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Discussion » Statements » Rosie's Corner » "Some on Mueller's team say report was more damaging than Barr revealed". I.E. Barr lied. What a surprise! RIGHT?

"Some on Mueller's team say report was more damaging than Barr revealed". I.E. Barr lied. What a surprise! RIGHT?

He lied by omitting pertinent information. A lie of OMISSION.

Posted - April 4, 2019

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  • 46117
    Trump is really playing with fire and BARR?  He is toast.  It only takes a Judge to say the bulk ought to be released.

    ARI MELBER: Good evening, Chuck. Thank you.

    We begin with breaking news. Bombshell reports tonight that Bob Mueller`s 
    boss talked about wiretapping President Trump or even ousting the president 
    of the United States through the 25th Amendment of the Constitution. And 
    that`s, of course, the way that you remove a president who is deemed unable 
    to handle the job. You need the support of the Cabinet and the Congress.

    If you`re hearing these words, if they are sinking in, then you know 
    already this is not some Friday night news dump. This is a Friday night 
    explosion. But these claims and these stories tonight are also hotly 
    contested. They may portend an irreversible escalation in the handling of 
    the Mueller probe itself and whether President Trump will seize on this 
    report which is in “The New York Times” to pursue his own version of a 
    Saturday night massacre.

    So given this year`s scale of this, we`re going to start our broadcast here 
    on THE BEAT a little differently tonight. We`re going to begin with the 
    context for these explosive leaks and some of the skepticism about them. 
    Then I`m going to share with you exactly what we know, both “The New York 
    Times” report and some conflicting accounts from some other very high-level 
    sources and then we`ll turn to our experts.

    So first, there`s the context here. The heat on Donald Trump right now has 
    never been hotter with the DOJ flipping his former campaign chair and his 
    long-time personal lawyer. In fact, it`s only the past days and weeks that 
    the news leaked that both men are not only guilty but are talking to Bob 
    Mueller. So amidst that heat that now sources inside and outside the DOJ 
    say, “It`s no surprise that we`re seeing fresh attacks on the DOJ 
    leadership maybe giving everything they`ve got.”

    The “NYT” report focuses on a few comments that were made in a meeting that 
    these sources say were either sarcastic jokes or were never acted on. And 
    note how odd it is that conversations from well over a year ago would be 
    leaking out right now, at the boiling point of cooperation in this Russia 
    probe. And before I read you the “Times” account, I want you to know what 
    else we`re learning.

    Tonight, the top Senate Democrat Schumer is warning against this entire 
    story, against using these leaks as a pretext for Donald Trump to do what 
    many think he`s wanted to do for a long time which is kneecap the Bob 
    Mueller probe by firing Bob Mueller`s boss Rod Rosenstein. So that`s the 
    context, that`s the congressional fallout at this hour.

    Now let me show you exactly what “The New York Times” is reporting that 
    Mueller`s boss, Rod Rosenstein was basically aghast at how Trump was 
    operating after firing James Comey and that he secretly suggested recording 
    Trump and discussed even the 25th Amendment. This idea of using a wire to 
    “secretly tape” the president when he visited the White House or of others 
    doing so. Since the key question at the time was whether Donald Trump 
    fired James Comey to stop the Russia probe and whether the other officials 
    should try to tape him during interviews over who would replace Comey.

    Now the article reports that Rosenstein got into the mechanics of it noting 
    White House officials never checked his phone when he arrived for those 
    meetings and then there is the passage that is by far the most shocking 
    that is certainly rattling the internet, the claim that Rod Rosenstein 
    thought he might get Jeff Sessions and John Kelly who was then head of DHS 
    to use the 25th Amendment to remove Trump.

    Now the article includes Rosenstein denying this entire story as, 
    “factually incorrect and includes another DOJ official saying that someone 
    at the meeting thought “The Times” was basically misconstruing the 
    reference to a wire and it was actually made “Sarcastically.” Now that is 
    what “The New York Times” reports. This story obviously appears quite 
    helpful to Donald Trump`s view of a deep state justice department out to 
    get him.

    And “The Times” is not claiming its reporting is based on people who 
    actually heard Rosenstein say any of those things. Let me point you to 
    investigative journalist Marci Wheeler noting tonight not a single one of 
    these people, “The Times” quote is actually a witness to the episodes. 
    None of them had even read the memos memorializing the events directly, but 
    have instead simply been briefed secondhand.

    And then there are the other sources and because this is so important 
    because this could potentially change everything, let`s go through it in 
    detail. Because late today, DOJ officials are telling “NBC News” the 
    meeting in question in May was at a secured facility, it was a week after 
    Trump fired Comey as FBI director and the day before Rosenstein made that 
    big move to appoint Mueller.

