How will you react when Trump/GOP scraps the investigation?

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/07/us/politics/michael-flynn-case.html
‘Never Seen Anything Like This’: Experts Question Dropping of Flynn Prosecution
Abandoning the case is the latest step in a pattern of dismantling the work of the Russia investigators. A former prosecutor likened it to eating the department from the inside out.

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department’s decision to drop the criminal case against Michael T. Flynn, President Trump’s former national security adviser, even though he had twice pleaded guilty to lying to investigators, was extraordinary and had no obvious precedent, a range of criminal law specialists said on Thursday.


“I’ve been practicing for more time than I care to admit and I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Julie O’Sullivan, a former federal prosecutor who now teaches criminal law at Georgetown University.

The move is the latest in a series that the department, under Attorney General William P. Barr, has taken to undermine and dismantle the work of the investigators and prosecutors who scrutinized Russia’s 2016 election interference operation and its links to people associated with the Trump campaign.

The case against Mr. Flynn for lying to the F.B.I. about his conversations with the Russian ambassador was brought by the office of the former special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III. It had become a political cause for Mr. Trump and his supporters, and the president had signaled that he was considering a pardon once Mr. Flynn was sentenced. But Mr. Barr instead abruptly short-circuited the case.

On Thursday, Timothy Shea, the interim U.S. attorney in the District of Columbia, told the judge overseeing the case, Emmet G. Sullivan, that prosecutors were withdrawing the case. They were doing so, he said, because the department could not prove to a jury that Mr. Flynn’s admitted lies to the F.B.I. about his conversations with the ambassador were “material” ones.


The move essentially erases Mr. Flynn’s guilty pleas. Because he was never sentenced and the government is unwilling to pursue the matter further, the prosecution is virtually certain to end, although the judge must still decide whether to grant the department’s request to dismiss it “with prejudice,” meaning it could not be refiled in the future.

A range of former prosecutors struggled to point to any previous instance in which the Justice Department had abandoned its own case after obtaining a guilty plea. They portrayed the justification Mr. Shea pointed to — that it would be difficult to prove to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt that the lies were material — as dubious.

“A pardon would have been a lot more honest,” said Samuel Buell, a former federal prosecutor who now teaches criminal law at Duke University.

The law regarding what counts as “material” is extremely forgiving to the government, Mr. Buell added. The idea is that law enforcement is permitted to pursue possible theories of criminality and to interview people without having firmly established that there was a crime first.

James G. McGovern, a defense lawyer at Hogan Lovells and a former federal prosecutor, said juries rarely bought a defendant’s argument that a lie did not involve a material fact.


“If you are arguing ‘materiality,’ you usually lose, because there is a tacit admission that what you said was untrue, so you lose the jury,” he said.

No career prosecutors signed the motion. Mr. Shea is a former close aide to Mr. Barr. In January, Mr. Barr installed him as the top prosecutor in the district that encompasses the nation’s capital after maneuvering out the Senate-confirmed former top prosecutor in that office, Jessie K. Liu.

Soon after, in an extraordinary move, four prosecutors in the office abruptly quit the case against Mr. Trump’s longtime friend Roger J. Stone Jr. They did so after senior Justice Department officials intervened to recommend a more lenient prison term than standard sentencing guidelines called for in the crimes Mr. Stone was convicted of committing — including witness intimidation and perjury — to conceal Trump campaign interactions with WikiLeaks.

It soon emerged that Mr. Barr had also appointed an outside prosecutor, Jeff Jensen, the U.S. attorney in St. Louis, to review the Flynn case files. The department then began turning over F.B.I. documents showing internal deliberations about questioning Mr. Flynn, like what warnings to give — even though such files are usually not provided to the defense.

Mr. Flynn’s defense team has mined such files for ammunition to portray the F.B.I. as running amok in its decision to question Mr. Flynn in the first place.
The questioning focused on his conversations during the transition after the 2016 election with the Russian ambassador about the Obama administration’s imposition of sanctions on Russia for its interference in the American election.

The F.B.I. had already concluded that there was no evidence that Mr. Flynn, a former Trump campaign adviser, had personally conspired with Russia about the election, and it had decided to close out the counterintelligence investigation into him. Then questions arose about whether and why Mr. Flynn had lied to administration colleagues like Vice President Mike Pence about his conversations with the ambassador.

