Timeline of investigations into Donald Trump and Russia (2020–2022)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This is a timeline of events from 2020 to 2022 related to investigations into the many suspicious links between Trump associates and Russian officials and spies relating to the Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections. It follows the timeline of Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections, both before and after July 2016, until November 8, 2016, election day, the transition, the first and second halves of 2017, the first and second halves of 2018, and the first and second halves of 2019.

These events are related to, but distinct from, Russian interference in the 2020 United States elections.

Relevant individuals and organizations

This is a list of individuals and organizations that have been involved in the events related to either the election interference that Russia conducted against the 2016 U.S. elections and/or the resulting investigations into suspected inappropriate links between associates of Donald Trump and Russian officials. Seth Abramson estimated more than 400 people could be listed here.[1]: 3 

A–E

F–M

N–R

S–Z

2019

2020

January

  • Early January: Prosecutors recommended Flynn serve up to six months in jail; which is overruled on January 29, when new a sentencing recommendation asks for only probation for Flynn.[10]
  • January 3: Oral arguments in the House's suit against the Justice Department over access to unredacted grand jury testimony in the Mueller probe.[11] and in the McGahn case.[12] The possibility of gun battles is discussed.[13]
  • January 4: Mueller records show that Manafort admits to link from Russian intelligence to origins of Ukraine investigation.[14]
  • January 7: Prosecutors recommend prison time for Flynn.[15]
  • January 14: Flynn asks to withdraw his guilty plea.[16]
  • January 15:
    • The House votes to send the articles of impeachment to the Senate.[17]
    • Pelosi signs the articles of impeachment, and the House managers formally deliver the articles to the Senate.[18]
  • January 16:
    • The impeachment trial of Donald Trump begins with the swearing in of Chief Justice John Roberts and 99 of the 100 senators. The senators then unanimously vote to issue a summons requiring President Trump respond in writing by the evening of Saturday, January 18, to the charges against him. The Senate then adjourns until the morning of January 20.[19]
    • Flynn sentencing is postponed yet again after he asks to withdraw his guilty plea.[20]

February

  • February 5:
Senate Intelligence report on Russia Interference volume 3: U.S. Government Response to Russian Activities
  • February 6: The Senate Intelligence Committee releases volume three of its report on Russian election interference.[26]
  • February 7:
    • Alexander Vindman fired,[27] and his brother Yevgeny is escorted out of the White House and removed from his position.[28]
    • Trump fires Sondland.[29]
  • February 10:
    • Judge indefinitely postpones Flynn sentencing.[30]
    • In a sentencing memo filing, federal prosecutors recommend Stone serve 7–9 years.[31]
    • Schumer calls on all 74 inspectors general to investigate retaliation against whistleblowers who report presidential misconduct, after the firing of Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman.[32][33][34]
  • February 11:
    • Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) blocks three election security bills.[35]
    • Under Trump's pressure, the DoJ abruptly moves to seek a shorter prison sentence for Stone.[36]
  • February 12:
    • Trump defends Stone in a series of tweets while attacking federal judge Amy Berman Jackson and the prosecutors involved in the case, and confirms that Barr intervened in Stone's sentencing recommendation. Trump also implies Judge Jackson is biased because of her role in the sentencing of Manafort and dismissal of a lawsuit against Hillary Clinton.[37][38]
    • Trump withdraws Jessie K. Liu's nomination to become the Treasury Department's terrorism and financial crimes undersecretary because of her office's handling of the Stone and Flynn cases.[39][40][41][42]
    • All four federal prosecutors resign from Stone's case after Barr's Justice Department announced that it planned to reduce its own sentencing recommendation.[43][44][45][46]
    • It is reported Judge Jackson denied Stone's request for a new trial.[47]
    • Jessie K. Liu resigns.[48][49]
  • February 14:
  • February 17: More than 2,000 DoJ officials and former prosecutors call for Barr's resignation.[53]
  • February 18: The Washington Post reports that the Federal Judges Association, representing 1,100 life-term federal judges, has called an emergency meeting that "could not wait" regarding Barr.[54][55]
  • February 19: Assange's barrister alleged at Westminster Magistrates' Court that Rohrabacher had visited Assange at the Ecuadorian embassy in August 2017 and, on instructions from President Trump, offered a pardon if Assange said Russia had no role in the 2016 Democratic National Committee email leaks. White House Press Secretary Stephanie Grisham denied the allegations.[56] Rohrabacher had previously confirmed the August 16 meeting, saying he and Assange talked about "what might be necessary to get him out" and discussed a presidential pardon in exchange for information on the theft of DNC emails that were published by WikiLeaks before the 2016 presidential election.[57]
  • February 20: Roger Stone sentenced to 40 months in prison, a $20,000 fine, and two years of supervised release.[58]
  • February 21:
  • February 23: Judge Jackson strongly rejects Stone's attorneys' request that she remove herself from Stone's case before ruling on a pending request to delay the beginning of Stone's prison sentence.[61] She castigates the attorneys for using the court to air meritless claims that she is biased against Stone.[61]
  • February 25: Federal judge Amy Berman Jackson rebukes Trump regarding his comments on Stone jury.[62]
  • February 27: The Senate Intelligence Committee interviews Emin Agalarov.[63]: 262, 281, 285, 287–288, 292, 296, 311, 346, 351, 657–658 
  • February 28: D.C. Cir. rules 2–1 in favor of appeal overturning a lower court's decision requiring McGahn's testimony.[64][65][66][67]

