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Saturday, January 12, 2019

The Scandal Noose Tightens: What Did Trump Know & When Did He Know It?

LYNE LUCIAN / THE DAILY BEAST
In late June of 1973, Senator Howard Baker of Tennessee, the ranking Republican on the special Senate committee convened to investigate the break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate building, uttered the immortal words that would assure his place in history and doom Richard Nixon: "What did the president know, and when did he know it?" 
Fast forward 45 years and that again is the raging question following 10 days of developments that tightened the noose around the embattled Donald Trump's fat neck:
U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell extended the term of Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller's grand jury, which was empaneled in July 2017 to investigate Trump campaign-Russia ties and has approved multiple indictments against Trump associates and Russian spies and trolls, for up to another six months.   
Paul Manafort's lawyers inadvertently revealed in a court filing that he shared internal campaign polling data with suspected spy Konstantin Kilimnik, laying out the pathway Trump's campaign manager used to give Russia access to the data it needed for its social media-based campaign against Hillary Clinton. 
The Supreme Court refused to intercede in a mysterious fight over a sealed grand jury subpoena to a foreign corporation issued by a federal prosecutor who probably is Mueller, raising the possibility that Trump may not be able to rely on the high court to protect him. 
Benjamin Wittes, editor of the Lawfare blog and a leading legal scholar, wrote that no attorney general will stand in the way of releasing Mueller's hugely anticipated final report to Congress and the public because there is no plausible legal basis to cover up crimes of "monstrous criminality."      
The New York Times reported that in the days after Trump fired FBI director James Comey, law enforcement officials became so concerned by Trump's behavior that they opened an investigation into not just whether he was obstructing justice, but whether he was secretly working on behalf of Russia.  
There are no detailed records of five personal meetings Trump has had with Vladimir Putin because the president has gone to "extraordinary lengths" to keep the specifics of his conversations secret and on at least one occasion took a translator's notes, reported The Washington Post.
Trump, meanwhile, unleashed a tweetstorm of criticism against Comey and the FBI that had earmarks of being written by his lawyers given that the tweets actually were literate and contained no ALL CAPS.   
Yes, yes, yes.  You've read over and over that the gig was up for Trump.  That the ax was about to fall. 
But what is different this time, and this time happens to be contemporaneous with the greatest of Trump's innumerable self-inflicted wounds -- the longest government shutdown in history over his Great Wall of America -- is that our accumulated knowledge of the scandal enables us to reach the inescapable conclusion that Trump was intimately involved in his campaign's collusion with Russia and that, as the Manafort court filing boo-boo revealed, Mueller certainly knows a great deal more about that than we do.   
And arguably even more importantly, after becoming president, Trump was acting on a pro-Russia agenda.   
This possibly included promises made to Putin to pursue an isolationist foreign policy beneficial to the Kremlin (which is exactly what has happened), shut down the FBI's nascent investigation (which has not happened despite Trump's many efforts) and move on eliminating the Obama era sanctions that are crippling the Russian economy and negatively impacting on the Russian president's popularity at home (which has not happened because of Congress and pre-existing laws Trump cannot unilaterally scrap).   
Then there was Trump's campaign-trail plea to Russia to release hacked Clinton emails (granted within hours) and behind-the-scenes efforts to alter the Republican Party's convention platform on Ukraine in a pro-Russian direction (successful). 
The onslaught of bad news for the president comes as he and the Trump Organization bring on 17 new defense lawyers, a number of whom actually appear to be competent, in anticipation of a whole lot more bad news with additional Mueller indictments expected, an onslaught of investigations from newly-empowered House Democrats just getting under way and protracted court fights over executive privilege.   
The hiring of former White House lawyer Stefan Passantino by the Trump Organization this week underscores the vulnerability of the president's family businesses, which he has never divested himself from and are run by his two oldest sons, Donald Jr. and Eric Trump.  This raises a host of legal issues because of the overlap between the Trump Organization and decisions made by the White House.  Then there is the involvement in both by Michael Cohen, Trump's longtime lawyer and fixer turned cooperating witness for both the special counsel and New York prosecutors and announced witness at a forthcoming House hearing into Trump's business ties. 
The idea of the sitting U.S. president being investigated as an agent of a foreign nation, let alone Russia, should leave us gasping for air.  Are you? 
"It's mind-blowing and . . . any determination that the president of the U.S. had been or was a Russian agent would be out of The Manchurian Candidate," said former U.S. attorney Harry Litman as he gasped for air.  "And I would have to imagine it would make it untenable for him to be president but it would also be the political scandal of all time." 
There are two big takeaways from the week the noose tightened. 
First, despite much admirable work, the news media -- including The Times and WaPo -- have kept missing the big picture, and The Times will never live down the October 31, 2016 whopper of a headline 
Investigating Donald Trump, F.B.I. Sees No Clear Link to Russia
although the marginally comprehensible story beneath it did not exactly support that. Then there were subsequent stories and a public editor column that sought to distance the Gray Lady from the burgeoning scandal while being overly tough on Clinton in a number of weakly reported stories. 
Second, in the context of Putin working to elect the vulnerable-to-blackmail Trump because he would help his agenda, the big picture is that the Russia scandal investigation has never really been about obstruction of justice on the one hand and collusion on the other.  As The Times bombshell revealed despite its maddening nuanced-ness, the investigation has been primarily a counterintelligence investigation with ancillary criminal aspects, including obstruction of justice.   
In other words, the obstruction was a big part of the collusion.  With what Donald Trump knew and when he knew it right in the bullseye.  

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

6 comments:

  1. Remember the Mafia guy who feigned insanity to try to get out of being prosecuted? My fear is that by the time all the Mueller investigation evidence is released, the mental state of the Individual 1 will be even more compromised than it obviously is right now and he will get out yet again of having to pay for his lawlessness (and possible treason).

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  2. Treason, as a specific charge, refers to aiding a declared enemy in wartime, so of course Trump cannot be charged with that. But treason has a more general meaning, the betrayal of your country. It's starting to look more and more like Trump is likely guilty of treason in that sense. Flynn got in touch with the Russian ambassador right after Trump won the election, and quite possibly he was getting marching orders to convey to Trump. That is information that Mueller probably is preparing to release in his report. And Rudy G may be aware of that, explaining why he told friends the report would be "horrific." That scenario would also explain why Trump was trying to get Comey to drop the investigation of Flynn, and fired Comey when he would not do it.

    Trump has not criticized Flynn for flipping, perhaps because he is holding onto the hope that Flynn lied to Mueller to protect him. I would not count on that; Mueller's team seemed very happy about Flynn's cooperation. Thus Trump is probably now terrified about what will happen when Mueller brings down the axe on his neck. And his terror could explain the bizarre spectacle of a pointless government shut-down: he wants to put the nation's focus on anything besides his own criminality.

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  3. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  4. Brad:

    Terrifically well said, as always. I too am not going to get hung up on the textbook definition of treason. Trump is a traitor.

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  5. I'll say it again: this is going to be one hell of a year...

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  6. So if they can indict and convict Trump as a recruited spy before he was nominated, does that mean that everything he has done can be thrown out? All his executive orders, all his cabinet, Kavanaugh, the tax cut, Pence , the Election !?! The mind boggles.

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