WASHINGTON — One misconception about the Ukraine-Trump-whistleblower story is that it came out of nowhere.

In fact, it’s been playing out for months — in plain sight.

Here’s a helpful timeline of the scandal/controversy, per NBC’s Lauren McCulloch and the “Meet the Press” team, which drives home the point that we’re not at the beginning of this story.

We’re smack-dab in the middle.

  • Aug. 2018: Trump signs the Fiscal Year 2019 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which includes $250 million to extend the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative.
  • Late Jan. 2019: Rudy Giuliani meets for the first time with former Ukraine prosecutor Yuri Lutsenko, who succeeded the man that Joe Biden and the Obama administration helped oust.
  • March 20: President Trump tweets, “John Solomon: As Russia Collusion fades, Ukrainian plot to help Clinton emerges.” @seanhannity @FoxNews.
  • March 24: Donald Trump Jr. tweets, “We need more @RichardGrenell’s and less of these jokers as ambassadors. Calls Grow To Remove Obama’s U.S. Ambassador To Ukraine.”
  • April 21: Volodymyr Zelenskiy defeats Poroshenko in run-off.
  • April 23: Rudy Giuliani tweets, “Now Ukraine is investigating Hillary campaign and DNC conspiracy with foreign operatives including Ukrainian and others to affect 2016 election. And there’s no Comey to fix the result.”
  • April 25: Joe Biden announces presidential bid.
  • April 29: Whistleblower learns the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch, is being recalled to Washington.
  • May 1: The New York Times publishes its original story on Joe Biden, his son and Ukraine — and it also notes, beginning in its 11th paragraph, how Giuliani has been investigating the matter.
  • May 6: Trump talks on Fox News about Biden and Ukraine: “I’m hearing it’s a major scandal, major problem. Very bad things happened, and we’ll see what that is. They even have him on tape, talking about it. They have Joe Biden on tape talking about the prosecutor. And I’ve seen that tape. A lot of people are talking about that tape, but that’s up to them. They have to solve that problem.”
  • May 7: Ambassador Yovanovitch is recalled, according to news reports.
  • May 9: The New York Times says that Giuliani plans travel to Ukraine to help Trump: “We’re not meddling in an election, we’re meddling in an investigation, which we have a right to do,” Giuliani says.
  • May 10: Giuliani cancels travel to Ukraine.
  • May 14: Whistleblower learns that Trump instructs Vice President Pence to cancel planned travel to attend Zelenskiy’s inauguration; Energy Secretary Rick Perry is sent instead.
  • June 21: Giuliani complains about Zelenskiy over Twitter, “New Pres of Ukraine still silent on investigation of Ukrainian interference in 2016 election and alleged Biden bribery of Pres Poroshenko. Time for leadership and investigate both if you want to purge how Ukraine was abused by Hillary and Obama people.”
  • July 18: Trump orders acting chief of staff Mick Mulvaney to hold back nearly $400 million in military aid to Ukraine.
  • July 24: Robert Mueller testifies before Congress.
  • July 25: Trump has his phone call with Zelenskiy, in which the president of the United States asks a “favor” to look into “Crowdstrike,” as well as Joe Biden and his son.
  • Early Aug.: Giuliani meets with a top Zelenskiy aide, Andriy Yermak, in Madrid.
  • Aug. 12: Whistleblower makes his complaint to Congress.
  • Aug. 28: Politico reports that the Trump administration is holding up the military aid to Ukraine.
  • Sept. 2: Pence, in news conference in Poland, doesn’t deny that Ukraine aid was tied to Giuliani’s Biden investigation: “As President Trump had me make clear, we have great concerns about issues of corruption. And, fortunately, President Zelenskiy was elected decisively on an anti-corruption message.”
  • Sept. 9: Three House committees begin investigating Giuliani’s involvement with Ukraine.
  • Sept. 11: Withheld funds to Ukraine are released.
  • Sept. 18: The Washington Post reports that the whistleblower complaint involves Trump’s communications with a foreign leader – and a troubling “promise.”

Ring a bell? Allegations of misusing a highly classified database

Here’s the big news from yesterday’s release of the whistleblower’s complaint to Congress, per NBC’s Carol E. Lee.

“Allegations by a whistleblower that White House officials misused a highly-classified database to shield President Donald Trump’s quest for information against a political opponent have raised alarm among national security experts and former government officials familiar with the secret, electronic system,” Lee writes.

More: “Former and current intelligence officers who spoke on the condition of anonymity said that, if true, such misuse should spark an investigation into the potential mishandling of a classified system.”

And: “‘The only reason to use classification to limit who sees a transcript is if the conversation is classified,’ said Ben Rhodes, a deputy national security adviser in the Obama administration. ‘We know from the transcript that the conversation wasn’t classified so the only reason to restrict access is to protect the president’s corruption.’”

Tweet of the day

2020 Vision: Bennet urges caution about the march toward impeachment

Democratic presidential Michael Bennet, who didn’t qualify for the third Dem debate, told Politico that Democrats need to be cautious when it comes to impeachment over this whistleblower story.

“I think that we need to let this investigation take its course before anybody makes that judgment and I’ve got responsibilities on the Intelligence Committee to do oversight; I’ve not reached a conclusion. I do think that it would be nice for us to have a president who didn’t behave the way this president did on that telephone call,” he said.

Bennet added, “Look, I’ve said I think that he’s committed impeachable offenses. I said that about the Mueller Report. I think it’s clear from the Mueller report that he obstructed justice, and I think that’s an impeachable offense. [But] what I think and what the American people think are two different things. And you can’t remove a president unless there’s public sentiment. I suppose you could try, but it seems to me that there would be a debacle in the country.”

On the campaign trail today

Joe Biden is in Las Vegas… Elizabeth Warren holds a town hall in New Hampshire… Andrew Yang also stumps in the Granite State… And Pete Buttigieg has a one-on-one interview with MSNBC’s Stephanie Ruhle at the Texas Tribune Festival.

Dispatches from NBC’s embeds

Andrew Yang campaigned yesterday in New Hampshire, where he emphasized the economy and took questions on the climate, the Department of Education Budget and supporting veterans. NBC’s Julia Jester spoke with a few voters after the event who gave Yang mixed reviews. One undecided voter said the primary race is a “moving target”, but when it came to national Democrats and impeachment said, “even if the Democrats legitimately hurt themselves doing this, I believe that they think it’s the right thing to do.”

Another voter who supports Julian Castro said he was surprised by Yang’s sole focus on the economy, “I’m finally getting a little tired about it being about the economy” rather than the environment, he told Jester.

And in Biden world, Joe Biden told California donors that President Trump is trying to “hijack an election”, according to the pool report. While at the event, Biden mimicked Trump and said Trump was aiming at him given his lead in many polls.

Data Download: The number of the day is …

11.

That’s the number of Democratic House members who have NOT come out in favor of some kind of impeachment proceedings against Trump.

What’s more, all but one of those 11 represent districts that voted for Trump in 2016.

The exception? Tulsi Gabbard.

The Lid: Joining in

Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at the number of Democrats in competitive districts who have come out in support of impeachment over the last week.

ICYMI: News clips you shouldn’t miss

NBC’s White House team writes that the president’s team is facing “total panic” about what to do next.

Trump says that those who passed information along to the whistleblower are “like spies.”

Jane Timm fact-checks the false claim that Democrats threatened Ukraine aid.

Rudy Giuliani spent months cultivating relationships with prosecutors in Ukraine.

Trump Agenda: Returning to the Mueller playbook

The White House is returning to the Mueller playbook.

The Washington Post lays out how the whistleblower worked in stealth to lay out a case against the president.

And the New York Times notes that White House aides were worried about the Ukraine call as soon as Trump put down the phone.

2020: How impeachment affects Biden vs. Warren

Jonathan Allen looks at how impeachment could impact the Warren vs. Biden fight.

Trump will hold a campaign rally in Minneapolis next month.

Kamala Harris says Giuliani should be disbarred.

Tom Price is interested in that Georgia Senate appointment.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/meet-the-press/ukraine-story-has-been-playing-out-lot-longer-you-might-n1059481

Fired Dallas police officer Amber Guyger becomes emotional as she testifies in her murder trial on Friday. She told police she thought that her neighbor’s apartment was her own and that he was an intruder.

Tom Fox/AP


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Tom Fox/AP

Fired Dallas police officer Amber Guyger becomes emotional as she testifies in her murder trial on Friday. She told police she thought that her neighbor’s apartment was her own and that he was an intruder.

