THREAD: Since I'm all about the women, I'm turning to Alyssa Farah Griffin next. Griffin, a friend to Cassidy Hutchinson and Sarah Matthews, helped both communicate with the committee and was represented by John Bolton's lawyer Chuck Cooper. 1/
Before getting into her testimony, let's remember who Alyssa Farah was *before* joining Team Trump: an experienced flak for ultra-conservatives, including Mark Meadows, Jim Jordan, and VP Pence. It was her old boss Meadows who brought her back to the WH from the Pentagon. 2/
Still, Griffin says she "intentionally" had not worked directly for Trump before because she preferred hierarchy and structure. And the Trump Admin was the "wild west," a place where senior staff did not even understand "basic levers of how government works." 3/
Griffin, like many before her, thought she could bring order to chaos. But she came to understand "you could do, you know, the most exceptional policy rollout or surrogates operation, but if he’s talking about God knows what over here, that’s just going to derail everything.” 4/
It was also a place, said Griffin, where the effective gatekeepers -- Meadows & Kushner -- chose their battles and/or disappeared, resulting in the "flattest organization" Griffin had worked in. She would see junior staff in the Oval and not understand how they got there. 5/
Griffin says she tried to minimize her contact with Trump directly except for when she needed him to walk things back. One critical example? The post-George Floyd killing "when the looting starts, the shooting starts" tweet, which she says came out *exactly* as Trump intended. 6/
Schiff asks Griffin if that episode was reflective of Trump's overall attitude about the use of violence. And she says yes, he felt law enforcement had a right to react with violence and that he often wanted to see "shows of strength" in the street. 7/
What sticks out here is how Schiff elicits the dots & connects them. The guy who said leakers inside his WH should be executed & gleefully retweeted video of police beating a 75-year-old is also the guy who called on rally attendees to "fight like hell" on 1/6. 8/
And as for the idea that either Ivanka or Hope Hicks were his better angels? Griffin dismisses this as myth and notes Hope, Jared, and Ivanka were behind the Lafayette Square incident of summer 2020, another gross display of WH-sanctioned violence. 9/
Griffin was not heavily involved in the campaign, nor did the campaign lean much on Griffin or McEnany to focus on specific messaging. But Jason Miller once called to ask that she encourage Trump to stop knocking mail-in voting as inherently bad. Why? Trump needed it to win. 10/
At the time Griffin testified, the Mar-a-Lago records investigation was just beginning. But her testimony about records compliance training during her time with Pence versus her 2020 stint with Trump is intriguing. 11/
She was also "stunned coming from the defense background that there were no briefings on how to deal with classified information and that it was actually very cavalierly discussed in nonclassified settings." (Less stunned? People in present-day America watching the MAL case.) 12/
And after recalling that Trump routinely tore papers up, Griffin learned the committee had received materials from the Archives that had been taped back together. She was "surprised somebody had the sense to go back and get those things." 13/
If Trump is indicted on 1/6-related charges, DOJ would need to show Trump knew he lost. Griffin could be key: About a week after the election was called, she found Trump watching TV in the Oval, & as he saw Biden's image, he asked, "Can you believe I lost to this effing guy?" 14/
But let's rewind to Election Night itself: Griffin peeked into the Map Room after Arizona was called, saw Trump yelling amidst total "chaos," and quickly fled. 15/
Griffin said she had zero involvement with Trump's post-Election Night speech or related messaging because by then, she had long been "boxed out" in favor of Meadows, the kids, Rudy, Hope, and the "core campaign team." And she wasn't even on speaking terms with McEnany. 16/
The next day, Griffin was scheduled to appear on Harris Faulkner's show on Fox when Hope Hicks called to say, "Stand down. We have a whole comms plan in place. We have a whole strategy... don't say anything about the election." Griffin did press for the WH again. 17/
Griffin resigned from the White House in early December after realizing neither Trump nor Meadows would accept the loss. She then heard that Trump and Meadows tried to install Kash Patel as CIA Director, only to be foiled by Gina Haspel's "suicide pact" with the entire IC.
