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Durham Report Trashes the FBI, Fortifies the Right’s Mythology

Four years and $6.5 million has brought us the long-awaited Durham Report, a withering critique of how the FBI went about its investigation into the Trump campaign’s extensive contacts with Russian sources, and the Clinton campaign’s efforts to sow suspicion of collusion. At least, that was its intention.

Right-wing media exploded in euphoria, warping the report’s conclusions behind recognition. The first words on the lead-off primetime show on Fox that night had host Will Cain saying, “It’s confirmed that the FBI worked to rig the outcome of an American presidential election”. Truth has not won out at Fox after the Dominion debacle.

The left pretended a yawn with its hosts saying there is “nothing new” in 306 pages article illustration
Special Counsel John Durham

never seen before and repeating the vacuous “there’s no there, there”.

Durham’s report is devoted to criticizing the FBI. Other than storytelling, it deals with little else. This plays perfectly into the Republican narrative that the Justice Department and its Federal Bureau of Investigation have been “weaponized” against the Right. On his Fox show when the report was released, Sean Hannity’s first words were, “The Left’s Russia hysteria has officially come to an end”. Durham’s narrow focus on the FBI has given the Right the false ability to claim that is all there was in 2016.
We can expect them to cite the report reflexively from this moment forward, especially in response to every indictment of Donald Trump, as proof of a corrupt “deep state”, even though the report says nothing of the sort.

retaliation

John Durham, the U.S. attorney for the district of Connecticut, was tapped by Attorney General William Barr to look for criminality in the 2016 campaign, election, and beyond. Barr believes in a “unitary” theory of an all-powerful presidency effectively above the law. Accordingly, it was an outrage that the Trump campaign was investigated. To make that conclusive, he had created this second investigation just a month after stiffing former FBI Director Robert Mueller’s report. He equipped Durham with everything he would need to root out who should be prosecuted, even giving Durham access to CIA intelligence.

Durham contends in his report that the FBI opened its probe, code-named “Crossfire Hurricane”, entirely too rapidly, in violation of its own procedures, and on the basis of thin information.

The story in brief: On May 10th of 2016, Trump aide Gorge Papadopoulos had told Australian diplomats over drinks in London that Russia had offered to assist the Trump team with information that would damage Hillary Clinton. Not until July 26th did the Australians pass this on to our embassy in the UK which immediately reported it to the FBI.

That caused the FBI on July 31, 2016, to cast aside its normal procedures, skipping “assessment” and “preliminary” steps, and going to a full investigation, undoubtedly influenced by nine days earlier WikiLeaks having dropped thousands of emails that had been hacked from the Democratic National Committee’s (DNC) servers. It certainly looked like what Mr. Papadopoulos foretold was real. Not to investigate would be unthinkable.

For Mr. Durham, though, the FBI acted on “raw, unanalyzed, and uncorroborated intelligence” that was “a noticeable departure” from how it had responded to “foreign election interference plans aimed at the Clinton campaign”. He quotes from FBI’s prerequisite for launching a full investigation — “an articulable factual basis for the investigation that reasonably indicates that … [a]n activity constituting a federal crime or a threat to the national security … is or may be occurring” — and so on, but neither Durham, nor anyone in the media inveighing against the FBI on reading the report this week, all these years later, shows any sense of the moment. There was about to be an election for the presidency of the United States. It is the very end of July with a bare three months and a few days remaining. Suddenly, with Russian interference already evident, Trump’s public statements about Russia, media reporting on possible ties between Trump and Russian businessmen, and now the Papadopoulos leak of a Trump campaign possibly accepting Russian assistance that ties into the WikiLeaks DNC hack. There is no time to go through the ponderous three-step process. Deputy Director Andrew McCabe decrees that Crossfire Hurricane investigation be “opened immediately”.

coming up short

Durham’s mere scolding wasn’t what Bill Barr had hoped for. To engineer the desired result, Barr had even joined Durham on a trip to Italy looking for evidence and frequently invited him for drinks evenings, flouting the special counsel purpose of hands-off separation.

But just as he had claimed “exoneration” after Bill Barr’s adulteration corruption of the Mueller Report, Donald Trump posted to Truth Social,

“WOW! After extensive research, Special Counsel John Durham concludes the FBI never should have launched the Trump-Russia Probe!”

