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Sinking Stone, Trump’s ‘Austin Powers Villains’, NYT vs. Christian Schools

January 25, 2019 by GregC

Listen to “Sinking Stone, Trump’s ‘Austin Powers Villains’, NYT vs. Christian Schools” on Spreaker.

David French of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America dissect the Mueller indictments of Trump ally Roger Stone and how the latest revelations should concern the president.  They also comb through the indictment and marvel at Stone’s intimidation tactics, which David likens to a rejected script for a mobster film.  And they slam the New York Times for trying to pile on Christian education by begging young people to #exposeChristianschools.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: Christian schools, indictment, Mueller, National Review, NYT, Roger Stone, russia, Three Martini Lunch, Trump, Wikileaks

Breaking Down the Buzzfeed Story

January 18, 2019 by GregC

Listen to “Breaking Down the Buzzfeed Story” on Spreaker.

Buzzfeed sparked a furor Thursday night with a report alleging Special Counsel Robert Mueller has detailed evidence showing President Trump directed former attorney Michael Cohen to lie to Congress, but Buzzfeed’s own reputation has some experts holding their powder dry before reaching any conclusions.

Cohen has already pleaded guilty to perjury charges related to his congressional testimony, and prosecuting documents claim he did so at the behest of a person most believe to be Trump.

According to the Buzzfeed report, Trump specifically told Cohen to tell lawmakers that the Trump Organization scrapped plans for a Trump Tower in Moscow in January 2016. In reality, the plans were shelved in June or July of that year.

Buzzfeed reporter Anthony Cormier says he has not seen any documentation of Trump suborning perjury but he remains very confident in the accuracy and veracity of his sources.  That revelation raises suspicions for some since Buzzfeed suffered heavy criticism for publishing the Steele dossier in January 2017 without verifying the contents.

How damaging is this to President Trump if it is true?  What sort of corroboration would remove any doubt?  And how important is that corroboration given Cohen’s admission as a serial liar.

Listen to the full podcast as I discuss all these questions and more with former federal prosecutor Andrew C. McCarthy, now a contributing editor at National Review Online.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: Buzzfeed, Cohen, Moscow, Mueller, Perjury, Trump

Great Start for DeSantis, Gabbard Joins 2020 Race, Mild Mueller Report?

January 14, 2019 by GregC

Listen to “Great Start for DeSantis, Gabbard Joins 2020 Race, Mild Mueller Report?” on Spreaker.

Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America applaud new Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for suspending Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel and naming two stellar judges to the Florida Supreme Court.  They also discuss Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard joining the 2020 presidential race and how her defense of Syria’s Bashar al-Assad could impact the campaign.  And as many breathlessly await the Mueller report on Russian meddling in the 2016 campaign, ABC’s Jonathan Karl reports that the report will likely be anti-climactic.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: 2020, DeSantis, Florida, Gabbard, Israel, Mueller, National Review, Three Martini Lunch, Trump

Martini Awards Part 3: Worst Scandal, Best Political Theater, Worst Political Theater

December 26, 2018 by GregC

Listen to “Martini Awards Part 3: Worst Scandal, Best Political Theater, Worst Political Theater” on Spreaker.

Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America are back from celebrating Christmas with three more prestigious Three Martini Lunch Awards. Today they discuss the most significant scandals of 2018 and then sift through a ton of possibilities for the best and worst political theater of 2018. And maybe, just maybe, there will be a moment from the Kavanaugh hearings that fits one or more of these categories.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: Graham, Greitens, Kavanaugh, Kelly, Mueller, National Review, Three Martini Lunch, Whitehouse

McCarthy: Mueller Building Collusion Case Without A Crime

November 29, 2018 by GregC

Listen to “McCarthy: Mueller Building Collusion Case Without A Crime” on Spreaker.

It’s been a rough week for former allies of President Trump, with Special Counsel Robert Mueller scrapping the plea agreement with former campaign chairman over allegations of  lying and former Trump attorney Michael Cohen pleading guilty once again to lying under oath – this time to congressional investigators about Trump’s business dealings in Russia.

And while Trump critics lick their chops in hopes of bringing him down and the president’s defenders point out there is still no one in Trump’s orbit accused of malfeasance in the 2016 campaign, former federal prosecutor Andrew C. McCarthy says Mueller is not letting the lack of a crime slow him down.

