IOPList.Org

Full Version: FBI Shuts Down FOIA over Coronavirus
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
Tom Fitton

[Image: aOHU6N9.jpg]


‘Weiner Timeline': How the FBI Gave Hillary Cover During the Election




We just released 180 pages of communications between former FBI official 
Peter Strzok and former FBI attorney Lisa Page that include Strzok’s “weiner timeline,” 
which shows a time gap of almost a month between the discovery of former 
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s emails on the laptop of disgraced former 
Congressman Anthony Weiner and the obtaining of a search warrant.

On November 3, 2016, Strzok sends an email to Page with a “weiner timeline.” 
The document shows that on September 28, 2016, the Assistant Director in Charge (ADIC) 
of the New York Office of the FBI reported “potential MYE-related material,” 
referring to Midyear Exam, which was the code name of the FBI’s Clinton 
email investigation. The timeline shows that not until October 30, almost 
a month after the discovery, was a search warrant for the emails obtained:


09/26/2016  
NYO [New York Office] obtains SW [search warrant] for Weiner laptop


09/28/2016

ADIC NY notes potential MYE-related material following weekly SAC [Special Agent in Charge] SVTC [Secure Video Teleconference]


09/29/2016

Conference call between NYO and MYE team


  • NYO notes processing is crashing system and not complete, but during troubleshooting observes material potentially related to MYE (clintonemail.com and state.gov domainsseen during course of review

  • No numbers/volume available

  • Discussion about ability to search for material determines such activity would be outside scope of warrant

  • Request to NYO to gather basic facts (numbers, domains, etc) based on their review

Approx. 10/19/2016
NYO completes carving
NYO observes SBU [Sensitive but Unclassified] attachment


10/21/2016

6:00 PM DOJ/NSD advises MYE leadership that SDNY informed them of MYE- related media on Weiner media


10/25/2016

DOJ-DD conversation re material


10/26/2016

DOJ-MYE-NYO conference call
DD advised of results of call with MYE team conclusion material should be looked at; DD directs briefing to D


10/27/2016
Briefing to D; D concurs with conducting investigation to obtain data


10/30/2016

SW [search warrantsworn out at SDNY
Copy of media obtained by MYE SAs [Special Agents], entered into evidence, and provided to OTD [Operational Technology Division] for processing



A partial Strzok timeline was included in Department of Justice Inspector General 
Michael Horowitz’s June 2018 report on the Clinton email investigation. 
Also, the report suggested possible bias by Strzok: “[W]e did not have 
confidence that Strzok’s decision to prioritize the Russia investigation over 
following up on the Midyear-related investigative lead discovered on the 
Weiner laptop was free from bias.”

The new documents are the latest production from a January 2018 
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit filed after the DOJ failed to 
respond to a December 2017 request for all communications between 
Strzok and Page (Judicial Watch v. U.S. Department of Justice (No. 1:18-cv-00154)).
 
The FBI is only processing the records at a rate of 500 pages per month 

and has refused to process text messages. At this rate, the production 
of these communications won’t be completed until late 2021.

The new records we uncovered also include an email chain that concludes 
on November 5, 2016 — the day before Comey notified Congress that 
the FBI had not changed its July conclusion – with the subject line “Drafting” 
in which Strzok indicates that he is working on the “initial review” of “the data” 
for an upcoming statement.
 
In an additional version of the November 2016 “Drafting” email thread Strzok 
concludes that he found “no new potentially classified email on the media [laptop] …”
 

In a November 6, 2016, email with the subject line “Request for conference call 
bridge” Strzok tells senior FBI officials: “[Redacted], Jon and I completed our 
review of all of the potential HRC work emails on the laptop. 
We found no previously unknown, potentially classified emails on the media [laptop].”
 
Reportedly, only 3,077 of the more than 300,000 emails found on the 

Weiner laptop “were directly reviewed for classified or incriminating information. 
Three FBI officials completed that work in a single 12-hour spurt the day 
before Comey again cleared Clinton of criminal charges.”

