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https://talkingpointsmemo.com/muckraker/maria-butina-pleads-guilty-to-conspiracy

Maria Butina Pleads Guilty To Conspiracy



WASHINGTON, D.C. – Accused Russian agent Maria Butina pleaded guilty in federal court today to one conspiracy charge, and has agreed to cooperate with the investigation.


Butina, appearing in court in a green jumpsuit, admitted to one count of conspiracy. As part of the plea agreement with the government, prosecutors dropped the other count in the indictment originally brought against her, and agreed not to prosecute her for any other crimes they were made aware of during their plea discussions.

A status hearing was set for Feb. 12, 2019 without any sentencing date set for the duration of her cooperation.

The conspiracy charge brings with it a maximum five year sentence, but, according to the plea agreement, her attorneys estimate that the sentencing guidelines that will be recommended to the judge will be 0-6 months incarceration. Prosecutors in the plea agreement don’t commit to a sentencing guideline estimate. Depending on how helpful Butia’s cooperation is to prosecutors, they may also file an additional letter suggesting the judge lessen that sentence. Butina also faces the possibility she will be deported after she serves any prison sentence the judge choses to impose.

Butina was arrested in July 2018 over allegations that she failed to register with the attorney general as an agent of the Russian government while infiltrating the National Rifle Association and National Prayer Breakfast. She initially pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Since then, her attorneys have struck a pugnacious tone in court filings, while the Kremlin has called her a “political prisoner” and accused Washington of violating her human rights.

Also revealed at the beginning of the hearing was the reason that Judge Tanya Chutkan mysteriously appointed a public defender to serve as an advisory counsel to Butina. She had held a mostly private teleconference last week regarding concerns raised by the government that there might be a conflict of interest issue because prosecutors had evidence — in the form of taped conversations — that Butina spoke with a journalist from jail, potentially in violation in of a gag order in the case.

Chutkan said she had not nor did she intend to make a finding on whether the gag order had been violated by Butina or her attorneys, but had appointed public defender A.J. Kramer so that the potential for a violation being found woudln’t influence Butina’s decision to plead guilty. Kramer told the court she had met with Butina before she signed the plea agreement, and Butina confirmed that she was waiving any conflict.

The judge, before proceeding with the mechanics involved in accepting Butina’s plea, also brought up a request that Butina’s attorney, Robert Driscoll, made last month. Driscoll had asked that Butina be transferred to the general population of the jail where she is being held, as her detention status has her segregated from the rest of those incarcerated.

The filing claimed she was suffering a “profound” psychological impact from her lack of human contact and stimulation, and the judge, who had denied that request, asked if Driscoll’s opinions on her mental state had changed. Driscoll said accommodations had been made since that filing to allow her out of her cell more often and that Butina “is doing well mentally.”

Butina appeared in court Thursday with her hair — a duller shade of red — in a braid. There was a hole by her left elbow in the white long-sleeved shirt she wore under her jumpsuit. She was mostly serious faced and showed no emotion as she answered the judge’s questions about the plea.

In a surprising turnaround for the gun-toting Siberia native, she has struck a deal to cooperate with federal investigators.

Erik Kenerson, an assistant U.S. Attorney from the U.S. Attorney’s office, read from a statement of offense that Butina agreed to which outlines the conspiracy to develop a “backchannel” line of communications with people connected to U.S. politics, without notifying the Attorney General.

In the statement, Butina admitted to working with Russian politician and central banker Aleksandr Torshin from March 2015 “to establish unofficial lines of communication with Americans having power and influence over U.S. politics.”

Torshin – a lifetime NRA member – reportedly retired last month.

That same month, Butina wrote a policy paper titled “Description of the Diplomacy Project,” suggesting that Russia “could use unofficial channels of communication” to influence U.S. foreign policy towards Moscow.

“Further, Butina opined that the circumstances were favorable for building relations with a certain U.S. political party,” the filing reads. Both in court and in the filings, prosecutors refer to what is apparently the GOP as “Political Party #1.” The president – referred to last week as “Individual 1” in a separate case, has not yet commented.

After sending the proposal to Torshin and others, Butina requested that an unnamed “Russian billionaire” pay her $125,000 to attend a series of conferences that Butina identified in the proposal and to “determine where the focus of Russian interests lies [sic] in cooperating with the US.”

Prosecutors write in the filing that Butina knew that Torshin “sometimes acted in consultation” with the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in one case telling Butina that he did not think the MFA would “go for it” on an attempt to “create a dialogue with the then-President Elect’s advisors.”

Butina’s longtime boyfriend – GOP operative Paul Erickson – is reportedly a focus of the probe.