“What Mueller is trying to do here is build a collusion case without a crime,” said McCarthy, who is also a contributing editor at National Review Online and a Fox News contributor.  He led the successful prosecution of those responsible for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and other terrorist plots against New York City landmarks.

But McCarthy says Mueller sure makes it seem like there was underlying criminal behavior.

“Despite the fact he doesn’t have a crime that would turn that into a criminal conspiracy, he’s camouflaging that with a bunch of false statements pleas that he has taken from people in Trump’s orbit and also the fact that he has these two indictments against Russians,” said McCarthy.

“So the Press reports that Mueller is investigating collusion between Russia and Trump and many people have pleaded guilty in the investigation.  And they leave out the inconvenient fact that the guilty pleas of the Trump associates have nothing to do with Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and the indictments of the Russians have nothing to do with the Trump campaign,” said McCarthy.

But McCarthy also points out that despite not having an underlying crime, Mueller has unearthed deception from former Trump associates, including Michael Cohen’s admission that he lied about talks between Trump’s people and the Russians about a Trump Tower in Moscow cut off in January 2016 as he entered the primary season when those talks went until June, by which time Trump had already clinched the nomination.

McCarthy says Mueller can now use statements like that to discredit public statements Trump has made to the contrary.  He also finds it interesting that Trump cut off talks with Russians about the real estate project just days after the Russians promised but failed to hand over damaging information about Hillary Clinton.

Listen to the full podcast as McCarthy explains how rare it is to withdraw a plea agreement but also how Manafort is in a very unusual position.  He also details the “perversity” of the special counsel position that allows those prosecutors to keep hunting for targets even when there is no underlying crime.

“Mueller has been allowed to essentially cast his line wherever he chooses to and fish around for a crime until he finds one,” said McCarthy.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: Cohen, Manafort, Mueller, SpecialCounsel, Trump

Russia Probe Needed, But Not A Special Counsel

July 13, 2018 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/7-13-mccarthy-blog.mp3

Special Counsel Robert Mueller indicted 12 Russians, accusing them of hacking key individuals and institutions and even, stealing the information of some 500,000 voters.

However, a former federal prosecutor says while it’s vital to know how Russia tried to interfere in the 2016 campaign, there’s still no connection to the Trump campaign and still no basis for why a special counsel is on this case.

Andrew C. McCarthy served as a prosecutor in the Southern District of New York and led the successful prosecution of Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and others for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing and plots against other New York-area landmarks.

He says the biggest question in his mind following the announcement of the indictments was whether Trump knew this announcement was coming.

Knowing now that Trump was aware, McCarthy finds it very interesting that Trump gave the green light for the news to go public just before his Monday meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Finland.

“It seems to me, since he was given a heads-up that this was happening, he had an opportunity to direct that the indictment not be unsealed.  He didn’t do that, which suggests to me that he and his advisers actually think that having this will strengthen their hand when they meet with Putin,” said McCarthy.

On Friday, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein announced the indictments against a dozen figures connected to the Russian intelligence and military communities.

The Trump administration quickly released a statement pointing out that no Americans, much less any Trump campaign figures, had any connection to Russia’s alleged meddling.

“Today’s charges include no allegations of knowing involvement by anyone on the campaign and no allegations that the alleged hacking affected the election result,” said White House spokesperson Lindsay Walters in a statement.

“This is consistent with what we have been saying all along,” she added.

McCarthy says Trump’s argument that no campaign official has been charged when anything related to a Russian conspiracy clearly holds true.

“It’s perfectly natural and appropriate for them to say yet again that there are no indications in this indictment of any conspiratorial relationship between the Russians and the Trump campaign,” said McCarthy.

Just as when Mueller issued indictments against 13 Russian entities in February, known as the troll farm indictments, McCarthy says no evidence has turned up yet to justify the existence of a special counsel on this matter.

“When I see this indictment, I thought what I thought when I saw the troll farm indictment, which is why do we need a special counsel for this?  It doesn’t seem to me that there’s any reason that we needed a special counsel.

“The Justice Department, which was investigating Russian interference in the election – with the FBI – before Mueller was appointed, certainly could have handled these cases,” said McCarthy.

But McCarthy is also clear that he believes an investigation into Russian activity during the 2016 cycle is highly warranted.

“I don’t think anyone sensible has ever questioned the legitimacy of the investigation as it pertains to Russian interference in the 2016 election.  That ought to be something that everybody agrees needs to be done and needs to be run down,” said McCarthy.

