Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby BenDhyan » Fri Feb 09, 2018 12:02 am

Wow, 2 more FBI agents quit...

DOJ official who worked on Clinton, Russia probes just bolted his position for ‘personal reasons’

February 8, 2018

The Justice Department official who interviewed Hillary Clinton as part of the investigation into her emails is leaving the agency, he announced on Wednesday.

David Laufman, who leads the DOJ’s counterintelligence division, is leaving the DOJ for “personal reasons,” according to The Washington Post.

In addition to working on the investigation into Clinton’s handling of classified information, Laufman has also worked on the investigation into Russian meddling in the presidential election.

On the Clinton investigation, he sat in on interviews with the former secretary of state and several of her aides, including Cheryl Mills, Huma Abedin and Jake Sullivan.

He was joined in those interviews by Peter Strzok, the FBI agent who is currently embroiled in a scandal over politically-charged text messages.

Strzok’s texts suggest a less than amicable relationship with Laufman, who served as chief of the National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export Control Section.

“I am getting aggravated at Laufman,” Strzok wrote in one March 23, 2016 text message to FBI lawyer Lisa Page.

“But he’s literally doing nothing other than sitting in on the big interviews,” he said in another, dated April 9, 2016.

The timing of Laufman’s decision is sure to raise questions because of a Justice Department inspector general’s forthcoming report about the FBI and DOJ’s handling of the Clinton email investigation. Strzok’s texts were discovered during the court of that investigation.

“It’s tough to leave a mission this compelling and an institution as exceptional as the Department of Justice. But I know that prosecutors and agents will continue to bring to their work precisely what the American people should expect: a fierce and relentless commitment to protect the national security of the United States,” Laufman told The Post in a statement.

http://www.bizpacreview.com/2018/02/08/doj-official-worked-clinton-russia-probes-just-bolted-position-personal-reasons-599810



Another longtime Comey aide leaving FBI

Fox News 6h

The longtime head of public affairs at the FBI -- who was a confidant of former director James Comey -- is planning to retire, Fox News has learned.

A notice went out this week for a retirement get-together for Michael Kortan scheduled for Feb. 15. Since 2009, Kortan has served as assistant director for public affairs, an influential job that controlled media access. He also served under former director Robert Mueller, now leading the Russia probe.

The FBI confirmed to Fox News that Kortan is retiring.

It's unclear whether the retirement was long-planned or in any way precipitated by recent events. The FBI said he was finishing 33 years of service.

After Comey became director in September 2013, Kortan helped facilitate regular on-the-record briefings with beat reporters, a departure from previous directors.

Kortan also was front and center during the Hillary Clinton email investigation, and especially in July 2016 -- coordinating media coverage and handing out copies of Comey’s public statement recommending against criminal charges in the investigation into mishandling of classified information. Kortan more recently surfaced in text messages released between FBI officials Peter Strzok and Lisa Page.

While those texts have drawn attention for their anti-Trump sentiments, Kortan also seemed to surface in a message warning about the contents of 302s, which were FBI interview summaries from the Clinton email case, that weren’t given to Congress up-front. In the September 2016 text, Strzok wrote that “there are VERY inflammatory things in the 302s we didn’t turn over to [Congress]…that are going to come out in FOIA and absolutely inflames Congress. I’m sure Jim and Trisha and Dave and Mike are all considering how things like that play out as they talk amongst themselves.”

“Mike” would appear to be a reference to Kortan.

Kortan is the most recent senior FBI official to retire. Others have been reassigned since Comey was fired by President Trump in May 2017.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2018/02/08/another-longtime-comey-aide-leaving-fbi.html

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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby Iamwhomiam » Fri Feb 09, 2018 12:46 am

Why I Am Leaving the F.B.I.

By JOSH CAMPBELL FEB. 2, 2018

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/02/opinion/leaving-the-fbi.html
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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby stillrobertpaulsen » Fri Feb 09, 2018 3:04 pm

Rooney: Entire Republican Staff of House Intelligence Committee Is Under Investigation

Kevin DrumFeb. 8, 2018 1:41 PM

Rep. Tom Rooney says the atmosphere on the House Intelligence Committee is “absolute poison”:

Rooney said one reason for the tension is an erosion of trust, exacerbated by an ongoing ethics investigation into the “entire Republican staff,” including “the woman up front that answers the phone” for alleged leaks. He later added that the matter was being handled by the Office of Congressional Ethics.

Leaks, you say? From Republican staffers? I am shocked.
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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby BenDhyan » Fri Feb 09, 2018 7:24 pm

And another....

Justice Department No.3 to quit: report

February 10, 20189:51am

In the latest sign of turmoil at US law enforcement agencies, senior Justice Department official Rachel Brand reportedly plans to quit after only nine months.

The US Justice Department's third-ranking official, Rachel Brand, plans to step down after just nine months, the New York Times reports, at a time when President Donald Trump has taken aim at senior law enforcement officials.

A friend of Associate Attorney General Rachel Brand told the Associated Press she is stepping down for a private sector job.

Brand was next in line of succession to Deputy Attorney-General Rod Rosenstein for oversight of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into potential collusion between Trump's 2016 presidential campaign and Russia and whether the Republican president has unlawfully sought to obstruct the ongoing probe.

Brand's resignation is the latest sign of turmoil at US law enforcement agencies, which have come under attack by Trump and his Republican allies in recent months.

News of her departure comes a week after Trump approved the release of a previously classified memo written by Republican lawmakers that portrayed the Russia investigation, initially handled by the FBI and now headed by Mueller, as a product of political bias against Trump at the Justice Department and FBI.

Neither Brand nor a Justice Department spokesman could be immediately reached for comment.

http://www.news.com.au/world/breaking-news/justice-department-no3-to-quit-report/news-story/4d07db906da0075bf3beb65e39805bef

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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby mentalgongfu2 » Sat Feb 10, 2018 6:37 pm

Trump blocks release of Democratic Russia memo
The White House said the memo contained sensitive and classified information.

By KYLE CHENEY 02/09/2018 07:56 PM EST Updated 02/09/2018 11:23 PM EST
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President Donald Trump blocked the public release Friday of a classified House Democratic memo written in response to Republican claims that the FBI inappropriately spied on a Trump campaign adviser in 2016, prompting furious Democratic charges of hypocrisy and political exploitation of intelligence secrets.

The House of Representatives can still vote to release the memo despite Trump’s action, which could set the stage for a partisan brawl in the House next week over the document's fate.


Trump on Saturday tweeted: "The Democrats sent a very political and long response memo which they knew, because of sources and methods (and more), would have to be heavily redacted, whereupon they would blame the White House for lack of transparency. Told them to re-do and send back in proper form!"

The dueling Republican and Democratic memos are part of a larger fight over the legitimacy of special counsel Robert Mueller's probe into Russian election meddling. Many Democrats consider the fight a Republican diversion meant to distract from the underlying question of whether the Kremlin infiltrated the Trump campaign.

Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee issued their memo to rebut an earlier House Republican document which accused the FBI of misleading a federal judge to obtain an October 2016 warrant to spy on Trump campaign foreign policy adviser Carter Page. Trump approved the release of the GOP memo, despite the FBI’s public objection, and insisted that it "totally vindicates" him — even though the Republican document only speaks to one component of the FBI's sprawling probe into Russian election meddling.

A Friday night statement from White House Counsel Don McGahn said that Trump was "inclined" but “unable” to declassify the 10-page memo because it "contains numerous properly classified and especially sensitive passages.”

The statement was accompanied by a letter from FBI Director Christopher Wray and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein that identifies “information for which national security or law enforcement concerns are especially significant.” Like the GOP memo, the Democratic document draws from classified intelligence about the FBI's Russia probe.

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McGahn wrote that Trump had directed the Justice Department to provide "technical assistance" to the House intelligence panel should it wish to "revise" the document for possible release.

Democrats were furious at Trump's decision, which they called proof that Republicans are exploiting classified information for political ends.

"The hypocrisy is on full display," tweeted House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi. "What does the President have to hide?"

Hours after the White House's announcement, the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), said in a statement that the Democratic memo could still be released after the redaction of sensitive passages flagged by Wray and Rosenstein.

"Intelligence Committee Republicans encourage the minority to accept the [Justice Department’s] recommendations and make the appropriate technical changes and redactions so that no sources and methods are disclosed and their memo can be declassified as soon as possible,” said Nunes.

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, and other Democrats said Friday night that they would work with the Justice Department to address its concerns.

The House Intelligence Committee can overrule Trump’s decision and vote to send the Democratic memo to the full House, which would then meet in a secret session to debate whether to make the document public by a majority vote. Both actions would require some Republican support.

Democrats had asked for a review of their document from the Justice Department and FBI in advance of its release. The House Intelligence Committee unanimously voted Monday to release the full Democratic memo, a signal that the committee believes "the public interest would be served" by the release of the document.

Democrats believe their memo refutes the GOP account of the surveillance warrant the FBI secured against Page, a previously little-known investment banker and energy consultant with a longtime interest in Russia whom Trump named to his campaign foreign policy team in March 2016.

