Timeline of investigations into Donald Trump and Russia (2019)
This is a timeline of events in 2019 related to investigations into links between associates of Donald Trump and Russian officials that are suspected of being inappropriate, 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 followed by 2020 and 2021.
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President of the United States
Impeachments
Interactions involving Russia Business and personal |
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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
- Aras Agalarov, Azerbaijani-Russian billionaire oligarch and President of the Crocus Group, close to both Trump and Vladimir Putin
- Emin Agalarov, Russian pop singer, and son of Aras
- Zainab Ahmad, associate of Robert Mueller
- Rinat Akhmetshin, Russian-American lobbyist and former Soviet counterintelligence officer[2] who emigrated to the U.S. in 1994[3]
- Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Crown Prince of the United Arab Emirates
- Justin Amash, U.S. Representative for Michigan's 3rd congressional district, first Republican to call for Donald Trump's impeachment, became an Independent July 4, 2019
- Greg Andres, associate of Robert Mueller
- Tevfik Arif, Soviet-born Turkish real estate developer and investor, founder of the Bayrock Group
- Andrii Artemenko, Ukrainian member of parliament
- Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks
- Arron Banks, primary funder and co-founder of Leave.EU campaign
- Stephen K. Bannon, Breitbart News chairman (2012–2016), Trump campaign CEO (August–November 2016), and White House Chief Strategist (January–August 2017)
- William Barr, United States Attorney General (1990–1993, February 2019 – December 2020), head of the United States Department of Justice (DoJ)
- Joe Biden, 46th President of the United States (2021–present); Vice President of the United States (2009–2017)
- James E. Boasberg, District Judge of the District Court for the District of Columbia
- John R. Bolton, National Security Advisor (April 2018 – September 2019)
- John O. Brennan, Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) (2013–2017)
- Richard Burr, North Carolina Senator (R), chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee
- Maria Butina, founder of "Right to Bear Arms" and associate of Alexander Torshin
- Steve Calk, banker who helped Paul Manafort and Rick Gates steal and launder money
- Cambridge Analytica, a now defunct political consulting, data mining, and analysis firm that worked for Trump's campaign; its parent company was SCL Group
- Christian Cantor, Israeli diplomat in London
- Michael Caputo, former chief of communications in New York for the Trump Campaign, contracted to perform public relations work for Putin in 2000[4]
- James Clapper, Director of National Intelligence (DNI) (2010–2017)
- Kevin Clinesmith, FBI lawyer
- Hillary Clinton, 2016 Democratic presidential nominee, Secretary of State (2009–2013), First Lady of the United States (1993–2001)
- Sam Clovis, former co-chairman and policy adviser for the Trump campaign
- Dan Coats, Director of National Intelligence (since March 2017)
- Michael Cohen, Donald Trump's personal attorney (2006–2018)
- Columbus Nova, the American investment arm of Viktor Vekselberg's business empire
- James B. Comey, 7th Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) (2013–2017)
- Concord Management and Consulting, accused of funding a troll farm that interfered in the 2016 election
- Rafael Correa, former Ecuadorian president
- Jerome Corsi, American political commentator and associate of Roger Stone
- Gregory Craig, former Obama White House counsel
- Randy Credico, American perennial political candidate
- Rick Dearborn, White House Deputy Chief of Staff (January 20, 2017 – March 16, 2018) and executive director of Trump's presidential transition team
- Oleg Deripaska, Russian oligarch, aluminum magnate with close ties to Putin
- Kirill Dmitriev, CEO of the Russian Direct Investment Fund
- Annie Donaldson, former Deputy White House Counsel\
- Alexander Downer, Australian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom
- Michael Dreeben, associate of Robert Mueller
- Eric A. Dubelier, former Federal prosecutor and attorney for Concord Management and Consulting
- Yuri Dubinin, Ambassador of the Soviet Union to the United States (1986–1990)
- Electronic Privacy Information Center, DC-based non-profit that filed FOIA lawsuit for release of complete Mueller Report
- T. S. Ellis III, a United States District Judge of the Eastern District of Virginia presiding over Paul Manafort's trial in Virginia. He was appointed by Ronald Reagan in 1987 and took senior status in 2007.
- Paul Erickson, Republican activist involved in several Republican presidential campaigns and romantic partner of Maria Butina
F–M
- Nigel Farage, leader of UKIP (2006–2009, 2010–2016), leader of The Brexit Party (since its founding in 2018) and a Member of the European Parliament (since 1999)
- Dianne Feinstein, California Senator (D), member of the Senate Intelligence Committee (chairwoman, 2009–2015) and ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee
- Michael T. Flynn, Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (2012–2014), National Security Advisor (January–February 2017)
- Dabney L. Friedrich, District Judge of the District Court for the District of Columbia
- Rick Gates, deputy to Manafort during the Trump campaign
- Rudy Giuliani, Mayor of New York City (1994–2001), and personal attorney for President Trump (since April 2018)
- John Gleeson, District Judge of the District Court for the Eastern District of New York (1994 – March 2016), advisor to Emmet G. Sullivan
- Andrew D. Goldstein, associate of Robert Mueller
- Rob Goldstone, British publicist of Russian singer Emin Agalarov
- J. D. Gordon, Trump transition team member, and Director of National Security for the Trump campaign (since March 2016)
- Chuck Grassley, Iowa Senator (R), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee (2015–2019), and President pro tempore of the United States Senate (since 2019)
- Guccifer 2.0, a hacker alias used by the Russian Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU)
- Stefan Halper, FBI informant
- Alvin K. Hellerstein, District Judge of the District Court for the Southern District of New York
- Hope Hicks, press secretary for the Trump campaign and White House Communications Director (August 2017 – February 2018)
- Beryl A. Howell, Chief United States District Judge for the District Court for the District of Columbia
- Internet Research Agency (IRA), a Russian entity charged with coordinating online propaganda efforts, finances managed by Khusyaynova, funded by Prigozhin
- Andrew Intrater, Columbus Nova CEO, cousin of Viktor Vekselberg
- Frederick Intrater, brother of Columbus Nova CEO Andrew Intrater, cousin of Viktor Vekselberg
- Anton Inyutsyn, Russian Deputy Minister of Energy
- Amy Berman Jackson, U.S. District Court Judge in the District of Columbia overseeing one of Mueller's cases against Paul Manafort
- Boris Johnson, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (since July 2019)
- Jones Day, law firm that worked for the Trump campaign
- Irakly "Ike" Kaveladze, Georgian-American senior vice president at the Crocus Group
- Bijan Kian, also known as Bijan Rafiekian, business partner of Michael Flynn and part of the Trump transition
- Konstantin V. Kilimnik, Paul Manafort's right-hand man in Kyiv, Ukraine, alleged Russian intelligence operative[5]
- Sergey Kislyak, Russian ambassador to the United States (2008–2017)
- Elena Alekseevna Khusyaynova, Russian accountant who managed social media troll operation finances (including the IRA) which interfere in 2016 elections and 2018 midterm elections, called "Project Lakhta"
- Simon Kukes, Russian-American businessman and associate of Vekselberg, German Khan, Len Blavatnik, Mikhail Fridman, and Vyacheslav Pavlovsky with ties to Russian businesses and the Russian government
- Jared Kushner, real estate investor, son-in-law and Senior Advisor to President Trump
- Sergey Lavrov, Foreign Minister of Russia
- Richard J. Leon, District Judge of the District Court for the District of Columbia
- Corey Lewandowski, former manager of Trump's primary election campaign (until June 2016)
- Jessie K. Liu, attorney involved in the Roger Stone case
- Paul Manafort, political consultant and former lobbyist for Viktor Yanukovych, campaign manager and chairman of the Trump campaign (June–August 2016), and Trump convention manager (March 2016)
- Simona Mangiante, Italian lawyer and wife of George Papadopoulos (since March 2018)[6]
- Andrew McCabe, Deputy (February 2016 – January 2018) and Acting Director of the FBI (May–August 2017)
- Mitch McConnell, Kentucky Senator (R) and Senate Majority Leader
- Kayleigh McEnany, White House Press Secretary (since April 2020)
- K. T. McFarland, political commentator and served as Deputy National Security Advisor under Michael Flynn for the first four months of the Trump administration
- Donald McGahn, White House Counsel to President Trump (January 2017 – October 2018)
- Amit Mehta, District Judge of the District Court for the District of Columbia
- Joseph Mifsud, Maltese academic and former diplomat for the Maltese government connected with Russian politicians and George Papadopoulos
- Andrew Miller, Roger Stone's associate
- Andrey Molchanov, member of the Federation Council of Russia (since 2008)
- Robert S. Mueller III, 6th FBI Director (2001–2013), appointed special counsel for the Russian interference investigation
N–R
- George Nader, businessman and lobbyist who acted as the Trump campaign's liaison to the United Arab Emirates
- Jerrold Nadler, Congressman (D-NY), chairman of the House Judiciary Committee (since January 2019)
- Paul M. Nakasone, Commander of United States Cyber Command (since May 2018)
- National Rifle Association, commonly known as the NRA
- Richard Neal, Congressman (D-MA), chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee (since January 2019)
- Kirstjen Nielsen, Secretary of Homeland Security (December 2017 – April 2019)
- Alexander Nix, former CEO of Cambridge Analytica
- Sam Nunberg, former political advisor to Trump campaign
- Devin Nunes, Congressman (R-CA), ranking member (since 2019) and chairman of the House Intelligence Committee (2015–18)
- Barack Obama, 44th President of the United States (2009–2017)
- Bruce Ohr, director of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (2014–2017) and Associate Deputy Attorney General (2017)
- Carter Page, oil industry consultant, former Trump campaign advisor on foreign policy
- Sarah Palin, Governor of Alaska (2006–2009)
- George Papadopoulos, former advisor to the Trump campaign on foreign policy
- Sean Parnell, Governor of Alaska (2009–2014); Lieutenant Governor of Alaska (2006–2009)
- W. Samuel Patten, lobbyist and associate of Paul Manafort, senior consultant for SCL Group
- Mike Pence, 48th Vice President of the United States (since January 2017)
- Dmitry Peskov, Putin's Press Secretary, and diplomat
- Mike Pompeo, Secretary of State (since April 2018); CIA director (January 2017 – March 2018)
- Reince Priebus, Trump's first White House Chief of Staff, former chairman of the Republican National Committee
- Yevgeny Prigozhin, Russian oligarch who funded the IRA and owns "Concord Management and Consulting" and "Concord Catering", called "Putin's chef"
- Erik Prince, chairman of Frontier Services Group, brother of Trump Administration Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, and founder of private military company Academi (formerly known as "Blackwater")
- Vladimir Putin, 2nd and 4th President of Russia
- James L. Quarles, associate of Robert Mueller
- Edgardo Ramos, District Judge of the District Court for the Southern District of New York
- John Ratcliffe, Director of National Intelligence (May 2020–present), Congressman (R-TX) (2015 – May 2020)
- Michele Reagan, Arizona Secretary of State (January 2015 – January 2019)
- Jeannie Rhee, associate of Robert Mueller
- Susan Rice, National Security Advisor (2013–2017)
- Michael S. Rogers, Director of the National Security Agency (NSA) (2014–2018)
- Dmitry Rogozin, Deputy Prime Minister of Russia (2011–2018)
- Dana Rohrabacher, Congressman (R-CA) (1989–2019)
- Rod Rosenstein, Deputy Attorney General, acting Attorney General for Russia–Trump investigations
- Wilbur Ross, 39th United States Secretary of Commerce (since February 2017)
- Marco Rubio, member of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Republican candidate for president in 2016
- Paul Ryan, Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (2015–2018)
S–Z
- Bernie Sanders, 2016 Democratic primary presidential candidate, Vermont Senator (I) (since 2007)
- Sarah Huckabee Sanders, White House Press Secretary (July 2017 – June 2019)
- Felix Sater, Russian-American former mobster, real estate developer, and former managing director of Bayrock Group LLC
- Adam B. Schiff, Congressman (D-CA), Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee (since 2019), and ranking member (2015–2018)
- Keith Schiller, former Deputy Assistant and concurrent Director of Oval Office Operations, and longtime personal body guard to Trump
- Karen Schreier, District Judge of the District Court for the District of South Dakota
- SCL Group, parent company of Cambridge Analytica
- Jay Sekulow, chief counsel at the American Center for Law & Justice, former personal attorney of Donald Trump
- Jeff Sessions, United States Attorney General (February 2017 – November 2018), Alabama Senator (R) (1997–2017), member of the Center for the National Interest's advisory council (2016)[7]
- Cody Shearer, political activist and former journalist, author of the "Shearer memo/dossier" that Steele passed on to the FBI
- Brad Sherman, Congressman (D-CA) (since 1997)
- Dimitri Simes, publisher of The National Interest and CEO of think tank Center for the National Interest (CNI)
- Glenn R. Simpson, co-founder of Fusion GPS, who hired Steele to compile damaging information on Trump and Russia
- Skadden, New York City-based international law firm
- Peter W. Smith, Republican operative and Illinois financier who had ties to Michael Flynn as early as 2015
- Gordon Sondland, United States Ambassador to the European Union (since June 2018)
- Sean Spicer, White House Press Secretary (January–July 2017) and White House Director of Communications (June–July 2017)
- Christopher Steele, former British MI6 intelligence officer, author of dossier on Trump and Russia
- Jill Stein, Green Party nominee in the 2016 United States presidential election
- Roger Stone, political consultant, staffer to President Richard Nixon (1972–1974), business partner of Manafort (1980s)
- Peter Strzok, FBI agent removed from the investigation in August 2017
- Emmet G. Sullivan, District Judge of the District Court for the District of Columbia
- Rex Tillerson, 69th United States Secretary of State (February 2017 – March 2018), and CEO of ExxonMobil (2006–2017)
- Ivan Timofeev, program director of the Kremlin-sponsored Valdai Discussion Club
- Erika Thompson, Australian diplomat in London
- Alexander Torshin, Russian Senator from Mari El Republic (2001–2015) and Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Russia (2015–2018)
- Anthony Trenga, District Judge of the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
- Donald Trump, 45th President of the United States (2017–2021), real estate developer (1971–2016)
- Donald Trump Jr., Executive Director of The Trump Organization, son of Donald Trump
- Eric Trump, Executive Vice President of The Trump Organization, son of Donald Trump
- Ivana Trump, first wife of Donald Trump
- Ivanka Trump, Advisor to the President (since March 2017), daughter of Donald Trump
- Cyrus Vance Jr., New York County District Attorney (2010–present)
- Alex van der Zwaan, Dutch attorney guilty of making false statements to the FBI
- Viktor Vekselberg, Russian oligarch
- Natalia Veselnitskaya, Russian attorney, best known for lobbying against the Magnitsky Act
- Kurt Volker, US Special Representative for Ukraine Negotiations (July 2017 – September 2019)
- Reggie Walton, District Judge of the District Court for the District of Columbia
- Jennifer Williams, advisor to Mike Pence on European and Russian affairs
- Allen Weisselberg, chief financial officer of The Trump Organization
- Andrew Weissmann, associate of Robert Mueller
- Matthew Whitaker, acting US Attorney General (November 2018 – February 2019)
- Andy Wigmore, director of communications for Leave.EU and close associate of Arron Banks
- Michael Wolff, journalist and author of Fire and Fury about the Trump White House
- Christopher A. Wray, Director of the FBI (since August 2017)
- Alexander Yakovenko, Russian ambassador to the United Kingdom (since 2011)
- Viktor Yanukovych, President of Ukraine (2010–2014)
- Aaron Zebley, associate of Robert Mueller
- Volodymyr Zelensky, President of Ukraine (since May 2019)
2016
2017
2018
2019
January
- January 2: The foreign company fighting a grand jury subpoena filed under seal its reply to Mueller's brief to the Supreme Court.[8] Alston & Bird is an involved law firm.[9] In October 2020, CNN reveals that the company is a state-owned Egyptian bank that may have been the source of funds for Trump's $10 million loan to his campaign on October 29, 2016.[10]
- January 3:
- The 116th United States Congress convenes with the House under Democratic control.
