Attorney
General Bill Barr seems to be at it again. This time he is not only obstructing
justice in defense of the President, but also in defense of himself. I am of course referring to the July 25th
phone call between the President of the United States and the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr
Zelensky, in which Trump mentions Barr several times. Clearly, this is a matter that screams for Barr’s
recusal. Equally clear, he will not
recuse himself, knowing what happened to former Attorney General Sessions. But that’s not all that’s troubling me. What’s troubling me is how the Criminal
Division of the Department of Justice decided—without even opening an
investigation—that the phone call did not involve a violation of the Federal
Election Campaign Act. Remembering that
Volume 1 of the Mueller Report dealt with this issue, I decided to use it as a
guide to see if the DOJ made the right decision. I don’t think it did.
First, the
criminal statute, and then the Mueller Report’s analysis.
52 US Code §30121 Contributions and
donations by foreign nationals
states in relevant part in Subparagraph (a)(1)(A) that it is unlawful for a
foreign national, directly or indirectly, to make an express or implied promise
to make a contribution or donation of a thing of value in connection with a
Federal election. This is the part that
applies to Zelensky. Part (2) of
Subparagraph (a) states that it is unlawful for
a person to solicit, accept, or receive a contribution or donation of the type
described in (A)(1). That’s the part
that applies to Trump.
Here is the
actual text:
(a)
Prohibition It shall be unlawful for—
(A) a contribution or donation of
money or other thing of value, or to make an express or implied promise to make a contribution or donation, in
connection with a Federal, State, or local election
(2)
a person to solicit, accept, or receive a contribution or donation described in
subparagraph (A) or (B) of paragraph (1) from a foreign national.
Before we
address subparagraph (a) in light of the call, I would note that, according to
the unclassified transcript of the phone call that was released to the public,
the call lasted 30 minutes. Yet it takes
only about 10 minutes to read the entire transcript, so you can be sure there
is more to the call than we’ve seen. Notwithstanding
that, I’ll base my analysis on what’s been released to date. The question is: Did Trump
solicit something of value from Zelensky in connection with the 2020
election? Yes, he did. According to the transcript (emphasis added):
- · After exchanging some flattering remarks, Trump gets down to business. He reminds Zelensky how much the U.S. does for Ukraine but “that it’s not reciprocal necessarily….” [That’s about as close to asking for a quid to reciprocate a quo as I’ve ever seen.]
- · Zelensky agrees that the U.S. has been very helpful with defense and then says, “…[W]e are almost ready to buy more Javelins from the United States for defense purposes.”
- · And then comes Trump’s first solicitation. He says, “I would like you to do us a favor though...” and proceeds to ask Zelensky to find the DNC servers Crowdstrike examined before the 2016 election and found to have been hacked by Russia. Trump says he thinks they may be in Ukraine, and he offers to have AG Barr call Zelensky about that.
- · And then comes Trump’s second solicitation. Trump says, “The other thing. There’s a lot of talk about Biden’s son, that Biden stopped the prosecution and a lot of people want to find out about that so whatever you can do with the Attorney General would be great.”
So, we can
put a big, fat, red CHECK next to paragraph (2) of subparagraph (a) of
the statute, solicitation. But how about
paragraph (1)? Did Zelensky promise
something of value to Trump in connection with the 2020 election? Yes, he did.
In response to Trump’s two solicitations, Zelensky says (emphasis added),
- · …my candidate will start as a new prosecutor in September. He or she will look into the situation, specifically to the company that you mentioned in this issue [presumably Crowdstrike, but the full transcript might indicate Burisma, the company on whose board Hunter Biden sat]. The issue of the investigation of the case [according to the Whistle Blower Complaint, "the case" refers to Biden] is actually the issue of making sure to restore the honesty so we will take care of that and will work on the investigation of the case.
So, we can
also put a big, fat, red CHECK next to paragraph (2) of subparagraph (a) of
the statute, a promise. Bingo! Promises solicited. Promises made. So why didn’t the Criminal Division at least
open an investigation into the matter---aside from the obvious fact that Barr
is running DOJ and is implicated in this phone call? Is there any credible basis for the
determination that there was no crime here?
I don’t see
any, but let’s give the Criminal Division the benefit of the doubt. There are two other items to be checked in
order to find a campaign finance violation.
One is in the criminal statute itself and concerns whether the
solicitation and the promise involved “a thing of value.” The other is outside
the criminal statute and involves intent:
Was there a willful, knowing violation of the Federal Election Campaign
Act?
Let’s turn
to the Mueller Report for some precedent.
These two questions—Was
there a thing of value? and Was there an intentional violation of the law?--were
dealt with in Volume 1 of the Mueller Report.
The issues came up in connection with Don Jr.’s Trump Tower meeting in
June 2016, the one where he took a meeting that President Trump said “anyone
would take” in order to get Russian dirt on Hillary Clinton. Mueller ultimately decided he couldn’t
establish beyond a reasonable doubt that a violation of campaign finance laws
had occurred in that meeting for two reasons.
One, he couldn’t prove that Don Jr. acted knowingly or willfully in
violation of the act, and two, he couldn’t establish beyond a reasonable doubt that
the Hillary dirt had a value exceeding $25,000, the threshold for a federal
felony offense.
But both of
these elements of the crime are present in the Zelensky call. There is a knowing, willful violation of the
Federal Election Campaign Act here. The Mueller
investigation was widely reported internationally. Zelensky would have had to have been living
under a rock not to have known that a foreign leader must not promise to
influence a federal election. And
contrary to what Rudy Giuliani and other Trump apologists might like to spin,
this was not a promise by Zelensky to fight corruption in Ukraine for
corruption’s sake. It was a promise to
help Trump defeat a potential political rival in exchange for the release of
U.S. defense dollars that were likely necessary in order to complete the
purchase of the defensive Javelins.
