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Thursday, February 07, 2019

Still Further On Down The Road: Three Big Russia Scandal Questions Answered

DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES
In light of recent developments having next to nothing to do with President Trump's State of the Union speech (nine-word summary: "Let's work together you rotten motherfuckers let's work together"), it's worth pondering three questions: Is Robert Mueller nearing the end of his Russia scandal investigation?  Why is the special counsel handing off so much juicy stuff to other prosecutors?  And will the do-over of the whitewashed Republican-led Intelligence Committee investigation by newly energized Democrats have an impact?    
While the president did slip a morsel of his trademark Trumpian Logic into the SOTU speech in an acknowledgement that those prosecutorial footsteps he's been hearing are growing louder ("If there is going to be peace and legislation, there cannot be war and investigation"), he has said and done nothing since that Democratic Blue Wave broke on the electoral shore last November indicating he's still not locked in a fantasy world of "witch hunt" denials as he watches colleague after colleague turn on him, become cooperating witnesses and, in the cases of his former campaign chairman and longtime lawyer-fixer, prepare to begin serving prison sentences. 
In addition to the no fewer than 17  investigations outlined here, prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York (SDNY) on Monday issued a barrage of subpoenas pertaining to Trump's inaugural committee, which raised a staggering and record $107 million but doesn't seem to know where much of the money went.   
The subpoenas were broad and included possible charges of conspiracy against the U.S., false statements, mail fraud, wire fraud, money laundering, disclosure violations, and violations of laws that prohibiting contributions from foreign nations and contributions in the names of other people known as "straw donors" in order to protect the identity of the real donors and the dubious circumstances under which they coughed up big bucks.  (Hint for the dimwitted: For access to Trump and his new  administration where money would aways talk.)  
That 18th investigation reportedly prompted Trump to ask Acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker, who has been anything but the foil Trump intended in naming him, "why more wasn't being done to control prosecutors in New York," whom the president suggested were "going rogue." 
And in an extraordinary rebuke to Devin Nunes and his Republican-dominated House Committee's conclusion last March in a party-line vote that the Trump campaign did not collude with Russia, new committee chairman Adam Schiff formally announced on Wednesday that the now Democrat-dominated committee will reopen the whitewashed investigation with a broad inquiry of their own, including scrutinizing "credible reports of money laundering and financial compromise" involving Trump’s businesses. 
Other committees are zeroing in on Trump, as well.  On Thursday, Democrats began their quest to secure a copy of Trump's kryptonite --   his long-suppressed tax returns -- and readied a subpoena for Whitaker should he refuse to answer questions at a hearing scheduled for Friday. 
Trump, of course, called the investigations "ridiculous" and "presidential harassment," while House Speaker Pelosi in turn accused him of delivering an "all-out threat" to newly-empowered Democrats who are taking their oath to provide checks and balances on his power. 
Meanwhile, there have been a flurry of scoops from the fake news media.  
Two biggies were from BuzzFeed News, which on one day reported that documents prove how intertwined the Trump Tower Moscow project and the Trump campaign were despite the candidate's repeated claims that he had no Russian business interests, and then on another that Rinat Akhmetshin, one of the Russians accompanying the by-now notorious Natalia Veselnitskaya to the infamous June 9, 2016 Trump Tower meeting, received suspicious payments totaling a half million dollars before and after the meeting. 
As to those three questions:    
Is Mueller nearing the end of his Russia  investigation? 
Giving a less than convincing answer, Whitaker has said "I have been fully briefed on the investigation and I look forward to Director Mueller delivering the final report.  I am comfortable that the decisions that were made are going to be reviewed. Right now, you know, the investigation is, I think, close to being completed."  
That is the testimonial of a man being paid to say what Trump wants to hear, while it is probable that Mueller continues to pursue evidence that some or perhaps many of the 17 or so Trump campaign officials and advisers who had more than 100 contacts with Russian nationals and WikiLeaks were co-conspiritors in the Kremlin's successful effort to cybersabotage Hillary Clinton's campaign. 
It can be argued endlessly whether Mueller is indeed wrapping up, whether we're at the beginning of the end, or the end of the beginning, or does "soon" mean next week or next June?  One thing is for sure: Trump's legal problems will long outlast Mueller's investigation.  
Why is the special counsel handing off so much to other prosecutors? 
Mueller is farming out investigations to SDNY and other prosecutors because he's got plenty on his plate (seven of the now 18 investigations, by my count) and spreading the wealth around, so to speak, increases the number of prosecutors Trump AG nominee William Barr would have to go after when he's confirmed, some of them working in Main Justice at his future Washington headquarters and some in field offices like SDNY.  
Will the new House Russia investigation have an impact? 
No and yes.  No because the inquiry is unlikely to unearth anything significant that we don't already know, but an emphatic yes because unlike Mueller and those other prosecutors, Schiff's committee will do much of its work in public, including televised hearings that will be a constant reminder of the enormity of the Russia scandal and Trump's deep involvement in it.  
Lest we need a reminder, all this activity reveals a man, a campaign and a presidency so abjectly dishonest and corrupt that there simply are no comparisons.  The Teapot Dome, Watergate and Iran-Contrs pale in comparison, while the scope of the Russia scandal is so enormous that there is only one comparable in American history -- the Soviet theft of atomic bomb secrets in the late 1940s.   

Click HERE for a comprehensive timeline of the Russia scandal
and related developments.

8 comments:

  1. the scope of the Russia scandal is so enormous that there is only one comparable in American history -- the Soviet theft of atomic bomb secrets in the late 1940s.

    To which I fear the Republicans (and perhaps much of the American public) would say, "Whatever."

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  2. A related concern is whether the incoming AG will try to bury much of the Mueller report's findings once it's finally done. I suppose he could do that and get away with it. But it also seems to me that Congressional committees could call on Mueller to testify and with sharp questioning learn everything Mueller discovered. While that would likely happen behind closed doors, members of those committees could then share the information with the press. And of course Mueller is adept at making information public via detailed indictments. I'm beginning to suspect the Mueller report will be fatal to Trump; hence Trump's frantic efforts to discredit it with cries of "witch hunt" even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.

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  3. Brad:

    I remain sanguine about Mueller's report seeing the light of day. At the very least, via a leak. And as you allude, there have been his so-called "speaking indictments."

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  4. I'm really glad that the investigations have been "spread around". Much harder to shut down than just one investigation.

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  5. I thought there was something about states being able to prosecute certain things more fully than the federal government or they had jurisdiction in some matters that the US did not. Many of us have known the Trump family to be crooked in their dealings but never made to pay in any substantial way. They owe us for all the money they made with their federal contracts over the years, to say nothing of what they owe people whose lives were harmed by their misdeeds. Shutting down the government being one of the latest, though within the authority, not without harm.

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  6. Laura:

    There are laws on the books in many states -- New York being one and the most relevant here -- that more or less parallel federal statues on fraud, money laundering, tax evasion and other financial crimes. In the context of the Trump family, this means that New York State could charge people whom the president pardoned and a presidential pardon would not be applicable.

    Additionally, NYC and New York State officials are pursuing their own investigations into Trump himself for fraudulently obtaining upwards of $400 million in business transaction, and into the Donald Trump Foundation (which has been forced to cease operations by the state). Meanwhile, the AGs of Maryland are pursuing an emoluments lawsuit that is advancing through the courts.

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  7. Thanks Shaun. Like was stated above. It's good to spread it around. I'm sure any state or country he has done business in could benefit by looking more closely at his dealings. Look at the immigrants he has allowed to be hired while mouthing off about how horrible they are!

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