TRUMP’S INCRIMINATING TWEET ISN’T AS IMPORTANT AS FLYNN’S PLEA

[This post first appeared at Billmoyers.com on Dec. 7, 2017]

The media focus on Trump’s tweet has obscured the key facts underlying Flynn’s guilty plea.

The media controversy over who wrote President Trump’s Dec. 2, 2017 tweet shifted attention away from a key point about the tweet itself: It is a double-barreled lie that obscures the facts surrounding a more important story.

Here is the tweet at the center of the storm:

The Media Controversy

Immediately after it appeared, pundits began debating whether Trump had incriminated himself. Some thought that Trump had admitted to obstructing justice.

Here’s their argument: Trump tweeted that he “had to fire Gen. Flynn because [Flynn] lied” — but not just to Vice President Pence, as Trump and the White House had maintained since February. Trump’s tweet also says that he fired Flynn for lying to the FBI. That means that on Feb. 14, 2017 — the day after Flynn resigned — when Trump asked then-FBI Director James Comey to back off on the bureau’s investigation of Flynn, Trump knew Flynn had lied to the FBI about his late-December 2016 conversations with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. In that scenario, Trump’s request that Comey “let this go” is an attempt to obstruct justice.

Then on Saturday Trump’s personal lawyer, John Dowd, claimed he authored the tweet. So, Trump defenders argue, because Trump didn’t write it, Trump didn’t incriminate himself. But that’s tenuous. Because Trump did not disavow or delete this “official statement by the president of the United States” — a definition that the Trump administration itself provided — the tweet became what lawyers call an “adoptive admission” that binds Trump. In other words, Dowd has created a nightmare for himself and his client.

But here’s the other thing: The tweet is riddled with lies.

The Lies

The truth is that Trump didn’t fire Flynn for either of the reasons he gave in his tweet. If he had, Flynn would have left his top national security post weeks earlier. Again, John Dowd’s words put his client in a tough spot. Dowd said White House counsel Don McGahn had told Trump in late January that he believed Flynn had probably misled the FBI and lied to Pence about the substance of his calls with Kislyak. But Trump didn’t fire Flynn until The Washington Post broke the story on Feb. 13. The unavoidable inference is that Trump did not fire Flynn because he lied; he fired him because the media discovered the lie and reported it.

The More Important Story

The media focus on Trump’s tweet has obscured the key facts underlying Flynn’s guilty plea, and Trump has no incentive to help the public see those facts clearly.

    • In late December 2016, Trump’s national security adviser-designate Mike Flynn — in consultation with a senior official of the Trump transition team later identified as K. T. McFarland — spoke to Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak about newly imposed US sanctions for election interference. Flynn’s mission was to persuade Kislyak that the Trump administration would reward Putin for a restrained response, and he succeeded.
    • After his phone call with Kislyak, Flynn “spoke with senior members of the presidential transition team about [his] conversations with the Russian ambassador regarding the US sanctions and Russia’s decision not to escalate.” We don’t know if Flynn’s conversations included Vice President-elect Mike Pence, but Pence was chairman of the transition team.
    • On Jan. 24, 2017, four days after the inauguration, the FBI interviewed Flynn. He lied, adhering to the White House line that Pence had established: Flynn’s discussion with Kislyak “had nothing whatsoever to do with those sanctions.”
    • For more than two weeks, Flynn remained in the nation’s most sensitive national security post until The Washington Post broke the story about Yates’ warning to McGahn. Then Trump and the White House said that Flynn was fired because he had lied to Pence about his conversations with Ambassador Kislyak.
    • On Feb. 14, 2017 — the day after Flynn’s resignation — Trump told Comey, “I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go. He is a good guy. I hope you can let this go.” Comey took Trump’s request as a directive to terminate the Flynn investigation. Three months later, Trump fired Comey.
    • Comey later testified, “It’s my judgment that I was fired because of the Russia investigation. I was fired in some way to change, or the endeavor was to change, the way the Russia investigation was being conducted.”

Properly considered, Trump’s tweet should bring into clear view the enduring theme of the Trump-Russia investigation: When facing questions related to Russia, Team Trump answers with lies — sometimes layers and layers of them.

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH DEC. 4, 2017

It was Flynn’s week, but we haven’t heard the last of him.

A personal prediction as to those higher in the food chain: Flynn has put Jared Kushner. Mike Pence, and Donald Trump (father and son) on the hot seat.

  • May 19-22, 2016: Trump, Don Jr. and Torshin at the NRA [revision of previous entry]
  • July 15, 2016: Flynn Denounces Turkey’s Erdoğan
  • Nov. 12, 2016: Russian Claims Conspiracy Helped Trump Win
  • Nov. 25, 2016: Trump Names McFarland Deputy National Security Adviser
  • Dec. 22, 2016: Flynn Communicates With Kislyak About UN Resolution
  • Dec. 28-29, 2016: Flynn Discusses New Sanctions With Kislyak
  • Dec. 31, 2016:
    Flynn Relays Kislyak Talks To Trump Team
  • Early January 2017: Flynn Promotes Nuclear Power Plant Program for Mideast
  • Feb. 15, 2017: Trump Says Flynn Has Been Treated Unfairly
  • April 9, 2017: McFarland Asked To Resign
  • Aug. 7, 2017: Trump Asks GOP Senators To End Trump-Russia Investigation [revision of previous entry]
  • Aug. 9, 2017: Trump Blasts McConnell Over Russia Investigation [revision of previous entry]
  • Sometime in November 2017: Mueller Quizzes Kushner About Flynn
  • Nov. 25, 2017: Woolsey With Trump At Mar-A-Lago With Trump
  • Nov. 26, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Nov. 27, 2017: Flynn’s Lawyer Meets With Mueller
  • Nov. 28, 2017: House Democrats Want Barrack To Appear
  • Nov. 28, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Nov. 29, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Dec. 1, 2017: Flynn Pleads Guilty to Making False Statements [revision of previous entry]
  • Dec. 1, 2017: James Comey Tweets
  • Dec. 2, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Dec. 3, 2017: Trump Tweets

 

FLYNN FALLS; EVEN BIGGER TIMBER IN TROUBLE

If you think Mike Flynn has problems, they’re nothing compared to those even higher on the Trump food chain — Pence, Kushner, and Trump himself. Newly posted at Billmoyers.com

A Timeline: Michael Flynn, Russia, and the Trump Administration

A look at everything we know about Retired General Michael Flynn’s ties to Russia. For a short time, Flynn served as the Trump administration’s national security advisor. Following a guilty plea for lying to the FBI, he’s now likely cooperating with special counsel Robert Mueller.

Michael Flynn, former national security advisor to President Donald Trump, leaves following his plea hearing at the Prettyman Federal Courthouse, December 1, 2017, in Washington, DC. Special Counsel Robert Mueller charged Flynn with one count of making a false statement to the FBI. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

The Trump-Russia investigation has reached a historic and defining moment. Former national security advisor Michael Flynn was an early and enthusiastic Trump supporter who remained a constant presence in Trump’s inner circle from the summer of 2015 to his resignation on Feb. 13, 2017.

Flynn also generated controversy and, based on previously published reports, faced potential legal exposure far beyond the crime of making false statements, to which he has now pled guilty. Almost certainly, that means he has cut a deal with special counsel Robert Mueller. In return for admitting that he made false statements to the FBI about his discussions with then-Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak and avoiding potential liability for other criminal wrongdoing, Flynn will likely provide evidence that incriminates others in Trump’s orbit. Who are the targets? The list is long, but top candidates include Jared Kushner, Donald Trump Jr., Vice President Mike Pence and President Donald Trump.

For Trump’s presidency, it’s possible that the Russia story may have moved from what Winston Churchill called “the end of the beginning” to the beginning of the end.

Click here to review the new Flynn Timeline.

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH NOV. 27, 2017

During a relatively quiet Thanksgiving week, Trump’s former national security adviser Mike Flynn accounts for some interesting new entries on the Trump-Russia Timeline.

Here’s a list of what we added with our Nov. 27 update:

  • July 1987: Trump’s Early Interest in Soviet Union Real Estate [revision of previous entry]
  • Late 2004 through 2015: Manafort Travels to Moscow [revision of previous entry]
  • February 2014 through October 2015: Yanukovych Falls; Manafort Continues Trips to Kiev
  • Nov. 19, 2015: Rohrabacher: “Forget Putin…”
  • August 2016: Flynn’s Consulting Firm Lobbies for Turkish Interests [revision of previous entry]
  • Sept. 20, 2016: Flynn Meets With Rohrabacher
  • Nov. 8, 2016: Flynn Publishes Op-Ed on Turkey
  • Nov. 19, 2017: Mueller Seeks Justice Dept. Documents
  • Nov. 21, 2017: WSJ: Mueller Investigating Kushner’s Foreign Contacts
  • Nov. 22, 2017: Trump Walks Away From SoHo
  • Nov. 23, 2017: Trump Won’t Pay Flynn’s or Manafort’s Legal Fees
  • Nov. 23, 2017: Flynn Lawyers No Longer Sharing Information With Trump Lawyers

READ, LISTEN, OR BOTH — BUT PLEASE PAY ATTENTION

Two links for your consideration:

— Bill Moyers and I discussed connecting some of the Trump-Russia dots here: “The Trump-Russia Story Is Coming Together. Here’s How to Make Sense Of It”

— Ian Masters interviewed me on his radio program here: “A Timeline and Roadmap of the Mueller Investigation”

 

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH NOV. 21, 2017

Happy Thanksgiving!

