In the 2004 science fiction movie, “The Forgotten”, a
planeload of children is kidnapped in midair by evil aliens. The aliens, in league with US intelligence
agencies, make everyone forget the children ever existed. This works on all except for one mother,
played by Julianne Moore, who desperately tries to find out what is happening.
Now we switch to the sequel, The Strange Case of the Missing
Russians. Try to remember, if you can,
that there once were thirteen alleged Russian trolls and three Russian
companies, headed by Concord Management and Consulting, LLC, that were
indicted by the Mueller investigation
team for conspiring to wage “information
warfare” on the US presidential election in 2016.
Wait a minute, you might say. Aren’t those guys the same as the twelve
Russian officials that Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein just announced
have been indicted for hacking into Clinton campaign servers? Nope.
It’s a confusion any low information casual observer (i.e., most of the
US population) might have. In this hand
we have thirteen Russian trolls, and poof, they’re gone. In the other hand, twelve Russian hackers
magically appear in their place.
What happened to the original group of indicted Russians and
Russian companies? Something very embarrassing
and potentially devastating to the Mueller team prosecutors. One of the accused fought back. Concord Management demanded their right to a
“speedy trial” and their right to see the evidence against them via the
discovery process.
Totally unprepared for this aggressive defense (or any
defense at all), the Mueller team tried several delaying courtroom tactics,
finally dumping nearly two terabytes of untranslated Russian social media data
on the defense as their “discovery” evidence.
It would be interesting to know how the prosecution
explained to the court exactly how untranslated Russian social media could
possibly influence a US presidential election, but we probably never will. Mueller
has added 4 assistant US Attorneys to handle the now-embarrassing case, and
according to what Devlin Barrett of the Washington Post advises us, it seems that that
Team Mueller seems to be cutting its exposure to ultimate humiliation.
People familiar with the staffing decision said the new
prosecutors are not joining Mueller's team, but rather are being added to the
case so that they could someday take responsibility for it when the special
counsel ceases operation.
It’s easy to see why this is being kept quiet by the
anti-Trump media. A prosecutorial defeat
or dismissal would indicate extreme incompetence by the Mueller investigation
team, possibly snowballing into calls from Congress to end the investigation.
So now we turn our attention to the newly-indicted group of
twelve Russian officers, intelligence agents, or “spies”
(take your pick) who allegedly hacked into Democrat party servers. The timing of these indictments is truly a
“magician’s trick”.
The purpose of this misdirection of substituting a new group
of patsies for the old forgotten ones is that they will almost certainly never
show up for a trial, as opposed to the inconvenient appearance of the previous
defendants. The new defendants can be proudly
displayed as shining examples of the effectiveness and competence of the
Mueller investigation, which will allow it to extend its existence into
perpetuity.
The Mueller team will never have to present their
“evidence”, which appears to be even more questionable than the previous data
dump of Russian garbage.
As Sundance
explains:
The entire indictment…is
based on the premise of the FBI conducting some -unexplained and
unsubstantiated - form of forensic data-analysis to formulate their detailed
conclusions.
However, can anyone explain how this FBI forensic data-analysis
was possible when the FBI was never allowed access to the DCCC, DNC and Clinton
Campaign servers?
Hmmm. Could be that
aliens in league with US intelligence agencies performed the analysis. Or it could be just plain old dishonesty,
corruption and/or incompetence within the Mueller/FBI/DOJ /CIA presidential
coup cabal. But whatever corruption and
incompetence may exist in the Great Russian Witch-Hunt, I’m confident our
trustworthy media masters will make it soon be forgotten.
Andrew Thomas
as published in American Thinker
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