March

  • March 5:
    • House lawyers announce appeal of February 28 Circuit court ruling.[68]
    • Judge Reggie Walton calls Barr "unreliable" and that Barr's public statements about the Mueller report "distorted" and "misleading". Walton cited "inconsistencies" between Barr's statements and the public, partially redacted version of the report, saying Barr's "lack of candor" called "into question [his] credibility and, in turn, the department's"; demands unredacted Mueller report for review.[69][70][71]
  • March 6: Regarding the February 28 Circuit court ruling, House lawyers argue that blocking lawmakers from suing to obtain information from the executive branch would leave Congress with little choice but to "direct its sergeant at arms to arrest current and former high-level executive branch officials for failing to respond to subpoenas."[72][73]
  • March 9: The Australian Information Commissioner sues Facebook for allegedly breaching the privacy of over 300,000 Australians when it gave Cambridge Analytica access to their data.[74]
  • March 10: D.C. Cir. federal appeals court permits access by the House to grand jury Mueller probe evidence from the DoJ, including redactions as well as underlying interviews and memos. The ruling can be appealed to the full court or to the Supreme Court.[75][76][77]
  • March 13: On appeal from the House, the full Court agrees to reconsider the McGahn congressional subpoena case.[78]
  • March 16: The charges against Concord Management and Consulting are dismissed with prejudice.[79][80]
  • March 23: Barr's scheduled March 31 testimony before the House Judiciary Committee is postponed indefinitely due to the COVID-19 pandemic. He was scheduled to testify regarding three topics: overruling prosecutors on Roger Stone's recommended sentence, the arrangement for Giuliani to provide information on Ukraine, and the pulled nomination of Jessie K. Liu.[81][82] The GOP-majority Senate had previously asked Barr not to testify about the Justice Department's decision to reduce Stone's sentencing recommendation.[83][84][85]

April

Report of the Select Committee on Intelligence United States Senate on Russian Active Measures Campaigns and Interference in the 2016 U. S. Election, Volume 4 - Review of the Intelligence Community Assessment with Additional Views
  • April 21: A bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee report reaffirms the U.S. intelligence community's conclusions that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election with the goal of making Trump president. The report rejects Trump's repeated claims that a "deep state" intelligence community was biased against him and that Kremlin assistance to his campaign was a "hoax," perpetrated by Democrats. The committee found "specific intelligence reporting to support the assessment that Putin and the Russian Government demonstrated a preference for candidate Trump," and that Vladimir Putin "approved and directed" aspects of the interference.[89][90][91][92][93][94]
  • April 26: Trump tweets, then deletes, a series of Twitter attacks against journalists who received awards for their reporting on Trump/Russia and the Mueller probe.[95]
  • April 28:
    • Oral arguments in the McGahn case are heard before the full US Court of Appeals.[96]
    • Nearly three-dozen search warrants of Stone are unsealed, which reveal contacts between Stone, Assange, and other key 2016 Russian interference figures; and that Stone orchestrated hundreds of fake Facebook accounts and bloggers to run a political influence scheme on social media.[97][98][99]

