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John Huber, Justice Dept. Sheriff Who Never Quite Rode Into Town
Real Clear Investigations ^ | December 22, 2018 | Paul Sperry

Posted on 12/23/2018 1:39:51 AM PST by Trump_the_Evil_Left

John Huber has developed almost mythical status among pro-Trump tweeters since former Attorney General Jeff Sessions directed him to investigate why the FBI spied on Trump’s aides and whether they protected Hillary Clinton and her foundation over alleged misdeeds. They hoped the Salt Lake City-based prosecutor would aggressively expose the malfeasance that has already led to firings and resignations among the bureau’s top brass.

Instead, more than a year since his appointment, Huber’s lack of traction on either front is leading many once hopeful supporters to dismiss his investigation as a “sham."

RealClearInvestigations has learned from potential witnesses, their lawyers and others close to the investigations, that Huber has not impaneled a federal grand jury to subpoena witnesses or hear evidence.

They are puzzled as to why he has failed to interview key witnesses – such as disgraced FBI officials and Trump advisers targeted by them, as well as Clinton Foundation whistleblowers -- who could shed light on whether FBI and Justice Department officials misused their power when they obtained spy warrants to monitor Trump adviser Carter Page; or whether such officials turned a blind eye to millions of dollars in foreign Clinton Foundation donations influencing Clinton’s official decisions as secretary of state. Even when whistleblowers have reached out to Huber, offering reams of evidence, his office has not followed up, they say.

While some witnesses and their attorneys complain he’s not doing his job, some critics who once had high hopes for Huber now suspect he was never expected to. They say Huber’s appointment was always political, that the Justice Department had no interest in exposing its own corruption and named this longtime department official to mollify Republicans who clamored for the appointment of a second special counsel to investigate FBI and Justice activities under the Obama administration.

“At the time, people wanted a special counsel, but Jeff Sessions announced he brought in Huber and people said, ‘OK, we got Huber on it,’ ” former Justice Department prosecutor Victoria Toensing said. “But it was a head fake.”

Now a private attorney in Washington, Toensing represents a whistleblower in the so-called Uranium One scandal, who she says still has not been contacted by Huber. Her client, Doug Campbell, an FBI informant who claims to have evidence that Clinton helped Russians secure U.S.-based uranium rights in a quid pro quo for large donations to her family’s foundation and speaking fees for former President Bill Clinton from the Russian company at the heart of the deal.

“He should have contacted Doug Campbell within the first two months” of being assigned by Sessions to look into the 2010 uranium deal, Toensing said.

“It’s a farce,” she added. "It’s an embarrassment how this has been handled.”

Huber’s office would not speak directly to the complaints, but asserted that his inquiry is active and ongoing.

Two other Clinton Foundation whistleblowers reached out numerous times to Huber’s office, starting in April, and offered to turn over 6,000 pages of evidence, only to get the silent treatment for several months before finally hearing back after Republican leaders supporting the expert witnesses made a stink about the snub on Fox News.

Private financial-crimes investigators Lawrence Doyle and John Moynihan say they got no response after sending evidence of alleged foundation tax fraud, misappropriation of funds and pay-for-play schemes to Salt Lake City by mail in April and again in May. After hearing nothing back, they followed up and were told the materials had been “lost." So they re-sent them by FedEx in October. But again, they heard nothing. Then, finally, they received a call on Nov. 30 from an assistant U.S. attorney there, who said he would “review" the material.

“It’s disappointing it took that long,” said Moynihan, a former Justice official.

Just days earlier, GOP congressional leaders had called Huber to testify and give them a progress report on his work at a hearing originally scheduled for Dec. 5. Republicans are suspicious of the timing. The hearing was rescheduled without Huber.

“I find it just very coincidental that on Nov. 30 — a few days before the hearing [and] after they had been noticed that we wanted them to come and testify -- all of a sudden, they would start following up,” said House Oversight Subcommittee on Government Operations Chairman Mark Meadows.

