New FBI texts highlight a motive to conceal the president’s
involvement.
From the first, these columns have argued that the whitewash of the
Hillary Clinton–emails caper was President Barack Obama’s call — not the
FBI’s, and not the Justice Department’s. (See, e.g., here, here, and
here.) The decision was inevitable. Obama, using a pseudonymous email
account, had repeatedly communicated with Secretary Clinton over her
private, non-secure email account.
These emails must have involved some classified information, given the
nature of consultations between presidents and secretaries of state, the
broad outlines of Obama’s own executive order defining classified
intelligence (see EO 13526, section 1.4), and the fact that the Obama
administration adamantly refused to disclose the Clinton–Obama emails.
If classified information was mishandled, it was necessarily mishandled
on both ends of these email exchanges.
If Clinton had been charged, Obama’s culpable involvement would have
been patent. In any prosecution of Clinton, the Clinton–Obama emails
would have been in the spotlight. For the prosecution, they would be
more proof of willful (or, if you prefer, grossly negligent) mishandling
of intelligence. More significantly, for Clinton’s defense, they would
show that Obama was complicit in Clinton’s conduct yet faced no criminal
charges.
That is why such an indictment of Hillary Clinton was never going to
happen. The latest jaw-dropping disclosures of text messages between FBI
agent Peter Strzok and his paramour, FBI lawyer Lisa Page, illustrate
this point.
For the moment, I want to put aside the latest controversy — the FBI’s
failure to retain five months of text messages between Strzok and Page,
those chattiest of star-crossed lovers. Yes, this “glitch” closes our
window on a critical time in the Trump-Russia investigation: mid
December 2016 through mid May 2017. That is when the bureau and Justice
Department were reportedly conducting and renewing (in 90-day intervals)
court-approved FISA surveillance that may well have focused on the
newly sworn-in president of the United States. (Remember: The bureau’s
then-director, James Comey, testified at a March 20 House Intelligence
Committee hearing that the investigation was probing possible
coordination between Trump’s campaign and Kremlin interference in the
election.)
The retention default has been chalked up to a technological
mishap. Assuming that this truly was an indiscriminate, bureau-wide
problem — that lost texts are not limited to phones involved in the
Trump-Russia investigation — it is hard to imagine its going undetected
for five months in an agency whose business is information retention.
But it is not inconceivable. Attorney General Jeff Sessions maintains
that an aggressive inquiry is underway, so let’s assume (for argument’s
sake, at least) that either the texts will be recovered or a
satisfactory explanation for their non-retention will be forthcoming.
For now, let’s stick with the Clinton–Obama emails.
On July 5, 2016, Comey held the press conference at which he
delivered a statement describing Mrs. Clinton’s criminal conduct but
nevertheless recommending against an indictment. We now know that
Comey’s remarks had been in the works for two months and were revised
several times by the director and his advisers.
This past weekend, in a letter to the FBI regarding the missing texts,
Senate Homeland Security Committee chairman Ron Johnson (R., Wis.)
addressed some of these revisions. According to Senator Johnson, a draft
dated June 30, 2016 (i.e., five days before Comey delivered the final
version), contained a passage expressly referring to a troublesome email
exchange between Clinton and Obama. (I note that the FBI’s report of
its eventual interview of Clinton contains a cryptic reference to a July
1, 2012, email that Clinton sent from Russia to Obama’s email address.
See report, page 2.) The passage in the June 30 draft stated:
We also assess that Secretary Clinton’s use of a personal email
domain was both known by a large number of people and readily apparent.
She also used her personal email extensively while outside the United
States, including from the territory of sophisticated adversaries. That
use included an email exchange with the President while Secretary
Clinton was on the territory of such an adversary. [Emphasis added.]
Given that combination of factors, we assess it is possible that hostile
actors gained access to Secretary Clinton’s personal email account.
