Lawmakers Recommend Clinton, Comey, Lynch, McCabe for Criminal Referrals

that has to be a lie or he is the least intelligent and least qualified FBI person history.
Federal Bureau of Investigation... They investigate.

I agree it is so unbelievable he is not the least bit credible.
He was also spinning that started by the republicans baloney.
Pretty impressed Baier called him on that. He went up a notch.

I am fairly certain "comey" means "dumbass" in Russian.

Then again, it seems that we had a prior president who claimed he didn't know anything unless he read/saw it from media sources.

Epic. The fucking Director of the FBI. Unfuckingbelievable.

 
This is the very best thing that can happen for the Deep State opposition. Get the Deep State fighting against each other.

Now they have to turn on each other to save themselves. Hillary/Obama can no longer protect them as Captain of the ship. Fuel should be poured on this fire.

This could be the beginning of the end.


Indeed. and let's be clear that there is a reason why strzok and page are still there. they are useful for some reason that andy and comey the clown will not like. If they continue to play their cards right, they may get off with just a simple firing and to be able to hold on to their law licenses to start over again in life. But for for that kind of deal they will have to perform. Remember also, that Lisa Page also knew what Obama wanted and what Obama was following. Refer to her text messages for more on that. That no doubt is a productive trail for any investigator who follows it.
 
Clapper was one of Obama's worst appointments.

Clapper’s actions sure do look like political manipulations
BY JONATHAN TURLEY, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR — 04/28/18

Friday’s release of the House Intelligence Committee report generated much coverage over its finding of no evidence of collusion with the Russians. Receiving less attention was a small section entitled “Finding #44,” where the committee suggested that then-Director of National Intelligence (DNI) James Clapper leaked information from the so-called Steele dossier. Even worse for Clapper, the alleged leak was made to CNN, which later hired him as a contributor.

If true, both the national intelligence chief and then-FBI Director James Comey leaked information while denying such violations to Congress. Moreover, even if Clapper waited until shortly after leaving office, it is deeply troubling that he would confirm details of the dossier, which was under investigation.

The report recounts how Clapper gave “inconsistent testimony” to Congress when he denied ever “discuss[ing] the dossier or any other intelligence related to Russia hacking of the 2016 election with journalists.” That has proven to be untrue. Clapper later admitted he discussed the “dossier with CNN journalist Jake Tapper” and indicated he may have discussed the material with other journalists.

The timing is notable.

Clapper discussed the information in “early January 2017.” There was no compelling need to confirm the information, given the ongoing investigation and that it was still a subject of highly classified deliberations. Indeed, with FBI personnel looking into the matter, confirming the information could be viewed as unhelpful. Its most obvious value was to undermine Donald Trump.

In other words, the disclosure advanced political, not public, interests.

Clapper allegedly gave CNN the confirmation around the time that President Obama and President-elect Trump were given classified briefings on the dossier. On Jan. 10, 2017, Tapper and CNN ran with the breaking news that Obama and Trump were briefed on the “memos compiled by a former British intelligence operative.” Tapper cited “U.S. officials with direct knowledge of the briefings” and even described the “two-page synopsis” given to Obama and Trump. (The dossier was published in full by BuzzFeed after CNN’s disclosure.)

After leaving office, Clapper began regular commentary with CNN and became a paid CNN contributor in August 2017.

Clapper is accused of not only lying to the public but to the media for which he now works. After Trump objected to the leaking of the dossier story, CNN covered Clapper’s statement that he assured the incoming president neither he nor anyone in the intelligence community was responsible: “I expressed my profound dismay at the leaks that have been appearing in the press, and we both agreed that they are extremely corrosive and damaging to our national security.”

In March, Clapper, again on CNN, insisted, “I didn’t have any contact with media until after I left the government on the 20th of January, so I don’t quite understand, at least what I’ve read, that somehow I leaked about the dossier.” CNN host Don Lemon then asked, “So you didn’t leak anything about the dossier to any media?” Clapper answered, “No, not — I mean, I talked about it after I left the government, but not during that period, and certainly not between the 6th of January and the 10th when the president-elect himself talked about it.”

If Clapper confirmed the information before he left office on Jan. 20, he could again be accused of perjury. However, there remain concerns over Clapper discussing the internal review of the dossier in the midst of the ongoing investigation; doing so shortly after his departure from office does not alter its unprofessional character. It is even worse if Clapper isseen as leveraging such insider information while considering a possible media deal with CNN.