The emails also include an October 30, 2016, email titled “MYE data update,” 
in which Strzok tells other top FBI officials: “The discussion of the classified 
email remains accurate.”
 
In an October 31, 2016, email thread discussing a New York Times article 

about the FBI conducting a review of Huma Abedin’s emails found on Weiner’s 
laptop that Strzok circulated to then-Deputy Assistant Director of Counterintelligence 
Jonathan Moffa, then-Assistant Director for Counterintelligence Bill Priestap, 
and redacted persons, Moffa says: “I think [redacted],” to which Strzok replies, 
“Yes. Yes we did. Makes you wonder who dialed in ...” 
Moffa responds, “Sure does. First reference I’m ever aware of to our review network too.”

On November 1, 2016, a redacted official in the Director’s Office emails Strzok, 
Page and other redacted persons with a “Media question,” asking, “Politico 
asks why all of Huma’s electronic devices she may have used were not 
subpoenaed early on. Could you please provide any guidance on 
how I should respond? [Redacted]. Thank you.” Strzok replies, “Hi [redacted].”
 
On October 31, 2016, Strzok forwarded to Page a Mother Jones article titled 

“A Veteran Spy Has Given the FBI Information Alleging a Russian Operation 
to Cultivate Donald Trump,” concerning the allegations by a 
“former senior intelligence officer for a Western country who specialized in 
Russian counterintelligence” that the Russian government 
“has for years tried to co-opt and assist Trump.”

On October 31, 2016, Strzok forwarded to Priestap, Moffa, Page 
and unidentified persons an NBC News article titled, “FBI Making Inquiry 
into Ex-Trump Campaign Manager’s Foreign Ties,” about an FBI investigation 
of Paul Manafort, with Strzok saying, “Wow, busy news night. 
Talked with [redacted] earlier, he said [Washington Post reporter] 
Ellen Nakashima had mentioned below to him.” An unidentified General Counsel 
office official then responds, “FYI – Slate has an article on the Trump server.”
 
(The Slate article that alleged that Trump’s campaign set up a covert 

communication system with Russia during the 2016 election using a 
computer server in the United States and another owned by a Russian bank 
has been widely debunked.)

On November 14, 2016, New York Times reporter Matt Apuzzo emailed 
an unidentified FBI official asking, “We got this in the mail today. 
Any truth to it?” Attached was an “Affidavit for a Criminal Arrest Warrant and 
Search Warrants,” purporting to have been sworn out by an FBI agent 
and allegedly “charging DONALD JOHN TRUMP with conspiracy to commit espionage …” 
The FBI official forwarded it to Strzok and other redacted officials, saying, 
“For your awareness. The NYT provided the attached document to us today 
in order to verify its authenticity. It is supposedly an affidavit in support of 
espionage charges against Donald John Trump. They received it in the mail today. 
They doubt it is an authentic document noting there are numerous inaccuracies. 
Wanted to provide it for your awareness.” Strzok forwards it to Page, saying, 
“Told them it was not authentic. [Redacted].”

We also received productions of 171 pages and 119 pages of Strzok-Page emails 
showing the FBI actively pushed stories to the media to stoke its claim that the 
bureau was “highly confident” Russia was “behind recent hacks.” 
One email shows Strzok telling Page about an appearance on CNN by 
then-Assistant Attorney General for National Security John Carlin
“On CNN now talking about hacking of state election systems. NICE coordination NSD….”
 
The new emails also show Strzok, Page and other high-ranking FBI 

officials discussing the “alleged destruction of laptops;” a lengthy 
discussion about how to respond to a reporter’s inquiry into an 
alleged quid pro quo related to Hillary Clinton’s emails in which the 
State Department would create additional FBI overseas positions; 
and Strzok defending Director James Comey after a former FBI official 
said Comey had “thrown all the agents under the bus.”

