Posted on 10/22/2019 2:07:24 PM PDT by jazusamo
Full title: Judicial Watch: AP Reporters Gave DOJ/FBI Ukraine Info and Code to Private Locker of Paul Manafort in Apparent Effort to Push Criminal Prosecution
Andrew Weissmann organized off-the-record DOJ/FBI meeting with
AP to exchange clarification and assistance in their investigation
for details on former Trump Campaign Director Paul Manafort
(Washington, DC) Judicial Watch today released two productions of heavily redacted FBI documents 28 pages and 38 pages about an April 11, 2017, off-the-record meeting set up by then-Chief of the Justice Departments Criminal Fraud Section Andrew Weissmann, between the DOJ, the FBI and the Associated Press in which AP reporters provided information on former Trump Campaign Director Paul Manafort, including the numeric code to Manaforts storage locker.
Two months later, in early June , Weissmann was hired to work on Robert Muellers special counsel operation against President Trump. Weissman then reportedly spearheaded the subsequent investigation and prosecution of Manafort.
Included among the new documents are two typed write-ups of the meetings proceedings and handwritten notes taken during the meeting by two FBI special agents.
According to a June 11, 2017, FBI write-up :
The purpose of the meeting, as it was explained to SSA [supervisory special agent, redacted] was to obtain documents from the AP reporters that were related to their investigative reports on Paul Manafort.
No such documents were included in the documents released to Judicial Watch.
During the meeting, the AP reporters provided the FBI information about a storage locker of Manafort (the Mueller special counsel operation raided the locker on May 26, 2017 ):
The AP reporters advised that they had located a storage facility in Virginia that belonged to Manafort The code to the lock on the locker is 40944859. The reporters were aware of the Unit number and address, but they declined to share that information.
The reporters shared the information that payments for the locker were made from the DM Partners account that received money from the [Ukraine] Party of Regions.
The notes suggest the AP pushed for criminal prosecution of Manafort:
AP believes Manafort is in violation of the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA), in that Manafort send [sic] internal U. S. documents to officials in Ukraine AP has documentation proving this, as well as Manafort noting his understanding doing so would get him into trouble.
AP asked about the U.S. government charging Manafort with violating Title 18, section 1001 for lying to government officials, and have asked if the FBI has interviewed Manafort. FBI and DOJ had no comment on this question.
Also, according to the FBI write-up, The AP reporters asked about FARA [Foreign Agents Registration Act] violations and they were generally told that they are enforceable.
Although, according to the FBI write-up, no commitments were made [by DOJ] to assist the reporters, Andrew Weissmann asked the AP to contact foreign authorities to follow up:
[A]fter the meeting was started and it was explained to the reporters that there was nothing that the FBI could provide to them, the reporters opted to ask a series of questions to see if the FBI would provide clarification. No commitments were made to assist the reporters in their further investigation into the life and activities of Paul Manafort and the AP reporters understood that the meeting would be off the record.
They [AP reporters] reiterated what they had written in their article, which was a response from the Cypriot Anti-Money Laundering Authority (MOKAS) that they [MOKAS] had fully responded to Department of Treasury agents in response to [Treasurys] request. The AP reporters were interested in how this arrangement worked and if the U.S. had made a formal request. FBI/DOJ did not respond, but Andrew Weissman [sic] suggested that they ask the Cypriots if they had provided everything to which they had access or if they only provided what they were legally required to provide.
The AP reporters asked if we [DOJ/FBI] would be willing to tell them if they were off based [sic] or on the wrong traack [sic] and they were advised that they appeared to have a good understanding of Manaforts business dealings.
The reporters asked about any DOJ request for the assistance of foreign governments in the U.S. Governments investigation of Manafort:
The AP reporters asked if there had been any official requests to other countries. FBI/DOJ declined to discuss specifics, except to state that the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty requests are negotiated by diplomats, so they should remain at that level.
AP reporters told the FBI about payments in the black ledger , a Ukrainian record of allegedly illegal off-the-books payments:
The reporters advised that their next report , which was scheduled to come out in the next day or so after the meeting, would focus on confirming, to the extent that they could payments in the so called black ledger that were allegedly made to Manafort.
The impression that their sources give is that Manafort was not precise about his finances, specifically as it related to the black ledger. The AP reporters calculated that he received $60 to $80 million from his work in Ukraine, during the time period the ledger was kept. According to their review of the ledger, it appears that there is a slightly lesser amount documented based on all of the entries. The AP reporters accessed a copy of the ledger online, describing it as public document (Agents note the ledger has been published in its entirety by the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine, after it was given to them by Sergei Leshenko, Ukrainian RADA member [Ukrainian parliament] and investigative reporter.)
