The Russia-Obsessed Media Does Its Best to Ignore Clinesmith’s Guilty Plea

The Russia-Obsessed Media Does Its Best to Ignore Clinesmith’s Guilty PleaAs news broke Fri­day that John Durham’s crim­i­nal probe into the ori­gins of the Trump-Rus­sia inves­ti­ga­tion had result­ed in a for­mer FBI lawyer being charged with doc­tor­ing FISA evi­dence used against the Trump cam­paign, the for­mer­ly Rus­sia-obsessed main­stream media did its best to look the oth­er way.Kevin Cli­ne­smith, who first worked on the FBI’s Cross­fire Hur­ri­cane team and then under spe­cial coun­sel Robert Mueller — only to be fired in Feb­ru­ary 2018 after it was revealed he sent anti-Trump mes­sages — will plead guilty to one count of mak­ing false state­ments. Clinesmith’s admis­sion came after Jus­tice Depart­ment inspec­tor gen­er­al Michael Horowitz fault­ed him in a Decem­ber report for doc­tor­ing an email to state that for­mer Trump-cam­paign nation­al secu­ri­ty advis­er Carter Page was “not a source” for the CIA — when in fact the email from a CIA offi­cial stat­ed the opposite.Clinesmith’s plea is not an indict­ment, but a “crim­i­nal infor­ma­tion,” in which the defen­dant seeks to avoid being charged by a grand jury. As Nation­al Review’s Andy McCarthy has point­ed out, such a move is often made under a coop­er­a­tion agree­ment, sug­gest­ing that Cli­ne­smith could be work­ing with Durham.Despite the plea’s sta­tus as the first major devel­op­ment in Durham’s inves­ti­ga­tion, the media bare­ly bat­ted an eye, aban­don­ing the Rus­sia saga after pro­vid­ing wall-to-wall cov­er­age of Michael Flynn’s plea deal with Robert Mueller in Decem­ber 2017.“I think real­ly the most impor­tant thing right now is to stay hum­ble, and keep your eyes and your ears open, in terms of what you think you under­stand about Mike Fly­nn in this scan­dal,” MSNBC host Rachel Mad­dow said in her open­ing mono­logue the night Fly­nn, Trump’s for­mer nation­al-secu­ri­ty advis­er, pled guilty to lying to the FBI.But on her show Fri­day, Mad­dow, who breath­less­ly cov­ered “Rus­sia-gate” night after night for two years, total­ly ignored the Cli­ne­smith news. And she wasn’t the only one. CNN’s Ander­son Coop­er failed to cov­er the plea deal dur­ing his two hours of Fri­day-night pro­gram­ming. Cooper’s col­league Don Lemon, who also cov­ered the Rus­sia probe and Flynn’s plea relent­less­ly, couldn’t find time to cov­er Clinesmith’s plea dur­ing his 10 p.m. time slot.Instead of ignor­ing the news alto­geth­er, Maddow’s col­league Chuck Todd react­ed to the devel­op­ment by belit­tling Durham’s probe in gen­er­al, won­der­ing aloud whether the inves­ti­ga­tion is aimed at “cre­at­ing con­fu­sion about inves­ti­gat­ing the inves­ti­ga­tors.” MSNBC legal ana­lyst Andrew Weiss­mann decid­ed to chal­lenge the news head on.Weissmann claimed on Twit­ter that Clinesmith’s alter­ing of the email was not “mate­r­i­al” to the indict­ment, because Durham did not say whether Carter Page had, in fact, been a “source” for the CIA in the court doc­u­ment. That Page pro­vid­ed infor­ma­tion to the CIA, and was praised by the agency for doing so, is beyond dis­pute, whether Durham men­tioned it in his indict­ment or not.> Cli­ne­smith is charged with adding the words “not a source” to an email about Carter Page, but no where does the charge say that is false, i.e. that Page was a source for the CIA. With­out that, how is the addi­tion “mate­ri­al­ly” false? Com­pare with Barr’s mate­ri­al­i­ty std for Fly­nn.> > — Andrew Weiss­mann (@AWeissmann_) August 14, 2020The attempt to com­pare the Fly­nn guilty plea to Clinesmith’s, how­ev­er, does call into ques­tion the media fram­ing of both stories.Elite polit­i­cal reporters and pun­dits focused their writ­ing and broad­cast­ing on Flynn’s guilty plea for months and jumped to far-reach­ing con­clu­sions about what it meant for the future of Trump’s pres­i­den­cy. When Clinesmith’s plea was announced Fri­day, our opin­ion lead­ers and news gath­er­ers col­lec­tive­ly decid­ed to fit the lat­est devel­op­ment into the frame­work they’d devel­oped over the bet­ter part of two years, rather