Because the counterintelligence investigation was still open, the bureau used it as a basis to question Mr. Flynn about the conversations and decided not to warn him at its onset that it would be a crime to lie. Notes from Bill Priestap, then the head of the F.B.I.’s counterintelligence division, show that he wrote at one point about the planned interview: “What’s our goal? Truth/admission or to get him to lie, so we can prosecute him or get him fired?”

Mr. Barr has also appointed another outside prosecutor, John H. Durham, the U.S. attorney in Connecticut, to reinvestigate the Russia investigators even though the department’s independent inspector general was already scrutinizing them.

And his department has intervened in a range of other ways, from seeking more comfortable prison accommodations last year for Paul Manafort, Mr. Trump’s former campaign chairman, to abruptly dropping charges in March against two Russian shell companies that were about to go to trial for financing schemes to interfere in the 2016 election using social media.


Mr. Barr has let it be known that he does not think the F.B.I. ever had an adequate legal basis to open its Russia investigation in the first place, contrary to the judgment of the Justice Department’s inspector general.

In an interview on CBS News on Thursday, Mr. Barr defended the dropping of the charges against Mr. Flynn on the grounds that the F.B.I. “did not have a basis for a counterintelligence investigation against Flynn at that stage.”

Anne Milgram, a former federal prosecutor and former New Jersey attorney general who teaches criminal law at New York University, defended the F.B.I.’s decision to question Mr. Flynn in January 2017. She said that much was still a mystery about the Russian election interference operation at the time and that Mr. Flynn’s lying to the vice president about his postelection interactions with a high-ranking Russian raised new questions.

But, she argued, the more important frame for assessing the dropping of the case was to recognize how it fit into the larger pattern of the
Barr-era department “undercutting the law enforcement officials and prosecutors who investigated the 2016 election and its aftermath,” which she likened to “eating the Justice Department from the inside out.”


Oh yeh. The lefties be howling now.
 
Or a SCOTUS is chosen with clear bias that favors Trump, and the strategy is to take it all the way there.
https://thehill.com/homenews/admini...eme-court-to-shield-secret-mueller-grand-jury
Trump administration asks Supreme Court to shield secret Mueller grand jury materials
The Trump administration on Thursday asked the Supreme Court to shield redacted grand jury materials related to former special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe from the Democratic-led House.
 
Let's say the GOP pushes to make it go away over a procedural misstep brought about by by calls to rush its conclusion.

Or those overseeing it are replaced with flexible actors.


Will you be content with making the Mueller investigation go away this way? Would you rather change the rules to favor Trump than bringing Justice?

I am genuinely curious about the thinking out there.
https://thehill.com/policy/national...ow-about-fbi-official-dana-boentes-retirement
What you need to know about FBI official Dana Boente's retirement

Dana Boente is set to depart as the FBI’s top lawyer at the end of this month.

The exit is controversial and comes after allies of President Trump urged FBI leadership to take action on officials involved in the 2016 Russia investigation.

Boente’s resignation has been largely overshadowed by the protests going on around the country in the wake of George Floyd's death in police custody, and the coronavirus outbreak.

Here's what you need to know.

Who is Dana Boente?

Boente is a career federal prosecutor who has served in various positions within the Justice Department (DOJ) and FBI over the last 38 years.

Boente fleetingly served as the top DOJ official overseeing the Russia counterintelligence investigation after then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions famously recused himself, earning Trump’s ire.

Boente was later interviewed by then-special counsel Robert Mueller about his time running the agency. Boente reportedly gave Mueller his notes.

He also served as acting deputy attorney general and the head of the National Security Division.

Why is he retiring?

Boente is resigning, but it does not appear voluntary and it comes as Trump allies seek to continue ousting officials who played key roles in the counterintelligence investigation.

NBC News first reported over the weekend that FBI Director Christopher Wray, at the request of Attorney General William Barr, asked for Boente to resign. Wray himself has faced criticism and pressure from the right.

Boente was offered another position but chose to retire, according to The Washington Post.