Throughout the statement of offense, Erickson appears as “U.S. Person 1,” working with Butina to establish contacts with the Republican Party and NRA, including organizing a Russian delegation to the 2017 National Prayer Breakfast.

Butina wrote to Erickson that the Russian officials selected to come were invited “to establish a back channel of communication.”

Erickson helped Butina target Republican officials and pave the way for access to an unnamed “”wealthy and well-connected U.S. person” who hosted “friendship dinners where other wealthy and influential Americans discussed U.S.-Russia relations.”

Butina ran much of her infiltration campaign while studying at a master’s program at American University, appearing at NRA events and asking a question of then-candidate Donald Trump in a now-infamous video.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/trump-considering-kushner-chief-of-staff

HuffPost: Trump Considering Son-In-Law Kushner For Chief Of Staff Job


President Donald Trump is considering naming his son-in-law Jared Kushner White House chief of staff, HuffPost reported Thursday.

One unnamed “top Republican close to the White House” told HuffPost that Kushner had met with Trump about the job Wednesday, and two unnamed sources “close to Trump or the White House” confirmed Kushner’s interest in the position.

One unnamed source told HuffPost that Kushner had been “pushing his own candidacy with Trump.”
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/muckr...vestigation-into-trump-inauguration-committee

WSJ: Feds Open Criminal Investigation Into Trump Inauguration Committee


Trump’s inaugural committee is under criminal investigation by federal prosecutors from the Southern District of New York over whether donors handed over cash in exchange for access to government officials and into whether funds were misallocated, the Wall Street Journal reported.


Documents seized during raids of former Trump attorney and current felon Michael Cohen’s home, office, and hotel room in April 2018 led to the investigation, the newspaper reported, which is focusing on whether the record $107 million the committee raised was given “in exchange for access to the incoming Trump administration, policy concessions or to influence official administration positions.”

Specifically, the report stated that federal agents seized the recording of a conversation that Cohen made between himself and former Melania Trump adviser Stephanie Winston Wolkoff. In the recording, Wolkoff purportedly “expressed concern about how the inaugural committee was spending money,” the Journal cited one person as saying.

Investigators interviewed former Trump campaign aide and inaugural committee deputy chair Rick Gates in connection with the probe, asking him about “the fund’s spending and its donors.” Gates, the one-time protege to former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manfort who pleaded guilty in special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe and testified against Manafort, went to work for Barrack after the inauguration.

Billionaire Thomas Barrack Jr. headed the inauguration committee, and has reportedly not been approached by investigators.

Wolkoff’s company – WIS media partners – was the inauguration’s largest vendor, and was paid $25.8 million after being formed 45 days before the inauguration began.

Tax filings reviewed by the Journal show that the inauguration claimed that $77 million was spent on conferences, $4 million on ticketing, $9 million on travel, and $4.5 million on payroll.

It wasn’t immediately clear which payments specifically are subject to the probe.

Sam Patten, a political consultant who had done work in Ukraine, pleaded guilty to failing to register as a foreign agent in August for wiring $50,000 to the inauguration committee in order to secure a spot at the inauguration for the same Ukrainian politician who steered payments to Manafort.

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https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/...shock-dehydration-while-border-patrol-custody

7-Year-Old Immigrant Girl Dies Of Shock, Dehydration While In Border Patrol Custody


LAS CRUCES, N.M. (AP) — A 7-year-old girl who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border with her father last week died after being taken into the custody of the U.S. Border Patrol, federal immigration authorities confirmed Thursday.

The Washington Post reports the girl died of dehydration and shock more than eight hours after she was arrested by agents near Lordsburg, New Mexico. The girl was from Guatemala and was traveling with a group of 163 people who approached agents to turn themselves in on Dec. 6.

It’s unknown what happened to the girl during the eight hours before she started having seizures and was flown to an El Paso hospital.

In a statement, Customs and Border Protection said the girl had not eaten or consumed water in several days.

The agency did not provide The Associated Press with the statement it gave to the Post, despite repeated requests.

Processing 163 immigrants in one night could have posed challenges for the agency, whose detention facilities are meant to be temporary and don’t usually fit that many people.

When a Border Patrol agent arrests someone, that person gets processed at a facility but usually spends no more than 72 hours in custody before they are either transferred to Immigration and Customs Enforcement or, if they’re Mexican, quickly deported home.

The girl’s death raises questions about whether border agents knew she was ill and whether she was fed anything or given anything to drink during the eight-plus hours she was in custody.

Immigrants, attorneys and activists have long raised issues with the conditions of Border Patrol holding cells. In Tucson, an ongoing lawsuit claims holding cells are filthy, extremely cold and lacking basic necessities such as blankets. A judge overseeing that lawsuit has ordered the agency’s Tucson Sector, which patrols much of the Arizona-Mexico border, to provide blankets and mats to sleep on and to continually turn over surveillance footage from inside the cells.

