Trump's handpicked Attorney General refused Trump's request to clear him on Ukraine extortion scheme

Discussion in 'Politics' started by exGOPer, Nov 6, 2019.

  1. exGOPer

    exGOPer

    Trump wanted Attorney General William Barr to hold a news conference declaring the commander in chief had broken no laws during a phone call in which he pressed his Ukrainian counterpart to investigate a political rival, though Barr ultimately declined to do so,” the Washington Post reports.

    “The request from Trump traveled from the president, to other White House officials, and eventually to the Justice Department. The president has mentioned Barr’s declination to associates in recent weeks, saying he wished Barr would have held the news conference.”
     
  2. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark

    You know Trump is in trouble when Barr says keep me out of it.
     
  3. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark

    Quid pro quo now,extortion or The Hobbs act when he leaves office.


    Another Term For Trump’s Quid Pro Quo? Extortion.

    Former federal prosecutors say the president’s interactions with Ukraine also amount to extortion, as defined by the Hobbs Act.

    WASHINGTON – While both the president’s defenders and critics have settled on the phrase “quid pro quo” to describe President Donald Trump’s dealings with Ukraine, some former federal prosecutors have an even simpler description for it: extortion.

    Federal law makes it a crime for an official to demand or threaten another party to obtain something of value — a definition that appears to cover Trump’s decision to withhold hundreds of millions of dollars in military aid to the country unless its leader agreed to launch investigations advantageous to Trump’s reelection efforts.



    Help us tell more of the stories that matter from voices that too often remain unheard.

    The relevant law is known as the Hobbs Act, said Danya Perry, a former prosecutor in the U.S. Attorney’s office in New York City. Its definition of “extortion” includes obtaining property using “threatened force, violence, or fear, or under color of official right,” meaning using one’s official capacity. The crime is punishable by up to 20 years in prison.

    “The statute is often applied to a demand or a threat made by a public official in order to obtain something of value in exchange for his or her performance of an official act. The House is examining, among other things, whether the Ukrainian government felt under pressure to investigate the Bidens as a prerequisite to receiving potentially life-saving military assistance,” she said, referring to former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter. “To be clear, we do not yet know how the evidence will play out and certainly there may be valid available defenses, but it is certainly possible to make out a prima facie case.”

    The White House did not respond to queries about the withheld funds. Trump counselor Kellyanne Conway told Fox News on Sunday that the whole question was moot because Ukraine ultimately received the $391 million in military aid — but failed to note that it was released only after a whistleblower had filed a complaint about the matter. (The whistleblower first raised concern within the administration.)

    Bill Weld, who ran the Justice Department’s criminal division under President Ronald Reagan and is now running against Trump for the 2020 Republican presidential nomination, said Trump could also be charged with bribery. “The Hobbs Act is an extortion statute, and the same facts can constitute extortion and bribery, as here,” he said.

    The House of Representatives moved to open impeachment proceedings against Trump after the White House released a summary of a July 25 phone call showing that, when the Ukrainian president asked about military aid, Trump responded: “I would like you to do us a favor, though.”

    Trump and his allies have claimed that his requests for an investigation into Hunter Biden’s work for a Ukrainian gas company and Ukraine’s role in the origins of the FBI investigation into Trump’s 2016 campaign are all about his interest in ending “corruption.”

    Yet the White House has been unable to provide examples of Trump’s interest in ending alleged “corruption” except in those two cases, both of which happen to benefit him personally. Trump has long seen the former vice president as the most potent threat to his reelection, and Trump and his lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, have been trying to get Ukraine to publicly announce an investigation into the Bidens since early this year, according to testimony emerging from the impeachment inquiry. Further, Trump’s insistence on a probe into Ukraine’s supposed role in the 2016 election is, in reality, an attempt to undermine the conclusion reached by both the U.S. intelligence community and former special counsel Robert Mueller that Russia helped Trump win the presidency. Indeed, the conspiracy theory that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 election — which Trump’s former Homeland Security Adviser Tom Bossert called “completely debunked” — appears to have been spread by Russian intelligence, according to newly released documents from Mueller’s investigation.

    Renato Mariotti, a former federal prosecutor from Illinois, said that prosecuting Trump is unlikely, particularly with impeachment well under way. “It looks like extortion, and it is certainly corrupt, but I don’t believe this is the sort of activity that would actually be prosecuted,” he said. “Using presidential power in this way is not the sort of thing our criminal justice system is equipped to handle.”

    Republican senators, who would serve as jurors in an impeachment trial, are now turning to the argument that while Trump did, in fact, make military aid conditional on Ukraine conducting these investigations, such an act is not impeachable — essentially arguing that presidents are permitted to shape American foreign policy to their own personal benefit.

    Former Republican congressman Joe Walsh, who is also running against Trump, said that the need to defend Trump will constantly bring his party ever lower.

    “Every single GOP senator who says it was an ‘OK’ quid pro quo are lying because they know it’s not OK,” Walsh said. “By not impeaching and removing Trump for what he did, they are telling future presidents that foreign powers can now decide American elections. Like Trump, that’s a despicably disloyal thing for GOP senators to say and do.”


     
  4. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark

    In 2021 Trump has Muellers obstruction case(which hundreds of prosecutors say is a slam dunk case if not for Barrs interference),federal extortion/The Hobbs act charges and NY state charges.

    2021 is going to be a very good year.
     
  5. exGOPer

    exGOPer

    Yes, time to drop the latin, bribery and extortion is easy for the masses to understand.
     
  6. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...d541ec-ff55-11e9-8bab-0fc209e065a8_story.html



    From the moment the administration released the rough transcript, Barr made clear that whatever the president was up to, he was not a party to it.

    Though the rough transcript shows Trump offering Zelensky the services of his attorney general to aid investigations of Biden and his son, a Barr spokeswoman said that Barr and Trump had never discussed that.

    “The President has not spoken with the Attorney General about having Ukraine investigate anything relating to former vice president Biden or his son,” spokeswoman Kerri Kupec said in a statement released at the same time as the rough transcript. “The President has not asked the Attorney General to contact Ukraine — on this or any other matter. The Attorney General has not communicated with Ukraine — on this or any other subject.”

    It would not be the last time the Justice Department would have to distance itself from the White House on a matter relevant to the impeachment inquiry. After acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney said at a televised briefing last month that Ukraine’s cooperation in the investigations Trump wanted was tied to hundreds of millions of dollars of aid that the United States had withheld from Kyiv, a Justice Department official quickly made clear to reporters that the department did not endorse that position.

    “If the White House was withholding aid in regards to the cooperation of any investigation at the Department of Justice, that is news to us,” the official said.

    The department — and Barr in particular — has similarly sought separation from Rudolph W. Giuliani, the president’s personal lawyer who was leading the effort to investigate the Bidens.

    In addition to asserting that Barr and Trump had never discussed investigating the Bidens, Kupec said in her statement that the attorney general had not “discussed this matter, or anything relating to Ukraine, with Rudy Giuliani.” Barr’s allies had previously confided to reporters that the attorney general was unhappy with Giuliani, particularly over his going outside of normal channels to pursue investigations of interest to the president.
     
  7. I love the distancing. Looks like Barr pulled a Trump on Trump.
     
  8. Black_Cat

    Black_Cat

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  9. Tony Stark

    Tony Stark


    Barr has not defended Trump on The Ukraine and has made it clear he had nothing to do with it.Put all 60 of those IQ points of yours to work and try to figure out why.
     
  10. UsualName

    UsualName

    It won’t be long until Barr ends up like Sessions.
     
    #10     Nov 7, 2019