Mueller Should Release the Cohen Interviews
Michael Cohen |
In many ways, the investigation has moved from being a Washington witch hunt vaguely concerning Russia to being a political inquisition of President Trump and his allies. All pretense of truth and justice has been dropped.
Consider what Mueller and his team have done to Paul Manafort. After the early-morning FBI raid of his home in July 2017 that left Manafort and his wife watching armed agents ransack their home as they were in their pajamas, the charges that were ultimately brought against Manafort in October of that year had nothing to do with Russia or the 2016 election. They were all financial crimes related to his own business endeavors, but that didn’t matter to Mueller (or the media). Mueller still interrogated him more than a dozen times.
Manafort eventually signed a plea deal with Mueller – after being kept in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day. Now, Mueller’s team is attempting to renege Manafort’s plea agreement, saying he didn’t fully cooperate in their so-called Russia investigation – although they won’t say how he was supposedly uncooperative.
Then, look at Mueller’s tactics against retired General Michael Flynn, President Trump’s former national security adviser. After hours of interviews that apparently produced no smoking gun evidence that there was any collusion between President Trump’s campaign and Russia, Mueller charged Flynn with making false statements during the interviews – and he threatened to go after Flynn’s son to elicit a plea agreement. What parent wouldn’t accept a baloney plea deal to save his child from an unfettered, politically-motivated federal investigation?
Now, President Trump’s former attorney, Michael Cohen, has been sentenced to three years in prison for supposed campaign finance violations related to payments he made to women who claimed to have had affairs with President Trump well before 2016. However, The Daily Signal pointed out that legal precedent and statutory language indicate the transactions were not illegal under the Federal Election Campaign Act. Moreover, Cohen is serving two of those 36 months for misleading congressional committees about a one-time nascent Trump organization business proposal that never got off the ground. So, Cohen is showing one of his many faces and is now is doing and saying whatever Mueller wants in the hopes he can reduce his sentence.
Again, after months of interrogations, raids, threats, and more than 30 people and three companies indicted, there’s no evidence of any collusion with Russia to win the election. Yet, as I wrote in my New York Times bestselling books Understanding Trump and Trump’s America, Mueller and his team are determined to get whoever they can for whatever they can.
And these examples are only part of a larger pattern carried out by the Department of Justice. Consider the case against Maria Butina, the 30-year-old Russian national who is accused of conspiracy and breaking Section 951 – or “espionage-lite” –for attempting to build relationships with Republicans to improve U.S.-Russia relations. The charges carry an estimated sentence of up to six months in jail, as reported by The Daily Beast citing the plea agreement.
Since being locked up in July of this year, she has been kept mostly in solitary confinement and has not been given any clear explanation as to why. She broke this week and signed a plea agreement. While she was not prosecuted by Mueller’s team, as a part of her agreement she’s pledged to assist law enforcement, “in any and all to matters as to which the Government deems this cooperation relevant.” Butina has clearly been targeted in Mueller’s inquisition.
Mueller should be forced to release all 70 hours of his interviews with Cohen, so the American people can see how this inquisition is operating. Americans should be able to know whether and how often Mueller and his team threatened or blackmailed Cohen. We should be able to know how many different versions of the story Cohen told them – and how Mueller determined which stories were more useful than others.
They simply interrogated and intimidated Cohen until he broke and said what they wanted him to say – and that happened to take upwards of 70 hours. Make no mistake, this is not an investigation, it’s an inquisition.
These types of tactics are exactly what former Department of Justice attorney Sidney Powell wrote about in her bestselling book, Licensed to Lie: Exposing Corruption in the Department of Justice. Every American should read it to fully understand just how sick the system has become.
If we had any sense of equal justice, Comey, the Clintons, and their efforts to influence the 2016 election would be facing investigations of their own.
Mueller and his team feel empowered and emboldened to act on behalf of the establishment in Washington – and they are working to purge President Trump by any means necessary.
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Newt Gingrich is a former Georgia Congressman and Speaker of the U.S. House. He co-authored and was the chief architect of the "Contract with America" and a major leader in the Republican victory in the 1994 congressional elections. He is noted speaker and writer. The above commentary was shared via Gingrich Productions.
Tags: Newt Gingrich, commentary, Mueller, release, Cohen, interviews To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and "Like" Facebook Page - Thanks!
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