Politics The FBI’s Political Meddling

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That there were other things to pursue indictments.

In fact, Judicial Watch is seeking draft indictments unrelated to Lewinski.
 
BTW, Starr achieved 14 indictments and convicted, and/or guilty pleas in his investigations.
 
BTW, Starr achieved 14 indictments and convicted, and/or guilty pleas in his investigations.

And yet none of them were Hillary. SAD!

barfo
 
And yet none of them were Hillary. SAD!

barfo

Where there’s smoke, right?

Her law partner and 2nd at the DoJ was sent to prison.

The stonewalling mentioned was the disappearance of her Rose Law Firm billing records, that magically appeared in a room in the White House long after they were subpoenaed.

SAD that you would defend her. She’s a career criminal.
 
Where there’s smoke, right?

Her law partner and 2nd at the DoJ was sent to prison.

The stonewalling mentioned was the disappearance of her Rose Law Firm billing records, that magically appeared in a room in the White House long after they were subpoenaed.

SAD that you would defend her. She’s a career criminal.

A special prosecutor spent seven years investigating her and brought no charges. Numerous congressional committees have investigated her and brought no charges. The FBI has investigated her and brought no charges.

Maybe she corrupted all of those investigations, since she's such a criminal mastermind.

Or maybe there were no charges to bring.

barfo
 
A special prosecutor spent seven years investigating her and brought no charges. Numerous congressional committees have investigated her and brought no charges. The FBI has investigated her and brought no charges.

Maybe she corrupted all of those investigations, since she's such a criminal mastermind.

Or maybe there were no charges to bring.

barfo

Nothing? Starr brought 14 indictments that resulted in convictions, and was working on drafting indictment for your heroine. Those included her closest business partner and the governor that followed Clinton in Arkansas. It wasn't new corruption in Arkansas, just new faces.

In addition to those 14, there were 47 indictments of friends and partners of the Clintons, 33 of those during his administration proper. To put that in perspective, if Manafort and Flynn are indicted, that makes TWO during the Trump administration (so far).

She's a career criminal. There's good reason that scandals arise around her and her gang.

If she's as smart as you seem to think she is, it's impossible she wasn't aware of (at least) all the criminality going down. The TravelGate scandal alone is well documented abuse of power.
 
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/caught-in-the-whitewater-net/

Whitewater prosecutors cast such a wide net in Arkansas that they yielded a good-sized catch, even though the big fish seem to have gotten away.
The prime quarry of investigators, who started work in 1994, were President Clinton and his wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton. Mr. Clinton was cleared of any wrongdoing by special prosecutor Kenneth Starr in November and Mrs. Clinton has not been charged.

Nevertheless, the investigation resulted in 14 convictions and two acquittals. The last six indictments, handed down in April, were dismissed by a judge in July.

Caught in the Whitewater net were:

  • Webster Hubbell. A Clinton friend from Arkansas and former law partner of Mrs. Clinton, Hubbell held the number three job in the Justice Department when the Whitewater probe began. He pleaded guilty on Dec. 6, 1994, to mail fraud and tax evasion and admitted stealing almost $400,000 from his clients and partners in Little Rock's Rose Law Firm. He was sentenced to 21 months in jail in a plea-bargain deal in which he agreed to cooperate with investigators. He has reportedly provided prosecutors with little information, while at the same time working at a variety of jobs obtained for him by friends of Mr. Clinton. This has led to accusations that Hubbell's silence was bought and to new indictments, announced April 30, accusing Hubell, his wife, his lawyer and his tax accountant of tax evasion. These have been dismisssed. But Hubbell was arraigned Nov. 23 on a third set of charges filed by Starr.
    77430.jpg

    James McDougal
  • James McDougal. A Clinton friend and Whitewater business partner, McDougal operated Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan. He was convicted in May 1996 of 18 felony counts related to bad loans made by Madison, which failed in the late 1980s at a considerable cost to taxpayers. McDougal agreed to cooperate with prosecutors against Mr. Clinton, but not until after his conviction. He died in prison in March.
    75735.jpg

