10 REASONS WHY MUELLER MAY BE UNEASY WITH DOCUMENTS REVEALED
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10 REASONS WHY MUELLER MAY BE UNEASY WITH DOCUMENTS REVEALED
Justice Department documents released in connection with the withdrawal of charges against retired Lt. Gen Michael Flynn mark the first official unraveling of one of Russia special counsel Robert Muellerās cases.
The DOJās court filings provide telling new public indications that the departmentās investigative searchlight has swiveled around to shine on a pattern of questionable tactics employed by prosecutors working for Special Counsel Robert Muellerās probe into now-debunked claims of collusion between Russia and the Trump campaign to hijack the 2016 election.
FOLLOW ALONG WITH WHO’S WHO IN THE NEW DOCUMENT REVEAL.
DOWNLOAD THE NEW REFERENCE-LIKE SPECIAL REPORT, UNMASKING THE COVERUP.Ā
Based on the filings and conversations with senior Trump administration sources, it now appears that U.S. Attorney John Durhamās inquiry into the origins and conduct of the Russia probe is widening, and several senior U.S. officials ā Mueller prosecutors as well as top FBI leadership ā may be under scrutiny. . . .
The recent revelations raising questions of prosecutorial misconduct in the Flynn case fit an emerging, more general pattern of questionable tactics employed by the Mueller probe, including withholding relevant exculpatory evidence and misrepresenting the governmentās interactions with investigative targets. Here are nine more examples:
Misrepresentation of Papadopoulos cooperation:Ā Mueller prosecutors claimed in court filings that Trump volunteer George Papadopoulos hindered the FBIās Russia investigation. ButĀ declassified FBI interviews have revealed that special counsel prosecutors Aaron Zelinsky, Jeannie Rhee, and Andrew Goldstein withheld from the court testimonyĀ showing that Papadopoulos actually offered to help the FBI locate Joseph Mifsud, the mysterious professor whose suggestion that Russians would release dirt on Hillary Clinton to help the Trump campaign initiated Crossfire Hurricane.
Silence about Trump Tower meeting exculpatory evidence:Ā TheĀ special counsel withheld information regarding the June 2016 Trump Tower meeting,Ā preservingĀ the viability of the Trump-Russia collusion narrative. TheĀ New York Times storyĀ of the meeting between a lawyer connected to the Russian government and Trump campaign officials, including the presidentās eldest son, became one of the pillars of the discredited Trump-Russia narrative. House Intelligence Committee ChairmanĀ Adam Schiff claimedĀ that Donald Trump Jr.ās demand for dirt on Hillary Clinton at the meeting constituted ādirect evidenceā of collusion. However, within four days after the July 8, 2017 New York Times story broke, a translator who was at the 2016 meeting told the FBI that Trump Jr. did not discuss dirt on rival candidate Clinton or any other suspicious subject. Rather than make the translatorās information public, the special counsel stood by as a media narrative took shape insinuating that the presidentās son had ācolludedā with the Russian lawyer.
Court filings with deceptively edited email:Ā In November 2017, MuellerĀ prosecutors filed court documents with deceptively edited emailĀ between Papadopoulos and other Trump advisers. The other Trump officials are unnamed in the filings, but their identities were publicly revealed through leaks to the media, including the Washington Post and the Guardian. An email from Trump campaign foreign policy advisor Sam Clovis was edited to make it seem as though the former NORAD inspector general was encouraging Papadopoulos to pursue contacts with Russia, when in fact theĀ full email shows that he told him not to.
Scope memo used debunked Steele Dossier to set investigative parameters: Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosensteinās Aug. 2, 2017 memorandum laying out the scope of the special counsel investigation relied on the discredited āSteele Dossierā of Clinton campaign opposition research to set some of the Mueller prosecutionās parameters. For instance, the scope memo includes allegations that Trump campaign advisors Carter Page and Paul Manafort ācommitted a crime or crimes by colluding with Russian government officials with respect to the Russian governmentās efforts to interfere with the 2016 election for President of the United States.āĀ These allegations must have come from the Steele Dossier, as their provenance is unique to that compilation.
By the time Rosenstein wrote the scope memo, the dossier had already been disavowed by Steeleās alleged main source. Questioned by the FBI in January, March, and May 2017, the dossierās so-called primary subsource said that the intelligence on Trump-Russia ties he is alleged to have given Steele was āword of mouth and hearsay.ā Team Mueller would go onĀ to spend nearly two years and $40 million to āinvestigateā a collusion narrative which, as they knew from Steeleās primary subsource, issued from remarks made in ājestā and conversation āwith friends over beers.ā
Mueller final testimony ignores Steele Dossier: In his July 24, 2019 congressional testimony regarding his investigation into Russian election meddling, Mueller said he would not discuss āmatters related to the so-called Steele Dossier.āĀ The SCO’s final report makes littleĀ mention of the former British spyās collection of reports, even though it was theĀ source underlyingĀ the central premise Mueller was tasked to investigate ā whether the Trump campaign had colluded with Russia. Accordingly, the facts that the Clinton campaign paid for Steeleās reports and that the FBI used them to obtain a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act warrant on Trump adviser Carter Page are missing from Muellerās official record of his work. Obscuring the centrality of the Steele Report, moreover,Ā enabled prosecutors to evade disclosing that during three FBI interviews, Steeleās primary sub source disavowed the former British spyās reports.
Deceptive editing of Dowd voicemail:Ā The Mueller Report alsoĀ deceptively edits a Nov. 22, 2017 voicemail from White House lawyer John DowdĀ to Flynnās previous counsel to bolster a narrative that Trump was obstructing the investigation.
The secret side deal:Ā According to Flynnās current lawyer Sidney Powell, special counsel prosecutor Van Grack made a secret side deal with Flynnās previous counsel.Ā After threatening to indict Michael Flynn Jr., Van Grack agreed not to indict the generalās sonĀ as a material term of the plea agreement butĀ required that it be kept between himself and Flynnās previous counsel in order to avoid having to disclose it to the courts.
Improper acquisition of transition emails:Ā In December 2017,Ā a lawyer for the Trump transition team alleged that the SCO had improperly obtained the transition teamās emailsĀ from the General Services Administration. āWe understand that the special counselās office has subsequently made extensive use of the materials it obtained from the GSA, including materials that are susceptible to privilege claims,”Ā wrote transition team lawyer Kory Langhofer. Flynnās emails are believed to have been among the cache appropriated by the prosecutors.
Misleading Trumpās lawyers about his status:Ā On March 5, 2018,Ā Mueller told Trumpās lawyer John Dowd that the president was not aĀ focusĀ of the SCO probe. He was a āwitness-slash-subject,ā said Mueller. Dowd asked: āYou mean he has no exposure?ā Mueller confirmed that Trump had no exposure.Ā That was incorrect. A few months before, Muellerās top appellate lawyer Michael Dreeben was in a Manhattan court saying Trump was being investigated for obstruction of justice. TheĀ transcriptĀ of the secret court session was under seal until May 2019.
(Excerpt from Just the News. Article by Lee Smith.)
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