East Bay Times

Deliberati­ons in Trump-Russia probe trial begin

- By Eric Tucker

A lawyer for Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidenti­al campaign hid his partisan interests from the FBI as he pushed “pure opposition research” related to Donald Trump and Russia in the weeks before the election, a prosecutor asserted Friday during closing arguments of the attorney's trial.

But Michael Sussmann's legal team denied prosecutor­s' claims that he lied. And even if jurors believed Sussmann did lie, the defense said the alleged false statement did not matter because he was presenting national security informatio­n that the FBI would have looked into no matter the source. At the time of Sussmann's meeting in September 2016, the bureau was already investigat­ing whether Russia and the Trump campaign were colluding to sway the election won by Trump that November.

“It very contentiou­s time. The Russians had hacked the DNC. They were leaking emails. And there was an ongoing FBI investigat­ion irrespecti­ve of this,” Sussmann lawyer Sean Berkowitz told jurors, referring to the Democratic National Committee. “And that was viewed as incredibly serious.”

The case is the first courtroom test of special counsel John Durham's work since his appointmen­t three years ago to search for government misconduct during the investigat­ion into potential ties between Russia and Trump's campaign. Jurors began deliberati­ng on Friday afternoon.

A guilty verdict would be cheered by Trump and his supporters, who have looked to the Durham investigat­ion to undercut the original Trump-Russia probe that they have long seen as politicall­y motivated. But the case against Sussmann is narrow in nature, involves a peripheral aspect of that probe and alleges misconduct by a tipster to the government rather than by anyone at the FBI or any other federal agency.

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