No, he didn’t. Durham never says the FBI investigation shouldn’t have happened. That aligns with the Justice Department’s Inspector General Michael Horowitz’s inquiry into the FBI investigation. He effectively kneecapped Durham by getting there first. His 18-month review found many errors of process — 17 violations in the FISA Carter Page application alone. Despite the many faults in the FBI’s conduct, despite the stunning anti-Trump exchanges between Peter Strzok, who led Crossfire Hurricane, and FBI lawyer Lisa Page, Horowitz found that the FBI’s inquiry was validly predicated. So did the Republican-led Senate Intelligence Committee, chaired by Marco Rubio.

The FBI had already adopted a number of Horowitz’s recommended changes, leaving Durham with largely redundant complaints and pot shards to sweep up. The FBI has even admitted its mistakes in a contrite statement. Durham has only one proposal: a kind of “devil’s advocate role within the FBI to challenge investigators’ assumptions in politically sensitive investigations” as The Washington Post sees it.

is that all there is?

The report deals only with (i) the predicate or its lack for opening the investigation, as we’ve seen (ii) the Steele dossier and its use with the Carter Page FISA application, and (iii) the Alfa Bank episode, recounted below. That’s it. There is no mention of the bewildering Russia contacts and incidents that filled the daily media that year, the Pulitzer award winning work which uncovered so much questionable conduct matching what the Mueller investigation would later confirm.

The Steele Dossier

The Durham Report of course goes through the disastrous history of British intelligence agent Christopher Steele and the so-called dossier he put together that led to the FBI’s worst mistakes and indefensible conduct. The saga also exposed that the Hillary Clinton campaign had not only commissioned Steele to come up with what proved to be salacious “oppo” (opposition) research, but had the campaign’s law firm pay for the job in an attempt to hide their involvement.

The fraudulent scheme was then compounded by the FBI using the uncorroborated dossier as purported evidence in a FISA court application for surveillance of Trump sometime-adviser Carter Page.

Steele turned in his first report — the dossier would eventually run to 35 pages — at a meeting in London with an FBI agent from the Rome office on July 5, 2016. The agent’s reaction was disbelief, reports Durham.

The Right has tried to make that submission the root cause of the FBI investigation in its effort to turn the Steele dossier into the entirety of Russiagate so as to make all the Trump campaign contacts with Russians — the Mueller Report tallied over 100 — disappear. However, FBI headquarters didn’t receive the first six Steele reports until September 19th, fifty days after Crossfire Hurricane had begun. The Durham “Office endeavored to account for the nearly 75 days” without success; it seemed that Rome didn’t know what to do with Steele’s first memorandum. Durham’s timeline proves the dossier could not have prompted the FBI’s investigation, but the lie persists. There was Sean Hannity, right after the Durham Report’s release, saying about the dossier, “It was the very basis of Crossfire Hurricane”.

Without any verification, four of Steele’s reports were quickly put to work in a application submitted to the FISA (Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act) court as evidence Carter Page should be placed under surveillance.

Durham relates that neither the supervisory special agent “nor his investigators believed that Page was a threat to national security or a witting agent of the Russian government”. None knew that the man they were surveilling had served as a source for the CIA; when an agent learned Page had assisted the intelligence agency, he “felt like a fool”. So delinquent was the FBI in their verification that they told Steele that they “might be willing to pay…in excess of $1,000,000 if he could provide corroborating evidence”.

But Crossfire Hurricane investigators “did not and could not corroborate” any of the allegations in the dossier, nor could Steele, nor could his source, a Russian transplant living in the U.S., Igor Danchenko. And yet, without any further review, the surveillance application was submitted every 90 days by rule to the FISA court and renewed three times.

biased treatment

Two of Mr. Durham’s sternest criticisms — quoted widely in the media — held that

“FBI personnel displayed a serious lack of analytical rigor towards the information that they received, especially information received from politically affiliated persons and entities.”

and there is a

“need for the FBI and the Department to recognize that lack of analytical rigor, apparent confirmation bias, and an over-willingness to rely on information from individuals connected to political opponents”.

Both are conclusions in the Executive Summary and both oddly reference what would seem a minor matter — months of consternation by the Bureau whether to intervene and give the Clinton campaign a heads up about a probably illegal campaign contribution from a foreign entity. Durham’s complaint is that, whereas the agents did give a “defensive briefing” to Clinton’s people, they did not do the same with the Trump camp over a similar incident.

Durham similarly cites the Bureau’s handling of the Clinton Foundation. Three field offices had opened investigations into possible criminal activity involving large contributions made to the non-profit while Ms. Clinton was secretary of state, and now a candidate for the presidency, and whether the donations were “in exchange for favorable government action and/or influence”. But Deputy Director Andrew McCabe directed the field offices to close their cases, and was “negative,” “annoyed,” and “angry” at the Durham Office’s questioning. Durham is again peeved that this was a properly opened full investigation unlike the hasty Crossfire Hurricane, and “Once again, the investigative actions taken by FBI Headquarters in the Foundation matters contrast with those taken in Crossfire Hurricane.”