Another week; another Putin insider gets added to the list of known Russians in the Trump campaign’s orbit.
This time, it’s a Russian banker.
But there’s more…

The latest updates to our Trump-Russia Timeline:

  • Nov. 16, 2013: Trump Announces Plans for Moscow Skyscraper
  • Nov. 16, 2013: Russian Bank Announces $2.4 Billion Construction Loan for New Agalarov Development
  • March 20, 2014: US Imposes Sanctions Against Russia Over Ukraine
  • July 11, 2015: Russian Asks About Sanctions At Trump Rally
  • May 19-22, 2016: Trump, Don Jr. and Torshin at the NRA
  • Aug. 25, 2016: Clovis Becomes Trump Campaign National Co-Chair
  • Sept. 20, 2016: WikiLeaks Tweets Anti-Trump Group’s Password
  • June 2017: Akhmetshin and Kaveladze Meet in Moscow
  • July 12, 2017: Emin Agalarov Tries to Recant Previously Published Interview in Forbes
  • Mid-October 2017: Mueller Subpoenas Russia-Related Documents From Trump Campaign
  • Nov. 14, 2017: Sessions Says That He Has Not Lied About Trump Campaign Contacts With Russia [Revision of previous entry]
  • Nov. 16, 2017: Senate Judiciary Committee Complains About Kushner’s Incomplete Document Production
  • Nov. 17, 2017: Trump Reportedly Now Paying Own Legal Bills

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH NOV. 16, 2017

Jeff Sessions may be a slow-talker, but his latest congressional testimony shows he can turn on a dime:

From: “I didn’t remember” Papadopoulos’ Russia proposal at a meeting with Trump’s foreign policy team that Sessions chaired on March 31, 2016…

To: “I pushed back hard against it” after others recalled the plan.

Hmmmm…

And Mike Pence returns to the Timeline, explaining that when he laughed off the pre-election suggestion that the Trump campaign was in contact with WikiLeaks, he didn’t know what he was talking about.

It seems that every time someone asked any member of the Trump team about campaign contacts with Russia, the response was the same: lie and say that no such contacts occurred.

One-by-one, they’ve been caught with their “memories down.” According to The Washington Post, the claim of “zero” contacts was wrong. The correct number — so far — is 31, including 19 meetings — and counting.

We update our Trump-Russia Timeline regularly. More are coming this week.

Here’s a list of what we added with our Nov. 16 update:

  • June 30, 2016: Page and Papadopoulos Attend Group Dinner With Sessions
  • Sept. 8, 2016: Sessions Meets Russian Ambassador in His Senate Office
  • Nov. 13, 2017: Pence Says He Didn’t Know About Don Jr./WikiLeaks Emails
  • Nov. 14, 2017: Sessions Says That He Has Not Lied About Trump Campaign Contacts With Russia

 

 

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH NOV. 15, 2017

If you’ve been wondering why this week’s Trump-Russia Timeline update has taken longer than usual, here’s why:

Here’s a list of what we added with our Nov. 15 update:

  • July 1987: Trump’s Early Interest in Soviet Union Real Estate [revision of previous entry]
  • 1996: Trump Talks About ‘Trump Tower Moscow’
  • 2007: Manafort Works for Pro-Putin Ukrainian Politician [revision of previous entry]
  • Nov. 8-10, 2013: The Miss Universe Pageant in Moscow [revision of previous entry]
  • Nov. 12, 2013: Trump Boasts About Relationship With Russian Oligarchs
  • Between June 2015 and August 2017: 150 Million Americans Exposed to Russian-Government Linked Troll Farm [revision of previous entry]
  • June 2015: Russian Twitter Accounts Back Trump
  • Late January 2016: Carter Page Becomes Trump Campaign Unofficial Volunteer
  • March 21, 2016: Trump Identifies Page and Papadopoulos as Foreign Policy Advisers [revision of previous entry]
  • March 24, 2016: Mifsud Introduces Papadopoulos to ‘Female Russian National’ [revision of previous entry]
  • March 24, 2016: Papadopoulos Suggests Russia Meeting [revision of previous entry]
  • Early April 2016: Papadopoulos Continues Efforts to Arrange Trump-Russia Meeting [revision of previous entry]
  • April 10, 2016: Papadopoulos’ Email Exchange with Polonskaya [revision of previous entry]
  • April 25, 2016: Papadopoulos Informs Stephen Miller About Russia Contacts [revision of previous entry]
  • April 27, 2016: Trump Delivers First Major Foreign Policy Speech [revision of previous entry]
  • April 27, 2016: Papadopoulos Continues Reporting to Trump Campaign [revision of previous entry]
  • April 27, 2016: Sessions, Kushner and Kislyak at the Mayflower Hotel [revision of previous entry]
  • Mid-May: Bannon Introduces Trump Campaign to Cambridge Analytica
  • May 16, 2016: Page Suggests Trump Visit To Russia
  • May 26, 2016: Page Emails About Upcoming Moscow Trip
  • June 2016: Kushner Takes Control of Trump Digital Effort and Hires Cambridge Analytica [revision of previous entry]
  • Early June 2016: Cambridge Analytica Offers Help to WikiLeaks [revision of previous entry]
  • June 9, 2016: Don Jr., Manafort, Kushner Meet With Russian Lawyer [revision of previous entry]
  • Late June 2016: Page and Papadopoulos Attend Group Dinner With Sessions
  • July 7-8, 2016: Page Emails Trump Team About Moscow Trip
  • July 14, 2016: Trump Campaign Successfully Changes GOP Platform on Ukraine [revision of previous entry]
  • July 18, 2016: Sessions Speaks Privately With Kislyak [revision of previous entry]
  • During the July 2016 Republican Convention: Page Meets With Kislyak [revision of previous entry]
  • Aug. 13, 2016: Hacker’s Website and Twitter Suspended [revision of previous entry]
  • Aug. 14, 2016: Manafort Denies Receiving Improper Payments From Ukraine [revision of previous entry]
  • Late August 2016: Page Meets Hungarian Ambassador in Budapest
  • Around Sept. 13, 2016: Papadopoulos Meets British Officials in London
  • Sept. 20, 2016: Flynn Meets With Rohrabacher
  • Sept. 20-21, 2016: WikiLeaks Contacts Don Jr.
  • Sept. 30, 2016: Papadopoulos Gives Interview on Trump Policy [revision of previous entry]
  • Oct. 2, 2016: Stone Appears to Predict More Damaging WikiLeaks [revision of previous entry]
  • Oct. 3, 2016: WikiLeaks Writes Again to Don Jr.
  • Oct. 10, 2016: Trump: ‘I love WikiLeaks’
  • Oct. 12, 2016: WikiLeaks Contacts Don Jr. Again
  • Oct. 14, 2016: Pence On Coordination With Wikileaks
  • Oct. 21, 2016: WikiLeaks Contacts Don Jr. Again
  • Nov. 6, 2016: Papadopoulos on Panel Discussing Trump
  • Nov. 8, 2016: Papadopoulos Says He’s Still A Trump Adviser
  • Nov. 8, 2016: Sater Reportedly Attends Trump VIP Election Celebration
  • Nov. 8, 2016: WikiLeaks Suggests Trump Strategy If He Loses Election
  • Nov. 10, 2016: Russian Official Admits Trump Campaign Had Contact With Kremlin Intermediaries [revision of previous entry]
  • Early December 2016: Papadopoulos Discusses Trump Administration in Greece [revision of previous entry]
  • Dec. 8, 2016: Page Visits With Influential Russians in Moscow [revision of previous entry]
  • Dec. 9, 2016: Manafort Says He’s ‘Aware of What’s Going On’ in Transition [revision of previous entry]
  • Mid-December 2016: Flynn Reportedly Discusses Kidnapping Turkish Cleric
  • Dec. 16, 2016: WikiLeaks Sends Don Jr. Advice About Assange
  • Jan. 6, 2017: Comey Meets Trump for the First Time [revision of previous entry]
  • Mid-January 2017: Page Communicates With Bannon and Jones Day Law Firm
  • Jan. 18, 2017: Turkish Foreign Minister, Nunes, and Flynn at Breakfast Meeting [revision of previous entry]
  • Jan. 18, 2017: Kushner’s Numerous Omissions on Security Clearance Application
  • Jan. 20-22, 2017: Papadopoulos Meets with Greek and Israeli Leaders
  • Jan. 27, 2017: Trump to Comey: ‘I Need Loyalty’
  • Feb. 19, 2017: Lewandowski Denies Campaign Contacts With Russia [revision of previous entry]
  • March 4, 2017: Lewandowski: ‘I Never Met Carter Page’
  • March 27, 2017: New York Times Reports Undisclosed Meeting Between Kushner and Russian Banker [revision of previous entry]
  • May 6-7, 2017: Trump Decides to Fire FBI Director Comey [revision of previous entry]
  • May 26, 2017: Washington Post Reports on Kushner’s ‘Back-Channel’ Meeting With Kislyak [revision of previous entry]
  • July 11, 2017: WikiLeaks Contacts Don Jr. About His Emails
  • Sept. 19, 2017: Lewandowski: ‘Jail For Life’ Anyone Who Attempted to Influence Election Outcome
  • Sept. 26, 2017: Mueller Begins Interviewing White House Staffers [revision of previous entry]
  • Oct. 10, 2017: Page To Take the Fifth [revision of previous entry]
  • During the week of Oct. 23, 2017: Clovis Testifies Before Grand Jury [revision of previous entry]
  • Oct. 24, 2017: CIA Director Pompeo Reportedly Meets With DNC Hack-Conspiracy Theorist
  • Nov. 1, 2017: Mifsud Gives an Interview
  • Nov. 2, 2017: Papadopoulos’ Russian Intermediary Mifsud Disappears
  • Nov. 2, 2017: Page Testifies Before House Intelligence Committee
  • Nov. 4, 2017: NBC: Mueller Has Sufficient Evidence to Charge Flynn and His Son [revision of previous entry]
  • Nov. 8, 2017: Lewandowski Changes His Tune On Carter Page; Equivocates on Papadopoulos
  • Nov. 9, 2017: CNN: Mueller Has Interviewed Stephen Miller
  • Nov. 10, 2017: Trump Says Putin Denied Election Meddling; Peskov Says The Subject Didn’t Come Up
  • Nov. 11, 2017: Trump Tweets About Russia
  • Nov. 11, 2017: Pompeo Bucks Trump; Backs US Intelligence Conclusions
  • Nov. 13, 2017: The Atlantic Breaks the Don Jr./WikiLeaks Story

