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David Corn and the Roots of the Fusion GPS Trump Frame-up
Original research | 07/24/2017 | Fedora

Posted on 07/24/2017 4:12:04 PM PDT by Fedora

Accounts of the phony Trump dossier debacle typically begin on January 10, 2017, when CNN and BuzzFeed publicized allegations about an alleged Russian honey trap operation against Donald Trump that dossier compiler Christopher Steele has admitted were unverified. But the story of the phony dossier actually broke over two months earlier when Mother Jones Washington bureau chief David Corn reported Steele’s allegations on October 31, 2016 under the headline, “A Veteran Spy Has Given the FBI Information Alleging a Russian Operation to Cultivate Donald Trump: Has the bureau investigated this material?”. Corn had previously helped the Democrats sink Mitt Romney’s 2012 campaign with an article exposing a private fundraiser where Romney made some controversial comments about Obama voters. The evidence indicates that Corn and Fusion GPS may have already been working together to aid the Democrats at that time, adding another angle to the story that investigators should explore.

Fusion GPS was originally formed in 2009 (some sources claim 2011, but ICANN records and Internet archives show that the company’s site had been launched by December 2010) by a team with experience running financial investigations for the intelligence community and the Wall Street Journal. Managing director Benjamin S. Schmidt, a former Treasury Department intelligence analyst trained in identifying illicit financial networks, has since left the firm to become the managing director of Camstoll. Prior to joining the Treasury Department, Schmidt had worked with Stephen Emerson’s Investigative Project on Terrorism. In 2009, he assisted Israel with disrupting Palestinian financial networks. His Camstoll biography states that, “Prior to Camstoll, Mr. Schmidt was Managing Director of FUSIONGPS, a strategic intelligence consultancy in Washington, DC. There, he leveraged open source material to provide decision support and advisory services to corporations, law firms, financial institutions and non-profits. At FUSIONGPS, Mr. Schmidt coordinated complex international research projects examining illicit financial and money laundering activity, investigated and mapped international networks of front companies and organizations, and conducted due diligence on investments in emerging markets for financial institutions. Prior to that, Mr. Schmidt was a team lead and senior analyst in the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, where he examined foreign political, security, and illicit financial issues. His work was often included in the President’s Daily Brief and other senior level US intelligence products. He was a Pat Roberts Intelligence Scholar, and received the National Intelligence Exceptional Achievement Medal in 2011.” In 2012, Camstoll registered as a foreign agent representing Outlook Energy Investments LLC of Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. In 2016, Schmidt was quoted in articles investigating the Panama Papers.

Fusion GPS cofounding partner Glenn Simpson had previously worked as a journalist for Roll Call and the Wall Street Journal. While at Roll Call, he built his reputation by publishing articles investigating Newt Gingrich’s political action committee Gopac, as he and political scientist Larry Sabato worked on a book on political corruption for New York Times imprint Times Books. In 2010, Simpson was a senior fellow at the International Assessment and Strategy Center, a pro-Taiwan think tank. There he published an article reporting on a U.S. intelligence community report “that the governments of Russia and other Eurasian states actively collaborate with organized crime groups”, collaboration that Simpson alleged included an “alliance between Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and Russian aluminum king Oleg Deripaska”.

Another Fusion GPS partner is Peter Fritsch, a former Wall Street Journal senior editor and foreign bureau chief, whose reporting duties included covering the Pentagon and the intelligence community. One other Fusion GPS partner is Thomas Catan, Wall Street Journal Washington bureau staff reporter and former Financial Times investigative reporter.

Fusion GPS has frequently relied upon outside contractors to assist its research. Over the years, these have included Grant Fredericks of Forensic Video Solutions and Hollywood Scandals producer Scott Goldie.

During the 2012, Fusion GPS did opposition research on Mitt Romney, which included investigating Romney donor Frank VanderSloot. The research Fusion GPS did on VanderSloot was shared with Mother Jones reporter Stephanie Mencimer, who incorporated it into an article titled “Pyramid-Like Company Ponies Up $1 Million for Mitt Romney” that was published on February 6, 2012. The article resulted in objections from VanderSloot and an expensive defamation lawsuit for Mother Jones. In response to VanderSloot’s complaints, Mother Jones took down the article and re-reported it with corrections, Corn told BuzzFeed reporter Rosie Gray on March 15, 2012, indicating his involvement in the story.

