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Tom Fitton: JW Sues for
Biden-Ukraine Docs; Plot to 'Wear a Wire' in Oval Office; Steele & State
Dept. Relationship
Judicial Watch Steps Up and Sues for Records on Firing of
Biden-Ukraine Prosecutor
Joe Biden deserves a trophy for his audacity, but he’s not going to
escape serious scrutiny over his apparent threatening of the Ukraine
government for his son’s personal gain.
We filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit for records about the
firing of Ukraine’s top prosecutor after then-Vice President Biden
threated to withhold aid. We filed the lawsuit on Wednesday against the
U.S. Department of State (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:19-cv-02893)).
We sued after, as per usual, the State Department failed to respond to our
May 7, 2019, FOIA request seeking access to the following records:
1. Any and all records regarding, concerning, or related to Viktor
Shokin’s investigation of Mykola Zolchevsky and Shokin’s resignation at
Ukraine’s Prosecutor General.
2. Any and all records of communication between any official,
employee, or representative of the Department of State and any official,
employee, or representative of the Office of the Vice President regarding
Viktor Shokin.
In a widely distributed video,
Joe Biden confirmed that he successfully pressured, under threat of
withholding $1 billion in U.S. government aid, the Ukrainian government to
fire Shokin, who had allegedly launched an investigation into Burisma,
which had purportedly paid Biden’s son Hunter $50,000 a month.
The latest impeachment/coup assault on President Trump is an obvious
attempt to protect Joe Biden from the corruption scandals involving his
son. Our lawsuit will be the first of many to try to get to the bottom of
this influence-peddling scandal.
New Smoking Gun FBI Memo Details Plot to ‘Wear a Wire’ in
President Trump’s Oval Office
It’s easy to become blasé about the never-ending flow of astonishing
revelations in Washington. A deputy attorney general secretly recording the
President of the United States in the Oval Office, because he knows they
won’t pat him down at the door?
Yes.
We just obtained a two-page
memo written by then-Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe detailing how
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein proposed wearing a wire into the
Oval Office “to collect additional evidence on the president’s true
intentions.”
McCabe writes in the May 16, 2017, memo that Rosenstein said he thought it
was possible because “he was not searched when he entered the White
House.”
The Justice Department turned the document over in response to our February
2019, Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit.
We sued after the Justice Department and FBI failed to respond to
September 2, 2018, FOIA requests for documents about any FBI/DOJ
discussions regarding the 25th Amendment and plans to secretly record
President Trump in the Oval Office (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of Justice (No. 1:19-cv-00388).
In short, we sued for the coup docs and hit pay dirt.
The memo, which is redacted in key sections, purports to serve as a
“contemporaneous recollection” of a meeting that day (“12:30 pm on
5/16/2017”) in Rosenstein’s office. The meeting included Rosenstein,
Deputy Assistant AG for Intelligence Tashina
Gauhar and Principal Associate Deputy Attorney General Jim
Crowell in Rosenstein’s Justice Department office.
McCabe writes he began the meeting by telling Rosenstein that he
“approved the opening of an investigation of President Donald Trump …
to investigate allegations of possible collusion between the president and
the Russian Government, possible obstruction of justice related to the
firing of FBI Director James Comey, and possible conspiracy to obstruct
justice.” In justifying his investigation, McCabe refers to the memos
Comey secretly wrote on meetings he had with President Trump and an NBC
interview with Lester Holt. McCabe writes he “informed DAG [Rosenstein]
that as a result of his role in the matter, I thought he would be a witness
to the case.”
Rosenstein responded by recounting his discussion with President Trump,
then-Attorney General Sessions and then-White House Counsel Don McGahn
about Comey’s imminent firing and that President Trump wanted him to
write a “memo explaining the reason” for Comey’s firing. McCabe
writes:
As our conversation continued the DAG proposed that he could potentially
wear a recording device into the Oval Office to collect additional evidence
on the President’s true intentions. He said he thought this might be
possible because he was not searched when he entered the White House. I
told him that I would discuss the opportunity with my investigative team
and get back to him.
We discussed the issue of appointing a Special Counsel to oversee the
FBI’s Russia investigation. The DAG said he has two candidates ready, one
of whom could start immediately.
Additionally, McCabe admits that Rosenstein told him that McCabe had a
“credibility problem” because a Rosenstein staffer had provided him
with photos of McCabe wearing his wife’s campaign t-shirt in
contradiction to McCabe’s “assurance” he had no role in her campaign.
