The Day

N.Y. Times article sullies reputation of Groton’s most prominent Republican

- DAVID COLLINS d.collins@theday.com

It’s hard not to see the likely fallout for Connecticu­t Republican­s these days from the horrors their party seems intent on unleashing in Washington, from cuts to Social Security and Medicare and ending assistance to Ukraine to a catastroph­ic national debt default.

The principal national agenda of Republican­s, other than sabotaging the economy, seems to be learning what was on Hunter Biden’s laptop.

Indeed, the corrosion in Connecticu­t of public confidence even in moderate mainstream Republican­s is certainly already underway.

You don’t have to look much further than the harm that famed Groton prosecutor John Durham has done to his reputation, with his flirtation with Trumpism, to see what may lie in store for other leading figures in the Connecticu­t GOP.

At least Durham doesn’t seem to harbor any political ambitions and will be able to slink soon into some deep retirement bunker.

Really, based on the withering descriptio­n in The New York Times this week of his alliance with former Attorney General Bill Barr, as the two tried to do President Donald Trump’s bidding and besmirch the law enforcemen­t officials behind the Russia probe, Durham must want to crawl into a very dark hole.

You might even expect to see him in a wig and dark glasses if he turns up any time soon in any of his old local haunts in Groton, where he attended Robert E. Fitch Sr. High School, once worked for the Groton Long Point Police Department and grew up in Mumford Cove, where he still has a home.

The extensive story in The New York Times — by reporters Charlie Savage, Adam Goldman and Katie Benner — followed a monthslong review of the alliance between Barr and Durham in trying to find flaws in the Russia probe.

They broke a lot of longstandi­ng ethical Department of Justice standards, the story reports, and three prosecutor­s involved in the Durham investigat­ion left as a result.

Nora Dannehy, his No. 2 and longtime aide, quit in 2020 in anger over Durham’s neglect of prosecutor­ial ethics, according to the Times, and went on to become legal counsel to Gov. Ned Lamont.

“Ms. Dannehy, a longtime close colleague, increasing­ly argued with him in front of other prosecutor­s and FBI agents about legal ethics,” the Times story reported.

Ms. Dannehy was especially angry about Durham’s plans to prepare a preliminar­y report on the investigat­ion prior to the 2020 election, the

The Times story ends with an especially embarrassi­ng anecdote, describing the way a judge rushed Durham along in a closing argument in a trial he lost.

story said.

The story grew long legs this week and inspired lots of headlines across a wide spectrum of media, besmirchin­g Barr and Durham.

“Report exposes Durham as tool of Barr’s illegal weaponizat­ion of DOJ,” was typical.

“Details expose Barr’s Durham probe as a law enforcemen­t scandal,” was another.

“The stunning hypocrisy of Special Counsel John Durham’s inquiry into Trump-Russia probe,” was one of many headlines singling out Durham.

The usually reticent and conservati­ve prosecutor, Durham’s former associates said, exhibited strange new traits during his alliance with Barr, which included weekly meetings and occasions when the two strategize­d and “sipped scotch” together.

Some former colleagues were especially alarmed at the way he turned to a grand jury to secure access to private emails after a federal judge had twice refused him, because it was an intolerabl­e invasion of privacy.

He initiated what became unsuccessf­ul prosecutio­ns against the advice of other prosecutor­s and then lost in court.

Robert Luskin, a former DOJ prosecutor who represente­d witnesses Durham interviewe­d, told the Times he had a hard time squaring Durham’s prior reputation as a straight shooter with his conduct under Barr’s supervisio­n.

“This stuff has my head spinning,” Luskin told the Times. “When did these guys drink the Kool-Aid, and who served it to them?”

The Times story ends with an especially embarrassi­ng anecdote, describing the way a judge rushed Durham along in a closing argument in a trial he lost.

The judge interrupte­d Durham as he proferred some of the Trump distortion­s of the Russia probe: “You should finish up, Mr. Durham.”

Let the fall of John Durham be a cautionary tale for other once-mainstream Connecticu­t Republican­s, as the crazies take over their party.

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