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Führer Trump’s Impeachment Inquiry Thread. Update: The Senate completes the coverup


Intelligence IG Slaps Down Trump World’s False Claims About Whistleblower

The Office of the Inspector General of the Intelligence Community on Monday rejected an attempt by President Donald Trump and his allies to discredit the whistleblower who raised concerns about Trump’s July call with the Ukrainian president.

Ever since a whistleblower exposed Trump’s attempt to pressure the Ukrainian president to dig up dirt on Joe Biden, the President and his Republican allies have tried to discredit the whistleblower’s complaint by claiming it was based on “second hand information” and that Inspector General Michael Atkinson’s office had sneajily changed its requirement on whistleblower complaints right before the complaint in question was submitted on August 12.

Without directly responding to Trump, the inspector general’s office released a statement refuting Trump’s talking points. In the statement, the IG’s office said that the whistleblower did, in fact, include first-hand information in the complaint.

“The whistleblower stated on the form that he or she possessed both first-hand and other information,” the statement said.

Additionally, the IG’s office pointed out that even if the whistleblower only had second-hand information, the IG still would’ve accepted the complaint because the office’s statute does not require first-hand knowledge of the situation.

The statement also addresses conservatives’ conspiracy theory that the IG had changed its requirement right before the whistleblower submitted the complaint. The inspector general’s office explained that the whistleblower had used the same form the IG’s office has made available since May 24, 2018, and that the office had changed its forms (but not requirement itself) to clarify that whistleblowers did not need first-hand information.
 

Meet The Pro-Trump Power Couple Helping POTUS’ Shady Ukraine Schemes

Just four days ago, Joe diGenova and Victoria Toensing were on Sean Hannity’s primetime show, speaking in ominous tones about how the Trumpian bogeyman, George Soros, had funded the drive to impeach the President.

On Sunday, the husband-and-wife legal team was the subject of a story from the network: Fox News Sunday anchor Chris Wallace reported, citing a “top” unnamed government source, that they’d been doing “off-the-books” opposition research on Joe Biden, alongside Rudy Giuliani.

“The only person in government who knows what they were doing is President Trump,” Wallace said.

It was just another week in the life of the power couple, who’ve become favorite talking heads of the President and fierce critics of Democrats’ investigations into his activities.

DiGenova and Toensing — the former U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C. and the former deputy assistant attorney general, respectively — first crafted their public images as commentators during the impeachment of former President Bill Clinton (though diGenova had made a name for himself years earlier as the top federal prosecutor in D.C. during the investigation of Mayor Marion Barry).

As Howard Kurtz (now at Fox News, then at the Washington Post) wrote in February 1998, they’d been “quoted or on the tube more than 300 times in the month since the story broke.” A caption identified them as “sources, investigators, commentators.”

They are back at it. On Monday, Media Matters offered another staggering count: diGenova and Toensing have made over 90 appearances on Fox News and Fox Business Network in 2019.

The media hits clearly got the attention of Fox’s most prominent viewer. Back in March 2018, the pair were reported to be joining the President’s legal team. That never came to pass. But after years of swerving in and out of the public spotlight, the pair have picked up a number of other prominent clients in the Trump era.

At the time the couple was reported to be joining the Trump legal team, Toensing represented Blackwater founder Erik Prince, former campaign policy adviser Sam Clovis and, notably, former Trump legal team spokesperson Mark Corallo, who reportedly left that team over concerns that he’d witnessed obstruction of justice.

On Friday, the Kyiv Post reported another notable client: Dmitry Firtash, former business partner of Paul Manafort, who fled Ukraine after the 2014 revolution as Viktor Yanukovych’s government was swept out of power. Firtash is fighting extradition to the United States on bribery charges. DiGenova and Toensing’s firm didn’t immediately respond to TPM’s request to confirm their representation of Firtash.

Firtash’s case recently benefitted from an affidavit signed by none other than Viktor Shokin, the former Ukrainian prosecutor general whose ouster Trump allies have tried, unsuccessfully, to prove was an effort by Joe Biden to protect his son Hunter Biden.

A few days after news broke last year that they were joining Trump’s legal team, Trump lawyer Jay Sekulow announced that, in fact, “conflicts prevent Joe diGenova and Victoria Toensing from joining the president’s special counsel legal team.”

But, he added, “those conflicts do not prevent them from assisting the president in other legal matters. The President looks forward to working with them.”

