Dossier Dude starting to get Mueller-ized

Let's see now. You could charge him with perjury - but then offer immunity or a plea deal if he agreed to cooperate and flip on the higher up.

Gonna be a whole lotta lefties in DC and elsewhere who are going to learn that Mueller is not the only one who can play that game.

More to come. About three-four years worth.

Or....you can believe Usual Tard.....that is all over with and has been settled.

http://thehill.com/blogs/floor-acti...riminal-investigation-of-trump-dossier-author
 
Only thing you’re getting wrong here is Mueller isn’t playing any games.

I saw this cross Twitter, no real details of what they are alleging. It could be anything. But, we’ll keep an eye out for what this leads to.
 
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Only thing you’re getting wrong here is Mueller isn’t playing any games.

I saw this cross Twitter, no real details of what they are alleging. It could be anything. But, we’ll keep an eye out for what this leads to.


It's too early for anyone to be prosecuted for lying about the dossier scenario. They don't even have the promised documents yet for gawd's sake. But it does sort of put the idea into the air that if you are being interviewed by anyone about the dossier you might want to think twice about lying- maybe even plead the fifth. Good. A few months down the road though there will be some serious stuff fall out of that fusion rat's nest, in regard to prosecutions or threatened prosecutions.

Manafort has gone rogue now too, and he worked for Podesta so he might bring some dems down rather than the original plan which was to squeeze him and have him flip on Trump. Mueller thought he had Manafort fully under control. He doesn't. Looks like he is going to go for the full defense routine - and, as discussed, Mueller doesn't do particularly well in those scenarios. He gets the low-levels that cave and plead after his goons break the door down, hoping they will never have the balls or funds to fight back.
 




Right. Might need an app on your desktop to follow some of this.

Just when you think it can't get any better, the prosecution of Anwan will be underway as well. Shouldn't be that hard to get Debbie on multiple charges of perjury too- given that she is a born liar like the rest of her ilk. Even better if she tells the truth. That will be productive too.
 
And the Iwan brothers court date is when???????????

Enquiring minds want to know.

Next status hearing now moved out to March.

Government and defendant engaged in "complex discovery issues."

:cool:

He is only being held on a bank mortgage loan fraud charge. He took out a home mortgage against a unit that was not his primary residence but claimed it was. Home much discovery you gotta do there? note- that be a joke.


https://www.forbes.com/sites/frankm...-scandal-gets-another-deferment/#136196b81675
 
Only thing you’re getting wrong here is Mueller isn’t playing any games.

I saw this cross Twitter, no real details of what they are alleging. It could be anything. But, we’ll keep an eye out for what this leads to.

What exactly is Mueller alleging? The whole Mueller thing was suppose to show Trump colluded with the Russians. Mueller has charged Manafort for crimes dating back over 10 years that have nothing to do with Trump. He has charged Flynn for lying to the FBI which is the same thing they are claiming Hillary's pawn, Michael Steele did.

We still have to determine why the Obama administration was using the FBI to listen in to the Trump campaign. If it turns out the dossier was used as justification, well we have ourselves the biggest scandal in US history.
 
If it turns out the dossier was used as justification, well we have ourselves the biggest scandal in US history.

The fisa thing is critical but the side stories are also explosive. Why was the fbi participating in the funding of it or offering to do so at the time it was exposed so never actually occurred. (insurance policy being developed?) Fusion was also apparently using dnc/Hillary money to pay journalists to write fake news stories- which would make fbi participation with that type of organization all the more loathsome and problematic. Why did Orff, the senior Justice Department guy fail to disclose that his wife worked there and failed to disclose that he also had been directly meeting with them- such that the fbi had to fire him from one of his two current roles upon learning it?

Getting inside that fusion/gps scene is like getting inside Osama Bin Laden's compound. It is a treasure trove of intelligence and dirt. The fisa warrant thing is just one. If the dems get lucky and the wording on the request for the warrant is general enough to allow for other sources then so be it. But they are hiding something bigtime and Rosenstein would already know what it is. That's why he fought tooth and nail for six months to prevent its release. Not a good sign either when he refused to answer when directly asked by the committee if the dossier was used for the fisa warrant- knowing full well that the committee might appoint an investigator or get a subpoena if he did not answer it.

More to come.
 
OPINION
Byron York: What the Trump dossier criminal referral means
by Byron York | Jan 6, 2018, 6:33 AM


There's been a lot of confusion about the decision by Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Chuck Grassley and crime subcommittee chairman Lindsey Graham to refer Christopher Steele, author of the Trump dossier, to the Justice Department for a possible criminal investigation.

The two senators sent a brief letter Thursday to deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein and FBI director Christopher Wray. The letter, which was unclassified and released to the public Friday, was a cover letter for what Grassley and Graham called a "classified memorandum related to certain communications between Christopher Steele and multiple U.S. news outlets regarding the so-called 'Trump dossier' that Mr. Steele compiled on behalf of Fusion GPS for the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee and also provided to the FBI."