Tom Fox/AP

Former Dallas Police Officer Amber Guyger took the stand on Friday, testifying that she was “scared to death” when she fatally shot her unarmed black neighbor in his apartment last year. She has said she entered Botham Jean’s apartment — which was directly above hers — by mistake.

Guyger, 31, is charged with murder in the death of 26-year-old Botham Jean, a Dallas accountant and native of St. Lucia. It is the first time she has spoken publicly about the shooting. On Friday, she broke down in tears several times as she gave her version of what happened on Sept. 6, 2018.

The former officer’s attorneys argue that Guyger fired in self-defense after mistaking Jean for a burglar and contends the shooting was a tragic mistake. They say Guyger returned home after a long shift, didn’t realize she was on a different floor and entered the wrong apartment in the sprawling complex.

The latch on the door apparently wasn’t engaged, allowing Guyger to enter. She testified that the apartment was dark and that when the silhouetted person inside began approaching her at a “fast-paced” walk, she called out, “Let me see your hands! Let me see your hands!” and fired within seconds.

Guyger, who was fired from her job after the shooting, said she intended to kill Jean when she fired her gun, believing he was a threat.

“I was scared he was going to kill me,” she said under questioning by her attorneys.

“I hate that I have to live with this every single day of my life and I ask God for forgiveness, and I hate myself every single day. I never wanted to take an innocent person’s life. And I’m so sorry,” Guyger said.

Prosecutors, however, say she showed incredible carelessness that night. When Assistant District Attorney Jason Hermus asked Guyger, who was off duty but still in uniform at the time, why she didn’t back away and use her police radio to call for help, she said that entering the home “was the only option that went through my head.”

The prosecutor said Jean posed no threat and was in his living room eating a bowl of ice cream when Guyger entered his apartment. Hermus emphasized that Guyger realized somebody was inside the apartment when she was still out in the hallway. They say she was distracted by texts and phone calls with her partner and ignored several signs that would have indicated she was on the wrong floor. More critically, Hermus questioned how much first aid she administered to Jean after the shooting.

To make his point, he placed Guyger’s police first aid bag onto the table in front of her and began pulling out some of the content – combat gauze and other items designed to control traumatic bleeding. Asked why she didn’t use any of the first aid material, Guyger said that in the chaos of that night, she was panicking and never thought to use them.

“You chose to go in and find the threat even though you were in a position to take cover and concealment,” Hermus said, referring to police safety protocols. “You could have found cover and concealment and got help. You had a police radio. It worked. You were two blocks from PD headquarters. Response time is two minutes to the apartment. Had you done any one of those things, Mr. Jean would probably be alive today.”

Under questioning, Guyger said she did some CPR, but added that her training had been limited and that she “had never tried it on a person” before. She told the court that she was struggling to provide aid and talk on the phone to 911 dispatchers. She admitted she stopped providing aid to text her partner for help twice and to guide arriving officers from the hallway into the apartment.

The case will turn on whether the jury finds that Guyger acted reasonably.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/09/27/765122240/i-hate-myself-former-dallas-police-officer-tells-jurors-during-murder-trial

The events of the past 48 hours bring up a simple question: Based on what we know about the Ukraine-Trump saga, could any of the key players be charged with a crime?

Allegations of wrongdoing are flying around — a record of a July 25 phone call between President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reads more like a mafia shakedown than a conversation between two world leaders. Trump asks Zelensky to do him a “favor,” i.e. dig up dirt on his political rival Joe Biden. Trump then suggested that Zelensky take this offline and talk with Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, and US Attorney William Barr about it. In the background, Trump had frozen American aid to Ukraine, a strong-arm move that some on the internet pointed out would make Tony Soprano proud.

A day later, a whistleblower’s report was declassified and made available to the public. Among other things, the anonymous author said he feared that White House officials tried to conceal Trump’s conversation with Zelensky by placing the transcript of the call on a “separate electronic system that is otherwise used to store and handle classified information of an especially sensitive nature.”

All of this was just in time for acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire to spend much of his day Thursday being grilled by members of the House Intelligence Committee about whether he helped cover up this report.

A lot of Americans seem to think this is bad stuff. Already polls show a spike in support for impeaching the president. But is any of it illegal?


US President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky shake hands during the United Nations General Assembly in New York on September 25, 2019.
Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

It’s worth noting that the House, which has the sole power to impeach a president, can do so without a finding of criminal wrongdoing by the president. In other words, a president who hasn’t violated the law can still be impeached for “high crimes and misdemeanors,” a term that includes many actual federal crimes but that also includes what Alexander Hamilton described as “abuse or violation of some public trust.”

That said, it’s nonetheless important to know if the president and his associates broke the law. I spoke with four legal experts about the developments in the whistleblower scandal so far. Based on those conversations and other analysis that’s been published so far, four areas of federal criminal law could be troublesome for Trump, Barr, and Giuliani based on what we know: statutes dealing with campaign finance, bribery, extortion, and obstruction of justice.

Did Trump or his associates violate campaign finance law?

Federal law makes it illegal to “solicit, accept, or receive a contribution or donation” from a foreign national. The question of whether or not the president ran afoul of that law certainly seems in play in light of what we saw in the transcript.

For purposes of this statute, a “contribution or donation” is defined as “money” or another “thing of value.” So a prosecution of Trump would hinge upon whether the opposition research Trump sought on Biden constitutes such a “thing of value.” Barr and Giuliani, meanwhile, could be considered accomplices in Trump’s effort to obtain opposition research from Ukraine’s president.


President Donald Trump and US Attorney General William Barr depart after delivering remarks in the Rose Garden at the White House on Thursday, July 11, 2019 in Washington, DC.
Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Images

The Justice Department reportedly has already decided that this statute does not apply to Trump’s actions. According to BuzzFeed’s Zoe Tillman, DOJ’s “Criminal Division explored whether the July call merited opening a criminal investigation into potential campaign finance violations by the president.” But the DOJ ultimately concluded that “the information discussed on the call didn’t amount to a ‘thing of value’ that could be quantified, which is what the campaign finance laws require.”

Special counsel Robert Mueller, however, disagreed with this interpretation of the statute after a similar issue arose in his investigation of Russia’s interference in the 2016 campaign.

“Political campaigns frequently conduct and pay for opposition research,” he noted. Moreover, “a foreign entity that engaged in such research and provided resulting information to a campaign could exert a greater effect on an election, and a greater tendency to ingratiate the donor to the candidate” than if they gave the candidate money. The idea that opposition research isn’t a thing of tremendous value to political candidates ignores very basic realities about how political campaigns operate.

Even if an argument like Mueller’s prevails in the courts, however, a prosecution of Trump, Barr, or Giuliani would still need to overcome other hurdles. Among other things, any information obtained from a foreign national must be worth at least $2,000 to make a violation of the campaign finance statute a crime, and at least $25,000 to make it a felony. So, while Mueller’s interpretation may be correct, prosecutors would still need to prove that any information Trump obtained from Ukraine would meet this threshold.

Does Trump’s act constitute bribery?

Prosecutors might also look to a federal anti-bribery statute, which imposes criminal sanctions on a public official who “corruptly demands, seeks, receives, accepts, or agrees to receive or accept anything of value personally or for any other person or entity, in return for … being influenced in the performance of any official act.”

Any prosecution under this statute would raise similar issues to the ones that arise under the campaign finance law. Does opposition research constitute “anything of value”? Ultimately, that question would need to be resolved by the courts.

Additionally, prosecutors would need to prove that Trump committed an “official act” in return for the opposition research against Biden. And, in its 2016 decision in McDonnell v. United States, the Supreme Court defined the term “official act” very narrowly.

McDonnell involved former Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell (R), who was convicted of doing numerous favors for a wealthy businessman who lavished gifts upon the governor and his wife — including a Rolex watch for the governor and $20,000 worth of clothing for Maureen McDonnell. The governor, meanwhile, connected the businessman with top state officials and researchers who could aid the businessman’s company.

Yet the Supreme Court tossed out McDonnell’s conviction, holding that these favors did not constitute an “official act.” The law, according to McDonnell, “prohibits quid pro quo corruption.” And the favors McDonnell did for his benefactor — “hosting an event, meeting with other officials, or speaking with interested parties” — were not enough to constitute such corruption. Prosecutors needed to show that McDonnell agreed to make an actual policy decision in return for a bribe or that the governor somehow pushed another official to make such a policy decision.


Former Virginia Gov. Robert McDonnell (center) arrives at his corruption trial at U.S. District Court in Richmond, Virginia on August 25, 2014.
Alex Wong/Getty Images

Which brings us back to Trump’s phone call with Zelensky. There’s an argument that Trump’s actions are criminal, even under the McDonnell framework. If prosecutors can show that Trump agreed to provide aid to Ukraine in return for opposition research on Biden, that would arguably clear the bar set in McDonnell.