- Congressman Brad Sherman refiles articles of impeachment against Trump. The article charges Trump with obstructing justice by firing James Comey.[11]
- Jerome Corsi asks U.S. District Court Judge Richard J. Leon to take his December 10, 2018, lawsuit against Mueller.[12][13] Corsi claims the FBI and Mueller's team used "illegal, unconstitutional surveillance" in a "politically-motivated" criminal investigation against him.[12] Judge Leon accuses Corsi's lawyer of "judge shopping" and grants a Justice Department motion to randomly assign the case to another judge.[12]
- January 4: District Judge Beryl A. Howell extends the term of Mueller's grand jury in Washington, D.C., for an unknown amount of time. The grand jury's term was due to expire on January 5.[14]
- January 7: D.C. District Judge Dabney L. Friedrich strongly rebukes the attorneys for Concord Management and Consulting for repeatedly making personal attacks on Mueller's team. The rebuke was triggered by a January 4 filing that questions the trustworthiness of Mueller's office. Friedrich called Concord's recent filings "unprofessional, inappropriate, and ineffective," and said their "relentless personal attacks" would not affect her decision.[15]
- January 8:
- The US Attorney for the Southern District of New York (SDNY) indicts Natalia Veselnitskaya, known for her participation in the meeting in the Trump Tower with top campaign officials on June 9, 2016, for obstruction of justice in an unrelated case.[16] The prosecution alleges that while defending Russian investment company Prevezon Holdings in a New York court, she helped Russian Prosecutor General Yuri Chaika fabricate evidence supporting Prevezon's defense.[17]
- Paul Manafort's attorneys file response to Mueller's accusations of malfeasance to the DC judge.[18] Portions of the filing that were meant to be redacted are still readable because of incorrectly applied formatting in the document. The redacted portions reveal that prosecutors accused Manafort of lying because he denied and then admitted when prompted that he met with Kilimnik in Madrid, discussed a proposed Ukrainian peace plan with Kilimnik on several occasions, and shared polling data with Kilimnik while working for the Trump campaign.[19]
- The New York Times reports that while Manafort worked for the Trump campaign he provided Kilimnik with internal polling data for Kilimnik to pass on to Ukrainian oligarchs Serhiy Lyovochkin and Rinat Akhmetov, both of whom Manafort previously did work for in Ukraine.[20]
- The Supreme Court removes without comment a temporary stay in the legal battle by a "Corporation" from "Country A" fighting a grand jury subpoena. The stay had paused the accrual of fines by the company while it appealed the District Court of Appeals decision from December 18, 2018. This is believed to be the first U.S. Supreme Court decision related to the Mueller investigation.[21]
- The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals (D.C. Cir.) issues its full opinion in the appeal by a "Corporation" from "Country A" against a grand jury subpoena. The judges write, "[the company] failed to satisfy its burden of showing that Country A's law would prohibit complying with the subpoena, we agree with the district court that enforcing the subpoena is neither unreasonable nor oppressive." The company immediately appeals the decision to the Supreme Court.[21] In October 2020, CNN reveals that "Country A" is Egypt.[10]
- January 9: The Senate Intelligence Committee interviews Robert Foresman.[22]:282, 656, 714, 735–745, 747–748, 750–752
- January 10: The first Russia-related hearing of the newly Democratic majority House takes place: Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin testifies in a closed-door hearing on the Treasury Department's decision to ease sanctions on companies aligned with Oleg Deripaska.[23] After the hearing, Speaker Nancy Pelosi calls it "one of the worst classified briefings we've received from the Trump administration". She says they spent "most of the time reading an unclassified document". Other Democrats echoed Pelosi.[24]
- January 11:
- Mother Jones reports that the NRA appears to have coordinated ad buys with Republican candidates in at least three U.S. Senate races. Like the scheme reportedly used by the NRA and the Trump campaign, National Media Research, Planning and Placement (NMRPP) CFO Jon Ferrell placed scores of ad buys on behalf of the three senate campaigns and the NRA to air ads within minutes of each other on the same local television stations. The three senate campaigns were Senator Richard Burr's 2016 reelection campaign in North Carolina, Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley's successful 2018 campaign to unseat Missouri Senator Claire McCaskill, and the unsuccessful 2018 campaign by Montana state auditor Matt Rosendale to unseat Montana Senator Jon Tester.[25]
- The New York Times reports that the FBI opened counterintelligence and criminal investigations against Trump a few days after he fired Comey in May 2017. They were alarmed by Trump's actions and concerned that he may have been working for Russia against American interests. The investigations were eventually combined and taken over by Mueller.[26]
- Giuliani tells The Hill that Trump's legal team should be allowed to make corrections to Mueller's final report before it is seen by Congress or the public.[27]
- The Senate Intelligence Committee interviews Nunberg.[22]:194, 227, 230, 238
- January 12:
- The Washington Post reports that Trump ordered his translator for the second Putin meeting at the G20 summit in Hamburg on July 7, 2017, to hand over their notes and not discuss the meeting. The Hamburg meeting was one of five Trump-Putin interactions where no detailed records exist.[28]
- Trump tells Jeanine Pirro on Justice with Judge Jeanine that Cohen made a plea deal to protect his father-in-law from prosecution.[29] The Mueller report refers to his statements on Cohen in the interview as evidence of witness intimidation.[30]:152, 154, 156
- January 14:
- The New York Times reports on the unusually large expenses claimed by the Trump inauguration fund.[31]
- The Daily Beast reports that Mueller's office and the SDNY are investigating a breakfast meeting involving Flynn, Nunes, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, and 50–60 other foreign officials at the Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C., on January 18, 2017. This line of inquiry is part of their investigations into the Trump inauguration fund.[32][33]
- The Senate Intelligence Committee interviews Robert Curran.[22]:642–645, 647, 649–651, 653, 656
- January 15:
- Mueller's team requests a delay in Richard Gates' sentencing because he is still helping with their investigations.[34]
- Mueller's team files FBI special agent Jeffrey Weyland's partially redacted statement detailing the ways in which they believe Manafort lied to them, including about his contacts with Trump administration officials and his work to help people get positions in the administration. 157 pages of mostly redacted exhibits are included in the filing. They allege Manafort made contradictory statements to the Mueller team on several occasions as well as to the grand jury contradicting himself, other witnesses, and documents.[35]
- William Barr appears before the Senate Judiciary Committee for his confirmation hearing to become the next Attorney General. Barr refuses to commit to recusing himself from the Mueller investigation or release Mueller's eventual report. He also states that he would not fire Mueller if asked to do so by Trump without good cause. Barr circulated a memo among Trump administration members in 2018 in which he criticized the Mueller investigation.[36]
- Judge Howell imposes $50,000 a day fines on the foreign company fighting a grand jury subpoena from Mueller for not complying with the subpoena.[37]
- January 17:
- The Justice Department announces that Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom agreed to pay the U.S. government $4.6 million and retroactively register as a foreign agent for the work they performed for Manafort and the Ukrainian government. $4.6 million is the amount of money Skadden received from the Ukrainian Ministry of Justice and Manafort's offshore bank accounts. In the settlement agreement, which details the actions taken by Skadden on the behalf of Manafort and Ukraine, attorney and former White House counsel Gregory B. Craig is referred to as "Partner-1".[38]
- BuzzFeed News reports that Cohen gave Trump, Trump Jr., and Ivanka Trump regular and "very detailed" updates about the Trump Tower Moscow project during the 2016 campaign, including that he was discussing the project with Russian government officials. They also report that Cohen told Mueller's team that Trump directed him to lie to Congress about the project.[39]
- January 18:
- Mueller spokesman Peter Carr refutes some of the information in the January 17 BuzzFeed News article that claimed Trump directed Cohen to lie to Congress. He says, "BuzzFeed's description of specific statements to the special counsel's office, and characterization of documents and testimony obtained by this office, regarding Cohen's congressional testimony are not accurate". BuzzFeed top editor Ben Smith responds, "We stand by our reporting and the sources who informed it, and we urge the Special Counsel to make clear what he’s disputing".[40]
- Mueller's team interviews Bannon for the fourth and final time.[30]:18
- Trump tweets that Cohen lied to reduce his sentence, and finishes with, "Watch father-in-law!"[41] The Mueller Report refers to this tweet as evidence of witness intimidation.[30]:152, 154, 156
- January 20: Giuliani tells Chuck Todd on Meet the Press that the Trump Tower Moscow project continued through October or November 2016.[42] His statement confirms what Cohen told Mueller's team about the project.[30]:152
- January 21:
- In a New York Times interview, Giuliani quotes Trump as saying discussions about the Trump Tower Moscow project were "going on from the day I announced to the day I won."[43] His statement confirms what Cohen told Mueller's team about the project.[30]:152
- Giuliani walks back his recent statements on the Trump Tower Moscow project. He issues a public statement saying, "My recent statements about discussions during the 2016 campaign between Michael Cohen and candidate Donald Trump about a potential Trump Moscow 'project' were hypothetical and not based on conversations I had with the president.[44][30]:152 Trump's personal counsel also sends a letter to Mueller's team stating that Giuliani's public comments "were not intended to suggest nor did they reflect knowledge of the existence or timing of conversations beyond that contained in the President's [written responses to the Special Counsel's Office]."[30]:152–153
- January 22: The Supreme Court grants a motion from the "Corporation" from "Country A" to file its appeal under seal in its case challenging a subpoena from Mueller's grand jury. A redacted version of the petition will be made public.[45]
- January 23:
- Cohen delays his Congressional testimony, citing threats to his family.[46] Senate Intelligence Committee subpoenas Cohen to testify in closed session on February 12.[47]
- Mueller's team submits followup questions to Trump about the extent of his involvement in the Trump Tower Moscow project.[30]:150–151
- January 24: A grand jury in the District of Columbia indicts Stone on 7 counts; one count of obstructing a congressional proceeding, five counts of false statements, and one count of witness tampering.[48]:197
- January 25: Trump campaign associate Roger Stone is arrested by the FBI in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.[49][50]
- January 28:
- Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker announces that the Special Counsel investigation is "close to being completed".[51]
- Stone pleads not guilty in DC courtroom.
