RealClearInvestigations' Picks of the Week Feb.11to Feb. 17 Featured Investigation With this week's indictments of 13 Russian citizens and three Russian companies over meddling in the U.S. presidential election, but still and yet no formal charges that Americans knowingly colluded, it's worth asking now more than ever: What kind of Scandal-Gate is this? Here's a name many Americans would buy into: Boomerang-Gate, since the scandal keeps swooping back on those who launched it. As Paul Sperry reported forRealClearInvestigationsthis week, HouseIntelligence Committee Chairman DevinNunesis examiningthe roleCIA Director John Brennan and other Obama intelligence officials played in promoting the salacious and unverified Steele dossier on Donald Trump-including whether Brennan perjured himself in public testimony about it. The aide, who spoke only on condition of anonymity, saidNuneswill focus on Brennan as well as President Obama's first CIA director, Leon Panetta, along with the former president's intelligence czar, James Clapper, and national security adviser, Susan Rice, and security adviser-turned-U.N. ambassador Samantha Power, among other intelligence officials. "John Brennan did more than anyone to promulgate the dirty dossier," the investigator said. "He politicized and effectively weaponized whatwas false intelligenceagainst Trump."… Several Capitol Hill sources say Brennan, a fiercely loyal Obama appointee, talked up the dossier to Democratic leaders, as well as the press, during the campaign. They say he also fed allegations about Trump-Russia contacts directly to the FBI, while pressuring the bureau to conduct an investigation of several Trump campaign figures starting in the summer of 2016.
Apart from the fact that the CIA Director was trumpeting a dossier that former FBI Director JamesComeyhas described as "salacious and unverified," Brennan'sactivities may put him in legal jeopardy. In May 2017, Sperry reported, "Brennan also swore that he did not know who commissioned the anti-Trump research document (testimony excerpt here),even though senior national security and counterintelligence officials at the Justice Department and FBI knew the previous year that the dossier was funded by the Hillary Clinton campaign." Read Full Article Other Noteworthy Articles and Series Robust D.C. Home Prices All About Federal Power, Power, Power RealClearInvestigations The real economy may governMainStreet, but it has little sway in the nation's capital. Thanks to the never-ending flow of tax dollars, recessions are eventsdistrict insiders mostlyhear about on the news. One place to see this D.C. Difference istheWashington real estate market, which is a bubble that never bursts.Values in both luxury homes and the broader market tend to hold their ground and appreciate in value over time - providing a less obvious leg up in life's most important personal investment to those within the federal government's orbit. His Cheatin' Art: Playmate on Trump's System of Infidelity New Yorker Fasten your seat belts: Donald Trumpmay havecheated on his wives before he was elected president! Then, he tried to hide his infidelity! This article "provides a detailed look at how Trump and his allies used clandestine hotel-room meetings, payoffs, and complex legal agreements to keep affairs—sometimes multiple affairs he carried out simultaneously—out of the press." Call it the art of the kiss and no tell. First-Class Travel Marks Pruitt's EPA Tenure Washington Post Unlike his predecessors, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt often flies in business or first classon official business, racking up big bills at taxpayer expense. In one three-day period last June, he bought a first-class, round-trip ticket between Washington and New York ($1,641.42); flew with President Trump on Air Force One to Cincinnati (free), beforeusinga militaryjet to get to New York ($36,068.50) where he had a first-class seats on commercial flights to and from Rome ($7,0003.52). Federal regulations require officials to "consider the least expensive class oftravel that meets their needs." The IRS Is Coming for Your Passports National Review Beginning this month, the Internal Revenue Service will begin denying passports to some American citizens who owe at least $50,000 in unpaid taxesand, in some cases, revoking the passports of Americans with tax delinquencies.Kevin Williamson also reports that there is "no appeal, no procedural remedy in the law, no redress for those who have been wrongly targeted." Big Decline in the Black Incarceration Rate Washington Post The decline in the U.S. imprisonment rate is producinga"a sizable and surprising racial disparity": African-Americans are benefitting from the national de-incarceration trend as whites serve time at increasingly higher rates. The rate of imprisonment among African-American men has tumbled 22 percent since 2000, while the rate for white men is 4 percent higher than it was in 2000. As a result, the racial disparity has shrunk by nearly one quarter. Nurses and Cooks Fill In for Federal Prison Guards USA Today Hundreds of secretaries, teachers, counselors, cooks and medical staffers were tapped last year to fill guard posts by the Bureau of Prisonsbecause of acute officer shortages and overtime limits at prisons run by the federal department. The moves were made despite repeated warnings that the assignments placed unprepared employees at risk. And thepractice has continued for years even though the agency has been rebuked by Congress and federallabor arbitrators. Texas: How a SWAT Team Killed a Police Shooter Dallas News Apeacefulprotest against police violence turned deadly in Dallas in July 2016, when a lone gunman murdered five officers, wounding nine others along with two civilians. Thisdeeply reportedarticle combines a strong narrative with maps, drawings, photographs, videosandotheralternative story forms, to focus ontheSWAT team'shours-long effort to subdue the heavily armed shooter after he was trapped in a school- long enough to explode a bomb near him. Hungry? You Could Eat a Horse 1843 Magazine In our judge-not world of moral relativism,gastronomy may be the last realm with strong and numerous taboos. Would you eat a dog?Or a cat?How aboutSecretariat?In some parts of Italy horse meat - orcarniequine, which sounds better to our era, anyway - is becoming popular. One restaurant offers amanecourse of "Horse Three Ways" ("French tartare, a slice of roasted horse andpesto dicavallo."). Fans say it'stasty and low-fat and nothing anyone should have a cow over. |