Orchestrated by Nunes, the Republican memo accused senior FBI officials of failing to disclose that the warrant to surveil Page was based, in part, on a dossier compiled by a former British spy whose work was financed by the campaign of Hillary Clinton and the Democratic Party.

Democrats say their memo shows that the FBI did note the dossier's political origins in an October 2016 application for a warrant to monitor Page under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act — and that Republicans mischaracterized the extent to which the FBI relied on the dossier to obtain its warrant, which was approved by a federal judge.

Nunes and other Republicans have publicly conceded that the FBI's application disclosed that the dossier had political backing, but complain that the information was relegated to a footnote.

Democrats also note that the FBI's Russia investigation began months before the FBI sought a warrant against Page, who visited Moscow in July 2016 and whom the FBI previously investigated after he was the target of a 2013 recruitment effort by a pair of Russian spies in New York City. One or more judges approved three subsequent 90-day renewals of the warrant against Page, which suggests that the FBI's surveillance was collecting suspicious information, legal experts say.

Some Republicans with national security and intelligence backgrounds were sharply critical of Trump's decision Friday.



White House lurches into crisis mode, again
By ANDREW RESTUCCIA
"The White House's failure to declassify the House Intelligence Committee minority memo — particularly in the face of unanimous bipartisan vote by the committee — represents a massive strategic miscalculation," said Jamil Jaffer, a former lawyer in George W. Bush's White House who has also served as senior counsel to the House Intelligence Committee.

"The decision to reject the committee's request simply plays into the partisan narrative about the Nunes memo and deprives the American public of the benefit of both sides of highly politicized debate," added Jaffer, now a professor at George Mason University.

Senate Democrats also denounced Trump's decision.

"Refusal to release Democratic response to [the GOP memo] — evidence of obstruction of justice by Donald Trump happening in real time," tweeted Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.)

Although Republicans on the committee unanimously voted to send the memo to Trump earlier this week for a decision on its release, they questioned its accuracy and warned that it contained national security information that should not be disclosed.

"I have numerous concerns with the public release of this information," Nunes told colleagues shortly before voting to release the document. He said the memo "contains a large volume of classified information, including some touching on sources and methods heightening the potential to damage nationals security."

"Nevertheless, in the interest of fairness and transparency, and because I am confident that classification issues would be appropriately addressed by the executive branch's review process, I plan to vote in favor of making this memo publicly available," he added.

A public statement from the FBI had objected to the "accuracy" of the Republican memo, but the bureau did not publicly say that it revealed national security information that should remain secret.
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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Feb 11, 2018 7:38 pm

“I talk to Flynn virtually everyday, if not multiple times a day,” DevinNunes said in December 2016. “Seldom there's a day that goes by that I don't talk to Flynn, and especially right after the campaign, directly.”


Image

Devin Nunes attended a breakfast with Michael Flynn and Turkey's foreign minister just before the inauguration

Natasha Bertrand

Nov. 10, 2017, 2:52 PM

Rep. Devin Nunes, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, attended a breakfast meeting at which Michael Flynn and Turkey's foreign minister were also present.

The breakfast took place just before President Donald Trump's inauguration in January.

A Wall Street Journal report published Friday indicated the special counsel Robert Mueller was scrutinizing Flynn's dealings with the Turkish government.


Republican Rep. Devin Nunes, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, attended a breakfast meeting in January that Michael Flynn, then the incoming national security adviser, and Mevlut Cavusoglu, the Turkish foreign minister, also attended.

The breakfast event, held on Wednesday, January 18, was closed to the press, and it is still unclear what exactly was discussed.

The Washington correspondent for the Turkish newspaper Daily Sabah, which tends to be pro-government, reported at the time that an aide to Cavusoglu said he "was the only foreign leader at the breakfast and the topics on the US-Turkish agenda were discussed by the attendees."

The invitation, obtained by the newspaper, said the breakfast would "be a small event for about 50-60 guests" and that the incoming White House chief of staff, Reince Priebus, "might join the meeting," Daily Sabah reported.

Nunes' spokesman, who did not return a request for comment on Friday, issued a statement earlier this year downplaying the importance of the breakfast.

"Chairman Nunes was a speaker at that event, but it was a large breakfast event, not a small, private meeting as described in that article," the spokesman, Jack Langer, told the fact-checking website Snopes.

He continued:

"Mr. Cavusoglu was one of about 40 attendees at the event, which included 20-30 ambassadors to the U.S. and about 10 other foreign dignitaries and officials. The attendees heard some remarks from Flynn, Chairman Nunes, and other representatives on national security issues — the discussion topic was not Turkey or any other single country ... if [Nunes did speak to Cavusoglu], it would've been among all the other ambassadors and officials at the event. There was no separate, private meeting."

Nunes' attendance at the event is newly relevant amid revelations that the special counsel Robert Mueller is investigating a meeting that another congressman, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, took with Flynn in September 2016. Flynn had begun lobbying on behalf of Turkish government interests one month earlier.

New scrutiny of Flynn's dealings with Turkey

FILE PHOTO - U.S. National Security Advisor Michael Flynn boards Air Force One at West Palm Beach International airport in West Palm Beach, Florida U.S. on February 12, 2017. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/Files

That lobbying work continued into the presidential transition and through December, according to a Wall Street Journal report published Friday. Mueller is scrutinizing an alleged plot involving Flynn to return an exiled Turkish cleric to the country, the report said.

It is unclear whether Flynn was still being paid to lobby for Turkish government interests when he attended the breakfast meeting on January 18.

But on January 10, Flynn reportedly met with the national security adviser at the time, Susan Rice, and asked her to hold off on implementing an anti-ISIS plan that involved arming the Syrian Kurds. The Turkish government vehemently opposes any plan that would empower the Kurds, whom Ankara views as a threat to Turkey's sovereignty.

Nunes, meanwhile, has been at the center of a series of controversies since the House Intelligence Committee began investigating Russia's interference in the 2016 US election.

The California Republican stepped aside from the investigation in early April after it emerged that he had briefed Trump and the press on classified intelligence without first telling his fellow committee members. But he quickly began conducting his own investigations into "unmaskings" by the Obama administration and the credibility of a dossier, compiled by the former British spy Christopher Steele, alleging ties between Trump's campaign team and Russia.

In June, Nunes angered the Democrats when he demanded more details from the CIA, FBI, and National Security Agency about why Obama administration officials requested the unmasking of Trump associates last year. He also threatened in September to hold Attorney General Jeff Sessions and FBI Director Chris Wray in contempt of Congress if they did not respond to a subpoena for documents relating to the Steele dossier.
http://www.businessinsider.com/devin-nu ... ia-2017-11


Nunes Memo Reveals Congressman’s Penchant for Conspiracy Theories

By Jeff Stein On 2/11/18 at 9:10 AM
Watching the Devin Nunes memo blow up like a trick cigar a few weeks ago, Andrew Janz called himself “probably the happiest man in the country.”

An assistant district attorney vying to oust Nunes from his California congressional seat, Janz said last week that his campaign war chest had more than tripled since Nunes announced he was releasing highly edited Top Secret information to discredit the FBI and Justice Department investigations into “Russiagate.” That’s not saying much: The Democrat’s $240,000 purse would hardly cover the cost of robocalls in today’s congressional elections, where winning candidates spend an average of $1.3 million—and Nunes already has three times that figure. And while there were some signs the incumbent’s grip was slipping—a January poll commissioned by Janz showed Nunes leading a reelection bid by only five percent against a generic Democratic opponent—his highly edited release of the documents was proving popular among Republicans.

Still, Janz told me, “I’m feeling great, man. You've seen the memo. I think there's going to be plenty for folks on the Democratic side, and even some folks on the Senate Republican side, to poke holes in.”

Which is what they did. “The Nunes Memo fizzled and failed,” said former Nixon White House counsel-turned Watergate witness John Dean in a representative view. “The only thing it established is that Nunes is a nut job, and he has released anew the putrid stench of neo-McCarthyism.”

“Nut job” has clung to Nunes’s reputation as long as he’s been chairman of the House Intelligence Committee (HPSCI, in Washington-speak). Or at least among Democrats (and some Republicans) who have decried Nunes’s transformation of a once bipartisan national security panel into a GOP platform to attack Democrats.

Janz thinks he knows why: Nunes’s mentorship by Michael Flynn, the now disgraced former Trump national security adviser. “I know that they had a pretty close relationship,” he said. Nunes served on the executive committee of the Trump transition team with Flynn, he noted, which was headed by Vice President Mike Pence, “and it seems to me like he never left. He's still on that team.“

A descendent of Portuguese Azorean immigrants, Nunes grew up on a Central Valley, California farm and concentrated on water issues when he came to Congress in 2003. But his fundraising prowess for fellow Republicans endeared him to Representative Paul Ryan and House Speaker John Boehner, who in 2013 anointed him chairman of the intelligence panel.

Like many hawks back then, Nunes was in awe of Flynn, who had won praise for revolutionizing the hunt for terrorists in Iraq and Afghanistan. “This guy was one of the best intelligence officers in several generations,” Nunes told me in a December 23, 2016 interview. “I don't know if you've ever met him, but Flynn is extremely smart. He really is top notch.”