Griffin then scathingly assesses Meadows, who was her boss on two prior occasions before the WH: "If there’s one observation I have of Mark Meadows it’s that he never appreciated the significance of the role he had, but he loved the levers of power that came with it.” 19/
She doesn't hold back on Kayleigh McEnany either, deeming her a "smart woman" who is also "a liar and an opportunist." 20/
After she leaves the WH in early Dec. '20, Griffin quickly signs the GA GOP as a client leading up to the two Senate seat runoffs. She wanted Trump to stay away. Instead, he flew in at the end & insisted, "Your vote doesn't count, it's all rigged. And then we lost." 21/
On 1/6, Griffin watched Fox at her in-laws' FL home & is horrified both by Trump's speech & its aftermath. She tries to reach Meadows by phone & text, but knowing how long it takes to negotiate a Trump tweet, she aims higher. She tweets to get his attention. 22/
Toward the end of Griffin's interview, she and Schiff have a poignant exchange about a through line of Trump's presidency: his propensity to "condone violence in support of his cause or view." 23/
And that propensity is one Griffin, like the committee members, ultimately sees in personal terms through the "very specific, very violent" death threats aimed at her, often in direct response to Trump's rhetorical attacks. FIN
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NEW: The Paul Weiss departures keep coming, this time with former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District Damian Williams exiting . . . for Jenner & Block.
Williams -- a former Garland & Stevens clerk who has never worked at a law firm other than Paul Weiss -- served as the U.S. Attorney throughout Biden's presidency and oversaw the prosecutions of Ghislaine Maxwell, Sam Bankman-Fried, Sean Combs, and, of course, Eric Adams.
Williams then was pilloried by Trump's DOJ for allegedly pursuing Adams for political reasons--a narrative wholly rejected by Judge Dale Ho after examining the record presented by DOJ in seeking Adams's dismissal.
NEW: While the Department of Justice issued a statement last night about the criminal charges against Rep. McIver, a spokesperson for her legal team confirms that it did not receive the charging document for until this morning, 12-plus hours later. 1/
DOJ policy, as embodied in the Justice Manual, is clear: "DOJ personnel shall not respond to questions about the existence of an ongoing investigation or comment on its nature or progress before charges are publicly filed." 2/
There are exceptions, including "[w]hen the community needs to be reassured that the appropriate law enforcement agency is investigating a matter, or where release of information is necessary to protect the public safety," but neither is relevant here. 3/
Harvard researcher Kseniia Petrova has been charged criminally with smuggling goods -- e.g., frog embryos and samples thereof -- into the United States on the same day the judge overseeing her habeas case questioned the government's authority to revoke her visa. 1/
The administration told that judge, Christina Reiss, they intend to send Petrova back to Russia, despite her fear of arrest due to her support for Ukraine. Reiss scheduled a bail hearing on May 28, "potentially setting the stage for Ms. Petrova’s release." 2/ ...nytimes.com/2025/05/14/h
At some point today, the administration moved to unseal its criminal complaint against Petrova in a Massachusetts federal court and represented she has been arrested. 3/
There's been significant focus today on what the opinion dismissing the criminal case against Eric Adams says about Trump's DOJ. But what it says about the career prosecutors involved is as, if not more, significant. 1/
The Adams debacle resulted in the resignation of two prosecutors, then-acting U.S. Attorney Danielle Sassoon and AUSA Hagan Scotten, both former SCOTUS clerks and all-around superstars. And DOJ placed three other members of the core case team on administrative leave. 2/
In a now-public memo, DOJ told Sassoon they would be investigated by DOJ's Office of Professional Responsibility and pursuant to Trump's executive order directing the A.G. to investigate "weaponization of justice" and to issue a report. 3/
I want to live in a world where we do not talk about judges as if they owe their allegiance, or their very existence, to a particular president. Based on my experience as both a litigator and a journalist, that describes the vast majority of the federal judiciary. 1/
And yet, Judge Aileen Cannon, for all of her credentials and pre-judicial experience, has consistently staged the hearing of motions in a way that favors Trump and his co-defendants, handpicked a theory of dismissal at the invitation-by-concurrence of Justice Thomas, and even exercised jurisdiction she did not have. 2/
Her actions concerning the Special Counsel’s report, for example, were premised on authority she had stripped herself of by dismissing the case and an eventuality she refused to acknowledge: that the indictment against the two people who would supposedly be prejudiced by the report’s release not only had been dismissed but that DOJ’s pending appeal of her ruling will soon disappear too.
NEW: Per @adamreisstv, Rudy Giuliani is now almost 90 minutes late for a one-day trial on whether his Palm Beach, FL condo can be taken to satisfy his $146 million debt to former GA election workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss. 1/
Rudy owes the women that money because his failure to participate in their defamation lawsuit was so complete that they won a default judgment on liability. And when they tried the issue of damages to a jury last December, that $146 million was the jury’s award. 2/
Since then, he has been playing games with several courts in an attempt to conceal or even exclude his assets from being seized to pay them. He first filed for bankruptcy, only to have his case kicked out of court for his obfuscation and withholding of information. 3/