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May 17, 2022 48 tweets 8 min read Read on X
Good morning from the E. Barrett Prettyman courthouse in Washington DC, where opening arguments are set to begin in the Sussmann-Durham case. Packed media room so will likely be plenty of people live tweeting. nytimes.com/2022/05/15/us/…
One of the cybersecurity researchers who developed the Alfa Bank data and analysis and had been on the prosecutors witness list, Manos Antonakakis, has invoked Fifth Amendment so won't testify, DeFilippis said. /2
DeFilippis wanted an FBI agent to talk about how the FBI wondered if DNS data was spoofed as part of its inquiry (reached no conclusion); judge rules it can't get into that as part of his earlier ruling they can't raise that spectre if no evidence Sussmann had reason to doubt. /3
After opening arguments, Marc Elias, Sussmann's former partner at Perkins Coie and and the general counsel of the 2016 Hillary Clinton campaign, will testify today and there will likely be some discussion of Steele dossier materials. /4
Arg re Steele dossier stuff, including whether prosecution can tell jury that it reached the FBI team on same day as Alfa Bank meeting. Defense says prejudicial, coincidence gives misleading impression of coordination, given winding path of dossier. Judge hasn't ruled yet. /4
Jury is brought in. There are four alternates instead of the usual two because of covid, Judge Cooper notes, so there are 16. Jury won't learn who is an alternate until deliberations begin. /5
Atmospheric note: Though it doesn't look like he will talk, John Durham is at the prosecutorial table. Unfortunately can't see him on the cc tv feed angle. (Being in media room means we can use laptops & be online, plus see faces of lawyers rather than backs of heads.) /5
Deborah Shaw, member of the Durham team, begins opening arguments. Tells the jury that Sussmann was a privileged lawyer with connections who lied about having no client in order to use the bureau as a political tool for his clients, Clinton campaign and a technology executive./6
Notable: while describing the night-before text in which Sussmann indisputably told Baker he was not coming on behalf of any client, Shaw says it was the alleged reiteration of that statement in person the next day that is the charged crime. /7
Shaw addresses "the elephant in the room" - tells jury their feelings about Russia, Trump, Clinton can't play a role in the case. This is about "our FBI" which should not be used as a tool by anyone, Republicans or Democrats./8
Shaw says this was about a look a leak and a lie. Look - Joffe had researchers look for derogatory info about Trump and Russia in DNS data. Leak - Sussmann tried to get NYT to write about it. Lie - Sussmann brought it to FBI but lied about having no client. /9
Shaw tells jury the FBI knew Sussmann was representing Democrats they were the victim of a hack (contends if they knew he was allegedly repping campaign on Alfa Bank they might not have quickly met with him). She doesn't tell them Russia the perpetrator of that hack. /10
Wrapping up she again calls Sussmann privileged because he could walk into FBI and get meeting with Baker. Whether Republican or Dem, whether love Trump or hate him, we should all agree that FBI should not be used for political ends, she says./11
Bosworth says Sussmann didn't lie and wouldn't. He worked alongside FBI, former prosecutor had a clearance. Joffe is no mere tech exec but global DNS expert, and FBI confidential informant. When Joffe brought him the info, he took it seriously./12
Bosworth says was a time when questions about Trump's connections to Russia were swirling. The plan was to take this new weird thing public and they took it to NYT. That's what campaign wanted, get article that hurts Trump and helps them. Campaign didn't want FBI meeting./13
Bosworth says Sussmann wanted to give the FBI heads up so they wouldn't be caught flat footed when article came out, and FBI shut down the article. So govt theory is nonsensical./14
Bosworth emphasizing the Russian hack of DNC Sussmann got hired for. Says Sussmann not involved in analysis of the Alfa Bank data, didn't know about spam server, not in position to understand "gobbledygoop" of DNS data. /15
A key factual/interpretive thing comes into view: Shaw said Sussmann went to FBI bc frustrated NYT was delaying the story - to sex it up and create urgency. Bosworth says Sussmann believed story's publication was imminent when went to FBI - to give heads up of what was coming./16
After talking about subsequent calls that week between Baker and Sussmann, Bosworth talks about Baker's bad memory, has testified different things at different times. The March 2017 meeting notes discussing client. "That's reasonable doubt if there ever was." /17
Bosworth tries to poke other holes. Sussmann was the last lawyer Dems would have sent if trying to conceal since FBI knew he was a Dem/DNC/campaign lawyer. Campaign didn't direct or want him there; Joffe gained nothing. Source didn't matter anyway; FBI didn't even ask./18
Bosworth wraps up. 20 minute break./19
First prosecution witness, FBI supervisory special agent David Martin, is sworn in. He is cyber crime specialist. Shaw is walking through his background and experience./20