Durham then brings up at some length the minor figure, Charles Dolan. Danchenko had a relationship with Dolan, a public relations specialist who had worked for the DNC and had developed a number of Kremlin connections. They traveled to Moscow together. A Dolan contact had provided material to Danchenko that was passed on to Steele. And so forth. The thrust of over 30 pages in the report about Dolan is to fault the FBI for never having interviewed him.

Hillary’s vilification campaign

The Durham Report also reluctantly deflates a story that has been popular on the Right, which blames Hillary Clinton as the one who created suspicion of Russian influence on Trump and his campaign.

To quote Durham, Russian intelligence had picked up purported…

“approval by Hillary Clinton on July 26, 2016, of a proposal from one of her foreign policy advisers to vilify Donald Trump by stirring up a scandal claiming interference by the Russian security services.”

The motive, Durham says, was “to divert attention from her own concerns relating to her use of a private email server”.

But by this point, suspicious activity was already in the wind: Trump had asked the Russians to find Hillary’s missing e-mail; the Russia-connected Paul Manafort had surprisingly been hired as Trump’s campaign manager; Carter Page had visited Moscow; WikiLeaks had download DNC e-mail. Weren’t events doing the kompromat job, and didn’t Clinton already have a vilifying campaign in the works — the Steele dossier?

Besides, the Director of National Intelligence, John Ratcliffe, had written on September 29, 2020, to Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham about the vilify plot that, “The [intelligence community] does not know the accuracy of this allegation or the extent to which the Russian intelligence analysis may reflect exaggeration or fabrication.” Wasn’t this more likely Russian disinformation and election interference?

Durham had to admit in the report that he could not determine “the accuracy of this allegation”. Once again, Durham is left with complaining only of FBI process. He believes the uncorroborated intelligence should have at least made the FBI question whether the Clinton campaign was up to nefarious skulduggery. The FBI had opened a full investigation of the Trump campaign on raw, uncorroborated information, but in the case of the “Clinton plan intelligence”,

“the FBI never opened any type of inquiry, issued any taskings, employed any analytical personnel, or produced any analytical products in connection with the information.

One media article believes that Durham spent one of the four years on this. It came to nothing but right-wing commentators will have none of that. Paying no attention to Durham’s reporting, “Fox News Tonight” said:

“Hillary Clinton personally approved a proposal from one of her foreign policy advisers…U.S. intelligence agencies knew in fact what Hillary Clinton was trying to do.”

ALFA bank’s pinging

Just before the 2016 election, in a story titled “Investigating Donald Trump, F.B.I. Sees No Clear Link to Russia”, The New York Times reported that the FBI knew of what cyber experts said appeared to be a mysterious back channel between the Trump Organization and Alfa Bank”, a major Russian financial institution with ties to the Kremlin. The article was circumspect, though, noting that the FBI had not found “any conclusive or direct link” but that “Hillary Clinton’s supporters … pushed for these investigations.”

Indeed they did. Durham goes on to quote Clinton adviser Jake Sullivan that the allegations in the articles…

“could be the most direct link yet between Donald Trump and Moscow[,] that “[t]his secret hotline may be the key to unlocking the mystery of Trump’s ties to Russia[,]” and that “[w]e can only assume that federal authorities will now explore this direct connection between Trump and Russia as part of their existing probe into Russia’s meddling in our elections.”

The story: A tech operator working for a company contracted to manage and monitor dedicated White House computer servers had picked up traffic between the Trump Organization and Alfa. A Trump server intermittently received short bursts of activity from Alfa and would then fall silent. The only other activity on the idle server was from a healthcare providing company. The tech operator turned this anomalous activity over to Michael Sussmann, a lawyer at the law firm engaged by the Clinton campaign, who took it to the FBI. One can assume the intent was to scandalize Trump with the insinuation that he was still dealing in Russia. Sussman was indicted by Durham for lying to the FBI — he had said he wasn’t representing Clinton.

Hannity once again: “[T]he biggest election and presidential spying scandal in the history of this great country. This is far worse than Watergate”.

The FBI is a domestic terror organization said Sean Davis, CEO of The Federalst “and I have a hard time looking at this and coming to any other conclusion than that the FBI has to be defunded”.

The story of the mysterious Alfa Bank transmissions was never conclusively solved, but was ultimately thought only to be advertising campaign messages from the bank which had the Trump server in its promotional address list, a surmise that would explain the healthcare outfit’s communications as well.