The DOJ declined to comment on such reports, and the FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Right-leaning news outlets, citing unnamed FBI officials, reported in late April that court documents filed by the DOJ allegedly showed Boente was withholding exculpatory evidence related to Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser.

Such allegations have yet to be substantiated. The contents of the legal documents are sealed and remain unknown, but that hasn’t stopped the memos from being touted by defenders of Flynn, who had pleaded guilty of lying to the FBI about his conversations with Russia’s former ambassador to the United States.

The Justice Department controversially dropped its case against Flynn last month. Flynn’s lawyer, Sidney Powell, argued the Boente documents supported calls to dismiss the Flynn case.

Fox Business host Lou Dobbs, an avid defender of Trump, amplified Powell’s arguments on his show.

“Shocking new reports suggest FBI General Counsel Dana Boente was acting in coordination with FBI Director Christopher Wray to block the release of that evidence that would have cleared General Flynn,” Dobbs said in late April.


FBI Assistant Director of Public Affairs Brian Hale called the claims about Wray “absolutely false” in a statement to news outlets at the time. His statement made no mention of Boente.

Trump officials have been scrutinizing Boente’s Russia probe involvement

Boente was already on the radar of the president’s allies for his role in signing off on one of the surveillance warrant reauthorizations applications that allowed the FBI to wiretap then-Trump campaign aide Carter Page.

DOJ watchdog Michael Horowitz released a report last year that found “at least 17 significant errors and omissions” in the FBI’s application to wiretap Page, which was approved by a special intelligence court.

Horowitz’s report faulted the team working on the Russia probe, dubbed “Crossfire Hurricane,” for failing to disclose such information to department officials like Boente, before they signed off on the applications.

The Flynn case has re-emerged as a flashpoint among Republicans, who believe he was the victim of prosecutorial misconduct. They have also accused the Obama administration of seeking to hurt Trump’s incoming administration by going after Flynn.

But the administration has also come under intense criticism for dropping the charges against Flynn. Critics say the FBI exercised standard practices in its case and that the decision to drop charges was a political move by Attorney General William Barr.

The fate of Flynn’s case is now up to a federal judge.

Wray is in the hot seat

Boente’s firing comes as Wray has faced increased pressure from the president’s allies to take action as it relates to the Flynn case.

Amid that pressure, Wray ordered an internal review last month into the Flynn case that will determine whether there was any misconduct or errors made by bureau officials during the course of their investigation, and to determine whether there are ways to improve FBI policies and procedures.

Such a move came after news reports surfaced that said Trump’s advisors were urging him not to fire Wray out of fear that he would ignite a firestorm heading into the 2020 election.

Boente may have his chance to speak

Boente, who is set to retire June 30, may have an opportunity to defend his record on Capitol Hill.

Last month, Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) released a list of more than 50 names of individuals he hopes to authorize subpoenas for as part of his panel’s inquiry into the Russia probe. Boente is among those on the list.

The subpoenas are expected to be put up to a vote on Thursday during a business meeting. If approved by a majority vote by the panel, Graham will be able to subpoena witnesses, documents or other materials as part of the probe.

The Flynn case is one of the threads that Senate Republicans are expected to examine as part of the probe.

TAGS FBI CHRISTOPHER WRAY DONALD TRUMP JEFF SESSIONS MICHAEL FLYNN ROBERT MUELLER LINDSEY GRAHAM WILLIAM BARR LOU DOBBS CROSSFIRE HURRICANE SPYING
 
https://thehill.com/policy/national...ow-about-fbi-official-dana-boentes-retirement
What you need to know about FBI official Dana Boente's retirement

Dana Boente is set to depart as the FBI’s top lawyer at the end of this month.

The exit is controversial and comes after allies of President Trump urged FBI leadership to take action on officials involved in the 2016 Russia investigation.

Boente’s resignation has been largely overshadowed by the protests going on around the country in the wake of George Floyd's death in police custody, and the coronavirus outbreak.

Here's what you need to know.

Who is Dana Boente?

Boente is a career federal prosecutor who has served in various positions within the Justice Department (DOJ) and FBI over the last 38 years.

Boente fleetingly served as the top DOJ official overseeing the Russia counterintelligence investigation after then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions famously recused himself, earning Trump’s ire.