ON LAW, LIFE AND OTHER MATTERS

For anyone interested, here’s a link to my recent interview on a wide range of topics, including law firms, Trump-Russia, and life. The transcript sub-headings allow readers to skip to specific sections as desired.

 

 

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH NOV. 6, 2017

Papadopoulos-Page-Flynn…More puzzle pieces come together in this week’s updates to the Trump-Russia Timeline:

Here’s a list of what we added with our Nov. 6 update:

  • Between June 2015 and August 2017: 150 Million Americans Exposed to Russian-Government Linked Troll Farm [revision of previous entry]
  • March 4, 2016: Trump Narrows the Field
  • March 24, 2016: Papadopoulos Suggests Russia Meeting [revision of previous entry]
  • March 31, 2016: Trump Meets with Foreign Policy Advisers [revision of previous entry]
  • Spring 2016: Papadopoulos Presents His Trump Credentials to Foreign Leaders
  • Early April 2016: Papadopoulos Continues Efforts to Arrange Trump-Russia Meeting [revision of previous entry]
  • May 4, 2016: Trump Stands Atop the Republican Field [revision of previous entry]
  • June 7, 2016: Trump Promises to Reveal ‘Things That Have Taken Place With the Clintons’ [revision of previous entry]
  • July 7, 2016: Page Says US Is to Blame for US-Russia Friction; Meets With Russians [revision of previous entry]
  • July 20, 2016: Papadopoulos Talks About Trump’s Foreign Policy
  • August 2016: Flynn’s Consulting Firm Begins Lobbying for Turkish Interests [revision of previous entry]
  • Sept. 19, 2016: Flynn Discusses Kidnapping Muslim Cleric
  • Sept. 30, 2016: Papadopoulos Interview on Trump Policy
  • Early December 2016: Papadopoulos Dines With Greek Defense Minister
  • Jan. 27, 2017: Papadopoulos Lies to the FBI [revision of previous entry]
  • Oct. 10, 2017: Page To Take the Fifth [revision of previous entry]
  • Oct. 25, 2017: WSJ Calls on Mueller to Resign
  • Nov. 1, 2017: Clovis Withdraws
  • Nov. 2, 2017: Robert Mercer Sells Stake in Breitbart
  • Nov. 3, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Nov. 3, 2017: DOJ Considers Charging Russian Hackers
  • Nov. 3, 2017: GOP Lawmakers Call for Mueller’s Recusal
  • Nov. 4, 2017: NBC: Mueller Has Sufficient Evidence to Charge Flynn and His Son

 

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH NOV. 2, 2017

Let’s just say it’s been a busy week for the Timeline.

Here’s a list of what we added with our Nov. 2 update:

  • Between June 2015 and August 2017: 126 Million Americans Exposed to Russian-Government Linked Troll Farm
  • March 6, 2016: Papadopoulos Becomes Trump Campaign Adviser [revision of previous entry]
  • March 14, 2016: Mifsud Takes an Interest in Papadopoulos [revision of previous entry]
  • March 21, 2016: Trump Identifies Page and Papadopoulos as Foreign Policy Advisers [revision of previous entry]
  • March 24, 2016: Mifsud Introduces Papadopoulos to ‘Female Russian National’ [revision of previous entry]
  • March 24, 2016: Papadopoulos Suggests Russia Meeting [revision of previous entry]
  • Early April 2016: Papadopoulos Travels to Israel and Discuses Trump Russia Policy [revision of previous entry]
  • April 10, 2016: Papadopoulos’ Email Exchange with ‘Female Russian National’ [revision of previous entry]
  • April 18, 2016: Papadopoulos Connects Directly to Russia [revision of previous entry]
  • April 22, 2016: Papadopoulos and Timofeev Continue Their Conversations [revision of previous entry]
  • April 26, 2016: Papadopoulos Learns That Russians Have ‘Dirt’ on Hillary Clinton [revision of previous entry]
  • April 30, 3016: Another Papadopoulos Email to Mifsud [revision of previous entry]
  • May 4, 2016: Papadopoulos Email Exchanges With Timofeev [revision of previous entry]
  • May 13, 2016: Mifsud Updates Papadopoulos [revision of previous entry]
  • May 14, 2016: Papadopoulos Emails Lewandowski About Russia Meeting [revision of previous entry]
  • June 1, 2016: Papadopoulos Pushes Russia Meeting [revision of previous entry]
  • June 19, 2016: Papadopoulos’ Russia Push Continues [revision of previous entry]
  • July 14, 2016: Papadopoulos Reportedly Says Trump Campaign Has Approved Russia Meeting
  • Aug. 15, 2016: Trump Campaign Encourages ‘Off-The-Record’ Meeting [revision of previous entry]
  • July 19, 2017: Trump Nominates Clovis to USDA’s Top Science Post
  • Oct. 5, 2017: Papadopoulos Pleads Guilty [revision of previous entry]
  • During the week of Oct. 23, 2017: Clovis Testifies Before Grand Jury
  • Oct. 30, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Oct. 30, 2017: Trump’s Lawyer Minimizes Papadopoulos’ Role; Denies Collusion
  • Oct. 30, 2017: Sarah Sanders Distances Campaign from Papadopoulos
  • Oct. 31, 2017: Trump Tweets

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH OCT. 30, 2017

With last week’s update, I said you’d learn more about Papadopoulos. I didn’t expect it so soon. Manafort and Gates are big news. Papadopoulos is far bigger.