Nevertheless, prosecutors struggled to meet this high bar in another high-profile corruption case. Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) allegedly received paid vacations and other gifts from a wealthy doctor in return for Menendez allegedly pressuring government agencies to take actions that would benefit that doctor.

But the case ended in a mistrial and the Justice Department eventually decided to abandon the case.

Did he commit extortion?

Writing in the Daily Beast, former United States Attorney Barbara McQuade points to the Hobbs Act, a federal anti-extortion law, as another possible source of criminal liability against Trump.

The Hobbs Act prohibits actions that “in any way or degree obstructs, delays, or affects commerce or the movement of any article or commodity in commerce, by robbery or extortion.” The word “extortion,” is defined as “obtaining of property from another, with his consent, induced by wrongful use of actual or threatened force, violence, or fear, or under color of official right.”

The magic words here are “under color of official right.” This language refers to public officials who use their office to pressure another person. As the Supreme Court has explained, to show that a criminal defendant acted under color of official right, “the Government need only show that a public official has obtained a payment to which he was not entitled, knowing that the payment was made in return for official acts.

Thus, if Trump blocked military assistance to Ukraine in order to extract a payment from that country, that could form the basis for a Hobbs Act prosecution.

That said, the Hobbs Act also defines extortion as “the obtaining of property from another.” So a Hobbs Act prosecution could hinge on whether opposition research against Biden constitutes “property.”

Did he obstruct justice?

Several other federal laws make it a crime to tamper with documents related to a federal investigation. One statute, for example, imposes criminal liability on anyone who “knowingly alters, destroys, mutilates, conceals, covers up, falsifies, or makes a false entry in any record, document, or tangible object with the intent to impede, obstruct, or influence” a federal investigation. If Trump or one of his associates committed such an act to cover up other potentially criminal activity, they could face prison time (though, again, any prosecution of Trump would have to wait until he leaves office).

At this stage, however, we can’t know for sure whether such a cover-up took place — although a whistleblower accused White House officials of moving the transcript of Trump’s call with Zelensky to a “separate electronic system that is otherwise used to store and handle classified information of an especially sensitive nature.” The White House, in other words, may have tried to shield Trump from political damage by hiding the transcript in a system normally afforded to the most sensitive national security information.

Whether this attempt to conceal the transcript was done at Trump’s behest and whether it was done specifically to obstruct a federal investigation are not yet known. So it remains to be seen whether an obstruction case could be built against Trump or against other Trump administration officials.

A long way to go

The criminal case against Trump and his closest associates, in other words, remains uncertain. Again, the DOJ’s Office of Legal Counsel has held that a sitting president cannot be prosecuted, so at least in Trump’s case, any criminal case would have to come when he’s out of office.

Whether Trump will ultimately face criminal charges when he’s no longer in office will turn on as yet unknown facts, on how courts resolve untested questions of law, and on whether prosecutors want to roll the dice on a conviction in the face of such uncertainty. It could also turn on whether the next administration wants to deal with the political circus that would arise from prosecuting a former president.

All of this uncertainty, moreover, helps demonstrate why the impeachment power reaches broadly to allow a public official to be removed for non-criminal acts. As Justice Joseph Story said in 1833, “political offences are of so various and complex a character, so utterly incapable of being defined or classified, that the task of positive legislation would be impracticable, if it were not almost absurd to attempt it.”

Congress cannot possibly anticipate in advance every single way that a public official may betray the nation’s trust. And so the Constitution does not make impeachment contingent upon whether a prosecutor could prove that the president committed a specific crime.


President Donald Trump arrives at the White House on September 26, 2019.
Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

Source Article from https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/9/27/20885557/criminal-laws-trump-barr-giuliani-ukraine

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reported Thursday that Iran is further enriching uranium with advanced centrifuges, the latest and most serious violation to date of the 2015 nuclear deal. Though President Trump pulled the U.S. out of the nuclear agreement, European leaders were still trying to salvage it.

On September 25, the IAEA verified that additional centrifuge cascades were accumulating, or had been prepared to accumulate, enriched uranium, a source familiar with the report told CBS News, meaning that Iran was moving forward with its nuclear development in a way that is prohibited by the 2015 deal.

Iran has doubled down on its intention to continue its nuclear development, stymied by the biting sanctions that the U.S. has placed on Iranian leaders and on Iran’s trade with other nations.

Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani spoke to reporters at a press conference Thursday, a day after his address to the annual U.N. General Assembly. He said that the information that the international nuclear agency has released came from Iran’s nuclear experts, and that it was Iran’s intention to advance its program. He said it is the United States that first breached the accord by imposing sanctions.

Although Iran has denied its intention to build nuclear weapons, the nuclear deal was intended to extend the time the nation would need to have enough fissile material to produce a bomb.

Three European signatories to the 2015 nuclear deal reportedly said they would trigger the dispute mechanism if there were further violations.

Iran began moving ahead with more advanced centrifuges in early September, and inspectors verified new centrifuges, including 30 advanced IR-6 and three IR-6s models, in violation of the deal that allows Iran to accumulate enriched uranium with slightly more than 5,000 of its first-generation IR-1 centrifuges at its Natanz facility.

Rouhani on Thursday said Iran could negotiate a new agreement with the United States if the U.S. implements all provisions of the nuclear deal, including the lifting of sanctions.

“We have nothing to do with” Saudi oil attack

The U.S., Britain, France and Germany have accused Iran of responsibility for the drone and missile strikes against Saudi Arabian oil facilities in mid-September. In response to a question by CBS News, Rouhani denied any Iranian involvement.

“As we say in Persian, we’re not the top end of the onion or the bottom of it, so we have nothing to do with it,” he said.

“Those who make the allegations must provide the needed proof to back up such allegations.”

In his speech to the U.N. General Assembly, Rouhani warned that a “single blunder” could “fuel a big fire.”

Gary Sick, a senior research scholar at Columbia University’s Middle East Institute who served on the U.S. National Security Council, told CBS News, “The series of attacks on tankers and pipelines and, now, Abqaiq” — the Saudi Aramco facility — “have demonstrated that Iran has the capacity to inflict costs on the U.S. and its allies in retaliation for their policies. Trump has made it very clear that he is unwilling to react militarily, but neither is he willing to modify his economic blockade. The French proposed an alternative, but the U.S. has apparently rejected it.”

“Iran is in a difficult position after the European countries backed up the U.S. assertion that it was responsible for the Saudi Aramco attacks,” Richard Gowan, U.N. Director at the International Crisis Group, told CBS News.

Iran releases British-flagged oil tanker

The British-flagged oil tanker, Stena Impero, which was seized by Iranian forces in July, left Iran Friday morning, Iran’s marine and port authority said. 

File photo of the British-flagged oil tanker Stena Impero, which was seized by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard in July 2019.

Tasnim News Agency/via AP


Iran’s president had said Thursday that the oil tanker would be released, and called for talks. “Cease this policy of maximum pressure and pursue a policy of dialogue and logic and reason,” Rouhani said. Negotiations “would be a different set of circumstances and a different atmosphere.”

Iran’s nuclear developments were expected to be a focus at the U.N. this week, but President Trump’s conversations with Ukraine have eclipsed that in the spotlight.

At the U.N. General Assembly debate, Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz said the international community should continue to support a “maximum pressure policy,” and Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Assaf said, “We know very well who stood behind this aggression.”

“Utmost pressure with every tool available should be applied to end the terrorist and aggressive conduct of the Iranian regime,” al-Assaf said.

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/news/iran-breach-of-nuclear-deal-stena-impero-oil-tanker-released/

House panels subpoena Pompeo for documents related to Ukraine…

In a letter to Pompeo, the heads of the House Foreign Affairs, Oversight and Intelligence committees requested documents relevant to Ukraine.

read more

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/09/27/trump-signs-spending-bill-to-avoid-government-shutdown.html

Updated at 1:30 p.m. with more details from testimony.

Amber Guyger sobbed as she took the stand in her own defense Friday, the fifth day of her murder trial, saying she will forever regret the night she killed Botham Jean. But the prosecution said the fired police officer cared more about herself than Jean that night, and failed to give him proper first aid.

Guyger, 31, fatally shot 26-year-old Jean in his apartment near downtown Dallas on Sept. 6, 2018. Her defense called the shooting a “tragic, but innocent” mistake and has argued she was reasonable in believing Jean was a burglar when she entered his apartment, thinking it was her own.