    And this official tells us, “Seven people were there. Rosenstein, McCabe 
    who was then acting as Comey`s replacement, an FBI lawyer Lisa Page and 
    four career DOJ officials including Scott Schools. And this is important 
    because he`s the career official who would later sign off on the decision 
    to fire McCabe himself. “Rosenstein and McCabe were arguing and at one 
    point, Rosenstein asked, `Well, what do you want me to to do, Andy, wear a 
    wire?` Two DOJ officials say the remark was made sarcastically,” according 
    to what this official tells “NBC”.

    As for raising the issue of invoking the 25th Amendment, the senior DOJ 
    official says there`s a brief reference to it in a note about the meeting 
    that was written again by McCabe. “Dag”, that would be Rosenstein, “raises 
    25th Amendment” and, “Official says the notes about the same meeting taken 
    by Lisa Page don`t reference it at all and that Rosenstein didn`t raise it.

    This person telling “NBC” the notion that he would want to talk about 
    discussing this with Kelly makes no sense. He didn`t even know Kelly then. 
    Now, I can tell you the public timeline does back that up. Rosenstein who 
    have been in the post three weeks, Kelly was not a big player in the Trump 
    White House at the time. He didn`t become chief of staff until later in 
    July.

    Now as a DOJ lawyer, Rosenstein would know it also takes a lot more than 
    just some cabinet members to really use the 25th Amendment. You need a 
    super majority in Congress but the Republicans, of course, are in charge 
    there. Now this story is contested by the people involved. There is no 
    doubt about one thing and why it is such a big story tonight.

    This now lives in the white-hot center of the controversy over what Trump 
    is going to do about a Russia probe that is heading for the White House. 
    Donald Trump`s son is seizing on the report saying it proves that DOJ`s top 
    guys will do anything in their power to undermine Donald Trump. Meanwhile, 
    journalist Gabriel Sherman who wrote a book on “Fox News” is reporting 
    tonight that the man you see there, former Fox Executive Bill Shine, who 
    now runs White House Communications for Trump is preparing a media plan to 
    “Build public support for Trump to fire Rosenstein.” And here is a new 
    call from “Fox” Anchor Laura Ingram calling for Trump to do just that.

    So let`s get to our experts now that we have laid out the multiple 
    dimensions of this story. Kim Wehle is a law professor at the University 
    of Baltimore. She was a federal prosecutor who worked directly with Rod 
    Rosenstein. Nick Ackerman has much experience as a former Watergate 
    special prosecutor. And part of the reporting I mentioned, “NBC`s” 
    intelligence and national security journalist Ken Dilanian is here for what 
    he knows about it.

    Kim, I begin with you. When you read “The New York Times” version 
    secondhand of these things said by Rod Rosenstein, do they sound to you 
    like things that he wanted to actively do, to run a wiretap and remove the 
    president or do you see them in some other light?

    KIM WEHLE, LAW PROFESSOR, UNIVERSITY OF BALTIMORE: Well, what I know from 
    Rod Rosenstein, and I have known him professionally and personally for a 
    long time, is that he is a man of impeccable integrity. And he`s really 
    someone who believes in public service and the rule of law. I think the 
    question here is he doing his job as deputy attorney general and I don`t 
    think there`s any question that he`s been doing that.

    Now, of course, Donald Trump can fire him under Article 2 of the 
    Constitution. He has the power to do that but that will have repercussions 
    that are important because as you mentioned, Ari, really what`s in the room 
    is the fact that Vladimir Putin wants to destroy our democratic process. 
    He wants to tear people apart and part of that is attacking the career 
    officials like Rod Rosenstein who are working really hard to uncover what 
    the Russians did to undermine our electoral process and to get to the 
    bottom of it.

    MELBER: So you see this explicitly as many of Mueller`s allies have seen 
    it, as Chuck Schumer was saying, as a potential pretext to try to go after 
    Rosenstein. What do you make though specifically of the notion that he was 
    talking about wearing a wire? I mean there is a federal process that would 
    govern that if it were even serious. Your view?

    WEHLE: No, I wasn`t there. I mean Rod can from time to time make jokes. 
    I mean he`s a serious guy, but he also has a sense of humor. And 
    obviously, there was tremendous amount of pressure in the room. Of course, 
    I wasn`t there, so there`s no way that I can actually weigh in on what 
    happened or didn`t happen. But let`s face it, the other elephant in the 
    room is the fact that whether 25th Amendment was addressed or not.