Here’s a list of what we added to the Trump-Russia Timeline with our Oct. 30 update:

  • 2006: Rick Gates Joins Manafort’s Firm
  • Dec. 10, 2015: Flynn Receives Money From RT [revision of previous entry]
  • March 6, 2016: Papadopoulos Becomes Trump Campaign Adviser
  • March 14, 2016: ‘The Professor’ Takes an Interest in Papadopoulos
  • March 24, 2016: ‘The Professor’ Introduces Papadopoulos to ‘Female Russian National’
  • March 29, 2016: Trump Hires Manafort [revision of previous entry]
  • March 31, 2016: Trump Meets with Foreign Policy Advisers [revision of previous entry]
  • Early April 2016: Papadopoulos Continues Efforts to Arrange Trump-Russia Meeting
  • April 10, 2016: Papadopoulos Email Exchange with ‘Female Russian National’
  • April 18, 2016: Papadopoulos Connects to Russia
  • April 22, 2016: Papadopoulos and ‘The Russian MFA Connection’
  • April 25, 2016: Papadopoulos Keeps a Trump ‘Senior Policy Adviser’ Informed
  • April 26, 2016: Papadopoulos Learns That Russians Have ‘Dirt’ on Hillary Clinton
  • April 27, 2016: Papadopoulos Continues Reporting to Trump Campaign
  • April 30, 3016: Another Papadopoulos Email to ‘The Professor’
  • May 4, 2016: Papadopoulos Email to ‘The Russian MFA Connection’
  • May 13, 2016: ‘The Professor’ Updates Papadopoulos
  • May 14, 2016: Papadopoulos Emails ‘High-Ranking Campaign Official’ About Russia Meeting
  • May 21, 2016: Papadopoulos Pushes Russia Meeting
  • June 1, 2016: Papadopoulos Keep Pushing Russia Meeting
  • June 2016: Cambridge Analytica Offers Help to WikiLeaks
  • June 9, 2016: Don Jr., Manafort, Kushner Meet With Russian Lawyer [revision of previous entry]
  • June 12, 2016: Assange Says He Has Clinton Emails
  • June 19, 2016: Papadopoulos’ Russia Push Continues
  • July 22, 2016: WikiLeaks Releases DNC Emails
  • July 29, 2016: Cambridge Analytica Receives First Payment From Trump Campaign
  • Early August 2016: Steele Gives the FBI Documents About Alleged Trump-Russia Connections [revision of previous entry]
  • Aug. 15, 2016: Trump Campaign Encourages ‘Off-The-Record’ Meeting
  • Aug. 17, 2016: Bannon and Conway To Run Trump Campaign
  • Aug. 19, 2016: Manafort Resigns From Trump Campaign; Gates Remains [revision of previous entry]
  • Aug. 26, 2016: Rebekah Mercer Wants Trump Campaign to Help WikiLeaks
  • Sept. 1, 2016: Trump Pays Cambridge Analytica $5 million
  • Jan. 20, 2017: Gates Remains in Trump Orbit
  • Jan. 27, 2017: Papadopoulos Lies to the FBI
  • Feb. 17, 2017: Papadopoulos Deactivates His Facebook Account
  • Feb. 23, 2017: Papadopoulos Changes Cellphones
  • July 27, 2017: Papadopoulos Arrested
  • Oct. 5, 2017: Papadopoulos Pleads Guilty
  • Oct. 20, 2017: Cohen Senate Appearance Postponed [revision of previous entry]
  • Oct. 23, 2017: Mueller Investigating Podesta Group
  • Oct. 24, 2017: Manafort Reportedly The Subject of Another Investigation
  • Oct. 24, 2017: House Leaders Announce New Clinton Investigations
  • Oct. 25, 2017: Trump Tweets About ‘Steele Dossier’
  • Oct. 25, 2017: The Cambridge Analytica/WikiLeaks Story Breaks
  • Oct. 27, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Oct. 27, 2017: Roger Stone Lashes Out
  • Oct. 27, 2017: US Attorney Dana Boente Resigns
  • Oct. 27, 2017: Trump Tweets About Russia Investigation Costs
  • Oct. 29, 2017: Trump Tweets As Indictment Announcement Imminent
  • Oct. 30, 2017: Paul Manafort and Rick Gates Surrender to Federal Authorities After the Grand Jury Indicts Them
  • Oct. 30, 2017: Papadopoulos Guilty Plea Unsealed
  • Oct. 30, 2017: Trump Tweets About Indictments

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH OCT. 23, 2017

Pence and Papadopoulos pervade this week’s updates to the Trump-Russia Timeline at BillMoyers.com. Never heard of Papadopoulos? You will.

Who’s next?

And check out the new stand-alone Timeline for Paul Manafort.

Here’s a list of what we added with our Oct. 24 update:

Additions to our main Trump-Russia Timeline:

  • March 21, 2016: Trump Identifies Page and Papadopoulos as Foreign Policy Advisers [revision of previous entry]
  • March 24, 2016: Papadopoulos Suggests Russia Meeting [revision of previous entry]
  • March 31, 2016: Trump Meets with Foreign Policy Advisers [revision of previous entry]
  • April 27, 2016: Papadopoulos Pushes Trump-Putin Meeting
  • May 4, 2016: Papadopoulos Pushes Russia Meeting
  • Sometime in May: Papadopoulos Keeps Pushing Trump-Russia Meeting
  • June 9, 2016: Don Jr., Manafort, Kushner Meet With Russian Lawyer [revision of previous entry]
  • July 2, 2016: Trump Meets with Pence
  • July 12, 2016: Trump Dines with Pence
  • July 14, 2016: Trump Calls Christie About VP Spot
  • Aug. 17, 2016: Trump Receives First National Security Briefing
  • Sept. 25, 2016: Page Writes to Comey
  • Nov. 11, 2016: Pence Replaces Christie as Transition Team Chair [revision of previous entry]
  • Nov. 18, 2016: Trump Names Flynn National Security Adviser
  • Oct. 16, 2017: Trump Says He Doesn’t Plan to Fire Mueller
  • Oct. 16, 2017: Mueller Team Interviews Spicer
  • Oct. 17, 2017: Kushner Adds Noted Libel Lawyer to Legal Team
  • Oct. 18, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Oct. 18, 2017: Sessions Refuses to Answer Questions About Trump Conversations
  • Oct. 18, 2017: Fusion GPS Executives Assert Fifth Amendment
  • Oct. 18, 2017: Senate Intelligence Committee Interviews Lewandowski
  • Oct. 19, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Oct. 19, 2017: CIA Corrects Director Pompeo’s Misstatement
  • Oct. 19, 2017: Trump Is Interviewing US Attorney Candidates for Manhattan
  • Oct. 20, 2017: Cohen Senate Appearance Postponed
  • Oct. 21, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Oct. 22, 2017: Magnitsky Act Moves to Canada
  • Oct. 22, 2017: Sen. Lindsey Graham Doesn’t Understand Trump’s Russian ‘Blind Spot’

Additions to our timeline of the Comey firing:

  • Oct. 16, 2017: Trump Says He Doesn’t Plan to Fire Mueller
  • Oct. 16, 2017: Mueller Team Interviews Spicer
  • Oct. 18, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Oct. 18, 2017: Sessions Refuses to Answer Questions About Trump Conversations
  • Oct. 21, 2017: Trump Tweets

Additions to our Kushner Timeline:

  • June 9, 2016: Don Jr., Manafort, Kushner Meet With Russian Lawyer [revision of previous entry]
  • July 2, 2016: Trump Meets with Pence
  • July 12, 2016: Trump Dines with Pence
  • July 14, 2016: Trump Calls Christie About VP Spot
  • Nov. 11, 2016: Pence Replaces Christie as Transition Team Chair [revision of previous entry]
  • Nov. 18, 2016: Trump Names Flynn National Security Adviser
  • Oct. 17, 2017: Kushner Adds Noted Libel Lawyer to Legal Team

Additions to our Pence Timeline:

  • June 9, 2016: Don Jr., Manafort, Kushner Meet With Russian Lawyer [revision of previous entry]
  • July 2, 2016: Trump Meets with Pence
  • July 12, 2016: Trump Dines with Pence
  • July 14, 2016: Trump Calls Christie About VP Spot
  • Nov. 11, 2016: Pence Replaces Christie as Transition Team Chair [revision of previous entry]
  • Nov. 18, 2016: Trump Names Flynn National Security Adviser

 

THE MANY PIECES OF EVIDENCE SUGGESTING TRUMP OBSTRUCTED JUSTICE

[This post first appeared on BillMoyers.com on Oct. 23, 2017]

On Oct. 4, 2017, Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Richard Burr (R-NC) said that all issues relating to the investigation into Russian interference with the election remain open. But with respect to the firing of FBI Director James Comey, the committee had gone as far as it could and was passing the baton: “Future questions surrounding Comey’s firing are better answered by the [special] counsel or by the Justice Department,” Burr said.

Special counsel Robert Mueller is reportedly investigating whether Trump’s interactions with Comey amount to obstruction of justice. The charge can be leveled at anyone, including the president, who attempts to influence, obstruct or impede a federal investigation or a judicial process.

Most people assume that Comey’s firing is the linchpin of any obstruction of justice case against Donald Trump. And while it’s certainly important, it’s just one brick in a longer road. The BillMoyers.com Trump-Russia Timeline reveals that Trump’s Comey predicament is far worse than wherever the act of firing him takes Mueller. Long before he dismissed the FBI director — and for months thereafter — Trump took numerous actions that could now support an obstruction of justice charge. Consider:

  • On Jan. 27, 2017 — a week after the inauguration — acting Attorney General Sally Yates spoke with White House counsel Don McGahn about national security adviser Michael Flynn. In December, Flynn had been in contact repeatedly with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. In public statements, Vice President Mike Pence and press secretary Sean Spicer had said that Flynn engaged in no discussions about Russian sanctions with Kislyak. But, Yates informed McGahn, that was not consistent with what US intelligence agencies knew to be true. Someone, presumably Flynn, was lying, and that made him potentially susceptible to blackmail by the Russians, who knew the truth about those conversations. On the same day that Yates spoke to McGahn, Trump invited FBI Director Comey to a private dinner at the White House. “I need loyalty,” Trump told him.

