New York Post

‘Collusion’ pushers in a spin over Durham

- ANDREW C. McCARTHY

WHAT a surprise: The media-Democrat complex that, for years, attempted to convince the country that a sitting US president was a clandestin­e agent of Russia is now spinning wildly, trying to persuade Americans that its politicize­d suspicions actually amounted to compelling evidence of Donald Trump’s “collusion” with Moscow.

That is the fallout from special counsel John Durham’s indictment of Democratic attorney Michael Sussmann, and of the related reports that the prosecutor has subpoenaed additional informatio­n from Sussmann’s former firm Perkins Coie, the lawyers for the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee.

Durham indicted Sussmann for lying to the FBI about whom he was working for (he pleaded not guilty). In peddling flimsy evidence that servers at a Russian bank proved a Kremlin communicat­ions back channel to Trump, Sussmann, a former DOJ lawyer, allegedly claimed not to be working for anyone — just a good citizen!

In reality, he was working for tech entreprene­ur Rodney Joffe, who was angling for a job in the anticipate­d Hillary Clinton administra­tion. Sussmann was also logging his time to Perkins Coie’s Clinton campaign client account.

More intriguing than the narrow charge is the indictment’s 27-page descriptio­n of the context. Durham’s theory appears to be that the Trump-Russia collusion narrative was essentiall­y manufactur­ed by the Clinton campaign. To produce dirt on Trump, the campaign relied on its Perkins Coie lawyers, obviously figuring their consultati­ons would remain concealed under the attorney-client privilege.

Perkins Coie, in turn, retained rabidly anti-Trump researcher­s at Glenn Simpson’s Fusion GPS, which recruited Christophe­r Steele, a rabidly anti-Trump former British spy. It seems not to have mattered to Camp Clinton whether the Trump dirt was concocted rather than uncovered.

Durham’s critics have incoherent­ly argued both that his years of investigat­ion with few charges show there is nothing there, and that he is a partisan conducting a witch hunt (in which case one wonders why there have been so few charges). In point of fact, Durham is a wellregard­ed prosecutor who has conducted sensitive special investigat­ions for administra­tions of both parties, and who has a reputation for moving meticulous­ly — which means he prioritize­s accuracy over speed.

Typical of Durham, he is proceeding cautiously because having an overarchin­g theory does not necessaril­y mean he has an overarchin­g crime.

A political dirty trick is not necessaril­y an actionable criminal conspiracy. It is one thing to show that self-interested political operatives found ways to peddle to alltoo-willing investigat­ors extravagan­t suspicions about Trump corruption that they hoped were true.

It’s quite another thing to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that they were knowingly funneling false informatio­n that they realized the FBI would use in court proceeding­s. Consequent­ly, the collusion propagandi­sts are morphing into propaganda apologists, insisting that Camp Clinton operatives had good-faith reasons — even patriotic reasons — for the innuendo-laced case they contrived against Mrs. Clinton’s political opponent. Obviously, Durham is still investigat­ing and is not yet ready to draw firm conclusion­s. For now, two things are worth noting:

First, remember that at the time Perkins Coie tried to sell the FBI on an Alfa Bank angle of Trump-Russia, the bureau was simultaneo­usly pressing the absurd Steele dossier (produced for the Clinton campaign by Fusion GPS via Perkins Coie) on the FISA court, in order to get authorizat­ion to spy on a former Trump campaign adviser. The bureau concluded the Alfa Bank allegation was meritless. That is, at a time when they were so desperate they were willing to rely on the frivolous Steele claims, they neverthele­ss turned their noses up at the Alfa Bank story.

Second, Durham is not an ordinary prosecutor but a special counsel appointed by the Justice Department. Ordinary prosecutor­s either file indictment­s or quietly close investigat­ions without charges. Special counsels write lengthy reports describing their findings in detail, including evidence indicative of corruption and abuse of power that may not qualify for prosecutio­n under the strictures of the penal law.

Durham may have some more indictment­s left to bring. As for a comprehens­ive explanatio­n of what happened in Russiagate, though, we will probably have to wait for his final report . . . assuming the Biden Justice Department allows it to be made public.

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 ?? ?? TANGLED WEB: Lawyer Michael Sussmann (lower inset) dug up supposed dirt on Donald Trump while working on behalf of Hillary Clinton’s campaign and tech entreprene­ur Rodney Joffe (upper inset), special counsel John Durham (below) alleges in an indictment.
TANGLED WEB: Lawyer Michael Sussmann (lower inset) dug up supposed dirt on Donald Trump while working on behalf of Hillary Clinton’s campaign and tech entreprene­ur Rodney Joffe (upper inset), special counsel John Durham (below) alleges in an indictment.
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