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https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/...t-what-the-hell-legislative-purpose-subpoenas

Eric Trump On Deutsche Suit: ‘What The Hell Is The Legislative Purpose’ Of Subpoenas

Eric Trump, who is involved in the Trump family’s lawsuit against Deutsche Bank and Capital One, whined to “Fox and Friends” on Tuesday morning about House Democrats’ subpoenas requesting records associated with his family’s finances.

Eric Trump said the suit isn’t about the banks, but rather an effort to block lawmakers’ subpoenas and cry “presidential harassment.”

“Honestly we’re not adversarial to any of the banks. We’re just saying this is presidential harassment,” he said. “That’s all these people do. … What they want to do, they want to harass Trump. They don’t want to do their jobs. They want to harass Trump.”

“By the way, it’s not just my father,” he continued. “It’s, ‘Eric, I want to see all your bank records, I want to know how much money Lara spent for baby formula for Luke. I want to know how many beers Tiffany had on Friday afternoon in Georgetown.’ These are literally things they’re asking for.”

Eric Trump then launched into a diatribe about his father’s past interest in purchasing the Buffalo Bills, which never came to fruition.

“When Congress subpoenas somebody they have to have legislative purpose, right?… What the hell is the legislative purpose of subpoenaing for records associated with possibly buying the Buffalo Bills?” he said.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/schiff-will-issue-criminal-referral-doj-prince-testimony

Schiff Will Issue Criminal Referral To DOJ Regarding Prince’s Testimony To Congress

House Intel Committee chairman Adam Schiff (D-CA) said Tuesday that he will make a criminal referral to the Department of Justice based on Blackwater Founder Erik Prince’s allegedly false testimony before Congress.

“I do believe that there is a very strong evidence that he willingly misled the committee and made false statements to the committee and later today, we will be making a criminal referral to the Justice Department,” Schiff said during a televised interview with the Washington Post. “The evidence is so weighty that the Justice Department needs to consider this.”

Prince told Congress that a meeting in the Seychelles with a Russian banker linked to Russian President Vladimir Putin was by chance, a statement in contradiction to what he told special counsel Robert Mueller’s team.

 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/wohl-burkman-fabricate-sexual-assault-allegations-buttigieg

Report: Wohl, Burkman Try To Fabricate Sexual Assault Allegations Against Buttigieg

Right-wing troll Jacob Wohl and GOP lobbyist Jack Burkman are trying to recruit people to levy false accusations of sexual assault against Democratic candidate and South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg.

According to a Daily Beast report, a post popped up Monday on Medium penned by a man named Hunter Kelly accusing Buttigieg of assaulting him. When the Beast contacted him, Kelly said that the Medium post, and an accompanying Twitter account, were made without his permission or participation.

He posted on Facebook under the heading, “I WAS NOT SEXUALLY ASSAULTED.”
Screen-Shot-2019-04-30-at-8.23.50-AM.png


Kelly told the Advocate that Wohl and Burkman flew him to Washington, D.C. to sell him on the scheme, but that he didn’t agree to it.

Another source, a self-identified Trump supporter, told the Daily Beast that the pair — using aliases — approached him last week to push him to claim that Buttigieg assaulted him when he was too drunk to consent. The source also gave the outlet a recording of the conversation that corroborated his claims.

Wohl and Burkman reportedly told the man that the allegations would make him famous and prove a “catalyst” for real victims to come forward. They were candid that the scheme’s intent was to quash the mayor’s momentum.

Buttigieg brushed off the attempted smear campaign.

“It’s not going to throw us,” he told the Daily Beast. “Politics can be ugly sometimes but you have to face that when you’re in presidential politics.”
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/nra-suspends-top-lawyer

The Hits Keep Coming: NRA Suspends Its Top Lawyer

The NRA has suspended Steve Hart, its longtime top lawyer, in just the latest sign of the infighting that is splintering the group.

According to the Daily Beast, Hart was suspended before Lt. Col. Oliver North announced Saturday that he would not serve a second term as NRA president.

The gun rights group has been imploding all week, with CEO Wayne LaPierre claiming that North is extorting him, a legal skirmish breaking out between the NRA and its advertising vendor and North’s dire warnings about the organization’s financial leadership.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/...lfoyle-joins-trump-campaign-as-senior-adviser

All In The Family: Ex-Fox Host Kim Guilfoyle Joins Trump Campaign As Senior Adviser


Former Fox News host-turned pro Trump PAC staffer Kimberly Guilfoyle has joined President Trump’s 2020 reelection campaign as a senior adviser, according to The Washington Examiner.