Huber ultimately balked at the invitation, reportedly because he would have to appear with the ignored whistleblowers. “He was never scheduled to testify,” House Oversight spokeswoman Amanda Gonzalez Thompson confirmed.

The Clinton Foundation probe isn’t the only case where Huber appears to be dragging his feet.

Sessions told Congress he also tasked Huber with looking into whether FBI investigators and Justice lawyers misled the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act court by making deliberate misrepresentations about evidence presented against Page, whom they targeted as a “Russian agent." Allegations include omitting material facts and exculpatory evidence undermining their probable-cause case.

For instance, they never told judges that their application relied heavily on a dossier of anti-Trump opposition research funded by the Clinton campaign. Recently revealed emails show then-FBI Director James Comey raised concerns about the reliability of the “unverified” dossier before he signed the initial application for the FISA warrant in October 2016.

Page, who denies the allegations, says he has not been contacted by Huber’s office.

“Never heard anything from Utah,” he said in an interview.

In fact, Page added, “I have spoken with no federal law enforcement officials this year.”

In addition, Huber has yet to interview a key Justice official involved in the surveillance activities.

Republicans say demoted Justice official Bruce Ohr recently testified to Congress that he’s not been interviewed by Huber about his contacts with FBI officials while they were surveilling Trump aides before and after the 2016 presidential election. Nor has his wife, Nellie Ohr, who worked on the dossier used to support wiretap warrants, according to his testimony.

Meadows sent a letter to Sessions demanding Huber interview Bruce Ohr about his connection to the bureau’s process in obtaining the wiretap. The Republican leader says the FBI used Ohr as a back channel for dossier information. He followed up with another letter in October asking for an update on Huber’s progress.

Inspector General Michael Horowitz: overlapping inquiries. AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta Defenders say what appears to be slow progress may be a function of Huber having to wait on Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz, who is conducting his own investigation into the department’s mishandling of the Clinton and Trump probes. They point out that Huber is shadowing Horowitz’s slow-moving probe and lending any prosecutorial support he sees fit to provide. Inspectors general do not have the power to subpoena outside witnesses and compel testimony, or convene grand juries and seek indictments.

“I am surprised by witnesses saying that they have not been contacted. And there has been no public indications of his use of grand juries or other powers,” said George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley, who thought appointing Huber instead of a special counsel would bring faster results. “But that may reflect a priority given to the investigation by Horowitz [because] he had the experience and evidence going into the investigation."

He also noted that Huber may be avoiding overlap with Horowitz’s lines of inquiry.

“Some witnesses have already given statements to other investigators, and there may be less of a need for re-interviews,” Turley added.

However, neither Page nor Ohr has heard from investigators from Horowitz’s office, either.

The lack of movement by the inspector general surprises colleagues.

“Michael Horowitz assured me last summer he would have additional reports (including regarding the alleged FISA abuses), but there’s still no sign of them,” former State Department Inspector General Howard Krongard said.

“I’m disappointed,” he added. "I don’t know what is holding them up."

Horowitz’s office declined comment. But Huber’s insisted he is still conducting his inquiry.

"Mr. Huber was asked to evaluate certain issues and report directly to the attorney general and the deputy attorney general, as appropriate,” Melodie Rydalch, spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Salt Lake City, told RCI. "His review is ongoing."

Asked why key figures have gone unquestioned and what areas of investigation he has pursued, she said, "It would be inappropriate for us to comment on the scope or findings of his review.”

Rydalch also declined to provide details about the size of Huber’s team and budget, though he is said to marshal several senior federal prosecutors.

Huber’s appointment came late last year after the chairmen of judiciary committees on the Hill repeatedly called for a second special counsel to investigate Uranium One and alleged surveillance abuses. Sessions said he designated Huber in November 2017 to look into the matters and see if one was necessary.

In a March 29 letter to the GOP congressional leaders, Sessions said he was “confident” Huber would conduct a “full, complete and objective evaluation of these matters.” He pointed to his skills as a prosecutor and to his location 2,000 miles from Washington, where he could operate far removed from Beltway politics and conflicts.

