• DOJ's Flynn filings renew focus on mysterious Susan Rice email during t

    From Peter Jankowski@1:229/2 to All on Friday, May 15, 2020 05:15:57
    XPost: alt.politics.obama, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.politics.republicans
    From: homoshows@disney.com

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/doj-flynn-susan-rice-email-during-
    transition

    Russia probe files released as part of the Justice Department's move to
    drop its case against former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn are raising new questions about a mysterious Inauguration Day email sent by
    Flynn's predecessor in the Obama administration, Susan Rice.

    An exhibit in the DOJ's motion to dismiss the Flynn case last week
    detailed a special counsel interview of former Deputy Attorney General
    Sally Yates. The interview indicated outgoing President Barack Obama was
    aware of Flynn’s intercepted December 2016 phone calls with then-Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak during the presidential transition period.

    DURHAM MOVING 'FULL THROTTLE' ON RUSSIA PROBE REVIEW, TOP FEDERAL
    PROSECUTORS INVOLVED: SOURCES

    The document noted Yates learned about the calls during a Jan 5, 2017,
    Oval Office meeting with Obama, Rice, then-FBI Director James Comey, then-
    CIA Director John Brennan, and then-Director of National Intelligence
    James Clapper.

    After the briefing, Obama asked Yates and Comey to "stay behind," and said
    he had "learned of the information about Flynn" and his conversation with Russia's ambassador about sanctions. Obama "specified that he did not want
    any additional information on the matter, but was seeking information on whether the White House should be treating Flynn any differently, given
    the information.”

    At that point, the document said, "Yates had no idea what the president
    was talking about, but figured it out based on the conversation. Yates
    recalled Comey mentioning the Logan Act, but can't recall if he specified
    there was an 'investigation.' Comey did not talk about prosecution in the meeting.”

    This would eventually lead to Flynn being interviewed, amid supposed
    concern he had violated the obscure and never-successfully-enforced Logan
    Act, and later pleading guilty to lying to investigators about his Kislyak talks.

    But the mention of that Oval Office meeting aligns with an email that Rice
    — on Jan. 20, 2017, the day President Trump was sworn into office — sent herself documenting Obama’s guidance, evidently in the same meeting, about
    how law enforcement should investigate Russian interference in the 2016 presidential race.

    Rice's office downplayed the significance of that email when it first
    surfaced in early 2018, raising questions at the time from congressional Republicans.

    A source close to the Senate Judiciary Committee told Fox News on Monday
    that GOP Senate investigators are now taking a closer look at that email.

    The message was first flagged in 2018 by Sens. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, the former Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.,
    who now sits as chairman of the panel. The email was partially
    unclassified and appeared to detail that same Jan. 5, 2017, meeting, also
    said to include former Vice President Joe Biden.

    “President Obama began the conversation by stressing his continued
    commitment to ensuring that every aspect of this issue is handled by the intelligence and law enforcement communities ‘by the book,’” Rice emailed
    to herself. “The president stressed that he is not asking about,
    initiating or instructing anything from a law enforcement perspective. He reiterated that our law enforcement team needs to proceed as it normally
    would by the book.”

    The email also appeared to reflect Obama’s guidance on sharing sensitive information with both the Russians and the incoming Trump administration.

    Rice wrote that Obama said, “he wants to be sure that, as we engage with
    the incoming team, we are mindful to ascertain if there is any reason that
    we cannot share information fully as it relates to Russia.”

    She added: “The President asked Comey to inform him if anything changes in
    the next few weeks that should affect how we share classified information
    with the incoming team. Comey said he would.”

    At the time of discovery, Graham described Rice's email as "disturbing."

    Russia investigation transcripts show Obama knew of wiretapped Flynn phone callsVideo
    “She’s sending herself an email talking about a conversation on Jan. 5
    with the president, reassuring herself, and I guess the president, that
    this would be done by the book,” Graham told Fox News in February 2018. “I think that’s odd and disturbing because we know the investigation
    regarding the Trump campaign was anything but by the book.”

    But Rice’s attorney at the time, Kathryn Ruemmler, said there was “nothing ‘unusual’” about Rice “memorializing an important discussion for the
    record.”

    “The Obama White House was justifiably concerned about how comprehensive
    they should be in their briefings regarding Russia to members of the Trump transition team, particularly Lt. General Michael Flynn, given the
    concerning communications between him and Russian officials,” Ruemmler
    said in a statement to Fox News in 2018. “The discussion that Ambassador
    Rice documented did not involve the so-called Steele dossier.”

    Ruemmler added: “Any insinuation that Ambassador Rice’s actions in this
    matter were inappropriate is yet another attempt to distract and deflect
    from the importance of the ongoing investigations into Russian meddling in America’s democracy.”

    SENATORS FLAG 'UNUSUAL' SUSAN RICE EMAIL ON RUSSIA PROBE SENT ON
    INAUGURATION DAY

    The renewed focus on Rice’s email comes after House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., also released a trove of thousands of
    pages of transcripts of interviews with former Trump campaign officials
    and Obama administration officials from the panel’s own Russia
    investigation.

    The transcripts, which included Rice’s interview with the panel in 2017, revealed that top Obama officials were questioned over whether they had or
    had seen evidence of collusion, coordination or conspiracy between the
    Trump campaign and Russia during the 2016 election—the issue that drove
    the FBI’s initial case and later Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation. Most said they had not.

    “To the best of my recollection, there wasn’t anything smoking, but there
    were some things that gave me pause,” Rice said, according to her
    transcribed interview, in response to whether she had any evidence of conspiracy. “I don’t recall intelligence that I would consider evidence to
    that effect that I saw…conspiracy prior to my departure.”

    HOUSE INTEL TRANSCRIPTS SHOW TOP OBAMA OFFICIALS HAD NO 'EMPIRICAL
    EVIDENCE' OF TRUMP-RUSSIA COLLUSION

    When asked whether she had any evidence of “coordination,” Rice replied:
    “I don’t recall any intelligence or evidence to that effect.”

    When asked about collusion, Rice replied: “Same answer.”

    New questions emerge about who knew what during early phases of Russia investigationVideo
    Meanwhile, Obama’s unexpectedly intimate knowledge of the details of
    Flynn’s calls raised new questions about Obama’s awareness and role in the early days of the Russia investigation.

    OBAMA KNEW DETAILS OF WIRETAPPED FLYNN PHONE CALL SURPRISING TOP DOJ
    OFFICIALS IN OFFICIAL MEETING WITH BIDEN, DOCUMENTS SHOW

    The exhibit on the Yates interview continued: "It was not clear to Yates
    from where the President first received the information. Yates did not
    recall Comey's response to the President's question about how to treat
    Flynn. She was so surprised by the information she was hearing that she
    was having a hard time processing it and listening to the conversation at
    the same time.”

    Yates, who was fired by the Trump administration after refusing to defend
    its travel ban executive order in court, would later say that she was
    concerned Flynn would be vulnerable to blackmail because of his
    interactions with Russia.

    The filing to dismiss the Flynn case came after the DOJ determined that
    the bureau's 2017 Flynn interview -- which formed the basis for his guilty
    plea of lying to investigators -- was "conducted without any legitimate investigative basis.”

    The retired Army lieutenant general for months had been trying to withdraw
    his plea, aided by a new attorney aggressively challenging the
    prosecution’s case and conduct.

    Fox News' Gregg Re and Alex Pappas contributed to this report.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/doj-flynn-susan-rice-email-during-
    transition

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