The Border Patrol has seen an increasing trend of large groups of immigrants, many with young children, walking up to agents and turning themselves in. Most are Central American and say they are fleeing violence. They turn themselves in instead of trying to circumvent authorities, many with plans to apply for asylum.

Agents in Arizona see groups of over 100 people on a regular basis, sometimes including infants and toddlers.

Arresting such groups poses logistical problems for agents who have to wait on transport vans that are equipped with baby seats to take them to processing facilities, some which are at least half hour north of the border.

The death of the 7-year-old comes after a toddler died in May just after being released from an ICE family detention facility in Texas, and as the administration of Donald Trump attempts to ban people from asking for asylum if they crossed the border illegally. A federal appeals court has temporarily blocked that ban, but the administration asked the U.S. Supreme Court to reinstate it Tuesday.

Cynthia Pompa, advocacy manager for the ACLU Border Rights Center, said migrant deaths increased last year even as the number of border crossing dropped.

“This tragedy represents the worst possible outcome when people, including children, are held in inhumane conditions. Lack of accountability, and a culture of cruelty within CBP have exacerbated policies that lead to migrant deaths,” Pompa said.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/sanders-blames-dems-inauguration-probe

Sanders Blames Dems For Inauguration Probe: All Trump Did Was Raise Hand, Take Oath


White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders on Thursday evening waved off concern over a new report that President Trump’s inauguration committee is under criminal investigation by blaming Democrats for the probe.

“This didn’t have anything to do with the President, he was focused on the transition and building out a new government and preparing to take office,” Sanders told Fox News Thursday night. “The role that the President had in the inauguration was to raise his hand and take the oath.”

“I think this is a perfect example of Democrats recognizing that all the accusations they made and the information that came out of the Michael Cohen case has nothing to do with the President,” she continued. “So now they’re going to — I would say plan B, but this is more like plan D or E or F to take this President down.”

The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that the Southern District of New York had opened a criminal investigation into the Trump inauguration committee to determine whether donors paid for access to government officials.

 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/walker-signs-lame-duck-gop-bills

Walker Signs Lame-Duck GOP Power Grab Bills 24 Days Before Leaving Office


MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker signed a sweeping package of Republican-written legislation Friday that restricts early voting and weakens the incoming Democratic governor and attorney general, brushing aside complaints that he is enabling a brazen power grab and ignoring the will of voters.

Walker signed the bills just 24 days before he leaves office during an event at a state office building in Green Bay, about 130 miles (209 kilometers) from his Capitol office.

The Republican governor and one-time GOP presidential candidate downplayed bipartisan criticism that they amount to a power grab that will stain his legacy. He detailed all of the governor’s powers, including a strong veto authority, that will not change while defending the measures he signed as improving transparency, stability and accountability.

“There’s a lot of hype and hysteria, particularly in the national media, implying this is a power shift,” Walker said before signing the measures. “It’s not.”

Walker was urged by Democrats and Republicans, including Democratic Gov.-elect Tony Evers and former Republican Gov. Scott McCallum, to reject the legislation. Walker, who was defeated by Evers for a third term, had earlier said he was considering partial vetoes, but he ultimately did not strike anything.

Democrats and liberal advocacy groups are expected to sue within days over the bills, which was pushed through the Republican-controlled Legislature during a lame-duck session last week.

Republican leaders and Walker moved forward with the proposals immediately after Evers defeated the GOP governor as part of a Democratic sweep of statewide offices in the midterm election. The push is aimed at safeguarding conservative policies put in place during Walker’s eight years as governor and mirrors tactics used by Republicans in North Carolina in 2016. Republicans in Michigan are weighing similar moves .

The Wisconsin bills focus on numerous Republican priorities, including restricting early in-person voting to two weeks before an election, down from as much as nearly seven weeks in the overwhelmingly Democratic cities of Milwaukee and Madison.

The legislation shields the state’s job-creation agency from Evers’ control until September and limits his ability to enact administrative rules. The measures also would block Evers from withdrawing Wisconsin from a multistate lawsuit challenging the Affordable Care Act, one of his central campaign promises.

The legislation imposes a work requirement for BadgerCare health insurance recipients, which Walker won federal approval to do earlier this year, and prevents Evers from seeking to undo it.

It eliminates the state Department of Justice’s solicitor general’s office, which outgoing Republican Attorney General Brad Schimel used to launch contentious partisan litigation. Doing away with it ensures Democratic-Attorney General-elect Josh Kaul can’t use the office to challenge Republican-authored laws.