    There are other people within the administration, this anonymous op-ed we 
    saw on “The New York Times” that have posited that that might be 
    appropriate and we have seen publicly a president who is in chaos, who is 
    close to corruption if not corrupt and there is incompetence throughout the 
    executive branch. And as a constitutional law professor and someone who 
    was in public service, I`m just deeply, deeply concerned about the 
    structure of our government because whether you`re Democratic or Republican 
    when it becomes damaged, it`s damaged for good.

    It`s like a car that has the sideswiped. New people can drive that car but 
    it`s still going to be trashed until someone fixes it. And at this point, 
    we`re getting more and more broken and it`s very very serious. I really 
    hope Rosenstein can hang on in these deeply politicized times.

    MELBER: And Ken, digging into the people at the meeting, we`ll put it on 
    the screen because there`s a lot to follow. There`s Rosenstein, McCabe, 
    Lisa Page, and these four career DOJ officials who are lesser known. 
    McCabe, of course, was later fired. We know Donald Trump reportedly 
    started chewing him out the moment he became acting director on the phone 
    and attacking his wife. Page resigned and, of course, was figured into a 
    scandal that House Republicans had seized on. So you have Rosenstein left 
    with those officials.

    What does your reporting tell us about the significance of what happened in 
    that meeting?

    KEN DILANIAN, INTELLIGENCE & NATIONAL SECURITY REPORTER, NBC NEWS: Well, 
    it`s so hard to know what to believe, Ari, because as you said, the Justice 
    Department is pushing back on this vigorously, both to Pete Williams and to 
    me. Senior Justice Department officials are saying absolutely did not 
    happen the way “The New York Times” is describing it. They are saying that 
    Rosenstein`s remark was sarcastic.

    But when you talk to people that know Rod, as Kim said, he has a dry wit 
    and people say that it`s possible that he said something in jest that maybe 
    Andy McCabe took seriously and wrote it down in a memo as if he really 
    meant to wear wire. But complicating this picture, Ari, that “The New York 
    Times” has reported in the last few minutes that there was a second 
    instance where McCabe and Rosenstein talked about Rod Rosenstein 
    potentially recording the president or wearing a wire.

    And the Justice Department again, our sources are pushing back on that. 
    And so the only thing I can say is there were four career people in the 
    room in addition to those named people that you outlined. And so this is a 
    knowable fact. I mean all these people can be interviewed and we can get 
    to the bottom of it. We do have Andy McCabe`s contemporaneous memo.

    And by the way, some Justice Department officials are suggesting he has an 
    ax to grind and he was fired by the FBI, but that wasn`t true back in May 
    2017 when he wrote the memo. He was the deputy director of the FBI. And 
    so I think his account should be given some credibility but, again, it`s 
    just a hall of mirrors. We have two diametrically opposing accounts here, 
    Ari.

    MELBER: Nick?

    NICK ACKERMAN: Ari, I think this is just part of the overall effort to try 
    and get rid of the Russian investigation. One piece of the context that 
    you didn`t mention was that last week Donald Trump came out and was 
    actually trying to declassify all of the classified information that was 
    surrounding the Russian investigation at the request of certain Republicans 
    in the House that are trying to undermine and destroy this investigation.

    Just today, it was announced he wasn`t going to do that. Probably because 
    some other people within the administration have prevailed upon him. So 
    now we have another Salvo out there trying to undermine this investigation, 
    undermine Rod Rosenstein. If you look at the two items that are being 
    talked about, one is the 25th Amendment. That is so cumbersome.

    The idea that anybody seriously could think that they could use the 25th 
    Amendment here where you`ve got to get the majority of the cabinet to then 
    write to the speaker and to the President Pro Temp of the Senate. And then 
    on top of that, the president can override that by writing another letter 
    and then the majority again of the cabinet members would have to write back 
    to the speaker and Senator Pro Temp and there have to be a two-thirds vote 
    of both chambers of Congress to remove the president.

    That`s not going to happen. This amendment was designed for the situation 
    where a president is really incapacitated like Woodrow Wilson was.

    MELBER: Right. Stay with me, everybody. I want to add to our discussion 
    founder and editor-at-large of “The Weekly Standard” Bill Kristol who`s 
    kept an eye on all these things.

    Bill, you have been in white houses where everyone parses the leaks. And 
    this one is quite interesting. I want to read more from “The New York 
    Times” piece because “The New York Times” has clearly come down on the idea 
    that Rosenstein said these things and it meant something, not that they are 
    misconstrued quotes. That`s why their headline says Rosenstein suggests he 
    secretly records Trump, although the article includes his denial.