    Susan McDougal
  • Susan McDougal. With her former husband, James, Mrs. McDougal was a partner in the Whitewater land deal and in Madison Guaranty. She was convicted in 1996 of four felony fraud counts. She now is serving a two-year sentence. Unlike her ex-husband, she refused to cooperate with the Whitewater prosecutors and was senteced to 18 months in jail on a civil contempt charge. She completed that jail term earlier this year, but still has refused to answer questions before a grand jury. On May 4, she was charged with criminal contempt and obstruction of justice.
  • Larry Kuca. A business associate of the McDougals, he pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges in connection with a federally backed loan. He was sentenced to probation and community service.
  • Robert Palmer. A land appraiser in Little Rock, Palmer was accused of filing false papers in connection with Madison Guaranty. He was sentenced to probation in 1994.
    77431.jpg

    Jim Guy Tucker
  • Governor Jim Guy Tucker President Clinton's successor as Arkansas governor, Tucker resigned after his conviction in May 1996 on mail fraud and conspiracy charges. He was sentenced to probation. Facing separate conspiracy and income-tax evasion charges in connection with a sham bankruptcy and cable-television system sale, Tucker pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate with investigators.
  • William Marks Former business partner of Tucker, Marks was charged in 1997 in connection with the sham bankruptcy with which he and Tucker allegedly tried to hide profits and avoid income tax on the sale of a cable television station. He agreed to cooperate with investigators. In return, several charges against him were dropped.
  • John Haley A lawyer for Tucker, Haley was accused with Marks and Tucker in the bankruptcy and cable TV station transactions. He pleaded guilty in February to a misdemeanor charge of failing to provide correct information to the government
  • Eugene Fitzhugh. A lawyer and businessman, Fitzhugh was one of the first to be accused in 1994. He pleaded guilty to trying to bribe Hale. In exchanged for his plea, he was sentenced to 28 months, and prosecutors dropped charges accusing him of conspiring to defraud the Small Business Administration.

  • Charles Matthews. An Arknsas businessman and colleague of Fitzhugh, Mathews was accused with Fitzhugh of trying to defraud the Small Business Administration. He pleaded guilty instead to misdemeanor bribery charges and was sentenced to 16 months.
    76095.jpg

    David Hale
  • David Hale. A former municipal judge and businessman in Little Rock, Hale was the star witness in independent counsel Ken Starr's first Whitewater trial. He served a jail term for conspiring to defraud the SBA. With his guilty plea, he agreed to cooperate with investigators. He testified against the McDougals and has told prosecutors Mr. Clinton pressured him into making a suspect loa to Susan McDougal. Hale's testimony has come under question with reports that he obtained cash from a conservative group with ties to special Whitewater prosecutor Starr. Hale trial this summer on state charges was delayed by illness.
  • Stephen Smith. A former Clinton aide, Smith pleaded guilty in 1995 to lying about a federally backed loan he obtained from Hale.
  • Christopher Wade. An Arkansas businessman and real estate agent, Wade pleaded guilty to bankruptcy fraud in 1995.
  • Neal Ainley. An Arkansas banker, Ainley pleaded guilty in 1995 to concealing cash payments to Mr. Clinton's campaign.
 
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/caught-in-the-whitewater-net/

Whitewater prosecutors cast such a wide net in Arkansas that they yielded a good-sized catch, even though the big fish seem to have gotten away.
The prime quarry of investigators, who started work in 1994, were President Clinton and his wife, Hillary Rodham Clinton. Mr. Clinton was cleared of any wrongdoing by special prosecutor Kenneth Starr in November and Mrs. Clinton has not been charged.

Nevertheless, the investigation resulted in 14 convictions and two acquittals. The last six indictments, handed down in April, were dismissed by a judge in July.

