New York Post

Durham’s big mistake: Portraying FBI as victim

- ANDREW C. McCARTHY Andrew C. McCarthy is a former federal prosecutor.

WHAT was the role of the FBI? In the Russiagate probe, in which special counsel John Durham has been tasked with getting to the bottom of the Trump-Russia “collusion” farce, that is the key question. If you don’t get the bureau’s role right, you’re apt to get the most consequent­ial things wrong.

Durham has banked his investigat­ion on the premise that the FBI was a victim — an innocent dupe manipulate­d by the wily Clinton campaign. On Tuesday, this misplaced faith led to the acquittal of Clinton lawyer Michael Sussmann.

The irony abounds. A Washington, DC, jury found Sussmann not guilty of making a false statement to the bureau even though Durham’s team convincing­ly proved the falsity of the statement he made — namely, that in purveying derogatory informatio­n about Donald Trump, Sussmann was not representi­ng any client, when in fact he was representi­ng the Hillary Clinton campaign.

Moreover, although the acquittal will encourage Democrats and their legacy media allies in seeking to discredit Durham’s probe, the law enforcemen­t shenanigan­s uncovered by the trial illustrate that the probe is essential.

Neverthele­ss, the probe will come to naught, and accountabi­lity will remain a pipe dream, unless Durham gets the FBI’s role right.

As I contended in “Ball of Collusion: The Plot to Rig an Election and Destroy a Presidency,” the outrage of the Trump-Russia “collusion” farce is that the lawenforce­ment and intelligen­ce apparatus of the United States government was put in the service of partisan politics — first to attempt to get Clinton elected president and, when that failed, to hamstring the Trump administra­tion’s capacity to govern.

That is, what makes Russiagate a uniquely dangerous chapter in modern American history is the willful interferen­ce by powerful federal agencies in electoral politics. The real collusion was between the Clinton campaign and the Obama-era executive branch — particular­ly (but by no means exclusivel­y) the FBI.

Durham proceeded on a different theory. The culprits, by his lights, are the Clinton campaign and its operatives. We are to see the FBI not as colluding with the Clinton campaign, but as victimized by the Clinton campaign.

The false-statement case against Sussmann is one of three indictment­s Durham has brought in more than three years of conducting his probe. In each one, the defendant is accused of duping the FBI, not collaborat­ing with the FBI, in an effort to portray Trump as a Kremlin asset.

Two others charged

Besides Sussmann, Durham has charged Igor Danchenko, the principal source for the notoriousl­y bogus Steele dossier, with lying to the bureau about his own sources of informatio­n.

Remarkably, Danchenko had previously been suspected by the FBI of being a Russian agent; and the bureau did not even bother to interview him until it had used his informatio­n — without endeavorin­g to verify it — in applying under oath for FISA court-surveillan­ce warrants. His informatio­n was credited because it fit the predisposi­tion of FBI headquarte­rs that Trump was a cat’s-paw of Putin.

Durham’s other prosecutio­n was of Kevin Clinesmith, an FBI lawyer. Clinesmith falsified informatio­n to conceal that Trump campaign adviser Carter Page, whom the FBI portrayed as a Russian spy, had actually been informing the CIA about his Russia contacts. To most of us, that would strongly suggest that the FBI had lost its profession­al detachment when it came to suspicions about Trump. Yet even here, Durham sees the FBI as the victim: Clinesmith was charged not with defrauding the FISA court on behalf of the FBI, but of lying to the FBI; and he was permitted to plead guilty despite implausibl­y maintainin­g that neither he, nor the bureau, intended to deceive anyone.

And then there’s Sussmann. The proof at trial demonstrat­ed that what he gave the FBI was more a cover story than a false statement.

If Sussmann had openly identified himself as a Clinton operative peddling opposition research, the bureau would have been seen as collaborat­ing with the campaign by using the “oppo” as the pretext for an investigat­ion. So Sussmann instead pretended that he was just a good citizen — a former Justice Department official who was bringing the FBI informatio­n out of patriotic concern for national security, not partisan motives.

You can’t prove a false-statements charge unless it is establishe­d that the investigat­ing agency was fooled by the lie. In Sussmann’s trial, the proof showed that the cover story did not fool the FBI; it enabled the FBI, which was second only to the Clinton campaign in its commitment to pursuing the TrumpRussi­a “collusion” tale.

Powerful federal agencies interfered in a presidenti­al election, on behalf of one candidate against the other. The public needs accountabi­lity for that. It won’t get accountabi­lity if Durham continues to portray the FBI as a witless dupe, rather than a willing collaborat­or.

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