In September 2015, Fusion GPS was hired to do opposition research on Donald Trump by an unknown party described by the New York Times as a “wealthy Republican donor who strongly opposed Mr. Trump”.. After Trump emerged as the Republican front-runner, Fusion GPS continued to research Trump for the Clinton campaign and for the FBI.

From June to November 2016, Fusion GPS employed Orbis Business Intelligence to research Trump. Orbis was formed in 2009 by Christopher Steele, a former MI6 officer stationed in Russia, and Christopher Burrows, a former British Foreign Office official. By July, news about Orbis’ research had leaked widely, with Rubio campaign operative Rick Wilson telling the New York Times that “an investigative reporter for a major news network” contacted him at that time asking him what he knew about the investigation. An MI6 official told the Times that Steele also passed his research on to British intelligence “in late summer or early fall”. In October, the FBI met Steele in Rome and offered him $50,000 to continue investigating Trump.

On October 31, Corn published his article, which alluded to Orbis’ research, citing Steele anonymously. Corn had begun his writing career in the late 1970s at The Nation while a junior majoring in history at Brown University. In 1994, he published his first book, a biography criticizing CIA agent Ted Shackley, a frequent target of far-left groups such as the pro-Sandinista Christic Institute. In 2003, Corn triggered an FBI investigation of Robert Novak’s naming of CIA agent Valerie Plame, suggesting to Plame’s wife Joseph Wilson that Novak’s column may have been a criminal violation of the Intelligence Identities Protection Act. Corn then published an article making the first public accusation that the Bush administration had committed a crime by blowing Plame’s cover. Three years later, Corn would coauthor the first book identifying the actual leaker as Richard Armitage. Corn summarized his involvement in the Plame affair in his 2006 book Hubris, a criticism of the Bush administration’s Iraq policy coauthored with reporter Michael Isikoff, then with Newsweek, who has recently been covering Trump for Yahoo! News.

During the 2012 campaign, as Corn’s publication Mother Jones was using Fusion GPS’ research on the Romney campaign for articles, Corn wrote investigative reports on the Romney campaign, collaborating with Jimmy Carter’s grandson James Carter. While working on a story about Romney’s firm Bain Capital investing in a Chinese manufacturer who used American outsourcing, Carter discovered a video of Romney speaking at an event that seemed to involve the same company. This discovery led to Corn’s September 2012 story about Romney’s fundraising comments, which some analysts credited with tipping the scales against Romney in the election.

Evidently, on behalf of his client Fusion GPS, Steele was hoping to deliver a similar October Surprise blow to Trump by sharing his dossier research with Corn. Steele met Corn in New York in October 2016, Vanity Fair reporter Howard Blum later revealed. Corn’s article quoted Steele anonymously:

In June, the former Western intelligence officer--who spent almost two decades on Russian intelligence matters and who now works with a US firm that gathers information on Russia for corporate clients--was assigned the task of researching Trump’s dealings in Russia and elsewhere, according to the former spy and his associates in this American firm. This was for an opposition research project originally financed by a Republican client critical of the celebrity mogul. (Before the former spy was retained, the project’s financing switched to a client allied with Democrats.) “It started off as a fairly general inquiry,” says the former spook, who asks not to be identified. But when he dug into Trump, he notes, he came across troubling information indicating connections between Trump and the Russian government. According to his sources, he says, “there was an established exchange of information between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin of mutual benefit.”

After BuzzFeed published Steele’s dossier, individuals mentioned in the dossier suedSteele and Orbis Business Intelligence for defamation. In his defense, Steele blamed Fusion GPS for circulating his dossier among reporters without his permission. However, he admitted “off-the-record briefings to a small number of journalists about the pre-election memoranda in late summer/autumn 2016”. Steele’s defense contended that in October 2016, “Fusion GPS instructed him to brief a journalist from Mother Jones”, as Daily Caller reporter Chuck Ross summarized.

Despite Steele admitting that his dossier was never verified, and despite specific allegations in the dossier being disproven, Corn has continued to promote the dossier’s thesis, recently publishing an article claiming that “Donald Trump Jr.’s Emails Sound Like the Steele Dossier”. In his recent piece, Corn argued that Donald Trump Jr’s meeting with Natalia Veselnitskaya vindicates Steele’s dossier:

Trump and his supporters have denounced the Steele memos as unsubstantiated trash, with some Trump backers concocting various conspiracy theories about them. Indeed, key pieces of the information within the memos have been challenged. But the memos were meant to be working documents produced by Steele--full of investigative leads and tips to follow--not finished reports, vetted and confirmed.