Caught in the Whitewater net were:

  • Webster Hubbell. A Clinton friend from Arkansas and former law partner of Mrs. Clinton, Hubbell held the number three job in the Justice Department when the Whitewater probe began. He pleaded guilty on Dec. 6, 1994, to mail fraud and tax evasion and admitted stealing almost $400,000 from his clients and partners in Little Rock's Rose Law Firm. He was sentenced to 21 months in jail in a plea-bargain deal in which he agreed to cooperate with investigators. He has reportedly provided prosecutors with little information, while at the same time working at a variety of jobs obtained for him by friends of Mr. Clinton. This has led to accusations that Hubbell's silence was bought and to new indictments, announced April 30, accusing Hubell, his wife, his lawyer and his tax accountant of tax evasion. These have been dismisssed. But Hubbell was arraigned Nov. 23 on a third set of charges filed by Starr.
    77430.jpg

    James McDougal
  • James McDougal. A Clinton friend and Whitewater business partner, McDougal operated Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan. He was convicted in May 1996 of 18 felony counts related to bad loans made by Madison, which failed in the late 1980s at a considerable cost to taxpayers. McDougal agreed to cooperate with prosecutors against Mr. Clinton, but not until after his conviction. He died in prison in March.
    75735.jpg

    Susan McDougal
  • Susan McDougal. With her former husband, James, Mrs. McDougal was a partner in the Whitewater land deal and in Madison Guaranty. She was convicted in 1996 of four felony fraud counts. She now is serving a two-year sentence. Unlike her ex-husband, she refused to cooperate with the Whitewater prosecutors and was senteced to 18 months in jail on a civil contempt charge. She completed that jail term earlier this year, but still has refused to answer questions before a grand jury. On May 4, she was charged with criminal contempt and obstruction of justice.
  • Larry Kuca. A business associate of the McDougals, he pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges in connection with a federally backed loan. He was sentenced to probation and community service.
  • Robert Palmer. A land appraiser in Little Rock, Palmer was accused of filing false papers in connection with Madison Guaranty. He was sentenced to probation in 1994.
    77431.jpg

    Jim Guy Tucker
  • Governor Jim Guy Tucker President Clinton's successor as Arkansas governor, Tucker resigned after his conviction in May 1996 on mail fraud and conspiracy charges. He was sentenced to probation. Facing separate conspiracy and income-tax evasion charges in connection with a sham bankruptcy and cable-television system sale, Tucker pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate with investigators.
  • William Marks Former business partner of Tucker, Marks was charged in 1997 in connection with the sham bankruptcy with which he and Tucker allegedly tried to hide profits and avoid income tax on the sale of a cable television station. He agreed to cooperate with investigators. In return, several charges against him were dropped.
  • John Haley A lawyer for Tucker, Haley was accused with Marks and Tucker in the bankruptcy and cable TV station transactions. He pleaded guilty in February to a misdemeanor charge of failing to provide correct information to the government
  • Eugene Fitzhugh. A lawyer and businessman, Fitzhugh was one of the first to be accused in 1994. He pleaded guilty to trying to bribe Hale. In exchanged for his plea, he was sentenced to 28 months, and prosecutors dropped charges accusing him of conspiring to defraud the Small Business Administration.

  • Charles Matthews. An Arknsas businessman and colleague of Fitzhugh, Mathews was accused with Fitzhugh of trying to defraud the Small Business Administration. He pleaded guilty instead to misdemeanor bribery charges and was sentenced to 16 months.
    76095.jpg

    David Hale
  • David Hale. A former municipal judge and businessman in Little Rock, Hale was the star witness in independent counsel Ken Starr's first Whitewater trial. He served a jail term for conspiring to defraud the SBA. With his guilty plea, he agreed to cooperate with investigators. He testified against the McDougals and has told prosecutors Mr. Clinton pressured him into making a suspect loa to Susan McDougal. Hale's testimony has come under question with reports that he obtained cash from a conservative group with ties to special Whitewater prosecutor Starr. Hale trial this summer on state charges was delayed by illness.
  • Stephen Smith. A former Clinton aide, Smith pleaded guilty in 1995 to lying about a federally backed loan he obtained from Hale.
  • Christopher Wade. An Arkansas businessman and real estate agent, Wade pleaded guilty to bankruptcy fraud in 1995.
  • Neal Ainley. An Arkansas banker, Ainley pleaded guilty in 1995 to concealing cash payments to Mr. Clinton's campaign.

