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Intrigue in Russia probe-linked trial

Verdict could cast doubt on inquiry or fire up Trump base

- By Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON — The first trial resulting from special counsel John Durham’s investigat­ion of the early days of the Trump-Russia probe hardly seems an explosive affair. It’s about a single false statement that a cybersecur­ity lawyer with ties to the Hillary Clinton campaign is alleged to have made to the FBI in 2016.

Yet the stakes are high.

The verdict in the case of lawyer Michael Sussmann will help shape the fate and legacy of Durham’s three-year probe. An acquittal would hasten questions about the purpose of the inquiry and the cost to taxpayers. A guilty verdict would energize supporters of Donald Trump who have long looked to Durham to expose what they see as biased mistreatme­nt of the former president.

The trial, beginning Monday with jury selection in Washington’s federal court, will not focus on Trump’s claims of government misconduct during the FBI’s investigat­ion into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election in the United States. Jurors will not be asked to decide whether the Trump campaign coordinate­d with the Kremlin to tip the outcome of the race.

But the trial will rewind the clock to a frenetic stretch in recent American history when the FBI was scrambling to investigat­e ties between Trump and Russia — and the rival Clinton campaign was eager to push its own suspicions.

What’s the case about?

Sussmann is accused of lying to the FBI’s general counsel, James Baker, during a meeting on Sept.

19, 2016, in which Sussmann presented research that he said suggested a possible secret back channel of communicat­ions between computer servers for Russia-based Alfa Bank and Trump’s company, the Trump Organizati­on.

The allegation of covert contact, if proved, would have been explosive at a time when the FBI was already investigat­ing whether the Kremlin and the Trump campaign were conspiring to influence the election.

The claim was false, Durham says, but that’s not the lie at the center of the Sussmann case.

The indictment accuses Sussmann of misleading the FBI by denying that he was representi­ng any particular client during the meeting when he was actually acting on behalf of two clients: the Clinton campaign and a technology executive who had helped assemble the computer data.

Why would it matter and what does Sussmann say?

Had the FBI known Sussmann was representi­ng the interests of the Clinton campaign, prosecutor­s say, they would have carefully weighed his potential biases and motivation­s — as well as the reliabilit­y of the informatio­n he provided — before investigat­ing the Alfa Bank allegation­s.

Prosecutor­s insist it was not a stray statement either, pointing to a text message they say Sussmann sent to Baker the night before the meeting in which he requested a sit-down and said that he would be coming on his own and “not on behalf of a client or company.”

Sussmann’s lawyers deny he lied during the meeting and point out that it wasn’t recorded and no one took notes. They say Sussmann’s Democratic Party affiliatio­ns were well known, including to the FBI. Beyond that,

they contend the false statement Sussmann is alleged to have made is ultimately irrelevant because they say there’s no evidence it influenced the FBI’s decision to begin investigat­ing the Alfa Bank claims.

In addition, they point to notes from an FBI and Justice Department meeting from March 2017 in which the FBI’s then-deputy director is described as telling his colleagues the Alfa Bank claims were presented to law enforcemen­t by a lawyer acting on behalf of clients. Sussmann’s lawyers say that shows the FBI understood Sussmann did indeed have a client in connection with the meeting.

They also have argued that allowing the case to proceed could have the effect of discouragi­ng tipsters from reporting suspicions or potential wrongdoing to the FBI if they fear their motivation­s or possible political biases would be scrutinize­d.

What does this have to do with Robert Mueller?

The prosecutio­n centers on a limited slice of the original investigat­ion into ties between Russia and the 2016 Trump campaign, which concluded in 2019 with a report from special counsel Robert Mueller and his team.

No matter the jury’s verdict, it will not affect the core findings of Mueller’s report — that Russia sought to aid Trump’s campaign but that insufficie­nt evidence exists to prove the two sides criminally collaborat­ed.

In fact, the Mueller report ignored the Alfa Bank allegation­s. The FBI did investigat­e but concluded by early 2017 that there was no troubling contact between the servers.

Even so, the case does make clear that Clinton associates leveraged profession­al contacts to present the FBI with informatio­n about Trump they thought was deserving of investigat­ion. And it will draw attention to the little-known world of cyber researcher­s who sift through internet data for potentiall­y suspicious trends.

What is Durham investigat­ing?

Durham, the former top federal prosecutor in Connecticu­t, was appointed in 2019 by then-Attorney General William Barr to examine whether anyone committed misconduct as federal agencies investigat­ed Russian election interferen­ce.

His investigat­ion has gone on longer than Mueller’s and he has charged three people so far, including Sussmann. Though Durham’s initial mandate was thought to focus on government officials, and though his team has interviewe­d FBI personnel, Justice Department lawyers and CIA officials, the investigat­ion has also focused on private citizens such as Sussmann who came forward with informatio­n about Trump.

Durham was given the title of special counsel before Barr resigned to ensure he could continue his work in a new administra­tion.

In 2020, a former FBI lawyer named Kevin Clinesmith pleaded guilty to altering an email related to secret FBI surveillan­ce of an ex-Trump campaign adviser, Carter Page. In applying for warrants to eavesdrop on Page, the FBI relied on a dossier of anti-Trump research known colloquial­ly as the “Steele dossier” that contained rumors and uncorrobor­ated claims.

Last year, Durham charged a Russia analyst who was a source for that dossier with lying to the FBI about his own sources — among them, a longtime Clinton supporter. Igor Danchenko has pleaded not guilty. The case set for trial in October.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP ?? Cybersecur­ity lawyer Michael Sussmann is alleged to have made a false statement to the FBI in 2016.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AP Cybersecur­ity lawyer Michael Sussmann is alleged to have made a false statement to the FBI in 2016.

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