Anyone
Of “Russian Descent” Now Targeted In Senate Investigation
27
December, 2017
The
Senate committee probing alleged Russian interference in the U.S.
political system has deemed anyone “of Russian nationality or
Russian descent” relevant to its investigation, according to a
document obtained by TYT.
In
an email dated December 19, 2017, April Doss—who serves as
senior minority counsel on the Senate Select Committee on
Intelligence (SSCI)—defined the scope of the committee’s inquiry
as anyone a subject “knows or has reason to believe [is] of Russian
nationality or descent.” The senior majority counsel for the SSCI,
Vanessa Le, was cc’d on the mails.
Doss,
the former head of intelligence law at the National Security Agency,
was reportedly brought
onto the
committee by Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.), who serves as its vice
chairman and one of its most prominent
public faces.
Warner has repeatedly said that the committee’s work represents the
“most important thing [he’s] ever done.” The chairman of the
committee is Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.).
On
July 27, 2017, Charles C. Johnson, a controversial right-wing media
figure, received a letter from
Sens. Burr and Warner requesting that he voluntarily provide
materials in his possession that are “relevant” to the
committee’s investigation. Relevant materials, the letter went on,
would include any records of interactions Johnson had with “Russian
persons” who were involved in some capacity in the 2016 U.S.
elections.
The
committee further requested materials related to “Russian persons”
who were involved in some capacity in “activities that related in
any way to the political election process in the U.S.” Materials
may include “documents, emails, text messages, direct messages,
calendar appointments, memoranda, [and] notes,” the letter
outlined.
Doss’s
statement was in response to a request made by Robert Barnes, an
attorney for Johnson, for clarification as to the SSCI’s definition
of a “Russian person.”
How
the committee expects subjects to go about ascertaining whether a
person is of “Russian descent” is unclear. “It does indicate
that the committee is throwing a rather broad net,” Jonathan
Turley, a professor of law at George Washington University, said. “It
is exceptionally broad.” In terms of constitutionality, Turley
speculated that “most courts would view that as potentially too
broad, but not unlawful.”
Rachel
Cohen, a spokesperson for Sen. Warner, said the SSCI “does not
comment on specific witnesses or related requests.”
Johnson
told TYT that he intends not to cooperate with the SSCI in any
respect.
Jill
Stein, the 2016 Green Party candidate, also received a
request for materials from the committee, and has stated that she
plans to fully comply. But as TYT previously reported, a former Stein
campaign staffer, Dennis Trainor Jr., said that
he has serious reservations about compliance.
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