The wheels of justice in the Durham probe into the FBI investigation of โCrossfire Hurricane,โ have turned slowly.
But that doesn't mean the accountable always escape justice.
For years, the narrative that Russia conspired with Donald Trump to sway the 2016 presidential election dogged the former president.
Although three investigationsโincluding one by a Republican-led Senate committeeโconcluded that Russia meddled in election to Trump's benefit, allegations of a conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russian officials never amounted to a hill of beans.
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In contrast, there's more controversy than ever around the Steele dossier. The infamous report first entered the public's imagination when ex-British spy Christopher Steele gave it to the FBI in 2016.
Despite Steele's ties to Democratic Party power brokers, the media breathlessly reported on his alleged findings. Democrats used them to paint the president as the Kremlin's newest stooge.
Only now are some outlets coming around to the realization that the Clinton campaign โginned up bogus investigationsโ into Trump.
New Indictments Reflect Poorly on the Mainstream Media
Fox News explains, breaking down the latest indictments from Special Counsel John Durham:
A researcher who added key allegations to the largely debunked Steele dossier was arrested last week on charges that he lied to the FBI during five interviews. In September, a former Perkins Coie partner who fed information tying Russia to Donald Trump โ and has suspectedย ties to the Clinton campaignย โ was also accused of lying to a top FBI official.
Both men,ย Igor Danchenko andย Michael Sussmann, pled not guilty.
Danchenko was a key source for the Steele dossier's core allegations that the Trump campaign was colluding withย Russiaย to win the 2016 election. According to Durham's indictment, the Russian-born researcher lied about having communicated with a Russian-American business magnate who's been suspected of supplying information for the dossier.
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Sussmann met with a top FBI official to share information that linked Trump to a Kremlin-tied bank and lied when he said he wasn't representing anyone, according to the indictment. The lawyer has maintained that he told the official that he was representing a tech executive and has denied that he was involved with theย Clinton campaign.
At the time, Sussmann was a partner at Perkins Coie, which represented both the Democratic National Committee and the Clinton campaign.
Democrats have been tight-lipped in response, especially following Danchenko's indictment:
Fox News sought comment on Danchenko'sย indictmentย from seven Democratic members who satย on the House Intelligence Committee during its Russia probe and promoted or defended the dossier, including Reps. Adam Schiff, Eric Swalwell, Joaquin Castro, Mike Quigley, Jackie Speier, Andrรฉ Carson and Jim Himes.
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None of their offices responded. However, Schiff was confronted about the latest developments in an appearance on โThe View.โ
WATCH:
2 Comments
Ho Hum….Nothing will happen. They’ll get away with everything because mainstream media isn’t covering it.
I don’t know if I entirely agree with that. The top-level guys (Hillary et al.) will. But that doesn’t mean the mid-level guys will get off, too, or that Democrats won’t be hurt politically. The mainstream media’s failure over the past 50 years has led to an explosion in conservative news outlets. Even since Fox News debuted, we’ve seen countless radio programs, websites, podcasts and entire networks devoted to challenging the left’s narrative.
Even though I’m not the most hardcore Republican anymore, plenty of moderate Republicans and independents don’t think highly of the media either. This dynamic has given the right an opening. They seem to have seized the initiative, and I think their coverage motivates people to vote. I saw that firsthand in Virginia.
Things aren’t perfect, but I’m cautiously optimistic.