Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

jberryhill

jberryhill's Journal
jberryhill's Journal
May 7, 2018

A few observations on the Manafort hearing transcript

The way a motion hearing works is that the parties submit their written arguments on a particular question - in this case whether the special prosecutor has authority to prosecute the charges in this indictment. These briefs are dissected by the clerks, who assess which parts of what arguments are well supported, which parts aren't, and who also research the relevant law in order to assist the judge's review of the briefs. When the parties come to argue the motion, they each get a set amount of time during which they are to present their argument and answer questions by the judge.

The judge is going to eventually issue a decision which either side is likely to appeal. One of the most frequent things that happens on appeal is that a case is remanded - sent back to the district court for a do-over on some particular issue which the appeals court believes was not adequately considered. The judge would prefer that not to happen. The judge may have some idea of where he or she would like to go with a decision, what criticisms might be made of that position, and will often fish for the parties to define the limits of their positions. For example, if a judge were considering whether the president could be indicted would, in the face of an argument advancing absolute privilege from indictment, ask a question about an extreme situation like, "What if the president shot someone in the middle of Fifth Avenue? Is it your position that he couldn't be indicted for that?" just to see if the attorney will follow the logic off of a cliff, or whether the attorney will define some set of limiting circumstances.

Dreeben got off on a bad foot early. If the judge wants an answer to a simple factual question, you give an answer to that simple factual question, you don't start into your argument. Take this one:

THE COURT: All right. The indictment
against Mr. Manafort was filed in February, but it
actually was antedated by a filing in the District of
Columbia. These allegations of bank fraud, of false
income tax returns, of failure to register or report
rather, failure to file reports of foreign bank
accounts, and bank fraud, these go back to 2005, 2007,
and so forth. Clearly, this investigation of
Mr. Manafort's bank loans and so forth antedated the
appointment of any special prosecutor and, therefore,
must've been underway in the Department of Justice for
some considerable period before the letter of
appointment, which is dated the 17th of May in 2017.
Am I correct?

MR. DREEBEN: That is correct, Your Honor.


See, that's easy. No problem...

THE COURT: All right. So when the special
prosecutor was appointed -- and I have the letter of
appointment in front of me -- what did they do? Turn
over their file on their investigation of Mr. Manafort
to you all?

MR. DREEBEN: Essentially, Your Honor,
special counsel was appointed to conduct an
investigation --

THE COURT: I'm sorry. Answer my question.
Did you remember what my question was?


The question was, did the previous investigators turn over their file when the special counsel was appointed. That's a simple question about the order of events which the judge is looking to nail down before moving on. Dreben starts to answer by launching into an explanation of why the special counsel was appointed, and is trying to get ahead of things. And so he comes back with:

MR. DREEBEN: Yes, Your Honor, and I was
attempting to answer your question. We did acquire the
various investigatory threads that related to
Mr. Manafort upon the appointment of the special
counsel.


That "I was trying to answer before you interrupted me" line could have best been left unsaid. He starts rubbing the judge the wrong way early and often.

The hearing can often take the form of an almost role play game. In the sorts of passages that people are freaking out over, the judge proposes a perspective on the arguments and concludes with:

"Where am I wrong in that regard?"

If the judge lays out a view of the case and says, "Where am I wrong?" You tell the judge where what he said is wrong. You don't go on a roundabout description of your view of the case, which Dreeben does, thus bringing the judge back to...

THE COURT: Yes. Now I asked you: Where am
I wrong about that?

MR. DREEBEN: Your Honor, our investigatory
scope does cover the activities that led to the
indictment in this case.

THE COURT: It covers bank fraud in 2005 and
2007?

MR. DREEBEN: Yes, because --

THE COURT: Tell me how.

MR. DREEBEN: Your Honor, the authorization
for the special counsel to investigate matters is
described generally in the appointment order on May --

THE COURT: I have it right in front of me,
and it won't surprise you to learn that I'm fully
familiar with it. My question to you was, how does
bank fraud and these other things that go back to 2005,
2007, how does that have anything to do with links
and/or coordination between the Russian government and
individuals associated with the campaign of Trump?

MR. DREEBEN: So the authorization order
permits investigation of two different things that are
described in separate clauses. The first are links and
coordination between individuals associated with the
Trump campaign and the Russian government's effort to
influence the election. Mr. Manafort was a campaign
official.

THE COURT: You're running away from my
question again. You know, I'm focused on the
indictment that is here.


The judge was really asking a pretty simple question. So, trying one more time, he goes back to language in question in the authorization:

THE COURT: All right. I think you would
agree that the indictment that we have before the Court
is not triggered by (i), which says, "any links and/or
coordination between the Russian government and
individuals associated with the campaign of President
Donald Trump." Bank fraud in 2005 and other things had
nothing whatever to do with that.

....

MR. DREEBEN: So I would take a different
look at the way this order works than Your Honor's
description for a couple of reasons.

THE COURT: All right.

MR. DREEBEN: The first is...


Yay! At long last, Dreeben decides to discuss the case the way the judge wants to do it.