Boente was later interviewed by then-special counsel Robert Mueller about his time running the agency. Boente reportedly gave Mueller his notes.

He also served as acting deputy attorney general and the head of the National Security Division.

Why is he retiring?

Boente is resigning, but it does not appear voluntary and it comes as Trump allies seek to continue ousting officials who played key roles in the counterintelligence investigation.

NBC News first reported over the weekend that FBI Director Christopher Wray, at the request of Attorney General William Barr, asked for Boente to resign. Wray himself has faced criticism and pressure from the right.

Boente was offered another position but chose to retire, according to The Washington Post.

The DOJ declined to comment on such reports, and the FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Right-leaning news outlets, citing unnamed FBI officials, reported in late April that court documents filed by the DOJ allegedly showed Boente was withholding exculpatory evidence related to Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser.

Such allegations have yet to be substantiated. The contents of the legal documents are sealed and remain unknown, but that hasn’t stopped the memos from being touted by defenders of Flynn, who had pleaded guilty of lying to the FBI about his conversations with Russia’s former ambassador to the United States.

The Justice Department controversially dropped its case against Flynn last month. Flynn’s lawyer, Sidney Powell, argued the Boente documents supported calls to dismiss the Flynn case.

Fox Business host Lou Dobbs, an avid defender of Trump, amplified Powell’s arguments on his show.

“Shocking new reports suggest FBI General Counsel Dana Boente was acting in coordination with FBI Director Christopher Wray to block the release of that evidence that would have cleared General Flynn,” Dobbs said in late April.


FBI Assistant Director of Public Affairs Brian Hale called the claims about Wray “absolutely false” in a statement to news outlets at the time. His statement made no mention of Boente.

Trump officials have been scrutinizing Boente’s Russia probe involvement

Boente was already on the radar of the president’s allies for his role in signing off on one of the surveillance warrant reauthorizations applications that allowed the FBI to wiretap then-Trump campaign aide Carter Page.

DOJ watchdog Michael Horowitz released a report last year that found “at least 17 significant errors and omissions” in the FBI’s application to wiretap Page, which was approved by a special intelligence court.

Horowitz’s report faulted the team working on the Russia probe, dubbed “Crossfire Hurricane,” for failing to disclose such information to department officials like Boente, before they signed off on the applications.

The Flynn case has re-emerged as a flashpoint among Republicans, who believe he was the victim of prosecutorial misconduct. They have also accused the Obama administration of seeking to hurt Trump’s incoming administration by going after Flynn.

But the administration has also come under intense criticism for dropping the charges against Flynn. Critics say the FBI exercised standard practices in its case and that the decision to drop charges was a political move by Attorney General William Barr.

The fate of Flynn’s case is now up to a federal judge.

Wray is in the hot seat

Boente’s firing comes as Wray has faced increased pressure from the president’s allies to take action as it relates to the Flynn case.

Amid that pressure, Wray ordered an internal review last month into the Flynn case that will determine whether there was any misconduct or errors made by bureau officials during the course of their investigation, and to determine whether there are ways to improve FBI policies and procedures.

Such a move came after news reports surfaced that said Trump’s advisors were urging him not to fire Wray out of fear that he would ignite a firestorm heading into the 2020 election.

Boente may have his chance to speak

Boente, who is set to retire June 30, may have an opportunity to defend his record on Capitol Hill.

Last month, Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) released a list of more than 50 names of individuals he hopes to authorize subpoenas for as part of his panel’s inquiry into the Russia probe. Boente is among those on the list.

The subpoenas are expected to be put up to a vote on Thursday during a business meeting. If approved by a majority vote by the panel, Graham will be able to subpoena witnesses, documents or other materials as part of the probe.

The Flynn case is one of the threads that Senate Republicans are expected to examine as part of the probe.

TAGS FBI CHRISTOPHER WRAY DONALD TRUMP JEFF SESSIONS MICHAEL FLYNN ROBERT MUELLER LINDSEY GRAHAM WILLIAM BARR LOU DOBBS CROSSFIRE HURRICANE SPYING

Lindsey Graham is requesting that the senate approve a subpoena for him to testify.
The article posted could not have possibly done a better job of failing to point out why he was removed. But that's fine if he appears before the Senate committee we will talk more.

