So Roger Stone had a bit of a tantrum yesterday. He’s angry because he was assigned to a judge he doesn’t want.
What’s really happening is that Rule of Law colliding with Cult of Leadership.
time.com/5532193/roger-…
When Special Counsel filed Stone’s indictment, he designated Stone’s case as related to the pending U.S. v. Netyksho—the Russian hacking case.
justice.gov/file/1080281/d…
It also alleges that the Russian hackers conspired with persons “known and unknown to the grand jury” to interfere with the 2016 presidential election.
All the defendants in the Netyksho case are employed by Russian intelligence(GRU).
To begin with, Stone didn't want his case designated as "related" to the Russian hacking case.
She made it clear that she’s not sympathetic to people who conspired with Russians. cnn.com/2019/02/15/pol…
He also didn't want Judge Jackson.
She then said this raises “legitimate questions about where [Manafort’s] loyalties lie.”
He also doesn’t want his case designated as being “related” to the Russian GRU officials who hacked the DNC, etc.
So he filed this doc, arguing that the cases are not related: assets.documentcloud.org/documents/5732…
Moreover, he argues that his alleged crimes and the Russian hacking occurred a year apart, so the cases were “unlikely” to have arisen from the same wiretap or search warrant.
Special Counsel (SC) filed this response, and revealed a few new facts: politico.com/f/?id=00000168…
“In particular,” SC says, “evidence in this case was found in accounts that were subject to search warrants executed in Netyksho.”
Special Counsel also argues that the cases are related because Stone is accused of obstructing an investigation into the Russian Netyksho hacking.
Stone then had his temper tantrum. He posted a picture of the judge with a crosshair in the background.
He accused her of running a “show trial” on behalf of “Deep State Hitman” Mueller. (link in the next tweet)
Then he deleted the photo, and his lawyers filed an apology with the court.
assets.documentcloud.org/documents/5743…
But—like Flynn and Papadopoulous—Stone isn’t giving up his version of reality.
After Comey was fired, McCabe was summoned to a meeting with Trump.
cbsnews.com/news/andrew-mc…
McCabe knew this wasn't true.
He also knew Trump expected him to "adopt" this falsehood.
McCabe knew that he’d “given him the wrong answer” and that he’d soon lose his job because of it, but he wasn't willing to lie to keep his job.
This fits with what we know of Trump.
The portrait McCabe draws of Trump is not a bumbling fool, but an expert manipulator who knows how to subtly threaten and draw people into his web of lies. He entices. He threatens.
Now Stone is facing a judge who will not accept the Trump-Fox-GOP version of the truth.
He won't give up his reality. He will present himself as a victim.
Stone has lived his entire life in a world of his own creation—and that world is about to collide with factuality in a court of law.
The fight is Cult of Leadership v. our democratic institutions.
This gives him a few days, until Thursday, to contemplate what it's like on the inside of a jail.