May

  • May 1: In her first press briefing, White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany incorrectly states the Mueller probe is "the complete and total exoneration of President Trump."[100]
  • May 7:
  • May 13: Manafort released from prison early due to COVID-19 concerns. He will spend the rest of his sentence in home confinement.[108]
  • May 21: Cohen released from prison early due to COVID-19 concerns. He will spend the rest of his sentence in home confinement.[109]
  • May 28: The New York Times reports that Mueller's team investigated Trump campaign foreign policy adviser Walid Phares' ties to the Egyptian government.[110]
  • May 29: The Justice Department delivers the Flynn-Kislyak phone call transcripts to Congress.[111] The transcripts were first requested on February 15, 2017.[112]

June

  • June 1: A judge in the Flynn case refuses to dismiss it. The Justice Department announces that it will appeal.[113]
  • June 3: Rosenstein testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee in a hearing reviewing the FBI and Mueller investigations into contacts between the 2016 Trump campaign and Russians.[114]
  • June 10:
    Amicus curiae brief filed by John Gleeson on whether prosecutors should be allowed to drop the guilty plea by Michael T. Flynn, and whether Flynn should be charged with perjury.
    Judge Gleeson advises Judge Sullivan that he should reinstate the charges against Flynn.[115]
  • June 19: The Justice Department releases a new version of the Mueller report[116][117][118] without redactions for portions about Stone.[119]
  • June 23:
    • The Room Where It Happened by John Bolton is published.[120]
    • Stone's attorneys request that Stone delay the start of his prison sentence from June 30 to September 3 over COVID-19 concerns; five prisoners at the federal prison camp in Georgia that Stone was scheduled to report to have tested positive.[121] The DoJ declines to oppose the motion.[121] Judge Jackson orders the DoJ to explain its position in writing.[121]
  • June 24:
    • Court of Appeals orders Judge Sullivan to dismiss Flynn case.[122]
    • Mueller investigation prosecutor Aaron Zelinski tells the House Judiciary Committee that four Justice Department supervisors told him to reduce the Stone sentencing recommendation because they were under political pressure.[123]
  • June 26: Judge Jackson orders Stone to surrender himself at FCI Jesup in Georgia on July 14 to begin his prison sentence.[124] She orders Stone to remain under confinement in his southern Florida home until then so that he can quarantine himself before traveling to Georgia in accordance with DoJ policy.[124]
  • June 30: Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN) files H.R. 1032, impeaching Attorney General Barr for misusing his office in relation to the Russia investigation.[125]

July

  • Summer: Acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Michael Sherwin closes an investigation into whether a state-owned Egyptian bank financed Trump's $10 million loan to his campaign on October 29, 2016.[126]
  • July 2: Supreme Court grants cert on Mueller grand jury materials case.[127]
  • July 6:
    • Roger Stone's attorneys petition D.C. appeals court to delay Stone's prison sentence.[128]
    • U.S. District Judge Karen Schreier sentences Erickson to seven years in federal prison plus three years of supervised release for wire fraud and money laundering. Erickson's lawyer asks for home confinement instead of prison because Erickson's recent heart valve replacement can make him more susceptible to complications from COVID-19, but Judge Schreier rejects the request noting that Erickson entered the courtroom without wearing a mask so he must not be concerned about becoming infected. The judge orders Erickson to report to prison on July 20.[129]
  • July 9:
    • Former SDNY US Attorney Geoffrey Berman testifies before the House Judiciary Committee.[130]
    • The Supreme Court rules on Trump subpoenas, sending them back to the lower courts.[131]
    • Judge Sullivan, through his attorney, Beth Wilkinson, files a petition for an en banc review of Flynn's case by the entire D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, arguing that the three-judge panel was improperly trying to force the district court "to grant a motion it had not yet resolved ... in reliance on arguments never presented to the district court."[132][133]
    • Michael Cohen is sent back to prison following violations of his home confinement terms.
  • July 10:
    Executive Grant of Clemency for Roger Jason Stone, Jr.
    Trump commutes Stone's sentence after the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled earlier in the day that Stone is ineligible for a delayed sentence.[134][135]
  • July 13: Judge Jackson orders prosecutors and Stone to provide her with a copy of Trump's commutation order so that she can determine which parts of Stone's sentence are affected by it.[136]
  • July 17: The DoJ provides the Senate Intelligence Committee with an unclassified but redacted copy of the interview report on the FBI's January 24–26, 2017, interview of Igor Danchenko, a primary source for the Steele dossier, about the information he provided to Steele.[137][138] Danchenko's name is redacted in the report because he is a confidential informant, but the report contains sufficient information for people to determine his identity and make it public a few days later.[137]
  • July 20: Cohen files suit against Barr alleging that his incarceration is a violation of his First Amendment rights.
  • July 23: Judge Hellerstein orders that Cohen be re-released to home confinement.
  • July 28: Barr testifies before the House Judiciary Committee.[139] He says that his intervention in Stone's case was "one-of-a-kind".
  • July 30: Full DC Court of Appeals voids Flynn's writ of mandamus and sets further hearing for two weeks hence.[140]