Until now, it wasn’t clear what those “other legal matters” were, outside of fiery public denunciations of Trump’s enemies that the President eagerly retweeted.

A quick search through Twitter reveals multiple instances in which Trump quoted diGenova from the @ realDonaldTrump account.

“The recusal of Jeff Sessions was an unforced betrayal of the President of the United States,” Trump quoted diGenova as saying in a May 30, 2018 tweet. “Hillary Clinton clearly got a pass by the FBI,” he wrote two weeks later.

Then, after that August 2018 tweet, silence: Trump tweeted no more quotes from the fiery lawyer, until… this month.

“Comey and McCabe (and more) are Dirty Cops,” Trump quoted diGenova as saying on Sept. 1. Another quote two weeks later: “We cannot have what happened to this President happen again […] it is time for Justice to come barreling in.”

Toensing, diGenova and Giuliani have all denied Fox News’ reporting that Giuliani had any help in his Ukrainian opposition research efforts — though diGenova did acknowledge in an interview on WBAL that he had spoken with Giuliani at one point about representing Ukrainian whistleblowers.

Nonetheless, the storylines appear to be somewhat connected: Just before Hannity interviewed diGenova and Toensing on Thursday about their views on the Ukraine story, Hannity had on another guest: John Solomon.

Earlier Thursday, Solomon wrote a post in The Hill that included the affidavit from Shokin.

In it, Shokin made the case that the Obama administration had shown a political bias against Firtash.

“Tonight, I’ve posted for the first time a sworn affidavit obtained by lawyers for a Ukrainian oligarch,” Solomon told Hannity on Thursday, referring to Firtash. Two minutes later, lawyers reportedly representing that same oligarch — diGenova and Toensing — appeared as Hannity’s next interviewees.

DiGenova praised Solomon, saying the “official records that are now available are going to really shoot a hole in [Democrats’] ship.”
 

Absent A War Room, Trump Runs Impeachment Defense From His Twitter

President Donald Trump has eschewed the coordinated response and war room favored by former President Bill Clinton during impeachment, opting instead for a scattershot defense helmed by his Twitter feed.

According to the Washington Post, the loose theme of the defense is to attack the detractors, like the Bidens.

Some Republicans reportedly wish that Trump would run a tighter ship, as he has in recent days floated that impeachment could cause a Civil War and asserted that he is actively trying to unmask the whistleblower.

Trump is mostly concerned with keeping those Republicans on board, as he can’t afford too many defections to avoid removal from office if the House impeaches him.
 

Giuliani Is ‘Weighing’ Whether To Appear For Testimony, Says He Has ‘Tapes’ To Share

President Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani is still deciding whether he will comply with House Democrats’ subpoena to appear for testimony, and claimed he had “video tapes” and other “evidence” he wants to share with Congress.

“I’m weighing my alternatives,” Giuliani told Fox News’ Sean Hannity on Monday evening. “I’ll get all my evidence together, I’ll get my charts. I don’t know, if they let me use my video tapes and tape recordings that I have, if they let me get some of the evidence that I gathered — and I have to tell you, Sean, all this nonsense about I was interfering in the election, I gathered all this evidence before the Mueller probe ended, so it was clearly under my responsibility as the lawyer for the President of the United States.”



Taking Giuliani’s remarks with a grain of salt, the former New York City mayor also started his with Hannity by spouting off on an unsubstantiated conspiracy about former President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton working with Ukraine to find dirt on Trump in 2017, after the 2016 election. He also spent the majority of the interview peddling his fabricated allegations against former Vice President Joe Biden– accusations that are the center of President Trump’s efforts to pressure the Ukrainian government to investigate Biden.



Giuliani was subpoenaed by members of the House Intelligence, Foreign Affairs and Oversight Committees on Monday, requesting documents related to his efforts in Ukraine to dig up dirt on Biden. The panels also requested information about Trump’s decision to temporarily withhold military aid from Ukraine around the same time he was pressuring the new Ukrainian president to probe the Biden family.

The subpoena is part of House Democrats quick moving impeachment inquiry, which Democratic leadership announced last week after revelations about the call were surfaced.
 

CNN: Trump’s Aides Warning Him There’s A Real Chance He’ll Be Impeached

President Trump’s aides and allies have warned him in recent days that there’s a real chance he might be impeached, according to CNN.

CNN’s Jim Acosta reported on Monday night that aides have “cautioned him just in the last few days he faces the real likelihood of impeachment,” adding that others close to Trump are “divided” on the gravity of House Democrats’ impeachment efforts.