Mr. Durham uncovered Boente's gig bigtime.

MORE TO COME.
 
https://thehill.com/policy/national...ow-about-fbi-official-dana-boentes-retirement
What you need to know about FBI official Dana Boente's retirement

Dana Boente is set to depart as the FBI’s top lawyer at the end of this month.

The exit is controversial and comes after allies of President Trump urged FBI leadership to take action on officials involved in the 2016 Russia investigation.

Boente’s resignation has been largely overshadowed by the protests going on around the country in the wake of George Floyd's death in police custody, and the coronavirus outbreak.

Here's what you need to know.

Who is Dana Boente?

Boente is a career federal prosecutor who has served in various positions within the Justice Department (DOJ) and FBI over the last 38 years.

Boente fleetingly served as the top DOJ official overseeing the Russia counterintelligence investigation after then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions famously recused himself, earning Trump’s ire.

Boente was later interviewed by then-special counsel Robert Mueller about his time running the agency. Boente reportedly gave Mueller his notes.

He also served as acting deputy attorney general and the head of the National Security Division.

Why is he retiring?

Boente is resigning, but it does not appear voluntary and it comes as Trump allies seek to continue ousting officials who played key roles in the counterintelligence investigation.

NBC News first reported over the weekend that FBI Director Christopher Wray, at the request of Attorney General William Barr, asked for Boente to resign. Wray himself has faced criticism and pressure from the right.

Boente was offered another position but chose to retire, according to The Washington Post.

The DOJ declined to comment on such reports, and the FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Right-leaning news outlets, citing unnamed FBI officials, reported in late April that court documents filed by the DOJ allegedly showed Boente was withholding exculpatory evidence related to Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser.

Such allegations have yet to be substantiated. The contents of the legal documents are sealed and remain unknown, but that hasn’t stopped the memos from being touted by defenders of Flynn, who had pleaded guilty of lying to the FBI about his conversations with Russia’s former ambassador to the United States.

The Justice Department controversially dropped its case against Flynn last month. Flynn’s lawyer, Sidney Powell, argued the Boente documents supported calls to dismiss the Flynn case.

Fox Business host Lou Dobbs, an avid defender of Trump, amplified Powell’s arguments on his show.

“Shocking new reports suggest FBI General Counsel Dana Boente was acting in coordination with FBI Director Christopher Wray to block the release of that evidence that would have cleared General Flynn,” Dobbs said in late April.


FBI Assistant Director of Public Affairs Brian Hale called the claims about Wray “absolutely false” in a statement to news outlets at the time. His statement made no mention of Boente.

Trump officials have been scrutinizing Boente’s Russia probe involvement

Boente was already on the radar of the president’s allies for his role in signing off on one of the surveillance warrant reauthorizations applications that allowed the FBI to wiretap then-Trump campaign aide Carter Page.

DOJ watchdog Michael Horowitz released a report last year that found “at least 17 significant errors and omissions” in the FBI’s application to wiretap Page, which was approved by a special intelligence court.

Horowitz’s report faulted the team working on the Russia probe, dubbed “Crossfire Hurricane,” for failing to disclose such information to department officials like Boente, before they signed off on the applications.

The Flynn case has re-emerged as a flashpoint among Republicans, who believe he was the victim of prosecutorial misconduct. They have also accused the Obama administration of seeking to hurt Trump’s incoming administration by going after Flynn.

But the administration has also come under intense criticism for dropping the charges against Flynn. Critics say the FBI exercised standard practices in its case and that the decision to drop charges was a political move by Attorney General William Barr.

The fate of Flynn’s case is now up to a federal judge.

Wray is in the hot seat

Boente’s firing comes as Wray has faced increased pressure from the president’s allies to take action as it relates to the Flynn case.

Amid that pressure, Wray ordered an internal review last month into the Flynn case that will determine whether there was any misconduct or errors made by bureau officials during the course of their investigation, and to determine whether there are ways to improve FBI policies and procedures.

Such a move came after news reports surfaced that said Trump’s advisors were urging him not to fire Wray out of fear that he would ignite a firestorm heading into the 2020 election.

Boente may have his chance to speak

Boente, who is set to retire June 30, may have an opportunity to defend his record on Capitol Hill.