One interesting element of the Donald Trump Jr. emails now in the news is that they track with parts of the Steele memos.

In that first memo, dated June 20, Steele wrote that Trump “and his inner circle have accepted a regular flow of intelligence from the Kremlin, including on his Democratic and other political rivals.” The Trump Jr. email chain began on June 3, 2016. This was shortly after Trump had secured the Republican presidential nomination. It was that day that Rob Goldstone, a talent manager for a middling pop-star named Emin Agaralov, contacted Trump Jr. and said Emin’s father, Aras Agalarov, a Putin-friendly billionaire developer, had met with the “crown prosecutor of Russia,” who offered to provide the Trump campaign with negative information on Clinton. The Agalarovs and Goldstone had a close relationship to the Trumps, because they all had worked together in 2013 to bring the Miss Universe pageant, which Trump owned at the time, to Moscow. (Part of the deal was that Emin would get to perform two songs.) Following that event, both Trumps worked with both Agalarovs to develop a major project in Moscow. (It never happened.)

This email from Goldstone to Trump Jr. led to a meeting six days later, where a Kremlin-connected Russian attorney spoke to Trump Jr., Kushner, and Manafort about negative information on Clinton. In a statement, Trump Jr. says that what she offered was vague and meaningless, suggesting there was nothing to it. (But Trump Jr. has dissembled repeatedly about this meeting.)

Let’s turn to Steele’s June 20 memo. It stated:

”Source A confided that the Kremlin had been feeding TRUMP and his team valuable intelligence on his opponents, including Democratic presidential candidate Hillary CLINTON, for several years…This was confirmed by Source D, a close associate of TRUMP who had organized and managed his recent trips to Moscow, and who reported, also in June 2016, that this Russian intelligence had been ‘very helpful’.”

The memo also reported that there was anti-Clinton information that Putin was sitting on:

”A dossier of compromising material on Hillary CLINTON has been collated by the Russian intelligence services over many years and mainly comprises bugged conversations she had on various visits to Russia and intercepted phone calls rather than any embarrassing conduct. The dossier is controlled by Kremlin spokesman, PESKOV, directly on PUTIN’s orders. However it has not as yet been distributed abroad, including to TRUMP. Russian intentions for its deployment still unclear.”

There has been no confirmation that Putin steadily fed information to Trump’s camp or that a Kremlin-controlled anti-Clinton dossier existed. But one of Steele’s overarching points in this memo was that Putin’s regime was funneling derogatory Clinton material to Trump. The Trump Jr. emails suggest that the Russian government was aiming to do that and that the Trump campaign was willing and eager to receive assistance from Putin. So Donald Trump Jr. has done what Steele could not: produce evidence that the Trump campaign was—or wanted to be—in cahoots with a foreign adversary to win the White House.

Corn’s effort to implicate Trump, Jr. backfires by implicating Fusion GPS in the Veselnitskaya affair, effectively acknowledging that Steele was receiving information from “a close associate of TRUMP who had organized and managed his recent trips to Moscow”, clearly a reference to someone associated with the Agalarovs. This undercuts the claim of Fusion GPS had no knowledge of Veselnitskaya’s meeting with Trump, Jr. Fusion GPS denied foreknowledge of the meeting in a statement to the Washington Post: “Fusion GPS learned about this meeting from news reports and had no prior knowledge of it. Any claim that Fusion GPS arranged or facilitated this meeting in any way is false.” Following the publication of Steele’s dossier, Fusion GPS distanced itself from Glenn Simpson, who has reportedly opted to plead the Fifth in response to a Senate Judiciary Committee subpoena.

What did David Corn know, and when did he know it?


TOPICS: FReeper Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: chrissteele; christophersteele; davidcorn; dossier; fedora; frresearch; fusiongps; grantfredericks; orbis; peterfritsch; russia; russians; scottgoldie; steele; thomascatan; trumprussia; veselnitskaya
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To: Fedora

It’s a super elaborate 3-D chess game being played, and even just floating names like RG is a gambit.