The AP reporters discussed an extensive list of issues, companies, and individuals that they felt should be investigated for possible criminal activity, including a $50,000 payment to a mens clothing store; a 2007 meeting with Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska; Loav Ltd., which was possibly incorporated by Manafort; NeoCom, which the AP reporters implied was incorporated solely to cover up money laundering; and other matters.
The reporters described an internal U.S. work product that had been sent to Ukraine. The reporters described it as an internal White House document. The FBI report stated that it was not clear if the document was classified.
These shocking FBI reports evidence a corrupt collusion between the DOJ and the media, specifically The Associated Press, to target Paul Manafort, said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. These reports are further reason for President Trump to pardon Manafort and others caught up in Muellers abusive web.
Evidently referring to these documents, Manaforts lawyers alleged that Weissmann provided guidance and leaked grand jury testimony to the AP reporters investigating Manafort.
This document production comes in an April, 2019 Judicial Watch Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Justice ( Judicial Watch v. U.S. Department of Justice (No. 1:19-cv-00879)) filed after the FBI failed to respond to a July 5, 2018, FOIA request for:
All records concerning the April 2017 meeting between Department of Justice and FBI personnel and representatives of The Associated Press. This request includes all notes, reports, memoranda, briefing materials, or other records created in preparation for, during, and/or pursuant to the meeting.
All records of communication between any representative of the Department of Justice and any of the individuals present at the aforementioned meeting.
Under Mueller, Weissmann became known as the architect of the case against former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, which produced no evidence of collusion between Manafort, the Trump campaign and Russian operatives. It indicted Manafort on unrelated charges.
In an October 2017 article describing Weissmann as Muellers Pit Bull , The New York Times wrote, He is a top lieutenant to Robert S. Mueller III on the special counsel investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election and possible links to the Trump campaign. Significantly, Mr. Weissmann is an expert in converting defendants into collaborators with either tactical brilliance or overzealousness, depending on ones perspective. Weissman oversaw the pre-dawn home raid of Manafort in what one former federal prosecutor described as textbook Weissmann terrorism. Weissmann reportedly also attended Hillary Clintons Election Night party in New York.
In May 2019, Judicial Watch uncovered 73 pages of records from the DOJ containing text messages and calendar entries of Weissmann showing he led the hiring effort for the investigation that targeted President Trump.
In December 2017, Judicial Watch made public two productions of DOJ documents showing strong support by top DOJ officials for former Acting Attorney General Sally Yates refusal to enforce President Trumps Middle East travel ban executive order. In one email, Weissmann applauds Yates, writing : I am so proud. And in awe. Thank you so much. All my deepest respects.
Are these AP reporters CIA? That is the first question I have.
My question was: Reporters? Why would they have the key?!
The President is correct, the MSM is very evil.
JACK GILLUM, CHAD DAY and JEFF HORWITZ
Why are you shouting? Should those names mean something to my memory?
Why are you shouting? Should those names mean something to my memory?
CHAD DAY and JEFF HORWITZ now work at the Wall Street Journal. Jack Gillum works for ProPublica. All their twitter accounts are active and are about what you would expect.
Yep, and especially so for AP.
They are the AP reporters.
Also Ap reporters Nataliya Vasilyeva contributed reporting from Kiev and Moscow, and Lynn Berry from Washington
Lynn Berry was the editor-in-chief of The Moscow Times, the leading English-language daily in Russia, from January 2001 until June 2006. She was replaced by former deputy editor Andrew McChesney.
Before being appointed editor, Berry occupied the night editor position and was later promoted to managing editor. Previous to her stint with The Moscow Times, she worked in the Moscow bureau of the Associated Press. She is now Associated Press news editor in Moscow.
Off the Wall Ping!
Contact to be added.
Operation Mockingbird is real and coming to our living rooms daily.
And for decades so many kooks thought this was the stuff of KooKs.
Lets Wrap This FReepathon Up Early, Folks Donate Today!
The reporters arent smart enough to have scoped out this info. The reporters are acting as a cutout between a foreign government (Five Eyes) spying on a US citizen and the FBI/DOJ. FBI cant legally spy on US citizens, so they get a foreign government to do the work, then use the MSM as a cutout.
Would this qualify him for a new trial?
Does Manafort have any hope of his conviction being thrown out due to “fruit of the poisonous tree?” Does Law and Order have to prove they would have gotten to the same place anyway?
Uhuh... my point exactly.
See #17
I don't know but Tom Fitton is not one to stretch the truth in my view.
From article:
"These shocking FBI reports evidence a corrupt collusion between the DOJ and the media, specifically The Associated Press, to target Paul Manafort, said Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. These reports are further reason for President Trump to pardon Manafort and others caught up in Muellers abusive web."
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