I guess you are trying to make the case that if whoever is indicted tomorrow is an associate of Trump's, then Trump himself must be a criminal?

Seems like an odd approach for a Trump loyalist like yourself.

barfo
 
I guess you are trying to make the case that if whoever is indicted tomorrow is an associate of Trump's, then Trump himself must be a criminal?

Seems like an odd approach for a Trump loyalist like yourself.

barfo

I'm making the case that Starr accomplished 14 indictments that led to convictions, not related to Lewinski.

Trump fired both Manafort and Flynn, immediately after it was found out they had undisclosed ties to foreign governments.
 
I'm making the case that Starr accomplished 14 indictments that led to convictions, not related to Lewinski.

Yes, so what? Why is that fact relevant here?

Trump fired both Manafort and Flynn, immediately after it was found out they had undisclosed ties to foreign governments.

Completely incorrect in the case of Flynn. He did not fire Flynn immediately. The transition team (head: Mike Pence) was warned that he had ties to foreign governments. Obama warned Trump personally. Sally Yates warned the White House. Yet Flynn was kept on as Nat. Security Advisor until the press found out.

barfo
 
Yes, so what? Why is that fact relevant here?



Completely incorrect in the case of Flynn. He did not fire Flynn immediately. The transition team (head: Mike Pence) was warned that he had ties to foreign governments. Obama warned Trump personally. Sally Yates warned the White House. Yet Flynn was kept on as Nat. Security Advisor until the press found out.

barfo

I wouldn't trust the outgoing people as far as I could throw them.

When it became known that Flynn lied about his record with foreign governments, he was fired. He didn't last long at all.

The real numbers of members of administrations convicted of crimes:
Trump 0
Obama 1
W 5
Clinton 2
GHW Bush 1
Reagan 6, including three deputy secretaries of the armed forces.
Carter 0
Ford 1
Nixon 10
 
So Denny, Who's supposed to hold our "representatives" accountable if it isn't the FBI?
 

I'm talking about when they commit crimes. Y'all aren't making sense. Nixon's ass should've gone to prison. MF's get pardoned and shit when they literally commit crimes against the the U.S.
 
I'm talking about when they commit crimes. Y'all aren't making sense. Nixon's ass should've gone to prison. MF's get pardoned and shit when they literally commit crimes against the the U.S.

Nixon didn't do anything wrong because in the end he compromised.

- Gen John Kelly
 
Crime is crime and it should be prosecuted no matter who committed it.

Separation of powers. The FBI investigating members of congress is an Executive Branch attacking the Legislative Branch.

It's written in the constitution that congress polices itself.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/nov/16/charles-rangel-convicted-misconduct-congress

Once out of office, the person can and should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

That goes for the president, too. He can be sued for civil issues, but not indicted for crimes (until he's impeached or otherwise leaves office).
 
Separation of powers. The FBI investigating members of congress is an Executive Branch attacking the Legislative Branch.

It's written in the constitution that congress polices itself.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/nov/16/charles-rangel-convicted-misconduct-congress

Once out of office, the person can and should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

That goes for the president, too. He can be sued for civil issues, but not indicted for crimes (until he's impeached or otherwise leaves office).

Don't you have to be charged to be impeached??
 
Don't you have to be charged to be impeached??

Impeach means "charged with high crime or misdemeanor" (basically) by the house of representatives.

A trial is held by the senate with the supreme court acting as judge. If 2/3 of the senate votes to remove, the president is removed from office.

Once removed, he can be indicted for crimes.

Bill Clinton was to be indicted for his crimes, but reached a plea bargain with the special prosecutor in 2001, after he left office.

http://www.slate.com/articles/news_...001/01/what_sort_of_plea_did_clinton_cop.html
 
That goes for the president, too. He can be sued for civil issues, but not indicted for crimes (until he's impeached or otherwise leaves office).