He’s also chiding the president for regularly tweeting condemnations of the Mueller team.  While McCarthy believes Trump sees the investigation is a ‘witch hunt’ specifically as it relates to his campaign and not to possible Russian involvement, he says the persistent denunciation of Mueller is a bad move.

“I think we all know when he says that what he’s talking about is the allegation that his campaign colluded with the Russians, of which there remains no evidence, much less charges.

“But I don’t think it’s helpful that if he knows you’re about to release a set of charges that confirm what all of us have suspected for some time, which is that the Russians did conduct this operation against our election, I don’t know that that’s the best time to be taking shots at the prosecutor,” said McCarthy.

But do these indictments advance the plot much into the Russian meddling?  McCarthy doesn’t think so.

“Other than putting some names and some interesting specifics like the Bitcoin aspect of it and the fact that they made that into a money laundering conspiracy, I don’t think that we’ve learned a lot that we didn’t know already on the basis of what we’ve been told by the intelligence community regarding its investigation,” said McCarthy.

But while we may not have learned much today, McCarthy says Mueller clearly has learned some new tactics.  After the troll farm indictments, the special counsel got a bit of a surprise that he made sure didn’t happen again this time.

“The problem that Mueller ran into in the troll farm case is that he indicted three of these companies that really turned out to be Kremlin fronts.  Much, I think, to his surprise and chagrin, one of them retained counsel in Virginia and showed up and demanded to get the discovery and get ready to go to trial,” said McCarthy.

McCarthy says it’s highly unlikely that any of the 12 Russians indicted on Friday will ever face prosecution.

So why go through the indictments?

“I think the point is to try to file a conclusive U.S. government investigative document that puts to rest any claim that Russia is not responsible for any of this,” said McCarthy.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: 2016 elections, hacking, Mueller, news, russia, Trump

‘I Think That Was Outstanding’

April 18, 2018 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/4-16-MCINERNEY-BLOG.mp3

Retired U.S. Air Force Gen. Tom McInerney is applauding the Trump administration for building a coalition to strike Syria and carrying out a successful attack, but he says solving the long-term challenges there requires collaboration with Russia and that cannot happen so long as Special Counsel Robert Mueller continues his probe.

On Friday night (early Saturday in Syria), the U.S., along with Great Britain and France, fired dozens of missiles at three specific targets in Syria in response for the chemical weapons attack that took place several days earlier.

As McInerney suspected last week, President Trump took longer to order a response in order to build international support and participation.  He’s thrilled our allies took part and says the cooperation extended beyond London and Paris.

“I think that was outstanding.  Having those two partners is extremely important.  In addition, we had other partners.  We fired (some) missiles from the Red Sea that went over Saudi Arabia and other locations.  So we had other, de facto partners as well, which is equally important,” said McInerney.

He’s also thrilled with the results of the mission.

“We got three important targets, one of them in Damascus, which was their research and development center for chemical weapons and a very important target.  We took that out as well as two other targets, one a production and the other a storage facility,” said McInerney.

The U.S. fired 105 missiles, primarily cruise missiles, and none were shot down, contrary to assertions from the Syrian government.

Last week, McInerney recommended wiping out the Syrian air force if the U.S. was convinced the Assad regime was responsible for the chemical attack.  He says coalition building made that impossible.

“When we went for the allies to be participating with us, that put time in the equation.  That meant the Syrian air force moved a lot of their assets in with the Russians…because they knew we wouldn’t strike anything with the Russians in it,” said McInerney.

Trump telegraphed the attack in various tweets and public statements last week, but McInerney says it’s clear the administration was communicating with Moscow long before the missiles started flying.

“They were well aware of it.  They elected to let us go in and do it.  I think that was the right move.

“There’s a lot of talk going on about what they’re going to do to retaliate, etc.  But I think the Russians got caught with their hands in the cookie jar, so they didn’t want to see what President Trump was going to do and the other allies.  Getting the UK and the French involved was a very important decision,” said McInerney.

Despite the strong Russian denunciation of any response, McInerney believes Russia is smart enough not to overreact.

“You can never tell but I really believe that President Putin does not want to have a direct confrontation down there.  He doesn’t have nearly the size of the forces we have, and he certainly doesn’t want to open the door for others to go in.” he said.

