"Page downplayed his interactions with Dvorkovich during his March 2017 interviews with the FBI. During these interviews, Page characterized his interaction with Dvorkovich in July 2016 as a simple introduction in passing and a brief handshake." #Woodsjustice.gov/storage/120919…
N.B. This report on Dvorkovich was only included in the Woods Procedures for the third and final FISA renewal on Carter Page.
"Yuval Weber also told the FBI that while in Russia in July 2016, Carter Page was picked up in a chauffeured car and it was rumored he met with Igor Sechin. However, the FD-302 documenting this interview does not contain any reference to a chauffeured car picking up Carter Page."
In sum: Yuval gets a timely interview with the FBI (two weeks after Mueller appt), his chauferred car rumor gets put in as "corroboration" for the final FISA renewal, his interviewing notes get misplaced, and one of the interviewing agents can't recall the day the rumor was told.
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On October 11, 2016, Christopher Steele, Jonathan Winer, and Orbis employee Tatyana Duran met with Deputy Assistant Secretary Kathleen Kavalec at the State Department. oig.justice.gov/reports/2019/o…
The meeting was structured into roughly three equal sessions, each about an hour long.
According to Steele, Kavalec was the only person at the meeting who took any notes. ("We were not taking notes in America at all during that visit," said Steele.) scribd.com/document/47395…
Yuval Weber seems to be one of the only known person who witnessed Carter Page shake hands with Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich at the New Economic School in Moscow on July 8, 2016.
Long story short, Carter says someone took a photo and/or video of him shaking hands with Dvorkovich, and apparently that's what started the FISA process on stage on him in the first place.
"During the course of the investigation, the FBI learned that Wolfe had been involved in the logistical process for transporting the [Carter Page] FISA materials from the Department of Justice for review at the SSCI."
If you're unfamiliar with the story, it goes that, in 2005, Diligence's Nick Day and Gretchen King had allegedly been caught spying on an employee of the auditing firm KPMG at the behest of their ultimate client, Alfa Group. politico.com/story/2007/03/…