But critics say Huber is, in fact, a typical government insider. An Obama holdover who was also very close to Sessions, Huber previously led the attorney general office’s national security section in Washington and was the executive assistant attorney general. And some question his chops as a prosecutor, citing several bungled white-collar and public corruption cases that his office opened in Utah, though others are quick to credit Huber with recent reductions in violent crime in the state.

“He’s an establishment Justice Department career person, who’s not going to take any strong action against what went on at the FBI and Justice,” former Justice prosecutor Larry Klayman said.

Toensing noted an inherent conflict in Huber reporting his findings to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who signed one of the warrant renewals for wiretapping Page. Others note that Huber may have a local conflict in the Uranium One matter, since the Russian deal involved uranium mining interests located in his state.

“Rod signed one of the FISA applications and is potentially a co-conspirator in the FISA abuse. Why would Huber report anything back to him that’s embarrassing on the FISA front? It makes no sense,” she said. “The whole thing is corrupt and cries out for a special counsel.”

Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton agreed, arguing the FBI and Justice can’t be expected to investigate themselves, even with an outside-the-Beltway prosecutor leading the investigation.

“Huber was a distraction to ease pressure for a second special counsel,” he said, adding that Sessions used sleight of hand in crafting his letter to Congress. Technically, he explained, Huber had a mandate from Sessions only to investigate the investigations, not the underlying allegations.

“Huber wasn’t tapped to investigate anything,” Fitton said. "He was tasked to investigate whether to investigate.”

Fitton said he intends to FOIA Justice for the “regular updates” that Sessions said he was getting from Huber.

Once Democrats take back control of the House, they will have little interest in pressuring Huber to keep them in the loop on what are Obama-era scandals.

That leaves the Senate.

While the Senate Judiciary Committee told RCI it has not received "any updates" from Huber’s office or Justice about his work, it plans to continue its oversight as Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) takes the gavel from longtime Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) in January.

“There’s no imminent plan for Huber to testify,” said committee spokesman George Hartmann. “But Sens. Grassley and Graham have worked closely on oversight issues over the last two years, and I wouldn’t expect either of them to forget about it."


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: comey; deepstate; democrats; fbi; gop; huber; jamescomey; johnhuber; justice; lisapage; msm; mueller; obamaholdover; peterstrzok; q; qanon; qleakage; qseepage; republicans; robertmueller; rosenstein; sessions; strzok; toensing; trump; uniparty; victoriatoensing
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To: wastoute

Excellent hypothesis, probably correct. Just look at how GOP Senator Richard Burr (R-NC) has led interference for the Democrats and guaranteed that the Senate committees do nothing. That is just one example of a key Republican working against getting this stuff fully investigated and prosecuted.


21 posted on 12/23/2018 5:21:58 AM PST by Trump_the_Evil_Left (FReeper formerly known as Enchante (registered Sept. 5, 2001), back from the wild....)
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To: Trump_the_Evil_Left

The feral government wants nothing to do with justice or secure borders. Once the patriots in this country realize this, pick up ol Bessy and their possibles maybe we can fix what is broken with our Country.


22 posted on 12/23/2018 5:27:47 AM PST by eartick (Stupidity is expecting the government that broke itself to go out and fix itself. Texan for TEXIT!)
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To: Badboo
All farce and theater by every single Republican, without exception. This, by the way, includes the OMB director and the President.

You are going to call every Trumpette out of the woodwork on this comment.

I agree with you as well that all of the feral government is complicit and this little experiment needs to have a serious look at.

23 posted on 12/23/2018 5:31:59 AM PST by eartick (Stupidity is expecting the government that broke itself to go out and fix itself. Texan for TEXIT!)
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To: wastoute

Of course, the support from Ryan and McConnell for Mueller and Rosenstein, combined with their utter lack of support for or cooperation with other investigations, shows where they are on all of this.