These new records show how Hillary Clinton was protected from investigation 
over the Weiner laptop by the FBI for a full month during the presidential 
campaign. And the documents further confirm that Strzok pushed laundered 
media Russia smears of Trump within the FBI. No wonder the FBI is slow 
rolling the release of these documents.
 
We recently uncovered records showing that Clinton apologized to the 

FBI over her email abuses, but that apology was not in the FBI 302 report 
documenting her interview. Records also showed that Strzok had information 
on an intelligence briefing for then-candidate Trump.

In early February 2020, we made public several emails between Strzok and Page 
that showed their direct involvement in the opening of Crossfire Hurricane, 
the bureau’s investigation of alleged collusion between the Trump campaign 
and Russia. The records also showed “confirmed classified emails” on 
Clinton’s unsecure, non-state.gov email server “beyond the number 
presented” in Comey’s statements.
 
In January 2020, we revealed Strzok-Page emails that detail special 

accommodations were given to the lawyers of Clinton and her aides 
during the investigation of her email controversy. Additionally, 
in November 2019, Judicial Watch uncovered Strzok-Page emails showing 
the attorney representing three of Clinton’s aides met with senior FBI officials.

In November 2019, we received DOJ records showing that, after 
Clinton’s statement denying the transmission of classified information over 
her unsecure email system, Strzok sent an email to FBI officials citing 
“three [Clinton email] chains” containing © [classified] portion marks in 
front of paragraphs.”
 
In June 2019, we uncovered emails showing that FBI top officials were 

scrambling to write a letter to Congress to supplement Comey’s Senate testimony 
in an apparent attempt to muddle his message. Also, in that month, 
we received records showing then-FBI General Counsel James Baker 
instructing FBI officials to expedite the release of FBI investigative material 
to Hillary Clinton’s lawyer, David Kendall, in August 2016. Kendall and the 
FBI’s top lawyer discussed specifically quickly obtaining the FBI’s 302 report 
of its interview with Clinton.

In February 2019, we uncovered emails documenting an evident cover-up 
of a chart of potential violations of law by Clinton. A few weeks earlier, 
we uncovered DOJ records revealing former FBI General Counsel James Baker 
discussed the investigation of Clinton-related emails on Weiner’s laptop with 
Clinton’s lawyer David Kendall. Baker then forwarded the conversation to 
his FBI colleagues.
 
In a separate Judicial Watch case, U.S. District Court Judge Royce C. Lamberth 

recently granted our request to depose Clinton about her emails and 
Benghazi-related documents. The court also ordered the deposition of 
Clinton’s former Chief of Staff, Cheryl Mills and two other 
State Department officials.

You can see that Judicial Watch’s efforts to uncover the truth about the 
Deep State cover-up for Hillary Clinton and the attendant abuse of 
President Trump have yielded significant success.  But this is still but a 
taste as we pry documents out almost on a daily basis.  

So, stay tuned…


FBI Tells Court Transparency Not Mission-Critical

Our FBI has blessed us with a fitness app and is promoting it on Twitter – 

to the horror of privacy advocates, because it requires users to enter 
their GPS coordinates.      

At the same time, our FBI has shut down its FOIA operations, 
because of the coronavirus.

Here’s the latest. We have released a joint status report in FOIA lawsuit 

CONTINUED

for records about top Justice Department official Bruce Ohr and his 
wife Nellie Ohr, in which the DOJ states it has suspended electronic 
FOIA operations. The Ohrs were involved in the anti-Trump dossier 
authored by former British spy Christopher Steele.

The Justice Department claims it is currently unable to continue searching 
for documents because the employees who would conduct the search in 
the FBI Records / Information Dissemination Section (RIDS) are, 
“non-mission critical” during the COVID-19 pandemic and were ordered 
to stay at home beginning March 17, 2020.
 