I think there is some uncertainty on that point, because no one has ever tried to indict a president. I think I read that Ken Starr drafted a legal opinion that a sitting president could be indicted.

barfo
 
I think there is some uncertainty on that point, because no one has ever tried to indict a president. I think I read that Ken Starr drafted a legal opinion that a sitting president could be indicted.

barfo

@Denny Crane This MUST be fake since it's from the NY times. You know them...

Can the President Be Indicted? A Long-Hidden Legal Memo Says Yes

WASHINGTON — A newfound memo from Kenneth W. Starr’s independent counsel investigation into President Bill Clinton sheds fresh light on a constitutional puzzle that is taking on mounting significance amid the Trump-Russia inquiry: Can a sitting president be indicted?

The 56-page memo, locked in the National Archives for nearly two decades and obtained by The New York Times under the Freedom of Information Act, amounts to the most thorough government-commissioned analysis rejecting a generally held view that presidents are immune from prosecution while in office.

“It is proper, constitutional, and legal for a federal grand jury to indict a sitting president for serious criminal acts that are not part of, and are contrary to, the president’s official duties,” the Starr office memo concludes. “In this country, no one, even President Clinton, is above the law.”

Mr. Starr assigned Ronald Rotunda, a prominent conservative professor of constitutional law and ethics whom Mr. Starr hired as a consultant on his legal team, to write the memo in spring 1998 after deputies advised him that they had gathered enough evidence to ask a grand jury to indict Mr. Clinton, the memo shows.

Other prosecutors working for Mr. Starr developed a draft indictment of Mr. Clinton, which The Times has also requested be made public. The National Archives has not processed that file to determine whether it is exempt from disclosure under grand-jury secrecy rules.

In 1974, the Watergate special counsel, Leon Jaworski, had also received a memo from his staff saying he could indict the president, in that instance Richard M. Nixon, while he was in office, and later made that case in a court brief. Those documents, however, explore the topic significantly less extensively than the Starr office memo.

In the end, both Mr. Jaworski and Mr. Starr let congressional impeachment proceedings play out and did not try to indict the presidents while they remained in office. Mr. Starr, who had decided he could indict Mr. Clinton, said in a recent interview that he had concluded the more prudent and appropriate course was simply referring the matter to Congress for potential impeachment.

As Robert S. Mueller III, the special counsel in the latest inquiry, investigates the Trump campaign’s dealings with Russia and whether President Trump obstructed justice, the newly unearthed Starr office memo raises the possibility that Mr. Mueller may have more options than most commentators have assumed. Here is an explanation of the debate and what the Starr office memo has to say.

Why do some argue presidents are immune?
Nothing in the Constitution or federal statutes says that sitting presidents are immune from prosecution, and no court has ruled that they have any such shield. But proponents of the theory that Mr. Trump is nevertheless immune for now from indictment cited the Constitution’s “structural principles,” in the words of a memo written in September 1973 by Robert G. Dixon Jr., then the head of the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel.

This argument boils down to practicalities of governance: The stigma of being indicted and the burden of a trial would unduly interfere with a president’s ability to carry out his duties, preventing the executive branch “from accomplishing its constitutional functions” in a way that cannot “be justified by an overriding need,” Mr. Dixon wrote.

In October 1973, Mr. Nixon’s solicitor general, Robert H. Bork, submitted a court brief that similarly argued for an “inference” that the Constitution makes sitting presidents immune from indictment and trial. And in 2000, Randolph D. Moss, the head of the Office of Legal Counsel under Mr. Clinton, reviewed the Justice Department’s 1973 opinions and reaffirmed their conclusion.

What was the Starr office’s stance?
In laying out his case, Mr. Rotunda played down arguments that permitting a president to be indicted would cripple the executive branch. Instead, he placed greater emphasis on immunity issues that the Nixon — and, later, Clinton — legal teams dismissed.