Last month, Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) released a list of more than 50 names of individuals he hopes to authorize subpoenas for as part of his panel’s inquiry into the Russia probe. Boente is among those on the list.

The subpoenas are expected to be put up to a vote on Thursday during a business meeting. If approved by a majority vote by the panel, Graham will be able to subpoena witnesses, documents or other materials as part of the probe.

The Flynn case is one of the threads that Senate Republicans are expected to examine as part of the probe.

TAGS FBI CHRISTOPHER WRAY DONALD TRUMP JEFF SESSIONS MICHAEL FLYNN ROBERT MUELLER LINDSEY GRAHAM WILLIAM BARR LOU DOBBS CROSSFIRE HURRICANE SPYING

WHERE ARE THE ORIGINAL FLYNN 302'S???
 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/30/us/politics/trump-russia-justice-department.html

Justice Dept. Never Fully Examined Trump’s Ties to Russia, Ex-Officials Say
The former deputy attorney general maneuvered to keep investigators from completing an inquiry into whether the president’s personal and financial links to Russia posed a national security threat.

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department secretly took steps in 2017 to narrow the investigation into Russian election interference and any links to the Trump campaign, according to former law enforcement officials, keeping investigators from completing an examination of President Trump’s decades-long personal and business ties to Russia.

The special counsel who finished the investigation, Robert S. Mueller III, secured three dozen indictments and convictions of some top Trump advisers, and he produced a report that outlined Russia’s wide-ranging operations to help get Mr. Trump elected and the president’s efforts to impede the inquiry.

But law enforcement officials never fully investigated Mr. Trump’s own relationship with Russia, even though some career F.B.I. counterintelligence investigators thought his ties posed such a national security threat that they took the extraordinary step of opening an inquiry into them. Within days, the former deputy attorney general Rod J. Rosenstein curtailed the investigation without telling the bureau, all but ensuring it would go nowhere.

A bipartisan report by the Republican-led Senate Intelligence Committee released this month came the closest to an examination of the president’s links to Russia.
Senators depicted extensive ties between Trump associates and Russia, identified a close associate of a former Trump campaign chairman as a Russian intelligence officer and outlined how allegations about Mr. Trump’s encounters with women during trips to Moscow could be used to compromise him. But the senators acknowledged they lacked access to the full picture, particularly any insight into Mr. Trump’s finances.

Now, as Mr. Trump seeks re-election, major questions about his approach to Russia remain unanswered. He has repeatedly shown an openness to Russia, an adversary that attacked American democracy in 2016, and refused to criticize or challenge the Kremlin’s increasing aggressions toward the West. The president has also rejected the intelligence community’s finding that Russia interfered in 2016 to bolster his candidacy and the spy agencies’ assessment that Russia is trying to sabotage this year’s election again on his behalf.

Mr. Rosenstein concluded the F.B.I. lacked sufficient reason to conduct an investigation into the president’s links to a foreign adversary. Mr. Rosenstein determined that the investigators were acting too hastily in response to the firing days earlier of James B. Comey as F.B.I. director, and he suspected that the acting bureau director who approved the opening of the inquiry, Andrew G. McCabe, had conflicts of interest.

Mr. Rosenstein never told Mr. McCabe about his decision, leaving the F.B.I. with the impression that the special counsel would take on the investigation into the president as part of his broader duties. Mr. McCabe said in an interview that had he known Mr. Mueller would not continue the inquiry, he would have had the F.B.I. perform it.

“We opened this case in May 2017 because we had information that indicated a national security threat might exist, specifically a counterintelligence threat involving the president and Russia,” Mr. McCabe said. “I expected that issue and issues related to it would be fully examined by the special counsel team. If a decision was made not to investigate those issues, I am surprised and disappointed. I was not aware of that.”

Mr. Rosenstein declined to comment. The disclosure about the counterintelligence investigation is based on interviews with former Justice Department and F.B.I. officials.

Installing Mr. Mueller as special counsel in May 2017, Mr. Rosenstein ordered him to examine “any links and/or coordination between the Russian government” and the Trump campaign. Many Democrats embraced the appointment as a sign that law enforcement would complete a full accounting of Mr. Trump’s ties to Russia.