On the same day, according to a Strzok–Page text, a revised draft of
Comey’s remarks was circulated by his chief of staff, Jim Rybicki. It
replaced “the President” with “another senior government official.”
This effort to obscure Obama’s involvement had an obvious flaw: It would
practically have begged congressional investigators and enterprising
journalists to press for the identification of the “senior government
official” with whom Clinton had exchanged emails. That was not going to
work.
Consequently, by the time Comey delivered his remarks on July 5, the
decision had been made to avoid even a veiled allusion to Obama.
Instead, all the stress was placed on Clinton (who was not going to be
charged anyway) for irresponsibly sending and receiving sensitive emails
that were likely to have been penetrated by hostile intelligence
services. Comey made no reference to Clinton’s correspondent:
We also assess that Secretary Clinton’s use of a personal e-mail
domain was both known by a large number of people and readily apparent.
She also used her personal e-mail extensively while outside the United
States, including sending and receiving work-related e-mails in the
territory of sophisticated adversaries. [Emphasis added.] Given that
combination of factors, we assess it is possible that hostile actors
gained access to Secretary Clinton’s personal e-mail account.
The decision to purge any reference to Obama is consistent with the
panic that seized his administration from the moment Clinton’s use of a
private, non-secure server system was revealed in early March 2015. I
detailed this reaction in a series of 2016 columns (see, e.g., here and
here). What most alarmed Obama and Clinton advisers (those groups
overlap) was not only that there were several Clinton–Obama email
exchanges, but also that Obama dissembled about his knowledge of
Clinton’s private email use in a nationally televised interview.
On March 4, just after the New York Times broke the news about Clinton’s
email practices at the State Department, John Podesta (a top Obama
adviser and Clinton’s campaign chairman) emailed Cheryl Mills (Clinton’s
confidant and top aide in the Obama State Department) to suggest that
Clinton’s “emails to and from potus” should be “held” — i.e., not
disclosed — because “that’s the heart of his exec privilege.” At the
time, the House committee investigating the Benghazi jihadist attack was
pressing for production of Clinton’s emails.
As his counselors grappled with how to address his own involvement in
Clinton’s misconduct, Obama deceptively told CBS News in a March 7
interview that he had found out about Clinton’s use of personal email to
conduct State Department business “the same time everybody else learned
it through news reports.” Perhaps he was confident that, because he had
used an alias in communicating with Clinton, his emails to and from her
— estimated to number around 20 — would remain undiscovered.
His and Clinton’s advisers were not so confident. Right after the
interview aired, Clinton campaign secretary Josh Scherwin emailed
Jennifer Palmieri and other senior campaign staffers, stating: “Jen you
probably have more on this but it looks like POTUS just said he found
out HRC was using her personal email when he saw it on the news.”
Scherwin’s alert was forwarded to Mills. Shortly afterwards, an agitated
Mills emailed Podesta: “We need to clean this up — he has emails from
her — they do not say state.gov.” (That is, Obama had emails from
Clinton, which he had to know were from a private account since her
address did not end in “@state.gov” as State Department emails do.)
So how did Obama and his helpers “clean this up”?
Obama had his email communications with Clinton sealed. He did this by
invoking a dubious presidential-records privilege. The White House
insisted that the matter had nothing to do with the contents of the
emails, of course; rather, it was intended to vindicate the principle of
confidentiality in presidential communications with close advisers.
With the media content to play along, this had a twofold benefit: Obama
was able (1) to sidestep disclosure without acknowledging that the
emails contained classified information, and (2) to avoid using the term
“executive privilege” — with all its dark Watergate connotations — even
though that was precisely what he was invoking.
Note that claims of executive privilege must yield to demands for
disclosure of relevant evidence in criminal prosecutions. But of course,
that’s not a problem if there will be no prosecution.