This is not the first time Clapper has been accused of giving false testimony to Congress and the public. Ironically, when Clapper was discussing this information with CNN, the statute of limitations was winding down on his lying to Congress about the controversial surveillance program that impacted virtually all Americans. Clapper denied the existence of the program to the Senate and, when later confronted over his perjury, insisted his testimony was “the least untruthful” statement he could make. That still makes it untruthful, but in Washington, people like Clapper do not get indicted for perjury. Clapper was made a CNN contributor after the statute of limitations expired on his alleged perjury.

Notably, Comey wrote in one of his memos that CNN had the information on the dossier and was looking for a “news hook” to run it. That news hook became the leak that Comey briefed Trump on the dossier. CNN has appropriatelydeclined to answer media questions of whether Comey or Clapper were sources for its dossier story.

After leaving as DNI, Clapper was used repeatedly by CNN without mentioning his alleged perjury on the surveillance program. CNN, for example, did not mention it in using him to rebut Trump’s allegation that his campaign staff was surveilled under the Obama administration; Clapper categorically denied it and said he would have been aware of such secret surveillance. In fact, Trump associates, including Carter Page, were under surveillance.

Democrats have rushed to shield Clapper and denounced questions about his conduct as a “smear campaign.” They note that, when later confronted directly in his testimony about his discussions with Tapper, he said: “Well, by the time of that, they already knew about it. By the time it was — it was after — I don’t know exactly the sequence there, but it was pretty close to when we briefed it and when it was out all over the place. The media had it by the way.”

That, however, is different from what he said in his public statement. Nor does it change the gravity of his conduct. Having the dossier did not change CNN’s need for confirmation from government officials. Indeed, Comey admitted the media was looking for a hook and still required confirmation of the information. If Clapper gave it to Tapper, he lied to Congress, other media and the public. Moreover, Clapper told Congress “it was pretty close to when we briefed it.” The briefing (which Clapper includes himself as part of) occurred before Jan. 10, not after Jan. 20. “Pretty close” is not a defense to perjury.

Of course, neither is describing a lie as the “least untruthful answer” — but that worked fine for Clapper in his prior "inconsistent" testimony.

CNN will be rightfully celebrated for its disclosure of the dossier during Saturday night’s White House Correspondents’ Dinner. The assembled press will honor the network for its story and how “the CNN team later reported that then-FBI Director James Comey personally briefed Trump about the dossier. Thanks to this CNN investigation, 'the dossier' is now part of the lexicon.”

Many will be looking in the audience for CNN’s national security expert — James Clapper.

Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George Washington University. You can follow him on Twitter @JonathanTurley.

http://thehill.com/opinion/white-ho...ctions-sure-look-like-political-manipulations
 
April 30, 2018
Indictments Are Comey...er, Coming
By William L. Gensert
Since Barack Obama weaponized the FBI, the IRS, the NSA, the FISA court, and the CIA, citizens who believe that America is a nation of laws have been on a collision course with progressives. Core constitutional tenets including checks and balances, equality under the law, innocent until proven guilty, and no man is above the law have been replaced with identity politics, victim culture, and weakened First and Second Amendments.

Apocryphally, Bismarck said: "God looks out for idiots, drunkards, children, and the United States of America."

Thank God for Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Congressman Devin Nunes, Congressman Trey Gowdy, and prosecutor John Huber (appointed by Sessions to investigate the DOJ and prosecute crimes uncovered by I.G. Horowitz).

Thank God for Hillary Clinton. Had she won, or gone gracefully into the night after losing, we wouldn't know of the left's plan for the usurpation of the United States Constitution.

Had Comey not wanted to be the "corpse at every funeral, the bride at every wedding and the baby at every christening," these shenanigans would still be secret.

The report from I.G. Horowitz is expected to drop in May. Huber has grand jury power to subpoena and indict. Together, they should produce a prodigious amount of indictments.

In going after Trump, the left ensnared itself.