Among them, he noted that the Constitution’s speech-or-debate clause explicitly grants limited immunity to lawmakers for certain actions. “If the framers of our Constitution wanted to create a special immunity for the president,” he argued, “they could have written the relevant clause.”

He also wrote that the 25th Amendment, which allows for temporary replacement of a president who has become unable to carry out the duties of the office, created a mechanism that would keep the executive branch from becoming incapacitated if the president was on trial.

And he noted that if indictments had to wait until a president’s term was up, some crimes would become untriable — such as those where the statute of limitations had run out. That could happen for crimes that do not rise to an impeachable offense, he wrote, citing the example of a president who punches an irritating heckler.

“No one would suggest that the president should be removed from office simply because of that assault,” he wrote. “Yet the president has no right to assault hecklers. If there is no recourse against the president, if he cannot be prosecuted for violating the criminal laws, he will be above the law.”

What has the Supreme Court said?
The Supreme Court has never addressed the question of whether a sitting president can be indicted and tried. But in a landmark 1997 ruling, Clinton v. Jones, it permitted a lawsuit against Mr. Clinton for unofficial actions — accusations of misconduct before he became president — to proceed while he was in office.

In his 2000 memo, Mr. Moss dismissed this ruling, emphasizing that the burdens of being a criminal defendant were greater than the burdens of being sued by a private litigant. But in the Starr office memo, Mr. Rotunda deemed the ruling far more significant for the criminal question.

“If public policy and the Constitution allow a private litigant to sue a sitting president for acts that are not part of the president’s official duties (and are outside the outer perimeter of those duties), and that is what Clinton v. Jones squarely held,” he wrote, “then one would think that an indictment is constitutional because the public interest in criminal cases is greater.”

Could Mueller go where no prosecutor has before?
Even if Mr. Mueller were to uncover sufficient evidence to indict Mr. Trump, decide that the legal arguments in the Starr office memo were correct and conclude that he wanted to ask a grand jury for an indictment while Mr. Trump is president — all big ifs — yet another uncertainty would loom: whether he must accept the Office of Legal Counsel’s analysis, even if he disagreed with it.

The Justice Department’s regulations give Mr. Mueller, as a special counsel, greater autonomy than an ordinary prosecutor, but still say he must follow its “rules, regulations, procedures, practices and policies.” They also permit Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein to overrule Mr. Mueller if he tries to take a step that Mr. Rosenstein deems contrary to such practices.

There is no guiding precedent about whether Office of Legal Counsel memos would fall into that category, or if a special counsel is free to reach his own legal judgments. But as Mr. Mueller’s office investigates, the ambiguity about the rules could influence calculations in the Trump camp about how much to cooperate and how much to fight, said Renato Mariotti, a former federal prosecutor turned defense lawyer.

“I would be surprised if Mueller indicted the president for the same prudential reasons that swayed Starr,” Mr. Mariotti said. “But the specter that he might do that could have an impact on things. If I were on the president’s team, I would say, ‘I don’t think it’s likely that he would, but it’s possible,’ depending on what the facts are.”

Here's the Memo:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive...-Savage-NYT-FOIA-Starr-memo-presidential.html
 
Starr's unpublished memo aside...

https://www.forbes.com/sites/inside...-allegations-of-past-misconduct/#7a6775a0491b

The Attorney General’s Office of Legal Counsel has considered this issue in depth twice in the past half-century – in 1973, in connection with President Richard Nixon’s role in Watergate, and again in 2000, after President Bill Clinton was acquitted of impeachment charges. On both occasions, federal lawyers in the Attorney General’s office apparently determined that the indictment or criminal prosecution of a sitting President was impermissible and unconstitutional because it would undermine the capacity of the executive branch to perform its constitutionally assigned functions.

The United States Constitution provides only for impeachment and is silent on the issue of whether federal officials can be criminally prosecuted while holding office.
If Mueller finds some indictable offense, he would present it to the house of representatives and they would impeach, the senate would remove, and then the former president put on trial.

The question of whether a president can be sued while in office was decided by the Supreme Court in the Jones v. Clinton matter.
 