“I was scared whoever was inside of my apartment was going to kill me, and I’m sorry,” Guyger said through tears, her voice shaking. “I have to live with that every single day.”

Guyger said she wishes Jean and her roles had been reversed and he had shot her when she entered his apartment, a floor above hers. Jean was not armed.

“I wish he was the one with the gun and killed me. I never wanted to take an innocent person’s life, and I am so sorry. This is not about hate; it’s about being scared,” she said, seeming to look directly at Jean’s parents as she spoke.

Allison and Bertrum Jean remained stoic throughout her testimony.

Read more: Police treated Amber Guyger special on night of shooting, prosecutor argues

Lead prosecutor Jason Hermus grilled her during cross-examination, focusing on a moment of her testimony when she said being alone with Jean after she shot him was the “scariest thing” she could imagine.

“That’s the scariest thing you can imagine, right?” Hermus asked.

“Yes, sir,” Guyger said.

“Can you imagine Mr. Jean’s perspective? An intruder barging into his apartment,” Hermus said. “And then having been shot and fallen and being alone in that apartment — can’t you imagine that being a little bit scarier than you just being alone at the moment?”

“Yes, sir,” she said.

Hermus, a former officer himself, noted that Guyger shot Jean directly in the chest, right where she was trained as a police officer to shoot.

“When you aimed and pulled the trigger at Mr. Jean, shooting him in center mass right where you are trained, you intended to kill Mr. Jean?” he asked.

“I did,” she said.

Intent is a crucial element for prosecutors to establish because it’s what sets apart murder from a reckless act like manslaughter or criminally negligent homicide.

Amber Guyger is led off the witness stand by her attorney Toby Shook as she breaks down crying Friday during her murder trial.(Tom Fox / Staff Photographer)

Guyger was the first witness her defense team called to the stand Friday. Speaking publicly for the first time since the shooting, Guyger talked about her childhood growing up in Arlington, her affair with her married police partner, her training as an officer and, most importantly, the night she says she confused Jean’s apartment for her own at the South Side Flats, not far from police headquarters.

About an hour into her testimony, the fired officer broke down in tears as defense attorney Toby Shook asked her to demonstrate how she entered Jean’s apartment that night. Hermus asked for a break when she started to sob.

“No, keep going,” Guyger said while crying, before Judge Tammy Kemp dismissed the jury for a brief break.

When testimony resumed about a half-hour later, Shook asked Guyger to walk the jury through what happened that night last September.

She said she was scared when she heard “shuffling” inside what she believe to be her apartment. When she opened the door, she saw a silhouette of a person in the dark, she said.

“I knew someone was moving around inside my apartment so I wanted just to find that threat,” Guyger said.

She pulled her gun with her right hand — her backpack, lunchbox and police vest were in the other —and shouted at Jean, she testified.

“Let me see your hands! Let me see your hands!” she yelled, according to her testimony.

She said Jean began walking toward her quickly and yelled, “Hey, hey, hey!” in an aggressive tone before she fired twice from where she was standing in the door frame.

Shook, a former prosecutor, asked her what was going through her head when she fired.

“I was scared he was going to kill me,” she said.

After the two shots, she walked into the apartment and realized she wasn’t in her home, noticing Jean’s round ottoman in his living room.

“It started hitting me that this guy, I have no idea who he is, and that’s when everything just started to spin,” she testified.

She said she dialed 911 while kneeling next to Jean, and had to get up to go into the hallway when the dispatcher asked what apartment she was in.

She said using her left hand, she started to do chest compressions on Jean. The prosecution had suggested she did not provide first aid, noting that her uniform had no blood on it and the gloves in her pocket that night were clean and unused.

“The state he was in, I knew it wasn’t good,” Guyger testified.

Guyger sat with her head bowed, eyes down as the recording of her 911 call played over speakers in the courtroom. One juror and Botham Jean’s father, Bertrum, did the same.

Shook asked Guyger what was going through her head after the shooting, “That I shot an innocent man. He didn’t deserve — I didn’t — I thought I was in my apartment,” she said.

Guyger had sent texts to her police partner, Martin Rivera, while still on the phone with 911. She said she was scared and had no help to perform CPR on Jean.

“I was by myself with someone I had just shot,” she said. “I was alone with him, and that’s the scariest thing you could ever imagine, and I just wanted help.”

Shook asked how she feels about killing Jean.

“I feel like a terrible person. I feel like crap. I hate that I have to live with this every day of my life. I ask God for forgiveness and I hate myself every day,” she said, her voice shaking as she cried.

During Guyger’s testimony, Jean’s father, Bertrum, wiped his eyes from time to time with a white handkerchief.

Allison Jean sat for most of the testimony with her left hand cupping her chin, her pointer finger over her lips. She would periodically shake her head gently as Guyger spoke.

Botham Jean’s father, Bertrum, wipes away tears while Amber Guyger testified Friday, the fifth day of her murder trial.(Tom Fox / Staff Photographer)

Hermus, during cross-examination, suggested Guyger had other options besides shooting Jean, like calling for backup. He also noted that no South Side Flats neighbors who took the stand during the trial heard the loud commands she said she made.

“I can’t tell you why,” Guyger said.

“It’s because you didn’t say it,” Hermus retorted.

“That’s not true,” she said.

Read more: Prosecution contrasts Amber Guyger’s spotless uniform with ‘heroic’ efforts of fellow officers

Hermus later noted that there was “combat gauze” in her backpack, used to temporarily control traumatic bleeding. It was unused.

The prosecutor asked if Jean was “bleeding horribly” after the gunshot wound, and Guyger said she did not recall much blood.

She said it didn’t cross her mind to use the gauze or a first-aid kit also in her backpack that night.

Hermus asked whether Guyger did anything besides periodic chest compressions to help Jean after she shot him.

She said she performed a “sternum rub,” something she thought would help keep him alive that she testified she had seem paramedics do before.

How to listen and subscribe to our audio reports

Source Article from https://www.dallasnews.com/news/courts/2019/09/27/i-was-scared-he-was-going-to-kill-me-amber-guyger-testifies-about-night-she-killed-botham-jean/

Mr. Poroshenko’s eagerness to win over Mr. Trump and his growing fears that political rivals would thwart his re-election opened the way for Mr. Giuliani to press Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Yuri Lutsenko, who has since been fired, to help Mr. Trump’s own re-election by investigating Joe Biden and his son.

How Mr. Poroshenko expected the Trump administration to help lift his sagging fortunes ahead of Ukraine’s presidential election, held in two rounds in March and April this year, is unclear. He got trounced anyway, losing emphatically to Mr. Zelensky, whose own officials quickly became the Trump team’s new targets in its drive to damage Mr. Biden.

While Democrats want Mr. Trump impeached over his dealings with Ukraine, the president and his allies have counterattacked with their own Ukraine-focused scandals. They have revived a debunked theory that the country colluded with the Clinton campaign to hurt Mr. Trump’s chances in 2016 and asserted, with little evidence, that Mr. Biden used his position as vice president to prevent Ukraine from investigating his son.

Ukrainians, jaded after years of watching their own leaders trade the power and privileges of office for personal financial or political gain, have mostly shrugged off what, for Mr. Trump, is possibly the most serious scandal to buffet the White House since Watergate toppled President Richard Nixon in 1974.

That a country few Americans paid much attention to in the past now commands center stage in Washington has stirred mostly bemusement in Ukraine. Those feelings are also tinged with a touch of pride that, after centuries in the shadow of Russia, its giant neighbor to the east, the nation is no longer seen as a backwater but a pivot around which the fate of the world’s most powerful country implausibly turns.

Pavlo Klimkin, Ukraine’s foreign minister under Mr. Poroshenko, said in a caustic Twitter message this week that going down in history “as the country that led to the impeachment of the U.S. president” was “not a very fun prospect.” But, he added, “Now everyone understands what we are capable of.”

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/27/world/europe/ukraine-zelensky-cold-war-trump-giuliani.html

CLOSE

Following a House intelligence committee hearing regarding a whistleblower’s explosive complaint about national security and the Trump White House, the committee’s chairman said the complaint provides a “good roadmap” for further investigation. (Sept. 26)
AP Domestic

WASHINGTON – Amid what could be a mortal threat to his presidency, Donald Trump spent Friday attacking a key impeachment investigator and the whistleblower whose complaint triggered the latest impeachment drive.

“Sounding more and more like the so-called Whistleblower isn’t a Whistleblower at all,” Trump tweeted during what looked like a preview of his impeachment communications strategy seeking to undermine his accusers.

“In addition,” Trump said, “all second hand information that proved to be so inaccurate that there may not have even been somebody else, a leaker or spy, feeding it to him or her? A partisan operative?”

