https://www.lawfareblog.com/what-wa...ct-between-white-house-and-justice-department What the Watergate 'Road Map' Reveals About Improper Contact Between the White House and the Justice Department Jim Baker is a Visiting Fellow at the Lawfare Institute, a Visiting Fellow in Governance Studies at the Brookings Institution, and a Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School. He is also the former General Counsel of the FBI.
These court filings show that they have nothing at all on Trump. There were certainly no campaign finance violations. (They are only a fine anyway). Furthermore, a president can only be impeached for something done while in office. --Go boil your head.
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/...s-close-to-being-an-unindicted-co-conspirator James Comey: Trump is 'close' to being an unindicted co-conspirator President Trump is "close" to being an unindicted co-conspirator in Robert Mueller's investigation of former Trump's former lawyer,, according to fired FBI Director James Comey. "Not in the formal sense that he's been named in an indictment," Comey said during a New York City event hosted by MSNBC. "But if he’s not there, he’s certainly close given the language in the filing that the crimes were committed at his direction." Comey's comment came after Trump last week referred to in a sentencing memo filed by New York federal prosecutors in relation to Michael Cohen, Trump's former fixer. Prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney's Office in the Southern District of New York on Friday outlined in the memo how Cohen told them he had taken steps before the 2016 election to silence women, like porn star Stormy Daniels, from publicizing their alleged extramarital affairs with Trump decades ago "in coordination with and at the direction of individual one." "Individual one" is widely believed to be Trump. The former FBI chief's remarks also came days after he gave a six-hour interview to lawmakers on the House Judiciary and Oversight and Government Reform committees Friday in a closed-door session. The transcript of his testimony was released to the public Saturday. Comey added Sunday that if Trump weren't president, he would be exposed legally. "That person would be in serious jeopardy of being charged because the government wouldn't make that sponsoring allegation if they weren't seriously contemplating going forward with criminal charges," he said. "Where it stands here I can't say." The lawyer, whose public profile has risen since his abrupt dismissal from the Trump administration in May 2017 at the hands of the president, also said he would never launch his own a bid for the White House. "I've thought about it enough to know that I'm never going to run for office," Comey told Wallace.