NYTimes eats some crow. Claims the president is somehow fuming all day long, and is about to fire Mueller have been constant the past few days.


https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/01/us/politics/trump-russia-charges.html

In Call With Times Reporter, Trump Projects Air of Calm Over Charges

President Trump projected an air of calm on Wednesday after charges against his former campaign chief and a foreign policy aide roiled Washington, insisting to The New York Times that he was not “angry at anybody” and that investigations into his campaign’s links to Russia had not come near him personally.

...


He also pushed back against a report published Monday night by The Washington Post, which the president said described him as “angry at everybody.”

“I’m actually not angry at anybody,” Mr. Trump told The Times.

The phone call seemed intended to dispel the impression of a president and a White House under siege. The indictment of Mr. Manafort and his longtime deputy, Rick Gates, on Monday came as little surprise to Mr. Trump or his team, and they were relieved that the charges were not directly related to last year’s campaign. Instead, both were indicted on charges including money laundering, tax evasion and failing to properly disclose lobbying on behalf of foreign governments.

...

Still, three advisers, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal dynamics, said reports of a shellshocked team had been overstated, although some conceded that word that Sam Clovis, an early aide on Mr. Trump’s team, had been interviewed by Mr. Mueller’s team had caught some advisers off guard.

In private moments, Mr. Trump, who is prone to venting, blows off steam about the investigation but then moves on, according to one of the advisers. The president is “annoyed” by the omnipresent Russia fever, the adviser said, but he is comfortable with the strategy adopted by Ty Cobb, a senior White House lawyer, who has insisted on cooperating with Mr. Mueller without attacking him, in hopes of a speedy resolution. There is no talk of firing the special counsel, the adviser said.
 
Some thoughts on the Papadopoulos guy.

Another guy with weak association to the campaign also sought Hillary's emails. This was widely reported a while back (July, in fact, if not earlier).

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/politics/ct-peter-smith-death-met-0713-20170713-story.html

These guys were seeking emails from Hillary's illegal private email server, not any emails hacked from the DNC or Podesta (those weren't HER emails). This is a really big detail to consider. These republican operatives didn't seem to know about the DNC hack, or if Clinton's illegal server was actually hacked or not. Thus they didn't collude on any hacking, according to what we know and can deduce.

There's only a tiny bit of news with Papadopoulos - that there was a second guy looking for oppo research on Clinton, willing to talk to Russians.

The difference between Papadopoulos and Clinton/Dossier is that Papadopolous wasn't paid, and his efforts mostly rebuffed by the campaign. It is no smoking gun, and if Mueller cannot produce something more substantial, this really is a nothingburger.

Also, FWIW, collusion isn't illegal. There are no laws against collusion itself, outside of obscure financial situations. Simply talking to Russians is no crime, so if you're going to strike at Trump, you better find something that's actually legit.

There are laws against conspiracy, though. That is the proper legal term that we should be talking about, should there be any evidence the campaign actively worked with hackers to hack the DNC and Podesta, or even conspired to release the emails, I would absolutely call it conspiracy and at least a violation of election laws. If republicans actually received the emails they appeared to be seeking, that would violate election laws, at least. If republicans participated (directing, suggesting, etc.) specific hacking incidents, those would be criminal acts (cybercrime laws).

Clinton and DNC's direct or indirect payments to a foreign national (Steele) are absolutely criminal. Federal Election Campaign Act (52 USC 30101) prohibits foreign nationals and governments from giving or receiving money in U.S. campaigns. It also prohibits the filing of false or misleading campaign reports to hide the true purpose of the money (52 USC 30121).

What she did as Secy of State and that needs a special counsel in its own right, to prove or disprove the allegations, are serious crimes. Bribery, mail fraud, wire fraud, and racketeering. The charges are not limited to the uranium deal, but rather hundreds of $millions in donations to her "charity" in exchange for what looks like favors provided using her office. Also the charity itself, which failed to provide the promised documentation of foreign donations, that was a requirement for her being allowed to become Secy of State.
 
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