But even if
we give Zelensky a pass on knowingly or willingly violating the campaign
finance act, because of difficulties of proof based on jurisdictional
and evidentiary logistics, there is the intent of Trump.
His intent to violate the statute can be inferred from the inappropriate
siloing of the call’s transcript in the separate computer system maintained by
the White House. Trump either ordered or
knew about that burying of the call, which had it been “perfect,” there would
have been no need to segregate it. All
by itself, and even without knowing more facts, the concealment is classic
circumstantial evidence of a knowing violation of the act.
As noted in
the Mueller Report, Don Jr.’s knowledge of the illegality of accepting Hillary
dirt at the Trump Tower meeting could have been proved by the attempt to
conceal the purpose of the meeting. The
problem was that the concealment—the self-serving memo written on Air Force One
that claimed the meeting’s purpose was to discuss Russian adoption—was written by people who did not attend the meeting and it occurred
almost a year after the meeting. That authorship and that time
lag made it plausible in Mueller’s view that the cover-up was created for
political, not legal, reasons. It just didn't reach the "beyond a reasonable doubt" evidentiary standard. That is
not the case here. The call was siloed
immediately or shortly after it occurred,and it strains credulity to think that Trump was unaware of the siloing.
So we can put a big, fat, red CHECK next to knowing and willful.
So, all
that’s left now is the “value of the solicited promise” which has to exceed
$25,000. In the case of the Trump Tower meeting, Mueller
couldn’t put a value on the Hillary dirt, partly because the Russians failed to
deliver it. He acknowledges that it
surely had a value to the Trump campaign, but exactly what that dollar value
was, Mueller couldn’t definitively determine. We do not have that problem in the Zelinsky
call. There was an unequivocal
solicitation for opposition research. There
was an unequivocal promise to try to get it.
And there was an acceptance of the promise in the form of the subsequent
release of the withheld defense appropriation.
Bingo
again! We have jumped well over the
$25,000 hurdle. We know the value of the
solicitation to Trump and the value of the promise to Zelensky. It’s $400 Million of military aid that Trump
had personally asked Rick Mulvaney, Director of the Office of Management and
Budget, to withhold after it had been appropriated by Congress months earlier. That was the value of the promise to
Zelensky, and it was the value of the solicitation to
Trump. So we can put a big, fat, red CHECK next
to a thing of value.
Here’s a
recap of the Mueller Report’s details on the Trump Tower meeting so you can
make your own determination as to their relevance to the Zelensky call and how it’s
different from the Trump Tower meeting.
In General:
The
Office considered whether to charge Trump Campaign officials with crimes in
connection with the June 9 meeting described in Volume I, Section IV.A.5, supra. The Office concluded
that, in light of the government’s substantial burden of proof on issues of
intent (“knowing” and “willful"), and the difficulty of establishing the
value of the offered information, criminal charges would not meet the Justice
Manual standard that the admissible evidence will probably be sufficient to obtain
and sustain a conviction.
Requirement
of “Knowing” and “Willful”(emphasis added)
On
the facts here, the government would unlikely be able to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that the June 9 meeting participants had general knowledge
that their conduct was unlawful. The investigation has not developed evidence
that the participants in the meeting were familiar with the
foreign-contribution ban or the application of federal law to the relevant
factual context. The government does not have strong evidence of surreptitious
behavior or efforts at concealment at the time of the June 9 meeting.
While the government has evidence of later efforts to prevent disclosure of the
nature of the June 9 meeting that could circumstantially provide support for a
showing of scienter, see Volume II, Section
II.G, infra,
that concealment occurred more than a year later, involved individuals who did
not attend the June 9 meeting, and may reflect an intention to avoid political
consequences rather than any prior knowledge of illegality.
Thing of
Value
These
authorities would support the view that candidate-related opposition research
given to a campaign for the purpose of influencing an election could constitute
a contribution to which the foreign-source ban could apply. At the same time, no
judicial decision has treated the voluntary provision of uncompensated
opposition research or similar information as a thing of value that could
amount to a contribution under campaign-finance law.
The
Zelensky call is different. There was
concealment at the time by, or with the knowledge of, a call participant. This was not a
voluntary provision of uncompensated opposition research. It was coerced and it was compensated to the
tune of $400 Million. The stripped-down
transcript alone was enough to warrant the opening of an investigation into the
Zelensky call. Yet the Criminal Division
of the DOJ didn’t open an investigation.
Wow.
As
Marcellus said to Horatio in Act-1, Scene-IV of Hamlet: “Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.”
The Department of Justice in the Trump Administration is a fish that
is rotting from its head to its tail.
Keep it
real!
Marilyn




Marilyn, it's a slam dunk the orange baboon should be impeached. I doubt it will be successful, but that's not a reason not to begin the process. This reprehensible character has moved the dial so much on what is or isn't acceptable, that the world has become numbed by it all.
ReplyDeleteIt's time to say enough is enough, and draw the line. An investigation in itself, is 100% necessary, whatever the outcome.
Imagine the foaming at the mouth from Republicans if Obama had done 1/50th of what Tronald Dump has done these last few years (and beforehand) ! The pitchforks, white capes and AR-15s would be massed on Pennsylvania Avenue....the hypocrisy of GOP supporters is laughable, if it wasn't so very sad.
I’m guessing Chris.
DeleteAdrian!
DeleteShall we start an office pool to see who gets the heave-ho first, BoJo or the the orange baboon?
DeleteEvery action has an equal and opposite reaction. Both have started, here in the UK and of course, for a while in the US....let's keep fingers tightly crossed!
Delete