August

  • August 3: Manhattan D.A. Cyrus Vance Jr. announces that he is investigating Trump and The Trump Organization for fraud.[141]
  • August 5: Former Acting Attorney General Sally Yates testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee, refuting accusations of partisan fraud in relation to the probe of potential collusion with Russia by the Trump campaign in 2016.[142]
  • August 6: Completing an investigation two years earlier in relation to Maria Butina and Russian infiltration of the National Rifle Association of America, NY Attorney General Letitia James files lawsuit to dissolve the organization and penalize its leadership.[143]
  • August 7: The full D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals rules 7-2 that Congress has standing to seek court enforcement of a subpoena for McGahn's testimony, reversing a three-judge panel's February 28 ruling.[144] In the majority opinion,[145] D.C. Circuit Judge Judith Rogers writes, "To level the grave accusation that a President may have committed 'Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors,' the House must be appropriately informed. And it cannot fully inform itself without the power to compel the testimony of those who possess relevant or necessary information."[144] Karen Henderson and Thomas B. Griffith, who were the majority on the original panel, dissented.
  • August 11: Hearing on Flynn case by full Court of Appeals.[146]
  • August 14: Former FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith pleads guilty to falsifying a document that was part of the investigation into Russia's interference in the 2016 election. Clinesmith admitted to altering an email in order to continue a secret wiretap on former Trump 2016 campaign adviser Carter Page. Trump called Clinesmith "corrupt" and said the plea deal was "just the beginning".[147]
  • August 17: Stone drops the appeal of his federal felony convictions.[148]
  • August 18:
    Report of the Select Committee on Intelligence United States Senate on Russian Active Measures Campaigns and Interference in the 2016 U. S. Election, Volume 5 - Counterintelligence Threats and Vulnerabilities
    The Senate Intelligence Committee, after three years, finally issues its report on Russian interference in the 2016 election. The report finds that Paul Manafort shared polling data with Konstantin Kilimnik.[149] The acting Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Marco Rubio issued a statement saying that the committee "found absolutely no evidence that then-candidate Donald Trump or his campaign colluded with the Russian government to meddle in the 2016 election."[150][151]
  • August 20: Judge throws out Trump's challenge to Vance's subpoena.[152]
  • August 21: Durham interviews Brennan for eight hours. Brennan tells him that Trump and Barr have politicized Durham's work.[153]
  • August 24: 2020 Republican National Convention. Trump is renominated for a second term.
  • August 31:
    • Flynn appeal is reversed, 8–2.[154][155]
    • Three judge panel voids Full Appeals court ruling in the McGahn case.[156] The House Judiciary committee announces another en banc appeal.[155]

September

  • September 1: Three-judge panel temporarily blocks Vance's subpoena for the president's taxes until hearing on September 25.[157]
  • September 9: House Judiciary committee files to have second en banc hearing on McGahn case.[158]
  • September 11:
    • Judge Gleeson strongly recommends denying the DOJ motion to dismiss the Flynn case.[159] He calls the request to drop the case a "corrupt and politically motivated favor unworthy of our justice system."[160]
    • Nora Dannehy, a top aide to John Durham's counter-investigation, resigns amid concerns about pressure from Barr.[161]
  • September 14: NBC News reports that the Justice Department inspector general is investigating the reduced sentence recommendation for Stone.[162]
  • September 15: Prosecutors request a delay in the start of Calk's trial after finding 29,858 documents related to the case in Mueller's office.[163]
  • September 27:
    • Fox News reports that the Durham report will not be released until after the election.[164]
    • The New York Times publishes a report stating that it has obtained at least two decades worth of tax return data for Trump, showing that he "paid no income taxes at all in 10 of the previous 15 years – largely because he reported losing much more money than he made" and that Trump engaged in "a decade-long audit battle with the Internal Revenue Service over the legitimacy of a $72.9 million tax refund that he claimed, and received, after declaring huge losses".[165] Trump calls the Times story "fake news".[166]
  • September 29: During a hearing in the Flynn case, Flynn's attorney Sidney Powell acknowledges that she had "a number of discussions with the President" about the case and had asked him not to pardon Flynn.[167]
  • September 30:
    • Senate Judiciary Committee to hear testimony from James Comey regarding the origins of the Russia probe, including abuses of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.[168]
    • Judge Walton rules that the Justice Department improperly redacted portions of the Mueller report and must release those sections by November 2.[169]