But privately, Mr. Rosenstein instructed Mr. Mueller to conduct only a criminal investigation into whether anyone broke the law in connection with Russia’s 2016 election interference, former law enforcement officials said.

“I love Ken Starr,” Mr. Rosenstein told Mr. Mueller, according to a new book by the journalist Jeffrey Toobin that first reported the conversation. “But his investigation was a fishing expedition. Don’t do that. This is a criminal investigation. Do your job, and then shut it down.”

If Mr. Mueller wanted to expand his investigation, Mr. Rosenstein told him, he should ask for additional authorities and resources.

But the special counsel built a staff — some inherited from the Justice Department and F.B.I., some of whom he hired — to investigate crimes, not threats to national security, which is the purview of counterintelligence investigations.

Simply investigating crimes, Mr. McCabe said, was a mismatched approach for a national security threat.

“It was first and foremost a counterintelligence case,” Mr. McCabe said. “Could the president actually be the point of coordination between the campaign and the Russian government? Could the president actually be maintaining some sort of inappropriate relationship with our most significant adversary in the world?”

Members of the special counsel team held early discussions led by the agent Peter Strzok about a counterintelligence investigation of the president. Those efforts fizzled when Mr. Strzok was removed from the inquiry three months later for sending text messages disparaging Mr. Trump.

Questions about the president’s ties to Russia dated to his presidential campaign.

Mr. Trump has sought to build a Trump Tower in Moscow for at least two decades, including during the campaign. His son Eric once said the Trump Organization relied on Russia for “all the funding we need” to purchase several golf courses in the United States. And the Senate report this month revealed the allegations of Mr. Trump’s potentially compromising encounters with women in Moscow in 1996 and 2013.

The F.B.I.’s mounting concerns about Mr. Trump reached a crescendo in the days after he fired Mr. Comey. Officials questioned whether Russia had leverage over the president and had dismissed the F.B.I. director to thwart any investigation that might reveal more. Their suspicions prompted agents including Mr. Strzok to open the counterintelligence inquiry.

The investigation was separate from the broader inquiry into the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia, code-named Crossfire Hurricane, that the bureau opened in the summer of 2016 to try to understand Russia’s operations to interfere in the election and whether Mr. Trump’s associates were conspiring with them.

The president and his allies have ramped up their attacks on that inquiry, misleadingly casting it as an illegitimate attempt by Democrats to spy on his campaign; independent reviews have found that investigators had sufficient reason to open it.

Mr. McCabe, convinced Mr. Trump would likely soon fire him, approved the opening of the inquiry into Mr. Trump, believing he was making it more difficult for anyone to interfere with or close the case without justifying doing so.

Mr. McCabe pushed Mr. Rosenstein to appoint a special counsel to conduct the investigation into Mr. Trump and the broader examination of Russia’s interference in the election. Two days later, Mr. Rosenstein appointed Mr. Mueller.

“It was the most enormous exhale of my life,” Mr. McCabe said. “I had been holding my breath” since the night Mr. Comey was fired, he added.

That day, Mr. Rosenstein joined Mr. McCabe while he briefed lawmakers about matters including the counterintelligence investigation and raised no objections.

The following day, Mr. McCabe briefed Mr. Mueller and his top deputies on the investigation into the president. But Mr. McCabe did not know that Mr. Rosenstein also gave his instruction to Mr. Mueller around that time to focus on whether crimes were committed.

Mr. Mueller later told Congress he did not conduct a counterintelligence investigation. The Democratic chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, Representative Adam B. Schiff of California, said in a memo released last week that he had reason to believe “that the F.B.I. Counterintelligence Division has not investigated counterintelligence risks arising from President Trump’s foreign financial ties.”

Mr. McCabe acknowledged that he underestimated Mr. Rosenstein’s willingness to conceal from him that he had curtailed the investigation. He remained at the F.B.I. for 10 months before being fired over displaying a lack of candor with internal watchdogs.

As Mr. McCabe left the bureau, he still believed Mr. Mueller was investigating Mr. Trump’s personal and financial ties to Russia.
 
the answer to the question, as far as cons are concerned, is with thunderous applause:

https://abcnews.go.com/US/trump-pardons-bannon-allies-final-night-office/story?id=75360429
Trump pardons Bannon, other allies on final night in office
The move came after Trump had already issued dozens of pardons in recent months.

