Sep 16, 2021 ¡ An attorney who represented Hillary Clintonâs ... Sussmann is accused of falsely telling Baker that he did not represent any client when he met him to give the FBI white papers and other data ...
Nov 30, 2018 ¡ 360. The FBI raided the home of a whistleblower who was in possession of documents regarding the Clinton Foundation and Uranium One, according to the whistleblowerâs lawyer, Michael Socarras. The whistleblower, Dennis Nathan Cain, had turned the documents over to the Department of Justiceâs inspector general and both the House and Senate ...
Nov 30, 2018 ¡ The FBI raided the home of a whistleblower who was in possession of documents regarding the Clinton Foundation and Uranium One, according to the whistleblowerâs lawyer, Michael Socarras. The whistleblower, Dennis Nathan Cain, had turned the documents over to the Department of Justiceâs inspector general and both the House and Senate ...
Nov 30, 2018 ¡ The Justice Departmentâs inspector general was informed that the documents show that federal officials failed to investigate potential criminal activity regarding former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the Clinton Foundation and Rosatom, the Russian company that purchased Uranium One, a document reviewed by The Daily Caller News Foundation alleges. âŚ
They allege instead that Sussmamn intentionally misled the FBI general counsel because he was acting at the time on behalf of an unnamed tech executive, an "U.S. internet company" and Hillary Clinton's Presidential Campaign.
In the spring of 2016, Russian military intelligence had hacked into the computer networks of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and the Democratic National Committee. Emails and documents stolen by the Russians had already been leaked in June and July of 2016 and Trump continued to encourage more leaks as they continued throughout the campaign.
In the indictment, however, prosecutors contend the statement was material "because, among other reasons, Sussmann's false statement misled the FBI general counsel and other FBI personnel concerning the political nature of his work and deprived the FBI of information that might have permitted it more fully to assess and uncover the origins of the relevant data and technical analysis , including the identities and motivations of Sussmann's clients."
The meeting between Sussman and Baker occurred more than a month after the FBI's "Crossfire Hurricane" investigation -- looking into whether people associated with the Trump campaign were coordinating, wittingly or unwittingly, with the Russian government's efforts to interfere with the 2016 campaign -- was opened on July 31.
Michael Sussmann, an attorney for the Perkins Coie law firm who previously represented the Democratic National Committee following the hacking of its servers by Russia during the 2016 campaign, is accused of lying "about the capacity in which he was providing allegations to the FBI" when he met with a top lawyer from the bureau in September 2016 and provided him information about potential ties between a Russian bank and computer servers in the Trump Organization.
The New York Times, which first reported news of Durham's plans to seek an indictment against Sussmann, also reported that Garland has declined to overrule Durham's decision.
All in all, events proved the FBI had good reason to raid Cohenâs office, as they gathered evidence of multiple federal crimes (beyond just campaign finance violations) to which Cohen pleaded guilty. Bill Clintonâs payment to Paula Jones was a settlement of a civil lawsuit that did not involve any criminal matter or criminal wrongdoing, and thus it was of no legitimate interest to law enforcement. The only commonality between the two cases was that they involved payments by politicians to women, but for very different reasons and circumstances.
On 6 May 1994, Jones , a former Arkansas state employee, filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against Clinton just days before the statute of limitations would have expired. In her lawsuit, she maintained that on 8 May 1991, she was working the registration desk at Excelsior Hotel in Little Rock, Arkansas, where the Third Annual Governorâs Quality Management Conference was being held, an event Bill Clinton (then governor of Arkansas) attended to deliver a speech. Jones alleged that an Arkansas state trooper, Danny Ferguson, approached her at the registration desk, told her that Clinton would like to meet with her, and escorted her to a business suite in the hotel where Clinton was staying.
A double standard was at play in the FBI's raid of the office of Donald Trump's lawyer but not Bill Clinton's.
District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas dismissed the lawsuit on 1 April 1998, holding that âthe governorâs alleged conduct does not constitute sexual assault,â that âplaintiffâs allegations fall far short of the rigorous standards for establishing a claim of outrage under Arkansas law,â that âplaintiff has failed to demonstrate that she has a case worthy of submitting to a jury,â and that âthere are no genuine issues for trial in this case.â
Nothing Clinton did in settling Jonesâ civil lawsuit was illegal (or even potentially illegal), but Trumpâs payment of hush money to Daniels through his lawyer was possibly an illegal act on the part of Trump and/or Cohen, hence the raid on the latterâs office but not the office of Clintonâs lawyer.
As the FBI explains, Cheryl Mills, Clintonâs former chief of staff, and David Kendall, Clintonâs lawyer, oversaw the process of sorting the work-related emails from the personal emails. Heather Samuelson, a lawyer who worked on Clintonâs 2008 presidential campaign, ...
One of the mysteries that the FBI has now cleared up is when Clintonâs emails that were deemed personal were deleted and how it was done.
That was not accurate.â. It turned out that Keilarâs assumption was accurate. The 31,830 personal emails that Keilar asked about were deleted âsometime between March 25-31, 2015,â according to the FBI. That was about three weeks after Clinton received a House subpoena on March 4, 2015. As the FBI explains, Cheryl Mills, ...
Clinton repeatedly had said âeverybody in the government with whom I emailed knew that I was using a personal email.â But the FBI said âe-mails from Clinton ⌠did not display her e-mail address,â and only 13 people directly emailed her.
But the FBI said her emails were deleted âbetween March 25-31, 2015â â three weeks after the subpoena. The campaign now says it only learned when the emails were deleted from the FBI report.
The FBI on Sept. 2 â the Friday before Labor Day â released an 11-page summary of its interview of Clinton and a 47-page âfactual summaryâ of its investigation of her email use when she served as secretary of state from January 2009 to February 2013. The FBI probe focused on whether Clinton or her staff violated federal laws governing ...
However, the employee told the FBI that âhe had an âoh shitâ moment and sometime between March 25-31, 2015 deleted the Clinton archive mailbox from the PRN server and used BleachBit to delete the exported .PST files he had created on the server containing Clintonâs e-mails.â.