“I
Know Where All The Bodies Are Buried”: Clinton Foundation CFO
Spills Beans To Investigators
Kessel
told MDA “There is no controlling Bill Clinton. He does whatever he
wants and runs up incredible expenses with foundation funds,”
according to MDA’s account of the interview.
The
CFO of the Clinton Foundation, thinking he was “meeting an old
professional acquaintance,” admitted to investigators that the
charity had widespread problems with governance, accounting
and conflicts
of interest,
and that Bill Clinton has been commingling business and personal
expenses for a long time, reports The
Hill‘s
John Solomon.
Clinton
Foundation CFO Andrew Kessel made the admissions to investigators
from MDA Analytics LLC – a firm run by “accomplished ex-federal
criminal investigators,” who have been probing the Clinton
Foundation for some time.
Kessel told
MDA “There is no controlling Bill Clinton. He does whatever he
wants and runs up incredible expenses with foundation funds,
according to MDA’s account of the interview. “Bill
Clinton mixes and matches his personal business with that of the
foundation.
Many people within the foundation have tried to caution him about
this but he does not listen, and there really is no talking to him.”
MDA
compiled Kessel’s statements, as well as over 6,000
pages of evidence from a whistleblower they
had been working with separately, and which they filed secretly over
a year ago with the FBI and IRS. MDA has alleged that the
Clinton Foundation engaged in illegal activities, and may owe
millions in unpaid taxes and penalties.
In addition to the IRS, the firm’s partners have had contact with prosecutors in the main Justice Department in Washington and FBI agents in Little Rock, Ark. And last week, a federal prosecutor suddenly asked for documents from their private investigation.
…
The memo also claims Kessel confirmed to the private investigators that private lawyers reviewed the foundation’s practices — once in 2008 and the other in 2011 — and each found widespread problems with governance, accounting and conflicts of interest.
“I have addressed it before and, let me tell you, I know where all the bodies are buried in this place,” the memo alleges Kessel said.
…
The 48-page submission, dated Aug. 11, 2017, supports its claims with 95 exhibits, including internal legal reviews that the foundation conducted on itself in 2008 and 2011. –The Hill
“There
is probable cause that the Clinton Foundation has run afoul of IRS
rules regarding tax-exempt charitable organizations and has acted
inconsistently with its stated purpose,” MDA alleged in its memo,
adding “The
Foundation should be investigated for all of the above-mentioned
improprieties. The tax rules, codes, statutes and the rule of law
should and must be applied in this case.”
Foundation
officials confirmed that Kessel met with MDA investigators, but said
that he “strongly denies that he said or suggested hat the Clinton
Foundation or President Clinton engaged in inappropriate or illegal
activities.”
“Mr.
Kessel believed he was meeting an old professional acquaintance who
was looking for business from the Foundation,” the foundation added
in a statement.
MDA
was specifically created to investigate 501c3 charities, and
researched the Clinton Foundation at its own expense in
the hope that the whistleblower submission they compiled might result
in a government reward if the IRS was able to corroborate wrongdoing
and recover tax dollars.
The IRS sent multiple letters in 2017 and 2018 to MDA Analytics, confirming it had received the submission and it was “still open and under active investigation.” But, shortly before last month’s election, the agency sent a preliminary denial letter indicating it did not pursue the allegations for reasons that ranged from a lack of resources to possible expiration of the statute of limitations on some allegations.
I asked a half-dozen former federal investigators to review the submission and key evidence; all said the firm’s analysis of tax-exempt compliance issues would not be that useful to federal agencies that have their own legal experts for that. But they stressed the evidence of potential criminality was strong and warranted opening an FBI or IRS probe. –The Hill
According
to retired FBI supervisory agent Jeffrey Danik, MDA’s work is “a
very good roadmap for investigation, adding “When you have the
organization’s own lawyers using words like ‘quid pro quo,’
‘conflicts of interest’ and ‘whistleblower protections,’ you
have enough to get permission to start interviewing and asking
questions.”
While
some of the documents MDA submitted were marked as attorney-client
privileged, Danik doesn’t think that should be an issue for federal
investigators – given that since special counsel Robert Mueller
“got the OK to investigate Michael Cohen and his attorney-client
communications with President
Trump,
I imagine that hurdle could be overcome under the crime-fraud
exception.”
Meanwhile,
next week a GOP Congressional subcommittee led by Rep. Mark Meadows
(NC) will review the work of John Huber – the US attorney
designated a year ago by then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions to
investigate “all things Clinton.” The hearing will establish how
much money and resources Huber has dedicated, and whether
we can expect to see any recommendations regarding Hillary Clinton’s
transfer of classified information from her insecure private server,
along with the foundation’s activities.
To
that end, a prosecutor working under Huber called MDA
analytics last week and requested copies of their Clinton Foundation
evidence, according to Solomon.
A prosecutor working for Huber called MDA Analytics last week, seeking copies of their evidence, according to sources. The firm told the prosecutor that the FBI has possessed the evidence in its Little Rock office since early 2018, the sources said.
Some evidence that MDA investigators cited is public source, such as internal foundation reviews hacked in 2016 and given to WikiLeaks. Other materials were provided to the investigators by foreign governments that have done business with the charity, or by foundation insiders.
One of the nonpublic documents is an interview memo the MDA Analytics investigators penned after meeting with Kessel in late November 2016 at the Princeton Club in New York City. –The Hill
Kessel’s
inadvertent admissions, meanwhile, track closely with comments made
in 2008 written by a private lawyer named Kumiki Gibson – who the
Clinton Foundation hired to study its governance. Gibson flagged
concerns over improper
commingling of charitable and private business.
“The
work of the Foundation and the President are intertwined in a way
that creates confusion at, and undermines the work of, the Foundation
at virtually every level,” he wrote, warning that such actions pose
“reputational and legal challenges, and with confusion,
inefficiencies and waste.”
Specifically, the memo warned the foundation had not created policies and procedures “required by law” and that some of its leaders “appear to have interests that do not always align with those of the Foundation.”
It also raised the possibility of illegal activities, saying the foundation and its managers held an “anti-compliance attitude” and that there were lower-level employees who “begged” for whistleblower protections after witnessing “less than fully compliant behavior or even worse are asked to participate in or condone it.” –The Hill
Meanwhile,
a 2011 review by the law firm Simpson Thatcher noted “material
weaknesses” found by auditors in 2009 and 2010, such as a lack of
board meetings and unsigned board minutes – and also found that
some foundation employees “abuse expense privileges,” while
others had conflicts of interest.
We
look forward to hearing anything further from Solomon and The
Hill on
whatever Huber has been up to.
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