Guilfoyle, who is dating Donald Trump Jr., left Fox News last year — where she worked as a host for more than a decade — and joined the Trump PAC America First Action.

“President Trump has a clear record of accomplishments and promises kept as he continues to Make America Great Again,” Trump 2020 campaign manager Brad Parscale said in a statement, according to the Examiner. “These exceptional additions to the re-election effort will help us take our case to the voters and ensure victory.”
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/muckraker/rod-rosenstein-resigns

Rod Rosenstein Submits Resignation Effective May 11


Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein submitted his resignation to President Trump on Monday, effective May 11.

The move brought Rosenstein’s often tumultuous two-year tenure to an end, during which he oversaw special counsel Robert Mueller’s sweeping investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election and was present at key moments during the firing of FBI director James Comey.

While often the subject of the President’s ire — he even privately discussedresigning last year after reports emerged that he had floated wearing a wire to surveil the president — Rosenstein had nothing but praise for his boss in his letter on Tuesday.

“I am grateful to you for the opportunity to serve; for the courtesy and humor you often display in our personal conversations; and for the goals you set in your inaugural address: patriotism, unity, safety, education and prosperity,” he said.

In his resignation letter, Rosenstein praised the Justice Department’s efforts under the Trump administration, while vaguely alluding to some of the more controversial issues of his tenure as the Department’s No. 2 — from the Russia investigation to the attacks on the Justice Department for pursuing the probe.

“Our nation is safer, our elections are more secure, and our citizens are better informed about covert foreign influence efforts and schemes to commit fraud, steal intellectual property, and launch cyberattacks,” Rosenstein wrote in the letter. “We also pursued illegal leaks, investigated credible allegations of employee misconduct, and accommodated congressional oversight without compromising law enforcement interests.”

Rosenstein found himself the target of criticisms from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle at various points in the administration.

Democrats were aghast at the role he played in the termination of Comey — writing a memo criticizing the FBI director’s handling of the Hillary Clinton email probe — that the administration used as cover to explains Trump’s decision.

However, he also appointed the special counsel, and quickly became a foil for Republicans, including for Trump himself, as they sought to smear the Department over the coarse of the investigation. Trump once mocked him for being “from Baltimore” where there “very few Republicans in Baltimore, if any.”

Rosenstein is in fact a Republican, despite staying in his role as U.S. Attorney of Maryland during the Obama administration. He lives in a suburb just outside of D.C.

In Monday’s letter, which came on the heels of an event last week where the outgoing official took a combative tone with the press, Rosenstein fashioned the Department above the fray that was a constant for most of the time he spent leading it.

“We enforce the law without fear or favor because credible evidence is not partisan, and truth is not determined by opinion polls,” Rosenstein said. “We ignore fleeting distractions and focus our attention on the things that matter, because a republic that endures is not governed by the news cycle.”

The letter closed with a reference to President Trump’s campaign slogan.

“We keep the faith, follow the rules, and we always put America first.”
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/muckraker/new-york-attorney-general-dissolve-nra

How The New York Attorney General’s Probe Threatens The NRA’s Future

The National Rifle Association could be in deep trouble.

A wide-ranging investigation into the NRA announced this weekend by New York State Attorney General Letitia James threatens the very existence of the organization, experts in non-profit law told TPM.

James has the power to ask a judge to dissolve the gun-rights group if she finds evidence that the board engaged in serial violations of New York state charity law, as her office did with the Donald J. Trump Foundation. Lesser remedies available could see James remove individual members from the NRA board and require that restitution be paid out to any parties harmed by the self-dealing that allegedly occurred.

The Democratic attorney general’s office confirmed to TPM that it had issued subpoenas in connection with a probe into the NRA. The Wall Street Journal reported that the probe focuses on possible self-dealing within the organization, misstatements on the non-profit’s regulatory filings, and “unauthorized political activity.”

James’ investigation has raised the stakes for an NRA already grappling with allegations of decades of fiscal mismanagement and insider deals between top executives and higher-ups at the NRA’s longtime ad firm, Ackerman McQueen.

The NRA sued Ackerman this month, claiming that the Oklahoma City-based company is refusing to hand over documents it needed to inspect the pair’s financial relationship.

Where the attorney general is digging
Chartered in 1871 in New York State as a marksmanship group, the NRA has remained under the same charter in the state’s bureau of charities even as it morphed into the ferocious gun rights group we know today.

Experts told TPM that the political activity prong of the probe could be the most serious for the non-profit.