24 posted on 12/23/2018 5:32:36 AM PST by Trump_the_Evil_Left (FReeper formerly known as Enchante (registered Sept. 5, 2001), back from the wild....)
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To: Trump_the_Evil_Left
Huber and IG Horowitz were both appointed by Obama.

The outcome of their alleged “investigation” is exactly what I expected - nothing.

The only mystery that remains to be solved is why Trump nominated Rod Rosenstein, who was Obama’s “go to” U.S. Attorney for eight years.

One other mystery - why did Trump never declassify and publicly release any documents that would have proved his own innocence and proved the political corruption in the DOJ and FBI?

25 posted on 12/23/2018 5:35:44 AM PST by zeestephen
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To: Flick Lives

Huber and Sessions are already punch lines for jokes.


26 posted on 12/23/2018 5:37:33 AM PST by Bonemaker (invictus maneo)
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To: zeestephen

The lack of declassification is explained by the ways in which DOJ and the Mueller probe have set things up. The Mueller team scoops up every possible doc for their “investigation” ... then while it is pending (indefinitely, going into 2019 now) any declassification would be termed an “obstruction of justice” by Mueller & co. That is why all the calls for Trump to simply order declassification won’t help — he has surely been told that Mueller would treat such an order as an “obstruction of justice” — no matter how perverse that would be.


27 posted on 12/23/2018 5:40:09 AM PST by Trump_the_Evil_Left (FReeper formerly known as Enchante (registered Sept. 5, 2001), back from the wild....)
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To: Flick Lives

Just the DOJ version of “Omerta”....code of both honor and silence.


28 posted on 12/23/2018 5:57:24 AM PST by alloysteel (Man does not live by bread alone. He needs chocolate cake too.)
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To: Trump_the_Evil_Left

“Huber has not impaneled a federal grand jury to subpoena witnesses or hear evidence.”

Tits on a bull.

5.56mm


29 posted on 12/23/2018 6:01:50 AM PST by M Kehoe (DRAIN THE SWAMP!)
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To: Trump_the_Evil_Left

The people, and any choice they make for office, will be investigated, and a crime will be found. The government, and its choices, will never be investigated. Mueller, Huber, Sessions, and RR are proof that the government no longer serves the people. The showdown on the budget is proof that government has no intention of protecting the people. Democrats are just an American ostrich, with their heads in the sand, hoping that as long as the push Patriots to the crocodile now, it won’t come for them next.


30 posted on 12/23/2018 6:17:22 AM PST by Pete Dovgan
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To: Trump_the_Evil_Left

The Huber Investigation was a sham, BS, fake, Fake to make sessions look like that he was doing the job as a real AG. Huber has done nothing, plans on doing nothing. Whittaker are the new AG should call his butt in and ask him what he has done, which will be nothing then tell him to stop the fake investigation an go back to what he was doing before which was nothing.


31 posted on 12/23/2018 6:25:26 AM PST by klsparrow
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To: McGavin999

I agree with everything you say. Fire him and audit his “investigation”.


32 posted on 12/23/2018 6:31:17 AM PST by surrey
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To: Trump_the_Evil_Left

So many people, even here, believed the lies - many of them - printed over and over about Huber and Horowitz digging into the rotten Dims in the DOJ - in spite of NEVER having any evidence for them; believing because they wanted to.


33 posted on 12/23/2018 6:52:23 AM PST by Wuli
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To: Trump_the_Evil_Left
"Mr. Huber was asked to evaluate certain issues and report directly to the attorney general and the deputy attorney general, as appropriate,” Melodie Rydalch, spokeswoman

Clearly, she is saying he is not doing an investigation to collect evidence. He is merely evaluating issues to advise the AG.

Anyway, because of his absurd recusal, Jeff Sessions could not appoint a second special counsel to investigate the investigators of the Russia hoax from which he had recused himself. Huber was just a smokescreen to try to fob off those who wanted justice for government wrongdoers.