- Judge T. S. Ellis of the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia (E.D. Va.) postpones Manafort's February 8 sentencing date to an unspecified date, pending resolution of a dispute in his separate case before the DC District Court (D.D.C.).[52]
- January 29: Mueller's team interviews former Associate Attorney General Rachel Brand.[30]:108
- January 30: As part of the prosecution of Concord Management and Consulting, a court filing states that Russians leaked confidential evidence collected by the Mueller investigation.[53]
February
- Early February: The unnamed foreign company fighting a grand jury subpoena from Mueller (an Egyptian bank)[10] gives the Mueller investigation documents totaling around 950 pages, many of which were translated into English. Judge Howell stops the daily fines imposed on the company.[37]
- February 1: Stone appears in court. The judge warns she may impose a gag order.[54] A court filing by Mueller's prosecutors reveals that the FBI seized "voluminous and complex" evidence from Stone's home in Florida, containing emails and financial records.[55]
- February 4:
- During a closed-door DC District Court hearing, Mueller prosecutor Andrew Weissmann tells judge Amy Berman Jackson that Manafort's lying to investigators about his communications with Konstantin Kilimnik "goes, I think, very much to the heart of what the special counsel's office is investigating" suggesting that Mueller's office continues to examine a possible agreement between Russia and the Trump campaign.[56]
- Federal prosecutors in Manhattan subpoena documents concerning donors and finances from Trump's inaugural committee. Investigators are particularly interested in potential conspiracy to defraud the U.S., mail fraud, wire fraud, false statements, election fraud, foreign donations, and money laundering.[57]
- Federal prosecutors in the Southern District of New York request interviews with executives at the Trump Organization.[58][59]
- BuzzFeed News reports that Akhmetshin received suspicious payments before and after the Trump Tower meeting totaling $500,000 from Denis Katsyv. Wells Fargo and Bank of America reported the payments to the U.S. Treasury Department, and the reports were passed on to Mueller's team.[60]
- February 5:
- Thomas J. Barrack Jr., chairman of Trump's inaugural committee, confirms to the Associated Press that he was interviewed by the Mueller team in 2017, but says he was not a target of the investigation.[61]
- The Democratic-controlled House Intelligence Committee votes to refer dozens of witness testimony transcripts and thousands of other documents to Mueller's office. Committee Republicans had blocked Democrat efforts to release the documents to Mueller's office when Republicans controlled the Committee in 2018.[62]
- February 6: Trump's personal counsel declines to provide Mueller's team with the additional information about the extent of Trump's involvement in the Trump Tower Moscow project that they requested on January 23.[30]:151
- February 8: The House Judiciary Committee holds a hearing on Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker, focusing primarily on the Mueller probe and his relation to it.[63][64]
- February 11: Cohen's testimony under subpoena before a closed session of the Senate Intelligence Committee is postponed a third time, at Cohen's request, to an unspecified date.[65]
- February 13:
- Judge rules that Manafort 'intentionally' lied to the FBI, special counsel and grand jury, negating his plea agreement, including his contacts with his Russian associate during the campaign and later.[66]
- CNN reports Tyler McGaughey, the husband of William Barr's youngest daughter, was hired by White House Counsel's office, whose work intersects with the Russia investigation. Walter Shaub, the former director of the United States Office of Government Ethics, said McGaughey's beeline for the White House was "concerning."[67][68]
- Date for the trial of Michael Flynn's business partner Bijan Kian, the second of a Mueller derived case, is set for July 15.[69]
- Mueller's team interviews Chris Christie.[30]:38–39, 70, 87, 121
- February 14:
- Mueller's team interviews Gordon the final of four times since August 7, 2017.[48]:125–127
- William Barr is confirmed as Attorney General by the U.S. Senate.[70]
- Flynn sends outspoken Mueller critic Republican Representative Matt Gaetz images of a bald eagle and an American flag with no accompanying text. In May, the Twitter direct message is revealed in a court filing as evidence of Flynn's outreach to Mueller critics while he was cooperating with the Mueller investigation.[71]
- February 15:
- U.S. District Judge Amy Berman imposes a limited restriction on the kind of public statement Roger Stone can make about his court proceedings in order to ensure a fair trial and "to maintain the dignity and seriousness of the courthouse and these proceedings." Stone, his lawyers, and his witnesses are banned from making public statements as they enter or exit the courthouse.[72]
- Sarah Huckabee Sanders confirms to the press that she is "happy to voluntarily" sit for an interview with Mueller's investigators and says that the President urged her to "fully cooperate."[73]
- The New Jersey Attorney General subpoenas the Trump inaugural committee for records relating to fundraising events and "solicitations" conducted in New Jersey, copies of ledgers, tax forms, contracts and "all documents related to any benefits provided to donors."[74]
- February 17: The Guardian reports that Brittany Kaiser, former business development director of SCL Group, the parent company of Cambridge Analytica, was subpoenaed by Robert Mueller. Her spokesman said she was cooperating fully with his investigation. She is the first person with links to both Brexit and the Trump campaign known to have been questioned by Mueller.[75]
- February 20:
- Judge William Pauley grants Cohen's request to postpone his prison surrender date from March 6 to May 6 so he can further recover from recent shoulder surgery.[76]
- Cohen agrees to testify before open session of House Oversight Committee on February 27.[77]
- The Senate Intelligence Committee interviews international political consultant George Birnbaum.[22]:682, 685, 688
- February 21: Senate Intelligence Committee reportedly pursuing David Geovanis for questioning.[78]
- February 26:
- Cohen testifies in closed session before the Senate Intelligence Committee.[79][22]:14–15, 230, 274, 282, 357–358, 360, 416, 421–422, 424–425, 430–431, 435, 441, 443–444, 446, 451–453, 455–456, 458, 462, 646, 875–876
- A three-judge panel of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals rules that Mueller was legally appointed. The judges let stand a July 31, 2018, lower court ruling ordering Andrew Miller, a former aide to Roger Stone, to obey a grand jury subpoena from Mueller. The case was brought by Miller in an attempt to avoid testifying before Mueller's grand jury.[80][81]
- February 27: Cohen testifies before open session of House Oversight Committee.[82][22]:358
- February 28:
- Cohen testifies in closed session before the House Intelligence Committee.[83]
- House Oversight Committee chairman Elijah Cummings states his intention to interview Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump and Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg. House Intelligence Committee chairman Adam Schiff states he will call Weisselberg to testify.[84]
- In the Concord Management case, Mueller's team argues that over three million documents should not be exported to Russia under discovery rules.[85]
- Mueller's team interviews McGahn for the final of six times.[30]:84-87
- The Senate Intelligence Committee interviews Kushner.[22]:15, 17, 224, 253, 255, 350, 357–360, 372, 646, 674, 710, 718, 728, 764
March
- March 4: House Judiciary Committee sends letters seeking information and documents from 81 organizations and individuals associated with Trump.[86]
- March 6: Cohen gives additional testimony before House Intelligence Committee.[84][22]:295, 658
- March 7: Manafort is sentenced by Judge T. S. Ellis III (of E.D. Va.) to 47 months in prison in Virginia for tax evasion and bank fraud,[87] "far lighter than the 19- to 24-year prison term recommended under sentencing guidelines".[88]
- March 11: The Senate Intelligence Committee interviews Mangiante.[22]:470, 475, 509
- March 12: Mueller prosecutors and Mike Flynn jointly requested and received a 90-day extension for his sentencing, originally scheduled for March 18, stating that his cooperation with the Mueller investigation was complete but he may cooperate further in the prosecution of his former business partner, Bijan Kian, scheduled to begin in July.[89]
- March 13:
- Manafort is sentenced in DC District Court (D.D.C.) to 73 months in prison, thirty of which to be served concurrently with his previous sentence in Virginia. The length of his federal prison sentences is expected to total 7.5 years.[90]
- Minutes after his sentencing, New York State announced that Manafort had been charged with 16 state felonies, including residential mortgage fraud.[91]
- March 18: Propublica reports federal authorities raided Republican fundraiser Elliott Broidy's office in July 2018, seeking materials related to foreign officials dealings with Trump administration associates, including Gates and Nader, regarding conspiracy, money laundering, and crimes associated with illegal lobbying on behalf of foreign officials.[92][93]
- March 19:
- March 20: Ukrainian Prosecutor General Yuriy Lutsenko tells John Solomon in an interview on Hill.TV that his office is investigating claims that the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine attempted to interfere in the 2016 U.S. election to help Clinton.[95] He also claims the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch gave him a "do not prosecute" list at their first meeting after he took office in 2016, which the State Department denies as "an outright fabrication."[96]
- March 22:
- Mueller concluded the Special Counsel investigation and has submitted his long-anticipated report to Attorney General William Barr.[97] Barr stated that he may be able to give details regarding the report as soon as the weekend (March 23–24) to Congress.[98] Mueller's prosecutors identified 272 contacts between the Trump team and Russia-linked operatives.[99]
- The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) files a lawsuit under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) attempting to compel the Justice Department to release a copy of the Mueller Report.[100]
- March 24: Attorney General William Barr releases a four-page letter to Congress highlighting the key findings by the Special Counsel's final report. Barr stated that there is not sufficient evidence that Trump obstructed justice or colluded with Russia, but did not exonerate him on obstruction.[101][102]
- March 25:
- House Intelligence Committee testimony from former Trump business associate Felix Sater, who worked with Cohen on Trump Tower Moscow project, previously scheduled for March 27, is postponed to undetermined date.[103]
- The U.S. Supreme Court declines to hear an appeal by the unidentified company (an Egyptian bank)[10] fighting a Mueller grand jury subpoena. Mueller has transferred the case to the Washington, D.C., U.S. Attorney's office.[104]
- The Senate Intelligence Committee serves Prince a subpoena for documents and to appear before the committee.[22]:730
- March 27:
- Assistant U.S. attorney David Goodhand tells Judge Howell that Mueller's grand jury is still active and is "continuing robustly". He made the declaration in a hearing on the unidentified foreign government-owned company's fight against a grand jury subpoena.[105]
- In a joint letter, the House intelligence committee demands that Mueller "must" brief them and provide "all materials, regardless of form and classification, obtained or produced".[106][107][108]
- Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) introduces H.Res.257, authorizing an impeachment investigation. It is referred to the House Rules Committee.[109]
- Mueller sends Barr a letter in which he asserts that Barr's March 24 letter "did not fully capture the context, nature, and substance of this Office's work and conclusions" leading to "public confusion about critical aspects of the results of our investigation".[110]
- March 28:
- U.S. District Judge Tanya S. Chutkan sets Butina's sentencing hearing for April 26 after Assistant U.S. Attorney Erik Kenerson tells the court that prosecutors are ready.[111]
- Jared Kushner meets with the Senate Intelligence Committee.[112][113]
- March 29:
- EPIC files a motion requesting a preliminary injunction that would force the Justice Department to expedite EPIC's FOIA request for the Mueller Report. The judge schedules a hearing for April 9.[114]
- Barr sends a subsequent letter to Senator Lindsey Graham and Congressman Nadler informing them that he expects the redacted form of the Mueller Report will be given to Congress in mid-April at the latest. He also clarifies that his March 24 letter provided a summary of the nearly 400-page report's "principal conclusions" and was not intended to be a summary of the entire report. He also states that there are no plans for the White House to review the report before it is delivered to Congress.[115]