“(Some aides are) reassuring the president that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is just placating Democrats and won’t ultimately drive the process toward an impeachment vote,” Acosta said.

The tid-bit comes on the heels of a House Democrats’ subpoena of Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani and reports that the White House is largely unorganized in its impeachment defense, letting Trump run his own defense from his Twitter account.

 

Why On Earth Does Trump Think A DNC Server Is Hidden In Ukraine?

As he pressured Ukraine’s President to produce dirt that would discredit the Mueller investigation, Donald Trump first turned to a hobby horse that has received far less attention than his allegations against Biden: the cybersecurity firm Crowdstrike.



Asking for a “favor,” according to a memorandum of the July 25 call the White House released Wednesday, Trump told Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, “I would like you to find out what happened with this whole situation with Ukraine, they say Crowdstrike” — then, the transcript includes an ellipsis.

“I guess you have one of your wealthy people,” the record of the call continues, interrupted by another ellipsis, then: “The server, they say Ukraine has it.”

Crowdstrike is a sophisticated cybersecurity firm founded in 2011 by George Kurtz and Dmitri Alperovitch. The memo provides only a hint at what Trump was getting at, but it’s clear it touches on a right-wing conspiracy that’s stewed for months just under the surface.

Crowdstrike, the conspiracy goes, provided the FBI with false information incriminating Russian hackers while the DNC refused to hand over the servers themselves. The theory’s proponents accuse Democrats of planting evidence that their servers were hacked during the 2016 election — a breach that, arguably, contributed to Hillary Clinton’s loss that November.

This, some right-wingers strenuously assert, gave Democrats cover for the supposed murder of Seth Rich, the former DNC staffer who, conspiracists believe, was the real source of the stolen emails published by Wikileaks. (Rich’s family has repeatedly asked prominent right wingers, including via a pending lawsuit against Fox News, to stop spreading this fake story.)

In reality, Crowdstrike has had a hand investigating a number of high-profile hacking incidents, including the North Korean cyber-intrusion into Sony Pictures. But its work in 2016 for the Democratic National Committee brought the company to front pages worldwide.

It entered the scene in April 2016 after the DNC was hacked, one of several intrusions that ended with Democratic operatives’ stolen emails being published by the thousands online, where they became fodder for news cycles and then-candidate Donald Trump’s stump speeches. In the DNC’s case, the theft also included strategy documents, fundraising data, and opposition research, the Mueller report later confirmed.

The saga culminated on July 22, when Wikileaks published emails stolen from the DNC that tore the party apart and led DNC Chair Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) to resign that position. By July 26, the New York Times first reported that intelligence agencies had told the White House that they had “high confidence” Russia was behind the hacks.

Shortly after the hacks in April, the DNC’s CEO Amy Dacey had heard from her operations chief about unusual activity. She told a DNC lawyer who in turn called Crowdstrike’s president.

In June, in a report on its website, CrowdStrike identified two hacker groups — nicknamed “Cozy Bear” and “Fancy Bear” — that it found were working for the Russian government. The Mueller report later confirmed that “Fancy Bear” had hacked the DNC and then assumed the identity Guccifer 2.0 to publicize its stolen documents. In a statement to news outlets after the White House published the Trump-Zelensky transcript, Crowdstrike said it “provided all forensic evidence and analysis to the FBI.”

But to some denizens of right-wing fever swamps — and eventually, high profile GOPers like indicted operative Roger Stone — the firm’s involvement was the starting point for wildly conspiratorial thinking, including the assertion that evidence the firm gave to the FBI was fabricated, just another opportunity for the “deep state” to target Trump.

Take for instance, the first mention of “Crowdstrike” (as reported by NBC Newsand BuzzFeed) on the message board 4chan, the starting point for many pro-Trump rumors and conspiracies.



This, in essence, is the seed from which Trump’s comment to Zelensky grew — that, rather than seeking the truth, Crowdstrike was actively working against him.

The theories rely on two broad groups of evidence: First, Crowdstrike provided its evidence, including copies of the hacked servers, to the FBI, but, as a January 2017 Breitbart News article pointed out, did not provide access to its physical infrastructure. While cybersecurity experts point out that this isn’t unusual, it was still useful to conspiracists: The data point is used to imply the DNC was covering something up in its servers.