Nunes was speaking fives months after Flynn had startled many former military officers by leading “Lock her up” chants against Hillary Clinton at the Republican National Convention. It was also two years after the Obama White House has forced Flynn’s resignation as director of the Defense Intelligence Agency. “What happened,” Nunes told me, “is...he went out and said a lot of things that Obama didn't like…”

But that’s not close to the full story on Flynn, whose battlefield talents didn’t transfer well to running the DIA from 2012 to 2014. Not only were his executive skills lacking, according to many observers, including former Army general and Secretary of State Colin Powell, he quickly developed a reputation for indulging in conspiracy theories—or “Flynn facts,” his aides derisively called them.

But Nunes embraced them. During Flynn’s tenure, the neophyte intelligence overseer and the general came to share a number of beliefs. One was that the CIA was suppressing the release of documents captured from Osama Bin Laden’s lair that supposedly showed a closer relationship between Al-Qaeda and Iran than the Obama White House, then conducting backchannel talks with Tehran on halting its nuclear weapons program, wanted known. Nunes, according to a then-close observer, demanded the CIA open up its files for him and Flynn one Saturday. “He was going to sneak up on them” on a weekend, the source snorted, speaking on terms of anonymity to discuss the sensitive incident. Nunes denied that excursion, but said he did go down to Central Command headquarters in Tampa “to meet with the team that was doing exploitation of the documents in 2013.”

He and Flynn seemed to share an obsession with Iran. Nunes concurred with Flynn’s insistence that Tehran was involved with the 2012 attacks on the U.S. consulate and annex in Benghazi, and oversaw a two-year investigation into the incident, focusing on what Republicans had portrayed as] the Obama administration’s inept responses. But the committee’s final report, signed by its then-chairman Mike Rogers, “debunk[ed] a series of persistent allegations hinting at dark conspiracies” and concluded that “there was no intelligence failure, no delay in sending a CIA rescue team, no missed opportunity for a military rescue, and no evidence the CIA was covertly shipping arms from Libya to Syria,” according to the Associated Press’s account. The report also found no evidence tying Benghazi to Iran. Nunes called it a “whitewash.”

The congressman’s “nutty” reputation was enhanced in 2013 when he insisted on moving a joint U.S.-U.K intelligence base from England to the Azores, his ancestral home. The $1.2 billion price tag and national security concerns about relocating to such an obscure spot in the mid-Atlantic doomed the effort, according to an investigation by the National Review. But in an early preview of charges that he “cherry-picked” items for his Russiagate memo to undermine the FBI and Justice Department, the Pentagon accused Nunes’s staff of manipulating the numbers on the Azores gambit.

No evidence has surfaced that then-DIA Director Flynn, a native of Rhode Island, home to thousands of Azorean immigrants, had anything to do with that affair. But he and Nunes paired up to champion another issue, one that they were right about: whistleblower accusations that U.S. Central Command leaders were manipulating intelligence reports to burnish the Obama administration’s record against the Islamic State group. Flynn, according to The Weekly Standard, was annoying the White House with, “assessments that Al-Qaeda had doubled in strength over The preceding two years.” Nunes was helping lead a Republican-led joint congressional task force into the issue. At one point, he flew down to CENTCOM headquarters demanding to see documents, according to reports, but “once in Tampa...was denied access to the analysts and their findings, creating further schisms between the parties.” The task force ultimately backed up the whistleblower complaints. So did the Pentagon’s inspector general.

Nunes and Flynn evidently maintained close ties through the election and beyond, even as Flynn’s world was beginning to unravel with questions about his payments from Kremlin mouthpiece Russia Today, secret talks with former Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak and a confidential lobbying contract with a law firm tied to Turkish strongman Recep Tayyip Erdogan. “I talk to Flynn virtually everyday, if not multiple times a day,” Nunes told me in the late December 2016 interview. “Seldom there's a day that goes by that I don't talk to Flynn, and especially right after the campaign, directly.”

Despite the troubling revelations about Flynn’s Turkish deadlings, Nunes accompanied him to a January 18 breakfast at the Trump Hotel in Washington featuring Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, according to a report in the Istanbul newspaper Daily Sabah. Questioned by U.S. reporters. Nunes’s spokesman Jack Langer called the meeting “a large breakfast event” attended by ”20-30 ambassadors to the U.S. and about 10 other foreign dignitaries and officials.” But the Daily Sabah, which is considered close to the Erdogan regime, contradicted that statement, saying Cavusoglu was the “only foreign leader at the breakfast,” which was closed to the press and featured “topics on the U.S.-Turkish agenda.” Langer told the fact-checking site Snopes that “if [he did speak to Cavusoglu], it would’ve been among all the other ambassadors and officials at the event. There was no separate, private meeting.”

Flynn’s ties to the Erdogan regime may have had a darker side. About six weeks before the elections, Flynn and two business associates attended a secret New York meeting with Cavusoglu and Berat Albayrak, Erdogan’s son-in-law and the country’s energy minister. Also present: former CIA Director and then-Trump senior adviser James Woolsey. The topic: Plans to kidnap the prominent exiled anti-Erdogan cleric Fethullah Gulen in Pennsylvania and return him to Turkey. The meeting stayed secret until late March 2017, when The Wall Street Journal exposed it. In that account, Woolsey said he had cautioned Flynn and the others not to carry out any illegal operations and reported the discussion to a mutual friend of Vice President Joe Biden. Muller opened an investigation into Flynn’s Turkey ties last November, according to multiple reports.

Asked whether Flynn ever discussed the plot with Nunes, his spokesman Langer responded only, "And with this question, Newsweek has completed its transformation into The National Enquirer."

Nunes, meanwhile, was busy defending Flynn and Trump on another matter: the national security adviser’s secret conversations with Kislyak. Had the president-elect approved those talks, and did they include promises to reverse the Obama administration’s punishment of the Kremlin for its interference in the 2016 elections? In an unusually partisan step, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, who was supposed to be leading an investigation into Russian subversion and Team Trump, anointed himself one of the administration’s leading defenders. Trump and and Flynn, he opined, were “so busy” that they wouldn’t have had time to discuss talking to Kislyak.


A Washington Post headline called Nunes’s explanation “strange” and printed it in full:

“No, look, I think this whole issue with General Flynn—General Flynn is an American war hero, one of the—put together one of the greatest military machines in our history providing the intelligence to basically eliminate al-Qaeda from Iraq. And he was the national security adviser designee, he was taking multiple calls a day from ambassadors, from foreign leaders and look, I know this because the foreign leaders were contacting me trying to get in touch with the transition team and folks that wanted to meet with President Trump or — President-elect Trump and Vice President-elect Pence.”

Nunes could not rescue Flynn from disgrace—or later, special counsel Robert Mueller, with whom the former national security adviser negotiated a guilty plea on a charge of lying to the FBI.

But Nunes’s efforts to distract attention from Russiagate didn’t cease with Flynn’s departure from the administration a year ago. And even his now-famous “midnight run” to the White House weeks later indirectly involved Flynn: According to multiple reports, Ezra Cohen-Watnick, whom Flynn put in charge of intelligence matters on the White House national security council despite his scant, low level experience at the DIA, helped provide Nunes with classified documents that the congressman claimed to show—falsely—as it turned out, that Obama had “wiretapped Trump Tower.” That stunt prompted complaints from good-government groups that Nunes had improperly obtained and publicized classified information.

When the House Ethics Committee opened an investigation, Nunes stepped down from his panel’s slow-moving investigation into Kremlin election interference. Temporarily. And on the sidelines, critics noted, Nunes was continuing his campaign to deflect questions about Team Trump’s contacts with the Russians, which climaxed with the memo to discredit the Justice Department and FBI probes. That was just Nunes’s first step, Axios reported. The chairman is preparing as many as five more reports on politically motivated “wrongdoing” at those agencies, as well as the State Department.

Longtime observers of congressional oversight called such activism on behalf of an administration unprecedented. Partisanship has waxed and waned over the years at HPSCI, depending on who held the gavel, said former senior CIA official Larry Pfeiffer, but “we saw nothing compared with what we are seeing with Chairman Nunes, he told Newsweek. “I don’t envy our successors at Langley. We didn’t call HPSCI, ‘The Island of Misfit Toys’ for nothing!”

Nunes, said David Barrett, an authority on Congress and the spy agencies, has added to the partisan rancor on the Hill instead of isolating the committee from the political wars, which it needs to gain the trust of the CIA and other intelligence agencies to admit their mistakes. When the intelligence committees become political, he told The New York Times, oversight of the intelligence agencies becomes “just about impossible.”

“None has ever been so partisan as the current HPSCI chair,” Loch Johnson, a leading intelligence historian at the University of Georgia, told Newsweek. “Worst yet, Mr. Nunes has become Capitol Hill's cheerleader-in-chief for the Trump administration on anything dealing with intelligence.”

But is there a point when such partisanship moves beyond cheerleading into obstruction of justice? Nothing prevents the feds from looking into it, says Edward J. Loya, a former prosecutor in the Justice Department’s public integrity section. “The DOJ and FBI can initiate an obstruction of justice charge against anyone, including Congressman Nunes,” he told Newsweek. But “it would be highly inappropriate for special counsel Mueller to conduct an obstruction investigation about whether Nunes is obstructing Mueller’s own investigation. The more appropriate course,” said Loya, now in private practice with Epstein Becker Green in Washington, “would be for the DOJ to appoint a different special counsel to review this matter.”