CLOSE

Whistleblowers have been at time essential and detrimental to a country’s democracy, but what makes them different than a leaker? We explain.
Just the FAQs, USA TODAY

Lawmakers – including Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Ca., the House Intelligence Committee chairman also under attack by Trump – said the whistleblower’s complaint is backed by evidence that Trump tried to pressure the president of Ukraine into investigating political rival Joe Biden.

“You engaged in a shakedown to get election dirt from a foreign country,” Schiff to Trump of Twitter. “And then you tried to cover it up. But you’re right about one thing – your words need no mockery. Your own words and deeds mock themselves. But most importantly here, they endanger our country.”

Schiff was responding to Trump’s tweeted complaint that Schiff misrepresented his conversation with Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky, one in which Trump talked about foreign aid in connection with a request to have Ukraine investigate Biden.

“Adam Schiff therefore lied to Congress and attempted to defraud the American Public,” Trump said. “He has been doing this for two years. I am calling for him to immediately resign from Congress based on this fraud!”

Schiff responded that Trump is the liar. He tweeted back at Trump that the House will continue to investigate claims that he tried to enlist a foreign government to help his 2020 campaign by smearing a Democrat rival.

The two politicians, who have fought previously over the Russia investigation, renewed their battle a day after the release of a whistleblower’s complaint that Trump improperly pressured Zelensky.

The whistleblower is still unnamed.

In statements and emails throughout the week, Trump and allies argued that the whistleblower’s complaint doesn’t go much beyond what wasn’t already known.

The report, however, alleged Ukraine officials were aware that Trump wanted to discuss the issue before the July 25 call at the center of the controversy and said aides tried to “lock down” notes from Trump’s call to Ukraine.

It also provides more details of Trump’s interactions with the Ukrainian leader. The whistleblower suggests that Trump and aides tried to cover up his push for a foreign country to investigate a rival before the 2020 election by storing the notes of the call in a separate computer system reserved for highly sensitive material.

The whistleblower said some administration officials expressed concern that Trump “used the power of his office” to benefit himself and his reelection campaign.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/09/27/donald-trump-and-adam-schiff-scrap-over-impeachment-twitter/3784784002/

September 26 at 12:47 PM

A former top Ukrainian prosecutor, whose allegations were at the heart of the dirt-digging effort by Rudolph W. Giuliani, said Thursday he believed that Hunter Biden did not run afoul of any laws in Ukraine.

“From the perspective of Ukrainian legislation, he did not violate anything,” former Ukrainian prosecutor general Yuri Lutsenko told The Washington Post in his first interview since the disclosure of a whistleblower complaint alleging pressure by President Trump on Ukraine’s president, Volodymr Zelensky.

Lutsenko’s comments about Hunter Biden — which echo what he told Bloomberg News in May — were significant, because Trump and his personal attorney Giuliani have sought to stir up suspicions about both Hunter and former vice president Joe Biden’s conduct in Ukraine in recent weeks. Joe Biden is leading Trump in many opinion polls ahead of the 2020 election.

Hunter Biden has denied any wrongdoing, and there is no evidence he was involved in any lawbreaking in his work in Ukraine with the country’s largest private gas company.

Lutsenko has been an elusive figure in recent weeks since stepping down from office in late August, but his conversations with Giuliani figure highly in both Giuliani’s own allegations about corruption in Ukraine and in the whistleblower complaint that was declassified Thursday.

“There’s a lot of talk about Biden’s son,” Trump told Zelensky in a July 25 phone call, a rough transcript of which was released Wednesday.

According to the complaint, Trump in the call “praised Ukraine’s Prosecutor General, Mr. Yuriy Lutsenko, and suggested that Mr. Zelenskyy might want to keep him in his position.”

The rough transcript of the call released Wednesday by the White House did not mention a prosecutor general by name, and it was unclear from the transcript which official Trump was referring to.

Trump went on to tell Zelensky to be in touch with Giuliani and Attorney General William P. Barr and suggested that U.S. investigators could assist the Ukrainians to look into any wrongdoing.

But Lutsenko said he was not aware of any U.S. law enforcement officials coming to Ukraine to assist in any such probes while he was in office.

“No American groups came to Ukraine for an investigation” during Lutsenko’s tenure from May 2016 until late August.

Giuliani has alleged that Hunter Biden was involved in corruption during his nearly five years on the board of Burisma, the Ukrainian gas company. 

Giuliani has not offered any evidence. Burisma’s owner came under scrutiny by Lutsenko’s predecessors for possible abuse of power and unlawful enrichment, but Hunter Biden was never accused of any wrongdoing in the investigation. 

As vice president, Joe Biden pressured Ukraine to fire Lutsenko’s predecessor, Viktor Shokin, who Biden and other Western officials said was not sufficiently pursuing corruption cases. At the time, the investigation into Burisma was dormant, according to former Ukrainian and U.S. officials.

“Hunter Biden cannot be responsible for violations of the management of Burisma that took place two years before his arrival,” Lutsenko said.

Lutsenko had earlier cast doubt on Hunter Biden’s actions in Ukraine, an effort that drew Giuliani’s notice last year. Lutsenko said that Giuliani tried to arrange a meeting with him two times before they finally managed to connect on the third try in January,

“I took a vacation. I took my youngest son, I showed him New York and I met with Mr. Giuliani,” Lutsenko said. “I had a long conversation with him. But this was only in the forum of exchanging information.”

Lutsenko met with Giuliani again in Warsaw in mid-February, then for a third and final time “in Europe,” he said, refusing to be more specific.

Lutsenko did not fully explain the change of heart in May when he gave an interview to Bloomberg in which he said he believed Hunter Biden had not broken any Ukrainian laws.

But Lutsenko said that if U.S. authorities were separately interested in Hunter Biden’s financial arrangements in Ukraine, Ukrainian law enforcement officials would be happy to comply.

Trump and Giuliani have also alleged that Ukrainian officials intervened in the 2016 election to favor Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton. Their complaints were fueled in part by Lutsenko’s own publicly alleged concerns, which he said he passed along in person to Giuliani over the course of three meetings.

“If we talk about Ukrainian collusion, I think that there were signs of this type of interference,” Lutsenko said, pointing to the appearance in August 2016 of a mysterious black ledger that appeared to detail secret Ukrainian government payments to Paul Manafort for his work as a consultant to former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych. The release of the ledger that month quickly forced Manafort to step down as Trump’s campaign chairman. 

Ukrainian officials have denied any effort to help Clinton in the 2016 election.

Lutsenko had declined repeated requests for an interview in recent days. But on Thursday, a Kiev-based reporter saw Lutsenko in the lobby of a popular hotel in central Kiev. He entered the Premier Cigar Lounge of the hotel and had lunch. After he finished eating, reporters approached him, and although he said he had no time to talk, he kept answering questions for more than half an hour.

Lutsenko said that he planned to leave later Thursday for Britain, where he was going to spend a month studying English.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/former-ukraine-prosecutor-says-hunter-biden-did-not-violate-anything/2019/09/26/48801f66-e068-11e9-be7f-4cc85017c36f_story.html

President Trump on Friday said he refused a request by Tehran to lift crippling sanctions in exchange for talks — sharply contradicting Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s statements.

“Iran wanted me to lift the sanctions imposed on them in order to meet. I said, of course, NO!” Trump said in a tweet.

The State Department also slammed Rouhani’s claim as “baseless,” adding that the US is committed to zero oil exports from Iran, according to Bloomberg News.

Rouhani, speaking on his return from the UN General Assembly, said he met in New York with American officials at the insistence of Germany, Britain and France.

“The German chancellor, the prime minister of England (Britain) and the president of France were in New York and all insisted that this meeting take place. And America says that it will lift the sanctions,” Rouhani said on his official website, according to Reuters.

“It was up for debate what sanctions will be lifted and they (the United States) had said clearly that we will lift all sanctions.”

He said Tehran was prepared for negotiations but not in an atmosphere of sanctions and pressure.

“This action wasn’t in a manner that was acceptable, meaning that in the atmosphere of sanctions and the existence of sanctions and the toxic atmosphere of maximum pressure, even if we want to negotiate with the Americans in the 5+1 framework, no one can predict what the end and result of this negotiation will be,” he said.

Crude slipped after Rouhani’s claim that Washington offered to remove all sanctions on Tehran in exchange for negotiations — but after Trump’s denial, oil rebounded from the lows, according to CNBC.