Second, conspiracists weaponize information about Crowdstrike itself and use it to emphasize long-held suspicions by Trump and others that the Ukrainian government worked to subvert his campaign in 2016 — thus the part of Trump’s call with Zelensky about a mysterious Ukrainian oligarch and the bizarre supposition that the server is located in Ukraine.

Buzzfeed reported that some in the online far-right have linked Crowdstrike’s Moscow-born, American citizen owner, Dmitri Alperovitch, to Ukraine via his position as a fellow at the Atlantic Council — a D.C. think tank known for its focus on Ukraine. Ukrainian oligarch Viktor Pinchuk serves on the board of the Atlantic Council, and contributed to the Clinton Foundation, causing the temperatures of right-wing fever swamp creatures to skyrocket.

It’s not clear where Trump got the theory he advanced during his phone call, but he has been propagating versions of it throughout his presidency.

In a 2017 interview with the AP, for example, Trump asked a reporter why John Podesta and Hillary Clinton wouldn’t “allow the FBI to see the server? They brought in another company that I hear is Ukrainian-based.”

The reporter asked, “Crowdstrike?”

“That’s why I heard,” Trump replied. “I heard it’s owned by a very rich Ukrainian, that’s what I heard.”

Right-wing conspiracy theorists allege that the firm blamed Russia for the hack as part of a DNC-sponsored effort to cover up the murder of Seth Rich, who the cynical and the feverish hold responsible for sending internal DNC documents to Wikileaks. Elements of that theory have been promoted by the Russian government itself.



Elsewhere, far-right conservative media outpost Breitbart has boosted conspiracy theories around the firm. The website has portrayed Crowdstrike as a very circuitous arm of the Democratic Party. That has continued — on Saturday, Breitbart ran a story purporting to identify “common funding themes” between the whistleblower complaint and Crowdstrike.

Stone — a major proponent of the Seth Rich conspiracy theory — is now facing trial on charges of witness tampering and lying to Congress as part of its investigation into Russian interference in 2016.

The GOP provocateur had moved to produce the Crowdstrike report for his trial. But, in a bizarre twist of fate, the judge in his case denied Stone’s motion minutes after the White House released the Trump-Zelensky phone call.
 

Trump Warns Of ‘Civil War’ If He’s Removed. Some Followers Are Listening.

When President Donald Trump warned on his Twitter account of a “Civil War like fracture” if he is removed from office, the message had a special resonance with some of his heavier-armed supporters.



“We ARE on the verge of a HOT civil war,” the Twitter account for the Oath Keepers militia declared.

“Like in 1859,” it continued. “That’s where we are. And the Right has ZERO trust or respect for anything the left is doing. We see THEM as illegitimate too.” Trump supporters, the account added, “will NOT accept the results of a ‘successful’ impeachment as legitimate.”

The group is not a couple dozen preppers shooting guns in the woods, either. The Oath Keepers boasts thousands of members, many who are first responders, members of the military and veterans (hence the “oath” they swore to the Constitution). They have occupied American streets before, such as in Ferguson, where they carried military-style rifles and even monitored crowds from rooftops.

Alex Jones’ popular conspiracy channel InfoWars also seized on Trump’s message — as NBC News’ Ben Collins noted, talk of civil war is a mainstay for the media outlet, which frequently raises the topic in between ads for shady dietary supplements.

On Monday, a post on InfoWars’ website about the news pitched viewers: “TRUMP WARNS AMERICA: WE’RE IN DANGER OF ENTERING CIVIL WAR. From the show that told you first, learn what comes next!”

The President’s tweet, added to an already-roiling political environment, was an act of “stochastic terrorism,” former Obama administration Department of Homeland Security official Juliette Kayyem asserted on Twitter. The increasingly in-use term refers to political demagoguery that serves as the inspiration for random acts of politically motivated violence, such as mass shootings.

In recent months, supporters of the President have made headlines due to concerns about such attacks (or, in cases such as the recent massacre of Hispanic shoppers by a gunman in El Paso, actual mass violence).

For example, an Oregon man had his guns confiscated earlier this summer under the state’s new “red flag” laws after speaking of a plan to “slaughter” antifascists.

On the day House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced a formal impeachment inquiry of Trump, a Facebook page associated with the III% Security Force militia group linked to an article about Pelosi and wrote, “Someone should declare war on Domestic enemies if they are inside the country. Oh shit, dont repost or feds will come to your house..IDGAF.”

Another post on the militia’s public Facebook group, the next day, outlined “America’s Next Civil War Step by Step.” One step was “Militia activity becoming more widespread.” Another: “Political parties edging into becoming militias.” (In between those two, the author wrote: “YOU ARE HERE AND FAILING MISERABLY).”

