Posted on 07/27/2017 2:06:07 PM PDT by PPSman
FBI General Counsel James A. Baker is purportedly under a Department of Justice criminal investigation for allegedly leaking classified national security information to the media, according to multiple government officials close to the probe who spoke with Circa on the condition of anonymity.
(Excerpt) Read more at targetliberty.com ...
It has been so long since I was on a good Perp Walk discussion thread on Free Republic that I almost can’t remember what it was like. Sigh. Makes you nostalgic.
A leak about a leak investigation? The irony is strong with this one.
A leaker leaking on a leaker. The swamp is yuge.
>>><<<
It’s all such a joke. There must be 300-400 going-nowhere “investigations” going on right now.
and so it begins, break out the popcorn!
Imagine the covfefe that would cause!
James A. Baker Appointed as FBIs General Counsel
Washington, D.C.
January 15, 2014
FBI National Press Office
(202) 324-3691
Director James B. Comey has selected James A. Baker as the FBI’s general counsel. Most recently, Mr. Baker was an associate general counsel for Bridgewater Associates, LP.
After clerking for the Honorable Bernard A. Friedman in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, Mr. Baker joined the Department of Justice (DOJ) with the Criminal Division through the Attorney Generals Honors Program in 1990 and worked as a federal prosecutor with the divisions Fraud Section.
In 1996, Mr. Baker joined the former Office of Intelligence Policy and Review (OIPR), which later became part of DOJs National Security Division. From 2001 to 2007, Mr. Baker served as counsel for intelligence policy and head of OIPR. In this position, he developed, coordinated, and implemented national security policy with regard to intelligence and counterintelligence matters for the department. Moreover, he provided the attorney general, the U.S. intelligence community, and the White House with legal and policy advice on a range of national security issues and conducted oversight of the intelligence community, including the FBI, on behalf of the attorney general.
In 2006, Mr. Baker received the George H.W. Bush Award for Excellence in counterterrorismthe CIAs highest counterterrorism award. A year later, he received the NSAs Intelligence Under Law Award; the NSA Directors Distinguished Service Medal; and DOJs highest award the Edmund J. Randolph Award. That same year, he became a fellow at the Institute of Politics at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and a lecturer at Harvard Law School. From 2008 to 2009, Mr. Baker was assistant general counsel for national security at Verizon Business. He then returned to DOJ, and from 2009 to 2011, served as an associate deputy attorney general working on a range of national security issues, including cyber security.
Jims experience as a career prosecutor and as a national security official, as well his experience in the private sector, make him an excellent fit for his new position here at the FBI, said Director Comey.
Mr. Baker holds a juris doctorate and masters degree from the University of Michigan and is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame.
It appears Comey is one of many who are too big to jail.
https://www.law.umich.edu/newsandinfo/features/Pages/jamesbakerfbi082514.aspx
James A. Baker, ‘88: General Counsel for the FBI
By Jenny Whalen
Aug. 25, 2014
The memos rarely self-destruct and the gadget collection is limited to a Blackberry, but the position of General Counsel for the Federal Bureau of Investigation is not without its air of adventure, at least for James A. Baker.
James A. Baker, ‘88, was appointed general counsel of the FBI in January 2014.
“Throughout my career, I’ve been extremely lucky to have a series of fascinating jobs that have been extremely rewarding,” said Baker, a 1988 Michigan Law graduate. “Being General Counsel for the FBI means I have to deal with all of the legal risks and issues that confront the entire FBIeverything from counterterrorism to civil rights, and all of the FBI’s priorities across the board.”
Appointed General Counsel in January, Baker has spent much of his career in the public sector, working primarily on issues of national security and intelligence. Despite brief stints with Verizon Business and, most recently, Bridgewater Associates, LP, Baker said his “desire to serve the country and to have a positive impact on the world” has led him to return to roles in government time and again.
He credits part of this lifelong interest in public service to his postgraduate clerkship with the Hon. Bernard A. Friedman in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan.
“That was a fantastic opportunity in many ways, but among them was the fact that at the District Court you are able to see a whole range of matters and parts of the law in practice,” Baker said. “That visibility helped me figure out that among the things I was seeing, the work of the U.S. Attorney’s Office was the most interesting. As a result of that influence I decided to apply to the U.S. Department of Justice.”
He joined the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice (DOJ) through the Attorney General’s Honors Program in 1990 and went on to work as a federal prosecutor with the division’s Fraud Section, moving to the Office of Intelligence Policy and Review (OIPR)now part of DOJ’s National Security Divisionsix years later.