McInerney says solving the problems involving Syria, the Kurds, the Free Syrian Army, ISIS, and other radical groups like the Al-Nusra Front is deeply complicated, but he says working constructively with Russia is a big part of the solution.

“We need to get an accommodation.  The only way there’s going to be an accommodation over there in Syria – and it’s going to be divided up – is with the U.S. and Russia agreeing to work together,” said McInerney.

“That’s why the Mueller investigation that’s going on right now is impacting our national security.  I believe the Republican Congress ought to close that operation down.  The only collusion was between the Democratic Party and the Hillary Clinton campaign with Russia.  Yet, the Obama administration concocted the idea that the Trump [campaign] were the ones colluding,” said McInerney.

If the U.S. and Russia were to carve up Syria, what ought to be the greatest priorities?  McInerney says President Obama’s inaction opened the door for Russian intervention and has made it next to impossible to remove Bashar al-Assad.  He believes we have no choice but to allow Russia to keep its bases there.

He says the top goal should be limiting Iranian influence in the region.

“We need stability in the region.  We do not want to have a Shia Crescent that sweeps from Iran, through Iraq, through Syria, and to the Mediterranean.  That is not in the interest of the free world,” said McInerney.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: McInerney, military strike, Mueller, news, President Trump, russia, Syria

Closer to a Tax Cut, Disney to Gobble Up Fox, Strzok’s ‘Insurance Policy’

December 14, 2017 by GregC


Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America are cautiously optimistic that Republicans may soon pass a tax cut and while the proposal is not perfect, it moves in the right direction on a number of fronts.  They also react to Disney becoming an even more mammoth presence in entertainment with the news it is paying over $52 billion to buy most assets of Fox.  And they discuss the latest hit to the credibility of the Russia investigation, as a recently fired Mueller deputy referred to pursuing an “insurance policy” just in case Trump won the election.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: Disney, entertainment, Fox, insurance policy, Mueller, National Review, Peter Strzok, Republicans, russia, tax reform, Three Martini Lunch

‘It Is Absolutely Prosecutable’

August 4, 2017 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/8-4-toensing-blog.mp3

Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats announced a joint effort Friday, designed to track down and prosecute whoever is leaking classified information to the media, and former federal prosecutor Victoria Toensing says this problem can be addressed by putting the media on notice, limiting the number of people who see key documents and rooting out Obama holdovers from the National Security Council staff.

Toensing also urged caution before jumping to conclusions over Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s assembling of a grand jury into the Russia, probe but she fears serious mission creep is afoot and wonders why there still isn’t a grand jury investigating Hillary Clinton over her email scandal or examining the actions of the Clinton Foundation.

The issue of leaks jumped to the forefront again this week, after the Washington Post published classified transcripts of President Trump’s conversations with other world leaders during the first days of his administration.

Toensing says there is clear-cut criminal activity involved.

“It is absolutely prosecutable.  It is a leak of classified information.  What the Washington Post is doing is effecting President Trump’s ability to do his job, because the Washington Post is absolutely committed to bringing down this presidency,” said Toensing.

“You know ‘Democracy Dies in Darkness,’ their new label, their new motto?  Well, democracy dies in fake news in publishing classified information, which provides no news value.  What did we learn in the publishing of that transcript?  Nothing,” said Toensing.

Toensing says the most important thing to come out of the Sessions-Coats press conference is the warning that journalists will get subpoenaed if necessary to expose those responsible for the leaks.  She says they don’t need to be prosecuted to assist an investigation.

“They don’t have to go that far.  They can subpoena them and bring them before the grand jury, remember?  Patrick Fitzgerald did that in the Scooter Libby-Valerie Plame situation and there hadn’t even been a crime there we all know,” said Toensing, referring to the investigation into the alleged leaking of the identity of a covert CIA operative.

No one was ever charged for the leak, which came from Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage.  Libby was charged with perjury and making false statements.

While bracing for cries of suppressing the free press, Toensing says using reporters to track down leakers is a far cry from how former Attorney General Eric Holder treated the media during the Obama administration.

“They went after 20 [Associated Press] reporters.  There was hardly a peep.  AP peeped a little but there was not any massive outcry in the press,” said Toensing.  “They subpoenaed their phone records from Verizon.  AP didn’t even have notice that these subpoenas had taken place,” said Toensing.