A supporter of the President who claimed to be a member of the broader “III%” movement (so named because members assert that three percent of Americans served in Revolutionary War militias) put it more bluntly in a video he posted to Twitter.

The tweet, posted Sept. 24, has since been deleted. But in it, Twitter user “AlkireMike” included a video in which a man speaks directly to camera.

“At the end of the day, Mr. President, just know that if they try some illegal move to remove you from presidency, if there is an uprising of radical Islamic terrorists in this country, the three percenters are at your disposal,” he said. “All you have to do is come out on Twitter or national media and call us to arms, and we will show the world once again that America has the largest free-standing army with weapons, and firepower that they can’t even begin to fathom. You will have an army at your side at a moment’s notice, Mr. President. All you have to do is say the word.”


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Giuliani Lawyers Up With A Former Watergate Prosecutor

With the shadow of the Democrats’ impeachment inquiry looming over him, President Donald Trump’s personal lawyer apparently realized it’s time to get a lawyer of his own.


Multiple reports confirmed on Tuesday that Rudy Giuliani has hired former Watergate prosecutor Jon Sale as Democrats dig into Giuliani’s heavy involvement in Trump’s crusade to use resources from foreign governments to help his reelection efforts.

Politico reported that Sale agreed to serve as Giuliani’s lawyer on Monday, the same day House Democrats subpoenaed the former New York City mayor.

“We’re just starting to analyze what position we should take,” Sale told Politico.

However, Giuliani’s new legal representative has already identified a glaring flaw in the former New York City mayor’s blundering attempt to prove his innocence in the scandal.

“Every time I turn around, Rudy’s on another TV show,” he told CNN. “He and I could have a conversation, and then I turn on the television and he could be doing something else.”
 

The Ukrainian President Wants Nothing To Do With Trump’s Political Mess

The president of Ukraine has no interest in being dragged deeper into the political mess dogging President Trump.

During a press conference on Tuesday, President Volodymyr Zelensky told reporters that he has never once had contact with Trump’s attorney Rudy Giuliani, who has been hard at work drumming up bogus allegations against former Vice President Joe Biden regarding his son’s work in Ukraine.

“I’ve never met Rudy Giuliani, never, and I’ve never had any phone calls with him,” Zelensky told reporters at a press conference in Kyiv. Later, when asked by CNN if he was pressured by Trump to investigate Biden during a now-infamous call, Zelensky demurred further, parroting a talking point that Trump uttered during their first press appearance together amid the ongoing controversy last week.

“I’d like to tell you that I never feel pressure, I have lots of people who’d like to put pressure on me here and abroad,” he said. “But I’m the president of an independent Ukraine and I’d like to think, and my actions suggest, n0 one can put pressure on me.”

The recently elected president of Ukraine — a comedian-turned politician who pulled off a landslide victory against the incumbent president this past spring — may still heartily embrace a relationship with President Trump, whose unconventional path to the presidency ran parallel to parts of Zelensky’s unique rise to power.

But amid a presidential impeachment inquiry in the United States, which centers on the scandal that has emerged from his phone call with Trump, Zelensky has made pointed attempts in the past week to create distance between himself and the American president.

During that initial appearance with Trump last week in New York, Zelensky said that “nobody pushed me,” but pointed only to the White House’s record of the call as evidence that he wasn’t pressured, before saying he has no interest in being involved in the U.S. election. Trump then summed up an answer for him.

“I think you read everything. I think you read text,” Zelensky said last Wednesday. “I’m sorry, but I don’t want to be involved to democratic, open elections of U.S.A. No, you heard that we had good phone call. It was normal, we spoke about many things. I think, and you read it, that nobody pushed me.”

“In other words, no pressure,” Trump said.



 

Update To Classified System Keeps Log Of Who Accessed Docs Like Ukrainian Call

The White House reportedly updated the National Security Council secret codeword system in 2018, adding a feature that keeps track of who accessed documents like President Donald Trump’s call transcript with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

According to Politico, the update was installed to prevent leaks. Now that the whistleblower complaint revealed that Trump administration has been using the system to hide politically embarrassing calls with foreign leaders, Democrats will likely have a vested interest in who exactly stashed the transcripts behind codeword protection.

The update was installed after transcripts of Trump’s calls with the leaders of Australia and Mexico were leaked to the press last year.
 
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