“The political activity allegation, if it can be established, would be a clearer route to the removal of directors or key employees, officers, and, if it were flagrant enough, the dissolution of the organization,” Sean Delany, Executive Director of the Lawyer’s Alliance for New York and a former Assistant Attorney General overseeing the Charities Bureau at the Attorney General of the State of New York, told TPM.

Part of the issue goes to James’ powers as attorney general.

Marcus Owens, a former IRS official in charge of tax-exempt organizations, told TPM that while the IRS would decide on the group’s tax-exempt status, James has “pretty broad authority to step in and ensure that the organization has been complying with the rules for charities in New York.”

Those rules include a ban on activities that go beyond the charity’s purpose — in the NRA’s case, partisan political contributions and activities. The NRA has an affiliate called the Institute for Legislative Action that directly engages in lobbying.

Owens added that if James finds evidence that the NRA “has morphed into some kind of lobbying or political group and not necessarily a charity as New York law would define it,” that could give the attorney general more leeway to move from allegations around the misuse of money to the existence of the NRA itself.

Separate allegations of insider dealing could be harder to pin down. But, if investigators find that NRA boards failed to vet deals made with companies linked to NRA directors — as recent reporting suggests — then the group could find itself in further legal hot water.

Eric Gorovitz, a non-profit attorney who formerly worked at the Coalition To Stop Gun Violence, told TPM that “LaPierre, Oliver North, all the senior management and the directors, the foundation managers of the organization are within reach.”

North was ousted as president of the NRA over the weekend.

What James can do with what she finds
The most extreme remedy available to James would be dissolving the NRA.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the NRA’s outside counsel told the group to brace for a “dissolution action” by James.

To do that, James would have to prove to a judge that a pattern of either financial wrongdoing or political activity had ingrained itself so deeply at the NRA that no other remedy would be suitable.

Owens said that a dissolution request would likely take the form of “a combination of pointing to abuse, financial abuse by insiders, if that exists, plus related-party business transactions that allowed those who were not insiders to siphon money off….or it could be that the attorney general takes the position that its more like a trade association” acting for the political benefit of gun manufacturers.

Less dramatic remedies, like removing individual board members or mandating that the NRA institute tighter conflict of interest policies, are more likely.

Those actions would be oriented towards improving how the NRA handles money and making it a more effective organization.

“Stepping aside from which organization we’re talking about, you don’t want to harm the charity in its function, you want to focus on the bad actors,” Delany said.

“The point is not to injure the charity because of what individual bad actors do.”
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/muckraker/judge-refuses-to-toss-dems-emoluments-suit-against-trump

Judge Refuses To Toss Congressional Dems’ Emoluments Suit Against Trump


A D.C. federal judge refused to throw out a lawsuit brought by congressional Democrats accusing President Trump of violating the Constitution’s emoluments clause.

In a 48-page opinion Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Emmett Sullivan denied a motion from Trump to dismiss the case. Trump’s argument rested on a narrow definition of “emolument.” The judge found that argument unpersuasive.

“The President’s definition, however, disregards the ordinary meaning of the term as set forth in the vast majority of Founding-era dictionaries; is inconsistent with the text, structure, historical interpretation, adoption, and purpose of the Clause; and is contrary to Executive Branch practice over the course of many years,” Sullivan wrote.

Congressional Democrats sued Trump in June 2017, alleging that profits he received from his hotels that came from foreign government visitors constituted a violation of the emoluments clause, which prohibits presidents from receiving gifts or things of value from foreign governments.
 
What annoys the fuck out of me is how the media an politicians alike trusted Barr from the jump.. And gave validation to his word on that 4 page letter that was obviously not mullets assement.. But they ate that shit up
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/...ping-me-looking-into-u-s-spying-on-trump-camp

Barr And ‘People In The Department’ Looking Into US ‘Spying’ On Trump Camp

Attorney General Bill Barr said Wednesday that he had “people in the department helping me” examine intelligence actions in 2016 related to the Trump campaign.

Barr’s revelation came during a hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee, in response to Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA), who asked if Barr had tasked staff “to look into whether spying by the FBI and other agencies on the Trump campaign was properly predicated, and can Congress expect a formal report on your findings?”

Barr confirmed that he does “have people in the department helping me review the activities over the summer of 2016.”

While the attorney general said it was “a little early” to commit to briefing Congress on his findings, “I envision some kind of reporting at the end of this.”

Grassley’s question followed up on Barr’s comment during a hearing before the Senate Appropriations Committee in early April that “I think spying did occur” on the Trump campaign.

Democrats were outraged by the implication in Barr’s use of the word “spying.”