Should be indicted, but probably won't be:

  1. Barack Obama – Mishandling of classified information (18 USC §798) and obstruction of a criminal investigation (18 USC §1510) with respect to emails sent to and received from Hillary personal server. Obstruction of a criminal investigation (18 USC §1510). (When I heard that Obama had made a deal with Netflix, all I could think of was, "Great: Now, in ten years, Netflix will have a nuclear weapon!" But I digress.)
  2. Hillary Clinton – Mishandling of classified information (18 USC §798), conspiracy (18 USC §371) (the Uranium One deal), violations of campaign finance laws (the funneling of funds through a law firm to pay Glenn Simpson to pay Christopher Steele for the Steele dossier).
  3. Bill Clinton – Conspiracy (18 USC §371) and obstruction of a criminal investigation (18 USC §1510) (with Lynch) in the Hillary Clinton email investigation.
  4. Robert Mueller – Obstruction of a criminal investigation (18 USC §1510) and conspiracy (18 USC §371) in the Clinton Foundation (Uranium One) investigation.
Probably will be indicted, but maybe not:

  1. 202847_5_.png
    James Comey – Making false statements under oath (18 USC §1001) and mishandling of classified information (18 USC §798) (memos shared with Daniel Richman and Patrick Fitzgerald). Unauthorized disclosure (leaking) of sensitive FBI information (26 USC §7213).
  2. Daniel Richman – Mishandling of classified information (18 USC §798).
  3. Patrick Fitzgerald – Mishandling of classified information (18 USC §798).
  4. Andrew McCabe – Making false statements under oath (18 USC §1001), obstruction of a criminal investigation (18 USC §1510) (the issuance of "stand down" orders in the Clinton email investigation and the Clinton Foundation investigation (Uranium One). Unauthorized disclosure of sensitive FBI information (26 USC §7213). (Under I.G. criminal referral.)
  5. Christopher Steele – Providing false information to the FBI (18 USC §1001). From existing criminal referral made by senators, Grassley and Graham: "[T]here is substantial evidence suggesting that Mr. Steele materially misled the FBI about a key aspect of his dossier efforts, one of which bears on his credibility." Unauthorized disclosure of FBI information (26 USC §7213).
  6. Peter Strzok and Lisa Page (together forever) – Unauthorized disclosure of sensitive FBI information (26 USC §7213), obstruction of a criminal investigation (18 USC §1510), and conspiracy (18 USC §371) in the Clinton email investigation and with Obama administration officials, chief of staff Denis McDonough, Democratic Senate majority leader Harry Reid, CIA director John Brennan, James Clapper, McCabe, and Loretta Lynch in the Russia investigation.
  7. Loretta Lynch – Conspiracy (18 USC §371) and obstruction of a criminal investigation (18 USC §1510) (with Bill Clinton) in the Hillary Clinton email investigation and with Strzok, Page, McDonough, Reid, Brennan, Clapper, McCabe in the Russia investigation.
  8. John Brennan – Making false statements under oath (18 USC §1001) and conspiracy (18 USC §371) (see above).
  9. James Clapper – Unauthorized disclosure of information (26 USC §7213) (leaking the Steele dossier), making false statements under oath (18 USC §1001), and conspiracy (18 USC §371) (see above).
  10. Harry Reid – Conspiracy (18 USC §371) (see above).
  11. Cheryl Mills – Making false statements under oath (18 USC §1001) about the Clinton illegal private email server.
  12. Huma Abedin – Making false statements under oath (18 USC §1001) about the Clinton illegal private email server.
  13. James Baker (FBI general counsel) – Conspiracy (18 USC §371) in coordination with Strzok, Page, Mike Kortan (FBI assistant director for public affairs), James Rybicki (Comey's former chief of staff) and Comey, the unauthorized disclosure of sensitive FBI information (26 USC §7213).
  14. Sally Yates (ex-acting A.G.) – Making false statements under oath (18 USC §1001).
  15. Bruce Ohr – Lying to the FBI about wife's employment at Fusion GPS and his contacts with Christopher Steele.
  16. Samantha Power – The illegal unmasking of U.S. citizens caught up in unrelated intelligence investigations and conspiracy (18 USC §371).
  17. Susan Rice – The illegal unmasking of U.S. citizens and conspiracy (18 USC §371).
Andrew C. McCarthy:

The Obama Justice Department "guidance" about the Clinton Foundation probe reminds us of their approach to the Clinton emails caper – call it a "matter" not an investigation; do not use the grand jury; instead of subpoenas, try saying "pretty please" to obtain evidence; do not ask the co-conspirators hard questions because they're lawyers so that might infringe attorney-client privilege; let the witnesses sit in on each other's interviews; let the suspects represent each other as lawyers; if someone lies, ignore it; if someone incriminates himself, give him immunity; have the attorney general meet with the main subject's former-president husband on the tarmac a few days before dropping the whole thing; oh, and don't forget to write up the exoneration statement months before key witnesses – including the main subject – are interviewed.