The bills also allow lawmakers to intervene in lawsuits, ensuring Republicans will be able to defend their policies and laws in court if Kaul refuses to do it. Kaul also would need approval from the Legislature’s budget-writing committee before he can reach any settlements, further increasing the power of that GOP-controlled panel.

The Republican-controlled Legislature introduced and passed the bills less than five days after unveiling them late on a Friday afternoon two weeks ago. Outraged Democrats accused the GOP of a power grab that undermined the results of the November election. Evers and others have argued Walker will tarnish his legacy by signing the bills, and Kaul has predicted multiple lawsuits challenging the legislation.

Republican legislative leaders countered that they were merely trying to balance the power of the executive and legislative branches. They said they wanted to ensure Evers must negotiate with them rather than issue executive orders to undo their policy achievements.

Walker’s signing of the bills comes a day after he announced a $28 million incentive package to keep open a Kimberly-Clark Corp. plant in northeast Wisconsin. One of the lame-duck bills would prevent Evers from making such a deal, instead requiring the Legislature’s budget committee to sign off.

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/...ck-minimum-wage-paid-sick-citizen-initiatives

MI Gov Signs Laws Limiting Citizen-Led Minimum Wage, Sick Leave Initiatives


LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Gov. Rick Snyder on Friday signed laws to significantly scale back citizen-initiated measures to raise Michigan’s minimum wage and require paid sick leave for workers, finalizing an unprecedented Republican-backed legislative maneuver that opponents blasted as shameful.

To prevent minimum wage and earned sick time initiatives from going to voters last month, GOP lawmakers approved them in September so they could be more easily altered after the election with simple majority votes rather than the three-fourths support that would have been needed if voters had passed the proposals.

The tactic — never done until now — was pushed by the business community as necessary to avoid jeopardizing the economy. But it was criticized as an unconstitutional attack on voters’ will at a time Republicans in Michigan are trying to dilute the powers of incoming elected Democrats.

In another Midwest state, GOP Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker on Friday signed a sweeping package of legislation that restricts early voting and weakens the Democratic governor and attorney general.

Michigan’s Snyder signed the bills in private and issued a statement calling them a “good balance” between what the ballot drives proposed and what legislators drafted initially.

“They address a number of difficulties for job providers while still ensuring paid medical leave benefits and increased minimum-wage incomes for many Michiganders,” he said.

But state Rep. Christine Greig, who will lead House Democrats in the next two-year term, blasted his action.

“With a flick of his lame-duck pen, Gov. Snyder chose to rob the people of Michigan of the strong paycheck and good benefits they deserve,” she said in a statement. “It is shameful that this governor, who is just counting down the days to the end of his tenure, would use this opportunity to hurt the people of Michigan one last time.”

One law slows down a boost in Michigan’s minimum wage, so it will rise to $12.05 by 2030 instead of $12 by 2022 as mandated by the citizen-proposed measure. It repeals an existing provision that ties future increases to inflation, and it reverses a provision that would have brought a lower wage for tipped employees in line with the wage for other workers.

The other new law exempts employers with fewer than 50 employees from having to provide paid sick days — a change that is estimated to leave up to 1 million employees without the benefit. It also limits the amount of annual mandatory leave at larger employers to 40 hours, instead of 72 hours as proposed by the initiative.

The group that led the minimum wage ballot drive has promised to sue. And paid sick time advocates have vowed to launch a 2020 ballot drive to fully reinstate the law that made Michigan the 11th state to require employers to provide paid time off to workers who are sick or who have ill family members.

Republicans will not be able to use a similar “adopt-and-amend” strategy in 2020 because Democrat Gretchen Whitmer, a supporter of paid sick days and a higher minimum wage, will be governor.

It is uncertain if other GOP-backed legislation — to strip or dilute the authority of incoming elected Democrats and make it harder to organize ballot drives — will reach Snyder’s desk or if the governor, who is more politically moderate than Walker, would sign any of those measures.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/howard-kurtz-melania-trump-first-lady-treatment

Fox News Host On Melania: ‘No Other Modern First Lady Has Been Treated Like This’


During an appearance on “The Ingraham Angle” Thursday evening, Kurtz admitted that all first ladies are political figures “by definition.”

“But Melania is subjected to a particularly brutal kind of treatment and mockery, whether it’s Jimmy Kimmel making fun of her accent, to all this media chatter about, well, why didn’t she go on this trip with her husband and did she swat his hand away?”

He added: “She’s got a thick skin, but no other modern first lady has been treated like this.”

During the Obama years, a Fox News medical analyst said former first lady Michelle Obama should “drop a few” pounds, Ann Coulter said her next hashtag should be “I’m married to an idiot,” and Matt Drudge said he ran a seven-minute mile by imagining she was “chasing me with a long needle and syringe.”



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