    And I want to read from the article where it says basically Rosenstein made 
    his remarks about secretly recording Trump in meetings and conversations 
    with these officials. Several people described the episodes insisting on 
    anonymity. These people, they were briefed either on the event or on the 
    memos. Does that look like a tell to you because we just went through on 
    the screen all these anonymous people, as well as Rosenstein who`s got the 
    under record denial that people doing the leaking that “The Times” finds 
    credible are secondhand having read some other description of it?

    BILL KRISTOL, FOUNDER & EDITOR-AT-LARGE, THE WEEKLY STANDARD: That could 
    well be. And look, at the end of the day, either Rosenstein was rattled 
    and said a few things that he didn`t follow through on and they were 
    entirely speculative in terms of the 25th Amendment and he knew he couldn`t 
    follow through on and he knew he couldn`t follow through on wearing a 
    wiretap either. Or he was being witty, sort of humor where he was not 
    quite right but just started to act on it let`s say and whatever.

    He didn`t do it, right. He`s been deputy attorney general for a year and a 
    half now. We can judge his conduct in that job. And I believe almost 
    every outside observer who doesn`t have an ax to grind thinks his conduct 
    has been pretty impressive and that he has sustained the rule of law, 
    defended the Mueller investigation. At times, some critics would say he`s 
    given a little too much to the president`s directives, but he is part of 
    the administration after all.

    MELBER: But Bill, do you think that what you just said applies that “The 
    Times” got played?

    KRISTOL: Look, it`s possible. I think reporters can get played. They can 
    also be reporting somewhat accurately, mostly accurately, misunderstanding 
    things. The McCabe contemporaneous memo is the strongest thing on their 
    side, I would say. Presumably, the deputy director of the FBI, a man of 
    some experience, doesn`t put in a memo, something that`s just a throwaway 
    line, maybe he does or maybe they didn`t know each other well and he 
    misunderstood Rosenstein. He was just trying to write everything down. I 
    don`t know.

    I very much agree with I think what everyone has basically said which is 
    this does not give any grounds. I really mean there`s any grounds at all 
    in terms of any action of Rosenstein that justifies firing him or firing 
    Sessions or curbing the Mueller investigation. I think it`s important to 
    reiterate that whatever he might have said in a private meeting that he 
    didn`t follow through on and there`s no evidence he said again over the 
    next 16 or however many months he`s been deputy attorney general.

    That gives no grounds to Trump to do anything. Now, it does give plenty of 
    grounds to Donald Trump Jr. and Laura Ingram and everyone to attack 
    Rosenstein. And let`s just hope it stays at the level of rhetorical 
    context. I am worried given that Kavanaugh developments, given the 
    developments that Trump just decides. You know what, it`s just total 
    chaos.

    I`m good at these thunder jaw moments. This is my chance to get rid of 
    him. It will all just look like chaos and that was a conspiracy. And 
    we`ll have an election anyway in five, six weeks and maybe the Republicans 
    will hang on to the Senate. And so I think it`s right to be alarmed that 
    Trump could take advantage of this moment.

    MELBER: Kim?

    WEHLE: Well, I think we have to ask ourselves what would actually happen 
    so then the solicitor general of the United States would be put into place 
    in an interim basis. That`s Noel Francisco. He`s also a Republican with 
    pretty conservative credentials, but someone who is highly I think 
    respected as a lawyer. So presumably, he wouldn`t necessarily, I would 
    hope, just go ahead and fire Mueller and call off that probe.

    In addition, Mueller has been really careful to farm out a lot of these 
    criminal issues to other parts of the Justice Department, the Southern 
    District of New York in particular and those people answer to Jeff 
    Sessions. So I just want people to not be so worried that even if Mr. 
    Rosenstein is fired that all of a sudden the Mueller investigation is going 
    to end.

    HERE IS THE REST OF IT...

    https://www.msnbc.com/transcripts/msnbc-live-with-ari-melber/2018-09-21 This post was edited by WM BARR . =ABSOLUTE TRASH at April 5, 2019 3:47 AM MDT
      April 4, 2019 8:39 AM MDT
    1

  • 113301
    Thank you for your reply Sharon and the link. That is a VERY LONG read and I doubt anyone will hang in and read all of it. The ones who should won't bother. They are not remotely interested. The ones who needn't  read it already know what's going on. SIGH. Ever it shall be thus. We preach and it is only the choir who gives a sh** about any of it. :(
      April 5, 2019 3:49 AM MDT
    0