April
- Spring: Giuliani consults with Manafort via Manafort's lawyer on the existence of the Ukrainian "black ledger" as part of his investigation into whether the ledger was fabricated with the assistance of the U.S. government in order to help Clinton win the 2016 presidential election. Manafort tells Giuliani that the ledger didn't exist.[116]
- April 1: Judge Howell rejects a request from the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press to unseal the name of the company fighting a Mueller grand jury subpoena, but agrees to let them see edited versions of briefs and pleadings in the court battle. She also leaves open the possibility of unsealing the name when the grand jury is finished with their investigation.[117]
- April 2: EPIC announces that the Justice Department agreed to expedite its FOIA request for the Mueller Report after the group filed suit in federal court on March 22 and requested expedited service on March 29.[118][114]
- April 3:
- The House Judiciary Committee votes 24–17 to authorize committee chairman Nadler to issue subpoenas for the unredacted version of the Mueller Report and any exhibits, underlying evidence, or other materials prepared for the investigation.[119]
- The House Ways and Means Committee chairman Richard Neal formally requests copies of Trump's personal and business tax returns covering 2013 to 2018 from the IRS, and sets April 10 as the deadline for the response. By law, the committee has the authority to see anyone's confidential tax returns.[120][121]
- The New York Times reports that some of Mueller's investigators expressed concerns that attorney general Barr is downplaying the findings of their report.[122]
- April 5:
- Trump attorney William S. Consovoy sends a letter to Treasury Department general counsel Brent J. McIntosh that calls Neal's request for Trump's tax returns a "gross abuse of power" and urges the department to wait for a legal opinion from the Justice Department before turning over any of Trump's tax information.[123]
- A Justice Department court filing in response to EPIC's March 29 expedited FOIA request for the Mueller Report states that the department is processing 415 requests regarding the Mueller investigation, and that 198 of the requests came after Barr's March 22 announcement that the investigation was over.[124]
- A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit rules in a split decision[125] that grand jury materials can only be disclosed to prosecutors, defendants, and other grand juries as mandated by the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, and to the U.S. House of Representatives as authorized by a 1974 ruling by U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica. Sirica's ruling said that a House oversight investigation "in this setting acts simply as another grand jury". While the Appeals Court ruling is in a case unrelated to the Mueller investigation, its decision is expected to affect any legal actions the House may undertake to acquire the Mueller Report and any supporting grand jury material.[126]
- The Senate Intelligence Committee sends letter to Walter Soriano and owner of USG Security Ltd based in Britain for his communication with Manafort and Flynn, Psy-Group/Wikistrat, and Black Cube, Orbis Business Intelligence (a firm co-founded by Christopher Steele). Soriano has links to Deripaska.[127]
- April 7:
- Giuliani tells Howard Kurtz on MediaBuzz that he learned a few months before that a group of people in Ukraine colluded with the Clinton campaign during the 2016 Presidential election to help Clinton. He states that he wants the Ukraine government to investigate.[128]
- Prince's lawyer informs the Senate Intelligence Committee that Prince will invoke his Fifth Amendment rights instead of testifying before the committee.[22]:730
- April 8:
- Prosecutors from the U.S. attorney's office in Washington, D.C., file their sentencing recommendations for Patten in federal court in advance of his April 12 sentencing hearing. They say that Patten committed to being a witness against Manafort in his second trial, which was cancelled when Manafort pleaded guilty, and met with prosecutors several times to explain documents and answer questions. They cite his "substantial assistance" as the basis for recommending a lenient sentence. In a separate filing, Patten's lawyers ask for a sentence of probation and insist he did not know Kilimnik was connected to Russian intelligence even though they owned a company together. Kilimnik is identified as "Person A" in the prosecutor's filings and named directly in Patten's filings.[129][130]
- The FBI reveals in a court filing that Comey was a witness in the Mueller investigation and that his memos on his meetings with Trump were of interest in the investigation. The filing was part of a court case brought by CNN about a FOIA request for Comey's memos.[131]
- Nunes files a $150 million lawsuit against The McClatchy Company, owner of the Fresno Bee, in Virginia state court in which he claims that a McClatchy reporter conspired with a political operative to interfere with the House Intelligence Committee's investigations of the Clinton campaign and Russian election interference.[132][133][134]
- April 9:
- In a hearing that begins half an hour before Barr testifies before Congress, U.S. District Court Judge Reggie Walton denies EPIC's March 29 request for an injunction to expedite the release of the Mueller Report.[124]
- Barr appears before the House Appropriations Committee for a hearing on the Justice Department budget, and members ask him about the Mueller Report. He says no one outside the Justice Department read his March 24 letter about the Mueller Report before it was sent to Congress, but then later clarifies that the White House was told about the letter when it was sent, and the letter may have been read to them over the phone. He also says that Mueller and his team declined an opportunity to review the letter before it was sent. He declined to answer when asked if he consulted the White House before releasing the letter, saying, "I've said what I'm going to say about the report today." He tells the committee that he expects to send the redacted report to the House Judiciary Committee within a week with color coded redactions so that people can tell what kind of material was redacted, but refuses to give Congress the full unredacted report and says it is up to Congress to ask a court for the grand jury material.[135][136]
- U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin tells two congressional committees that White House lawyers had an "informational" discussion with Treasury department lawyers about a potential request for Trump's tax returns before Congress formally requested them. He tells the committees that he thinks such discussions are appropriate, but emphasizes that he will not take direction from Trump on whether or not to release the tax returns to Congress. He says, "We would not ever ask for the White House’s permission on this, nor did they give us permission."[137]
- April 10:
- Mnuchin sends a letter to the House Ways and Means Committee in which he states that the Treasury Department will miss the Committee's April 10 deadline for receiving Trump's tax returns because he is going to consult with the Justice Department about the legality of their April 3 request. He writes, "The Committee’s request raises serious issues concerning the constitutional scope of congressional investigative authority, the legitimacy of the asserted legislative purpose, and the constitutional rights of American citizens".[138]
- Barr tells the Senate Appropriations Committee that Mueller did not ask him or Congress to determine whether Trump obstructed justice. He tells the committee, "I don't know whether Bob Mueller supported my conclusion." He again states that he expected to release the Mueller Report within a week. He also tells the committee that the government spied on the Trump campaign, but then later says, "I am not saying that improper surveillance occurred. I'm saying that I'm concerned about it and looking into it, that's all."[139]
- The Wall Street Journal reports that the U.S. Attorney's office for SDNY interviewed Hope Hicks and Keith Schiller after learning about phone calls they each had with David Pecker shortly after American Media, Inc.'s payment to Karen McDougal was revealed in November 2016. The Journal also reports that SDNY investigators have a recording of a phone call between Michael Cohen and McDougal's lawyer, Keith Davidson.[140][141]
- Republican Representative Matt Gaetz introduces a bill that would remove Schiff from his position as chairman of the House Intelligence Committee and strip him of his security clearance. The move comes amid increasing partisan attacks on Schiff by Republican lawmakers and the President.[142]
- April 11: Former Obama White House counsel Gregory Craig is indicted for lying to the Justice Department's Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) Unit.[143][144] He is accused of lying about the work he and his former law firm, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, did for Manafort and the Ukrainian government.[143][144] The investigation of Craig was started by Mueller's team, then moved to SDNY, and was finally moved to the U.S. Attorney's office for the District of Columbia.[143][144] According to the indictment, Craig and other members of the law firm discussed FARA registration in February 2012, told the Ministry of Justice of Ukraine in August 2012 that their work would not require FARA registration, received subsequent legal advice that the firm needed to register their work under FARA, and then altered and backdated documents to hide the nature of their work and avoid registration.[143] Craig is not charged for failing to register under FARA because the statute of limitations has expired.[144]
- April 12:
- Patten is sentenced to three years of probation, 500 hours of community service, and fined $5,000 by Judge Jackson. The judge notes Patten's assistance to prosecutors, acceptance of blame, and that he didn't try to enrich himself as reasons for the lenient sentence. She says his cooperation is the main reason he avoided prison time for lying to Congress.[145]
- The Washington Post reports that researchers at Clemson University found the IRA sent thousands of tweets during the 2016 election campaign in an attempt to drive Bernie Sanders supporters away from Hillary Clinton and towards Donald Trump.[146]
- Craig appears in federal court in Washington, D.C., and pleads not guilty after being indicted the day before.[147] He is released on personal recognizance.[148]
- Andrew Miller's lawyers file a petition with the D.C. Court of Appeals asking the court to compel prosecutors to declare whether they are still pursuing grand jury testimony from Miller and, if they are, to accept an appeal to the full court of the court's three-judge ruling against Miller in February. They argue that the case is moot since Stone has been indicted and "Mueller's authority expired".[149]
- April 13: Neal sends a letter to IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig demanding Trump's tax returns by end of business on April 23. The letter lays out a legal argument citing judicial precedents showing he has the authority to demand the documents and the Treasury Department does not have the authority to refuse.[150]
- April 15: The House Intelligence and Financial Services committees issue subpoenas to Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Citigroup demanding documents related to Trump and possible money laundering by people in Russia and Eastern Europe.[151]
- April 17:
- The New York Times reports that there have been numerous conversations between White House lawyers and the Justice Department about the contents of Muller's report.[152]
- Along with the four banks reported subpoenaed April 15, additionally Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo & Co, Capital One Financial Corp., Royal Bank of Canada, and Toronto Dominion Bank are subpoenaed in Trump finance probe.[153][154]
- Nadler says that he will subpoena the unredacted report.[155]
- Judge Howell rules the foreign company fighting a grand jury subpoena from Mueller is no longer in contempt. Earlier, Mueller transferred the investigatory thread involving the company to the D.C. U.S. Attorney's office.[37] The company, an Egyptian bank, is being investigated as a possible source for the $10 million Trump loaned to his campaign on October 29, 2020.[10]
- April 18:
- Barr holds a press conference about the special counsel's report, Report on the Investigation into Russian Interference in the 2016 Presidential Election (the Mueller Report). The redacted report was released around 11 A.M. EDT.[156][157] The report couldn't recommend criminal charges,[152] due to the DoJ's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) policy created in the wake of the Watergate scandal saying that a sitting president is unindictable.
