Was Seth Rich’s Laptop National Security Evidence? 1
https://uncoverdc.com/2021/09/03/was-seth-richs-laptop-national-security-evidence/
by How Dareye
We reported in July on documents hosted at the FBI records vault related to murdered DNC staffer Seth Rich. The release followed attorney Ty Clevenger’s lawsuit after his client’s FOIA request had been denied. Here we examine these documents in detail.
The 142 pages are hosted within two PDFs that we’ve combined here (page numbers throughout this article correspond with that upload). Pages 86-142 are the newly released documents the FBI found to be related to Seth Rich. Some of these are identical, or nearly identical, to documents previously available in the public domain, while some reveal information that we had not yet seen.
Among the documents are numerous FBI ‘302’ forms used to summarize interviews conducted during the course of an active investigation. The 302 is a combination of an agent’s recollection of what was said and incorporating any notes taken. Interviews are not typically recorded.
Similar to a police incident report, the process is prone to both unintentional inaccuracies and intentional misrepresentation. 302’s have historically been used to manufacture fabricated evidence in politically sensitive cases, including General Michael Flynn’s case. The witness usually has no chance to correct errors or fabrications, though there is legal precedent that a characterization therein requires corroboration to be considered fact.
A 302 report is supposed to be filed by the agent within five days after the interview being summarized, but in the release, we see many 302 filings that are dated much later:
Page Subject of Interview Date Occurred Date Entered Difference (Days)
62 Unknown* 09/14/16 09/29/16 15
118 Unknown* 09/14/16 09/30/16 16
59 Unknown U.S. Attorney 03/15/18 03/26/18 11
11 Richard Gates** 04/10/18 08/15/18 127
47 Richard Gates** 04/10/18 05/10/18 30
15 Unknown 07/02/18 10/21/18 111
12 Jason Fishbein ocd kek 08/16/18 08/27/18 11
18 Jason Fishbein 09/05/18 10/23/18 48
20 Paul Manafort 09/27/18 10/31/18 34
71 Paul Manafort 10/01/18 11/02/18 32
50 Unknown 10/4-5/18 10/30/18 25
55 Unknown 10/24/18 11/09/18 16
29 Jerome Corsi 10/31/18 01/04/19 65
34 Dana Rohrabacher 10/02/19 03/05/20 155
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This 302 of an interview with a Seth Rich colleague whose unknown identity is almost entirely redacted. It appears twice here because it was entered by agents twice on different dates. Though they summarize the same interview, there are subtle differences between the two 302’s.
** This 302 appears twice because the summary of the interview was entered 5/10 in the case for which the investigation was being conducted, and then on 8/15, it was imported into a separate case due to its relevance in that secondary matter. It isn’t obvious what cases the filings relate to, but the later filing shows classification markings related to national security (NSICG).
In addition to the above, on page 24, an unknown person is said to have “voluntarily produced [redacted]” on 10/24/17, with the production both filed and uploaded digitally, but the 302 reports documenting that weren’t entered until 06/29/18.
Filing a 302 much later than the interview increases the chances that recollections will be inaccurate, or it could also be an indicator of foul play. The 302 from Peter Strzok’s interview with General Flynn was dated seven months after the interview.
Some of the interviews in this release are related to the Seth Rich murder investigation, while some are related to the investigation into the breach of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) servers. Mueller’s Crossfire Hurricane investigation of potential Russian interference into the 2016 U.S. Presidential election is also intertwined. Seth Rich’s employment with the DNC, Wikileaks publishing of the DNC data, Crowdstrike’s forensic analysis, FusionGPS providing information to DNC counsel Perkins Coie on potential Russian interference, and the attempt to impeach Trump are all related.