 

  • Two weeks later, as advisers were leaving an Oval Office meeting, Trump asked Comey to remain. “I hope you can see your way clear to letting this go, to letting Flynn go,” Trump told him on Feb. 14.

 

 

 

 

  • On May 2—the eve of FBI Director James Comey’s scheduled testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee—Trump supplemented his ongoing “Russia hoax” tweets with a more subtle form of obstruction—witness intimidation:

  • After Comey’s Senate appearance, Trump fumed about his testimony. Over the weekend of May 6-7 at his Bedminster Golf Club, he and aide Stephen Miller drafted a four-page letter directed to Comey, outlining Trump’s reasons for firing him.

 

  • On Monday, May 8, Sally Yates was preparing to testify about her January conversations with Don McGahn concerning Mike Flynn, and Trump unleashed another tweet smacking of witness intimidation:

  • Later that morning, Trump read his draft Comey termination letter aloud to several advisers, including White House counsel Don McGahn and Vice President Mike Pence. Together with Kushner and then-chief of staff Reince Priebus, McGahn and Pence drafted talking points about Comey’s planned firing. Meanwhile, Trump asked Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein for a memo outlining their problems with Comey. They complied, and Trump cited their recommendations as his reason for firing the FBI director. On May 9, Trump fired Comey.

 

 

  • All of that went for naught on May 10, when Trump confessed, first on May 10 to Russians in the Oval Office and then, on May 11, to the world on NBC, that he made the decision to fire Comey because of “Russia.”

 

  • The next day—as The New York Times reported on Trump’s Jan. 27 “loyalty dinner” with Comey—Trump again used Twitter to intimidate a key witness:

  • Asked at a May 18 news conference whether he had ever asked Comey to close or back down on the investigation into Mike Flynn, Trump answered, “No. No. Next question.”

 

  • On June 8, Comey told the Senate Intelligence Committee that Trump had asked him about Russia repeatedly and that he perceived Trump’s expressed “hope” about “letting Flynn go” as an order. The next day, Trump called Comey a liar and accused him of leaking classified information.

 

  • After the May 17 appointment of a special counsel to investigate Trump-Russia connections, Trump’s attacks on Robert Mueller were relentless, along with reports that Trump was considering firing him. In a July 19 interview with The New York Times, Trump referred to what he viewed as the appropriate limits to Mueller’s investigation. A week later, The Wall Street Journal asked him if Mueller’s job is safe. “No, we’re going to see,” Trump said.

 

  • Meanwhile, on July 8, 2017, Trump was helping his son draft a misleading statement about a June 9, 2016 campaign meeting at Trump Tower between his top advisers and three Russians who had promised to bring “dirt” on Hillary Clinton. The cover-up of that cover-up—that is, obfuscating the extent of Trump’s role in drafting his son’s original statement—lasted less than a month.

Why has Trump tried to shut down the Russia investigation, lied about Comey’s firing, persisted in efforts to intimidate key witnesses, inserted himself into misleading statements about his campaign advisers’ meetings with Russians offering to help him win the election, and held the sword of Damocles over the special counsel investigating him? Behind any effort to obstruct justice is a fear of the truth.

In a thorough 108-page factual and legal analysis for the Brookings Institution, Barry H. Berke, Noah Bookbinder, and Norman Eisen outline in great detail the case against Trump. People lie for a reason, and Trump is no exception. What he feared—and apparently still fears—continues to seep out.

Trump’s erratic behavior has many questioning his mental fitness to remain in office. But throughout his life, Trump’s actions have always been rational in a key respect: Trump does what is best for Trump. If that means obstructing justice, so be it.

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH OCT. 17, 2017

Could there be a correlation between Trump’s intensifying chaos and the unfolding story of the Trump-Russia investigation?

Additions to our main Trump-Russia Timeline:

  • On or Shortly After Jan. 10, 2017: Manafort Calls Priebus About ‘Steele Dossier’
  • March 3, 2017: Trump Vents Anger About Sessions Recusal [revision of previous entry]
  • July 14, 2017: Trump Campaign’s Digital Director Issues Statement
  • Oct. 4, 2017: Nunes Signs Subpoenas Relating to ‘Steele Dossier’
  • Oct. 5, 2017: Trump Dines with Priebus
  • Oct. 10, 2017: Page To Take the Fifth
  • Oct. 11, 2017: Cambridge Analytica Cooperating with House Probe
  • Oct. 11, 2017: Trump Drags Feet on Russian Sanction
  • Oct. 12, 2017: House Threatens to Subpoena Stone
  • Oct. 13, 2017: Mueller Interviews Priebus
  • Oct. 13, 2017: NBC: More Manafort Money Ties to Russian Oligarch
  • Oct. 13, 2017: Russian Banker Denies Felix Sater’s Trump Tower Claims

Additions to our timeline of the Comey firing:

  • Oct. 5, 2017: Trump Dines with Priebus
  • Oct. 13, 2017: Mueller Interviews Priebus

Additions to our Kushner Timeline:

  • July 14, 2017: Trump Campaign’s Digital Director Issues Statement
  • Oct. 11, 2017: Cambridge Analytica Cooperating with House Probe

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH OCT. 9, 2017

Lost in the controversy over the “Steele dossier” is an important fact: Key aspects of Christopher Steele’s investigation turned out to be true.

Here’s a list of what we added with our Oct. 9 update:

Additions to our main Trump-Russia Timeline:

  • Sept. 10, 2013: US Attorney Bharara Files Prevezon Case
  • Early August 2016: Steele Gives the FBI Documents About Alleged Trump-Russia Connections
  • June 9, 2016: Don Jr., Manafort, Kushner Meet With Russian Lawyer [revision of previous entry]
  • Oct. 31, 2016: David Corn Breaks ‘Steele Dossier’ Story
  • Dec. 9, 2016: McCain Delivers ‘Steele Dossier’ to FBI Director Comey
  • Jan. 6, 2017: CIA, FBI, NSA: ‘Putin Ordered an Influence Campaign in 2016’ [revision of previous entry]
  • Jan. 10, 2017: BuzzFeed Publishes ‘Steele Dossier’
  • Jan. 10, 2017: Trump Dismisses ‘Steele Dossier’ as ‘Fake News’
  • Jan. 11, 2017: Trump Blasts ‘Steele Dossier’
  • Jan. 11, 2017: Trump Tweets About BuzzFeed and Russia
  • Jan. 11, 2017: WSJ Identifies Author of ‘Steele Dossier’
  • Jan. 13, 2017: Trump Dismisses Steele as ‘Failed Spy’ Promoting ‘Fake News’
  • Jan. 14, 2017: Trump Tweets About ‘Steele Dossier’
  • Jan. 15, 2017: Trump: ‘We Should Trust Putin’; Blasts Steele
  • March 10, 2017: Trump Fires US Attorney Preet Bharara and 45 Other US Attorneys [revision of previous entry]
  • March 21, 2017: Magnitsky’s Lawyer Suffers Severe Injuries [revision of previous entry]
  • May 12, 2017: DOJ Settles Civil Russian Money Laundering Case; Criminal Case Continues [revision of previous entry]
  • Summer 2017: Mueller Interviews Steele
  • July 2017: Nunes’ Aide Sends Staffers to Contact Steele
  • Oct. 6, 2017: Steele Talking to Senate Intelligence Committee

Additions to our timeline of the Comey firing:

  • Dec. 9, 2016: McCain Delivers ‘Steele Dossier’ to FBI Director Comey
  • Summer 2017: Mueller Interviews Steele

Additions to our Kushner Timeline:

  • June 9, 2016: Don Jr., Manafort, Kushner Meet With Russian Lawyer [revision of previous entry]
  • May 12, 2017: DOJ Settles Civil Russian Money Laundering Case; Criminal Case Continues [revision of previous entry]

Here’s a list of what we added with our Oct. 7 update:

Additions to our main Trump-Russia Timeline:

  • June 14, 2016: Rohrabacher’s Request to Show Pro-Russia Film During House Committee Hearing is Denied
  • Nov. 8, 2016: Election Day Troubles [revision of previous entry]
  • April 11, 2017: Rohrabacher Meets with Rinat Akhmetshin in Berlin
  • Oct. 3, 2017: Mueller Researching Limits of Presidential Pardon Power
  • Oct. 4, 2017: Interim Press Conference with Senate Intelligence Committee Chair and Vice-chair
  • Oct. 4, 2017: Senate Intelligence Committee Leaders Announce Briefing; Trump Tweets
  • Oct. 5, 2017: Trump Tweets