October

  • October 6:
    • US attorney heading up Flynn unmasking probe resigns from Justice Department.[170]
    • Trump tweets[171][172] that he has declassified all Russia probe information.[173][174]
  • October 7:
    • Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit rules that Trump must hand over his tax returns to Manhattan prosecutors.[175]
    • Flynn moves to disqualify Judge Sullivan.[176][177]
    • The Justice Department tells Judge Sullivan that a document it is relying upon to argue for dismissal of Flynn's case was "inadvertently" altered by a "sticky note" placed on the document before it was scanned.[178]
    • Axios reports that Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe authorized the release to Durham of almost 1,000 pages of classified material on the Obama administration's 2016 Russia investigation.[179]
  • October 12: Fox News agrees to pay the parents of Seth Rich millions of dollars to settle a defamation lawsuit they filed over a May 2017 report the news service retracted a week later that claimed their son provided DNC emails to WikiLeaks before he died in July 2016.[180] A provision of the settlement requires that it be kept secret until after the November 2020 election.[181]
  • October 13:
    • In response to FOIA suit, the Justice Department refuses to declassify documents from the Russia investigations despite Trump's claim that he had already done so.[182]
    • Trump requests a stay from the Supreme Court on the October 7 ruling by the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit on his tax returns.[183]
  • October 16:
    • Judge Walton demands that either the Justice Department or the White House counsel's office explain the validity of Trump's October 6 tweet stating that he had declassified all documents relating to the Russian investigations.[184][185]
    • Nunes drops McClatchy from his April 8, 2019 defamation lawsuit against the company and Republican political consultant Liz Mair. He cites McClatchy's recent bankruptcy as the reason for dropping the company from the suit.[186]
  • October 20: Mark Meadows confirms Trump's tweets "declassifying" Russia documents were false.[187]
  • October 22: A New York state appeals court upholds the December 18, 2019, decision by a lower court to throw out the March 13, 2019, charges against Manafort on the grounds that they violate New York's double jeopardy law.[188]
  • October 23: Judge Sullivan orders the Justice Department to review its filings in the Flynn case and certify by October 26 whether any were manipulated.[189]
  • October 26: A Justice Department filing in the Flynn case says that attorneys for McCabe and Strzok confirmed two sets of their handwritten notes filed in the case are valid and unaltered. Correspondence between the attorneys shows that they refused to confirm the validity of the notes.[190]
  • October 30:
    • The Justice Department releases a tranche of FBI documents related to the Mueller investigation in response to a FOIA request by BuzzFeed News and CNN.[191]
    • The U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) refuses a FOIA request to release over 100 correspondence documents about Michael Flynn sent between DIA employees and Mueller's office.[192]

November

  • November 3: End of voting in the 2020 presidential election. The start of voting is dependent on state laws. Trump, as well as his campaign and his proxies begin attempts to overturn the 2020 United States presidential election
  • November 4: Trump prematurely proclaims victory in the presidential election, stating "A very sad group of people is trying to disenfranchise [those voters who voted for me] ... As far as I'm concerned we already have won this".[193]
  • November 7: Joe Biden is declared the winner of the 2020 presidential election by a consensus of mainstream media outlets.
  • November 10: McCabe testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee in its investigation of the origins of the Russia probe.[194]
  • November 20: The Supreme Court postpones its scheduled December 2 hearing on House access to Mueller's secret grand jury material. House attorneys requested a postponement so that the new Congress seated in January can decide whether to continue the case.[195]
  • November 25:
    Presidential pardon of Michael T. Flynn
    Trump pardons Flynn.[196][197]
  • November 30: The Justice Department files a motion to dismiss Flynn's case along with a copy of his presidential pardon. The motion claims that the pardon moots the case.[198]