“Eric Holder’s people went after James Rosen from Fox News an called him a co-conspirator, a criminal, and he was a flight risk.  Look what the Obama administration did without much of a murmur,” said Toensing.

But while that debate plays out, how can the Trump administration zero in those responsible for leaking classified information?  Toensing says it starts with tightening the inner circle.

“The Post also said these are notes from staff people and that they are routinely shared with a number of people.  I think that ‘routinely shared” has got to stop.  They’re going to have to limit the number of people who get these kinds of documents,” said Toensing.

Toensing also urges a detailed numbering system for all classified documents, so that investigators can zero in on what seems to be getting leaked to the media.  She says some reporters may go to jail rather than give up their sources, but the government needs to start applying pressure.

“I think the message has to go out there.  I think they have to start intimidating some of these people who have just been blatant in providing and publishing classified information,” said Toensing.

She is also frustrated by reports than many staff from the Obama National Security Council are still working there.

“That’s the president’s fault.  The president has been told, I know, whom to get rid of.  He hasn’t done so and he only has himself to blame,” said Toensing.

But Toensing is also increasingly leery of National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster given some of his recent decisions.

“He’s gotten rid of some very excellent NSC staff who seem to be more conservative, like hardliners against Iran, which I thought was a good idea.  Evidently, McMaster doesn’t and he’s gotten rid of them,” said Toensing, who is also fuming over McMaster choosing to allow Obama National Security Adviser Susan Rice to keep her national security clearance.

“That concerns me.  If Susan Rice is talking, she’s lying.  That has been her modus operandi throughout the whole Obama administration from Benghazi to Sgt. (Bowe) Bergdahl,” said Toensing.  “I have not seen her take on any major issue that she did not provide false statements.  So why he stuck up for her I have no idea.”

When it comes to the revelation that Mueller has convened a grand jury over the Russia probe, Toensing is less concerned at least for now.  She says a leak may not even be responsible for this news.

“That could or could not be a leak because you could have a witness called before the grand jury or someone who was asked to provide documents who provided that information, and that is not a crime,” said Toensing.

But Toensing is bothered by some aspects, including how the Mueller investigation appears to be delving into areas far afield from the the original focus of the probe.  She says the Justice Department should have avoided that problem at the outset.

“It should have been circumscribed by (Deputy Attorney General) Rod Rosenstein.  He should have said, ‘For the purpose of investigating Russian collusion only.’  And if investigating only Russian collusion you come across a crime, well then that can be prosecuted.  But expanding this to business dealings before Donald Trump even thought about running for president is certainly mission creep,” said Toensing.

Some Trump defenders are alarmed to see several top ranking FBI officials on the apparent witness list for the grand jury, asserting that they are allies of ousted FBI Director James Comey and thus unfair to the president.

Toensing disagrees.

“When I was a federal prosecutor, I would bring in federal agents all the time because they’re doing the investigation.  We don’t know whether they’d be fact witnesses, which would be one thing, or whether they are coming in because they have done X,Y, and Z and they need to tell the grand jury about their investigation,” said Toensing.

Toensing says assembling a grand jury may be an appropriate move in this case, but she is still puzzled over the FBI’s failure to have one looking into the Hillary Clinton email scandal and for its unusual habit of offering immunity to key figures in exchange for documents.

She says it’s still a good time for a grand jury to look at all questionable activities by the Clintons.

“They should do so now because the foundation has not been examined.  There are a lot of new emails now, acquired by Judicial Watch, showing that there was lots of play-for-play back and forth, (such as) million dollars coming in, can you get my friend an ambassadorship,” said Toensing.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: Clinton, Hillary, leaks, McMaster, Mueller, news, Trump, Washington Post

WV Gov. Joins GOP, Mueller Calls Grand Jury, Wasserman-Schultz Cries Wolf

August 4, 2017 by GregC

Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America welcome West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice’s decision to flip to the Republican Party, giving the GOP control of the governor’s office in 35 states.  They also wade through the implications of Special Counsel Robert Mueller creating a grand jury for his investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 campaign.  And they unload on former Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Rep. Debbie Wasserman-Schultz for her shameful efforts to protect herself and her former IT staffer from a criminal investigation by alleging anti-Muslim bias by the FBI.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: FBI, Grand Jury, justice, Martini, Mueller, Muslim, National Review, race card, Republican, russia, Wasserman-Schultz, West Virginia

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