McCabe writes he told him the photos were not from campaign events and that
he confirmed with “my ethics counsel at FBI” that wearing such a shirt
did not “constitute proscribed political activity.”
Earlier this month, through this same lawsuit, we uncovered DOJ records
that also confirmed
discussions about wearing a wire to record President Trump.
Another Judicial Watch lawsuit recently
uncovered documents that show the FBI had to retrieve memos about
alleged conversations from Trump, which included classified information,
from Comey’s home. And yet another Judicial Watch lawsuit uncovered
documents about Andrew McCabe’s conflicts of interest issues related to
his wife’s political campaign that took in hundreds of thousands of
dollars from then-Virginia Governor Terrence McAuliffe, who is closely tied
to the Clintons (see here and here).
This incredible memo details the conflicted and conniving coup effort
against President Trump. It is astonishing and shocking that McCabe thought
he could have the FBI conduct a “counterintelligence” operation on the
president and Rosenstein thought it would be appropriate to wear a wire to
secretly record President Trump in the Oval Office. That the DOJ and FBI
sat on this smoking gun for a year shows the need for urgent housecleaning
at those agencies.
The full text of the redacted McCabe memo is printed below:
Tuesday, May 16, 2017
At 12:30 pm on 05/16/2017, I met with Deputy Attorney General (DAG) Rod
Rosenstein in his office at the Department of Justice. Also present were
Tashina Gauhar and Jim Crowell. The following is a contemporaneous
recollection of the main topics we discussed.
I began by telling him that today I approved the opening of an
investigation of President Donald Trump. I explained that the purpose of
the investigation was to investigate allegations of possible collusion
between the president and the Russian Government, possible obstruction of
justice related to the firing of FBI Director James Comey, and possible
conspiracy to obstruct justice. The DAG questioned what I meant by
collusion and I explained that I was referring to the investigation of any
potential links between the Trump campaign and the Russian government. I
explained that counterintelligence investigations of this sort were meant
to uncover any existence of any threat to national security as well as
whether or not criminal conduct had occurred. Regarding the obstruction
issues, I made clear that our predication was based not only on the
president's comments last week to reporter Lester Holt (that he connected
the firing of the director to the FBI’s Russia investigation), but also
on the several concurring comments the president made to Director Comey
over the last few months. These comments included the President's requests
for assurances of loyalty, statements about the Russia investigation and
the investigation of General Michael Flynn. I also informed the DAG that
Director Comey preserved his recollection of these interactions in a series
of contemporaneously drafted memos. Finally, I informed the DAG that as a
result of his role in the matter, I thought he would be a witness in the
case.
The DAG then related his experiences at the White House on Monday,
05/08/2017. He began by stating that he had the feeling that the decision
to fire the Director had been made before he arrived. At the White House,
he first met with White House Counsel Donald McGahn, who told him that the
President had drafted a letter to Director Comey that McGahn did not want
the President to send. Shortly thereafter they met with the President and
Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and possibly others, in the Oval Office.
President Trump told the DAG he had written a letter to Director Comey,
asked the DAG if he had seen the letter, and instructed McGahn to provide
the DAG with a copy. The DAG described the letter to me as being a long
list, possibly several pages, of the President's complaints with Director
Comey. Among those complaints was a discussion about the FBI’s Russia
investigation, as well as a paragraph about the FBI Deputy Director. The
DAG indicated to me that he retained a copy of the President's letter. The
DAG said he told the President [redacted]. The President then directed the
DAG to write a memo explaining the reasoning for Director Comey’s
termination and that the DAG should include Russia. The DAG said to the
President he did not think this was a good idea and that his memo did not
need to include Russia. The President replied that he understood, but that
he was asking the DAG to include Russia anyway. As our conversation
continued the DAG proposed that he could potentially wear a recording
device into the Oval Office to collect additional evidence on the
President's true intentions. He said he thought this might be possible
because he was not searched when he entered the White House. I told him
that I would discuss the opportunity with my investigative team and get
back to him.
We discussed the issue of appointing a Special Counsel to oversee the
FBI’s Russia investigation. The DAG said he has two candidates ready one
of whom could start immediately. [Redacted] The DAG said that he left a
copy of the delegation with Acting Assistant Attorney General for National
Security Dana Boente to execute in the DAG’s absence if the DAG were
suddenly removed from his position. [Redacted] He anticipated that he may
be terminated when he puts the Special Counsel in place, in light of the
president's anger with AG Sessions when the AG recused himself from the
Russia investigation. The DAG further stated that he was told that others
heard the President tell the AG “you were supposed to protect me.”