The US and Iran are at odds over several issues, including Washington’s withdrawal from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal and American accusations — denied by Tehran — that Iran attacked two Saudi oil facilities on Sept. 14, forcing the kingdom to cut production in half.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2019/09/27/trump-says-he-refused-to-lift-sanctions-for-meeting-with-iran/

Sony ‘Spider-Man’ deal with Marvel shows how important fandom is

In a joint statement, Sony and Walt Disney revealed that Marvel, led by Kevin Feige, would produce a third Spider-Man film due out in theaters on July 16, 2021. And we have…

read more

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/09/26/jim-cramer-wall-street-is-terrified-of-warren-buy-these-stocks.html

The whistleblower complaint says notes from President Trump’s call with the Ukrainian president, released this week, were loaded into an electronic system meant for classified information “of an especially sensitive nature.”

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images


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Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images

The whistleblower complaint says notes from President Trump’s call with the Ukrainian president, released this week, were loaded into an electronic system meant for classified information “of an especially sensitive nature.”

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images

The whistleblower complaint released Thursday charges that White House officials attempted to limit access to potentially damaging details about President Trump’s call with Ukraine’s president by using a classified system reserved for highly sensitive information.

If this allegation is true, former National Security Council officials say, it would represent a highly unusual misuse of procedures that were created to keep America’s most important intelligence secrets safe.

According to the complaint, senior White House officials intervened to “lock down” records of the July 25 call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. To do this, the whistleblower said, the rough transcript was loaded into an electronic system meant for classified information “of an especially sensitive nature.”

“I have never seen it done in my time in the White House, and I doubt that other presidents have engaged in this, although you never know what happened in the Nixon White House,” former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told NPR’s Here & Now on Thursday. Panetta also previously served as the director of the CIA and White House chief of staff, all in Democratic administrations.

A former Trump NSC official confirmed to NPR that the Trump White House does use such a system. That official, who spoke to NPR on the condition of anonymity, said about four to six people in the White House likely had access to the system. Access is so tightly controlled that not even the president’s national security adviser can input or retrieve information from it — though high-ranking officials could direct information there. Information stored in the system is shared in person and not over email or secure phone lines.

“The only reason to do that is to possibly obstruct justice,” Panetta said. “When these kinds of tapes are isolated this way, there was a recognition that they contained possible evidence of wrongdoing.”

“I had never heard of anything like that,” said Ned Price, who was a senior director for strategic communications at the NSC during the Obama administration. Price said then-President Obama’s phone calls with world leaders were classified, but they weren’t stored on the top-secret system.

Another former NSC official, Michael Green, also described the alleged storage of the rough transcript on this separate system as “deeply disturbing.”

Green served as director for Asia at the NSC between 2001 and 2005, when George W. Bush was president.

“Remember President George W. Bush was getting phone calls after 9/11, during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,” Green said. “And so even in that context, I had never heard or witnessed what we’re seeing now, where a transcript was routed directly to the most sensitive compartmented security clearances so that no one could see it.”

Price, who has been an outspoken critic of Trump, said the type of information typically stored on this system would be related to intelligence programs or activity that only a specific set of people in the U.S. government would know about, and he emphasized that it wouldn’t be the kind of information that would be shared with a foreign leader on the phone.

The fact that the administration was able to release the rough transcript of the call undercuts the notion that any highly secret information was shared, Price argued.

“This seems to be nothing more than an abuse of the classification and the information security system to safeguard not the information, but to effect a cover-up,” he said.

The whistleblower complaint also says that the whistleblower was told that this was not the first time that a presidential transcript had been treated this way.

“This suggests that procedures in the White House right now are just ad hoc and that national security law and national security procedures … are being used in an ad hoc, haphazard and highly political manner,” Green said.

The White House declined to answer questions specifically about the handling of this transcript.

But, White House Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham has defended Trump’s call and slammed the complaint as “nothing more than a collection of thirdhand accounts of events and cobbled-together press clippings — all of which shows nothing improper.”

Kellyanne Conway, counselor to President Trump, told reporters she was not familiar with NSC procedures regarding these transcripts, but argued that what’s most important is that the White House has now made the call public.

Rep. Kevin McCarthy, the top Republican in the House, told reporters that he could understand why the White House might want to use a more secure system.

“Could I see why you’d want to put it on a more secure server?” McCarthy asked. “I think in the world of technology today, yeah, people should secure what’s going forward.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/09/27/764759182/former-officials-say-white-houses-use-of-secret-system-is-unusual-disturbing

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and other House Democrats will hold a news conference at 9:30 a.m. ET.

The news conference to mark 200 days of Senate inaction on H.R. 1, The For The People Act.

A statement described the act as “a historic reform package to restore the promise of our nation’s democracy, clean up corruption in Washington, expose secret foreign money in our politics, crack down on lobbyists and Washington insiders, strengthen America’s election security, protect the right to vote and return power back to the American people with clean, citizen-owned elections.”

It’s not clear if Pelosi will take questions about the impeachment inquiry.

Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/politics/live-news/whistleblower-impeachment-inquiry-09-27-2019/index.html

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Source Article from https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2019/09/chris-murphy-on-why-this-trump-scandal-is-different.html

September 27 at 10:45 AM

President Trump called Friday for the resignation of the Democratic chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, while House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) accused Attorney General William P. Barr of having “gone rogue” and said she’s praying for God to “illuminate” Trump.

The fallout from a whistleblower’s complaint about Trump’s July call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky played out on Twitter and television Friday, as the number of Democrats supporting the impeachment inquiry launched by Pelosi continued to grow.

Meanwhile, more than 300 former U.S. national security and foreign policy officials had signed a statement supporting an impeachment inquiry based on Trump’s pressing Zelensky during their call to investigate former vice president Joe Biden, a 2020 presidential contender, and his son Hunter Biden.

● Effort to shield Trump’s call with Ukrainian leader was part of broader secrecy effort

● Democrats eye quick impeachment probe of Trump as freshmen push for focus on Ukraine

Who’s who in the whistleblower complaint

The whistleblower complaint | Official readout: Trump’s July 25 phone call with Zelensky

10 a.m.: Oregon congressman accuses Trump of ‘treason’

Rep. Peter A. DeFazio (D-Ore.), speaking on the House floor Friday morning, accused Trump of “treason.”

DeFazio referred to remarks Trump made at a private event where the president said the whistleblower’s actions were akin to being a spy or committing treason.

“Let’s see: Russia has invaded the Ukraine, Ukraine is dependent upon the United States for military assistance to defend itself, Trump is withholding the aid, at the same time asking them for dirt on his political opponent,” DeFazio said. “He’s jeopardizing the national security interests of the United States. If anybody is committing treason — and I believe that’s an impeachable offense — it’s the president of the United States, Donald Trump.”

The lawmaker presiding over the House reminded DeFazio not to engage in personal attacks against the president in the House chamber.

A little later, Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.) said DeFazio crossed the line and asked that the Democrat be reminded that “such violation won’t be tolerated in the future.”

9:45 a.m.: Trump speculates ‘a leaker or a spy’ fed information to whistleblower

Trump speculated on Twitter on Friday morning that the whistleblower might have received information from “a leaker or spy” or a “partisan operative.” He offered no evidence for his suggestions.

“Sounding more and more like the so-called Whistleblower isn’t a Whistleblower at all,” the president tweeted. “In addition, all second hand information that proved to be so inaccurate that there may not have even been somebody else, a leaker or spy, feeding it to him or her? A partisan operative?”

Earlier Friday, Trump personal attorney Jay Sekulow claimed that the whistleblower complaint wasn’t written by the whistleblower.

“Look at the phraseology, the endnotes and the footnotes,” Sekulow said during an appearance on Fox News’s “Fox & Friends. “This wasn’t drafted by this individual. This was written by a law firm.”

9:30 a.m.: Trump returns to Twitter, calls Schiff a ‘sick man’

Trump fired off a series of mid-morning tweets, once again claiming his conversation with Zelensky was “perfect” and taking aim again at House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam B. Schiff (D-Calif.).

“IT WAS A PERFECT CONVERSATION WITH UKRAINE PRESIDENT!” Trump said in one tweet written in all capital letters.

Shortly afterward, he renewed his call from earlier Friday for Schiff to resign for what Trump contended was embellishing Trump’s conversation with Zelensky during remarks during a hearing Thursday hearing with acting director of national intelligence Joseph Maguire.

“Rep. Adam Schiff totally made up my conversation with Ukraine President and read it to Congress and Millions,” Trump wrote. “He must resign and be investigated. He has been doing this for two years. He is a sick man!”

Following Thursday’s hearing, Schiff explained that his summary of Trump’s call “was meant to be at least part in parody.”