Nunes would no doubt denounce such a move as “political.” And he might get some traction with the charge, considering that more than seven out of 10 Republicans polled after his memo’s release said they believed that “members of the FBI and Department of Justice are working to delegitimize Trump through politically motivated investigations.”

Back in the Central Valley, Janz says he’s ready to combat Nunes on Russiagate if he gets the nomination. After all, he says, some of the Trump administration’s own officials have been saying that the Russians are already meddling in this fall’s elections. He plans to pound Nunes on why he’s not focusing on that instead of undermining federal probes into Kremlin subversion.

“The best we can do is speak factually about what is going on...” he said. “All Americans should be alarmed. People in this district are asking why Nunes is going to such great lengths to cover for Trump. There must be some motivation behind what he is doing.”
http://www.newsweek.com/nunes-memo-trum ... fbi-802710



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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Feb 13, 2018 10:13 am

The Silicon Valley Giant Bankrolling Devin Nunes

Top executives at Oracle threw money to the controversial congressman just weeks after hiring a similarly controversial Nunes ally.

Weeks after they hired a controversial former Trump national security aide with ties to House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes (R-CA), top executives at the tech company Oracle made substantial donations to Nunes’ 2018 re-election campaign.

The donations, which totalled nearly $35,000 came from five executives, several of whom gave so much that they surpassed the legal limit and had to be refunded. What made the donations stand out, however, was not the size of them—$35,000 was a relatively small amount considering the more than $1.2 million that Nunes has raised so far this cycle. It was the timing of the giving.

Ezra Cohen-Watnick, who worked as a top White House intelligence aide linked to former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, joined Oracle just weeks before its executives began writing checks to Nunes. Cohen-Watnick had arrived at the company under a cloud of controversy. During his time in the administration, he had been identified as having provided Nunes with reports that showed former National Security Adviser Susan Rice had requested the unmasking of several Trump aides listed in classified documents. That disclosure resulted in an ethics investigation into Nunes, who was eventually cleared of any wrongdoing.

The “unmasking” scandal turned out to be vastly overstated. And it raised additional questions about Cohen-Watnick’s qualifications for the job. He ultimately was let go from the administration in August as part of a staff cleansing by Flynn’s successor, National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster.

News that Oracle had hired Cohen-Watnick in its Washington DC office came in September. In early and mid-October, Oracle’s top officials began giving to Nunes. Edward Lloyd Screven, the company’s chief corporate architect, wrote two checks to the congressman for $2,700 each that month. On October 16, Kenneth Glueck, a senior vice president, wrote two checks to Nunes for $2,700 each. That same day, Safra Catz, Oracle’s president, wrote a check to Nunes for $2,500. In late November, she wrote three more worth $5,200 (she was later refunded $2,500). Mark Hurd, CEO, would donate $5,400 in late November as well. So too would Oracle’s billionaire chairman and CTO Larry Ellison. He had $2,700 of his $8,100 in contributions refunded.

Oracle is a Republican outlier in Silicon Valley, and its executives’ right-leaning politics (and political contributions) present opportunities in Trump’s Washington unavailable to competitors like Amazon, a frequent target of Trump’s ire. Catz and Hurd are particularly close to the Trump administration, having both advised his transition team. They’ve also enjoyed personal access to high-level Trump administration officials—most notably McMaster. Catz dined with him in July, a dinner over which the National Security Adviser reportedly called President Donald Trump an “idiot” and a “dope.” But neither Catz nor any of the other Oracle executives who gave to Nunes had donated to the the congressman before. Nunes does not represent the district where Oracle is headquartered.

The congressman does have influence over legislation involving government surveillance law, on which Oracle has spent a fair amount of money lobbying, including in the last quarter of 2017. Oracle has gone out of its way in the past to praise Nunes and his Democratic counterpart on the House Intelligence Committee, California Rep. Adam Schiff, for their handling of cybersecurity issues. The company’s political action committee has donated to both congressmen. It would be slightly more than a month after the donations were made that Congress began seriously considering whether to extend, repeal or reform Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).

But these five Oracle executives have not personally donated to Schiff this cycle or, for that matter, the chairmen or ranking members of the Senate Judiciary or Intelligence committees, all of whom would have played an outsized role in that debate over the 702 program as well. Indeed, for all but one of these executives, Nunes has been the only House member to whom they have donated this current cycle.

Oracle representatives did not return a request for comment. A source who works with the company said they were unaware of any fundraiser that would have been held by Nunes, at which the executives would have appeared.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-silic ... ia=desktop


Obama’s top lawyer just accused Devin Nunes of a criminal offense

By Grant Stern February 12, 2018

A top former Obama administration lawyer just explained how Republican Congressman Devin Nunes (R-CA) could face criminal charges for the publicity stunt memo he released late last month.

Norm Eisen and two other distinguished attorneys explained in a New York Times column that Nunes’ release of a memo filled with top secret information could be more than just a political abuse of his official position. Last week, former Watergate whistleblower John Dean opined that Nunes’ memo was similar to a propaganda document for which he was convicted.

That’s why GOP lawmakers should be concerned about cooperating with Rep. Nunes, because as Eisen points out, they could become part of an obstruction of justice conspiracy between the White House and the Republican Chairman of the House Intel panel. He wrote:


Given Mr. Nunes’s own close relations to the White House as a former member of the executive committee of the Trump transition team, and his previous history conferring with White House officials on matters under investigation by his committee, it is fair to surmise that his staff, perhaps at his direction, may have coordinated the memo with the White House.

Such conduct could expose Mr. Nunes and his staff to liability for conspiracy to obstruct justice.

Endeavoring to stop an investigation, if done with corrupt intent, may constitute obstruction of justice. Plotting to assist such action may be conspiracy to obstruct justice.

Add your name to millions demanding Congress take action on the President’s crimes. IMPEACH TRUMP & PENCE!

Norm Eisen knows this area of the law well, having served as President Obama’s ethics lawyer in the White House and now as the Chairman of the non-profit watchdog group C.R.E.W.

It’s pretty unusual that a criminal investigation would ensnare a Congressman for official work, but there are case law precedents that draw the line between legislative process and political activities according to Eisen:


Normally, what is called “speech or debate” immunity would provide a strong bulwark against any such liability for Mr. Nunes or his staff. The Constitution provides that senators and representatives “shall not be questioned in any other Place” for “any Speech or Debate in either House,” immunizing members of Congress from criminal prosecution and civil lawsuits that concern the legislative process.

In this case, however, Mr. Nunes and company may have ranged so far afield that those protections no longer apply. Under the clause, mere peripheral connection to legislative acts cannot serve as a fig leaf to shield criminal conduct.

The clause does not protect activities that courts consider “political,” such as communicating with the executive branch on behalf of constituents, issuing a newsletter or news release or speaking outside of Congress. The most famous example involves Alaska Senator Mike Gravel and his staff, who were involved in the release and publication of the Pentagon Papers. The courts found that the speech or debate protections applied to Senator Gravel’s actions in entering the documents into the record of a subcommittee hearing, but did not apply to actions of the senator and his staff in arranging private publication following the hearing. The reason: The latter conduct was “in no way essential to the deliberations of the Senate.”

Devin Nunes has even more reasons to wish for an end to the Special Counsel’s probe than solely being on the Trump Transition team.

A lengthy report this weekend exposed the California Republican has a long relationship with disgraced former Trump NSA Gen. Michael Flynn.

Nunes’ told Newsweek that he was close with the convicted former Trump official throughout the transition:


Nunes and Flynn evidently maintained close ties through the election and beyond, even as Flynn’s world was beginning to unravel with questions about his payments from Kremlin mouthpiece Russia Today, secret talks with former Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak and a confidential lobbying contract with a law firm tied to Turkish strongman Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

“I talk to Flynn virtually everyday, if not multiple times a day,” Nunes told me in the late December 2016 interview. “Seldom there’s a day that goes by that I don’t talk to Flynn, and especially right after the campaign, directly.”

The Republican Congressman even attended a meeting with Flynn’s Turkish benefactors months after the General’s secret lobbying for the autocratic Erdogan government became national news.

Rep. Nunes has tremendous personal exposure to the Trump Russia criminal probe due to his position on the Trump Transition team and long relationship with General Flynn.

If the former Obama administration White House counsel is correct, then Devin Nunes could be swept up in one of Special Counsel Mueller’s indictments for orchestrating a very public cover-up of the Transition Team’s activities.
http://washingtonpress.com/2018/02/12/o ... l-offense/


Nunes Memo Reveals Congressman’s Penchant for Conspiracy Theories

By Jeff Stein On 2/11/18 at 9:10 AM
Watching the Devin Nunes memo blow up like a trick cigar a few weeks ago, Andrew Janz called himself “probably the happiest man in the country.”

