FBI NOW RELEASING DOCUMENTS ABOUT BILL CLINTON AND MARC RICH

BY  <http://www.newsweek.com/authors/matthew-cooper> MATTHEW COOPER AND
<http://www.newsweek.com/authors/nina-burleigh> NINA BURLEIGH ON 11/1/16 AT
3:48 PM

 

 

 <http://www.newsweek.com/us> U.S.
<http://www.newsweek.com/topic/james-comey> JAMES COMEY
<http://www.newsweek.com/topic/bill-clinton> BILL CLINTON
<http://www.newsweek.com/topic/marc-rich> MARC RICH
<http://www.newsweek.com/topic/hillary-clinton> HILLARY CLINTON

With the election just a week away, the FBI has released a tranche of
15-year-old documents dealing with Bill Clinton’s pardon of a fugitive
financier—a move that the bureau made without explanation and that only adds
to the confusion surrounding its controversial role in the presidential
contest.

While they offer some tantalizing tidbits, the documents are heavily
redacted and they don’t seem to offer any substantial new information about
the criminal inquiry launched by the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District
of New York after Clinton pardoned Marc Rich in 2001. Long sought for
extradition, the wealthy Rich was living overseas to escape charges related
to tax evasion and exporting goods to Iran (which remains under a less
restrictive U.S. embargo). His wife, Denise Rich, a singer-songwriter, was a
major donor to the Clintons.

The timing of the document dump—just seven days before the election—is
giving fodder to critics of FBI Director James Comey. While the Clinton
campaign has not released a formal statement about these documents from the
winter of 2001, Brian Fallon, a Clinton spokesman tweeted: "Absent a FOIA
litigation deadline, this is odd. Will FBI be posting docs on Trump's
housing discrimination in '70s?”

Comey is “acting like he’s trying to throw the election,” says Steve Ryan, a
prosecutor in Ronald Reagan's Justice Department who worked on organized
crime, referring to the FBI director’s “trifecta”—comments about the Hillary
Clinton email probe over the summer; his shocking letter last week
announcing new evidence related to that case; and now this out-of-the-blue
FBI document dump.

“It looks worse and worse each day. He’s out of his swim lane.… There’s no
precedent for this. I think it’s the most troubling thing I’ve seen out of
law enforcement,” he adds. Ryan notes that he is a Hillary Clinton donor,
but a number of Republicans have criticized Comey as well, including Larry
Thompson, the deputy attorney general under President George W. Bush.

As for the documents, they contain almost no previously unreleased
information, with the exception of several pages that refer to seized
property—apparently as evidence—including, intriguingly, "one cellophane
containing" and "one red rope containing."

The documents are so heavily redacted it is impossible to tell what the
cellophane or red rope "contained" or what, if anything, they have to do
with Rich's pardon.

Jill Farrell, a spokeswoman for the right-wing watchdog group Judicial
Watch, which has been leading efforts to expose Hillary Clinton's email
habits and the FBI's investigation by filing Freedom of Information Act
requests and civil lawsuits against the government, said the latest document
drop was not in response to any of its requests. "Tangentially, but not
directly for these ones. We’ve certainly been after this information and are
glad they finally coughed it up," she says.

Judicial Watch is funded by the Sarah Scaife Foundation. Scaife's late son,
Richard Mellon Scaife, financed many of the outside investigations into Bill
Clinton's financial and alleged extramarital affairs during the 1990s. The
two men made peace before Scaife died, though, and Clinton spoke at Scaife’s
funeral.

The Clinton campaign has been warring with Comey since he sent a letter to
Congress last week informing key committee members that the agency had found
new documents pertaining to the Hillary Clinton email investigation. Later,
news reports revealed that the documents were on the computer of Anthony
Weiner, the former congressman who is being investigated for allegedly lewd
contacts with an underage girl. His wife, Huma Abedin, is a longtime aide to
the Democratic presidential nominee. Abedin’s lawyer, Karen Dunn, issued a
statement on Monday saying that Abedin was fully cooperating with federal
authorities. The FBI has said it has begun to examine Weiner’s computer, but
no one is expecting it to finish inspecting the device, let alone assessing
whether anything on the machine is there in violation of the law, before
Election Day, November 8.

These 15-year-old documents from the Marc Rich pardon case don’t seem to
bear any relation to the current investigation. They were released on the
website where the bureau makes documents available to those who have filed
FOIA requests. When a Newsweek reporter asked the FBI about the origins of
this document, who requested it, and why it's coming out now, the bureau
sent back a pro forma statement saying that it was "following  the law and
standard procedure" of putting requested documents on its site once they had
been processed.

Adding to the weirdness of the document release was the way it was announced
on Twitter. The account,  <http://twitter.com/fbirecordsvault>
@FBIRecordsVault, had been dormant for over a year. Then at 4:00 AM on
Sunday, 20 new postings were announced in a single tweetstorm including one
about records for Fred C. Trump, the Republican nominee's late father. On
Monday,
<http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/fbi-twitter-link-william-clinton-foun
dation-marc-rich> the site heralded the arrival of the Marc Rich documents,
putting them under the heading of "William J. Clinton Foundation" although
the connection between the foundation and the Rich pardon is unclear from an
examination of the heavily redacted files. 

The probe was being conducted by the "Public Corruption Unit," according to
the documents, which say that "donations may have been intended to influence
the fugitive's pardon."

The documents are reminders of the long and often intertwining careers of
many of the America's top law enforcement officials. It was Comey who
replaced Clinton’s U.S. attorney for the Southern District, Mary Jo White,
and the embryonic investigation ended on his watch. (Comey was an Assistant
U.S. Attorney, or AUSA, in that office during Clinton's last term in
office.) The case against Rich, who was found guilty of selling goods to
Iran, as well as violating embargos with Libya and North Korea, was brought
in 1983 by then-U.S. Attorney for the Southern District, Rudolph Giuliani,
who went on to become mayor of New York City and is now a prominent
supporter of Donald Trump’s presidential bid. The point man at the Justice
Department for the pardons was Eric Holder, who dealt with the White House
which sidestepped the DOJ's usual elaborate procedures for reviewing pardons
during its last days in office in January 2001. Holder was the deputy
attorney general at the time and would be appointed attorney general by
President Barack Obama in 2009. Marc Rich died in 2013.

The Rich pardon was extremely controversial at the time. He was a top target
of U.S. law enforcement and Clinton's decision to grant him a pardon was
widely condemned by American law enforcement officials although not everyone
joined in the condemnation. At the time many speculated that the pardon was
wrapped up in Middle East politics. In January 2001, Clinton's last ditch
effort to produce an Israeli-Palestinian settlement had faltered, but
Israeli and Palestinian negotiators were going to give it one more try in
meetings in Taba, Egypt just after Clinton left office. The White House was
trying to bolster the political fortunes of Ehud Barak, the Israeli Prime
Minister who was facing an election. Israel had long lobbied for the pardon
of Jonathan Pollard who was convicted for spying for Jewish state but
Clinton was unwilling to free Pollard over the objections of the CIA and
other government agencies. But by pardoning Rich, who was popular for his
philanthropic work in Israel, the president, it was widely assumed, was able
to at least offer some help to Barak. In March 2001, Barak lost to Ariel
Sharon.

 

 

EM

On the 49th Parallel          

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko" 

 

 

 

 

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