In his mid-morning tweets, Trump also declared that, “The Democrats are now to be known as the DO NOTHING PARTY!”

9 a.m. Schiff responds to Trump’s call for his resignation

Schiff took to Twitter on Friday morning to respond to Trump’s call for him to resign for offering an embellished account of Trump’s phone conversation with Zelensky during Thursday’s House Intelligence Committee hearing.

“You engaged in a shakedown to get election dirt from a foreign country. And then you tried to cover it up,” Schiff tweeted. “But you’re right about one thing — your words need no mockery. Your own words and deeds mock themselves. But most importantly here, they endanger our country.”

Schiff said Thursday that his recounting of the Trump-Zelensky call was intended partly as parody, which Schiff said should have been obvious.

9 a.m.: Talk continues about Flake’s claim on GOP impeachment votes

Buzz continued on social media Friday about a claim made the day before by former senator Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) that at least 35 Republican senators would privately vote for Trump’s impeachment.

Flake, a frequent critic of Trump, offered his assessment Thursday at the Texas Tribune Festival.

“I heard someone say if there were a private vote there would be 30 Republican votes. That’s not true,” Flake said during a question-and-answer session. “There would be at least 35.”

A Senate vote at any impeachment trial would be public.

8:30 a.m.: New Yorker cover shows Trump and Giuliani killing Uncle Sam

The New Yorker revealed its cover art for next week’s magazine, which depicts Trump and his personal attorney Rudolph W. Giuliani as mobsters throwing Uncle Sam off a bridge to his death.

8 a.m.: Pelosi says she prays for Trump, asks that ‘God will illuminate him’

During a morning television appearance, Pelosi said she is praying for Trump and accused Barr of have “gone rogue” in his handling of the fallout from Trump’s call with Zelensky.

In the midst of a discussion about her decision to launch impeachment proceedings against Trump, Pelosi said: “I pray that God will illuminate him to see right from wrong. It’s very problematic.”

At other points during her appearance on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” Pelosi also accused Trump of “being disloyal to the oath of his office” and having used taxpayer dollars to “shake down” Zelensky.

Pelosi was referring to the fact that Trump had suspended military aid to Ukraine at the time of the phone conversation with Zelensky, in which he pressed for an investigation of the Bidens.

Trump has said repeatedly that there was “no quid pro quo.”

During the interview, Pelosi was also highly critical of Barr’s handling of the episode.

Barr’s Justice Department played a central role in holding up the disclosure of the whistleblower complaint to Congress.

As acting director of national intelligence Joseph Maguire testified Thursday, he consulted the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, which overruled the inspector general’s determination that the complaint was of “urgent concern,” a legal threshold that would have required disclosure to Congress within seven days.

“He’s gone rogue,” Pelosi said of Barr, adding: “I think where they’re going is a coverup of the coverup.”

7:45 a.m.: Trump calls on Schiff to ‘resign immediately’

Trump on Friday called on Schiff to “immediately resign” following Thursday’s hearing in which the House Intelligence Committee chairman offered an embellished account of Trump’s conversation with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

“Rep. Adam Schiff fraudulently read to Congress, with millions of people watching, a version of my conversation with the President of Ukraine that doesn’t exist,” Trump said in a tweet. “He was supposedly reading the exact transcribed version of the call, but he completely changed the words to make it sound horrible, and me sound guilty.”

“HE WAS DESPERATE AND HE GOT CAUGHT. Adam Schiff therefore lied to Congress and attempted to defraud the American Public,” Trump continued. “He has been doing this for two years. I am calling for him to immediately resign from Congress based on this fraud!”

Schiff explained later in the hearing what he had done.

“My summary of the president’s call was meant to be at least part in parody,” he said. “The fact that that’s not clear is a separate problem in and of itself.”

During an appearance on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe,” Pelosi said she was “so proud of Adam Schiff” for his handling of the hearing but did not allude to the episode in question.

7:15 a.m.: Trump takes swipes at the media in morning tweets

Trump took multiple swipes at the media in morning tweets, including complaining about punctuation used in a CNN report that mentioned a derogatory term he used for House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam B. Schiff (D-Calif.).

“To show you how dishonest the LameStream Media is, I used the word Liddle’, not Liddle, in discribing Corrupt Congressman Liddle’ Adam Schiff,” Trump wrote on Twitter, misspelling describing. “Low ratings @CNN purposely took the hyphen out and said I spelled the word little wrong. A small but never ending situation with CNN!”

Trump in fact used an apostrophe, not a hyphen.

In another tweet, he took issue with a story by Peter Baker of the New York Times and declared that he “should not even be allowed to write about me.”

7 a.m.: White House spokesman decries those who gave information to whistleblower

White House spokesman Hogan Gidley denounced leaks coming from the White House, calling them “dangerous,” and questioned the motives of those who provided information to the whistleblower.

During an appearance on Fox News’s “Fox & Friends,” Gidley was asked about Trump’s remarks Thursday morning to the U.S. Mission to the United Nations in which he dismissed the complaint against him from the intelligence community whistleblower and suggested that the person’s actions made him or her “close to a spy.”

“He was talking about the people who actually gave the information to the whistleblower,” Gidley claimed.

The whistleblower said the complaint was based on information from more than a half dozen U.S. officials.

Gidley noted that transcripts of previous Trump calls with the leaders of Australia and Mexico had also been leaked to the press.

“These leaks are dangerous,” he said, adding that he was not sure why they have happened.

“Do they just want to bolster their own careers or get invited to the cocktail parties here in D.C.?” he asked.

During the same interview, Gidley insisted that no one in the White House is concerned about the revelations in the whistleblower report.

“No one I’ve talked to is concerned at all about this because there is nothing there,” he said. “No one in the White House is concerned about this because the president has done nothing wrong.”

6:45 a.m.: Democrats rip Trump’s ‘threatening’ comments against whistleblower

Someone laughed loudly during the closed-door speech President Trump gave at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations on Thursday. Other voices spoke in hushed murmurs.

Trump had just demanded to know who provided a whistleblower with information about his call with the Ukrainian president, describing that person as “close to a spy” and adding: “You know what we used to do in the old days when we were smart? Right? With spies and treason, right? We used to handle them a little differently than we do now.”

Trump’s comments, which were included in leaked video obtained by The Washington Post and others, have sparked intense backlash, with top Democrats decrying his words as “threatening” and defending the whistleblower at the center of a new push for impeachment.

“He sounds like a criminal,” Sen. Kamala D. Harris (D-Calif.), a presidential primary candidate, told MSNBC on Thursday night. “‘Who snitched? Who gave up the goods? Let’s find out who gave up the goods on us and make sure there’s a consequence and it’s serious, and let that be a lesson to everybody else.’”

Read more here.

— Allyson Chiu

6:30 a.m.: Nearly 300 former officials call Trump’s actions concerning Ukraine ‘profound national security concern’

Nearly 300 former U.S. national security and foreign policy officials have signed a statement warning that Trump’s actions regarding Ukraine are a “profound national security concern” and supporting an impeachment inquiry by Congress to determine “the facts.”

“To be clear, we do not wish to prejudge the totality of the facts or Congress’ deliberative process,” said the statement, released Friday. “At the same time, there is no escaping that what we already know is serious enough to merit impeachment proceedings.”

The collection of signatures was set in motion by National Security Action, an organization founded and largely populated by officials from the Obama administration to call attention to Trump’s “reckless leadership.”

Many of the signers are former Obama officials. But the list includes others who served as career officials in both Democratic and Republican administrations, including Matthew Olsen, head of the Justice Department’s national security division under President George W. Bush and director of the National Counterterrorism Center under President Barack Obama.

Read more here.

— Karen DeYoung

6 a.m.: ‘Enough is enough with this guy,’ says Sen. Bernie Sanders

Echoing other Democratic White House hopefuls, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) lambasted Trump during an appearance Thursday night on “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” during which he also called the president a “spoiled brat.”

“He’s probably the most corrupt president in the modern history of this country,” Sanders said, prompting applause from the studio audience. “I think this Ukrainian business — using national security money designed to protect the people of America and use that as leverage to try to get dirt on a political opponent, and then trying to cover that up — this is an outrage on top of an outrage. And I think this is kind of taking millions of people to say, ‘You know what? Enough is enough with this guy. ’ ”

Sanders went on to say that he doesn’t think Trump “knows the difference between lying and truth-telling.”

“I doubt very much that he understands what the Constitution of the United States of America is about,” Sanders said. “I don’t think he understands that we have an emoluments clause which says you cannot enrich yourself when you’re president. I don’t know that he understands that. He grew up as a very rich kid. I think he’s a spoiled brat, and I think he thinks he can do anything that he wants to do.”

