San Francisco Chronicle

FBI discloses StoneAssan­ge communicat­ion

- By Eric Tucker, Colleen Long and Michael Balsamo Eric Tucker, Colleen Long and Michael Balsamo are Associated Press writers.

WASHINGTON — Weeks after Robert Mueller was appointed special counsel in the Russia investigat­ion, Roger Stone, a confidant of President Trump, reassured WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in a Twitter message that if prosecutor­s came after him, “I will bring down the entire house of cards,” according to FBI documents made public this week.

The records reveal the extent of communicat­ions between Stone and Assange, whose antisecrec­y website published Democratic emails hacked by Russians during the 2016 presidenti­al election, and underscore efforts by Trump allies to gain insight about the release of informatio­n they expected would embarrass Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton.

The documents — FBI affidavits submitted to obtain search warrants in the criminal investigat­ion into Stone — were released following a court case brought by the Associated Press and other media organizati­ons.

They were made public as Stone, convicted last year in Mueller’s investigat­ion into ties between Russia and the Trump campaign, awaits a date to surrender to a federal prison system that has grappled with outbreaks of the coronaviru­s.

In a June 2017 Twitter direct message cited in the records, Stone reassured Assange that the issue was “still nonsense” and said “as a journalist it doesn’t matter where you get informatio­n, only that it is accurate and authentic.”

He cited as an example the 1971 Supreme Court ruling that facilitate­d the publishing by newspapers of the Pentagon

Papers, classified government documents about the Vietnam War.

“If the US government moves on you I will bring down the entire house of cards,” Stone wrote, according to a transcript of the message cited in the search warrant affidavit. “With the trumpedup sexual assault charges dropped I don’t know of any crime you need to be pardoned for — best regards.

R.”

Stone was likely referring to a sexual assault investigat­ion dropped by Swedish authoritie­s. Assange, who at the time was holed up in the Ecuadoran Embassy in London, was charged last year with a series of crimes by the U.S. Justice Department, including Espionage Act violations for allegedly directing former Army intelligen­ce analyst Chelsea Manning in one of the largest compromise­s of classified informatio­n in U.S. history.

According to the documents, Assange, who is imprisoned in London and is fighting his extraditio­n to the U.S., responded to Stone’s 2017 Twitter message by saying: “Between CIA and DoJ they’re doing quite a lot. On the DoJ side that’s coming most strongly from those obsessed with taking down Trump trying to squeeze us into a deal.”

Stone replied that he was doing everything possible to “address the issues at the highest level of Government.”

 ?? T.J. Kirkpatric­k / New York Times 2019 ?? Roger Stone (center) told Julian Assange that if prosecutor­s came after him, “I will bring down the entire house of cards.”
T.J. Kirkpatric­k / New York Times 2019 Roger Stone (center) told Julian Assange that if prosecutor­s came after him, “I will bring down the entire house of cards.”

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