With the Clintons, though, enough is never enough. Obama Justice Department officials, figuring they were only a few days from succeeding in their quest to become Clinton Justice Department officials, decided to try to disappear the Clinton Foundation investigation, too.

After nearly two years of digging, there is still no proof of Trump-campaign collusion in Russian election-meddling. But we have collusion all right: the executive branch's law-enforcement and intelligence apparatus placed by the Obama administration in the service of the Clinton campaign. To find that, you don't need to dig. You just need to open your eyes.

Americans must open their eyes. Indictments of those responsible for this charade will reaffirm America as a nation of laws and not of people, no matter how big and untouchable those on the left think they are.
 
Now that is funny...

"When I heard that Obama had made a deal with Netflix, all I could think of was, "Great: Now, in ten years, Netflix will have a nuclear weapon!" But I digress.)?
 
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/apr/22/leaks-trump-deep-state-fbi-cia-michael-flynn
The 'deep state' is real. But are its leaks against Trump justified?
Jack Goldsmith
Even the most severe critics of the US president should worry about this subtle form of anti-democratic abuse

Sun 22 Apr 2018 07.00 BST Last modified on Sun 22 Apr 2018 12.19 BST
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Deep state final
‘The big loser in all this will probably be the national security bureaucracy itself and, to the extent it is weakened, the security of the American people.’ Illustration: Antoine Doré
America doesn’t have coups or tanks in the street. But a deep state of sorts exists here and it includes national security bureaucrats who use secretly collected information to shape or curb the actions of elected officials.

Some see these American bureaucrats as a vital check on the law-breaking or authoritarian or otherwise illegitimate tendencies of democratically elected officials.

Others decry them as a self-serving authoritarian cabal that illegally and illegitimately undermines democratically elected officials and the policies they were elected to implement.


The truth is that the deep state, which is a real phenomenon, has long been both a threat to democratic politics and a savior of it. The problem is that it is hard to maintain its savior role without also accepting its threatening role. The two go hand in hand, and are difficult to untangle.

The deep state has been blamed for many things since Donald Trump became president, including by the president himself. Trump defenders have used the term promiscuously to include not just intelligence bureaucrats but a broader array of connected players in other administrative bureaucracies, in private industry, and in the media.



But even if we focus narrowly on the intelligence bureaucracies that conduct and use information collected secretly in the homeland, including the FBI, National Security Agency (NSA), and National Security Council, there is significant evidence that the deep state has used secretly collected information opportunistically and illegally to sabotage the president and his senior officials – either as part of a concerted movement or via individuals acting more or less independently.

The hard questions are whether this sabotage is virtuous or abusive, whether we can tell, and what the consequences of these actions are.

Since Trump was elected, unusually sensitive leaks of intelligence information designed to discredit him and his senior leadership have poured forth from current and former intelligence officials in the deep state.

The first major one, in February 2017, concerned a court-approved NSA wiretap of a phone conversation between Russia’s ambassador to the United States, Sergey Kislyak, and incoming national security adviser Michael Flynn that concerned, among other things, the possible removal of Russia sanctions imposed by President Obama. Flynn had denied that the men discussed sanctions, and the leak revealing his lie led to his resignation.




Another major leak concerned communications intercepts during the campaign of Russian government officials discussing potentially “derogatory” information about Trump and top campaign aides. Other leaks in this vein included intercepts of Russian officials claiming they could influence Trump through Flynn, of Kislyak supposedly informing Moscow that he discussed campaign-related issues with then-Senator Jeff Sessions, and of Kislyak discussing in a communication to Moscow that Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, wanted to communicate via a secure channel.

These leaks probably mark the first time ever that the content of foreign intelligence intercepts aimed at foreign agents that swept up US-person information was leaked. They clearly aimed to damage US persons – ones who happen to also be senior US government officials.

'A political volcano just erupted': is the US on the brink of the next Watergate?
Read more
They were unlawful and, beyond that, they violated two until-now strict taboos about leaks – first on revealing the content of foreign intelligence information collected through electronic surveillance, and second on revealing the content of incidentally collected information about American citizens.