- The Speaker of the House schedules a conference call with the leadership of Congress on whether or not to begin formal impeachment proceedings the following Monday.[158]
- April 19:
- Nadler issues a subpoena demanding delivery of the full version of the Mueller Report to the House Judiciary Committee by May 1.[159]
- Politico reports that the 2020 Trump Campaign fired Jones Day, Don McGahn's law firm, at least partly in retaliation over McGahn's cooperation with Mueller. Their new lawyer is Nathan Groth, a former lawyer for Scott Walker and the Republican National Committee (RNC). The campaign claims it is a cost-savings move, and Jones Day declines to comment.[160]
- April 22:
- Nadler issues a subpoena to McGahn demanding that he provide the House Judiciary Committee with documents by May 7 and testify before the committee on May 21.[161]
- The House Democratic leadership tells fellow House Democrats in a conference call that House committees will investigate Trump without holding impeachment hearings. The call follows a letter from Pelosi to fellow House Democrats in which she claims the House can hold Trump accountable without impeachment hearings.[162]
- Trump sues Cummings in attempt to block the House Oversight Chairman's subpoena of longtime accounting firm for the Trump family and businesses, Mazars USA.[163][164]
- April 23:
- Mnuchin sends Neal a letter expressing "some of the legal concerns" the administration has with his request for Trump's tax returns. He says a decision will not be made on producing the returns until the Treasury Department receives a legal opinion from the Justice Department on May 6. The letter, which reads like a legal brief, calls into question the legality of the request and says it is politically motivated. IRS Commissioner Rettig sends a separate letter to Neal in which he says Justice Department review is "beyond the scope of internal revenue laws," leaving him unsure of what to do. Earlier in the day, White House spokesman Hogan Gidley says the Trump administration will reject requests for Trump's returns because of Trump's claim he is under audit.[165] No law actually prevents tax returns from being released due to an audit, as emphasized by the Commissioner of Internal Revenue.[166][167]
- Former White House personnel security director Carl Kline skips a House Oversight Committee hearing on White House security procedures. He was instructed to do so by White House deputy counsel Michael M. Purpura in a letter that says the subpoena issued by the committee ordering Kline to testify "unconstitutionally encroaches on fundamental executive branch interests." Kline's attorney, Robert Driscoll, told the committee that Kline would follow the instructions of the branch of government that employs him. He is currently an employee of the Defense Department, which is part of the executive branch. Chairman Cummings announces that the committee will begin contempt of Congress proceedings against Kline.[168]
- Manafort transfers to federal prison.[169]
- Lawyers for Giorgi Rtskhiladze send a letter to Barr demanding a correction to a footnote in the Mueller Report (Volume II, pp. 27–28, footnote 112)[30] that selectively quotes from a text message exchange between Rtskhiladze and Cohen about compromising tapes of Trump from his 2013 visit to Moscow. The letter asserts that the tapes were rumors and provides a screenshot of the text messages in context.[170]
- April 24: Facebook discloses in a quarterly earnings report that it set aside $3 billion to cover legal expenses related to Cambridge Analytica, and that it expects a $3–$5 billion fine from the FTC for its actions involving the firm, though no settlement has been reached.[171]
- April 25: The Privacy Commissioner of Canada and the Information and Privacy Commissioner for British Columbia release a joint report on the findings of their investigation into Facebook's interactions with Cambridge Analytica and the resulting abuses of user privacy. They conclude that Facebook broke Canadian privacy laws and has been uncooperative in finding solutions that would prevent future violations despite the company's public statements to the contrary.[172]
- April 26:
- Maria Butina is sentenced to 18 months of prison on charges of conspiracy.[173]
- Senate Intelligence Committee member Marco Rubio tells The New York Times that Russian hackers gained access to a Florida county election system in 2016 and were "in a position" to change voter registration data, but the affected county was never told because it was discovered through an intelligence operation. Rubio says that he can't reveal more because his position on the committee prevents him from sharing classified information.[174]
- April 30: A letter by Mueller objecting to Barr's characterization of his report is leaked to the press.[175]
May
- May 1:
- Attorney General Barr testifies before the Senate Judiciary committee on the Mueller Report.[176]
- Assistant Attorney General Stephen Boyd sends Nadler a letter informing him that the Department of Justice will not provide the House Judiciary Committee with an unredacted copy of the Mueller Report as demanded by a Committee subpoena.[177]
- May 2: Barr fails to appear at a House Judiciary Committee hearing. The Department of Justice informed Nadler the day before that Barr objected to the committee's plan to have committee staff attorneys ask questions. Nadler ends the hearing early with a warning that Barr will be held in contempt of Congress if he does not provide the full Mueller Report and underlying evidence to the Committee.[177]
- May 5: Trump tweets "Bob Mueller should not testify".[178][179]
- May 6:
- May 7: CNN reports Mueller tried to block the release of Comey's contemporaneous memos over concerns that Trump and other witnesses would change their stories after reading them.[183]
- May 8:
- Trump asserts executive privilege over the full, unredacted Mueller Report.[184][185][186][187][188]
- The US House Committee on the Judiciary votes to hold US AG Barr in contempt of Congress after he failed to comply with a subpoena ordering him to provide them with the full, unredacted version of the Mueller Report last week. The full House will vote on the measure in the near future.[189]
- The Senate Intelligence Committee, chaired by Republican Richard Burr, subpoenas Trump Jr. to answer questions about his previous testimony related to the Russia investigation, particularly the Trump Tower Moscow project and his Russian contacts.[190][191][192]
- May 9: The New York Times reports that Giuliani and lawyer Victoria Toensing will be traveling to Kyiv within a few days to investigate the origins of the Mueller investigation. He is seeking a meeting with incoming president Zelensky to discuss alleged Ukrainian interference in the 2016 presidential election to help Clinton. He tells the Times that he is seeking information that "will be very, very helpful to my client, and may turn out to be helpful to my government." Lev Parnas is helping with the arrangements in Kyiv.[193]
Trump–Ukraine scandal |
---|
Events |
People |
Companies |
Conspiracy theories |
- May 10:
- It is reported that according to two people briefed, White House officials asked at least twice in the previous month for McGahn to publicly say he never believed the president obstructed justice.[194]
- House Ways and Means Committee chairman Neal subpoenas Treasury department and IRS for Trump's tax returns.[195]
- It is reported Trump's personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani is encouraging the government of Ukraine to pursue an investigation into Joe Biden's son Hunter Biden and Hunter's involvement in a gas company Burisma Holdings owned by a Ukrainian oligarch Mykola Zlochevsky to try to discredit Mueller's investigation and undermine the case against Paul Manafort. In September the Trump–Ukraine scandal grows.[196][197]
- Giuliani announces that he cancelled his trip to Kyiv amid reports that he is trying to influence the Ukrainian government to help Trump win re-election.[198]
- May 13:
- Barr appoints U.S. Attorney for the District of Connecticut John Durham to lead an "investigation into the investigators", and any potential criminality that may have occurred in the initiation of the FBI's Crossfire Hurricane investigation and Special Counsel investigations.[199][200][201]
- Richard Pinedo completes his term of imprisonment.[202]
- May 14:
- Mueller investigation's sentencing for Rick Gates was due,[203] but is postponed due to Gates continuing cooperation, particularly in regards to the Stone trial preparation.[204]
- Hearing for Trump's bid to block Congress' demand on his financial records from Mazars USA,[205][206] occurs.[207]
- Republican Florida Governor Ron DeSantis announces Russians hacked voting databases in two Florida counties prior to the 2016 presidential election and no election results were compromised.[208][209][210]
- Trump Jr. agrees to give "limited" testimony in a private interview in mid-June to the Senate Intelligence Committee.[211]
- May 15: In a letter to House Judiciary Committee chairman Jerry Nadler, White House counsel Pat Cipollone states the White House will not comply with the Committee's March 4 letters requesting information and documents, asserting the request was designed "not to further a legitimate legislative purpose, but rather to conduct a pseudo law enforcement investigation on matters that were already the subject of the Special Counsel's long-running investigation and are outside the constitutional authority of the legislative branch."[212][213]
- May 16:
- Barr denies he is blocking Mueller's testimony to Congress.[214]
- U.S. District Judge Emmet G. Sullivan orders the government to make public by May 31 the redacted portions of the Mueller report related to Flynn, transcripts of a 2016 phone call between Flynn and Kislyak, and a voicemail left by Trump's lawyer John M. Dowd for Flynn's lawyer. Sullivan further orders that he be provided with copies of the recordings to review in chambers.[215]
- May 17: Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig defy the May 10 subpoena of Trump's tax returns.[216]
- May 18: Republican U.S. Representative Justin Amash tweets "Few members of Congress have read the [Mueller] report", while becoming the first GOP congressperson calling for Trump's impeachment.[217][218][219]
- May 19: It is reported anti-money launders at Deutsche Bank AG recommended in 2016 and 2017 transactions involving Trump and Kushner-controlled entities be reported to a unit of the Treasury Department that polices financial crimes. The report is denied by the Bank that it prevented Trump transactions from being flagged.[220][221][222]
- May 20:
- It is reported Russians linked to 2016 U.S. election interference discussed plans to promote unrest and even violence inside the U.S. as recently as 2018.[223]
- Judge Amit Mehta of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia rules that accounting firm Mazars USA must comply with a subpoena issued by the House Oversight Committee to turn over Trump's financial records.[224][225][226][227][228]
- It is reported Cohen told lawmakers earlier this year that one of Trump's personal attorneys Jay Sekulow told Cohen to lie to Congress by saying the Trump Tower Moscow deal ended nearly six months before they actually ended on January 31, 2016; and suggested he might be pardoned if he helped "shut down" the Russia investigation.[229][230]
- May 21:
- House Judiciary subpoenas Hicks and former Deputy White House Counsel Annie Donaldson in regards to their actions during the special counsel investigation.[231]
- At Trump's direction, McGahn fails to appear at hearing in front of the House Judiciary Committee per subpoena.[232][233][234][235]
- It is reported that according to a confidential draft legal memo written by IRS staffers the IRS must honor congressional requests for Trump's tax returns unless Trump invokes executive privilege.[236][237]
- Trump's former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson met with the House Foreign Affairs Committee in a closed-door private session, during which he talked about his attempts to tackle Russian interference in the 2016 election.[238]
- May 22:
- The DoJ agrees to provide the House Intelligence Committee with intelligence files from the Mueller investigation.[239][240][241]
- It is reported, per unsealed search warrants, Cohen communicated more than 1,000 times during eight months with the Intrater with ties to Vekselberg, regarding plans to give Flynn a proposal to lift sanctions against Russia.[242]
- Judge Edgardo Ramos of the SDNY rejected the Trump suit against Deutsche Bank, ruling the bank must comply with congressional subpoenas.[243][244]
- May 23: Trump orders intelligence community to fully cooperate with Barr's investigation into 2016 surveillance, and granted Barr "full and complete" authority to declassify any classified information pertaining to the investigation.[245]
- May 29: Mueller addresses the nation on the Russia probe and its results,[246] stating that "If we had had confidence that the President clearly did not commit a crime, we would have said so" and that “the Constitution requires a process other than the criminal justice system to formally accuse a sitting president of wrongdoing,” while also stating his investigation made the "conclusion that there was insufficient evidence to charge" on conspiracy with Russia.
- May 31:
- Federal prosecutors refuse to comply with a court order to release redacted sections of Mueller report in regards to Flynn and with other relevant materials, saying that they're "unnecessary," and thus Judge Emmet G. Sullivan shouldn't have them.[247]
- After a year of trying to avoid testimony, Ex-Stone aide Andrew Miller finally testifies before what was the Mueller grand jury.[248]
- Stone appears in court to get his case dismissed and fails.[248]
June
- June: The Senate Intelligence Committee refers Trump Jr., Kushner, Bannon, Prince, and Clovis to the DoJ for possible criminal prosecution for giving the committee misleading testimony, including false statements.[249]
- Early June: Steele is interviewed for 16 hours by Michael E. Horowitz-led DoJ Inspector General.[250][251]
- June 3: House Judiciary committee announces a series of hearings related to the Mueller Report titled "Presidential Obstruction and Other Crimes".[252]
- June 4:
- Hicks and Donaldson are instructed by the Trump Administration to defy congressional subpoenas.[253]
- Judge Sullivan rules that the government no longer needs to make public the Flynn-Kislyak transcripts or provide to him the recordings of Flynn, Kislyak and Dowd after prosecutors refused to do so on May 31.[254]
- June 6:
- Flynn fires Covington & Burling attorneys Robert Kelner and Stephen Anthony, who had negotiated his plea deal.[255]
- The 2017 audio of the voicemail of former Trump attorney John M. Dowd's voicemail to the lawyer of Flynn was released.[256]
- June 10: House Judiciary committee hearing "Lessons from the Mueller Report: Presidential Obstruction and Other Crimes" is scheduled, with John Dean as a witness.[252]
- June 12:
- June 13: House Intelligence Committee subpoenas Flynn and Gates.[258]
- June 16: Airing this date, in George Stephanopoulos' 20/20 interview he asks Trump "Your campaign this time around, if foreigners, if Russia, if China, if someone else offers you information on opponents, should they accept it or should they call the FBI?" and Trump suggests he doesn't consider it interference.[259]
- June 19: Hicks testifies before the House Judiciary Committee in closed doors testimony.[260]
- June 24:
- Regarding a potential violation of the Presidential Records Act, the House Oversight Committee chairman demands notes taken by an aide, present during a meeting between Putin and Trump during the 2017 G20 Hamburg summit which was previously undisclosed.[261]
- Donaldson and the House Judiciary agree to receive her testimony.[262]
- Flynn's sentencing is delayed to allow his new lawyer more time to study the case documents.[263]
July
- July 1: Judge Friedrich rules that the Mueller Report and government public statements about it violate a standing court rule against prejudicial public statements and could unfairly prejudice a jury in the Concord Management and Consulting case, but also says that time will cure the injury. He issues an order limiting further government public statements about the case.[264]
- July 8: The White House blocks former chief of staff to ex-White House counsel McGahn Annie Donaldson, whose contemporaneous notes are cited 65 times in the Mueller report, from answering 212 questions about potential obstruction of justice by Trump.[265]
- July 9: It is reported the DoJ is attempting to discourage Aaron Zebley and James L. Quarles, two of Robert Mueller's deputies, from testifying before Congress.[266]
- July 11: The House Judiciary Committee is scheduled to vote on authorizing subpoenas for 12 of Robert Mueller's witnesses; including Kushner, Sessions, Rosenstein, Flynn, Kelly, Lewandowski, as well as Dylan Howard and David Pecker, two executives at American Media, Inc., and Keith Davidson, an attorney who previously represented Stormy Daniels.[267][268]
- July 15:
- The trial of Bijan Kian, Flynn's business partner, begins in federal court in Alexandria, Virginia. Kian is accused of acting as an unregistered agent of the Turkish government while a member of the Trump transition team.[269]
- The Senate Intelligence Committee interviews FBI special agent in charge at the Mueller investigation David Archey.[22]:852
- July 16:
- Former Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa tells CNN that his government knew in 2016, that Assange was interfering in the U.S. election.[270]
- The Ukrainian Sixth Administrative Court of Appeals overturns the December 12, 2018 ruling by the Kyiv Administrative District Court, that National Anti-Corruption Bureau director Artem Sytnyk and member of the Ukrainian Parliament Serhiy Leshchenko acted illegally when they revealed that Manafort's name and signature were in Yanukovych's "black ledger".[271]
- July 18: ABC News reports that the Trump administration is again invoking executive privilege to block intelligence committees from seeing classified Mueller documents.[272]
- July 21: On Fox News Sunday, Chairman Nadler says: "The [Mueller] report presents very substantial evidence that the president is guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors ..."[273][274][275]
- July 23: Kian is found guilty of illegally lobbying for Turkey and conspiring with Flynn and Alptekin to cover up his activities. Federal Judge Anthony J. Trenga announces he will rule on September 5 whether he will throw out the convictions for lack of evidence. Sentencing is set for October 18.[276][277]
- July 24:
- Mueller testifies before the House Intelligence and Judiciary Committees.[278][279] Mueller reiterated his concern over foreign interference in U.S. elections, which he considered a serious threat.[280]
- Senate Republican Cindy Hyde-Smith blocks two election security bills and a cybersecurity measure.[281][282]
- Mitch McConnell blocks the two election security measures.[283]
- July 25:
- House Oversight and Reform Committee votes to subpoena senior White House officials' communications via private email accounts and messaging applications.[284]
- Senate Intelligence report on Russian interference in the 2016 election made public.[285] The report found the Russian government directed extensive activity, beginning in at least 2014 and carrying into at least 2017, against U.S. election infrastructure at the state and local level. The report recommends additional funding through Congress for states to improve election security once the $380 million appropriated in 2018 is spent.[286][287][288][289]
- Trump calls President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky, which later in September sparks the Trump–Ukraine scandal.[290] Vice President Mike Pence's representative Keith Kellogg,[291] and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo were on the call.[292] Approximately 90 minutes after Trump's call, senior budget official Michael Duffey tells Pentagon officials that Trump is personally interested in the Ukraine aid and has ordered the hold himself.[293][294][295][296][297][298]
- In the phone call, Trump asks Zelensky to investigate CrowdStrike, the company that investigated the 2016 DNC server break-in by the GRU, and makes reference to a server allegedly located in Ukraine. He tells Zelensky to contact Barr for more details. This is widely interpreted by the press as a reference to debunked conspiracy theories propagated by Russian media and Roger Stone, among others, that say the reason the DNC didn't give the server to the FBI for analysis is because it is located in Ukraine. The same conspiracy theories also claim the company is owned by a wealthy Ukrainian.[299]
- July 26:
- Senate Intelligence Committee's new report on election interference concluded Russia probably targeted the election systems in all 50 states in the 2016 elections.[300][301]
- House Judiciary Committee asks judge Beryl Howell to unseal Mueller's secret grand jury evidence.[302][303][304][305]
- Trump calls Boris Johnson to congratulate him on becoming the new Prime Minister of the UK. On the call, he asks Johnson to help him discredit the Mueller investigation.[306]
- July 30: U.S. District Judge John Koeltl dismisses the DNC's April 20, 2018, lawsuit accusing the Trump campaign and WikiLeaks of working with Russia to disseminate stolen DNC documents. Judge Koeltl said the dissemination was protected by the First Amendment because they were not involved in stealing the material. The DNC suit alleged that only Russia was involved in the theft.[307]
August
- August 2: Giuliani meets with Zelensky aide Andrey Yermak in Madrid to discuss the investigations of Zlochevsky and of Ukrainian interference in the 2016 election that Trump wants the Ukrainian government to pursue.[308]
- August 6:
- Judge Jackson dismisses one of the charges against Gregory Craig. She writes that there is ambiguity over whether the FARA statute applies to a document Craig wrote in 2013 that contains materially false information.[309][310]
- Strzok files suit against the FBI and the DOJ over his firing. His complaint asserts that he was denied due process under the 5th amendment because he wasn't given the opportunity to appeal his discharge, and that the release of his text messages violated the Privacy Act. The complaint argues that his firing was politically motivated because it ignored a recommendation from the Office of Professional Responsibility that he be demoted or suspended without pay for 60 days.[311]
- August 7:
- House Judiciary Committee sues McGahn to testify before Congress, claiming he is the "most important witness, other than the president," regarding their investigation into possible obstruction of justice by Trump.[312][313][314]
- McCabe files suit against the FBI and the Justice Department over his firing. His complaint asserts that he was illegally demoted and fired as part of a plan by Trump to remove people who are not loyal to him.[315]
- August 8:
- Per the request for House Financial Services and the House Intelligence Committees; Bank of America, Citigroup, Deutsche Bank AG, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, and Wells Fargo turn over documents relating to Russians who may have had dealings with the Trump Organization, and/or Trump and his family. Some of the banks also turned over documents to New York state investigators.[316][317][318]
- For the first time publicly, Nadler states the panel is conducting an impeachment inquiry into Trump.[319]
- The FBI releases its 302 reports[320] on interviews with Bruce Ohr. The interviews were conducted from November 21, 2016, through May 15, 2017.[321]
- August 12: A whistleblower in the U.S. intelligence community files a complaint alleging "the President of the United States is using the power of his office to solicit interference from a foreign country in the 2020 U.S. election."[322][323]
- August 13: Around this date, US ambassador to the European Union Gordon D. Sondland and U.S. State Department special envoy to Ukraine Kurt D. Volker work on drafting a statement for the Ukrainian president that commits Ukraine to investigating Hunter Biden and interference by Ukrainians in the 2016 U.S. election. Giuliani and a top aide to the Ukrainian president are aware of the statement. The Ukrainian government never releases the statement, and it is unclear whether they received it.[324][325]
- August 15:
- The House Judiciary Committee issues subpoenas to Lewandowski and Rick Dearborn to testify before the committee on September 17.[326] It is reported Trump is considering invoking executive privilege again, despite Lewandowski having never worked in the White House.[327]
- Gregory B. Craig's trial begins in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. He is accused of lying to federal investigators about the work Skadden performed for Manafort and Viktor Yanukovych.[328]
- August 22: Giuliani confirms the State Department assisted his efforts in pressing the government of Ukraine to probe Democratic opponents of president Trump, regarding Manafort information release.[329]
- August 26: The House Judiciary Committee subpoenas Rob Porter.[330]
- August 27: Intelligence Community Inspector General Michael Atkinson summarizes the whistleblower complaint to Paul B. Murphy, Wray's chief of staff at the FBI.[331]
September
- September 4:
- September 9:
- The House Judiciary committee releases formal parameters of its impeachment investigation.[333][334]
- It is reported the House Intelligence committee is accusing Flynn of failing to comply with its subpoena.[335][336]
- It is reported the House Intelligence, Oversight and Foreign Affairs committees are investigating reported efforts by Trump and Giuliani "to pressure the government of Ukraine to assist" Trump's re-election campaign.[337][338]
- It is reported a former senior Russian official, who was a top CIA asset, and was instrumental to the agency's conclusion that Putin orchestrated the interference in the 2016 presidential election, was extracted from inside Russia in 2017, due to concern over Trump's disclosures of classified information, possibly endangering the asset.[339][340][341]
- September 11: The House Judiciary Committee approves a resolution defining the rules for its impeachment investigation into Trump.[342][343][344][345]
- September 12:
- September 17:
- Trump orders Dearborn and Rob Porter not to testify at a House Judiciary Committee hearing about Trump's possible obstruction of justice.[351][352][353]
- Lewandowski refuses to answer dozens of questions about potential obstruction of justice during the House Judiciary Committee hearing "Presidential Obstruction of Justice and Abuse of Power."[354][355][356][357]
- September 18: The House Intelligence committee has demanded Flynn provide requested documents by this date.[335][336]
- September 19:
- After repeatedly blocking Democratic efforts to bring election security legislation to the floor, including a measure that would have authorized funding to update voting equipment, McConnell says he will now back a measure to provide states with an additional $250 million in election security funding.[358][359]
- Giuliani tells Chris Cuomo on CNN's Cuomo Prime Time that he asked the Ukrainian government to investigate Ukrainian interference in the 2016 election to benefit Clinton. He denies asking Ukraine to investigate Hunter Biden, then admits doing so after further questioning.[360]
- September 20: It is reported Trump pressured the President of Ukraine eight times to investigate Hunter Biden.[347][348][349][350]
- September 23:
- Flynn's lawyer Powell informs the House Intelligence Committee that Flynn will invoke his Fifth Amendment rights instead of testifying before the committee.[361] She writes, Flynn "will not appear before your committee on September 25, 2019 to be paraded, harassed or disparaged for doing so."[362]
- Bolton tells House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Eliot Engel in a phone call that he should "look into the recall of Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch." Later, Engel informs his colleagues on the Oversight, Intelligence, and Foreign Affairs Committees of the conversation.[363]
- September 24:
- September 25:
- The House Intelligence committee has demanded Flynn appear to testify this day,[335][336] prior to September 23 pleading the Fifth.
- It is reported Trump urged President Zelensky to "do us a favor" and "look into" potential corruption by Trump's political opponent's son per the White House readout of the July 25 call.[366]
- Trump responds to an AP reporter at a press conference at the U.N. that he believes Clinton's "missing" emails could be in Ukraine.[367][368]
- The White House releases a "rough transcript" of the July 35 Trump–Zelinski phone call.[369]
- September 26:
- Acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire testifies before the House Intelligence Committee about why he blocked the whistleblower complaint from being delivered to Congress.[370]
- The House Intelligence Committee releases an unclassified version of the whistleblower complaint.[371]
- September 27:
- The Democratic minority of the Senate Finance Committee releases a report which finds that the NRA acted as a "foreign asset" to Russia ahead of 2016 election.[372][373][374] The report presents detailed evidence of NRA officials' interactions with Russian nationals that bring into question the tax-exempt status of the NRA, including many details of the December 2015 Moscow trip that internal documents show was an official NRA function despite subsequent public denials.[375][374]
- House Democrats decide on a strategy to narrow the impeachment inquiry to focus on Donald Trump's phone call with Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelensky.[376][377][378] Three House committees (Intelligence, Oversight and Foreign Affairs) issue subpoenas to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and five other State Department officials to produce documents relating to the Ukraine phone call.[379]
- Senators Grassley and Ron Jonson send a letter to the Justice Department as a followup to Grassley's July 20, 2017, letter calling for an investigation into alleged coordination between Alexandra Chalupa and the Ukrainian government to interfere in the 2016 election. They again cite the January 11, 2017 Politico report on alleged Ukrainian interference as evidence.[380][381]
- Barr and Durham have at least two meetings with Italian intelligence officials in Rome. They are shown evidence on Mifsud and listen to a recording of him being deposed when he reportedly applied for police protection. Public records show Mifsud gave a deposition to justify his application for police protection after he left Link Campus University, but after Barr and Durham's meetings, two intelligence sources tell ANSA that Mifsud did not apply for police protection.[382][383][384]
- September 30:
- The House Oversight Committee issue a subpoena to Trump's personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani, as well as to three of Giuliani's associates, for documents relating to the Ukraine call.[385]
