Trump's Slow-motion Massacre at Justice Dept

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Trump's slow-motion massacre at the Justice Department

The Week
Paul Waldman
January 30, 2017


It's not quite the Saturday Night Massacre, but there may well be something of a slow-motion purge underway at the Justice Department, in which those in key positions whose loyalty to President Trump is less than absolute are pushed out the door. Monday we learned that FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe, who had aroused the ire of the ever-petulant occupant of the Oval Office by being married to someone who once ran for state office as a Democrat, is stepping down. This is just the beginning.


Just last week it was reported that when McCabe became acting director of the Bureau after James Comey's firing, Trump asked him in a meeting who he voted for in 2016. It's one of those stunningly inappropriate things that would be a major scandal with any other president, but that we've gotten numb to with Trump.

Apparently McCabe's answerthat he hadn't votedwasn't good enough, just as Trump didn't get the answer he wanted from Comey when he demanded a pledge of loyalty. So -- McCabe too became a target, with the president posting tweets demanding that he be sacked.

We also learned that Attorney General Jeff Sessions has been pressuring FBI Director Christopher Wray to fire McCabe — which it isn't hard to interpret as a way for Sessions to get back in Trump's good graces, given how often Trump has complained about Sessions recusing himself from the Russia investigation and therefore not being able to protect Trump in the way he believes is proper.

Indeed, McCabe told friends that he's leaving because of pressure Wray was applying to him.

And here's something you might have missed: When Comey began taking detailed notes about his meetings with Trump and sharing information about Trump's behavior with colleagues so a contemporaneous record of Trump's appalling behavior could be established, one of the people he reached out to was, you guessed it, Andrew McCabe. You might have missed it, but I'll bet President Trump didn't.

But wait, there's more. You may have heard about the secret memo that Trump lickspittle and House Intelligence Committee chair Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) has been circulating among his Republican colleagues, supposedly showing anti-Trump bias at the FBI. The New York Times reports that it singles out Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein for approving the continuation of surveillance of former Trump adviser Carter Page, whom law enforcement and intelligence officials suspect may have been acting as an agent of the Russian government. "The reference to Mr. Rosenstein's actions in the memo," the Times notes, "indicates that Republicans may be moving to seize on his role as they seek to undermine the [Russia] inquiry."

You bet they are, and Rosenstein presents a complicated case.

He was appointed to his position by Trump, and then was apparently ordered to write a memo making a case for why Comey should be fired.

Then that memo was used by the White House as the justification for the firing [of Comey].

Rosenstein testified to Congress that "[o]n May 8, I learned that President Trump intended to remove Director Comey and sought my advice and input." The next day, on May 9, he delivered the two-and-a-half page memo, which faulted Comey's handling of the Hillary Clinton email case, particularly Comey's decision to hold a press conference to criticize Clinton even though no charges would be brought against her. The White House then claimed that Trump was firing Comey because he had been recommended to do so by Rosenstein and Attorney General Sessions.

From the beginning, that was an absurd lie that nobody believed. The idea that Trump would fire the FBI director because Comey had treated Hillary Clinton unfairly was simply ludicrous, and they soon stopped mentioning it. But if Rosenstein thought he had demonstrated his membership on Team Trump, he was mistaken. Sessions had recused himself from the Russia investigation because of his own contacts with the Russian ambassador while he was working on the Trump campaign, so responsibility fell to Rosenstein, the second in command. He chose Robert Mueller, whose integrity would be beyond question, to serve as special counsel. And only Rosenstein has the power to fire Mueller.

Which is just what everyone knows Trump wants to happen. Trump denied a report last week that he ordered Mueller fired in June but backed off when Don McGahn, the White House counsel, threatened to quit rather than carry out the order. But even if you believe Trump's denial, no one disputes that he would be much happier if Mueller just disappeared.

