Anonymous ID: 234b96 June 8, 2018, 1:16 a.m. No.1666555   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6559 >>6567 >>6570 >>6579 >>6636

Former Senate Intelligence Committee director of security indicted, arrested for lying to FBI about leaks to reporters

 

Jim Wolfe, a longtime former director of security at the Senate Intelligence Committee, was indicted and arrested Thursday night for giving false statements to FBI agents during their investigation into leaks of classified information to the media.

 

According to the Department of Justice, Wolfe lied to FBI agents back in 2017 "about his repeated contacts with three reporters, including through his use of encrypted messaging applications."

 

Wolfe is also accused of making false statements about providing "non-public information related to matters occurring before the [Senate Intelligence Committee]" to two additional reporters.

 

"The Attorney General has stated that investigations and prosecutions of unauthorized disclosure of controlled information are a priority of the Department of Justice. The allegations in this indictment are doubly troubling as the false statements concern the unauthorized disclosure of sensitive and confidential information,” Assistant Attorney General Demers said of Wolfe's arrest. “Those entrusted with sensitive information must discharge their duties with honesty and integrity, and that includes telling the truth to law enforcement.”

 

“Mr. Wolfe’s alleged conduct is a betrayal of the extraordinary public trust that had been placed in him. It is hoped that these charges will be a warning to those who might lie to law enforcement to the detriment of the United States.”

 

Earlier on Thursday, Wolfe was named in connection to the DOJ's secret collection of phone and email records of a New York Times reporter with whom he had engaged in a 3-year-long romantic relationship.

 

In recent months, the Trump administration, assisted by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, has made a conscious effort to crack down on leaks to the media.

 

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

 

https:// www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/former-senate-intelligence-committee-director-indicted-for-lying-to-f-b-i-about-leaking-information-to-reporters

Anonymous ID: 234b96 June 8, 2018, 1:31 a.m. No.1666600   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>1666567

>>1666570

>>1666579

People like this will never learn because they believe with all of their experience working the government ropes they know exactly how to avoid detection. Just stupid on another level. Someone created encryption so there for it can be solved too, someone always has a way to unlock a door, if even by force, dumb asses, kek

Anonymous ID: 234b96 June 8, 2018, 1:50 a.m. No.1666672   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6690

Panic time at Camp Mueller

 

If this is June, it must be time to indict Paul Manafort again. The clock is ticking, and the tic-tocs are getting louder.

 

Robert Mueller is clearly feeling the hot breath of public impatience on the back of his neck. He was the great black-and-white hope for bringing down Donald Trump, and a year later the president is still not in prison stripes. Mr. Mueller has indicted Paul Manafort twice, and threatens now to jail him for tampering with a witness.

 

If he tampered with a witness while out on bail, and Mr. Mueller can prove it, jail is where he belongs. But bringing down a witness-tamperer is not what the special counsel/prosecutor was commissioned to do. Mr. Mueller was commissioned to bring in the head of Donald Trump.

 

Not by any means necessary, as Mr. Mueller and his team of thousand dollar-an-hour Blackstones seem to think, but by legitimate means, with evidence that would stand up in a court. They might not have the evidence they need to nail the president’s scalp on the court house wall, so the Manafort scalp might have to do, hence the multiple indictments and now the threat of prosecution for witness-tampering.

 

That might not work, either. Some lawyers who have followed Mr. Mueller’s meandering pursuit of the president understand what he’s trying to do but are puzzled about how he’s going about it. Paul Rosenzweig who teaches law at George Mason and Northwestern universities, and takes pains to say that he “yields to no one in my disdain for President Trump,” nevertheless reckons Mr. Mueller’s allegations of witness-tampering are “rather thin.” He says, in an article on the website “Lawfare,” that the FBI declaration in support of a witness-tampering charge is long on detail and short on information. “Drill down into the exhibits and you will see that only one, Exhibit N, is evidence of communications between Manafort and the witnesses he is alleged to have contacted in a tampering effort.”

 

Drill deeper and it gets even thinner. Study that exhibit and you will see that Mr. Manafort was successful in speaking to one witness, identified as Person D1, for only a minute and 24 seconds. He attempted to connect on three other calls, but did not succeed. Another witness said Mr. Manafort wanted to give Person D1 a link to a newspaper account about his indictment, and another tweet saying “we should talk.”