In a report devoted to criticizing the FBI, Mr. Durham here again says, “The FBI thus failed to act on what should have been … a clear warning sign that the FBI might then be the target of an effort to manipulate or influence the law enforcement process for political purposes.”

upshot

The Left characterizes Durham’s work as a total failure. Apart from e-mail tampering mentioned above, there were only two other prosecutions: Danchenko and Sussman. Both were indicted not for any criminal activity but for lying to the FBI. Both trials ended in acquittal.

Mueller’s work, which the Right tries to dismiss as a failure, resulted in the indictments of thirty-four individuals and three companies. Eight pleaded guilty or were convicted of felonies, including five Trump associates and campaign officials. Thirteen Russians were indicted for election interference, one of them Yevgeny Prigozhin who now runs the Wagner Group, the free-lance Russian militia fighting in Ukraine. None will likely face trial but at least they run a risk if they choose to travel to much of the world.

Of the eight indicted, lying to the FBI or Congress was one of the charges. If there was nothing to hide about Russian connections, why were they all lying?

The conservative reaction brought a bit of comedy. “Where’s the accountability for this? Who’s going to be held accountable? These are the questions we’re going to continue to ask,” said House Majority Leader Steve Scalise. “Who should go to jail for this?” asked Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene. “Someone needs to be going to jail,” said Representative Andy Biggs.

These figures seemed not to know that John Durham, an experienced prosecutor, had every legal tool at his disposal to prosecute, indict, and convict and the hysterics were making fools of themselves. From “Lock her up” forward, it is these complainers who want to weaponize the justice system, demanding imprisonment in the absence of any crime.

Durham had to beg off, writing,

“If this report and the outcome of the Special Counsel’s investigation leave some with the impression that injustices or misconduct have gone unaddressed, it is not because the Office concluded that no such injustices or misconduct occurred. It is, rather, because not every injustice or transgression amounts to a criminal offense, and criminal prosecutors are tasked exclusively with investigating and prosecuting violations of U.S. criminal laws.”

In her interview with Durham’s investigators probing her supposed “vilify” campaign, Hillary Clinton called Durham’s quest “really sad,” adding “I get it, you have to go down every rabbit hole.”

No Sign of Change at Fox

Last Friday, the media got hold of Trump’s deposition in the E. Jean Carroll case in which he says that unfortunately “or fortunately” stars like himself.
can grab women by the p***y and doubled down by then insulting the questioning attorney as not his type. On “Hannity” that night, no mention of the video on his show. Safe to say no mention on the other two shows as evident from the following two nights.

Monday is when the video got heavy playback on other channels. On the three primetime shows — “Fox News Tonight”, the substitute for Carlson now hosted by Kayleigh McEnany, a former Trump press secretary; “Hannity” at 9:00 o’clock; and Laura Ingraham’s “The Ingraham Angle” — no mention anywhere of the deposition videos even though they were thought to have a big impact with the jury.

The jury verdict came down on Tuesday. With one perhaps inadvertent exception, no coverage at all on all three hours of the three shows, even on a program that calls itself “Fox News Tonight”. You have to wonder just how much Fox viewers ever hear about what is happening in the real world. All of these programs literally every night go on about the border and Hunter Biden. Legitimate subjects, but it’s constant, endless.

The only “coverage” of the trial verdict came from guest Alan Dershowitz, who has claimed to be a Democrat but who’s been all-in for Trump and appears on Fox often. Mention of the decision against Trump in the Carroll case does not appear to have been planned because Dershowitz it was in the midst of the panel talking about Hunter Biden, of course:

“In the rape case today a judge allowing jurors to remain anonymous even from the jurors, even from the defense attorneys. That’s just unheard of. The rules imply change when Donald Trump’s involved and that’s what concerns me. This is an easy case to win on appeal. Inconsistent verdicts, statutes of limitation, anonymous jurors and if it was anybody except Donald Trump, it would be a slam dunk reversal on appeal. But it’s Donald Trump, and the appellate verdict will probably come down either just before or just after the election and the circuit court will be able to time it in a way that may very clearly impact the election. We should be very worried about the weaponization of our criminal justice and our justice system in general to get Trump”. That was followed by a comment that an impartial jury in New York doesn’t exist.