The White House purported to repair the president’s disingenuous
statement in the CBS interview by rationalizing that he had meant that
he learned of Clinton’s homebrew server system through news reports — he
hadn’t meant to claim unawareness that she occasionally used private
email. This was sheer misdirection: From Obama’s standpoint, the problem
was that he discussed government intelligence matters with the
secretary of state through a private email account; the fact that, in
addition, Clinton’s private email account was connected to her own
private server system, rather than some other private email service, was
beside the point. But, again, the media was not interested in such
distinctions and contentedly accepted the White House’s non-explanation.
Meanwhile, Attorney General Loretta Lynch ordered Comey to use the word
“matter” rather than “investigation” to describe the FBI’s probe of
Clinton’s email practices. This ensured that the Democratic
administration’s law-enforcement agencies were aligning their story with
the Democratic candidate’s campaign rhetoric. If there was no
investigation, there would be no prosecution.
In April 2016, in another nationally televised interview, Obama made
clear that he did not want Clinton to be indicted. His rationale was a
legally frivolous straw man: Clinton had not intended to harm national
security. This was not an element of the felony offenses she had
committed; nor was it in dispute. No matter: Obama’s analysis was the
stated view of the chief executive. If, as was sure to happen, his
subordinates in the executive law-enforcement agencies conformed their
decisions to his stated view, there would be no prosecution.
Within a few weeks, even though the investigation was ostensibly still
underway and over a dozen key witnesses — including Clinton herself —
had not yet been interviewed, the FBI began drafting Comey’s remarks
that would close the investigation. There would be no prosecution.
On June 27, Lynch met with Clinton’s husband, former President Bill
Clinton, on an out-of-the-way Arizona tarmac, where their security
details arranged for both their planes to be parked.
Over the next few days, the FBI took pains to strike any reference to
Obama’s emails with Mrs. Clinton from the statement in which Comey would
effectively end the “matter” with no prosecution.
On July 1, amid intense public criticism of her meeting with Bill
Clinton, Attorney General Lynch piously announced that she would accept
whatever recommendation the FBI director and career prosecutors made
about charging Clinton. As Page told Strzok in a text that day, “This is
a purposeful leak following the airplane snafu.” It was also
playacting.
Page elaborated that the attorney general already “knows no
charges will be brought.” Of course she did: It was understood by all
involved that there would be no prosecution.
Knowing that, Lynch had given the FBI notice on June 30 that she’d be
announcing her intention to accept Comey’s recommendation. Fearing this
just might look a bit choreographed, the FBI promptly amended Comey’s
planned remarks to include this assertion (which he in fact made on July
5): “I have not coordinated or reviewed this statement in any way with
the Department of Justice or any other part of the government. They do
not know what I am about to say.”
But they did not need to participate in drafting the statement, and they
did not need to know the precise words he was going to use. It was not
Comey’s decision anyway. All they needed to know was that there would be
no prosecution.
On July 2, with the decision that she would not be indicted long
since made, Mrs. Clinton sat for an interview with the FBI — something
she’d never have done if there were a chance she might be charged. The
farce was complete with the Justice Department and FBI permitting two
subjects of the investigation — Mills and Clinton aide Heather Samuelson
— to sit in on the interview as lawyers representing Clinton. That is
not something law enforcement abides when it is serious about making a
case. Here, however, it was clear: There would be no prosecution.
All cleaned up: no indictment, meaning no prosecution, meaning no
disclosure of Clinton–Obama emails. It all worked like a charm . . .
except the part where Mrs. Clinton wins the presidency and the problem
is never spoken of again.
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/455696/hillary-clinton-barack-obama-emails-key-decision-not-indict-hillary
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/455696/hillary-clinton-barack-obama-emails-key-decision-not-indict-hillary
3 comments:
Cathy Obrien: Hillary Clinton Raped Me ~ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-SSa9tTa0-k&feature=youtu.be
Hows that obama library gonna to deal with PR when hes in Federal Prison. lol.
I think library would make a good prison! Just add some bars to the windows and cement the doors shut.
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