Martin is explaining to the jury what DNS data is, laying out some basic background. I'm not going to live tweet much of this part./21
Shaw wraps up a dry Q&A with Martin on topics like DNS data and recursive servers and Tor exit nodes. Bosworth opens by getting him Martin to agree that this complicated stuff that has taken him a lot of education and training to become an expert in./22
Starting with the premise that DNS data doesn't tell you for sure whether a computer actually communicated with another one, he gets Martin to agree that to actually find out if it happened, you'd need steps like search warrants, subpoenas -- i.e. stuff FBI can do./23
Bosworth gets Martin to agree that Joffe is a respected DNS for-real expert and was an FBI confidential source, which he did. Shaw comes back to ask him if he knew Joffe was terminated as a source for cause, which he didn't. That's it for Martin./24
Now we will hear from FBI supervisory special agent Scott Hellman who oversees cybercrime investigations. DeFilippis is now leading the questioning, for now just laying groundwork and basics./25
Hellman took custody of the thumb drives of Alfa Bank-Trump-related DNS data Sussmann provided to Baker. Discussion of chain of custody. Baker gave to Peter Strzok, and then along to less prominent names. /26
I think Hellman said he didn't learn where Baker had gotten the data from. He and his supervisor analyzed the data and compared their assessment to a narrative that came with it./27
Hellman explains he and his supervisor were skeptical. They looked at the data & the white paper that accompanied it & disagreed with the methodology/conclusions. Didn't think it made sense that a secret channel would use a server with Trump's name on it, connecting directly./28
Hellman says they thought it was "conveniently coincidental" that the supposed secret coms had started three weeks before the inquiry described in the white paper. And they thought Russia had more sophisticated means to communicate secretly if it wanted. /29
Hellman says in terms of technical analysis, he would do the same steps regardless of knowing where the data came from. But.../30
...In terms of what level of investigation to open, he would want to know who provided the data and with what motivation to figure out how much he trusts the "facts" & whether to gather more info. (He didn't open investigation bc no hacking; Chicago FBI did - a full, he said)./31
DeFilippis wraps up. Break for lunch until 2 p.m./32
We've been back a bit. Before jury came in, there was discussion of Joffe being terminated as a confidential source in 2021. The reason was he should have given Alfa Bank info to his handler, not the FBI general counsel. Judge told prosecution to stay away from termination. /33
Sean Berkowitz, another lawyer for Sussmann, is cross-examining Hellman. Hellman thought it was weird Baker didn't tell him where the data came from. (Someone above him in the chain didn't either.) Berkowitz shows internal FBI messages showing others knew it was from Sussmann./34
When Hellman started reading the material he texted a colleague & said the more he reads it, it feels a little 5150ish. Hellman testifies that means he wondered if the person who wrote it was suffering from a mental disability./35
Berkowitz brings up Sept 21, 2016, text message to Hellman from his supervisor saying they had been asked to write up a summary of their analysis of the DNC report, suggesting contemporaneous knowledge it had a Dem source. Hellman disclaims memory of seeing that in realtime./36
Berkowitz gets Hellman to say that DeFilippis recently suggested to him that "DNC report" was maybe just a typo for "DNS report." Hellman doesn't think it's likely he just missed at the time that there was knowledge it was DNC. /37
Berkowitz established that Hellman's not a DNS expert and his look at the data/analysis was about a day. Got Hellman to say his technical steps would have been the same if knew where data came from, but Hellman says he would have noted that in his report. DeF back now. /38
DeF asked Hellman about rules for opening investigations in the DIOG. Hellman doesn't remember the acronym. (It's Domestic Investigations and Operations Guide.) Berkowitz is annoyed at asking Hellman about this topic since H's team didn't open one. (Counterintelligence did.) /39
DeF uses Hellman to establish that confidential human sources are supposed to give info to the FBI via their handlers. Berkowitz comes back with email to establish that Joffe did apparently give infor on this topic in Sept 2016 via a SA Tom Brasso who was apparently handler./40
That's it for Hellman. In a break now, back at 4. Not clear who next witness will be but hot mic picks up judge suggesting this will be over today 4:30 or 4:45./41
We're back. Next witness is Steve De Jong, a Neustar employee whose group does DNS internet services and hosting for companies. DeF questioning about what Neustar does. /42
DeJong says Joffe & GA Tech researcher Antonakakis asked for searing Neustar's DNS data for long list of Trump & Alfa domains. He pulled logs back to June '16. (Recall Hellman finding it "conveniently coincidental" that traces seemed to begin just 6 weeks before the study.)/43
