Today was the day for special counsel John Durham to testify before the House Judiciary Committee. House representatives wanted to hear from him about his investigation into the origins of the FBI’s Trump-Russia probe. Two Democratic lawmakers sought to detract from his findings, but he aimed sharp retorts at them.
Durham
released his report about the investigation last month. He criticized the FBI’s
“Crossfire Hurricane” investigation into a possible conspiracy between Donald
Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and the Russian government to win the election.
Fred Lucas published an article in The Daily Signal about the congressional
proceedings. He listed “six big takeaways from the former U.S. attorney’s
testimony before the House Judiciary Committee” from a hearing that lasted from
early morning to late afternoon.
1. ‘Two of the Dumbest Things I’ve Ever
Heard’
House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan,
R-Ohio, talked about the main sources for the anti-Trump “dossier” assembled by
former British spy Christopher Steele, which became the FBI’s predicate for
starting its Crossfire Hurricane probe.
Durham’s grand jury indicted Russian
citizen Igo Danchenko, a U.S. resident who has been a Russian analyst for
the Brookings Institution in Washington. Danchenko was the primary source for
the Steele dossier, but he was acquitted in a trial.
“Danchenko is the primary sub-source. A
few years before doing this work, he was investigated by the FBI for doing
espionage. Is that right?” Jordan said.
Durham replied that the FBI stopped that
investigation, believing that Danchenko had returned to Russia. However, he
actually remained in Washington.
Jordan said of the FBI and Danchenko:
“They go hire him, use the tax money of the people I get the privilege of
representing to pay this guy, who they obviously think is a Russian spy, to
hire him, who is the source of all the false information.”
Danchenko never was charged with being a
spy.
“They hired him and they paid him,” Durham
replied. “It was over $200,000.”
Jordan followed up by saying: “This guy is
hanging out with Dolan, Charles Dolan, who is a buddy of the Clintons, who is
also a source for the false [Steele] dossier that was used to spy on an
American citizen. In fact, don’t they [Danchenko and Dolan] meet on a park
bench somewhere in Arlington, Virginia, on New Year’s Day?
Durham replied: “New Year’s Day, middle of the day.”
The Durham report shows the FBI
didn’t even interview Dolan.
“This is straight-up out of the movies,”
Jordan said of the FBI’s uncritical acceptance of the so-called Steele dossier,
despite its sourcing.
“These are two of the dumbest things I’ve ever heard of,” the Ohio Republican added.
“They pay a guy who is a Russian
spy, who is the source of the dossier. The other source is Charles Dolan, who
meets with that guy [Danchenko] on a park bench in Arlington, and [FBI agents]
don’t want to interview him.”
Jordan later asked: “Were there
agents on the case who wanted to talk to Mr. Dolan?”
“Yes,” Durham answered.
“What happened to [FBI] Analyst No. 1?”
Jordan asked. “She kept pushing to talk to Mr. Dolan. She was ultimately turned
down. What happened to her?”
Durham replied: “At or about the same
time, she was assigned to a different project.”
Jordan seemed to want to add an
explanation point to Durham’s answer.
“They moved her. They said we can’t have
this,” Jordan said of the analyst’s FBI superiors. “We can’t have you looking
into the Clintons’ buddy. What did she do?”
“She memorialized it,” Durham replied.
Jordan explained: “She entered a memo
to the file because she said at some point the [Justice Department’s] inspector
general is going to want to know this information.”
2. ‘Reputation Will Be Damaged.’
Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., mostly taunted
Durham in his comments, pointing out that Trump had appointed him as U.S.
attorney for Connecticut before Attorney General William Barr appointed Durham
as special counsel to look into the FBI’s actions in the Trump-Russia
case.
“Do you believe Mr. Trump has pretty good
judgment on people, their abilities, their character?” Cohen asked.
“I’m not going to characterize Mr. Trump,
or my thoughts about Mr. Trump,” Durham initially answered.
[Cohen continued to badger Durham and
finally said the following:]
Cohen: “Your reputation will be damaged.
Everybody who gets involved with Donald Trump is damaged. He’s damaged goods.”
Durham’s response to Cohen drew applause
from some of those in attendance.
“My concern about my reputation is with
the people who I respect, and my family, and my Lord, and I’m perfectly
comfortable with my reputation with them, sir,” Durham said.
3. ‘Clinton Campaign Funded the Work.’
Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif., noted in
his questioning of Durham: “The Steele dossier was entered into the
Congressional Record. Was it true?”
Durham replied by stating what has been
widely accepted for years.
“There is not a single, substantive piece
of information in the dossier that has ever been corroborated by the FBI or, to
my knowledge, anyone else,” Durham said.
McClintock later asked, “What role did the
Clinton campaign play in this hoax?”
Durham replied: “The Clinton campaign
funded the work and opposition research that was done by Fusion GPS, and Fusion
GPS paid Mr. Steele.”
4. ‘Collusion and Conspiracy’
Rep. Mike Johnson, R-La., noted that
Durham’s report said the FBI launched the Trump-Russia conspiracy probe without
evidence or a predicate in 2016, and continued it until 2019, more than two
years into Trump’s presidency.
“To date, has any evidence of collusion
between the Trump campaign and Russia been uncovered?” Johnson asked.
Durham seemed to try to be respectful of
former FBI Director Robert Mueller, who as special counsel took over the
Trump-Russia investigation.
“There is information, of course, in the
report that was prepared by Director Mueller,” Durham said. “As to collusion
and conspiracy, I’m not aware of any.” …
Rep. Kevin Kiley, R-Calif., noted that
several House Democrats claimed that Trump and Russia colluded even after
multiple investigations failed to find evidence of it.
Kiley read an old tweet from Rep. Adam
Schiff, D-Calif., saying: “Collusion in plain sight.”
Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., ranking member
of the House Judiciary Committee, wrote on Twitter: “Obviously a lot of
collusion.”
Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif., tweeted: “We may
have an illegitimate president currently occupying the White House.”
And Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., wrote on
Twitter: “In our investigation we saw strong evidence of collusion.”
In each case, Kiley asked, “Mr. Durham,
were those statements supported by the Mueller report?”
Durham responded with variations of “I
don’t believe they were supported by the Mueller report” or “Not to my
knowledge.”
5. ‘Unique in Your Experience’
In a moment that garnered attention,
Durham appeared to take a not-so-subtle jab at Schiff by referring to a
recorded prank call to the California Democrat by two Russian
comedians in 2018.
In the prank, Schiff—investigating Trump
at the time—believed he was talking to a Ukranian official who had compromising
information on Trump, including “naked pictures of Trump.”
At the hearing, Schiff brought up a 2016
meeting between Trump’s son, Donald Trump Jr., and son-in-law Jared Kushner
with Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya, who had promised dirt on
Hillary Clinton.
“People get phone calls all the time from
individuals who claim to have information like that,” Durham responded.
Schiff shot back: “The son of a
presidential candidate gets calls all the time from a foreign government
offering dirt on their [most] important opponent. Is that what you’re
saying?”
“I don’t think this situation is unique in
your experience,” Durham said, in what seemed like a jab at Schiff.
Twitter lit up with reminders of Schiff
being pranked by the comedians. (The Daily Mail, which first broke the story in
2018, ran another story Wednesday about what seemed to be Durham’s poke at
the California Democrat, who is running for Senate.)
After this apparent reference to the prank
played on Schiff, the two continued an exchange about the 2016 meeting of
Trump’s son and son-in-law with the Russian lawyer at Trump Tower.
Schiff said: “You said it’s not uncommon
to get help from a hostile foreign government. … Do you really stand by that,
Mr. Durham?”
“I’m saying people make phone calls making
claims all the time, that you may have experienced,” the special counsel
replied.
Durham went on to say that the 2016
meeting at Trump Tower “was not illegal,” but he called it “stupid,
foolish, ill-advised.”
6. ‘White Supremacist in Chief’
Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., a member of the
“squad” of far-left female Democrats, blasted her Republican colleagues for
embracing Durham’s criticism of the FBI and said Trump was pushing them to do
so.
“St. Louis and I are here to set the
record straight on this political investigation conducted on the
twice-impeached, twice-indicted former white supremacist in chief, Donald
Trump,” Bush said.
“From the start, this entire investigation
has been an attempt to undermine the findings of the Mueller investigation and
distract the people of this country from Donald Trump’s corruption,” the
Missouri Democrat said. “That’s why it [the Durham investigation] began just
days after the release of the Mueller report. That’s why four years later—no
matter how much my colleagues across the aisle claim otherwise—the Durham
investigation did not exonerate Mr. Trump or any of his associates.”
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