Case File
efta-02549323DOJ Data Set 11OtherEFTA02549323
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DOJ Data Set 11
Reference
efta-02549323
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EFTA DisclosureText extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
From:
jeffrey E. <[email protected]>
Sent:
Saturday, June 23, 2018 3:39 PM
To:
Steve Bannon
Subject:
Re: Re:
maybe, but southern district . money la=ndering.. any action that "offends the constitution &quo=; .
corrupt
intent.. . m=ny open questions. . flippers will dictate ( my view )
On Sat, J=n 23, 2018 at 2:44 PM, Steve Bannon <
Big deal
Begin forwarded message:
Resent-From: <
<mailto
From: "Rivkin, David"
Date: June 23, 2018 at 8:14:49 AM EDT
To: Steve Bannon <
<mailto
Subject: Fwd: Re:
Here it is.
Sent from my iPhone
Begin forwarded message:
From: "Grossman, Andrew M" <
Date: June 23, 2018 at 12:56:55 AM EDT
To: "Rivkin, David"
Subject: Re:
> wro=e:
> >
> >
EFTA_R1_01704521
EFTA02549323
Mueller's Fruit of the Poisonous Tree
It makes no difference ho= honorable he is. His investigation is tainted by the bias that attended
i=s origin in 2016.
By
Elizabeth Price Fo=ey
June 2=, 2018 6:38 p.m. ET
414 COMMENTS<=u>
Special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation may face = serious legal obstacle: It is tainted by
antecedent political bias. The J=ne 14 report from Michael Horowitz, the Justice Department's inspector general,
unearthed a pattern of anti-Trump bias by high-ranking =fficials at the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Some of their
communicati=ns, the report says, were "not only indicative of a biased state o= mind but imply a willingness to take
action to impact a presidential candidate's electoral prospects."=Although Mr. Horowitz could not definitively ascertain
whether this bias =E2fldirectly affected" specific FBI actions in the Hillary Cli=ton email investigation, it nonetheless
affects the legality of the Trump-Russia collusion inquiry, code-named Crossfire Hurricane.=u>
Crossfire was launched only months before the 2016 election. Its=FBI progenitors—the same
ones who had investigated Mrs. Clinton40=804,deployed at least one informant to probe Trump campaign advisers,
obtained Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court wiretap warrant=, issued national security letters to gather records, and
unmasked the ide=tities of campaign officials who were surveilled. They also repeatedly lea=ed investigative
information.
Mr. Horowitz is separately scrutinizing Crossfire and isn4,=99t expected to finish for months.
But the current report reveals that FBI=officials displayed not merely an appearance of bias against Donald Trump, but
animus bordering on hatred. Peter Strzok, who le= both the Clinton and Trump investigations, confidently assuaged a
colleag=e's fear that Mr. Trump would become president: "No he won=E2nt. We'll stop it." An unnamed FBI lawyer
assigned to Crossfire told a colleague he was "devastated" and Q=804,numb" after Mr. Trump won, while declaring to
another FBI att=rney: "Viva le resistance."
The report highlights the FBI's failure to act promptly =pon discovering that Anthony Weiner's
laptop contained thousands o= Mrs. Clinton's emails. Investigators justified the delay by citing the "higher priority" of
Crossfire. But Mr. Horowit= writes: "We did not have confidence that Strzok's decisio= to prioritize the Russia
investigation over following up on Ethel investi=ative lead discovered on the Weiner laptop was free from bias."=/u>
Similarly, although Mr. Horowitz found no evidence that then-FBI=Director James Comey was
trying to influence the election, Mr. Comey did m=ke decisions based on political considerations. He told the inspector
general that his election-eve decision to reopen the=Clinton email investigation was motivated by a desire to protect her
assum=d presidency's legitimacy.
The inspector general wrote that Mr. Strzok's text messa=es "created the appearance that
investigative decisions were impac=ed by bias or improper considerations." The report adds, important=y, that "most of
the text messages raising such questions pertained t= the Russia investigation." Given how biases ineluctably shape
beh=vior, these facts create a strong inference that by squelching the Clinton=investigation and building a narrative of
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Trump-Russia collusion, a group of government officials sought to bolster Mrs. Clinton=E2ns electoral chances and, if
the unthinkable happened, obtain an in=urance policy to cripple the Trump administration with accusations of
ille=itimacy.
What does this have to do with Mr. Mueller, who was appointed in=May 2017 after President
Trump fired Mr. Comey? The inspector general conc=udes that the pervasive bias "cast a cloud over the FBI
investigations to which these employees were assigned,Q=9D including Crossfire. And if Crossfire was politically
motivated, then i=s culmination, the appointment of a special counsel, inherited the taint. =11 special-counsel activities—
investigations, plea deals, subpoenas, reports, indictments and convictions—are fr=it of a poisonous tree, byproducts of
a violation of due process. That Mr.=Mueller and his staff had nothing to do with Crossfire's origin of=ers no cure.