Included in the joint status report is a declaration from Michael G. Seidel, 
the FBI’s Assistant Section Chief of RIDS, Information Management Division, 
in which he states:

Quote:RIDS employees have been designated as not mission-critical and sent 

home as of March 17, 2020. Only a limited number of managers are being 
permitted to report to the office, but no FOIA processing is occurring as of 
March 17, 2020. While RIDS currently anticipates that its staff will return 
to work on March 30, 2020, this situation remains fluid and will be 
regularly re-assessed as circumstances change. As of March 17,2020, 
no further production of records pursuant to FOIA will be made, whether 
those productions are in relation to requests in litigation or at the 
administrative stage.

The filing comes in a March 2018 Freedom of Information Act lawsuit we 
brought after Justice failed to respond a December 2017 
request (Judicial Watch v. U.S. Department of Justice (No. 1:18-cv-00490)) for:

  • All records of contact or communication, including but not limited to emails, text messages, and instant chats between Bruce Ohr and any of the following individuals/entities: former British intelligence officer Christopher Steele; owner of Fusion GPS Glenn Simpson; and any other employees or representatives of Fusion GPS.
  • All travel requests, authorizations and expense reports for Bruce Ohr.
  • All calendar entries for Bruce Ohr.

So those responsible for Spygate get a breather while the people’s right to 
transparency is put on hold. When it came to spying on President Trump and 
innocent Americans, the FBI spared no expense, but coming up with a 
plan to fulfill their legal obligation to transparency can be put off indefinitely?
 
Judicial Watch and the DOJ have agreed to provide another joint status 

report on April 8, 2020.

We previously uncovered that Ohr was used by the FBI as a conduit for the 
Clinton-funded dossier by the Clinton-DNC spy ring at Fusion GPS. 
His wife Nellie, who was employed by Fusion GPS, passed dossier 
information to the FBI through him and later deleted emails received from him.
 
In April 2019, we uncovered documents showing that Bruce Ohr knew he had 

“possible ethics concerns,” in his January 2018 preparation to testify to the 
Senate and House intelligence committees.  He emailed his attorney and 
forwarded that information to his wife.

Bruce Ohr testified to Congress that he received Clinton-dossier information 
from his wife Nellie, who provided him with a memory stick that he then 
circulated to the FBI.
 
In May 2019, we uncovered that Nellie Ohr told Bruce that she deleted emails 

received from his DOJ account. 

In June 2019, we uncovered that Bruce Ohr received a total of $42,520 
in performance bonuses during the Trump/Russia investigation. 
Ohr’s bonus nearly doubled from $14,520 (received in November 2015) 
to $28,000 in November 2016.
 
On August 9, 2019 we obtained Bruce Ohr’s 302s showing that he was 

one of the main conduits used by Fusion GPS to spread the false information 
they created to smear President Trump.

On August 14, 2019, we uncovered even more evidence that Nellie Ohr 
sent Clinton-funded dossier materials to the DOJ through her husband Bruce.

We don’t need fitness apps from the FBI we need the agency to follow the law.


Hillary’s Emails & Benghazi—Inside Our Landmark Legal Battle

Because we our lawsuits exposed Hillary Clintons secret personal 

email server to the world, I’m not surprised that she will do anything to 
avoid being questioned by our crack attorneys. Micah Morrison, our 
chief investigative reporter, offers his perspective on this significant case.


Quote:[align=left]Life continues to unfold, even in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic. That includes—flying mostly under the media and legal radar—the most consequential freedom of information battle in a generation: Judicial Watch’s long fight for records related to Hillary Clinton’s emails and the Benghazi affair. In a landmark ruling earlier this month, U.S. District Court Judge Royce Lamberth granted Judicial Watch’s request to depose Mrs. Clinton in the case. Mrs. Clinton is directed to appear under oath and answer questions from Judicial Watch attorneys.
Quote:
It’s a big case. Lamberth called the issues in the lawsuit “one of the gravest modern offenses to government transparency.”


That was Lamberth in a 2018 ruling, four years after Judicial Watch first 
filed a lawsuit in the case. The Lamberth memorandum is a fierce defense 
of the Freedom of Information Act that should be required reading for every 
law school FOIA seminar. It details the government’s “outrageous misconduct” 
in the case and notes President Obama himself defended FOIA as 
“the most prominent expression of a profound national commitment to 
ensuring an open government.” The ruling outlined the discovery 
Judicial Watch would be permitted to take in the case.