An assistant district attorney vying to oust Nunes from his California congressional seat, Janz said last week that his campaign war chest had more than tripled since Nunes announced he was releasing highly edited Top Secret information to discredit the FBI and Justice Department investigations into “Russiagate.” That’s not saying much: The Democrat’s $240,000 purse would hardly cover the cost of robocalls in today’s congressional elections, where winning candidates spend an average of $1.3 million—and Nunes already has three times that figure. And while there were some signs the incumbent’s grip was slipping—a January poll commissioned by Janz showed Nunes leading a reelection bid by only five percent against a generic Democratic opponent—his highly edited release of the documents was proving popular among Republicans.

Still, Janz told me, “I’m feeling great, man. You've seen the memo. I think there's going to be plenty for folks on the Democratic side, and even some folks on the Senate Republican side, to poke holes in.”


Which is what they did. “The Nunes Memo fizzled and failed,” said former Nixon White House counsel-turned Watergate witness John Dean in a representative view. “The only thing it established is that Nunes is a nut job, and he has released anew the putrid stench of neo-McCarthyism.”

“Nut job” has clung to Nunes’s reputation as long as he’s been chairman of the House Intelligence Committee (HPSCI, in Washington-speak). Or at least among Democrats (and some Republicans) who have decried Nunes’s transformation of a once bipartisan national security panel into a GOP platform to attack Democrats.

Janz thinks he knows why: Nunes’s mentorship by Michael Flynn, the now disgraced former Trump national security adviser. “I know that they had a pretty close relationship,” he said. Nunes served on the executive committee of the Trump transition team with Flynn, he noted, which was headed by Vice President Mike Pence, “and it seems to me like he never left. He's still on that team.“

A descendent of Portuguese Azorean immigrants, Nunes grew up on a Central Valley, California farm and concentrated on water issues when he came to Congress in 2003. But his fundraising prowess for fellow Republicans endeared him to Representative Paul Ryan and House Speaker John Boehner, who in 2013 anointed him chairman of the intelligence panel.

Like many hawks back then, Nunes was in awe of Flynn, who had won praise for revolutionizing the hunt for terrorists in Iraq and Afghanistan. “This guy was one of the best intelligence officers in several generations,” Nunes told me in a December 23, 2016 interview. “I don't know if you've ever met him, but Flynn is extremely smart. He really is top notch.”

Nunes was speaking fives months after Flynn had startled many former military officers by leading “Lock her up” chants against Hillary Clinton at the Republican National Convention. It was also two years after the Obama White House has forced Flynn’s resignation as director of the Defense Intelligence Agency. “What happened,” Nunes told me, “is...he went out and said a lot of things that Obama didn't like…”

But that’s not close to the full story on Flynn, whose battlefield talents didn’t transfer well to running the DIA from 2012 to 2014. Not only were his executive skills lacking, according to many observers, including former Army general and Secretary of State Colin Powell, he quickly developed a reputation for indulging in conspiracy theories—or “Flynn facts,” his aides derisively called them.

But Nunes embraced them. During Flynn’s tenure, the neophyte intelligence overseer and the general came to share a number of beliefs. One was that the CIA was suppressing the release of documents captured from Osama Bin Laden’s lair that supposedly showed a closer relationship between Al-Qaeda and Iran than the Obama White House, then conducting backchannel talks with Tehran on halting its nuclear weapons program, wanted known. Nunes, according to a then-close observer, demanded the CIA open up its files for him and Flynn one Saturday. “He was going to sneak up on them” on a weekend, the source snorted, speaking on terms of anonymity to discuss the sensitive incident. Nunes denied that excursion, but said he did go down to Central Command headquarters in Tampa “to meet with the team that was doing exploitation of the documents in 2013.”

He and Flynn seemed to share an obsession with Iran. Nunes concurred with Flynn’s insistence that Tehran was involved with the 2012 attacks on the U.S. consulate and annex in Benghazi, and oversaw a two-year investigation into the incident, focusing on what Republicans had portrayed as] the Obama administration’s inept responses. But the committee’s final report, signed by its then-chairman Mike Rogers, “debunk[ed] a series of persistent allegations hinting at dark conspiracies” and concluded that “there was no intelligence failure, no delay in sending a CIA rescue team, no missed opportunity for a military rescue, and no evidence the CIA was covertly shipping arms from Libya to Syria,” according to the Associated Press’s account. The report also found no evidence tying Benghazi to Iran. Nunes called it a “whitewash.”

The congressman’s “nutty” reputation was enhanced in 2013 when he insisted on moving a joint U.S.-U.K intelligence base from England to the Azores, his ancestral home. The $1.2 billion price tag and national security concerns about relocating to such an obscure spot in the mid-Atlantic doomed the effort, according to an investigation by the National Review. But in an early preview of charges that he “cherry-picked” items for his Russiagate memo to undermine the FBI and Justice Department, the Pentagon accused Nunes’s staff of manipulating the numbers on the Azores gambit.

No evidence has surfaced that then-DIA Director Flynn, a native of Rhode Island, home to thousands of Azorean immigrants, had anything to do with that affair. But he and Nunes paired up to champion another issue, one that they were right about: whistleblower accusations that U.S. Central Command leaders were manipulating intelligence reports to burnish the Obama administration’s record against the Islamic State group. Flynn, according to The Weekly Standard, was annoying the White House with, “assessments that Al-Qaeda had doubled in strength over The preceding two years.” Nunes was helping lead a Republican-led joint congressional task force into the issue. At one point, he flew down to CENTCOM headquarters demanding to see documents, according to reports, but “once in Tampa...was denied access to the analysts and their findings, creating further schisms between the parties.” The task force ultimately backed up the whistleblower complaints. So did the Pentagon’s inspector general.

Nunes and Flynn evidently maintained close ties through the election and beyond, even as Flynn’s world was beginning to unravel with questions about his payments from Kremlin mouthpiece Russia Today, secret talks with former Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak and a confidential lobbying contract with a law firm tied to Turkish strongman Recep Tayyip Erdogan. “I talk to Flynn virtually everyday, if not multiple times a day,” Nunes told me in the late December 2016 interview. “Seldom there's a day that goes by that I don't talk to Flynn, and especially right after the campaign, directly.”

Despite the troubling revelations about Flynn’s Turkish deadlings, Nunes accompanied him to a January 18 breakfast at the Trump Hotel in Washington featuring Turkish foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, according to a report in the Istanbul newspaper Daily Sabah. Questioned by U.S. reporters. Nunes’s spokesman Jack Langer called the meeting “a large breakfast event” attended by ”20-30 ambassadors to the U.S. and about 10 other foreign dignitaries and officials.” But the Daily Sabah, which is considered close to the Erdogan regime, contradicted that statement, saying Cavusoglu was the “only foreign leader at the breakfast,” which was closed to the press and featured “topics on the U.S.-Turkish agenda.” Langer told the fact-checking site Snopes that “if [he did speak to Cavusoglu], it would’ve been among all the other ambassadors and officials at the event. There was no separate, private meeting.”

Flynn’s ties to the Erdogan regime may have had a darker side. About six weeks before the elections, Flynn and two business associates attended a secret New York meeting with Cavusoglu and Berat Albayrak, Erdogan’s son-in-law and the country’s energy minister. Also present: former CIA Director and then-Trump senior adviser James Woolsey. The topic: Plans to kidnap the prominent exiled anti-Erdogan cleric Fethullah Gulen in Pennsylvania and return him to Turkey. The meeting stayed secret until late March 2017, when The Wall Street Journal exposed it. In that account, Woolsey said he had cautioned Flynn and the others not to carry out any illegal operations and reported the discussion to a mutual friend of Vice President Joe Biden. Muller opened an investigation into Flynn’s Turkey ties last November, according to multiple reports.

Asked whether Flynn ever discussed the plot with Nunes, his spokesman Langer responded only, "And with this question, Newsweek has completed its transformation into The National Enquirer."

Nunes, meanwhile, was busy defending Flynn and Trump on another matter: the national security adviser’s secret conversations with Kislyak. Had the president-elect approved those talks, and did they include promises to reverse the Obama administration’s punishment of the Kremlin for its interference in the 2016 elections? In an unusually partisan step, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, who was supposed to be leading an investigation into Russian subversion and Team Trump, anointed himself one of the administration’s leading defenders. Trump and and Flynn, he opined, were “so busy” that they wouldn’t have had time to discuss talking to Kislyak.


A Washington Post headline called Nunes’s explanation “strange” and printed it in full:

“No, look, I think this whole issue with General Flynn—General Flynn is an American war hero, one of the—put together one of the greatest military machines in our history providing the intelligence to basically eliminate al-Qaeda from Iraq. And he was the national security adviser designee, he was taking multiple calls a day from ambassadors, from foreign leaders and look, I know this because the foreign leaders were contacting me trying to get in touch with the transition team and folks that wanted to meet with President Trump or — President-elect Trump and Vice President-elect Pence.”

Nunes could not rescue Flynn from disgrace—or later, special counsel Robert Mueller, with whom the former national security adviser negotiated a guilty plea on a charge of lying to the FBI.

But Nunes’s efforts to distract attention from Russiagate didn’t cease with Flynn’s departure from the administration a year ago. And even his now-famous “midnight run” to the White House weeks later indirectly involved Flynn: According to multiple reports, Ezra Cohen-Watnick, whom Flynn put in charge of intelligence matters on the White House national security council despite his scant, low level experience at the DIA, helped provide Nunes with classified documents that the congressman claimed to show—falsely—as it turned out, that Obama had “wiretapped Trump Tower.” That stunt prompted complaints from good-government groups that Nunes had improperly obtained and publicized classified information.

