The Hill:
When the final chapter of the Russia collusion caper is written, it is likely two seminal documents the FBI used to justify investigating Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign will turn out to be bunk.
And the behavior of FBI agents and federal prosecutors who promoted that faulty evidence may disturb us more than we now know.
The first, the Christopher Steele dossier, has received enormous attention. And the more scrutiny it receives, the more its truthfulness wanes. Its credibility has declined so much that many now openly question how the FBI used it to support a surveillance warrant against the Trump campaign in October 2016.
At its best, the Steele dossier is an “unverified and salacious” political research memo funded by Trump’s Democratic rivals. At worst, it may be Russian disinformation worthy of the “garbage” label given it by esteemed reporter Bob Woodward.
The second document, known as the “black cash ledger,” remarkably has escaped the same scrutiny, even though its emergence in Ukraine in the summer of 2016 forced Paul Manafort to resign as Trump’s campaign chairman and eventually face U.S. indictment.
In search warrant affidavits, the FBI portrayed the ledger as one reason it resurrected a criminal case against Manafort that was dropped in 2014 and needed search warrants in 2017 for bank records to prove he worked for the Russian-backed Party of Regions in Ukraine.
There’s just one problem: The FBI’s public reliance on the ledger came months after the feds were warned repeatedly that the document couldn’t be trusted and likely was a fake, according to documents and more than a dozen interviews with knowledgeable sources.
For example, Ukraine’s top anticorruption prosecutor, Nazar Kholodnytsky, told me he warned the U.S. State Department’s law enforcement liaison and multiple FBI agents in late summer 2016 that Ukrainian authorities who recovered the ledger believed it likely was a fraud. READ MORE
Just when is the swamp rats going to be the subject of actual Justice???? Or are they just going to be ignored and allowed to fester??
As the Swamp turns, my stomach turns and I’m in dark shadows on the edge of wetness in search of tomorrow.
Jimmy, did you watch a lot of soap operas when you were young and restless? 😉
No, Claudia, couldn’t stand them. But they were always on TV when I came home from school and my sisters and Mom were watching them. A quick PB&J san and glass of milk for me, and, “Later everyone!”
Jimmy, my mom was the same. She just watched one but made sure she had mending or something to do while watching. She didn’t want to “waste time”.
Funny, same here, Claudia. For mine, it was knitting, crocheting or wood carving, or, cooking dinner. My sisters just sat there doing nothing. ( 🙂 )