Additions to our timeline of the Comey firing:

  • Oct. 3, 2017: Mueller Researching Limits of Presidential Pardon Power
  • Oct. 4, 2017: Interim Press Conference with Senate Intelligence Committee Chair and Vice-chair

Additions to our Kushner Timeline:

  • Nov. 8, 2016: Election Day Troubles [revision of previous entry]

Here’s a list of what we added with our Oct. 2 update:

Additions to our main Trump-Russia Timeline:

  • October 2015: Cohen Receives Proposal for Moscow Residential Project
  • March 31, 2016: Trump Meets with Foreign Policy Advisers
  • April 11, 2016: Manafort to Russian Business Associate: ‘How Do We Use to Get Whole?’
  • June 2016: Sater Emails Cohen About Attending Russian International Economic Forum
  • July 7, 2016: Manafort Offers to Brief Oligarch Close to Putin [revision of previous entry]
  • July 18, 2016: Trump Campaign Successfully Changes GOP Platform on Ukraine [revision of previous entry]
  • June 15, 2017: Pence Hires Outside Attorney, Says He Will Cooperate with Mueller [revision of previous entry]
  • June 15, 2017: Reports: Mueller Is Investigating Kushner; McGahn Worries About Kushner-Trump Meetings
  • July 15, 2017: White House Hires Attorney for Trump-Russia Matters [revision of previous entry]
  • Sept. 28, 2017: Mueller Interviews NSC Chief of Staff Kellogg
  • Sept. 28, 2017: Senators are Concerned that Trump May Not Enforce New Russia Sanctions
  • Sept. 29, 2017: Fox News: Investigators Reviewing March 2016 Meeting of Trump Campaign’s National Security Advisers

Additions to our timeline of the Comey firing:

  • June 15, 2017: Pence Hires Outside Attorney, Says He Will Cooperate with Mueller [revision of previous entry]
  • Sept. 28, 2017: Mueller Interviews NSC Chief of Staff Kellogg
  • Sept. 29, 2017: Fox News: Investigators Reviewing March 2016 Meeting of Trump Campaign’s National Security Advisers

Additions to our Kushner Timeline:

  • June 15, 2017: Reports: Mueller Is Investigating Kushner; McGahn Worries About Kushner-Trump Meetings
  • July 15, 2017: White House Hires Attorney for Trump-Russia Matters [revision of previous entry]

Additions to our Pence Timeline:

  • June 15, 2017: Pence Hires Outside Attorney, Says He Will Cooperate with Mueller [revision of previous entry]

DAN RATHER’S AMERICA

Excerpts from my Oct. 3, 2017 appearance on “Dan Rather’s America” (on Radio Andy – Sirius XM 102 Radio):

Steven Harper Tells Dan Rather Why the Russia Investigation Is Not Overblown
https://youtu.be/4HVaplkgrG8

Steven Harper on Jared Kushner’s Role in the Evolving Russia Investigation
https://youtu.be/7O1UnJ_dzws

Is “Attack” Too Strong of a Term to Describe Russia’s Actions?
https://youtu.be/u2MN-Gnvqqk

 

DAN RATHER INTERVIEW

Here are three short excerpts from my Oct. 3 interview with Dan Rather on Sirius XM 102 — “Dan Rather’s America” on Radio Andy:
**
Steven Harper Tells Dan Rather Why the Russia Investigation Is Not Overblown
https://youtu.be/4HVaplkgrG8
**
Steven Harper on Jared Kushner’s Role in the Evolving Russia Investigation https://youtu.be/7O1UnJ_dzws
**
Is “Attack” Too Strong of a Term to Describe Russia’s Actions? https://youtu.be/u2MN-Gnvqqk

OCTOBER 3, 2017

On Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2017, you can:

  1. Listen to my conversation with Dan Rather on Sirius XM Channel 102. (“Dan Rather’s America” on Radio Andy at 10:00 am EDT) We’ll be discussing the Trump-Russia Timeline at BillMoyers.com
  2. Take advantage of a Kindle promotion and download my novel, The Partnership.” Through Oct. 7, it’s free. 

TRUMP LAWYERS, BEWARE!

[This post first appeared at BillMoyers.com on Sept. 28, 2017.]

NOTE: On October 3, 2017 at 10:00 EDT/9:00 CDT, my interview with Dan Rather on the Trump-Russia Timeline will air on “Dan Rather’s America” — Radio Andy, Sirius XM 102

Former White House counsel John Dean counted 21 lawyers involved in Watergate wrongdoing. Among the most prominent were President Richard M. Nixon, White House Domestic Affairs Adviser John Ehrlichman, Attorney General John Mitchell, Nixon’s personal attorney Herbert Kalmbach, White House special counsel Charles Colson, Egil “Bud” Krogh—who headed the “Plumbers” unit involved in the break-in—and Dean himself. History may not repeat itself, but sometimes it rhymes.

Obstructing justice requires more than a president’s single-handed efforts. It’s a team sport. Whether intentional or unwitting, complicit attorneys bring a unique disgrace to their profession and do enormous damage to the country. Upon admission to the bar, all of Trump’s advisers with JDs swore an oath to defend the Constitution and uphold the rule of law. Beginning the week of Oct. 1, many of them could face tough questions about whether they witnessed or participated in criminal wrongdoing at the highest levels of government.

At the moment, special counsel Robert Mueller has Trump’s former campaign chairman Paul Manafort (JD, Georgetown, ’74) in the hottest seat. But Mueller has also informed the White House that he wants to interview at least three lawyers who are present or former staffers. Others inside and outside the White House could join that line.

If he is following a typical prosecutorial approach—working from the bottom up in questioning witnesses who may have information pertinent to the investigation—Mueller has already reached rarified air. One of his early picks now sits in the office that John Dean once occupied, White House counsel Don McGahn (JD, Widener, ‘94), who reportedly has “a couple documents” so sensitive that he keeps them locked in a safe and away from Trump’s personal attorney, Ty Cobb (JD, Georgetown, ’78). Thanks to Cobb’s recent public comments over lunch with another Trump attorney, John Dowd (JD, Emory, ’65), Mueller can now be quite specific in seeking that material.

Long before the Cobb-Dowd luncheon that will become a case study in law school courses on professional irresponsibility, Mueller said he wanted to speak with one of McGahn’s deputies, James Burnham, (JD, U of Chicago, ’09). Burnham was reportedly with McGahn on Jan. 26, 2017, when acting Attorney General Sally Yates told them about her concerns with then-national security adviser Michael Flynn. Yet for more than two weeks after that briefing, Flynn remained in the nation’s most sensitive national security post. Reasonable investigators might want to know what McGahn did during to protect the country during that period. After all, the White House counsel is not any president’s personal attorney.

The third lawyer reportedly on Mueller’s current request list is Reince Priebus (JD, Miami, ’98). Other than as an indefatigable Trump defender, Priebus’ role in the Flynn episode is unclear. But Priebus was at the center of another Trump firestorm: the cover-up relating to the firing of FBI Director James Comey.

Apparently, Mueller has not yet questioned other attorneys involved in the Comey cover-up, but everyone knows who they are. Jared Kushner (JD/MBA, NYU, ’07) spent the weekend at Bedminster, NJ urging Trump to fire Comey. Then he reportedly joined Priebus, McGahn, and Vice President Mike Pence (JD-Indiana-Robert W. McKinney, ’86) to draft talking points. Pence saw or heard Trump read aloud his four-page letter outlining the reasons he was firing Comey. Pence also took the cover-up to Capitol Hill.

A president’s outside attorneys are at risk, too. On July 12, 2017, one of Trump’s personal lawyers, Jay Sekulow (JD, Mercer, ’80), told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos that Trump had no role in drafting Don Jr.’s first misleading statement about the June 9, 2016 meeting between top Trump advisers and three Russians. “The president didn’t sign off on anything,” he said. Four days later, he told NBC’s Chuck Todd the same thing: “I do want to be clear – that the president was not involved in the drafting of the statement and did not issue the statement.” Sekulow’s best defense now is that he didn’t know what he was talking about.

Since Nixon’s impeachment, the seminal lesson of political scandals has been: “It’s not the crime; it’s the cover-up.” Eventually, the public will learn whether Trump’s advisers have heeded that lesson. When that day arrives, it could become an especially embarrassing moment for those with legal degrees.

 

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH SEPT. 28, 2017

If you think it’s been a quiet week for the Trump-Russia story at BillMoyers.com, think again….