Which raises the question: Is Trump going to order Sessions to fire Rosenstein, so that a different official can be put in place to oversee the Mueller investigation, and that person can then be told to fire Mueller? That might sound like just the kind of thing that leads to impeachment, which was probably why Don McGahn was so desperate to keep it from happening. But how many times have you said, "Trump would never go that far," only to find that he would? As The Washington Post reports, "The president has told close advisers that the [Nunes] memo is starting to make people realize how the FBI and the Mueller probe are biased against him, and that it could provide him with grounds for either firing or forcing Rosenstein to leave."

I realize all this may seem confusing if you aren't immersed in the details of the Russia scandal. But:

But think of it as a clearing of the decks within the Justice Department.

Anyone who hasn't demonstrated their loyalty to Trump — and can't be counted on to protect him as the danger from the Russia scandal gets more acute — has got to go.

Trump might get rid of them himself, or he might send signals to his supporters in the media and on Capitol Hill, letting them know whom they should target.


Comey is gone, McCabe is going, and Rosenstein could be next. Under this president, any conception of the Justice Department as an independent agency devoted to the rule of law is quickly disappearing.


SOURCE: http://theweek.com/articles/751627/trumps-slowmotion-massacre-justice-department


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Trump escalates his war with U.S. law enforcement after memo release

The president hinted openly that he might yet fire senior officials over claims of bias against him.

Politico
By JOSH GERSTEIN and
DARREN SAMUELSOHN
02/02/2018

90

In more harmonious times, President Donald Trump, Attorney General Jeff Sessions, and FBI Director Christopher Wray stand during the National Anthem at the FBI graduation ceremony on Dec. 15, 2017, in Quantico, Va. | Evan Vucci/AP Photo

The week began with the FBI deputy director abruptly stepping down from his job after months of open accusations of anti-Republican bias from President Donald Trump, and it ended with Trump hinting ominously that he might get rid of the No. 2 at the Department of Justice over the Russia investigation.

In between, the president approved the release of a previously classified House Intelligence committee memo detailing claims of misconduct by officials investigating Trump’s presidential campaign over the clear objections of his own FBI director, Christopher Wray.


The move put Trump openly at odds with the whole of the nation’s law enforcement apparatus, including rank-and-file agents. The president did little to downplay the breach, telling pool reporters in the Oval Office who asked on Friday whether he still had confidence in Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general, after reading the memo: “You figure that one out.”

In a TV interview Friday night, White House spokesman Raj Shah seemed to rule out any move by Trump to fire Rosenstein or other officials at the Justice Department.

“On the deputy attorney general, there has been no change in the president's confidence in the DAG,” Shah said on CNN. “No changes are going to be made at the Department of Justice. We fully expect rod Rosenstein to continue on as the deputy attorney general.”

For his part, Wray signaled that he isn’t planning to quit over the memo release. In an email Friday afternoon, he told his staff to grit their teeth and press on with their work.
 

muckraker10021

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BGOL Investor
Trump Campaign Had Repeated Contacts With Russian Intelligence
Phone records and intercepted calls show that members of Donald J. Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and other Trump associates had repeated contacts with senior Russian intelligence officials.....
READ the ENTIRE Article: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/14/us/politics/russia-intelligence-communications-trump.html

Robert_Mueller%27s_resume.jpg

la-na-pol-trump-flynn-comey-russia-timeline-2017


Robert Mueller has audio recordings of Sessions, Flynn, Carter Page, & Kushner talking to the Russians prior to and after the November 2016 POTUS election. The FBI has custody of these intercepts. Flynn told the Russians not to worry about Obama imposed economic sanctions & the expelling of Russian agents from American suburban compounds (safehouses). Kushner asked the Russian ambassador for access to encrypted communication apparatus located inside the Russian embassy so that he (Trump) could use a "back channel" (not subject to U.S. interception) to talk directly with Putin. Carter Page has been under U.S. surveillance since 2013. Sessions lied to Congress about talks with the Russians; the FBI has recordings of his chats with the Russians too.