- It is reported Trump may have lied to Mueller about his knowledge of his campaign's contacts with WikiLeaks, citing the grand jury redactions in the Mueller Report.[386]
October
- October 1:
- Washington, DC federal judge orders the DoJ to produce 500 pages of memos documenting what witnesses told Mueller's office and the FBI during their investigation, requiring the DoJ to produce their first set of documents by November 1.[387]
- Italian newspaper il Foglio publishes a photo of Mifsud in Switzerland with a copy of the Swiss newspaper Zürichsee-Zeitung dated May 21, 2018, as proof that he is still alive. Mifsud has not been seen since October 2017.[388]
- Pompeo informs the chairmen of the House Foreign Affairs, Intelligence, and Oversight and Reform committees that the five State Department officials scheduled to be deposed in the House impeachment inquiry over the next two weeks will not appear.[389] He characterizes the depositions as "an attempt to intimidate, bully, and treat improperly, the distinguished professionals of the Department of State."[390]
- October 2:
- Senator Graham sends an official letter to Prime Ministers Scott Morrison of Australia, Giuseppe Conte of Italy, and Boris Johnson of the U.K. asking them to assist Barr in his investigation of the Trump–Russia dossier (Steele dossier), Mifsud, and Australian diplomat Alexander Downer.[391][392] Australian ambassador to the U.S. Joe Hockey responds that his government already offered assistance to Barr in May and strongly rejects Graham's characterization of Downer as working for the FBI to spy on Papadopoulos.[393][392]
- State Department Inspector General Steve Linick delivers a "packet of propaganda and disinformation" to House impeachment investigators promoting conspiracy theories about former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovich. The State Department received the packet in the Spring, allegedly from the White House. Giuliani tells CNN that he is the source of the material.[394]
- October 3: House impeachment investigators depose Volker.[395] He tells the investigators that he warned Giuliani that Ukrainian claims about Bidens' alleged misconduct were not credible.[396]
- October 4:
- Pompeo misses the deadline for providing documents to the House impeachment inquiry. At a press conference with the foreign minister of Greece, he tells reporters that he sent a letter as "our initial response to the document request. We’ll obviously do all the things we’re required to do by law."[397]
- House impeachment investigators depose Intelligence Community Inspector General Michael Atkinson.[398]
- October 7:
- U.S. SDNY Federal Judge Victor Marrero rules that the President is not immune from investigation and prosecution by state prosecutors while in office regardless of any legal opinions by the Justice Department. Marrero calls Trump's argument "repugnant to the nation’s governmental structure and constitutional values."[399] This is considered to be the first ruling on the Justice Department memos that claim the President is immune from prosecution while in office.[400]
- Deputy Assistant Secretary of State George P. Kent fails to appear for his scheduled voluntary deposition with the House impeachment investigators.[401]
- John Dowd, in is capacity as legal counsel for Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman, tells the Miami Herald that his clients will ignore House subpoenas for documents and skip their scheduled voluntary depositions with House impeachment investigators.[402]
- October 8:
- The Senate Intelligence Committee releases volume two of its report on Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. elections.[403] The report finds that the majority of the IRA's social media postings targeted African-Americans.[404]
- Cipollone sends a letter to Speaker Pelosi, Chairman Schiff, Chairman Cummings, and Chairman Eliot Engel informing them that the White House will not cooperate with the House impeachment inquiry.[405][406]
- The White House blocks Sondland's voluntary deposition with House impeachment investigators hours before the scheduled time.[401]
- State Department counselor T. Ulrich Brechbuhl fails to appear for his voluntary deposition with House impeachment investigators.[401]
- October 9: Parnas and Fruman are arrested at Dulles International Airport holding one-way tickets to Frankfurt on Lufthansa Airlines.[407]
- October 10:
- The Washington Post reports that former Italian prime minister Matteo Renzi and Link Campus University are both suing Papadopoulos for libel because of his public statements accusing Renzi and the university of helping Obama orchestrate Mifsud's activities. Renzi is asking for $1 million.[383]
- Federal prosecutors unseal an indictment accusing Parnas, Fruman, David Correia, and Andrey Kukushkin of violating campaign finance laws in 2018 to funnel money from a Russian national to political action committees (PACs) and campaigns supporting Trump, West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, and state and federal candidates in Nevada, New York, and other states.[408] The indictment alleges a contribution to one Congressman was made in exchange for pressure to remove Ambassador Yovanovitch from her post in Ukraine.[407][409] In the indictment, Yovanovitch is identified as "Ambassador",[407] Nevada gubernatorial candidate Adam Lexalt as "Candidate-1",[410] Nevada state attorney general candidate Wes Duncan as "Candidate-2",[410] Trump's main super-PAC America First Action as "Committee-1",[411] Morissey's PAC 35th Inc. as "Committee-2",[412] House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy's joint fundraising committee Protect the House as "Committee-3",[413] and U.S. Representative Pete Sessions as "Congressman-1".[414]
- Parnas misses his voluntary deposition with House impeachment investigators.[401]
- The White House tells Yovanovitch not to appear for her House deposition.[415]
- Career diplomat Michael McKinley resigns from the State Department over Trump's attacks on Yovanovitch. His latest position was senior advisor to Secretary of State Pompeo.[416][417]
- October 11:
- October 14:
- House impeachment investigators cancel Giuliani associate Semyon Kislin's scheduled deposition after he reaches a cooperation agreement with the House Intelligence Committee.[422]
- Sondland misses the deadline for providing subpoenaed documents to House impeachment investigators. His attorneys say he us unable to produce the documents without permission from the State Department.[401]
- House impeachment investigators depose former National Security Council official Fiona Hill.[423][424]
- October 15:
- Deadline for Giuliani to comply with House Oversight Committee subpoena,[385] passes with Giuliani stating he won't comply with a congressional subpoena.[425][426]
- Pence says he will not comply with a document request regarding Trump's July 25 call with Zelensky from House impeachment investigators.[427][428]
- The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) states it won't comply with a congressional subpoena over documents, which were requested October 7, about withholding military aid to Ukraine. The acting budget director Russell Vought refuses to testify on October 25.[429][430]
- House impeachment investigators depose senior State Department official George Kent.[431][432]
- October 16: House impeachment investigators depose McKinley.[433][417]
- October 17:
- Acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney tells reporters at a White House press conference that Trump withheld $400 million of military aid to Ukraine in order to force them to investigate "corruption related to the DNC server." He defends the move as "absolutely appropriate."[434][435]
- House impeachment investigators depose Sondland.[436][437]
- House Oversight and Reform Committee Chairman Elijah Cummings dies from "complications concerning longstanding health challenges." He chaired one of the three House committees conducting the impeachment inquiry.[438]
- October 18:
- Kian is scheduled for sentencing,[276] prior to September 24 overturning.
- Assistant Secretary of Energy Melissa F. Burnison informs House impeachment investigators that the Department of Energy will not produce the documents subpoenaed from Secretary Rick Perry, citing Cipollone's October 8 letter calling the subpoenas invalid.[439][440]
- October 21: House impeachment investigators postpone the depositions scheduled for October 24–25 because of a scheduling conflict with Congressman Cumming's memorial services.[441]
- October 22: House impeachment investigators depose William B. Taylor Jr..[442][443][444][445]
- October 23:
- House Republicans barge into the secure room in the basement of the Capitol building used by the House committees conducting the impeachment inquiry to depose witnesses. They refuse to leave for five hours as they protest the deposition process. There presence violates House rules because they bring electronic devices into a room secured for discussing highly sensitive or classified information.[446]
- House impeachment investigators depose deputy assistant secretary of defense for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia Laura Cooper after the unauthorized Republican protesters clear out of the secure room.[447][446]
- October 25:
- Butina is released from federal prison in Florida and deported to Russia.[448][449]
- Judge Howell orders the Justice Department to hand over to the House Judiciary Committee all of the grand jury materials referenced in the Mueller report, as well as any grand jury redactions in the Mueller report itself, by October 30.[450] She rules that an impeachment resolution voted on by the full House has never been required for House committees to perform an impeachment investigation.[451]
- The House subpoenas OMB officials Michael Duffey and Russell Vought, and Brechbuhl to testify in the impeachment inquiry on November 5 and 6.[452]
- Former Deputy National Security Advisor Charles Kupperman files suit asking for guidance from a federal court on whether he should comply with a Congressional subpoena issued by the impeachment inquiry or follow the White House's instructions to ignore it.[453]
- October 26: House impeachment investigators depose Philip T. Reeker, the acting under secretary in charge of European and Eurasian Affairs.[454][455]
- October 27: Kupperman skips his scheduled deposition with House impeachment investigators.[456]
- October 28: Alexander Vindman releases his opening statement for his deposition the next day.[457]
- October 29: House impeachment investigators depose Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Vindman.[458][459]
- October 30:
- The Court order to turn over Mueller's secret grand jury evidence to the House Judiciary Committee, which Attorney General William Barr had withheld, is stayed during appeal.[460]
- House impeachment investigators depose State Department Ukraine expert Catherine Croft and foreign service officer Christopher Anderson.[461][462][463]
- Acting assistant secretary for international security affairs Kathryn Wheelbarger misses her rescheduled deposition.[401]
- October 31:
- House impeachment investigators depose National Security Council Russia and Europe Director Tim Morrison.[464][465]
- The House passes a resolution putting in place formal rules for the impeachment process.[466]
- In a hearing on McGahn's challenge to a Congressional subpoena for testimony, Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson calls the Trump administration's claim that McGahn cannot be compelled to testify a "peculiar" argument threatening the checks and balances in the Constitution.[467]
- In the Kupperman case, Judge Richard J. Leon sets December 10 as an expedited hearing date.[467]
November
- November 1:
- The OLC issues an opinion stating that Executive Branch employees cannot be compelled to testify before Congress without the assistance of counsel from the agencies for which they work.[468][469]
- U.S. Department of Energy press secretary Shaylyn Hynes announces that Secretary Rick Perry will not participate in impeachment depositions, saying he "will not partake in a secret star chamber inquisition where agency counsel is forbidden to be present."[470]
- November 2: The DoJ starts to produce memos documenting what witnesses told Mueller's office and the FBI during their investigation.[471][472]
- November 4:
- Four White House officials fail to appear to give subpoenaed Congressional testimony for the impeachment inquiry: John Eisenberg, Michael Ellis, Robert Blair, and Brian McCormack. The four were ordered not to testify by the White House, which claims the subpoenas are not valid. The White House also claims Eisenberg has blanket immunity from being forced to appear.[473][474]
- Parnas's attorney Joseph A. Bondy announces that Parnas is ready to assist the House impeachment inquiry with testimony and documents.[475]
- November 5:
- Trial of Roger Stone begins.[476][477]
- Duffey and National Security Council (NSC) director of international energy and environment Wells Griffith fail to appear for their depositions in the impeachment inquiry.[478][479]
- November 6:
- November 7:
- Credico testifies for the prosecution in the Stone trial.[485]
- National security aide to Pence and State Department employee Jennifer Williams is deposed in the impeachment inquiry.[486][487] John Bolton skips his voluntary deposition.[488]
- November 8:
- Credico and Bannon testify in Stone's trial.[489][490][491]
- Mulvaney refuses to testify before Congress for the impeachment inquiry. His outside counsel William Pittard informs the investigating committees one minute before his scheduled deposition that he was directed by the White House not to testify.[492][493]
- Bolton's attorney Charles Cooper informs House general counsel Douglas Letter that Bolton has a lot to tell about Ukraine but will not testify unless he receives a subpoena.[488]
- OMB official Mark Sandy fails to appear for his deposition in the impeachment inquiry.[401]
- November 12:
- Gates testifies in Stone's trial. The prosecution rests its case before lunch. The defense plays one hour of a recording of Stone's testimony before the House Intelligence Committee, then rests without calling any witnesses.[494][495]
- The Republican staff of the House Intelligence, Oversight, and Foreign Affairs Committees circulates a memo[496] among Republican members of the committees to update them on "key points of evidence" from the closed-door impeachment hearings that bolster Trump's defense.[496][497] A subsection of the background information section discusses what they describe as interference by senior Ukrainian government officials in the 2016 U.S. election.[496][497]
- November 13:
- November 15:
- The jury convicts Stone on all seven counts brought by Special Counsel Robert Mueller of lying to Congress: obstruction of proceedings, five counts of false statements, and one count of witness tampering about his efforts to learn about the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks' release of hacked Democratic emails in the 2016 presidential election.[500][501][502]
- Former Ambassador Yovanovitch testifies in a public impeachment hearing before the House Intelligence Committee.[503]
- House impeachment investigators depose U.S. Embassy in Ukraine official David Holmes.[504][505]
- The White House releases a "memorandum of telephone conversation", also referred to as a "rough transcript," of the July 25 phone call with Zelinski.[506][507]