National security and its associated legal issues soon became an area of expertise for Baker, first through his work on matters related to criminal litigation and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), and later as a result of his role in supervising the rule of law and law enforcement activities of DOJ attorneys in Iraq and Afghanistan.
But over the last decade, it is cyber security that has emerged as a chief concern and personal focus of Baker’s.
“It is a very significant threat to the country now and raises a whole range of legal issues that are very complicated and tricky,” Baker said. “It’s a challenging area to practice in, but one that is very important. I’ve watched cyber threats grow over the course of my career in dealing with national security matters and I’ve become increasingly alarmed over the nature of the threat and the difficulty the defenders face in trying to deal with it.”
From the cyber criminal who threatens individual bank accounts to the organized crime group that puts the nation’s banking sector at risk, the scope of the FBI’s work is vast and the demands on its legal team equally so.
“It’s really about 270 people giving advice and performing legal services for the Bureau at headquarters, with another 100 or so attorneys across the country giving legal advice to FBI field offices,” Baker said of the General Counsel’s office and Chief Division Counsel program.
And being in the business of advice, Baker readily offers his own to law students aspiring to similar work in their postgraduate careers.
“Go forth and do public service, whatever that means for you,” Baker said. “Work for the government, or a nonprofit, or do pro bono if you are a lawyer, you should try to include public service in some part of your career. You’ll be a better lawyer for it.”
“But follow your passion. Think about why you are in law school and what you want to out of a legal career. Lawyers really need to follow their passion and do what excites them if they want to lead a rich and rewarding life.”
...yet
"Egg and bacon; egg sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg bacon and spam; egg bacon sausage and spam; spam bacon sausage and spam; spam egg spam spam bacon and spam; spam sausage spam spam bacon spam tomato and spam????!!!"
Maybe that’s why Trump is getting on Session’s case.
Comey worked as General Counsel of Bridgewater Associates, LP from 2010 to 2013.
My apologies for the link.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-wallechinsky/what-is-the-bush-administ_b_13144.html
01/02/2006
EXCERPTS
After 24 years of idleness, in September 2002 the Court of Review heard its first case because the Bush Administration tried to expand the coverage of FISA jurisdiction to allow prosecutors and local law enforcement agencies to be involved in the surveillance program and to have access to information obtained through the surveillance. FISC modified their requests before accepting them and the Bush Administration appealed. At the September 9, 2002, hearing before the Court of Review, the Bush Administration was represented by ten members of the Department of Justice, led by Solicitor General Theodore B. Olson, who had become famous when he presented the Bush-Cheney case to the Supreme Court during the 2000 presidential election dispute. Other notables included James A. Baker, in his role as counsel for the Office of Intelligence Policy and Review, and John C. Yoo, the administration go-to guy to legally justify anything the Bush Administration wants to do. The Justice Department team was joined by Spike Bowman, a lawyer for the FBI, and David S. Addington, a lawyer representing Vice-President Cheneys office. Lawyers supporting the FISC decision were not allowed to be present, so the ACLU and others later submitted a written brief to the three justices. The convening of the Court of Review was so novel that the justices had to ask the Justice Department lawyers who submitted the surveillance applications (the Attorney Generals staff) and how often the FISC met to consider the applications (once a week).
(snip)
The Administration also wanted to change the phrase the purpose of the surveillance is to obtain foreign intelligence information to a significant purpose of the surveillance . This qualifying word could open the door to all manner of other purposes for surveillance. When the Court of Review judges tried to get the Justice Department officials to clarify what other purposes there might be besides suspicion of terrorism or espionage, Olson and Baker were evasive.
And with the full support of both parties in the Senate. Trump dare not even think about firing him or telling him to slow down or how to do his job. Perfect set up and the idiots in the Senate on both sides of the aisle didn't see it coming.
I got $100 that sez he’s a hold over.
Winning!
Sessions finally woke up from his long, silent nap.
Interesting that Trump has been critical of Sessions lately — cause or effect? Is Trump trying help give Sessions credibility and laying the ground work for a dodge and then punch or is Sessions reacting to Trump and releasing information about the investigation.
Maybe this is the classic prosecution technique: start putting heat on somebody below the top level of the FBI to “persuade” him to flip on Comey. Then nail Comey and get him to flip on whoever he was taking orders from, all the way up the chain to the top.
Where might the top of the chain be? ;)
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