New York Post

‘Evidence’ was nuts: G-man

Debunks Dem ‘research’

- Ben Feuerherd and Bruce Golding

A research paper that Hillary Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann told the FBI would show ties between Donald Trump and Russia was so weak that an FBI agent joked it must have been written by a wacko.

On cross-examinatio­n Tuesday at Sussmann’s trial for allegedly lying to the feds, FBI supervisor­y agent Scott Hellman was confronted with an electronic message he sent a colleague the same day he received the paper and two thumb drives of data that Sussmann also gave then-FBI general counsel James Baker.

“It feels a little 5150ish,” Hellman (right) wrote.

Defense lawyer Sean Berkowitz asked Hellman what that meant.

“I thought perhaps the person who drafted this document was suffering from a mental disability,” Hellman answered.

‘5150’ reference

Section 5150 of California’s Welfare and Institutio­ns Code allows authoritie­s to involuntar­ily hospitaliz­e mentally ill people for up to 72 hours and has been widely adopted as slang to refer to someone who’s crazy.

In 1986, it was notably used as the title for Van Halen’s first album to feature “I Can’t Drive 55” singer Sammy Hagar, who has said he thinks he was abducted by aliens.

During direct examinatio­n by prosecutor Andrew DeFilippis, Hellman said the since-debunked material Sussmann gave Baker — which purportedl­y showed a secret back channel between a Trump Organizati­on computer server and Russia’s Alfa Bank — was marked by numerous red flags.

The most obvious was the Internet domain name assigned to the server, which Hellman described as a dead giveaway that nothing nefarious was going on.

“The name ‘Trump’ was in the name. It did not suggest secret communicat­ions,” he testified.

“We believe Russia would have a much more technical capability to hide organizati­ons. It wouldn’t be so overt and direct.”

Hellman also said he “did not agree with the conclusion in the paper” he reviewed.

“I felt that whoever had written that paper had jumped to some conclusion­s that were not supported by the technical data,” he said, speculatin­g that whoever authored the report simply searched for “Trump” on a dataset of email servers to make the since-debunked connection.

Hellman also recalled being stymied when he tried to determine the source of the data.

“I do remember I was frustrated at not being able to ID who had provided these thumb drives to Mr. Baker. He was not willing to tell me,” Hellman told DeFilippis.

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