Finally, Laura closes with a quickie she calls “Biden by the numbers”. A confused cartoon Biden says “What am I doing? I’m going to lose track here” and then the real Biden claims deficit reduction by “a hundred and sixty billion dollars, billion, B-I-L-L-I-O-N”. Simultaneously, on the screen Laura superimposes B I L O I O N. Not kidding. She tried to make it that he spelled it incorrectly, but he didn’t. She did. The program was recorded and played back. “He does have a little trouble with numbers, doesn’t he?”. No, Laura, it’s you.

Scandal Peaks for Clarence Thomas as the Right Tries to Explain It All Away

With respect for the Supreme court already at an all-time low, one would have thought the exposé by ProPublica cataloguing the extravagant gifts bestowed upon Clarence Thomas and wife Virginia would have silenced even the Court’s most ardent conservative supporters.

Not so. Conservative media immediately took to the ramparts to defend the justice. article illustration
Clarence Thomas and wife Virginia
The Wall Street Journal fired off an editorial titled, “The Smearing of Clarence Thomas” with the incendiary subtitle, “The left gins up another phony ethics assault to tarnish the Supreme Court.” The paper’s editorial board wrote,

“Justice Clarence Thomas has a rich friend who has hosted the Justice on his private plane, his yacht, and his vacation resort. That’s it. That’s the story.”

The story goes well beyond that, of course, for beyond the peculiarly suspicious flow of gifts from Texas billionaire Harlan Crow over a long stretch of years, Justice Thomas failed to report any of them in accordance with the ethics law enacted after Richard Nixon’s presidency.

The secret acceptance of gifts — “lavish” was the media’s most frequent adjective — has prompted questions of whether others of the justices have similarly been enjoying the largesse of those hopeful of influencing the Court. Three weeks after the first ProPublica story, The New York Times burst forth with a 5,000 word piece that spanned two full pages of the broadsheet’s print edition about George Mason University’s law school cozying up to a number of the justices by paying for their travel and accommodations abroad.

ProPublica #2: Crow buys Thomas property

But before a closer look at that, ProPublica followed up with a second story that a Harlan Crow company had in 2014 bought a house and two nearby empty lots in Savannah from Thomas’s family for $133,363 in which the justice held a one-third interest, had then paid for improvements, and since let Thomas’s mother go on living in the house rent free. Mr. Crow said his intention is to “one day create a public museum at the Thomas home dedicated to telling the story of our nation’s second Black Supreme Court justice”. Nine years have passed with no mention of that having transpired.

denial immediately set in

Conservative voices chose to ignore the ethics issue of Thomas taking in so much of value compounded by his failure for decades to disclose it. Hospitality received from friends may not require fastidious reporting, but reporting of sale of real estate property is mandatory. That seemed of no moment to Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) who charged that Democrats “cherry-pick” these disclosure omissions in “an unseemly effort” to “delegitimize the Roberts court.”

This is “the latest Democratic attempt to smear” Thomas, writes Hugo Gurdon, editor-in-chief of the conservative Washington Examiner magazine. He calls it the Democrats’ racism “at least as ugly as you find on the right”. Right-wing racism is “confined to the fringes”, but on the left racism “has been woven into the fabric of what it means to be a Democrat”, Gurdon says.

In a Senate hearing, Mike Lee (R-Ut) blasted Democrats and their “thuggish shakedown”. Thomas should seemingly be absolved of the obligations imposed on all other judges in the land because he is a…

“principled jurist…one of our greatest American success stories…a humble citizen who rose from poverty in the segregated south…one of the most influential jurists our country has ever known”.

Well to the right Ann Coulter. who has a law degree, defended the justice, writing…

“Having failed to destroy Clarence Thomas 32 years ago with preposterous sexual harassment charges (disbelieved at the time by 60% of Americans), now the left is resorting to attacking the ethics of a man vastly more honorable than the collection of degenerates reviling him.”

ProPublica #3: Paying for tuition

ProPublica published a third investigative report that Harlan Crow had paid two years of private high school tuition in 2006 and 2008 for Thomas’s grand nephew totaling roughly $100,000. The Thomases had taken custody of the boy at age six as his legal guardian and for a dozen years raised him as their son while his father was in prison on a drug charge.

On the right the argument is that disclosure was not required. The definition of a “dependent child” under the Ethics in Government Act is limited to a “son, daughter, stepson or stepdaughter.” But the Thomases made the boy their legal ward. That’s still not a son says those on the right.

But the tuition payments are effective income for the Thomases in the form of money that they didn’t have to pay themselves. And Mr. Thomas did declare $5,000 contributed by another friend toward the tuition cost, which says that Thomas did recognize such contributions as something to be disclosed but didn’t do so with Mr. Crow’s far more substantial payments.