When the government deprives a person of life, liberty or proper=y, it is required to use
fundamentally fair processes. The Supreme Court h=s made clear that when governmental action "shocks the
conscience," it violates due process. Such con=uct includes investigative or prosecutorial efforts that appear, under
the=totality of the circumstances, to be motivated by corruption, bias or entr=pment.
In U.S. v. Russell4=A0(1973), the justices observed: "We may someday be presented with a
situation in which the conduct of law enforcement agents is so outrageou= that due process principles would absolutely
bar the government from invo=ing judicial processes to obtain a conviction." It didn't =ake long. In Blackledge v. Perry
(1974), the court concluded that due process was=offended by a prosecutor's "realistic likelihood of
4>=98vindictiveness' " that tainted the "very in=tiation of proceedings."
In Young v. U.S. ex rel. Vuitton=C2*(1987), the justices held that because prosecutors have
"power to employ the full machinery of the state in scrutiniz=ng any given individual ... we must have assurance that
those who would =ield this power will be guided solely by their sense of public responsibil=ty for the attainment of
justice." Prosecutors must be "disinterested" and make "dispassionate as=essments," free from any personal bias.
In Williams v. Pennsylvania=/em> (2016), the court held that a state judge's potential bi=s
violated due process because he had played a role, a quarter-century earli=r, in prosecuting the death-row inmate
whose habeas corpus petition he was=hearing. The passage of time and involvement of others do not vitiate the =aint
but heighten "the need for objective rules preventing the operation of bias that might otherwise be o=scured," the
justices wrote. A single biased individual "m=ght still have an influence that, while not so visible ... is =evertheless
significant."
In addition to the numerous anti-Trump messages uncovered by the=inspector general, there is
a strong circumstantial case—including=personnel, timing, methods and the absence of evidence—that Crossfire was
initiated for political, not national-security, purposes.=/u>
It was initiated in defiance of a longstanding Justice Departmen= presumption against
investigating campaigns in an election year. And whil= impartiality is always required, a 2012 memo by then-Attorney
General Eric Holder emphasizes that impartiality is t>=80,particularly important in an election year," and "pol=tics
must play no role in the decisions of federal prosecutors or investig=tors regarding any investigations.... Law
enforcement officers and prosecutors may never select the timing of investigative step= or criminal charges for the
purpose of affecting any election, or for the=purpose of giving an advantage or disadvantage to any candidate or
politic=l party."
Strong evidence of a crime can overcome this policy, as was the =ase with the bureau's
investigation of Mrs. Clinton's priv=te email server, which began more than a year before the 2016 election. But
Crossfire was not a criminal investigation. It was a counter=ntelligence investigation predicated on the notion that
Russia could be co=luding with the Trump campaign. There appears to have been no discernible =vidence of Trump-
Russia collusion at the time Crossfire was launched, further reinforcing the notion that it=was initiated "for the purpose"
of affecting the president=al election.
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The chief evidence of collusion is the hacking of the Democratic=National Committee's servers.
But nothing in the public record sug=ests the Trump campaign aided that effort. The collusion narrative therefore hinges
on the more generic assertion that Russia aimed=to help Mr. Trump's election, and that the Trump campaign
reciproc=ted by embracing pro-Russian policies. Yet despite massive surveillance an= investigation, there's still no public
evidence of any such exchange—only that Russia attempted to sow po=itical discord by undermining Mrs. Clinton and to
a lesser extent Mr. Trum=.
Some members of the Trump team interacted with Russians and advo=ated dovish policies. But
so did numerous American political and academic =lites, including many Clinton advisers. Presidential campaigns
routinely seek opposition research and interact with foreign pow=rs. The Clinton campaign funded the Steele dossier,
whose British author p=id Russians to dish anti-Trump dirt. The Podesta Group, led by the brother=of Mrs. Clinton's
campaign chairman, received millions lobbying for Russia's largest bank and the Europ=an Center for a Modern Ukraine,
both with deep Kremlin ties. The Clinton F=undation and Bill Clinton took millions from Kremlin-connected
businesses.=u>
No evidence has emerged of Trump-Russia collusion, and Mr. Muell=r has yet to bring collusion-
related charges against anyone. Evidence sugg=sts one of his targets, George Papadopoulos, was lured to London, plied
with the prospect of Russian information damagi=g to Mrs. Clinton, and taken to dinner, where he drunkenly bragged
that he=E2.4>d heard about such dirt but never seen it. These circumstances not=only fail to suggest Mr.