Quote:
The heart of the matter, Lamberth wrote in 2018, is that “faced with one of 
the gravest modern offenses to government transparency, [Obama’s] State 
and Justice Departments fell far short. Did Hillary Clinton use her private email 
as Secretary of State to thwart [FOIA]? Was the State Department’s 
attempt to settle [a Judicial Watch] FOIA case in 2014 an effort to 
avoid searching—and disclosing the existence of—Clinton’s missing emails? 
And has State ever adequately searched for records in the case?”
Quote:
But government foot-dragging and stonewalling continued. Meanwhile, 
Judicial Watch discovered new emails (read about it here and here) and 
Mrs. Clinton’s written responses proved insufficient to answer the questions 
raised by the court and in discovery. Earlier this month—nearly six years after 
the case commenced—Lamberth’s patience finally ran out. 
“The court agrees with Judicial Watch,” he wrote, “it is time to hear 
directly from Mrs. Clinton.”


Lamberth’s 2020 order is stinging and concise. 
The State Department wants the matter closed and the Justice Department 
supports that position. “But there is still more to learn,” Lamberth notes. 
“Even though many important questions remain unanswered, the 
Justice Department inexplicably takes the position that the court should 
close discovery and rule on dispositive motions. The court is especially 
troubled by this. To argue that the court now has enough information to 
determine whether State conducted an adequate search is preposterous, 
especially when considering State’s deficient representations regarding 
the existence of additional emails.”

Lamberth noted earlier decisions that high-ranking government officials 
should not be dragged into court to account for official actions unless 
there were “extraordinary circumstances.” But the Judicial Watch case 
clears that bar, he ruled.

“The Court has considered the numerous times in which Secretary Clinton 
said she could not recall or remember certain details in her prior 
interrogatory answers,” Lamberth wrote. “In a deposition, it is more likely 
that plaintiff’s counsel could use documents and other testimony to refresh 
her recollection. And so, to avoid the unsatisfying and inefficient outcome 
of multiple rounds of fruitless interrogatories and move this almost 
six-year-old case to its conclusion, Judicial Watch will be permitted to 
clarify and further explore Secretary Clinton’s answers in person and 
immediately after she gives them.”

What did Secretary Clinton know about her private email server, 
FOIA, and Benghazi communications, and when did she know it? 
Lamberth spells out some of the key questions.

“For example,” Lamberth writes, “how did she arrive at her belief 
that her private emails would be preserved by normal State Department 
processes for email retention? Who told her that—if anyone—and when? 
Did she realize State was giving a ‘no records’ response to FOIA requests 
for her emails? If so, did she suspect that she had any obligation to 
disclose the existence of her private server to those at State handling 
the FOIA requests? When did she learn that State’s records management
employees were unaware of the existence of her private server? 
And why did she think that using a private server to conduct State Department 
business was permissible under the law in the first place? 
Again, who told her that—if anyone—and when?”


I'll post the rest in a short
Mrs. Clinton’s legal team has fired back with an 83-page petition to the
U.S. Court of Appeals asking it to throw out Judge Lamberth’s order.
The deposition order is “inappropriate, unnecessary, and a clear
abuse of discretion,” the Clinton lawyers wrote.

But of course the real abuse here is a six-year stonewall and an assault
on the Freedom of Information Act. Corrupt and secretive players throw
roadblocks, stonewalls and legal obstacles in the way of transparency,
accountability and reform. Bad actors drown the opposition in delays
and expensive legal actions. It is instructive that this fight has taken
six years. Most individuals and organizations do not have the money
and legal firepower to fight the government for months or years, so the
government wins. The critical message in the Lamberth rulings is that
FOIA, an essential tool in holding the powerful to account, is under siege.
Let’s hope the Court of Appeals recognizes that the real fight here is
about transparency and accountability, and allows the deposition of
Hillary Clinton to proceed.