Mark Paoletta, a biographer and friend of Thomas who served in the Trump administration, slammed reporting of the tuition payments as “despicable”. What is “supposedly scandalous” is Thomas and wife…

“devoting twelve years of their lives to taking in and caring for a beloved child—who was not their own—just as Justice Thomas’s grandparents had done for him.”

No doubt about it — an admirable act of compassion. But all of this evades the central question of why has a Texas billionaire heaped so much benefaction on a Supreme Court justice, offering up only the rubric of “friend”, and why has Clarence Thomas chosen to keep it all hidden?

And then there’s Ginni

On the same day of the tuition story, The Washington Post revealed that Leonard Leo, described as a “conservative activist” who is co-chairman of the board of the Federalist Society, secretly channeled tens of thousands of dollars to Clarence Thomas’s wife Virginia — Ginni, as she is known. A little over a decade ago, he had Kellyanne Conway, who would become an ardent Trump spokeswoman, use her polling company to bill a non-profit group Leo advises, Judicial Education Project, and then pass the money to Ms. Thomas, making certain that the paperwork made “No mention of Ginni, of course”.

The Post tracked $80,000 paid by Conway to Ginni’s firm Liberty Consulting from June 2011 to June 2012 with another $20,000 to come. The money was to compensate Ginni for uncertain consulting work. But Ginni is known for extreme rightwing advocacy and before the Court was the case in which the conservative justices would in the following year strip the 1965 Voting Rights Act of provisions that had restricted mostly southern states from making voting law changes without prior approval of the Justice Department. Leo and his Federalist Society are known for handing Trump a list of arch-conservative judges to appoint, which Trump followed without further vetting.

In a series of emails and texts, Ms. Thomas was exposed imploring Trump Chief-of-Staff Mark Meadows to do everything in his power to overturn Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory and hand Donald Trump a second term as president. We reported on this in this story citing as example a heated message Ginni sent to Meadows inspired by a QAnon conspiracy theory she ascribed to:

“Biden crime family & ballot fraud co-conspirators (elected officials, bureaucrats, social media censorship mongers, fake stream media reporters, etc) are being arrested & detained for ballot fraud right now & over coming days, & will be living in barges off GITMO to face military”.

Dirty pool: The Journal attacks its brethren

The most fervid effort to grant Thomas total absolution is at The Wall Street Journal where James Taranto, an editor who almost never writes, wrote half a dozen opinion pieces in the space of a few days. Two of them, each taking up most of a page of the broadsheet-size print edition, were devoted entirely to only the sale of the property in Savannah. article illustration
Harlan Crow’s The Michaela Rose

In none of his pieces is there any mention of years of the Thomases luxurious vacation trips aboard Crow’s 162 foot yacht nor flights on the Bombardier Global 5000 jet seemingly placed at Mr. Thomas’s disposal.

Taranto chose to attack rival media as the best way to deflect attention from Thomas’s years of failing to disclose what he had received from Mr. Crow. He finds a mistake where ProPublica doesn’t realize there was another house in a different Georgia county and calls it…

“a travesty of journalism, and I am increasingly disinclined to credit them with practicing journalism at all.”

He sweeps in The Washington Post as well, saying they both “commit comically incompetent journalism.”

Thomas’s failure to disclose is “an honest mistake” for Taranto. He didn’t think he needed to report because he sold at a loss. Nowhere in the disclosure instructions is there that exemption. Rather, the rule is base on proceeds of a sale; any amount more than $1,000 must be reported. So the loss-sale excuse is a fabrication. Taranto decides…

“One may be tempted to think that of all people a judge should know what the law says. But that’s a nonsensical standard.”

For a Supreme Court justice, whose work entails deciphering the complexity of laws and case history, the federal financial disclosure rules are apparently too abstruse for Thomas to comprehend.

Thomas’s blithe explanation

In response to ProPublica‘s story, Justice Thomas issued a statement that…

“Early in my tenure at the court, I sought guidance from my colleagues and others in the judiciary, and was advised that this sort of personal hospitality from close personal friends, who did not have business before the Court, was not reportable.”

“Early in my tenure” could mean as far back as 1991 when, nominated by President George H. W. Bush, he was sworn in. What sort of questions might he have asked of colleagues back then? Should he report someone picking up the check at a restaurant? A weekend as guest at a friend’s house? No need, he says he was told.