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-whistleblower-impeachment/2019/09/27/55b99276-e0a8-11e9-8dc8-498eabc129a0_story.html

The acting director of national intelligence defended the whistleblower in the first major showdown of the impeachment inquiry.

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Io5UpPOROTs

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Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2019/09/27/us/botham-jean-amber-guyger-friday/

CLOSE

Democratic members of the Congressional Ukraine Caucus expressed outrage over the redacted transcript of President Donald Trump’s call to Ukraine’s president to dig up dirt on Democrat Joe Biden. They demanded the full whistleblower complaint. (Sept. 25)
AP, AP

WASHINGTON – Joseph Maguire, acting director of national intelligence, was at the center of a firestorm Thursday when he testified before Congress over a whistleblower complaint about President Donald Trump’s communication with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky regarding a political rival. 

The whistleblower, who has not been identified publicly, filed the complaint Aug. 12 to the inspector general for the intelligence community, Michael Atkinson, who found it credible and urgent. Maguire and the Justice Department blocked Atkinson from passing the complaint to Congress immediately as required by law.

Trump raised allegations that former Vice President Joe Biden tried to interfere with a Ukrainian prosecutor who was investigating the founder of a Ukrainian gas company where Biden’s son Hunter served on the board.

Maguire named: Donald Trump names Joseph Maguire acting spy chief after succession turmoil

Report not handed over: Why did Joseph Maguire resist handing over the whistleblower report? Intel chief to testify in Congress

The whistleblower complaint arrived on Capitol Hill on Wednesday and was made public Thursday. Congressional Democrats criticized Maguire for not passing along the full complaint to Congress earlier. 

Revelations that Trump pushed the Ukrainian government to investigate Biden kicked off an impeachment inquiry.

“I am committed to protecting whistleblowers and ensuring every complaint is handled appropriately,” Maguire said in a statement Tuesday. “I look forward to continuing to work with the administration and Congress to find a resolution regarding this important matter.”

What does the director of national intelligence do? 

The director of national intelligence is a Cabinet-level official who leads the U.S. intelligence community and briefs the president on its findings. The position was created in 2005 after a panel set up to examine intelligence failures post-9/11 recommended it. 

Who is Joseph Maguire? 

Maguire assumed the position this year after Director Dan Coats resigned. The Trump administration opposed Coats’ second-in-command, Sue Gordon, opting instead to elevate Maguire, who had served as the director of the National Counterterrorism Center. 

Maguire, a retired naval officer, was a vice president at Booz Allen Hamilton and president and CEO of the Special Operations Warrior Foundation.

Maguire attended Manhattan College for his bachelor’s degree and earned a master’s degree in national security affairs from the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California.

Controversy leading up to Maguire’s appointment

Trump announced Maguire’s appointment by tweet after Gordon’s resignation. Conservatives saw Gordon as part of an intelligence establishment that often clashed with Trump. 

Donald Trump Jr., one of her critics, tweeted about concerns that Gordon had worked with John Brennan, President Barack Obama’s intelligence chief, who has been harshly critical of President Trump.

Trump had initially floated the name of Rep. John Ratcliffe to lead the office, but the Texas Republican withdrew his name amid questions about his résumé. 

Contributing: Bart Jansen, David Jackson, John Fritze and Michael Collins  

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/09/26/trump-impeachment-inquiry-what-dni-and-who-joseph-maguire/3772803002/

President Trump arrives for a news conference at the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday.

Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images


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Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

President Trump arrives for a news conference at the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday.

Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

A tumultuous week in Washington has set the stage for an intense new congressional investigation into President Trump — and what could prove to be a historic clash between the White House and Congress.

The outlines are now clear about conduct that no one, including Trump, disputes: The president asked his Ukrainian counterpart to investigate the family of Vice President Joe Biden, a potential political rival in the 2020 presidential election.

If Trump was sanguine about confirming that story — which the White House did with the extraordinary release on Wednesday of its own records about the conversation — House Democrats want the answers to more questions before they decide how much further to travel down a road they’ve said could lead to impeachment.

Some of these questions were raised by the release on Thursday of the previously secret complaint by an intelligence community whistleblower that sparked the Ukraine affair.

In that document, the complainant suggests that intermediaries told Ukrainian officials beforehand that a phone call or a meeting between President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Trump would depend on “whether Zelenskyy showed willingness to ‘play ball’ ” with Trump.

“I do not know who delivered this message to the Ukrainian leadership, or when,” the whistleblower added.

House Democrats want to learn the identities of those people and where their communications fit into the story.

Although Trump and his supporters argue that the White House’s account of Trump’s call with Ukraine’s president doesn’t record a “quid pro quo,” the full picture has not been made clear.

Did an aide or a diplomat tell Kyiv beforehand that U.S. military assistance to Ukraine was being suspended — as it was in the summer — as the prelude for a phone call in which Trump could expect Zelenskiy to ask for it to resume?

Zelenskiy did just that, according to the White House’s account.

When he told Trump that Ukraine was “ready to continue to cooperate” to buy more weapons from the U.S., that prompted Trump to ask him for a “favor” that he hoped might lead to information about the Biden family.

House intelligence committee Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., told reporters on Thursday after a hearing about the whistleblower complaint that he wants to learn whom the intelligence community’s inspector general has talked with about the Ukraine affair and then begin seeking witnesses of his own to fill out the story.

Inside the family

The complaint also describes a practice within the White House of compartmentalizing accounts of potentially politically sensitive Trump calls in a separate close-hold system that limits access even within the administration.

The system includes records of other presidential transcripts too, the complaint says.

People who’ve served in the White House in past administrations have said that’s not a conventional practice.

When did it begin and why? Does the secret system described in the complaint actually contain records about other presidential phone calls with foreign leaders that resemble Trump’s talk with Zelenskiy? What did Trump say?

Trump has vowed to be transparent about the Ukraine affair. He volunteered on Wednesday to release records about two other phone calls with Ukrainian leaders involving himself and Vice President Pence.

Trump also has suggested that he might not object to his attorney, Rudy Giuliani, speaking with congressional committees about the central role he has played in the outreach to Ukraine.

But if past is prologue, the White House may not be eager to cooperate much more with what Trump and his supporters call Democrats’ new “witch hunt.”

The administration has not given Congress documents or access to witnesses in response to many of its earlier requests involving the Russia investigation, Trump’s business dealings and more.

The president’s supporters have dismissed the Ukraine flap as another “information warfare operation” against the president.

Meanwhile, some of the disputes between the House and the administration are still playing out in court after committees filed suit for the relevant materials.

What isn’t clear is whether the theoretically greater stakes of the Ukraine matter — which House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Democrats have made the focus of what they say is an impeachment inquiry — may prompt Trump to change his tune.

The White House already has invoked executive privilege — the doctrine that permits an administration to shield some of its internal workings from public view — in keeping some witnesses and materials from Congress.

The investigation that Schiff and his colleagues now want to pursue involves the internal workings of the White House, discussions of the National Security Council and other aides, diplomats and others all squarely within the executive branch.

If Giuliani, who has been working for Trump but not the government, isn’t covered by executive privilege, many of the other people involved may be.

Executive privilege already has been the subject of internal debates involving the whistleblower case, acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire told Schiff’s committee on Thursday.

Are Pelosi and Schiff about to drive into a wall they’ll be unable to breach? Or will the putative threat of impeachment prompt Trump to open the gates?

The red wall

Trump may remain confident that in the event of actual impeachment proceedings — which would involve the equivalent of an indictment in the House and then lead to his trial in the Senate — he’d continue to enjoy the support of enough Republicans to retain the presidency.

That has been the assumption by Republicans thus far, and as Washingtonians headed to work on Friday morning, the red wall in the Senate still appeared robust.

At times, the president and his supporters have appeared to want to dare Democrats to go ahead with impeachment with the knowledge that they would lose, betting that the fallout actually would wind up weakening Pelosi and her members and strengthening Trump and Republicans.

Before this week, Pelosi seemed to read these politics in the same way and sought to rein in the most aggressive Democrats in the chamber. Then the accounts of Trump’s conduct broke the dam for so many of her members that the speaker joined them on Tuesday under the aegis of the I-word.

But Pelosi also hasn’t spelled out what, precisely, she, Schiff and her other top lieutenants actually may do differently, nor has she made clear how far Democrats are prepared to go.

That has put the speaker in an uncertain new standoff with the president, and the next phase in this melodrama may depend on who’s the first one to blink.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/09/27/764794409/the-trump-ukraine-affair-what-you-need-to-know-and-whats-coming-next