 

Direct evidence of witness-tampering against Mr. Manafort, in Prof. Rosenzweig’s telling, is mostly vapor. “Saying ‘we should talk’ is hardly the stuff that true witness-tampering charges are made of. More to the point, if the entire conversation in which Manafort participated lasted for less than a minute and a half, he would have to be a very, very fast talker to have accomplished anything.”

 

If Mr. Mueller is the lawyer that his friends and sometime colleagues say he is, why would he be showing such a weak hand, dealing with evidence thin enough to read a newspaper through, at such a critical juncture in the attempt to get a scalp? Prof. Rosenzweig thinks he has an answer for that.

 

“This is a sign that they are feeling pressure. Possibly from Trump. Possibly from Deputy Atty. Gen. Rod Rosenstein. Possibly just from their reading of the public tea leaves. Whatever the source of the pressure, they have an increased sense of urgency, they have an increased sense of urgency to move quickly.”

 

Mr. Mueller has been very skilled at keeping his investigation free of leaks. So far none of his lawyers have written op-eds for The New York Times or The Washington Post, telling of the fiesta to come. The New York Times, having given up all pretense of objectivity, as if to reassure the mob that the day of reckoning is coming, wants to buck up Mr. Mueller’s spirits. This is no time to panic.

 

Panic is never a picnic, and it’s true, Mr. Mueller may have the evidence already to send Mr. Trump up the river for good and all. He may even now be holding the smoking gun retrieved from his raids deep into Trump country. He may even be hiding the evidence in a pumpkin on a farm on the Eastern Shore, where pumpkins grow big enough to accommodate everything Congress, or a jury of plain folks, wants or needs.

 

But Mr. Mueller can’t blame the rest of us for wanting to know what he’s got. Indicting Paul Manafort again, or even sending him to jail to sweat out the needed evidence, won’t satisfy. The reason he’s having so much trouble finding evidence of collusion between Donald Trump and the Russians to cook the 2016 election may be because there isn’t any.

 

https:// www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/jun/7/panic-time-at-camp-mueller/

Anonymous ID: 234b96 June 8, 2018, 2:23 a.m. No.1666742   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Joseph Hagin, Donald Trump’s point man on North Korea, ‘to leave White House for CIA as Trump loyalists amass against him’

 

Hagin was deputy chief of staff for George W. Bush and an aide to George H.W. Bush, and that has made him a figure of suspicion by Trump loyalists, insiders said

 

White House deputy chief of staff Joseph “Joe” Hagin, the point person arranging the North Korean nuclear summit, is preparing to leave his West Wing post soon, according to four people familiar with White House planning.

 

Hagin, who is in Singapore this week and has been negotiating logistics for the on-again, off-again meeting between US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, may leave his job overseeing White House operations soon after returning from the historic visit, two of the people said.

 

Some of those close to Hagin say that he intends to run for the job of deputy director of the CIA, which is now vacant. But others have spoken of a rising backlash against the former Bush ally by Trump loyalists, who see him as a symbol of a bygone dynasty, and resent his adherence to convention.

 

One close Trump adviser said Hagin is eyeing the CIA job and plans to leave his White House post almost immediately after returning from Singapore.

 

A close associate of Hagin’s also said he is seriously eyeing the now-vacant CIA leadership position, adding that Hagin has not decided on a date to depart but does plan to leave the White House.

 

“Joe is ready to go,” said this confidant, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to be candid. “This could be his crowning achievement, this summit. It’s time. Joe Hagin has served his time.”

 

White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said “there are no personnel announcements at this time.”

 

Hagin could not be reached for comment in Singapore.

 

Hagin, a former deputy chief of staff to President George W. Bush, was brought into the Trump White House to add some gravitas and operational know-how when most Trump aides had little to no White House experience.

 

Trump named Hagin to the post the day of his inauguration in January 2017 and Hagin pledged to serve at least a year in the untested administration. In the early days of the presidency, colleagues often called Hagin “the grown-up in the room”.

 

Hagin, whose middle name is Whitehouse, had the bona fides. He worked in the same post, deputy chief of staff over operations, for George W. Bush from 2001 to 2008.

 

http:// www.scmp.com/news/world/united-states-canada/article/2149799/joseph-hagin-donald-trumps-point-man-north-korea