Justice Thomas has been trading off that advice for 32 years during which the kindness of one doting billionaire friend has ballooned to extraordinary gifts such as a 2019 nine-day vacation in Indonesia where Crow’s superyacht, with its crew and private chef, awaited for touring the islands. In another trip on the yacht, the Thomases toured New Zealand 10 years ago. Thomas saw no need to report any of it.

another real estate sale, hazily reported

Politico then reported at end-April that, beginning in 2015, Neil Gorsuch was article illustration
Justice Neil Gorsuch
for two years looking for a buyer of a 40 acre tract in Granby, Colorado, that he co-owned with two others. Nine days after his Supreme Court confirmation, the CEO of major law firm Greenberg Traurig bought the property. Gorsuch reported that his share of the sale netted him between $250,001 and $500,000 (disclosure forms show ranges), but he entered no description of the asset, nor that it was real estate, and he left the name of the buyer blank.

Since Gorsuch’s investiture on the Court, Greenberg Traurig has represented clients or filed amicus briefs in at least 22 cases before the High Court. Gorsuch has sided eight times with Greenberg Traurig clients and four times against. Those on the right are hopping mad, pointing out that the buyer never even met Gorsuch. That the sale was handled through intermediaries doesn’t mean Gorsuch doesn’t know where the money came from.

Fox prime-time host Laura Ingraham, another who has a law degree, decried “the bogus ethics accusations against my old boss Clarence Thomas. They’re ridiculous. Well now they’re coming for Neil Gorsuch.”

the breadwinner in the Roberts family

Insider (the renamed BusinessInsider) broke the story that a whistleblower at a law firm where Jane Roberts, the wife of Chief Justice John Roberts, was a headhunter, says she made the extraordinary sum of over $10 million in fees for placing attorneys with corporations and law firms between 2007 and 2014, according to internal documents. Some of the client firms have had business before the Court.

what to make of crow

The Journal once again: In a full-page piece by sometime longer-form opinion writer Barton Swaim which he titles, “Harlan Crow Is ‘Collateral Damage’ of a Smear Campaign”, after seconding Taranto — as The Journal digs ever deeper into condoning gifts to federal officials — Swaim tells us he went to Texas to meet Harlan Crow Turns out he is passionate about history with a bookshelf of some 5,000 volumes and quotations of Tacitus, Madison and de Tocqueville engraved on his walls, whereas the leftwing media chooses only to notice “Clarence Thomas’ Pal Harlan Crow Collects Nazi Artifacts”.

Contrary to the 1776 faction that seeks to polish our history, Crow says he believes, “if you’re going to tell the story of anything and in this case it’s America, you have to do it warts and all”. As a philanthropist he wants to encourage the civil exchange of ideas but “civil discourse has broken down”. He tells Swaim,

“Look, I’m a moderate Republican. Some of my other Republican friends think I’m too squishy, but I am what I am. I’m kind of a traditional George Bush type Republican. That’s my belief system. So I do what I believe. I support a number of moderate Democrats, too…This is not terribly important, but I’m moderately pro-choice, a first-trimester guy…So when people say I want to influence people on the court, I would say that if I were trying to do that, which I’m not, I’m not doing a very good job.”

telling the senate to bugger off

The ProPublica revelations arrived in the midst of rising clamor that the High Court is subject to no code of conduct and has resisted the whole principle that any rules should be imposed on the nine solons of the Court.

The Democratic-controlled Senate Judiciary Committee opened a hearing on the 2nd day of May on the subject of the lack of any ethics code and the abuse of its absence. Chairman Dick Durbin invited Chief Justice Roberts to attend but Roberts refused, article illustration
Chief Justice John Roberts
instead sending a letter, signed by all the justices, expressing his concern that “testifying to this Committee would somehow infringe on the separation of powers or threaten judicial independence”.

He cited numerous sources the jurists consult on ethics questions and that there is therefore no need for a code of conduct. In the face of the multiple instances of compromised ethics that brought about the committee hearing , it was hardly a persuasive argument. Roughly a decade ago, Roberts rebuffed the same recommendation as proposed now, to formally adopt the code that guides all lower federal judges. In the face of multiple failures to disclose gifts of considerable value, the chief justice defended the “exceptional integrity and experience” of his fellow jurists and said it was a “misconception” that they do not follow the same set of ethical principles as other judges.

Roberts seemed even to threaten that the Court might question whether Congress has the right of oversight:.”The Court has never addressed whether Congress may impose those requirements on the Supreme Court.”

Republicans on the committee stayed clear of the ethics conflicts that have come to light, most notably Clarence Thomas’s years of accepting a billionaire’s gifts of fully-paid foreign vacations, instead using their time in the hearings to accuse Democrats of trying to derail the Court’s conservative majority. Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC), the committee’s ranking member intoned:

“We’re going to push back as hard as we can and tell the American people the truth about what’s going on. This is not about making the court better. This is about destroying a conservative court. It will not work.”