Bosworth briefly questions De Jong. Establishes that Joffe is respected DNS expert and worked with government/FBI, won FBI award. Sussmann had nothing to do with pulling and analyzing the DNS data. And we're done for the day./44
Cleanup: Tomorrow will pick up w/ Deborah Fine, Laura Seago, Marc Elias, Tom McMahon, and then Jim Baker if they get to him which seems ambitious. Prosecution no longer intends to call Robby Mook but defense will; he has asked if can go early bc has trip planned./45
Conventional news article: nytimes.com/2022/05/17/us/…

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More from @charlie_savage

Dec 9, 2023
Next in our reported-out 2025 Trump policy stakes series went up this a.m. and will be Sunday NYT front: the prospect of withdrawing the USA from or gutting NATO, abandoning Ukraine and a retreat from Europe. w/ @jonathanvswan & @maggieNYT
Gift link: nyti.ms/3uSNafa
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We've been working on this series for 6 months & have been gratified lately to see others start to join in the conversation. We have been determined to stay grounded in what Trump & his truly close advisers have said & to add substantive reporting. Gift links to other chapters:/2
June 15: Trump plans to use the Justice Department as an instrument of vengeance against his adversaries, ending of the post-Watergate norm of DOJ investigative independence from the White House political control./3
nyti.ms/47RfJrQ
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Read 18 tweets
Aug 12, 2023
Seeing folks portraying it as a problem or gotcha that Garland appointed Weiss – a sitting US attorney – special counsel even though a 1999 regulation for special counsels has a provision that envisions them being appointed from outside government. Here's an explanation. /1
Takeaway up front: that part of the reg hasn't been understood to impose a controlling limit. It’s a tell that a commentator is not a credible & good-faith source of info if he doesn’t mention that Durham was *also* a sitting US attorney when Barr made him special counsel. /2
An attorney general’s legal authority to appoint someone to run a special investigation doesn’t come from the regulation. It comes from statutes enacted by Congress. Those laws don’t say that appointee has to come from outside government. /3 Image
Read 15 tweets
May 19, 2023
It occurred to me that one of the dishonest things about @marcthiessen’s column that I pointed out yesterday was actually even more egregious and is another affirmative factual error (a charitable word choice) that the WP should correct./15
When he backed his criticism of the FBI's decision to open a full investigation by misleadingly citing a passage about warrant renewal applications, Thiessen inserted "[the Trump campaign]” into a quote from the report. In context, "the target" instead meant Carter Page./16 ImageImage
Ironically, this comes in the same graph that falsely says the FBI presented a doctored email to the FISA court as evidence. That's wrong–it was not shown to the court–but Thiessen himself demonstrably presented a falsely doctored Durham report quote to WP readers as evidence./17 Image
Read 5 tweets
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.@marcthiessen wrote a shoddy Washington Post column using as a foil the headline of my piece yesterday assessing how the Durham inquiry fell flat after years of political hype. (He didn’t engage with its substance, of course.) A dissection follows. /1
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As an initial matter, Thiessen got his start at a lobbying firm that included two named partners – Paul Manafort and Roger Stone – who were convicted of felonies in the Russia investigation & pardoned by Trump. He does not disclose that conflict to the WP’s readers. /2 Image
Thiessen opens by insinuating that I am downplaying Durham bc I'm implicated in (his tendentious portrayal of) the media’s Trump-Russia coverage. Aside from whether he is accurately describing Mueller's complex findings, I wasn't part of the NYT’s Trump-Russia coverage team./3 Image
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Apr 27, 2023
DOJ detention memo for Jack Teixeira storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco… /1
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Mar 26, 2023
As Alberto @Ibarguen -- the head of the Knight Foundation @knightfdn and former publisher of The @MiamiHerald -- retires, I would like to add a public note of personal appreciation to the encomiums. /1 philanthropy.com/article/knight…
In 1999, when I went to work for The Miami Herald as a cub reporter just out of college and he was its publisher, he took a mentor-like interest in me. We got to know each other over occasional dinners/drinks, a Miami Heat game, etc. /2
In late 2001 or early 2002, when I was thinking about applying for a Knight Foundation journalism fellowship at Yale Law School, he encouraged it (he has a law degree from Penn) and wrote a strong letter of recommendation that really helped me stand out from the pack. /3
Read 5 tweets

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