By Jonathan Turley
July 27, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -The
Washington press corps seems engaged in a collective
demonstration of the legal concept of willful blindness,
or deliberately ignoring the facts, following the
release of yet another declassified document which
directly refutes prior statements about the
investigation into Russia collusion. The document shows
that FBI officials used a national security briefing of
then candidate
Donald Trump and his top aides to gather
possible evidence for Crossfire Hurricane, its code name
for the Russia investigation.
It is astonishing that
the media refuses to see what is one of the biggest
stories in decades. The Obama administration targeted
the campaign of the opposing party based on false
evidence. The media covered Obama administration
officials ridiculing the suggestions of spying on the
Trump campaign and of improper conduct with the Russia
investigation. When Attorney General William Barr told
the Senate last year that he believed spying did occur,
he was lambasted in the media, including by James Comey
and others involved in that investigation. The mocking
“wow” response of the fired FBI director received
extensive coverage.
The new document shows
that, in summer 2016, FBI agent Joe Pientka briefed
Trump campaign advisers Michael Flynn and Chris Christie
over national security issues, standard practice ahead
of the election. It had a discussion of Russian
interference. But this was different. The document
detailing the questions asked by Trump and his aides and
their reactions was filed several days after that
meeting under Crossfire Hurricane and Crossfire Razor,
the FBI investigation of Flynn. The two FBI officials
listed who approved the report are Kevin Clinesmith and
Peter Strzok.
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Clinesmith is the
former FBI lawyer responsible for the FISA surveillance
conducted on members of the Trump campaign. He opposed
Trump and sent an email after the election declaring
“viva the resistance.” He is now under review for
possible criminal charges for altering a FISA court
filing. The FBI used Trump adviser Carter Page as the
basis for the original FISA application, due to his
contacts with Russians. After that surveillance was
approved, however, federal officials discredited the
collusion allegations and noted that Page was a CIA
asset. Clinesmith had allegedly changed the information
to state that Page was not working for the CIA.
Strzok is the FBI
agent whose violation of FBI rules led Justice
Department officials to refer him for possible criminal
charges. Strzok did not hide his intense loathing of
Trump and famously referenced an “insurance policy” if
Trump were to win the election. After FBI officials
concluded there was no evidence of any crime by Flynn at
the end of 2016, Strzok prevented the closing of the
investigation as FBI officials searched for any crime
that might be used to charge the incoming national
security adviser.
Documents show Comey
briefed President Obama and Vice President Joe Biden on
the investigation shortly before the inauguration of
Trump. When Comey admitted the communications between
Flynn and Russian officials appeared legitimate, Biden
reportedly suggested using the Logan Act, a law widely
seen as unconstitutional and never been used to
successfully convict a single person, as an alternative
charge against Flynn. The memo contradicts eventual
claims by Biden that he did not know about the Flynn
investigation. Let us detail some proven but mostly
unseen facts.
First, the Russia
collusion allegations were based in large part on the
dossier funded by the Clinton campaign and the
Democratic National Committee. The Clinton campaign
repeatedly denied paying for the dossier until after the
election, when it was confronted with irrefutable
evidence that the money had been buried among legal
expenditures. As New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman
wrote, “Folks involved in funding this lied about it and
with sanctimony for a year.”
Second, FBI agents had
warned that dossier author Christopher Steele may have
been used by Russian intelligence to plant false
information to disrupt the election. His source for the
most serious allegations claims that Steele
misrepresented what he had said and that it was little
more than rumors that were recast by Steele as reliable
intelligence.
Third, the Obama
administration had been told that the basis for the FISA
application was dubious and likely false. Yet it
continued the investigation, and then someone leaked its
existence to the media. Another declassified document
shows that, after the New York Times ran a leaked story
on the investigation, even Strzok had balked at the
account as misleading and inaccurate. His early 2017
memo affirmed that there was no evidence of any
individuals in contact with Russians. This information
came as the collusion stories were turning into a frenzy
that would last years.
Fourth, the
investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller and
inspectors general found no evidence of collusion or
knowing contact between the Trump campaign and Russian
officials. What inspectors general did find were false
statements or possible criminal conduct by Comey and
others. While unable to say it was the reason for their
decisions, they also found statements of animus against
Trump and his campaign by the FBI officials who were
leading the investigation. Former Deputy Attorney
General Rod Rosenstein testified he never would have
approved renewal of the FISA surveillance and encouraged
further investigation into such bias.
Finally, Obama and
Biden were aware of the investigation, as were the
administration officials who publicly ridiculed Trump
when he said there was spying on his campaign. Others,
like House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff,
declared they had evidence of collusion but never
produced it. Countless reporters, columnists, and
analysts still continue to deride, as writer Max Boot
said it, the spinning of “absurd conspiracy theories”
about how the FBI “supposedly spied on the Trump
campaign.”
Willful blindness has
its advantages. The media covered the original leak and
the collusion narrative, despite mounting evidence that
it was false. They filled hours of cable news shows and
pages of print with a collusion story discredited by the
FBI. Virtually none of these journalists or experts have
acknowledged that the collusion leaks were proven false,
let alone pursue the troubling implications of national
security powers being used to target the political
opponents of an administration. But in Washington,
success often depends not on what you see but what you
can unsee.
Jonathan Turley is
the Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law at George
Washington University. You can find his updates online
@JonathanTurley.
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