Senator John Kennedy (R-La) had this take:

“Today’s hearing is an excuse to sling more mud at an institution that some—not all—some Democrats don’t like because they can’t control it 100 percent of the time.”

Conservative media is voicing the same meme. Fox News Laura Ingraham, who clerked for Thomas, would have us think there are no ethics violations:

“The bogus ethics accusations against my old boss Clarence Thomas. They’re ridiculous. Well now they’re coming for Neil Gorsuch.”

Her guest one night, Christopher Landau, ambassador to Mexico under Trump, voiced the same denial:

[I]nstead of taking on the court on the merits … they are seizing on these kind of attacks to try to delegitimize the court and demonize justices with these bogus ethics charges that really don’t pass the straight face test”.

grooming the justices

The Times Sunday edition at the end of April told the story of how George Mason’s law school, located in northern Virginia near D.C. and renamed after Antonin Scalia, has ambitions of becoming a conservative counterpart to Yale and Harvard. To do so it has been developing relationships with the Supreme Court’s conservative justices.

Justices Gorsuch, Thomas, and Kavanaugh have all been given teaching posts at Scalia Law at “top pay” and are even accorded personal services, such as house-hunting for Gorsuch. Teaching is one of the few activities permitted to justices for making extra money, and justices have long done so at other universities.

The law school takes the currying of the justices a sizeable step further, though, in a program that funds, typically, two-week teaching trips abroad. Amanda Frost, who teaches legal ethics at the University of Virginia School of Law, commented that, “Some of this sounds like all-expenses-paid vacations, with a little teaching thrown in.” The school sent Gorsuch to Iceland and Italy and Kavanaugh to the U.K., for example, for which the school makes all arrangements for travel and accommodations — such as “an ‘aristocratic,’ antique-filled apartment in the heart of the old town” for Gorsuch’s stay in Padua, Italy. He even got to choose which city.

The school has also reached out to the liberal side of the Court to some degree: Justice Kagan went on the Iceland trip as well. Justice Sotomayor spoke on a Scalia Law panel.

It’s not just Scalia Law. So do other law schools pay to send the justices abroad to conferences and teaching assignments . The Times cites similar perquisites paid for by other schools: Justices Ginsburg and Sotomayor sent to a 2019 conference in Portugal by New York University; Justice Alito to teach in Berlin and Paris by Tulane in 2016; Justices Alito to Rome and Kavanaugh to London by Notre Dame.

Scalia Law’s engagement with Supreme Court justices enhances the school’s prestige, attracts top-tier students, and above all the close connection to the justices raises money. Despite a prohibition against the jurists being involved in any money-raising endeavor, Scalia Law has pressed against that to the limit. The celebration of the renaming of the law school raised $750,000 that day in 2016. Was it because seven justices were induced to attend?

(The Times got hold of some of the information via a public-records request, with many documents held back or redacted.)

A dinner was held on the second anniversary of the renaming event. The Times says the school pushed for months for justices to come. With those junkets to Europe in the offing, how could they refuse? So “Five Supreme Court Justices Came to Scalia Law School Last Week”, the dean was able to boast after the event in an email to Scalia Law friends and colleagues. Beforehand, “court officials repeatedly pushed for media blackouts and tightly controlled announcements”, ruling against photos for “any endorsement, promotional or fund-raising purposes”. Nevertheless, the event raised $1.4 million for the law school.

Unfair

Justice Samuel Alito expressed his outrage at criticism of the Court in an interview given to — once again — James Taranto and hard-right attorney David Rivkin, a conservative media commentator who seems to have an open invitation to The Journal‘s opinion pages. Alito finds “this type of concerted attack on the court and on individual justices” unfair and bemoans that “nobody, practically nobody, is defending us”.

He seems curiously blindered from grasping that, as sole author of Dobbs that overturned the precedent of 50-years of rights to abortion because he found the justices who preceded him “egregiously wrong”, he would infuriate women in the millions.

Asked about “ethics” accusations against Justice Thomas in “partisan” media, Alito said, “I’ll stay away from that”, but that again fails to recognize that the suspicion of corruption in Thomas accepting valuable gifts is very much a part of the public’s diminished view of the legitimacy of the Court.

Criticism of the Court “undermines confidence in the government,” says Alito without irony, unmindful that it is the actions of the Court that have inspired the criticism.

the upshot

The Supreme Court has long been the national institution most respected by the American public along with the military. An NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll last month recorded that Americans’ confidence in the Court has declined to 37%.