All Dreeben really had to do was to explain that (which he gets to) "links and/or coordination between the Russian government and individuals associated with the campaign of President Donald Trump" is inclusive of pre-existing links between the Russian government and such individuals which, in fact, this indictment does. The indictment in this case is all about interesting things that Manafort did with money he got from Russian-allied Ukrainians.

The judge then proceeds with some other prodding to get a clear answer out of Dreeben, without a lot of success, and then goes on what has been characterized as a rant to the effect of "I'm trying to get you to give me a clear boundary of what may or may not be within the special prosecutor's scope, so don't try to weasel around the fact that the scope is intended to be limited" - in so many words (that's my paraphrase).

Dreeben was being a little too cautious to avoid being boxed in, but that part of the argument ends with an invitation for him to clear up the mess so far:


All right. I think you answered my
questions, Mr. Dreeben.
If you want to say anything
else -- now, of course, you're going to have a full
opportunity to respond to the defendant's arguments,
but I had some preliminary questions, which I think
you've answered.


Then, and finally at long last, Dreeben uses the opportunity to discuss the further clarifying letter from Rosenstein which defines this prosecution to be clearly within scope. That letter, so far made available to the court in redacted form, specifically defines two lines of inquiry about Manafort. Most of the rest of the letter is redacted. The judge asked to see the full unredacted letter, simply to make sure that the redacted portion doesn't relate to Manafort or would possibly narrow the lines of inquiry about Manafort.

The judge then turns to the defense, and that part of the hearing wasn't reported on very much. First off, the judge is almost patronizingly humorous toward the defense, but I've highlighted some "things you didn't hear in the media":


THE COURT: Thank you.
All right. I have actually heard probably
most of their argument, and I haven't heard all of
yours. You may now tell me what you think.

MR. DOWNING: Well, first of all, Your Honor,
good afternoon -- or good late morning.
I didn't know if you had any questions you
would like me to start off with answering as opposed to
just reiterating what's in the brief, but I will say --

THE COURT: Well, I don't want you to
reiterate what's in the brief. I've read that.

MR. DOWNING: Okay.

THE COURT: It's now your opportunity to
bring out what really you think is dispositive in some
arresting, interesting way.


MR. DOWNING: That's setting the bar high.

THE COURT: I reminisce a lot. The world has
changed. I was a student in England in the late '60s,
and I went to many oral arguments. They didn't use
briefs at all in the cases I went to. In the House of
Lords, the judges appeared in suits, and the lawyers
appeared and the barristers appeared in wigs and robes.
They together bent down, pulled books off the shelf,
and read cases together and argued about them. I
thought that was a charming but ineffective way to do
things. Writing briefs is much more effective, but
then it kind of renders oral argument a little more
uninteresting.

Tell me why -- you've heard him say -- I mean
their argument is fairly straightforward.
They say you
look at the May 17 letter. It says any links and/or
coordination between the Russian government and
individuals associated with the campaign of President
Donald Trump; secondly, any matters that arose or may
arise directly from the investigation. Which I focused
on their investigation rather than the Department of
Justice's, but that's a fair point. And then the third
one is any other matters within the scope of 600.4 of
Title 28, Code of Federal Regulations.
Then counsel appropriately called my
attention to the August 2 memorandum from Rosenstein
which amplifies that a bit. Of course, most of the
letter is redacted, but I'm advised that that doesn't
have anything to do with Mr. Manafort. I'm going to
look at that myself.

But that goes on to say whether crimes were
committed by colluding with Russian government
officials with respect to the Russian government
efforts to interfere with the 2016 election for
president. That was pretty clear from the May letter.
But then they go on to say committed a crime or crimes
arising out of payments he received from the Ukrainian
government before or during the tenure of President
Viktor Yanukovych.


Well, we could argue all day here and not get
very much clarity on whether there's a difference
between the Ukraine and Russia. Of course, I wasn't
there any later than about 40 years ago, but if you ask
the average Ukrainian, they will tell you there's a
huge difference.


On the other hand, the government makes a
very powerful point. Yankovych's operation was
supported by the Russian government. He did
essentially what they wanted him to do, but he's not
there anymore.
People are killing each other in the
eastern Ukraine. My hunch is that it's Ukrainians and
Russians that are mostly fighting.


Okay, now, did anyone notice the headline screaming "Judge Calls Mueller's Argument 'Clear' and 'Powerful'"? Yeah, I missed that headline too.

The judge lets the defense ramble on for a while, and responds:

THE COURT: Well, let me ask you: So what?
In other words, is what you're arguing that the use of
that investigation in this case is contrary to the
regulation that requires the acting attorney general
here, Rosenstein, to be specific about what areas he
wants investigated, and you're saying he was too
general. In this supplemental, doesn't he remedy that
in the August 2 letter?


Of course he does. The argument on the defense seems to read that some of that section of the hearing was letting the defense fill its time. But there is an interesting exchange toward the end, when the defense makes a play for getting internal DOJ documents it claims to exist...

THE COURT: Do you have anything else to add?