21 posted on 07/24/2017 4:36:31 PM PDT by Travis McGee (EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: Ray76

Thanks, good tidbit—Chalupa is also a point of contact with the Ukranian lobbyists and presumably with Steele’s sources in Ukranian intelligence and with Putin’s opposition within Russia—a trail that likely leads in the direction of Soros and the Podesta Group, I suspect.


22 posted on 07/24/2017 4:39:15 PM PDT by Fedora
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To: Ann Archy

David Brock? He was lovers with James Alefantis for a while—the two of them were getting blackmailed.


23 posted on 07/24/2017 4:41:21 PM PDT by Fedora
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To: Fedora

bump


24 posted on 07/24/2017 4:41:32 PM PDT by Sir Napsalot (Pravda + Useful Idiots = USSR; Journ0List + Useful Idiots = DopeyChangey)
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To: Enchante

Yes, they keep using this other Russia stuff to obscure the separate DNC email leak investigation and distract from the contents of the emails.


25 posted on 07/24/2017 4:42:35 PM PDT by Fedora
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To: Fedora

Corn should lead us right back to Obama and Rice and unmasking.


26 posted on 07/24/2017 4:42:56 PM PDT by browniexyz
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To: Travis McGee
-- It's beyond corrupt, what happened at the top echelons of the FBI, DOJ, IRS etc. --

Include Congress in that "etc." A good number of judges too, I would think. The rot is systemic. The system runs on money and dirt.

27 posted on 07/24/2017 4:43:56 PM PDT by Cboldt
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To: Enchante

David Corn was actually the first one to put Valerie plames name in print.


28 posted on 07/24/2017 4:44:37 PM PDT by Federal46
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To: Travis McGee; Fedora

I think we’re two months past legal wrangling, it seems the bullets are about to start hittin’ the bone.


29 posted on 07/24/2017 4:45:22 PM PDT by txhurl
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To: txhurl

Corn was also prominent in the following:

JOURNOLIST
In addition to the individuals already named in this profile, other prominent JournoList members included Michael Berube, DAVID CORN, Robert Greenwald, John Judis, Joe Klein, Paul Krugman, and Jeffrey Toobin. To view a list of 157 known JournoList members, click here.
http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/printgroupprofile.asp?grpid=7567


30 posted on 07/24/2017 4:47:00 PM PDT by MAGAthon
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To: txhurl

Trump’s cabinet shakeup is the preview for the offensive against the Deep State—switch from peacetime to wartime consigliere—if I’m reading this right.


31 posted on 07/24/2017 4:50:34 PM PDT by Fedora
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To: MAGAthon

Great link—thank you.


32 posted on 07/24/2017 4:51:23 PM PDT by Fedora
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To: Fedora

Yes. I’m certain we see the whites of their eyes now and are going to force them to fire the real first nuke. Then they meet their maker, whomever that is.


33 posted on 07/24/2017 4:59:39 PM PDT by txhurl
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To: MAGAthon

Thank you.


34 posted on 07/24/2017 5:00:48 PM PDT by txhurl
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To: LS

ping!


35 posted on 07/24/2017 5:01:03 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (I was not elected to continue a failed system. I was elected to change it. --Donald J. Trump)
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To: Fedora
Corn triggered an FBI investigation...Corn then published an article making the first public accusation that the Bush administration had committed a crime by blowing Plame’s cover. Three years later, Corn would coauthor the first book identifying the actual leaker as Richard Armitage.

"Scooter" Libby should own everything Corn ever possessed or will earn in his lifetime.

36 posted on 07/24/2017 5:04:34 PM PDT by ROCKLOBSTER (RATs and RINOs...same thing)
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To: Fedora

Excellent analysis. You should go to Fox or someone else freelance - you might make a few bucks...you deserve it.


37 posted on 07/24/2017 5:06:07 PM PDT by richardtavor
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To: ROCKLOBSTER

You have a good point!


38 posted on 07/24/2017 5:11:21 PM PDT by Fedora
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To: richardtavor

Thank you—would be easier to fund the research that way, LOL.


39 posted on 07/24/2017 5:14:06 PM PDT by Fedora
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To: Fedora

What will be our sign to charge?

I think the first move should be truckers taking a weeks’ vacation, forcing blue mayhem in RAT cities. Remind them what their ‘strength’ is really composed of.


40 posted on 07/24/2017 5:21:52 PM PDT by txhurl
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