than revise their con­clu­sions in the face of new facts.Take New York Times reporter Adam Gold­man, who broke the Cli­ne­smith sto­ry, for example.Goldman empha­sized Fri­day that “pros­e­cu­tors did not reveal any evi­dence in charg­ing doc­u­ments that showed Mr. Clinesmith’s actions were part of any broad­er con­spir­a­cy to under­mine Mr. Trump.” But in the 23rd para­graph, Gold­man men­tions that “Mr. Cli­ne­smith had pro­vid­ed the unchanged C.I.A. email to Cross­fire Hur­ri­cane agents and the Jus­tice Depart­ment lawyer draft­ing the orig­i­nal wire­tap application.”Taken togeth­er, the two state­ments raise seri­ous ques­tions. If Cli­ne­smith “pro­vid­ed the unchanged” email to oth­er FBI offi­cials, those offi­cials must have been aware that he doc­tored his email to the FISA court. In oth­er words, when they received the un-doc­tored email prov­ing that Page had long coop­er­at­ed with the fed­er­al gov­ern­ment and chose to say noth­ing, they became part of a “broad­er conspiracy.”Goldman proved much more will­ing to assign blame to a broad and neb­u­lous group of actors when Fly­nn pled guilty in Decem­ber 2017, call­ing the news “a polit­i­cal­ly treach­er­ous devel­op­ment for the pres­i­dent and his clos­est aides.”Goldman went on to write that Flynn’s plea implied “that pros­e­cu­tors now have a coop­er­a­tive source of infor­ma­tion from inside the Oval Office dur­ing the administration’s chaot­ic first weeks.” But a sim­i­lar hypoth­e­sis about the far-reach­ing impli­ca­tions of Clinesmith’s guilty plea was not advanced in Goldman’s most recent report.Other out­lets have engaged in sim­i­lar efforts to down­play the seri­ous­ness of Clinesmith’s wrong­do­ing by fram­ing the plea as a sin­gle act of unin­ten­tion­al malfea­sance. The notion that the Cross­fire Hur­ri­cane team acci­den­tal­ly failed to men­tion Page’s work for the CIA to the FISA Court is facial­ly absurd. The CIA sent a memo to the team detail­ing the agency’s rela­tion­ship with the for­mer Trump aide before the FBI filed their first FISA appli­ca­tion to sur­veil Page; the FBI didn’t men­tion it on that first appli­ca­tion or their three sub­se­quent appli­ca­tion renewals.NPR’s jus­tice cor­re­spon­dent Car­rie John­son head­lined her report on the Cli­ne­smith plea: “Case Linked To Alleged Abuse Of Sur­veil­lance Pow­er.” The label “alleged” has been inac­cu­rate since Decem­ber 2019, when Horowitz released a report detail­ing “at least 17 sig­nif­i­cant errors or omis­sions” in the FBI’s FISA appli­ca­tions used against Carter Page. John­son also report­ed that the for­mer FBI lawyer had “alleged­ly doc­tored an email.” In the very next para­graph, she quotes — with­out a hint of irony — Clinesmith’s lawyer, who told her that “Kevin deeply regrets hav­ing altered the email.“Johnson was not so timid when spec­u­lat­ing about the impli­ca­tions of Flynn’s guilty plea: After quot­ing then-White House spe­cial coun­sel Ty Cobb, who argued that Flynn’s deci­sion to plead guilty did not impli­cate addi­tion­al offi­cials, she explained that “Flynn’s plea agree­ment and coop­er­a­tion with Mueller would seem to sig­nal the oppo­site — that the inves­ti­ga­tion has now reached into the Trump White House itself, and that it still has a long way to go before wrap­ping up.”The Asso­ci­at­ed Press’s 2017 arti­cle on Fly­nn took a sim­i­lar angle, warn­ing that the devel­op­ment “could be an omi­nous sign for a White House” and hypoth­e­siz­ing that “if the Trump tran­si­tion made secret back-door assur­ances to Russ­ian diplo­mats, that could poten­tial­ly run afoul of the Logan Act” — with­out men­tion­ing that no one has ever been suc­cess­ful­ly pros­e­cut­ed under the law since its pas­sage in 1799.But in their report on Clinesmith’s plea, the AP opt­ed against com­ment­ing on what the devel­op­ment meant for the Russ­ian col­lu­sion nar­ra­tive and chose instead to com­ment on its util­i­ty as a prop that might “lift Trump’s wob­bly reelec­tion prospects” by expos­ing what the Trump admin­is­tra­tion “see[s] as wrongdoing.”




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