MR. DOWNING: Just briefly, Your Honor. The
one thing we would ask this Court to do before deciding
the motion before the Court is to ask the government
for what anybody who has had any experience with the
Department of Justice knows exists, which is the
written record. Where is the written record before
Mr. Mueller was appointed? Where is the written record
about the decision --

THE COURT: What do you mean by the written
record?


(the defense goes on to describe various DOJ procedures under which memos may have been generated)

THE COURT: What good would that do me if I
had all of that in front of me?

MR. DOWNING: It might show you exactly
whether or not Mr. Rosenstein violated the regs or
whether he complied with them.

THE COURT: I don't know about regulations,
but let's suppose he violated. Of course, counsel has
already pointed out that that's, in his view,
irrelevant. But let's suppose it shows that, that
Rosenstein didn't do a good job. So what?


MR. DOWNING: So our position is that to the
extent that Mr. Rosenstein exceeded his authority to
appoint a special counsel, the special counsel does not
have the authority of a U.S. Attorney.

THE COURT: Thank you.

MR. DOWNING: Thank you.

THE COURT: All right. I'll take the matter
under advisement.

Did you wish to respond to this last point?

MR. DREEBEN: No thank you, Your Honor,
unless you have any questions.

THE COURT: Good choice on your part.


I translate that as "Do you have anything to say about the irrelevant rathole the defense just went on about?"

Overall, I can see that Judge Ellis was somewhat annoyed that Dreeben was coming across as unduly cagey about exactly when any investigation of Manafort began, and how it came to be covered by the special prosecutor, and pressed Dreeben to be clear on the scope of the special counsel and why this indictment fell within that scope.

Then, the judge turns to the defense and says "The government has a pretty clear and strong position, what say you?" and at each turn says "So what?" to every position the defense advances.

May 5, 2018

MSNBC breaks new ground in color blindness.

They are running a picture of former congressman William Jefferson as Judge Ellis of the EDVA.

Do these people look alike to you?


http://twitter.com/Berryhillj/status/992571291621318656

Jefferson was convicted in a trial in which Ellis presided, so his picture comes up in Google searches for Ellis. But you’d think people paid to do this stuff weren’t so stupid.

May 3, 2018

Poll: Which did you like better - Infrastructure Week, or today's National Day of Prayer


Sweet Jesus, on the National Day of Prayer, the President of the United States launches into an explanation of how he paid a porn actress not to talk about having sex with him.

May 1, 2018

Trump telegraphed the alleged "Mueller question leak", btw


Among the quirks of Trump's odd mental function is a tendency for perseveration - to continue to repeat ideas, words, themes, past the relevant context in which they came up which, with Trump, is whatever the previous conversation he had, and whatever was the last part of that conversation.

During the weird Fox rant last week, Trump jarringly brought up the "leaked debate questions" canard, seemingly out of nowhere, in the course of discussing the Russian investigation.

Watch it again:

https://twitter.com/joshtpm/status/989479385983062016

Of all of the things to go off on, among the various grievances he has expressed toward CNN, he comes around to:

"Can you imagine, by the way, if you gave me the questions to a debate?"

...out of nowhere, and with seemingly no relevance to what he was going on about.
April 28, 2018

For the comedy act at the dinner, they should just run a couple minutes of his rally


“We have a great comedy act for you, folks, but he couldn’t be with us here, so please direct your attention to the screens....
April 28, 2018

The case for Jim Bakker as Congressional chaplain

He is a perfect match for the “spiritual needs” of the Republican flock.

And... he can make a bundle switching the cafeteria over to his food buckets!



Heck, they could make it a tick box on your tax form - Do you want $500 of your refund in the form of a Jim Bakker End Times Food Bucket?

April 27, 2018

The actual ruling in the Stormy Daniel's case, if you are interested


This is the actual ruling on the 90 day stay. As reporters tend to often fail to report the basis of a decision, or sort of miss the point of where a particular ruling falls into the procedural landscape of the proceeding, you may want to have a look at it yourself:


https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.cacd.704250/gov.uscourts.cacd.704250.53.0.pdf

" It is also quite possible that the
outcome of the criminal inves
tigation will benefit the parties
and the Court by streamlining the
issues and questions presented in this action.
Accordingly, the interests of judicial efficiency
weigh in favor of a temporary stay. "

The point being that this is not to say the entire criminal proceeding needs to run its course. It is more along the lines of "let's have a look-see when we know what Cohen winds up being indicted for, specifically" in order to decide whether the scope of probable discovery or testimony in this case is relevant to the contract claims being litigated.

It may also be, as it often is, that a suspect under indictment such as Cohen, may negotiate the terms of that indictment, in the event he becomes cooperative.

But given the relatively more consequential criminal case, compared to a civil suit over a contract, the judge most probably doesn't want anything to happen in this proceeding that is going to potentially throw a curveball into the mix during the process of vetting the evidence and finally charging Cohen with something in the SDNY.

Profile Information

Gender: Male
Hometown: Delaware
Member since: Fri Jan 20, 2006, 08:14 PM
Number of posts: 62,444
Latest Discussions»jberryhill's Journal