Durham surprised all of us who are following the Sussmann case with a wee-hours-of-the-morning filing last night. It addresses Durham’s claimed joint venture or conspiracy that Durham argues permits introduction of otherwise hearsay evidence: storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco…
Notably, for the first time Durham details a meeting on August 12, 2016, amongst Sussmann, the lead campaign lawyer, Marc Elias, Rodney Joffe (Tech Executive-1), and one of the founders of Fusion GPS (either Simpson or Fritsch, presumably).
Testimony in another case suggests that Laura Seago of Fusion may also been at that meeting, at which plans were discussed to collect and disseminate data and reports creating a “narrative” that Trump and Moscow were in close communication.
Durham’s description of the venture and its purpose puts a lie to the position taken by all who claim that everything Fusion was involved in while working with Perkins Coie was privileged. The. game was to create opposition research to give to the FBI and the press.
As he usually dies, Durham dropped another hint at some new, previously unknown aspect of the scheme that Durham is focusing on. In a footnote on the last page of the brief, Durham hints that Joffe may have improperly used his position at Neustar.
Here’s the footnote: “For example, as a result of perceived pressure to please Tech Executive-1 because of his role as a data provider for the Agency-1 contract, Researcher-1 ultimately sent an email endorsing Tech Executive-1’s draft white paper that the defendant would later…
provide to the FBI, stating: ‘A DNS expert would poke several holes to this hypothesis (primarily around visibility, about which very smartly you do not talk about). That being said, I do not think even the top security (non-DNS) researchers can refute your statements. Nice!’”
This suggestion of “perceived pressure” from Joffe is new. It raises the issue of whether Joffe used his position of control over private and govt data needed by prospective govt contractors, in order to unethically extract something from them.
The heart of this illicit scheme involved use of non public, sensitive data some of which were only available under sensitive govt contracts. Joffe stood in the middle as more or less a gatekeeper. Did he leverage that position, in breach of govt contracts, to misuse that data?
In recent briefing Durham has argued that notwithstanding the fact that over five years have passed since the meeting with the CIA about Yotaphones, Joffe still has possible criminal exposure because there are federal fraud crimes with longer than a five year SOL.
Durham is likely referring to 18 USC section 1031, which makes it a crime to commit fraud with respect to a govt contract having a value of $1 million or more. The statute of limitations is seven years. Read it here: law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18…
So Durham’s latest breadcrumbs raise the question of whether he is considering charging Joffe with major fraud under Section 1031, for misusing sensitive data generated under a contract with the EOP, or data sold to Ga Tech by Neustar for use in the DARPA contract.
Finally, this is speculation, but in citing the CIA’s findings that the data given to them by Sussmann were likely “user created,” there is the specter that Joffe and his team may not only misappropriated secret govt data to use for political purposes,
… but they could have fabricated some of that data. Could such misuse and deceptive fabrication be part of a scheme “to obtain … property by means of false pretenses” in connection with the procurement of a govt contract? Or a fraud against the United States?
Section 1031 is the one fraud statute that jumps out as something Durham may be contemplating for charges against Joffe.

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More from @KingMakerFT

Apr 22
@ProfMJCleveland is out today with some more bombshells found in documents produced by Ga Tech. Chief among them is that under the contract with DARPA, the Ga Tech computer folks assisted former Special Counsel Mueller in analyzing the DNC hack. thefederalist.com/2022/04/22/doc…
This article contains a veritable cornucopia of previously unknown details about the involvement of the “Joffe team” of DNS researchers in all aspects of the Trump/Russia collusion hoax - from Alfa Bank to Yotaphones and practically everything in between.
As to the Mueller investigation. the Ga Tech folks produced white papers for Mueller on APT-28 and APT - 29, famously relied upon by Crowdstrike to attribute DNC hacks to Cozy Bear and Fancy Bear versions of Russian hackers.
Read 5 tweets
Apr 20
Here are @ProfMJCleveland ‘s takeaways from the objections raised by Joffe, Fusion GPS, Perkins Coie and the Clinton campaign based on privilege and work product, to the production of documents to the prosecution. thefederalist.com/2022/04/20/4-t…
I have a couple of comments. I absolutely agree the Fusion is not the owner of any privilege and probably had no business intervening to protect a privilege it did not own. To make matters worse, Fusion’s theory is that it’s job was to assist Perkins Coie in its legal advice.
Yet most of Fusion’s time was spent generating opposition research and then passing that on to the press. This filing likely lost any credibility they might have had with the court. However I disagree with @ProfMJCleveland that the law firm doesn’t belong in this privilege fight.
Read 10 tweets
Apr 8
Regarding the extraordinary verdict in the Whitmer kidnapping case, @kenbensinger has followed the case closely and is out with a good article today about the case. He points out something most of the media has overlooked. The defendants had to fight the case with hands tied.
The prosecution objected to, and the judge agreed to exclude, a massive amount of evidence showing the lengths the FBI and its many informants went to encourage the defendants in their crazy plans and to keep the plans alive no matter what.
@kenbensinger describes some of what the jury never heard: “They said it was a case of entrapment and that they had hundreds of recordings, text messages, and Facebook posts that would shine a very different light on the government’s narrative. …”
Read 7 tweets
Apr 6
Here’s my take on the new information, not mentioned in the indictment, that Sussmann sent a text to Baker the day before the meeting, in which MS requests a meeting and says he’s not representing any client, but will be bringing information he thinks the FBI would like to see.
First, is the text a separate crime from what’s charged in the indictment? My answer is no, because nothing about the text shows materiality as to the lie about no client. It could just as easily been a white lie to get Baker to meet with him to discuss college football.
Read 13 tweets
Apr 5
There’s another issue brewing that bears watching: attorney/ client privilege. Sussmann filed a motion to exclude all evidence that is subject to the atty/client privilege, on the theory that the jury might assume that if a document is redacted or a witness refuses to answer,
…someone is trying to hide something. There is case law supporting that position, out of concern the jury would make an adverse inference. Some courts handle the problem with an instruction explaining what the privilege is and why assertion of it doesn’t imply anything bad.
On the other hand Durham has until tomorrow to file a motion to compel the production of documents and testimony withheld as privileged. Durham will argue that the privilege in certain cases was wrongly asserted. It’s possible that if Durham wins that motion. Sissmann’s is moot.
Read 8 tweets
Apr 5
There is an interesting issue brewing in the Sussmann case: did Joffe and his fellow techies conspire or act in concert with members of the Clinton neon campaign and Sussmann to generate and promote the narrative that Trump communicated with Russia through the Alfa Bank?
Durham relies on the DC Circuit’s Gewin opinion for the proposition that evidence that is otherwise hearsay may nevertheless be introduced into evince if the persons making the statements were part of an effort with the defendant to work together toward a common purpose.
Under Gewin, this combination or joint venture, while technically a conspiracy, need not have engaged in unlawful conduct. casetext.com/case/us-v-gewin
Read 9 tweets

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