Additions to our main Trump-Russia Timeline:

  • 1980: Stone and Manafort Start a Business [revision of previous entry]
  • 1988: Stone Urges Trump to Run for President
  • 2012: Trump Again Considers Presidential Bid
  • June 2015 to May 2017: Kremlin-linked Russian Company Buys Ads on Facebook; Russian Actors Also Used Twitter [revision of previous entry]
  • Sept. 22, 2017: Russians Continue Using Twitter to Support Trump
  • Sept. 22, 2017: Former DNI Clapper Expresses Doubt About Legitimacy of Trump’s Election
  • Sept. 25, 2017: Stone Decries Congressional Hearings
  • Sept. 26, 2017: Mueller Interviews of White House Staffers to Begin
  • Sept. 26, 2017: Senate Hearings on Legislation to Protect Mueller
  • Sept. 26, 2017: Russian Facebook Ads Supported Trump
  • Sept. 27, 2017: Trump Tweets About Facebook
  • Sept. 28, 2017: Twitter Says It Has Cracked Down on Russian Accounts

Additions to our timeline of the Comey firing:

  • Sept. 26, 2017: Mueller Interviews of White House Staffers to Begin
  • Sept. 26, 2017: Senate Hearings on Legislation to Protect Mueller

 

My First Book is Now Available in Paperback

Crossing Hoffa: A Teamster’s Story
My first book — a Chicago Tribune “Best Book of the Year” — is now available in paperback

You can read it on Kindle, too.

Click here to read some of the reviews

 

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH SEPT. 25, 2017

Here are the latest updates the Trump-Russia, Kushner, and Comey Firing Timelines to include these entries at BillMoyers.com:

Additions to our main Trump-Russia Timeline:

  • July 7, 2016: Manafort Offers to Brief Oligarch Close to Putin [revision of previous entry]
  • Nov. 8, 2016: Election Day Troubles [revision of previous entry]
  • December 2016: Kushner Establishes Private Email Account for Government Business
  • Sept. 18, 2017: Reports: Mueller Threatened ‘to Indict’ Manafort; Manafort Was Under Surveillance Before, During and After Campaign [revision of previous entry]
  • Sept. 21, 2017: Facebook Agrees to Give Congress 3,000 Russian Ads
  • Sept. 22, 2017: Trump Tweets
  • Sept. 22, 2017: DHS Finally Notifies States That Russian Hackers Targeted Their Election Systems
  • Sept. 24, 2017: White House Stonewalling; Nunes on Offense

Additions to our Kushner Timeline:

  • December 2016: Kushner Establishes Private Email Account for Government Business

Additions to our timeline of the Comey firing:

  • Sept. 24, 2017: White House Stonewalling; Nunes on Offense

 

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH SEPT. 21, 2017

It’s already been a busy week for the Trump-Russia Timeline and a bad week for Paul Manafort. Here are the Updates so far:

Additions to our main Trump-Russia Timeline:

  • July 7, 2016: Manafort Offers to Brief Oligarch Close to Putin
  • Aug. 20, 2016: Russian Trolls Organize Trump Events in Florida
  • June or July 2017: Mueller Interviews Rosenstein
  • Sept. 19, 2017: Manafort’s Lawyer Responds
  • Sept. 19, 2017: Michael Cohen Issues Statement; Senate Intelligence Committee Not Pleased
  • Sept. 19, 2017: RNC Paying Legal Fees for Donald Trump and Don Jr.
  • Sept. 20, 2017: Mueller Seeking White House Documents on Flynn, Comey Firings

Additions to our timeline of the Comey firing:

  • June or July 2017: Mueller Interviews Rosenstein
  • Sept. 20, 2017: Mueller Seeking White House Documents on Flynn, Comey Firings

THE CHARLOTTE SCHOOL OF LAW AND A WHISTLEBLOWER

The latest developments at the Charlotte School of Law are the culmination of regulatory capture. The last significant ABA task force addressing the crisis in legal education kicked the can down the road, as did all of its predecessors. That came as no surprise because the head of the task force was Dennis W. Archer. He also chaired the national policy board of InfiLaw, a consortium of Charlotte and two other marginal for-profit law schools owned by venture capitalists.

The Persistent Problem

Without the ability to exploit vulnerable prospective law students willing to incur six-figure law school debt in return for limited prospects of meaningful JD-required jobs, the InfiLaw schools—Charlotte, Arizona Summit, and Florida Coastal School of Law—probably would have gone out of business long ago. It’s a safe bet that InfiLaw’s owners would not send their kids to any of them.

Only recently did the ABA take steps to revoke Charlotte’s accreditation. The school lost access to student loan money, and now its doors are closed. In March 2017, the ABA put Arizona Summit on probation for reasons that included a 25 percent bar exam passage rate for its July 2016 graduates taking the test for the first time. Florida Coastal’s 2016 graduates are faring so poorly in the job market that its end may be in sight: only 36 percent of graduates obtained full-time long-term JD-required jobs. Meanwhile, Florida Coastal grads have the distinction of obtaining degrees from a school that is among the leaders in law school debt: almost $160,000. Arizona Summit’s grads are right up there with them.

For years, InfiLaw has been a poster child for a persistent problem, but it’s not the only offender. Ten years after the Great Recession decimated the demand for new law school graduates, the ABA has ignored a perverse incentive system arising from a dysfunctional market. Specifically, marginal law schools lack accountability for their graduates’ poor job prospects. Those schools live on student loans—which is to say that they would die without them. But once students make their tuition payments, their schools have no skin in the game.

Even Archer’s task force report acknowledged that 25 percent of law schools derive at least 88 percent of their revenues from tuition. The overriding goal becomes maximizing revenues by filling classroom seats with tuition-paying bodies. At most marginal schools, that has meant lowering admission standards–an action that later reflects itself in declining bar passage rates for graduates. The result: unemployed law school graduates are burdened with enormous non-dischargeable debt for degrees of dubious value.

What Will It Take?

Perhaps a Charlotte whistleblower will bring change to a profession that has shown a consistent unwillingness to police itself. The allegations from former Charlotte School of Law Professor Barbara Bernier, who filed suit in June 2016 under the False Claims Act, prompted a federal investigation. She alleges that the school defrauded taxpayers of more than $285 million over a five-year period. According to the suit, Charlotte used dubious tactics to shore up the school’s performance numbers, protect its accreditation, and keep federal student loan dollars flowing.

Bernier claims that admissions officers had quotas of students they had to accept to keep their jobs. She alleges that over a six-year period beginning in 2010, 1,355 substandard students were enrolled, resulting in improper government payments to the school totaling $285 million. She asserts that the school discouraged some students from taking the bar exam because it thought they were likely to fail. Even so, the school’s pass rate has dropped steadily and its February 2017 results were the worst in the state: 25 percent. For those repeating the exam, the February 2017 news was worse: 18 percent passed.

How could this happen? A better question is, why wouldn’t it? Bernier’s allegations are consistent with revenue-maximizing behavior that the current law school business model incentivizes without regard to graduates’ outcomes.

“At Charlotte, there was constant talk of investors — referring to the school’s owners,” the Charlotte School of Law whistleblower professor told The New York Times, “and the focus was on the number of students. They were bringing them in and setting them up and then failing them out.”

InfiLaw has until Oct. 20 to file a formal answer to the complaint. Perhaps someday its owners and those who run other marginal law schools across the country will answer to their students who leave such institutions with big debt and limited JD-required job prospects. Every year, the ranks of those alumni grow.

USING THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: IDENTIFYING TRUMP’S TELLS

[This article first appeared at Billmoyers.com on Sept. 19, 2017]

Trump dominates the news constantly. But consider the timing of his most stunning words, deeds and tweets in the context of the Trump-Russia Timeline and this question emerges: What happened in the Russia investigation to set him off this time? Sometimes, the public doesn’t learn the answer for months. But eventually, a pattern becomes clear. Some of his worst outbursts are connected to his biggest problem: Russia.

For example, on Jan. 27, Trump issued his first immigration travel ban. Defense Secretary James Mattis saw the executive order only a few hours before Trump arrived at the Pentagon for the signing ceremony. As Trump signed it, Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly was on the phone receiving his first full briefing on the new policy. Because Customs and Border Protection officials had no advance warning that the ban was coming, the result was worldwide chaos. Airports became scenes of mass demonstrations.

Everyone listening to Trump’s campaign rhetoric knew that some kind of immigration ban was coming. But why rush it out only a week after the inauguration? Observers blamed the debacle on incompetence and inexperience. But perhaps other events — unknown to the public at the time — played a part.

A day before Trump issued the ban, Acting Attorney General Sally Yates was telling White House counsel Don McGahn that then-national security adviser Michael Flynn was vulnerable to Russian blackmail. She said that White House statements about Flynn’s contacts with the Russian ambassador in late December 2016 — as President Obama was imposing new sanctions for Putin’s interference with the US election — didn’t line up with what the Justice Department knew to be true. The next day, Trump invited then-FBI Director James Comey to dinner, where he asked for Comey’s personal loyalty and received a cool response.