[Redacted]
The DAG related to me that on Sunday, 05/14/17, the AG asked him to
participate in the interview of [redacted] for the position of FBI
Director. [Redacted].
The DAG told me that he informed the AG that I should remain in my role
as Acting Director until the permanent Director was chosen. The DAG opined
that my only "problem" was that some people believe that I was involved in
my wife's 2015 campaign for State Senate in Virginia. The DAG said it was a
“credibility problem” because after having told him during my May 13
interview that I played no role in her campaign and attended no campaign
events, the DAG said a staffer had provided him with a photograph found on
the internet of me and my wife wearing Dr. Jill McCabe campaign t-shirts.
The DAG suggested that this photograph contradicted my statement that I had
not campaigned for my wife. I pointed out to the DAG that the photograph he
saw was taken not at a campaign event, but rather at [redacted] I further
informed the DAG that I confirmed with my ethics counsel at FBI that the
Hatch Act does not prohibit wearing a campaign button or shirt away from
the office, and that attending [redacted] wearing such a shirt does not
constitute proscribed political activity.
Documents Reveal Extensive Relationship between Dossier Author
Steele and Top Obama State Department Officials
It is now abundantly clear that Clinton spy Christopher Steele had an
outsized influence at the Obama State Department that proved useful when
the Clinton campaign needed help smearing Trump in 2016 and beyond.
This becomes clear in 146
pages of State Department documents which reveal that former
British spy and Dossier author Steele’s close working relationship with
high-ranking Obama State Department officials dating back to May of
2014.
The documents we obtained in a FOIA lawsuit show that, from May 2014 to
November 2015, Steele filed dozens of reports with his close associate at
State, Special Coordinator for Libya Jonathan Winer, who would then pass
them to Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland. The reports focused
mainly on the Russia-Ukraine crisis and U.S. sanctions on Russia.
The documents show that Steele’s work was also distributed to State
Department Coordinator for Sanctions Policy Daniel Fried and Principal
Deputy Assistant Secretary Paul Jones, whose focus in the Bureau of
European and Eurasian Affairs was on Russia and Ukraine policy.
The documents are Orbis Business Intelligence reports that Steele provided
to the State Department. Steele, a former MI6 spy, co-founded Orbis
in 2009.
We filed our lawsuit
on April 25, 2018, on behalf of The Daily Caller News Foundation after
State failed to respond to three separate FOIA requests (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:18-cv-00968)). The
lawsuit seeks:
- All records of communications between State Department officials,
including former Secretary of State John Kerry, former Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton, and Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland, on the
one hand, and British National Christopher Steele and/or employees or
contractors of Steele’s company, Orbis Business Intelligence, on the
other hand.
- All records and/or memoranda provided by Christopher Steele and/or his
firm Orbis Business Intelligence or by others acting on
Steele’s/Orbis’s behalf, to State Department officials.
- Any and all records in the custody of the State Department related to
the provision of documents to British national Christopher Steele and/or
his firm, Orbis Business Intelligence, or the receipt of documents from
Steele or his firm. Time period is January 20, 2009 through the
present.
- All records created in 2016 by Jonathan M. Winer relating to research
compiled by Christopher Steele.
Winer passed along an early Steele report to Nuland on May 19, 2014. It
discusses Russia-Ukraine policy. Winer writes: “Toria, another piece that
is not in my lane but which I wished to pass on to you. My friend Chris
Steele (Orbis Intelligence, former MI-6 Russia expert), provided me the
enclosed memo yesterday, describing a recent conversation (redacted) on
Russian Ukraine policy. As I was provided it from a person in private
sector, I am treating it as low side.”
In a November 20, 2014, email exchange, Winer offers to
introduce Principle Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Paul Jones to
Steele while Steele was to be in town, and he provides Jones and Nuland
with three Steele reports, discussing: “Ukraine looking towards
[redacted]”; “Ukraine economy shrinking due to loss of East
[redacted]”; and “President Putin’s current priorities [redacted].”
Winer writes to Jones: Paul, if you are still free, does 3 pm work to meet
with Chris Steele? I would pick him up downstairs, get him to your office,
and sit in. Will be sending you another Orbis report regardless in a few
minutes, it just arrived but I haven’t had chance to open it and manicure
it yet.”
“The more we dig, the more access we see the disgraced spy behind the
ridiculous dossier had at State. And we're going to keep on digging until
we learn just how deep this went,” said Christopher Bedford, editor in
chief of The Daily Caller News Foundation.
