Tyb
One Key Argument For Michael Sussmannâs Defense Has Already Crumbled
Michael Sussmannâs text message dispatches one of the strongest defenses pushed by his cohorts in the court of public opinion.
Former Hillary Clinton campaign attorney Michael Sussmannâs defenders have already been proven wrong on their claim that prosecutors will have a hard time proving Sussmann told the FBI that he was sharing Alfa Bank âintelâ on his own, and not on behalf of a client.
Shortly after Special Counsel John Durham charged Sussmann with making a false statement to former FBI General Counsel James Baker when he provided Baker with data and three âwhite papersâ purporting to establish a secret communication channel between the Trump organization and the Russia-based Alfa Bank, Sussmannâs friends, former colleagues, and political bedfellows launched a defense of the former Clinton campaign attorney.
Predictably, The Brookings Institute, which served as ground zero for the Russia collusion hoax, provided cover to Sussmann on its Lawfare blog. Chief collusion conspiracy theorist Benjamin Wittes penned a veritable defense brief. Wittes, who acknowledged in his article that âBaker is a personal friend and former colleague at Brookings and Lawfare,â attacked both Durham and the indictment.
Durhamâs 27-page speaking indictment is âone of the very weakest federal criminal indictments I have ever seen in more than 25 years covering federal investigations and prosecutions,â Wittes proclaimed, asserting âthe evidence that Sussmann lied at all is weak.â
âAs a preliminary matter, the indictment by its terms concedes that the entire caseânotwithstanding its many pages of narrative of the conduct of the Clinton campaign and its agentsâhinges on the testimony of a single witness: the former FBI general counsel, Jim Baker,â Witte wrote. âThis concession appears on page 18 of the indictment, which describes the Sept. 19, 2016, meeting between Sussmann and Baker at FBI Headquarters where the supposed lie happened. The indictment notably includes the fact that â[n]o one else attended the meeting.ââ
Wittes then ticks off the prosecutionâs three pieces of evidence that Sussmann told Baker he was not acting on behalf of any client, calling it âthin gruel,â with the gruel getting âa lot thinner when one looks at each of these pieces of evidence in any detail.â
First, there will be Bakerâs testimony that Sussmann told Baker he was not acting on behalf of any client, Wittes notes. But Wittes claims Baker will be an unconvincing witness, because in his congressional testimony in October 2018, âBaker repeatedly disclaims specific memory of whether Sussmann identified his clients.â âIt is hard for me to understand how a criminal case against Sussmann can proceed in the face of this testimony,â Wittes wrote.
Sussmannâs friend then downplays the âcontemporaneous notes of Bill Priestap,â a higher up at the time in the FBI. Those notes, which Priestap penned after Baker relayed his conversation with Sussmann to his colleague, read âsaid not doing this for any client.â The note seems to corroborate Bakerâs memory, Wittes acknowledges, before discounting it as hearsay. (Hearsay or not, the note will likely be admissible.)
Durhamâs third piece of evidence concerns Sussmann supposedly repeating the lie to the CIA in January, but that âdoesnât cleanly corroborate the allegation that Sussmann lied to Baker,â Wittes concludes.
While Wittesâ Lawfare piece presented the most comprehensive defense of Sussmann, his fellow Russia collusion hoaxers also pushed the âit will be impossible to prove Sussmann lied to Bakerâ theme. In an op-ed for MSNBC, âRussia, Russia, Russiaâ queen Barbara McQuade called the case âweak on the merits,â claiming the special counsel could not prove Sussmann made the false statement.
âSussmann maintains that he did not make the statement,â McQuade wrote, before repeating Wittesâ point that âit appears that the whole case is built on the testimony of one witness, Baker.â Like Wittes, McQuade stressed Baker will be a weak witness given his prior testimony. She also discounted Priestapâs corroborating notes as hearsay.
The Washington Post likewise critiqued the special counselâs case, arguing that âeven if the charge is legally sound, proving it will be a huge challenge.â âThe alleged false statement was not written down or recorded. There were no witnesses other than the FBI attorney,â the Post wrote. And âgiven the nature of human language and memory, itâs almost impossible to prove beyond a reasonable doubt precisely what was said during a portion of a single conversation five years ago,â the article announced.
The New York Times also worked to counter the special counselâs criminal case by citing Sussmannâs defense lawyers, Sean Berkowitz and Michael Bosworth. According to the Timesâ piece, Sussmannâs legal team âhave denied the accusation, insisting that he did not say he had no client and maintaining that the evidence against him is weak.â
The Timesâ Russian-hoaxer team of Savage and Goldman continued: âThe case against Mr. Sussmann turns on Mr. Bakerâs recollection that Mr. Sussmann told him he was not at the meeting on behalf of any clientâwhich Mr. Sussmann denies saying. There were no witnesses to their conversation.â
Sussmannâs lawyers went further in a statement released after the indictment, with NPR and others reporting the Latham and Watkins attorneysâ claim that the special counsel âis bringing a false statement charge based on an oral statement allegedly made five years ago to a single witness that is unrecorded and unobserved by anyone else.â
For all the ink spilled over the âyou canât prove Sussmann said he was not representing a clientâ defense of the former Clinton campaign attorney, 42 words dissolve that narrative: âJimâitâs Michael Sussmann. I have something time-sensitive (and sensitive) I need to discuss. Do you have availability for a short meeting tomorrow? Iâm coming on my ownânot on behalf of a client or companyâwant to help the Bureau. Thanks.â
Last week, the special counselâs office revealed Sussmann sent that text to Baker at 7:24 p.m. on the night before the meeting at which Sussmann handed the Alfa Bank material to the then-FBI general counsel. Just like that, the thin gruel seems more like cement.