December

  • December 8: Judge Sullivan dismisses the Flynn criminal case as moot because of Flynn's pardon. In his opinion, the judge writes that the Justice Department's previous arguments for dismissing the case were "dubious to say the least."[199]
  • December 11: The U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals hears oral arguments in the Justice Department's appeal of the September 23, 2019, overturning of Kian's conviction for failing to register as a foreign agent.[200]
  • December 16: The House Judiciary Committee informs the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals that it will reissue the McGahn subpoena in the next congressional term.[201]
  • December 22: Trump pardons Papadopoulos and van der Zwaan.[202]
  • December 23: Trump pardons Manafort and Stone.[203]

2021

January

  • January 6: Date of the 2021 United States Capitol attack.
  • January 13: Trump is impeached by the House of the Representatives 232–197 in his second impeachment on one charge of incitement of insurrection in relation to his conduct during the 2021 United States Capitol attack.
  • January 19: Trump pardons 143 people, including Paul Erickson, who had been sentenced to seven years for fraud.[204][205]
  • January 20: Joe Biden is inaugurated as the 46th President of the United States.
  • January 27: The Department of Defense inspector general closes its investigation opened on April 27, 2017, into whether Flynn received emoluments from Russia and Turkey, and forwards the results to acting Secretary of the Army John E. Whitley for review.[206] The investigation had been put on hold until Trump pardoned Flynn.[206]
  • January 29: Judge Boasberg sentences Clinesmith to 12 months of probation and 400 hours of community service for altering an email submitted with a June 2017 FISA warrant application for surveillance of Carter Page.[207]

February

  • February 8: The New York Times reports that the New York Court of Appeals refused to hear an appeal of the October 22, 2020, ruling upholding the dismissal of state charges against Manafort.[208]
  • February 13: Trump is acquitted by the Senate 57–43 in his second impeachment trial on one charge of incitement of insurrection in relation to his conduct during the 2021 United States Capitol attack.
  • February 17: The Justice Department asks the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals to delay oral arguments in the McGahn subpoena case by one and a half months to allow the Biden administration to negotiate an accommodation. The House Judiciary Committee opposes the request because it could lead to further litigation and delays.[209]
  • February 18: The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals delays oral arguments in the McGahn subpoena case to April 27.[210][211]
  • February 25: The FBI offers a $250,000 reward for information leading to the arrest of Kilimnik.[212]

March

  • March 5: The Justice Department files a superseding indictment against Calk adding an additional charge of conspiracy to commit financial institution bribery.[213]
  • March 12: The Department of Defense inspector general office announces that it closed its investigation into Flynn receiving foreign emoluments on January 27.[206]
  • March 18: A three-judge panel of the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously reinstates Kian's July 23, 2019, conviction for failing to register as a foreign agent.[214] The appeals court rejects the trial court judge's reasons for overturning the jury decision on September 24, 2019.[214]

April

  • April 15: The U.S. sanctions Kilimnik for interfering in U.S. elections.[215][216] For the first time, the U.S. government explicitly states that Kilimnik passed the Trump campaign data he received from Manafort to the Russian government.[217]
  • April 22: The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals delays oral arguments in the McGahn subpoena case to May 19 at the request of the Justice Department.[218] The court warns the Justice Department that this is the last delay that will be granted without exceptional circumstances.[218]
  • April 27: The full panel of the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals refuses to rehear the appeal of Kian's overturned conviction, which a three-judge panel reinstated on March 18, 2021.[219]

May

  • May 3:
    • Judge Jackson orders the Justice Department to release the March 24, 2019, memorandum from the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) to Attorney General Barr providing the legal justification for not charging Trump with obstruction of justice despite the evidence provided in the Mueller Report.[220][221] She found that the Justice Department lied to the court in its justification for withholding the document from a FOIA request filed by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington on April 18, 2019.[220][221]
    • In separate letters, the Justice Department informs reporters Ellen Nakashima, Greg Miller, and Adam Entous that the department secretly obtained their phone records in 2020 for the time period April 15 through July 31, 2017.[8] All three were reporting on Trump and Russia for The Washington Post at the time.[8]
  • May 11: McGahn's and the House Judiciary Committee's lawyers inform the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals that they have reached an accommodation and will be requesting the court to remove the May 19 hearing from the court's calendar.[222][223] The filing notes that Trump is not a party to the agreement.[222][223]
  • May 24: The Justice Department informs Judge Jackson that they are appealing her May 3 order to release the unredacted version of the OLC memo justifying Barr's decision not to prosecute Trump.[224][225]