When the House Ethics Committee opened an investigation, Nunes stepped down from his panel’s slow-moving investigation into Kremlin election interference. Temporarily. And on the sidelines, critics noted, Nunes was continuing his campaign to deflect questions about Team Trump’s contacts with the Russians, which climaxed with the memo to discredit the Justice Department and FBI probes. That was just Nunes’s first step, Axios reported. The chairman is preparing as many as five more reports on politically motivated “wrongdoing” at those agencies, as well as the State Department.

Longtime observers of congressional oversight called such activism on behalf of an administration unprecedented. Partisanship has waxed and waned over the years at HPSCI, depending on who held the gavel, said former senior CIA official Larry Pfeiffer, but “we saw nothing compared with what we are seeing with Chairman Nunes, he told Newsweek. “I don’t envy our successors at Langley. We didn’t call HPSCI, ‘The Island of Misfit Toys’ for nothing!”

Nunes, said David Barrett, an authority on Congress and the spy agencies, has added to the partisan rancor on the Hill instead of isolating the committee from the political wars, which it needs to gain the trust of the CIA and other intelligence agencies to admit their mistakes. When the intelligence committees become political, he told The New York Times, oversight of the intelligence agencies becomes “just about impossible.”

“None has ever been so partisan as the current HPSCI chair,” Loch Johnson, a leading intelligence historian at the University of Georgia, told Newsweek. “Worst yet, Mr. Nunes has become Capitol Hill's cheerleader-in-chief for the Trump administration on anything dealing with intelligence.”

But is there a point when such partisanship moves beyond cheerleading into obstruction of justice? Nothing prevents the feds from looking into it, says Edward J. Loya, a former prosecutor in the Justice Department’s public integrity section. “The DOJ and FBI can initiate an obstruction of justice charge against anyone, including Congressman Nunes,” he told Newsweek. But “it would be highly inappropriate for special counsel Mueller to conduct an obstruction investigation about whether Nunes is obstructing Mueller’s own investigation. The more appropriate course,” said Loya, now in private practice with Epstein Becker Green in Washington, “would be for the DOJ to appoint a different special counsel to review this matter.”

Nunes would no doubt denounce such a move as “political.” And he might get some traction with the charge, considering that more than seven out of 10 Republicans polled after his memo’s release said they believed that “members of the FBI and Department of Justice are working to delegitimize Trump through politically motivated investigations.”

Back in the Central Valley, Janz says he’s ready to combat Nunes on Russiagate if he gets the nomination. After all, he says, some of the Trump administration’s own officials have been saying that the Russians are already meddling in this fall’s elections. He plans to pound Nunes on why he’s not focusing on that instead of undermining federal probes into Kremlin subversion.

“The best we can do is speak factually about what is going on...” he said. “All Americans should be alarmed. People in this district are asking why Nunes is going to such great lengths to cover for Trump. There must be some motivation behind what he is doing.”
http://www.newsweek.com/nunes-memo-trum ... fbi-802710


FEBRUARY 12, 2018 | CELIA WEXLER
THE NUNES MEMO: SIX DEGREES OF SEPARATION FROM REALITY
Donald Trump, tweets
Photo credit: Adapted by WhoWhatWhy from @realDonaldTrump / Twitter and The White House.
Late last Friday, President Donald Trump blocked the release of a classified Democratic memo supposedly rebutting the claims of Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA) that the FBI deceived a secret court while investigating Russian interference in the 2016 election.

The White House claimed that Trump’s decision was based on the national security concerns of his Department of Justice.

But a week earlier, Trump ignored similar qualms from DOJ when he allowed the release of the Nunes memo.

It is possible a redacted version of the Democratic document may ultimately be released. But since even Republican policymakers and conservatives did not find the Nunes document very persuasive, it is likely that most of the public has lost interest by now.

Yet how the memo was framed, how it generated media attention, and the questions it raises remain relevant.

Not so long ago, government openness and accountability were issues that drew bipartisan support. Progressive and conservative groups that championed these issues often worked together.

But in late January, a new Twitter campaign, ostensibly about open government, was launched by staunch political partisans who urged Congress and the president to #ReleaseTheMemo.

The campaign had authentic roots among Trump supporters — but recent investigations point to Russian bots helping amplify the Twitter hashtag, and drawing mainstream media attention.

#ReleaseTheMemo demanded public disclosure of an analysis of how the FBI convinced a secret court to authorize the surveillance of Trump campaign aide Carter Page. Nunes, who chairs the House Permanent Subcommittee on Intelligence (HPSCI), framed the issue as a fight for transparency. House Republicans on HPSCI voted to release the classified memo, and Trump agreed.



The Nunes memo assailed the FBI for convincing a judge to permit the surveillance of Page without stating that the bureau relied on evidence paid for by the Clinton campaign.

Only the memo itself does not corroborate that accusation, and Nunes reportedly now concedes that the FBI — in a footnote — did tell the court that it based the justification for the surveillance in part on findings from a “political” source. The memo’s release did not provoke much praise, even from the right. Several conservative groups and media outlets critiqued Nunes’s effort. National Review’s headline, “The Memo Doesn’t Make Its Case,” was one of the kindest.

Nevertheless, Nunes says he will now be taking his investigation to potential abuses at the State Department.

Interestingly, the people who for years have formed bipartisan alliances to make government more open and accountable were largely missing from this fight.

Why? They contend that Nunes’s effort was not the crusade he made it out to be. Indeed, it’s defined by what it is not.

1) Not about transparency

“Nunes is using the tools and the rhetoric of transparency not for broad accountability but to advance a very particular agenda of his own,” Steven Aftergood told WhoWhatWhy. Aftergood, who directs the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists, is worried that Nunes’s attempt to cloak his effort under the mantle of openness “could taint transparency initiatives by making them all seem trivially partisan.”

Aftergood and others in the transparency community make the case that the memo itself was not actually a government document. Instead, it was based on a “perception” of the underlying classified documents by Republicans with an agenda.

What makes this ploy all the more, uh, transparent — advocates charge — is that House Republicans on HPSCI voted to release only a Republican memo based on classified materials, and not a rebuttal memo from committee Democrats. (After the Nunes memo was released, and days later, HPSCI unanimously voted on February 5 to make public the Democratic counter-memo that Trump on Friday refused to release.)

That’s not how Congress operates, says Daniel Schuman, Policy Director for DemandProgress and a former congressional staffer, referring to the established process for congressional committees to conduct hearings and oversight in a way that respects the views of all members. “You don’t have a random staffer go off and write a memo, and then drop it on the minority 20 minutes before the vote, and say, ‘Okay, this is the thing we’re reporting out and you don’t get to say anything about it.’”

2) Not about vindication

Trump claimed in a tweet that the Nunes memo “totally vindicates ‘Trump’ in [Russia] probe,” but it seems he’s pretty lonely in that assertion. Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-SC), who co-wrote the memo and actually read the classified documents, tweeted that it “does not undermine the Mueller investigation in any way.”

House Speaker Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) made the same point, stating that the memo “does not impugn the Mueller investigation or the deputy attorney general.”



3) Not about congressional oversight

In the same press briefing where Ryan walked away from Trump’s claim, he strongly asserted that the Nunes memo was about “legitimate oversight” of the executive branch intelligence agencies.

But Schuman contends that is absolutely not the case.

“If Nunes was serious and not just politically posturing, then he would have brought this up during the 702 fight,” he said. Critics worry that Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) has been used by intelligence agencies spying on foreign communications to also “incidentally” collect and search information on Americans without first obtaining a warrant. Section 702 was reauthorized by Congress last month.

“If he thought that there was a real problem with the way FISA works, he wouldn’t have worked to expand the powers of the government to engage in mass surveillance, including the surveillance of Americans without a warrant,” Schuman charged. If Nunes truly had these qualms, he said, “the time to bring it up is during the reauthorization. But he waited right until it was done, and then he picked this fight.”

And Aftergood points out that even if Nunes had concerns only about the Russia inquiry, a staff memo was not the way to do oversight.

“You have hearings, you do an investigation, you get officials on the record, and you publish a real report that summarizes the evidence and the conclusions,” he said. “The 3 1/2 page staff memo is not that report. At best, it’s a justification for why a real investigation should be done. But it cannot possibly exhaust the subject that it addressed.”

4) Not the finest hour for either Democrats or Republicans on HPSCI

Certainly, Republicans on the committee have received the strongest criticism. DemandProgress and the Project on Government Oversight, both known for their willingness to work with conservative groups on government openness and accountability, called on Ryan to fire every Republican member of HPSCI save one — Gowdy — from the committee. Their reason? The other committee Republicans, including Nunes, had voted to release the memo without seeing the underlying classified information on which it was based.

In their letter, the groups assert that the Republicans’ vote “constitutes such a severe lack of judgment” and demonstrates “an inability to fulfill their constitutional oversight obligations” or “to maintain public trust in their findings and recommendations” that they should be replaced.

