https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/john-durham-scrutinizes-steele-dossier-source-through-brookings-institution-subpoena-report/ar-BB1fAowY?ocid=msedgntp
John Durham scrutinizes Steele dossier source through Brookings Institution subpoena: Report
Jerry Dunleavy 8 hrs ago
Special counsel John Durham is reportedly scrutinizing British ex-spy Christopher Steele’s main source for his discredited dossier, using a subpoena to obtain documents from the Brookings Institution related to its employment of Igor Danchenko, a researcher who visited Russia in 2016 as he worked for the ex-MI6 agent.
The New York Times reported on Monday, citing “people familiar with the investigation," that Durham “has keyed in on the FBI’s handling of a notorious dossier of political opposition research both before and after the bureau started using it to obtain court permission to wiretap a former Trump campaign adviser." The outlet said Durham obtained records from the left-leaning think tank in Washington, D.C., related to Danchenko, who worked for the organization from 2005 to 2010 as a Russia researcher but is best known as the main source for Steele’s discredited Trump-Russia dossier in 2016.
The new report said in February, before Merrick Garland was confirmed as attorney general, Durham “obtained old personnel files and other documents” related to Danchenko from the Brookings Institution through a subpoena.
Michael Cavadel, the general counsel at Brookings, said the subpoena was received on New Year’s Eve and the think tank took until February to produce the documents to Durham in part because of coronavirus-related delays. Cavadel told the New York Times that “Brookings provided the responsive documents, none of which contained information associated with the reports known as the Steele dossier.”
The news report said Durham “has also asked questions that suggested a focus on skepticism about how the FBI approached issues that might have undermined the dossier’s credibility as a basis for wiretap applications” and that Durham has been asking why the FBI did not tell the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court that Danchenko “had once been the subject of a counterintelligence investigation.”
DURHAM ISSUING SUBPOENAS AND INTERVIEWING WITNESSES
Neither Danchenko nor Brookings immediately responded to the Washington Examiner’s request for comment.
DOJ Inspector General Michael Horowitz released a report in December 2019 that concluded Steele's discredited dossier played a "central and essential" role in the FBI's effort to obtain wiretap orders against Carter Page, a 2016 Trump campaign adviser who was never charged with a crime and denied any wrongdoing. The DOJ watchdog criticized the bureau for at least 17 “significant errors and omissions."
Durham discovered that U.S.-based and Russia-trained Danchenko, Steele’s primary sub-source, was investigated by the FBI as a possible “threat to national security," according to documents declassified by then-Attorney General William Barr and released in September. The FBI team, working in an operation dubbed "Crossfire Hurricane," apparently became aware of this information about Steele’s primary sub-source in December 2016.