In the waning hours of his time in office, President Donald Trump late Tuesday issued a final batch of pardons and commutations to a group that included former White House strategist Steve Bannon and two other longtime political allies, Elliott Broidy and Paul Erickson, in a move that will further solidify Trump's legacy of using his sweeping presidential powers to benefit his inner circle.

The latest batch of names, released by the White House on Trump's final night as president, granted 73 pardons and commuted all or part of the sentence of 70 additional individuals, after Trump had already issued several dozen such directives in recent months.

The most notable recipient is Bannon, who served as an executive at Breitbart before joining Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, then was indicted last August on charges tied to an alleged conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering related to a crowdfunding effort to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Bannon had been largely out of Trump's orbit until recently, when reports surfaced that he had been quietly contributing to the president's post-election strategy.

MORE: Steve Bannon calls his arrest 'a political hit job,' says effort was in support of Trump
"Mr. Bannon has been an important leader in the conservative movement and is known for his political acumen," read a statement released by the White House late Tuesday.

Prosecutors have accused Bannon of defrauding hundreds of thousands of donors to the "We Build the Wall" fundraising campaign by falsely claiming that he and other organizers would not take a cut of any donated funds. Investigators allege that organizers of the group, including Bannon, were syphoning off at least $1 million for their own personal expenses, according to prosecutors.

Bannon has repeatedly claimed that his actions were only meant to support of the president -- but in an ironic twist, many of those who were allegedly defrauded were among the president's most ardent rank-and-file supporters. Since Bannon's indictment, Trump has sought to distance himself from his onetime top adviser.

For his part, Bannon called his arrest -- which occurred over the summer on a boat docked in Westport, Connecticut -- a "political hit job." He and his three co-defendants all pleaded not guilty, and his trial date had been set for May 24, 2021.


Broidy is a California financier who emerged as a top Trump fundraiser in 2016. He agreed to plead guilty in October to illegal lobbying for foreign interests as part of a massive federal investigation into the embezzlement of a Malaysian sovereign wealth fund.

Prosecutors were investigating Broidy for allegedly lobbying the Trump administration to drop their investigation into a man charged as the alleged mastermind of the $4.5 billion Malaysian fraud scheme. Broidy's advisers declined to comment when asked recently if he would seek a pardon from Trump.

Trump's pardon for Erickson, 59, comes as the seasoned Republican operative from South Dakota had begun serving an 84-month sentence in a Minnesota federal prison last year. He had pleaded guilty last year to defrauding investors in an oil venture after being indicted on a range of fraud charges.

The veteran conservative insider gained national attention earlier in the Trump presidency as the love interest of convicted Russian agent Maria Butina, a gun-toting Second Amendment activist who was nearly 30 years his junior. Erickson helped Butina gain access to a range of high-profile political figures as she worked as a clandestine foreign agent. Prosecutors called it a "duplicitous relationship," and Butina later pleaded guilty and was ultimately permitted to return home to Russia.

Erickson was never charged with any wrongdoing in Butina's case, and his attorney said at the time that Erickson "a good American" who "has never done anything to hurt our country and never would."

"Mr. Erickson's conviction was based off the Russian collusion hoax. After finding no grounds to charge him with any crimes with respect to connections with Russia, he was charged with a minor financial crime," read the White House statement. "This pardon helps right the wrongs of what has been revealed to be perhaps the greatest witch hunt in American History."

At least one recipient in Trump's final batch of pardons allegedly paid "tens of thousands of dollars" to the president's former lawyer for help securing it, according to The New York Times.

William T. Walters, who was convicted on insider trading charges, reportedly sought the help of Trump's former personal attorney, John Dowd, who "marketed himself" as someone who could use his access to the White House to secure the pardon for Walters and other convicted felons, according to the Times. Dowd denied that he had used his access to lobby for pardons.

MORE: Paul Manafort, Roger Stone, Charles Kushner among those pardoned by Trump
Bannon, Broidy and Erickson join a long list of former Trump allies and supporters to have their legal travails squashed through Trump's intervention.
 
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