Schuman also had harsh words for the committee’s ranking Democrat Adam Schiff (CA), who, he charged, also failed the oversight test. Nunes and Schiff had, “only days before, joined hands” to defeat bipartisan efforts in the House to amend the 702 law to provide US citizens with more surveillance protections.

Adam Schiff
Rep. Adam Schiff (D CA). Photo credit: US House / Wikimedia

5) Not Communication, It’s Manipulation

Aftergood worries that Nunes’s rhetoric may have exacerbated a situation in which it is becoming more difficult to reach consensus on the meaning of words like “transparency.” There are people, many of them Trump backers, who support the Nunes memo as revealing “hidden truths,” he said, while others “including myself” believe it a “manipulative exercise.”

“It is proving very difficult for people with those diverging views to communicate with one another. It’s as if we are entering separate incompatible political universes,” Aftergood laments. “That’s a dangerous place to be. It makes it harder to work in a cooperative, democratic fashion to solve the many problems that we have.”

The Nunes flap also reinforces the failings of HPSCI, something 34 progressive and conservative groups addressed in a detailed letter calling for reforms to the committee. The letter was released in September 2016.

The letter called for a change in the way members of the committee are selected, to ensure that a diversity of views from both parties would be included, and that members of other crucial committees — including Homeland Security, Armed Services, and Judiciary — be included. Now, the choice of members rests entirely with the majority and minority leaders of the House, Schuman said. This selection process, he insisted, creates a committee whose members are known for their “fealty to the intelligence community.”

Another reform would have assigned a staffer to each HPSCI committee member with the security clearance to read classified documents. Without that staff support, panel members likely don’t get the briefings they need to conduct meaningful oversight.

The letter also called for a more transparent process to help inform the public about HPSCI’s oversight, permitting HPSCI to release a classified document unless two-thirds of the 22-member panel voted against it.

Those reforms have not been adopted. Indeed, partisan rancor on HPSCI is so intense that Republicans are erecting a wall to separate Democratic and Republican staffers.

6) An Unhealthy Elevation of the FBI

Schuman and others worry that far too many progressives are becoming enamored of the FBI and the Department of Justice. This trend began far before Trump, Schuman says, as many Americans looked to law enforcement and spy agencies to protect the US from terrorism post-9/11. “If you look at this as a civil liberties issue, then the left and right are working against the middle. A lot of Americans have been happy to trust law enforcement,” Schuman said.

But what’s new and disquieting, he added, are the changing attitudes of many on the progressive end of the spectrum.

“The left’s weird elevation of the FBI as the people who are going to protect us is unusual,” Schuman said. “If they think about communities of color and religious minorities and recent history they would know that’s not the case. The FBI is a profoundly anti-progressive entity in many respects.”
https://whowhatwhy.org/2018/02/12/nunes ... n-reality/
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Feb 16, 2018 8:14 pm

the judge is citing Trump’s declassification of the Nunes memo as precedent in the case when the DOJ tried to argue why certain trump/Russia details should remain secret the judge responded in this manner “That’s going to be a hard sell, given what the president’s done. He has now declassified an entire national security investigation.”

U.S. tries to keep some Russia probe details secret despite Republican memo
Sarah N. Lynch
3 MIN READ
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department on Thursday fought in federal court to keep some minor details of its counterintelligence probe into Russian interference in the 2016 election under wraps, even after President Donald Trump had unwrapped them.

FILE PHOTO: Voters cast their votes during the U.S. presidential election in Medina, Ohio, U.S. November 8, 2016. REUTERS/Aaron Josefczyk/File Photo
Earlier this month, Trump declassified a Republican memo which alleges that the FBI used a dossier prepared by a former British intelligence officer to authorize surveillance on a Trump campaign adviser suspected of being a Russian agent.

Despite that unprecedented public disclosure, a Justice Department lawyer told a judge in oral arguments at the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on Thursday that the government still cannot reveal the date when it received a complete copy of the dossier for fear it might “confirm previously unconfirmed facts about a law enforcement-sensitive” investigation.

That argument exasperated U.S. District Court Judge Amit Mehta, who said that Trump has since changed the landscape for what can be disclosed by declassifying details of a counterintelligence investigation.


“That’s going to be a hard sell, given what the president’s done,” Mehta said. “He has now declassified an entire national security investigation.”

Mehta said that normally the Justice Department’s objections to providing such information in private litigation would be justified. But, “this isn’t the ordinary case,” he said.

He suggested the department consider whether it can submit a one-sentence page disclosing when it received the dossier.

The Justice Department was in court on Thursday trying to beat back a subpoena from the news organization BuzzFeed.

In early 2017, Buzzfeed published a copy of the dossier, penned by Christopher Steele and funded in part by U.S. Democrats.

The dossier makes some serious and salacious allegations against Trump, and suggests that the Russians and Trump’s campaign colluded ahead of the 2016 election. Trump has denied colluding with Russia. U.S. intelligence agencies have concluded Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential campaign, though Russia has denied it.


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Buzzfeed is seeking material from the Justice Department to help defend itself against a defamation lawsuit it is facing by a Russian businessman who claims he was libeled in the dossier.

Much of the information it sought previously it no longer needs because it was disclosed elsewhere, a lawyer for the company conceded on Thursday. But the company still contends it needs to know the time frame for when the FBI obtained the dossier.

The dossier has prompted a backlash by Congressional Republicans, who allege the FBI used it to improperly obtain a warrant from a U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court without verifying the facts or disclosing it was funded by Democrats.
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa- ... SKCN1FZ2Z1
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Feb 17, 2018 2:58 pm

HOT TOPIC $148,979 Money Trail Just Made Things Worse For Devin Nunes in Scandal

BycpowellPublished on February 14, 2018 SHARE TWEET


Rep. Devin Nunes (R. CA), author of the infamous hoax memo, should himself be investigated for his own ties to Russia and his involvement in covering up the “alleged” crimes of the Trump administration.

Scott Dworkin at the Democratic Coalition Against Trump explains, via Twitter: “NEW: Devin Nunes paid $148,979 in campaign funds to a company where the President says he worked for candidates & political parties in Russia. Same guy also was in Russia in 2016 & was on Russia Today propaganda network in July 2017.”

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As you can see, Nunes’ campaign paid the funds to McNally Temple:

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Below you can see the Russia connection on the company website:
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Another day, another Russia connection, but it’s all just fake news, right?
http://www.bluedotdaily.com/148979-mone ... ign=buffer
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu May 10, 2018 11:48 pm

Polly Sigh

NEW DEMANDS: Trump shills, Meadows & Jordan, demand unredacted version of Aug memo detailing scope of Mueller probe, escalating their feud with Rosenstein. They also demand Sessions say whether he signed off on Cohen raid. Why? House probe is over.
#Maddow https://cnn.it/2Kwa6oC

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Trump joins House attacks on DOJ for document release but Rosenstein & top FBI officials suspect that some lawmakers are using their oversight authority to gain intelligence about the investigation so they can share it with the WH. Ya think?!
#Maddow https://nyti.ms/2FCr3tT

[img]‏https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DcUPYTLXUAAzG6l.jpg[/img]
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Nunes threatens Sessions with contempt over Russia materials despite being told by DOJ that providing info on a "specific individual" could pose a national security risk & that release of other info could result in "potential loss of human lives."
#Maddow https://cnn.it/2HWtmxW

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Intelligence officials worry that turning over certain unredacted documents to Nunes would endanger the life of a source who provided information that went to the Mueller team. https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics ... story.html

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"A U.S. citizen who has provided evidence to the CIA and FBI"... https://twitter.com/ericgeller/status/9 ... 0963306496

!! Top WH officials, with Trump's approval, agreed to back the DOJ's decision to withhold info Nunes has been demanding because it could risk lives by potentially exposing an intel source – a US citizen who provided intelligence to the CIA & FBI.
#Maddow https://wapo.st/2rv6nzg?tid=ss_tw&utm_t ... 1c695319bc

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Nunes, in order to funnel more Russia probe info to Trump, sought all documents on a longtime FBI & CIA intel source [which if made public could endanger human lives] THEN denied it: "I never referenced an individual."
The subpoena proves he did.
#Maddow https://wapo.st/2rD6pVV?tid=ss_tw&utm_t ... eb6d99b119

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NEWS: In move to potentially end standoff amid GOP threats of holding Sessions in contempt, DOJ invites Nunes and Gowdy to a classified Thurs briefing on material department warned could risk human lives if disclosed. Nunes had issued subpoena for it. w/@LauraAJarrett @jeremyherb

This is laughable. Of course Nunes will immediately turn and leak the information – to Trump, a subject of the criminal investigation, of which Nunes is demanding to see classified intel [i.e. evidence].