Papadopoulos committed a crime, they reek of entrapment. The source of this information, former A=stralian diplomat
Alexander Downer, admits Mr. Papadopolous never mentione= emails, destroying any reasonable inference of a
connection between the D=C hack and the Trump campaign.
Crossfire's progenitors thus ignored an obvious question= If Russia promised unspecified dirt on
Mrs. Clinton but never delivered i=, how would that amount to collusion with the Trump campaign? If anything, such
behavior suggests an attempt to entice and pot=ntially embarrass Mr. Trump by dangling the prospect of compromising
infor=ation and getting his aides to jump at it.
Given the paucity of evidence, it's staggering that the =BI would initiate a counterintelligence
investigation, led by politically =iased staff, amid a presidential campaign. The aggressive methods and subsequent
leaking only strengthen that conclusion. If the FBI=sincerely believed Trump associates were Russian targets or agents,
the pr=per response would have been to inform Mr. Trump so that he could protect =is campaign and the country.
Mr. Trump's critics argue that the claim of political bi=s is belied by the fact that Crossfire was
not leaked before the election.=ln fact, there were vigorous, successful pre-election efforts to publicize the Trump-
Russia collusion narrative. Shortly after C=ossfire's launch, CIA Director John Brennan and Mr. Comey briefed =ongress,
triggering predictable leaking. Christopher Steele and his patron= embarked on a media roadshow, making their dossier
something of an open secret in Washington.
On Aug. 29, 2016, the New York Times published a letter to Mr. C=mey from Senate Minority
Leader Harry Reid, saying he'd learned of="evidence of a direct connection between the Russian government and
Donald Trump's presidential campaign," whic= had "employed a number of individuals with significant and distur=ing
ties to Russia and the Kremlin." On Aug. 30, the ranking Democratic members of four House committees wrote a public
letter to Mr. Comey requesting "that the FBI assess whether connections betw=en Trump campaign officials and Russian
interests" may have contri=uted to the DNC hack so as "to interfere with the U.S. presidentia= election." On Sept. 23,
Yahoo News's Michael Isikoff repo=ted the Hill briefings and the Steele dossier's allegations regarding =arter Page. On
Oct. 30, Harry Reid again publicly wrote Mr. Comey: 40=9Cln my communications with you and other top officials in the
national se=urity community, it has become clear that you possess explosive information about close ties and
coordination between Donald Tru=p, his top advisors, and the Russian government."
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That these leaking efforts failed to prevent Mr. Trump's-victory, or that Mr. Comey's ham-fisted
interventions might have a=so hurt Mrs. Clinton's electoral prospects, does not diminish the legal significance of the
anti-Trump bias shown by government official=.
The totality of the circumstances creates the appearance that Cr=ssfire was politically
motivated. Since an attempt by federal law enforcem=nt to influence a presidential election "shocks the conscience,"
any prosecutorial effort derived from such an out=ageous abuse of power must be suppressed. The public will learn
more once =he inspector general finishes his investigation into Crossfire's g=nesis. But given what is now known, due
process demands, at a minimum, that the special counsel's activity be paus=d. Those affected by Mr. Mueller's
investigation could litigate su=h an argument in court. One would hope, however, that given the facts eith=r Mr. Mueller
himself or Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein would do it first.
Mr. Rivkin and Ms. =oley practice appellate and constitutional law in Washington. He served
at=the Justice Department and the White House Counsel's Office during the Reagan and George H.W. Bush
administra=ions. She is a professor at Florida International University College of La=.
Appeared in the June 23, 2018, print edition.</=pan>
Best,
<1=>
Andrew</=>
Andrew Grossman
Partner
Washington Square=u>
1050 Connecticut Ave, N.W. I S=ite 1100
<https://maps.=oogle.com/?q=1050+Connecticut+Ave,+N.W.+%7C+Suite+1100+%0D°700A+WashingtonaDC+20036&ent
ry=gmail&source=g>
Washington, DC 20036
chttps://maps.=oogle.com/?q=1050+Connecticut+Ave,+N.W.+%7C+Suite+1100+%0D%0A+Washington=+DC+20036&ent
ry=gmail&source=g> -5304
5
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bakerlaw.com <http://www.ba=erlaw.com/>
<http://www.=akerlaw.com/Findlawyers.aspx?Lookup_By_Emai
From= "Rivkin, Dav=d"
Date: Friday, June 22, 2018 at 7:50 PM
To: "Grossman, Andrew M
Subject: <no subject>
Can you please send me WSJ op Ed. Tx</=>
Sent from my iPhone
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