A single coincidence of three stunning events — Yates’ revelations to McGahn, the Comey loyalty dinner, and the botched rollout of an illegal travel ban — would not alone prove that Trump’s most jaw-dropping comments, accusations and policy pronouncements are reactions to or deflections from bad news about the Russia investigation. But consider the context surrounding some of Trump’s other dramatic presidential moments.

***

***

***

  • Bad news: Beginning on July 8 and continuing throughout the month, reports about the June 9, 2016 meeting among Trump’s top campaign advisers and the Russians dribbled out. On July 18, 2017, The Washington Post and CNN identified the last of the three Russian attendees — an employee of the Russian real estate company owned by Aras Agalarov and his son, Emin. Trump had prior — and quite profitable for Trump — business dealings with the Agalarovs.
  • Trump outburst: In an expansive interview with The New York Times on July 19 and contemporaneous tweets, Trump launched attacks on Attorney General Jeff Sessions, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, and former FBI Director Comey.

***

  • Bad news: On July 25, in advance of his congressional testimony, American financier William Browder released a statement explaining the interconnections between US sanctions, Putin and Russian adoptions — the supposed topic of the June 9, 2016 meeting between top Trump campaign advisers and the Russians. On the morning of July 26, the FBI conducted a surprise raid on the home of Trump’s former campaign manager, Paul Manafort.
  • Trump outburst: A few hours after the Manafort raid and without consulting the secretary of defense or the joint chiefs of staff, Trump tweeted a new ban on military service by transgender individuals. Senior military officials immediately distanced themselves from Trump’s tweet.

***

***

  • Bad news: Around Aug. 11 – Mueller told the White House that he wanted to interview numerous Trump staffers.
  • Trump outburst: Aug. 11-12 – Trump refuses to denounce white supremacy in his condemnation of the Charlottesville attacks, instead noting “violence on many sides” of what was clearly an incident of domestic, white supremacist terrorism. He then takes off on a campaign tour during which he continues to draw attention to his earlier comments, stir up controversy, divide Americans, and dominate the news.

***

  • Bad news: Sept. 17-18 — The New York Times reported that one of its journalists overheard two of Trump’s personal lawyers — John Dowd and Ty Cobb — at a Washington, DC restaurant publicly discussing internal strategy disagreements over Trump’s defense. The dispute involved Cobb’s and White House counsel Don McGahn’s differing opinions on how to deal with special counsel Mueller’s discovery requests. Reportedly, Cobb wanted to disclose everything; McGahn wanted to hold some materials back. “He’s got a couple documents locked in a safe,” Cobb told Dowd. Then on Sept. 18, The Times reported that when the FBI raided Manafort’s home, special counsel Mueller reportedly informed him that he would be indicted. Later that day, CNN reported that the FBI had obtained a FISA warrant to tape Manafort’s telephone conversations prior to and after the election.
  • Trump outburst: Sept. 17 — Trump retweets several bizarre images, including a video of him hitting a golf ball that strikes Hillary Clinton in the back and causes her to stumble as she boards a plane.

In context, Trump’s dangerous and often divisive outbursts suggest that the country is at the mercy of a president who uses the power of his office to exploit a manipulable press, vulnerable citizens and tragic events in the service of eclipsing the issue that continues to dog his presidency: the Russia investigation. They’re also what poker players call “tells” — inadvertent revelations. When he acts out in ways that are extreme — even for Trump — he could be revealing that something he doesn’t like is unfolding in the story that he wants everyone to ignore: Russia. At those moments, everyone should pay especially close attention to it.

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH SEPT. 18, 2017

Here are the latest additions to the Trump-Russia Timeline at Billmoyers.com. I’ve also added new names to the Timeline’s filtering function: Steve Bannon, Robert Mercer, Julian Assange, Rep. Dana Rohrbacher, Rep. Devin Nunes, and Cambridge Analytica.

Additions to our main Trump-Russia Timeline:

  • Nov. 8-11, 2013: The Miss Universe Pageant in Moscow [revision of previous entry]
  • June 2015 to May 2017: Kremlin-linked Russian Company Buys Ads on Facebook [revision of previous entry]
  • June 2016: Kushner Takes Control of Trump Digital Effort and Hires Cambridge Analytica [revision of previous entry]
  • May 12, 2017: DOJ Settles Civil Russian Money Laundering Case; Criminal Case Continues [revision of previous entry]
  • Sept. 6, 2017: Facebook Reverses Earlier Denials; Admits Russian Trolls Bought Ads During Election
  • During the week of Sept. 11, 2017: McGahn Has “A Couple Documents Locked in a Safe”
  • Sept. 13, 2017: GOP Congressman Seeks Pardon for Assange
  • Sept. 18, 2017: NYT Reports Manafort “to be indicted”; FBI Taped Him

Additions to our Kushner Timeline:

  • June 2015 to May 2017: Kremlin-linked Russian Company Buys Ads on Facebook [revision of previous entry]
  • June 2016: Kushner Takes Control of Trump Digital Effort and Hires Cambridge Analytica [revision of previous entry]
  • May 12, 2017: DOJ Settles Civil Russian Money Laundering Case; Criminal Case Continues [revision of previous entry]
  • Sept. 6, 2017: Facebook Reverses Earlier Denials; Admits Russian Trolls Bought Ads During Election
  • Sept. 13, 2017: GOP Congressman Seeks Pardon for Assange

MIDWEEK UPDATES TO THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE

The plot thickens: Newest Additions to the Trump-Russia Timeline at Billmoyers.com. Here are the titles of the new or newly revised entries:

  • June 2015: Flynn Promotes Joint US-Russia Nuclear Project in Mideast
  • Late December 2016: Bannon, Flynn and Kushner Meet Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi [revision of previous entry]
  • During the Week of June 19, 2017: Trump Lawyers Reportedly Learn About Emails Relating to June 9, 2016, Meeting [revision of previous entry]
  • Sept. 2, 2017: DOJ: No Evidence of Wiretapping [revision of previous entry]
  • Sept. 12, 2017: Trump’s Press Secretary Says FBI Should Investigate Comey
  • Sept. 12, 2017: House Democrats Refer Potential Flynn Misconduct to Mueller
  • Sept. 13, 2017: Sarah Sanders Doubles-Down on Comey
  • Sept. 13, 2017: Mueller Investigating Flynn’s Son
  • Sept. 13, 2017: Rice’s Reasons for ‘Unmasking’ Trump’s Associates Satisfies GOP

 

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA TIMELINE: UPDATES THROUGH SEPT. 11, 2017

Here’s a link to the newest additions to the Trump-Russia Timeline at Billmoyers.com. The summary titles may pique your interest:

  • Oct. 3, 2013: Trump Praises Putin, Again
  • Feb. 10, 2014: Trump Says Putin Contacted Him in November 2013
  • April 12, 2014: Trump Praises Putin, Again
  • May 27, 2014: Trump Boasts about Relationship with Putin
  • June 20, 2014: Trump Embraces Putin’s Criticism of “American Exceptionalism”
  • March 18, 2015: Trump Launches Exploratory Committee for Presidential Bid
  • June 18, 2015: Trump Boasts about Russian Relationships
  • June 29, 2015: Trump Says He Can Get Along with Russians
  • June 2015 to May 2017: Kremlin-linked Russian Company Buys Ads on Facebook
  • Sept. 27, 2015: Trump Praises Putin, Again
  • Oct. 6, 2015: Trumps Says He’s Met Putin
  • Oct. 13, 2015: Sater Sends Michael Cohen Letter of Intent for Trump Tower Moscow
  • Oct. 17, 2015: “Putin Loves Donald Trump”
  • Nov. 10, 2016: Trump: ‘I Got to Know [Putin] Very Well’ [revision of previous entry]
  • April 26, 2016: Trump Embraces Putin, Again
  • June 3, 2016: Trump Repeats Putin’s PraisJune 6 and 7, 2016: Don Jr.’s Phone Calls with Emin Agalarov
  • June 9, 2016: Don Jr., Manafort, Kushner Meet With Russian Lawyer [revision of previous entry]
  • July 27, 2016: Trump Embraces Putin, Again
  • Sept. 7, 2016: Trump Embraces Putin, Again
  • Dec. 23, 2016: Trump Quotes Putin
  • March 2017: Don Jr. Denies Any Campaign Contacts with Russians
  • Sometime around Aug. 11, 2017: Mueller Wants to Interview White House Staffers
  • Sept. 5, 2017: Congressman Issues More Subpoenas Relating to Steele Dossier
  • Sept. 7, 2017: Don Jr. Talks to Senate Intelligence Committee

THE TRUMP-RUSSIA SCANDAL ROLLS ON

All eyes have been on Harvey-DACA-Korea-Irma. But the Trump-Russia TImeline on BillMoyers.com has stunning new entries.

And we now have new Interactive versions of

The Pence Timeline,

The Kushner Timeline, and

The Comey Firing Timeline.