GOP Rep. Tom Rooney says to us that he doesn't believe DOJ's concerns that disclosing info would risk lives. "That assumes we will immediately turn and leak the information, which would jeopardize potentially sources and methods," insisting they don't have a "cavalier" attitude

Paul Ryan backed Nunes:
-After his midnight run to the WH debacle
-During his battle with DOJ & FBI over "The Memo" release
-Now, as Nunes demands DOJ reveal the ID of a longtime FBI & CIA intel source so he can pass more Russia probe info to Trump
#Maddow https://cnn.it/2rDCIUG
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After meeting w/ intel chiefs, Nunes backed off demands that the DOJ give him top-secret info on an intel source who aided Mueller [so he could give it to Trump].
@RepSwalwell: It's like giving the WH keys to the evidence locker.
https://www.washingtonpost.com
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https://twitter.com/dcpoll/status/994751225760493569
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
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Don’t forget that.
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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby BenDhyan » Fri May 11, 2018 12:01 am

So there is now a lot of speculation as to who the FBI informant whose name has been redacted is?

https://www.wsj.com/articles/about-that-fbi-source-1525992611

The answer may be...Carter Page?

http://www.palmerreport.com/opinion/carter-page-may-have-just-let-slip-that-hes-an-fbi-and-cia-informant/2391/
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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri May 11, 2018 9:02 am

or Felix Sater........he's done it before


Ed Krassenstein


I have spoken to several legal experts and they tell me that it is nearly impossible that Nunes and other GOP congressman are not subjects of Mueller's investigation.


Scott Dworkin


BREAKING: A GOP Hill staffer just told me she was instructed today to keep her distance from Devin Nunes, his staff and the GOP House Intel Cmte staff, because it looks like they are targets "of multiple ongoing investigations by Special Counsel Mueller's office/FBI and the DoJ."

https://twitter.com/georgezab


Rooney: Entire Republican Staff of House Intelligence Committee Is Under Investigation
https://www.motherjones.com/kevin-drum/ ... stigation/
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby BenDhyan » Fri May 11, 2018 7:21 pm

And some say Stefan Halper... https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/978269326519230465.html

EXCLUSIVE: A London Meeting Before The Election Aroused George Papadopoulos’s Suspicions.. http://dailycaller.com/2018/03/25/george-papadopoulos-london-emails/
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Re: Crazed Right-Wing Sites Pushing Nunes #ReleaseTheMemo

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat May 12, 2018 3:30 pm

BenDhyan » Fri May 11, 2018 6:21 pm wrote:And some say Stefan Halper... https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/978269326519230465.html

EXCLUSIVE: A London Meeting Before The Election Aroused George Papadopoulos’s Suspicions.. http://dailycaller.com/2018/03/25/george-papadopoulos-london-emails/


thank you so much for that link Ben and I so do appreciate your respectful posts towards me even if we disagree sometimes

John Dean was an associate deputy Attorney General and White House counsel before pleading guilty to obstruction of justice. Dean ended up serving four months in federal detention and was disbarred as an attorney.

“Nunes co-conspirator on the Hill is his staffer Kashyap Patel,” Dean charged.


viewtopic.php?f=8&t=40827&p=650439&hilit=Kashyap+Patel#p650439



KASHYAP PATEL HAD BETTER NOT RELY ON THE BILL DUHNKE PRECEDENT

May 12, 2018/1 Comment/in Leak Investigations, Mueller Probe /by empty wheel

Contrary to what a lot of people understand of the case, Jeffrey Sterling was not the CIA’s first suspect for the Merlin leaks to James Risen. Senate Intelligence Committee Staff Director Bill Duhnke was. As former CIA press person Bill Harlow testified, he told the FBI that James Risen had close ties to Duhnke when he first talked to them about Risen’s story.

Q. Okay. And you also told them that someone they should talk to about something like this would be Bill Duhnke, a person named Bill Duhnke, correct, up at the — that worked at the U.S. Senate?

BY MR. MAC MAHON: Q. Now, Mr. Harlow, in 2003, you told the FBI that you thought that Mr. Risen might reach out to the Staff Director of the Senate Select Intelligence Committee on Intelligence for confirmation, that Mr. Risen would, correct?

[snip]

A. My recollection is what the FBI asked me is who are the kind of people that Risen might talk to on a story like this, and I told them that he had regular contact with the Congressional Oversight Committees, including the Senate Intelligence Committee, and so the kind of places he might go to ask about the story would be the Senate Oversight committees. That’s my recollection of it. You know, it’s a dozen years ago but —

Q. And one of the names you gave them was Bill Duhnke, right?

A. Right.


As FBI Agent Hunt explained, however, she was hampered from investigating whether Duhnke (who knew aspects about Merlin that Sterling did not which showed up in Risen’s reporting) was a source for Risen because Senator Pat Roberts refused to cooperate with the FBI, even after then FBI Director Robert Mueller requested himself.

Q. And do you also remember writing in 2006 that the FBI director contacted the SSCI Chairman and Senator Pat Roberts, right?

A. Yes.

Q. And that Senator Roberts told Director Mueller that he wasn’t going to cooperate with the FBI at all in this investigation, correct?

A. Yes.

Q. And that never changed, did it?

A. It did change.

Q. You then got some cooperation from SSCI, correct?

A. I did. Q. You never got an interview with Mr. Duhnke, right?

A. I did not interview Mr. Duhnke.

Thus it happened that Speech and Debate prevented the FBI from investigating whether a key Intelligence Committee staffer played a role in a leak the government claimed was one of the worst ever.

I thought of that precedent when I read this passage in the NYT’s latest story on DOJ’s belated realization that Devin Nunes was using purported oversight requests to discover details that might help Trump delegitimize the Mueller investigation.

In another meeting, Mr. Rosenstein felt he was outright misled by Mr. Nunes’s staff. Mr. Rosenstein wanted to know whether Kashyap Patel, an investigator working for Mr. Nunes who was the primary author of the disputed memo, had traveled to London the previous summer to interview a former British spy who had compiled a salacious dossier about Mr. Trump, according to a former federal law enforcement official familiar with the interaction.

Mr. Patel was not forthcoming during the contentious meeting, the official said, and the conversation helped solidify Mr. Rosenstein’s belief that Mr. Nunes and other allies in Congress were not operating in good faith.


And these passages in an earlier NYT piece on Patel.

Over the summer, Mr. Nunes dispatched Mr. Patel and another member of the committee’s Republican staff to London, where they showed up unannounced at the offices of Mr. Steele, a former British intelligence official.

Told Mr. Steele was not there, Mr. Patel and Douglas E. Presley, a professional staff member, managed to track him down at the offices of his lawyers. There, they said they were seeking only to establish contact with Mr. Steele, but were rebuffed and left without meeting him, according to two people with knowledge of the encounter.

A senior official for the Republican majority on the Intelligence Committee, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about the matter, said the purpose of the visit had been to make contact with Mr. Steele’s lawyers, not Mr. Steele. Still, the visit was highly unusual and appeared to violate protocol, because they were trying to meet with Mr. Steele outside official channels.

Ordinarily, such a visit would be coordinated through lawyers, conducted with knowledge of the House Democrats, who were not informed and the American Embassy.


Given Rosenstein’s concerns that Patel was lying, I find it particularly interesting that he didn’t inform the American Embassy when he was there. It’s as if he was looking for a back channel!

As NYCSouthpaw noted, Patel has been hanging around the White House since he’s started playing this role.

In the months since, Mr. Patel has apparently forged connections at the White House. In November, he posted a series of photos to Facebook of him and several friends wearing matching shirts at the White House bowling alley. “The Dons hit the lanes at 1600 Pennsylvania,” Mr. Patel wrote under the photos.

This would suggest that the Nunes designee who has had firsthand access to all this intelligence, has also gotten really comfortable with the White House, leaving the possibility that he has shared the information with those in charge of delegitimize the investigation.

I’ve long wondered why Nunes has refused to read the information he has fought so hard to get access to. But by giving Patel that access without reading the materials himself, Nunes ensures that someone with easy access to the White House sees the materials, without jeopardizing the power to refuse any cooperation with Mueller.

Nunes, like Roberts did in 2006, could simply refuse to cooperate under speech and debate.

And it might well work!

There is, however one problem with that. You see, one of the ways (admittedly one of the less offensive ways) the President has interfered in the operations of DOJ is by demanding that the department ratchet up the leak investigations. And at a time last summer where Trump was threatening to fire Sessions so he could hire someone who could interfere with the Mueller investigation, Sessions and Dan Coats rolled out a new war on leaks, speaking of new permissiveness for prosecutors. Both Sessions…

To prevent these leaks, every agency and Congress has to do better.

We are taking a stand. This culture of leaking must stop.

[snip]

Finally, here is what I want to tell every American today: This nation must end the culture of leaks. We will investigate and seek to bring criminals to justice. We will not allow rogue anonymous sources with security clearances to sell out our country any longer.

These cases are never easy. But cases will be made, and leakers will be held accountable.

All of us in government and in every agency and in Congress must do better.

And Coats invoked Congress as a source of leaks specifically.

I would like to point out, however, that these national security breaches do not just originate in the Intelligence Community. They come from a wide range of sources within government, including the Executive Branch and including the Congress.


At the time, those mentions were deemed a warning that (in addition to changing the rules allowing them to pursue journalists), DOJ would also start pursuing Congress and its staffers more aggressively.

So while the available evidence suggests that Patel may be part of Nunes’ effort to funnel information to the White House, and while past history has shown that Nunes’ counterparts have been able to protect intelligence committee leakers, perhaps the witch hunt demanded by Trump will change that.
https://www.emptywheel.net/2018/05/12/k ... precedent/
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
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