Open Borders Coalition: Free All Illegal Immigrants Over Coronavirus

The Left’s solution for everything seems to involve making our streets less safe.
There is a frenzy in places to release prisoners from jail.
Of course New York City is in on it.

When should we not expect calls for releasing illegal aliens?
Our Corruption Chronicles blog reports.

Although there have been no confirmed cases of Coronavirus
disease in federal immigration detention facilities, open borders
groups are taking advantage of the health crisis to demand that
all illegal aliens be immediately released from custody and into
communities throughout the United States. The movement,
known as FreeThemAll, was launched this month by a coalition of
leftist nonprofits long critical of the Trump administration’s hardline
immigration policies. “The immigrant community is at grave risk,”
according to one of the groups leading the effort, Texas-based Refugee
and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services (RAICES).
The public is encouraged to contact Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE) to demand that the agency
“release all immigrants in detention, because detention is no
place for a family, and no place for a family to be during a pandemic.”

In a letter to ICE San Antonio Field Director Daniel Bible, RAICES
Executive Officer Jonathan D. Ryan asks for the immediate release of
detained illegal immigrant families and individuals due to COVID-19.
He also urges ICE to suspend all deportation activity, citing unsubstantiated
reports that illegal aliens deported from the U.S. have presented the
first cases of COVID-19 in their countries of origin. “ICE should not
participate in the spread of this dangerous virus around the world,”
Ryan writes. “This is a public health emergency. It is critical that ICE
detention centers and jails be prepared to respond appropriately
to the crisis.” He continues to blast the agency by asserting that the
U.S. government has a woeful history of addressing pandemics in
ICE detention. “We are concerned about the health and safety of our
clients who, with their liberty restricted in detention, cannot practice
recommended social distancing from other detained persons or from
detention center staff,” the RAICES chief writes.

The group is part of a broader movement in the U.S. to release all
illegal immigrants housed in federal detention centers throughout
the country. Hundreds of immigrant rights advocates, human and
civil rights groups and other leftist organizations are also pressuring
federal authorities to release illegal aliens in federal custody via the
Detention Watch Network, which aims to abolish immigration
detention in the United States. “Detention Watch Network imagines
a world where every individual lives and moves freely and a society
in which racial equity is the norm and immigration is not criminalized,”
according to the group’s website. “The abolition of immigration
detention is part and parcel of struggles against racism, xenophobia,
discriminatory policing, and mass incarceration and our aims coincide
with these broader struggles against racialized oppression.”

In a letter signed by 763 like-minded groups, Detention Watch Network
orders ICE Director Matthew T. Albence to immediately release all people
currently detained in immigration detention, cease all local enforcement
operations and eliminate ICE check-ins and mandatory court appearances.
The coalition also requests that the federal government make phone and
video calls free for detainees and that fees be waived for all costs associated
with soap, sanitizer and other hygiene products. If the government doesn’t
release all detainees, the letter asks for a “commitment that at no point
will a facility be locked down or closed off to outsiders or be considered in
its entirety as a place of quarantine” so that family members and attorneys
maintain access to the incarcerated. “Jails, prisons and detention centers
are sites where people are acutely vulnerable to health complications and
the impact of outbreaks,” the letter states. “Choosing to deprive people of
their freedom contributes to the already lethal conditions of mass confinement.”
Signatories include: Abolish ICE Denver, Allies to End Detention, Asians 4
Black Lives Portland, California Sanctuary Campaign, CASA-Maryland and
Compañeros Inmigrantes de las Montañas en Acción.

CE currently has 37,311 illegal immigrants in detention facilities,
according to the latest agency figures. More than half—19,526—have
criminal convictions or pending criminal charges, the records show.
As of March 14, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS),
the agency that administers the nation’s lawful immigration system,
determined that 5,867 of the illegal aliens in ICE custody have an
established persecution or torture claim.



[Image: 5wN6h1x.png]
Tom Fitton