- November 16: House impeachment investigators depose OMB official Mark Sandy.[508][509]
- November 18:
- It is reported that the House of Representatives is investigating whether Trump lied to Special Counsel Robert Mueller.[510][511]
- The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals schedules arguments for access by House for unredacted Mueller Grand Jury materials. House counsel Douglas Letter argues that the House needs it immediately for the impeachment probe.[512]
- Paul Erickson pleads guilty to federal wire fraud and money laundering charges. One charge includes transferring $1,000 of an investor's money to Maria Butina.[513]
- November 19:
- U.S. District Court Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson announces that she will issue a ruling on November 25 on whether McGahn must honor a subpoena and testify before Congress. The announcement comes after House counsel Doug Letter files a request[514] to expedite the decision so that McGahn's testimony can be used in the impeachment investigation.[515]
- Vindman, Williams, Volker, and Morrison testify in public impeachment hearings before the House Intelligence Committee.[516][517]
- November 20:
- Speaking at an economic forum in Moscow, Putin says, "Thank God nobody is accusing us anymore of interfering in U.S. elections.... Now they're accusing Ukraine. Well, let them sort this out among themselves."[518]
- Sondland, Cooper, and Hale testify in public impeachment hearings before the House Intelligence Committee.[519][520]
- November 21:
- According to a leaked copy of the justice department Inspector General's report on the origins of the Russia investigation, a former low-level FBI lawyer is under criminal investigation by the Justice Department for allegedly altering documents in 2016 related to the FISA Court-approved surveillance of Carter Page.[521][522]
- In the same leaked document, the Inspector General's report exonerates the FBI of any possible wrongdoing in the origin of the Russia probe.[523]
- David Holmes and Fiona Hill testify in a public impeachment hearing before the House Intelligence Committee.[524] Hill tells the Committee that the narrative pushed by its Republican members that Ukraine, not Russia, interfered in the 2016 U.S. election "is a fictional narrative that has been perpetrated and propagated by the Russian security services themselves."[525]
- November 25: Judge Jackson rules that McGahn must testify.[526]
- November 26: Nadler invites Trump or his counsel to participate in the House Judiciary Committee's first impeachment hearing scheduled for December 4.[527][528]
- November 27: Federal appeals court stays Judge Jackson's ruling regarding whether McGahn must comply with a House subpoena. Schedules oral arguments for January.[529][530]
- November 29: Nadler informs Trump that he must decide by December 6 whether or not to participate in the House Judiciary Committee's impeachment hearings after that date.[531][532]
December
- December 1: Cipollone rejects Nadler's offer for Trump or is attorneys to participate in the December 4 House Judiciary Committee impeachment hearing, calling the entire impeachment process unfair.[533]
- December 2:
- The House Intelligence Committee circulates among members its draft report on the impeachment investigation.[534][535][536]
- Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson refuses to extend stay on the McGahn case.[537]
- Republican members of the House Intelligence, Oversight, and Foreign Affairs committees release their own report[538] on the impeachment inquiry that calls Schiff unfair and claims that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 U.S. election.[539]
- Politico reports that the Senate Intelligence Committee was unable to find any evidence that the Ukrainian government interfered in the 2016 presidential election.[540]
- December 3:
- The House Intelligence Committee votes 13–9 along party lines to release the report[541] on their impeachment inquiry.[542]
- The DoJ unseals an indictment[543] against Nader and several American straw donors for 2016 donations to Clinton, other Democrats, and the Trump inauguration on behalf of U.A.E. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan (MbZ). The indictment alleges Nader reimbursed the others for $3.5 million in donations in their names.[544][545]
- December 4:
- Leaked IG report draft shows that U.S. Attorney John Durham, who had been conducting an investigation into the origins of the Russia probe told Horowitz that he had found no evidence of any wrongdoing and that right-wing conspiracy theories were merely that.[546]
- The House Judiciary Committee holds its first impeachment hearing. The hearing focuses on what is considered impeachable, with testimony provided by four constitutional law professors: Noah Feldman, Pamela Karlan, Michael Gerhardt, and Jonathan Turley.[547]
- December 5: Pelosi asks House committee chairs to prepare articles of impeachment against President Trump.[548]
- December 6:
- Cipollone rejects Nadler's invitation for Trump or his attorneys to participate in the House Judiciary Committee's impeachment hearings, writing, "House Democrats have wasted enough of America’s time with this charade.[549] You should end this inquiry now and not waste even more time with additional hearings."[550]
- Senators Grassley, Graham, and Johnson, in their respective roles as chairs of the Senate Finance, Judiciary, and Homland Security and Government Affairs committees, jointly send requests to Chalupa and Andreii Telizhenko to produce documents and appear for staff-level interviews about their alleged roles in alleged Ukrainian interference in the 2016 presidential election.[551]
- December 9:
- The DoJ Inspector General Horowitz's report on the Russia investigation is released, confirming previously leaked exonerations.[552]
- House Intelligence Committee staffers present to the House Judiciary Committee the case for the impeachment of the President.[553] During the hearing, Daniel S. Goldman claimed "Trump's persistent and continuing effort to coerce a foreign country to help him cheat to win an election is a clear and present danger to our free and fair elections and to our national security."[554][555]
- December 10:
- House Judiciary Committee introduced two articles of impeachment against Trump, charging him with abuse of power and obstruction of the impeachment inquiry.[556][557]
- Trump castigates FBI Director Wray on Twitter for supporting the conclusions of the DoJ IG report.[558][559]
- At a hearing in the Kupperman case, House lawyers move to dismiss his lawsuit asking for guidance on whether he should comply with Congressional subpoenas. They assure Judge Leon that they have dropped his subpoena and will not be calling him to testify in the future. Kupperman's lawyer asks the judge to continue the case so that Kupperman can get a definitive answer.[560]
- December 11:
- The Senate Judiciary Committee holds hearings on the DoJ IG report.[561] IG Horowitz tells the committee that the investigation into the New York FBI field office leaking information about the Clinton email investigation to Giuliani in 2016 is still underway.[562]
- The House Judiciary Committee begins debating the articles of impeachment.[563]
- December 12: The House Judiciary Committee continues debating the articles of impeachment for 14 hours, with the Democrat majority voting down Republican amendments that would have diluted the articles.[564]
- December 13:
- House Judiciary Committee approves articles of impeachment against President Trump on a partisan vote.[565]
- The Supreme Court grants certiorari on Presidential immunity in criminal cases.[566]
- December 16:
- Mike Flynn's sentencing is rescheduled after U.S. District Judge Emmet G. Sullivan D.C. dismissed Flynn's motion to find prosecutors in contempt.[567]
- The House Judiciary Committee files a supplemental brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit regarding the committee's suit to access Mueller grand jury material.[568]
- December 17:
- December 18:
- The House votes to pass both articles of impeachment against President Trump, making him only the third President in American history to have been impeached.[571]
- New York state judge Maxwell Wiley rules that the March 13 state charges brought against Manafort violate the state's double jeopardy law, which prevents someone from being prosecuted under state law for crimes they were already convicted of in federal court.[572]
- December 20: Justice Department claims that McGahn case is moot now that impeachment has been done.[573]
- December 23: In reply, the House's counsel states that further impeachment articles are possible and thus the suit "In re: Don McGahn" is not moot.[574]
- December 24: Deadline for written arguments in the Justice Department's appeal of the lawsuit over access by House impeachment investigators to the Mueller Grand Jury evidence and to force the testimony of McGahn.[512]
- December 30: The Bolton/Kupperman case is dismissed as moot.[575]
2020
See also
Wikisource has original text related to this article: |
References
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- House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (December 2019). "The Trump-Ukraine Impeachment Inquiry" (PDF). U.S. House of Representatives. Retrieved December 3, 2019.
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- "California CEO and Seven Others Charged in Multi-Million Dollar Conduit Campaign Contribution Case". U.S. Department of Justice. December 3, 2019. Retrieved December 8, 2019.
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Further reading
- Abramson, Seth (September 3, 2019). Proof of Conspiracy: How Trump's International Collusion Is Threatening American Democracy. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-1250256713.
https://static.macmillan.com/static/macmillan/proofofconspiracy/endnotes.pdf
- Benkler, Yochai; Faris, Robert; Roberts, Hal (October 15, 2018). Network Propaganda: Manipulation, Disinformation and Radicalization in American Politics. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0190923631.
- Bittman, Ladislav (1983). The KGB and Soviet Disinformation. Foreword by Roy Godson.
- Chait, Jonathan (July 9, 2018). "Will Trump Be Meeting With His Counterpart — Or His Handler? A plausible theory of mind-boggling collusion". The Daily Intelligencer. New York magazine. Retrieved August 24, 2018.
- Costa, Robert; Leonnig, Carol D.; Dawsey, Josh (December 2, 2017). "Inside the secretive nerve center of the Mueller investigation". The Washington Post.
- Demirjian, Karoun (December 8, 2016). "Republicans ready to launch wide-ranging probe of Russia, despite Trump's stance". Chicago Tribune, The Washington Post.
- DiResta, Renee; Shaffer, Kris; Ruppel, Becky; Sullivan, David; Matney, Robert; Fox, Ryan; Albright, Jonathan; Johnson, Ben (December 17, 2018). "The Tactics & Tropes of the Internet Research Agency" (PDF). New Knowledge – via Wikimedia Commons.
- Entous, Adam; Nakashima, Ellen; Jaffe, Greg (December 26, 2017). "Kremlin trolls burned across the Internet as Washington debated options." The Washington Post.
- Foer, Franklin (March 2018). "The Plot Against America". The Atlantic.
- Frank, Thomas (January 12, 2018). "Secret Money: How Trump Made Millions Selling Condos To Unknown Buyers". BuzzFeed News.
- Hamburger, Tom; Helderman, Rosalind S. (February 6, 2018). "Hero or hired gun? How a British former spy became a flash point in the Russia investigation." The Washington Post.
- Harding, Luke (November 16, 2017). Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0525520931.
- Harding, Luke (November 19, 2017). "The Hidden History of Trump's First Trip to Moscow". Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win. Politico Magazine.
- Hettena, Seth (May 2018). Trump / Russia: A Definitive History. ISBN 978-1612197395.
- Howard, Philip N.; Ganesh, Bharath; Liotsiou, Dimitra; Kelly, John; François, Camille (December 17, 2018). "The IRA, Social Media and Political Polarization in the United States, 2012-2018" (PDF). Computational Propaganda Research Project – via Wikimedia Commons.
- Jamieson, Kathleen Hall (October 3, 2018). Cyberwar: How Russian Hackers and Trolls Helped Elect a President; What We Don't, Can't, and Do Know. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0190915810.
- Lichtman, Allan J. (2017), The Case for Impeachment, Dey Street Books, ISBN 978-0062696823
- Luce, Edward (November 3, 2017) The Big Read: Trump under siege from Mueller as he travels to Asia. Financial Times.
- McCain, John; Graham, Lindsey; Schumer, Chuck; Reed, Jack (December 11, 2016). "McCain, Graham, Schumer, Reed Joint Statement on Reports That Russia Interfered with the 2016 Election". United States Senate Committee on Armed Services.
- Nance, Malcolm (October 10, 2016). The Plot to Hack America: How Putin's Cyberspies and WikiLeaks Tried to Steal the 2016 Election. Skyhorse Publishing.
- Osnos, Evan; Remnick, David; Yaffa, Joshua. "Trump, Putin, and the New Cold War," (March 6, 2017), The New Yorker.
- Pacepa, Ion Mihai; Rychlak, Ronald J. (2013). Disinformation: Former Spy Chief Reveals Secret Strategies for Undermining Freedom, Attacking Religion, and Promoting Terrorism
- Pilipenko, Diana; Dessel, Talia (December 17, 2018). "Following the Money: Trump and Russia-Linked Transactions From the Campaign to the Presidential Inauguration". Center for American Progress.
- Porter, Tom (December 1, 2016). "US House of representatives backs proposal to counter global Russian subversion". International Business Times UK edition.
- Shane, Scott; Mazzetti, Mark (September 20, 2018). "The Plot to Subvert an Election", The New York Times
- Shultz, Richard H.; Godson, Roy (1984). Dezinformatsia: Active Measures in Soviet Strategy
- Strohm, Chris (December 1, 2016). "Russia Weaponized Social Media in U.S. Election, FireEye Says". Bloomberg News.
- Thompson, Nicholas; Vogelstein, Fred (February 12, 2018). "Inside the two years that shook Facebook–and the World." Wired.
- Toobin, Jeffrey (December 11, 2017). "Michael Flynn's Guilty Plea Sends Donald Trump's Lawyers Scrambling" The New Yorker.
- Unger, Craig (July 13, 2017). "Trump's Russian Laundromat" The New Republic.
- Unger, Craig (2018). House of Trump, House of Putin: The Untold Story of Donald Trump and the Russian Mafia. Dutton. ISBN 978-1524743505.
- Watts, Clint (2018). Messing with the Enemy: Surviving in a Social Media World of Hackers, Terrorists, Russians, and Fake News. Harper. ISBN 978-0062795984.
- Weisburd, Andrew; Watts, Clint; Berger, J. M. (November 6, 2016). "Trolling for Trump: How Russia is Trying to Destroy Our Democracy". WarOnTheRocks.com.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Russian interference in 2016 United States elections. |
- Desjardins, Lisa (February 21, 2019) [June 7, 2018]. "The giant timeline of everything Russia, Trump and the investigations". PBS NewsHour.
- "Joint Statement from the Department Of Homeland Security and Office of the Director of National Intelligence on Election Security", October 7, 2016
- Trump Investigations by the Associated Press
- Bill Moyers: Interactive Timeline: Everything We Know About Russia and President Trump
- Committee to Investigate Russia has five timelines.
- Data, Democracy and Dirty Tricks, March 19, 2018 Channel 4
- Trump and Russia: A timeline of the investigation, USA Today
- Tracking the Russia investigations, CNN
- The Trump Russia Investigation, WhatTheFuckJustHappenedToday.com
- "The Russia investigation and Donald Trump: a timeline from on-the-record sources", PolitiFact
- Public Documents Clearinghouse: Congressional Russia Investigations, Just Security