This was obviously a delaying tactic and public relations ploy in hopes that the Democrats would take over the House and end the only investigations, however weak they were, into the crimes and misconduct by Federal intelligence and law enforcement agencies to hurt the Trump Campaign and to help the Clintons.

I'm beginning to think there really was a Pee Party blackmail video, except it starred Jeff Sessions.

They won the House. After as long a delay as possible to let things die down, the IG report will be issued which will include a few mild criticisms and recommend some new procedures for optics.

They successfully outlasted the GOP House, and now they merely need to outlast Trump until 2020 and the long national nightmare for our above-the-law masters in the DOJ, FBI, CIA, the State Department and elsewhere in the deep state will be over.

34 posted on 12/23/2018 7:24:05 AM PST by Meet the New Boss
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To: Badboo
So much bullchit in this article. Either the republicans in the house or the senate can easily target, cut, and gut appropriations for any agency and any position in any agency if they have gone off the rails. .

Could have. Now the GOP is in the minority, so any power like that they lost in the House.

As we are seeing, the Senate is pretty dysfunctional for the GOP too.

35 posted on 12/23/2018 7:28:49 AM PST by Jack Black ("If you believe in things that you don't understand then you suffer" - "Superstition",Stevie Wonder)
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To: Trump_the_Evil_Left; Liz; GOPJ; DoughtyOne; Cboldt
The Mueller team scoops up every possible doc for their “investigation” ... then while it is pending (indefinitely, going into 2019 now) any declassification would be termed an “obstruction of justice” by Mueller & co. That is why all the calls for Trump to simply order declassification won’t help — he has surely been told that Mueller would treat such an order as an “obstruction of justice” — no matter how perverse that would be.

Sounds like what Strzok/Page/McCabe called an "insurance policy." And if by some miracle the GOP approved a second special counsel to investigate the DOJ etc. its actions would be "obstruction of justice" too.

36 posted on 12/23/2018 7:30:15 AM PST by ding_dong_daddy_from_dumas (Mozart tells you what it's like to be human. Bach tells you what it's like to be the universe)
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To: Trump_the_Evil_Left

The window for attacking this has narrowed substantially. Sessions made sure of that, either through his ineptitude or collaboration. While he sat on his hands, the coup attempt grew stronger and more strategic.

Meantime, the Deep State has implemented a disinformation campaign and infiltrated sites like Free Republic with stuff like this Q to distract the right and keep them thinking that salvation was just around the corner — all while they deepened their treasonous effort.

Brennan and his ilk have infiltrated our site, and we allowed it to happen. The camel’s nose is under our tent, and we are dangerously close to aiding and abetting the Deep State’s strategic plan.


37 posted on 12/23/2018 7:40:04 AM PST by Magnatron
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To: Jack Black
On the budget side OMB has done squat under Mulvaney. OMB can make your life absolutely miserably as an appointee in an agency. Working with appropriators they can gut you another.

Hasn’t been done. Why. Because the White House and Trump wants it that way. With apologies “Everyone is getting fat except Mama Cass”.

38 posted on 12/23/2018 7:48:05 AM PST by Badboo (Why it is important)
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To: eartick
Half of what Trump does is kabuki. Sometimes to rile the racist, regressive, fascists. Sometimes to rile up the his base.

You have to understand that to understand him.

I support him, but without the wall he is doomed. Any more gun control nonsense and he is toast. He cannot afford ANY defections from his base. The haters are growing their numbers every day with a massive harvest planned for 2020.

Trump, conservatives, and republicans haven’t the faintest idea on how to use government and to build a local infrastructure to oppose that.

39 posted on 12/23/2018 7:56:05 AM PST by Badboo (Why it is important)
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To: Trump_the_Evil_Left

burr is a big blurr, an empty suit...a nothing except what they have on him, or either he is the laziest bum there is and has amassed his wad and is just coasting to retirement - one or the other - but of no use and like tits on a boar hog useless!


40 posted on 12/23/2018 8:05:47 AM PST by ldish (Have had enough...you??????)
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