the White House, the Trump NSC division supervisor was not allowed to get rid of Ferrante," he added, "and Ferrante continued working in direct conflict with the no-contact policy between the White House and the Department of Justice."
Well, he certainly was part of the conspiracy. Were I Durham, I'd give him a Queen for a Day hearing to find out what his marching orders were.Cassius said:Quote:
"Between the election and April 2017, when Ferrante finally left the White House, the Trump NSC division supervisor was not allowed to get rid of Ferrante," he added, "and Ferrante continued working in direct conflict with the no-contact policy between the White House and the Department of Justice."
Can this guy be charged with a crime?
My concern is based upon DOJ's continued declination of unsealing the Comey memos. Barr has declass authority but they are still fighting in court to keep those memos secret but not claiming they are part of an ongoing investigation, which would indicate Comey and/or McCabe are under grand jury investigation. That is confusing to me.fasthorses05 said:
I don't understand about your "backbone" statement. I'm pretty sure the information revealed in the article will make it's way to proper investigative results. Assuming this is correct, then Comey's guilt will be black and white. I don't doubt your Mueller comment is correct, and believe there will be some evidence to connect him with the Comey affair, through Rosenstein, but probably tangential.
If this is correct, it would take an willful effort by the DOJ (Barr), to avoid indicting Comey. I can possibly see them not indicting Mueller, but missing out on the Comey indictment would seriously piss off a lot of American's, especially me.
There may be more to this than meets the eye. Per the article, Ferrante was replaced by another agent:Cassius said:Quote:
"Between the election and April 2017, when Ferrante finally left the White House, the Trump NSC division supervisor was not allowed to get rid of Ferrante," he added, "and Ferrante continued working in direct conflict with the no-contact policy between the White House and the Department of Justice."
Can this guy be charged with a crime?
Quote:
Another FBI official, Jordan Rae Kelly, who worked closely with Mueller when he headed the bureau, replaced Ferrante upon his White House exit (though she signed security logs for him to continue entering the White House as a visitor while he was working for BuzzFeed). Kelly left the White House last year and joined Ferrante at FTI Consulting.