Grassley and Graham said that, on the basis of the classified information laid out in the memo, "we are respectfully referring Mr. Steele to you for investigation of 18 U.S.C. 1001, for statements the committee has reason to believe Mr. Steele made regarding his distribution of information contained in the dossier." (18 U.S.C. 1001 is the same federal false statements law that special counsel Robert Mueller has used to charge Michael Flynn and George Papadopoulos in the Trump-Russia investigation.)

That's all Grassley and Graham said, or at least all they said that was released to the public. The classified memo, of course, was not released at all.

It was all very confusing. What did the letter mean? Were Grassley and Graham alleging that Steele lied to the Senate Judiciary Committee? To some other congressional committee? To other investigators? If so, to whom?

The move met with skepticism in a number of circles. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, called it an "effort to deflect attention" from the Trump-Russia probe. A former prosecutor called it "nonsense" in an interviewwith the Washington Post. A law professor speculated that it was "baseless."

At the same time, few outside the committee seemed to understand what the letter meant. So, here is what appears to be going on:

Steele has not talked to any of the three congressional committees investigating the Trump-Russia affair – the Senate Judiciary Committee, the Senate Intelligence Committee, or the House Intelligence Committee. Steele did not make false statements to them because he has not made any statements to them.

Steele has, reportedly, talked to Mueller's prosecutors, but it seems highly unlikely Grassley and Graham are suggesting Steele lied to Mueller because it is highly unlikely – actually, beyond highly unlikely – that the Mueller office would have shared any of Steele's answers with the Senate Judiciary Committee. So, what were Grassley and Graham referring to in their letter? What are the "statements the committee has reason to believe Mr. Steele made" that Grassley and Graham believe might be false?

The answer is that Steele talked – and talked a lot – to the FBI. Remember that when he began to compile the dossier in the summer of 2016, Steele reportedly concluded the sensational information he had picked up – allegations of election collusion and Trump sexual escapades in Russia – was so important that he had to take it to the FBI. Steele told the left-leaning magazine Mother Jones that he first took the material to the FBI "near the start of July."

That began a series of communications between Steele and the bureau in which Steele made certain representations to the FBI about his work. It is a crime to make false statements to the FBI – doesn't have to be under oath, doesn't have to be in a formal interview or interrogation setting, it's simply a criminal act to knowingly make a false statement to the FBI.

As a result of their talks, Steele and the FBI reached a tentative agreement whereby the FBI would pay Steele to continue the anti-Trump work.

All the while, Steele was also working for the opposition research firm Fusion GPS – his dossier was the result of a Fusion anti-Trump project funded by the Clinton campaign. As part of that, Steele briefed reporters on what he had found. In a London court case, Steele's lawyers said that in September 2016, Fusion GPS directed Steele to brief reporters from the New York Times, the Washington Post, CNN, the New Yorker, Yahoo News, and, later, Mother Jones. Steele did each briefing individually.

One serious question is whether Steele told the FBI that he was telling reporters the same information – those explosive allegations about Trump and Trump associates – that he was bringing to bureau investigators. If the FBI knew that, would they have agreed to an arrangement to make Steele a paid FBI operative investigating the Trump-Russia affair? That would have been a most unorthodox arrangement, with Steele disseminating his allegations to the FBI and the press simultaneously.

That is not exactly how the FBI operates. So now the question is: When Steele was discussing working for the FBI, did he fully inform the FBI of what his work for the Clinton campaign involved, in particular his briefing the press on the findings he would be reporting to the FBI? To use Grassley's and Graham's words, were the "statements the committee has reason to believe Mr. Steele made regarding his distribution of information contained in the dossier" accurate?

One way to find that out is to compare what Steele told the London court with what Steele told the FBI. Some of the London court testimony is public. As for what Steele told the FBI, the Senate Judiciary Committee has examined a lot of dossier-related material from the FBI under an agreement that allows the committee to view materials the bureau has originally produced to the House Intelligence Committee.

It appears that Grassley and Graham are pursuing inconsistencies between what Steele told the FBI and what Steele told the London court. If they conflict, which is true? If what Steele told the FBI was untrue, that's a problem.

Ultimately, the Steele-FBI deal fell through, for reasons that have never been publicly disclosed.

But there has been much speculation that the FBI used information from the uncorroborated dossier to seek court permission to spy on Americans in the Trump-Russia investigation. That would be a big deal, and it is an issue House and Senate Republicans are determined to sort out.

"I don't take lightly making a referral for criminal investigation," Grassley said in a statement Friday. "But, as I would with any credible evidence of a crime unearthed in the course of our investigations, I feel obliged to pass that information along to the Justice Department for appropriate review. Everyone needs to follow the law and be truthful in their interactions with the FBI."

"Maybe there is some innocent explanation for the inconsistencies we have seen," Grassley continued, "but it seems unlikely."

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/b...rral-means/article/2645184?platform=hootsuite
 
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