June

  • June 2:
    • The Justice Department informs The New York Times that in 2020 they seized phone records for Times reporters Matt Apuzzo, Adam Goldman, Eric Lichtblau, and Michael S. Schmidt from the time period January 14 to April 30, 2017.[9] At the time, the four were reporting on Comey and the Clinton email investigation.[9]
    • Reality Winner, the former NSA contractor who pleaded guilty in 2017 to giving The Intercept a top-secret document about Russian hackers targeting U.S. election systems, is transferred from prison to a halfway house.[226]
  • June 4: McGahn gives closed-door testimony to the House Judiciary Committee, with questions restricted to matters discussed in the unredacted version of the Mueller Report.[227]
  • June 10: It is reported that prosecutors in the Justice Administration during the presidency of Donald Trump subpoenaed Apple in 2018 in order to obtain metadata from Schiff and Swalwell who were members of the House Intelligence Committee. as well as aides and their family members, including one minor as part of an effort to find the source of leaks of classified information in the early years of the Trump administration. The data did not tie the House Intelligence committee to the leaks.[228][229][230] During an interview on The Rachel Maddow Show Schiff called for an inspector general investigation of the Trump Justice Department calling the seizure of data a "terrible abuse of power." House Speaker Nancy Pelosi also backed calls for an investigation stating "These actions appear to be yet another egregious assault on our democracy waged by the former president."[231]
  • June 11: Justice Department Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz announces that he will review the department's use of subpoenas to secretly access reporter's, lawmaker's, and at least one of their family member's communications records from 2017 and 2018.[232]
  • June 22: Calk's trial for bribing Manafort with $16 million in high-risk loans to get a Trump administration position is scheduled to begin in the Southern District of New York.[213]

September

  • September 20: Jesse Benton and Doug Wead (dies in December) pleaded not guilty in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia to charges of making a straw donation to the Trump campaign in 2016 on behalf of a Russian national.[233][234]

2022

August

  • August 7: Business Insider publishes an interview with Manafort in which he admits that he gave polling data to Kilimnik on August 2, 2016.[235][236]
  • August 19: A federal appeals court rules that the Justice Department must publicize an internal memo that was ordered by William Barr that detailed if Donald Trump should have been charged with Obstruction of Justice following the Mueller Report.[237]

November

  • November 17: Jesse Benton is found guilty on six counts related to illegal campaign contributions to Trump's 2016 campaign. Benton had bought a $25,000 ticket to the Republican National Convention's (RNC) 2016 event on behalf of a Russian individual without disclosing his nationality to the Trump campaign. On February 17, 2023, Benton is sentenced to 18 months in prison.[238][239]

See also

References

  1. ^ Abramson, Seth (November 13, 2018). Proof of Collusion: How Trump Betrayed America. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1982116088. It crosses continents and decades and has swept into its vortex more than four hundred people, millions of pages of financial records, and scores of unanswered questions about the state of our democracy. Index for Proof of Collusion.
  2. ^ Dilanian, Ken; Lebedeva, Natasha; Jackson, Hallie (July 14, 2017). "Former Soviet Counterintelligence Officer at Meeting With Donald Trump Jr. and Russian Lawyer". NBC News. Archived from the original on July 14, 2017. Retrieved January 10, 2020.
  3. ^ Cohen, Marshall; Kopan, Tal; Chan, Adam; Devine, Curt (July 15, 2017). "The new figure in the Trump-Russia controversy: Rinat Akhmetshin". CNN. Archived from the original on July 15, 2017.
  4. ^ Miller, James (April 13, 2017). "Trump and Russia: All the Mogul's Men". The Daily Beast. Archived from the original on June 7, 2017. Retrieved October 25, 2019.
  5. ^ Polantz, Katelyn; Perez, Evan (March 30, 2018). "Source: Mueller pushed for Gates' help on collusion". CNN.
  6. ^ Stephanopoulos, George; Mosk, Matthew (March 5, 2018). "Russia Investigation Romance: Key witness George Papadopoulos marries Italian lawyer". ABC News. Retrieved July 9, 2018.
  7. ^ "Advisory Council". Center for the National Interest. Archived from the original on October 30, 2016. Retrieved July 24, 2019.
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