Mueller also has all of Trump's financial information, money transfers from Russian & German banks and Russian embassy payments. https://www.buzzfeed.com/jasonleopold/newly-uncovered-russian-payments-are-a-focus-of-election?utm_term=.wdzzyaJpj#.njnAn0YX6
Mueller already has his case against Trump. This is why Trump and his republiklan sycophants are doing everything they can to destroy the FBI & the U.S. Justice Department. This is why Trump's lawyers are doing everything they can to prevent Trump from going into a room with Mueller, without a lawyer and answering questions. Mueller will subpoena Trump to appear in front of a grand jury if Trump refuses to voluntarily answer questions. That Washington D.C. grand jury would be 80% Black people; the irony, a racist president talking bullshit in front of Black jurors. Trump is in the same position as a 100 pound marlin fish caught on a hook off the Florida coast; the marlin will fight like hell as one tries to pull it into the boat, if you don't know what you are doing the marlin will pull you and your fishing rod into the ocean or tip the boat. Such is the manner of the struggle between Trump and Mueller, and 99% of the republiklan carcass is riding with Trump clinging to his jockstrap.

http://www.latimes.com/politics/la-na-pol-trump-flynn-comey-russia-timeline-2017-htmlstory.html




Boycott the Republican Party

by JONATHAN RAUCH AND BENJAMIN WITTES | March 2018
...We’re thus driven to believe that the best hope of defending the country from Trump’s Republican enablers, and of saving the Republican Party from itself, is to vote mindlessly and mechanically against Republicans at every opportunity, until the party either rights itself or implodes (very preferably the former)....
READ the ENTIRE Article: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/03/boycott-the-gop/550907/
 
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National Security

Third-highest ranking official at the Justice Department stepping down


By Sari Horwitz, Josh Dawsey
February 9, 2018 at 10:42 PM

Rachel L. Brand, the third-highest-ranking official at the Justice Department and the first woman to serve as associate attorney general, plans to step down, the department announced Friday — a resignation that comes at a moment of intense political scrutiny for the department, including some harsh criticism from President Trump.

Brand, 44, who has been in her Senate-confirmed position for only nine months, would have been in line to take over the supervision of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s Russia investigation if Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein, the department’s No. 2 official, was fired by Trump or recused himself from the matter.

Brand is leaving the Justice Department to join Walmart as the executive vice president for global governance, the company said. Her departure was first reported by the New York Times.

The possibility of Brand being thrust into the Russia investigation has increased in recent weeks as Rosenstein has come under political attack from Republicans for supporting the renewal of a surveillance warrant on a former Trump campaign adviser.

“I think it’s a disgrace what’s happening in our country,” Trump said last week when he was asked about the release of a memo from Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee claiming abuses in the Russia investigation.

“A lot of people should be ashamed of themselves and much worse than that,” Trump said.

When Trump was asked by a reporter whether he was then more likely to fire Rosenstein and whether he had confidence in him, Trump replied, “You figure that one out.”

Trump has also publicly attacked the FBI, which is a component of the Justice Department. He has blasted Attorney General Jeff Sessions for recusing himself in the Russia investigation and turning it over to Rosenstein, who then appointed Mueller as special counsel. He said he wouldn’t have appointed Sessions if he knew he was going to recuse himself from the Russia probe.

Last summer on Twitter, Trump called Sessions “beleaguered” and “very weak,” and at a news conference in the Rose Garden said he was “disappointed in Sessions.”


With Brand’s departure, Solicitor General Noel Francisco is next in line at the Justice Department to oversee the Russia investigation after Rosenstein.

“Rachel has shown real leadership over many important divisions at the Department,” Sessions said in a statement. “I know the entire Department of Justice will miss her, but we join together in congratulating her on this new opportunity in the private sector.”

Brand in a statement thanked Sessions for his leadership and said, “I’ve seen firsthand his commitment to the rule of law and to keeping the American people safe.”

Brand has one of the department’s more politically challenging jobs, managing the lawyers who litigate civil issues, including Trump’s travel ban as well as civil rights, environmental and antitrust cases.


https://news.google.com/news/amp?ca...-11e8-8b0d-891602206fb7_story.html#pt0-940309
 
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