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-CA), for example, said“this type of partisan talking point may please Donald Trump, who rails against a ‘deep state coup,’ but it also strikes another destructive blow to our democratic institutions.”

But Barr, reportedly, was intentional in his use of the word.

Later, after asking Barr about Carter Page, Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) asked “was any other Trump campaign official under surveillance [in 2016] to your knowledge?”

“These are the things that I need to look at,” Barr responded. “I have to say, as I’ve said before, to the extent there was any overreach, I believe it was a few people in the upper echelons of the [FBI] and perhaps the Department [of Justice] but those people are no longer there.”

 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/barr-reveals-new-details-meeting-mueller-about-obstruction-case

Barr Reveals New Details Of Meeting With Mueller About Obstruction Case


Attorney General William Barr and his colleagues at the Justice Department first heard that special counsel Robert Mueller would not be making a determination on whether the President obstructed justice during a meeting on March 5, 2019, Barr said during his testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday.

Barr said he was “frankly surprised” by Mueller’s decision and peppered him with questions about the reasoning behind it. He also defended his characterization in his March 24 letter that Mueller’s decision not to indict President Trump on obstruction did not take into account the Department of Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) rule that it’s impermissible to indict a sitting president. Barr suggested that Mueller’s team merely could not reach a conclusion, when their thought process was more nuanced than that.

“Special counsel Mueller stated three times to us in that meeting in response to our questioning that he emphatically was not saying that but for the OLC opinion, he would have found obstruction,” Barr said Wednesday. “He said that in the future, the facts of the case against a president might be such that a special counsel would recommend abandoning the OLC opinion, but this is not such a case.”

Barr said he and his colleagues did not “quite understand” why Mueller wasn’t going to reach a decision, and when pressed at that March 5 meeting, Mueller’s team said they were still “formulating an explanation.”

“Once we heard that the special counsel was not reaching a conclusion on obstruction, the deputy and I discussed and agreed that the department had to reach a decision. We had the responsibility to assess the evidence as set forth in the report and to make the judgment,” Barr said Wednesday.

“I say this because special counsel was appointed to carry out the investigative and prosecutorial functions of the department and to do it as part of the Department of Justice,” he continued. “The powers he was using, including the power of using the grand jury and using compulsory process, exists for that purpose, the function of the Department of Justice in this arena, which is to determine whether or not there has been criminal conduct. It’s a binary decision.”

It was not previously known that Barr discussed the obstruction case with Mueller at a March 5 meeting, and that at that time, Barr decided he would reach a conclusion on whether the president obstructed justice.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/muckraker/barr-mueller-trump-obstruction-mcgahn-deny

Barr Defends Trump Obstruction With A Rationale That Mueller Already Blew Up

Attorney General Bill Barr on Wednesday defended certain actions taken by President Trump that special counsel Robert Mueller investigated, using a justification that Mueller already dismissed in his report.

Barr was asked specifically about Trump’s demand that his White House counsel Don McGahn publicly deny a report that Trump had previously ordered that McGahn fire the special counsel.

The attorney general claimed that the conduct didn’t amount to criminal obstruction because it was plausible that Trump was concerned with spinning the press rather than impeding the investigation. Barr argued that Trump may have been frustrated that the New York Times had mischaracterized exactly what the President had ordered McGahn to do, because, in Barr’s telling, the President may have merely been seeking for the removal of Mueller on the basis of alleged conflicts, rather than a full termination of investigation.

“As the report indicates,” Barr claimed, “it could also have been the case that he was primarily concerned about press reports.”

Furthermore, Barr argued, Trump knew that McGahn had already been interviewed by the special counsel’s staff “weeks before.”

But Mueller’s report engaged with these theories and expressed deep skepticism about them.

“If the President were focused solely on a press strategy in seeking to have McGahn refute the New York Times article, a nexus to a proceeding or to further investigative interviews would not be shown,” Mueller said. “But the President’s efforts to have McGahn write a letter ‘for our records’ approximately ten days after the stories had come out — well past the typical time to issue a correction for a news story — indicates the President was not focused solely on a press strategy, but instead likely contemplated the ongoing investigation and any proceedings arising from it.”

Likewise, Mueller said that even though McGahn had already been interviewed, the obstruction inquiry was still ongoing, and it was “foreseeable that he would be interviewed again on obstruction-related topics.”

Finally, Mueller’s report also dismissed the idea that the conflicts argument for removing the special counsel was sincere.

The evidence, Mueller said, shows that the “President was not just seeking an examination of whether conflicts existed but instead was looking to use asserted conflicts as a way to terminate the Special Counsel.”
 
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