Of course, it will be for a jury to decide whether Sussmann lied to Baker and is guilty of the offense charged, but Sussmannâs text message dispatches one of the strongest defenses pushed by his cohorts in the court of public opinion, which raises an intriguing question: Why is this text only becoming known now?
It isnât as if Durhamâs team went light on the details, either in the indictment or follow-up legal filings. And from comments they made to the press, Sussmannâs attorneys seemed unaware that prosecutors possessed the text messageâwhich would be bizarre if the special counselâs office knew of the text before dropping the indictment. After all, the special counsel would want to show Sussmann the strongest evidence it had of the alleged crime, to push him to enter a plea deal and cooperate with prosecutors.
Together these facts suggest that neither the special counselâs office nor Sussmannâs legal team knew this damning text existed prior to the indictment. How, then, was the text discovered?
One possible explanation is that the text was recovered from one of Bakerâs two cellphones the DOJâs Office of Inspector General had secreted from the special counselâs office until January 2022. But those phones were âFBI cellphones,â and according to Durhamâs filing, the text was sent to Bakerâs personal cell phone.
So, maybe instead the special counselâs office somehow just recently obtained access to Bakerâs personal cell phone or texts sent to that phone. If so, why the delay? Was someone keeping this evidence on the sly? Or did Baker possibly forward the Sussmann text from his personal cell phone to one of his FBI cellphones, and thus the text was on the phones the OIG had long possessed? If so, that raises even more questions.
The mysterious case of the appearing text will have to wait for another day. For now, though, we know that, contrary to the Russia-collusion hoaxersâ claim, the special counsel has ample evidence that Sussmann told Baker he was not working on behalf of a client, striking down one of the two main defenses touted by Sussmannâs backers. With a decision by the court on Sussmannâs motion to dismiss imminent, the second attack of the indictmentâthat the lie was not materialâwill likely crumble soon too.
https://thefederalist.com/2022/04/11/one-key-argument-for-michael-sussmanns-defense-has-crumbled-already/
Democrat Candidate For Arizona Governor Katie Hobbs Supports Abortion Until Birth
Katie Hobbs has made it clear that unborn children will be the most at-risk Arizonians if she is elected governor. During an interview with a local CBS affiliate, the gubernatorial nominee refused to say where she draws the line on abortion. Thatâs because she doesnât draw the line.
In February, Arizona lawmakers passed a ban on abortions after 15 weeks. But this will likely change if Hobbs becomes governor, as she indicated that there should be no legal limits on abortions in a recent interview.
âAbortion is health care,â she responded to a journalistâs question of at what gestational age it should be legal to dismember a live preborn human. Asked again after she failed to support a limit on this practice, Hobbs replied, âAbortion is a personal decision between a woman and her family and her doctor, and thatâs something that needs to be discussed in the medical exam room, not by politicians.â
Hobbs is correct. These decisions should not be made by politicians like her, whose track record on abortion is nothing short of barbaric. Late-term abortions include abortions after 20 weeks âwhen the child is approximately five months of age, at which time the babyâs facial features are developing and unborn babies can hear their motherâs heartbeat.
In 2011, Hobbs voted against banning sex- and racially discriminatory abortions. Her vote condoned the murder of unborn girls and countless minority children, including black babies, who are the biggest victims of abortion.
In addition to supporting the murder of unborn daughters and minority children, Hobbs voted for forcing taxpayers to fund abortion, a position the majority of Americans oppose.
Perhaps the most appalling of Hobbsâ abortion advocacy was her vote against requiring doctors to try to revive babies who survive abortions.
Hobbs is not the only Democrat politician who feels free to publicly express abortion extremism out of step with the majority of voters. Former Virginia governor Ralph Northam sent shivers down Americaâs spine with his comments on post-birth âabortionsâ in 2019.
âThe infant would be delivered,â said Northham. âThe infant would be kept comfortable. The infant would be resuscitated if thatâs what the mother and the family desired. And then a discussion would ensue between the physicians and the mother.â
https://thefederalist.com/2022/04/11/democrat-candidate-for-arizona-governor-supports-abortion-until-birth/
Democrat Katie Hobbs Says She Wants Zero Restrictions On Abortion
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aUUDUVjRy3E
https://schumann-resonance.earth/