The new documents show that on June 13, 2014, Winer forwarded to Nuland a
Steele report on
the Russia-Ukraine crisis and the Kremlin being emboldened to challenge
U.S. sanctions.
Winer passed two Steele reports to
Nuland on July 1, 2014, with one discussing someone claiming success in the
Russian-Ukraine crisis, and the other discussing the Crimea annexation.
Winer sends an
email from his verizon.net account
to his state.gov account
on July 11, 2014 under the subject “Likely Measured Russian Response to
Ukrainian Military, (redacted) Orbis report. Winer writes: “I note in
particular their focus on sanctions and the fact that they are biting deep
already, though maybe someone should tell him that Administration doesn’t
need Congress to add to those…”
Winer passes to State Department Coordinator for Sanctions Policy Daniel
Fried on July 17, 2014 an Orbis report on
the Russia-Ukraine Crisis and increasing hostilities.
On July 18, 2014, Winer passes to Nuland a Steele report on
a (redacted) company avoiding U.S. sanctions and “the problem of early
warning of U.S. action.”
Winer passed Nuland a Steele report on
Aug. 1, 2014 discussing “Early Russian Leadership Views on
Counter-Sanctions against the West.”
On August 29, 2014, Winer passes to Nuland three Steele reports discussing:
Ukrainian views on a Poroshenko-Putin meeting in Minsk; Ukrainian views on
Russia’s military goal of a corridor to Crimea before winter; and someone
“still seeking bilateral Russia-UK Gas deal despite conditions.”
On Aug. 29, 2014, Winer forwarded to Nuland a Steele report discussing
the Ukrainian crisis and “Putin’s performance from within Russian
leadership.”
On September 11, 2014, Winer forwarded to Fried a Steele report titled
“Moscow fears Western sanctions.”
On October 20, 2014, Winer sent to Nuland four Steele reports dealing
with: Growing Kremlin frustration with Kiev and pro-Russian forces in
Ukraine; Petro Poroshenko’s efforts to secure victory in upcoming
parliamentary elections; Kiev’s view of international relations; and
efforts by a Kremlin owned insurance company, SOGAZ, to evade U.S.
sanctions.
On November 3, 2014, Winer forwarded to Nuland three reports:
One dealing with an early Kremlin reaction to the Ukrainian election
outcome; another discussing a gas negotiations deal; and the third
discussing Ukrainian internal politics and EU attitudes.
On November 7, 2014, Winer sends Nuland a Steele report titled
“Signs of a more conciliatory Kremlin position” relating to the
Russia-Ukraine crisis.
On December 6, 2014, Winer forwarded Nuland a Steele report about
Putin seeking a PR campaign designed to combat sanctions.
On December 11, 2014, Steele sent a report to
Winer/Nuland about a Russian Central Bank warning to Putin that there would
be insufficient funds to support all “SOEs” hit by sanctions.
On January 12, 2015, a Steele report was
sent to Nuland and Winer discussing Ukraine’s worry that it would be
trade bait between the U.S. and Russia.
On February 16, 2015, Steele sent a report to
Nuland and Winer about a company “secretly owned by Putin, Putin’s
mistress and friends.”
In a March 19, 2015, email
thread, Winer and Nuland are forwarded Steele reports dealing with
Ukraine political instability and the possible return to power of Ukrainian
politician Yulia Tymoshenko.
On April 17, 2015, Nuland and Winer received two Steele reports,
one related to why Russia was supplying Iran with missile defense, and the
other related to Russian exports of gas to Europe through Ukraine.
On June 19, 2015, Nuland and Winer received a Steele report concerning
the likely political demise of Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev
and his successor and the country’s geopolitical reorientation toward
China.
On July 6, 2015, Steele sent a report to
Nuland and Winer about the “boozing” Ukrainian President Petro
Poroshenko struggling to deal with fellow oligarchs amid growing
dysfunction.
On August 19, 2015, Weiner and Nuland received another Steele report related
to the possibility of a Ukrainian leader retaining a U.S. passport.
On November 5, 2015, Nuland sent colleague Geoffrey Pyatt three
Steele reports dealing
with: Ukraine relations and military situation in eastern Ukraine; Ukraine
politics and elections; and President Poroshenko’s “evolving
constitutional agenda” and deepening partnership with someone.
This is just the latest of many important revelations uncovered by our
massive investigation into the Clinton-funded, anti-Trump dossier and its
use to obtain FISA warrants in order to spy on the Trump campaign. You can
track our over 50 Deep State coup lawsuits on our new Internet site at www.judicialwatch.org.
Until next week …
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