Many people, including many who are not in the Trump camp, have interpreted these leaks to violate a third taboo by marking a return to the Hoover-era FBI’s use of secretly collected information to sabotage elected officials with adverse political interests.

The comparison is plausible in light of the extensive efforts soon after the election to encourage the bureaucracy, including the intelligence bureaucracy, to resist the Trump administration, and the evidence that there was in some agencies such resistance.

But while Hoover did many awful things in quiet, neither during his reign nor at any other time in American history have we seen such a profusion of sensitive leaks from the deep state with such an overtly political aim to bring down senior leadership.

The former national security adviser Mike Flynn with Donald Trump in 2016.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest The former national security adviser Mike Flynn with Donald Trump in 2016. Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters
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There is, of course, the possibility that the anti-Trump leaks, on their face political and unprecedented, were nonetheless justified whistleblowing, akin perhaps to leaks about illegal surveillance programs or about illegal interrogation practices at CIA black sites. Put another way, it is possible that the benefits of the leaks, considered narrowly, outweigh the evil inherent in breaching the first two taboos above.

The situation the leaks are a response to is itself extraordinary to the point of being unprecedented. The then acting attorney general of the United States, Sally Yates, believed that Flynn, the new national security adviser, was compromised by the Russians and vulnerable to blackmail, and so warned the White House, which seemed to take no steps in response to the information.

More broadly, a number of very odd circumstances suggested unusual and potentially corrupt connections between the Trump campaign and administration and the Russian government, about which the FBI had been conducting a counterintelligence investigation since the summer of 2016.

All of this came in the context of the unprecedented Russian DNC hack designed, our intelligence agencies tell us, to help Donald Trump win the election. And then once in office, Trump himself engaged in vicious and in many instances false attacks on the intelligence community and justice department investigators.

Do these unprecedented circumstances justify the unprecedented deep state leaks?

At no other time have we seen such a profusion of sensitive leaks from the deep state with such an overtly political aim
The lines crossed by the deep state leaks against Trump were thought to be absolute ones until 2017. But we have never faced a situation in which the national security adviser, and perhaps even the president of the United States, presented a credible counterintelligence threat involving one of our greatest adversaries.

Perhaps the facts will develop to give us enough clarity about the Russia-Trump connections to be able to make a better judgment along the lines of the judgment history has made about previous virtuous leaks. But perhaps we will never have clarity, and thus won’t be able to reach consensus on whether the leaks were justified.

However those matters develop, the whole ordeal has already done great damage to both the presidency and the national security bureaucracy.

As deep state officials get a taste for the power that inheres in the selective revelation of such information, and if the leaks are not responded to with severe punishments, it is easy to imagine the tools that brought down Flynn being used in other contexts by national security bureaucrats with different commitments and interests.

Even the most severe critics of Trump should worry about this subtle form of anti-democratic abuse. The big loser in all this will probably be the national security bureaucracy itself and, to the extent it is weakened, the security of the American people.

Copies of James Comey’s book, A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership, line the shelves of a Washington bookstore.
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Copies of James Comey’s book, A Higher Loyalty: Truth, Lies, and Leadership, line the shelves of a Washington bookstore. Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA
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Even if it turns out that Flynn and others close to Trump were in the bag for the Russians, many people will for a long time view the anti-Trump leaks as political abuse of intelligence to harm political enemies.

This perception will be deepened by the Trump administration’s relentless and often false attacks on the integrity of the intelligence community, including its false suggestion that the original collection that incidentally captured Flynn’s communications, as opposed to the leaks of such information, was illegitimate.

The Flynn and related leaks didn’t just violate the law – they violated a core commitment the intelligence community made in after the era of Hoover not to politicize, or appear to politicize, the use of surveillance tools or the fruits of their use.


The whole intelligence collection system – which has an importance that far transcends its undoubtedly large importance in this discrete context – is vulnerable here for the simple reason that the intermixture of politics with intelligence collection is the intelligence system’s Achilles’ heel.

If surveillance comes to be seen through a domestic political lens, with domestic political winners and losers, the intelligence community will have a very hard time acting with needed public credibility. And that in turn means it will have a harder time doing what it needs to do to keep us safe.

Jack Goldsmith is Henry L Shattuck professor of law at Harvard University and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is the author, most recently, of Power and Constraint: The Accountable Presidency After 9/11 (W W Norton 2012)
 
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