 Good morning Hank, it's Tuesday so today I want to discuss what we know about the relationship between Donald Trump's presidential campaign and the Russian government's interference in our 2016 elections but first a couple notes. Russia is a huge and massively diverse country of 144 million people but in the context of this election meddling we are talking specifically about Vladimir Putin and his government. Russia and the US are currently adversaries. Putin's regime has sought to undermine democracy and democratic institutions around the world and in the US's view invaded a sovereign nation but whether the United States and Russia are friends is not actually that relevant to the legal questions at hand. Also there is a lot of speculation about this story online. For the purposes of this video I'm only going to refer to events that have either been confirmed by the people who participated in them or reported independently by two separate news organizations. Sources as always in the video info below. Okay here we go. The Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence have stated with high confidence that the Russian government sought to influence the outcome of the US presidential election favoring Donald Trump over Hillary Clinton. They've also stated that Russia's leader Vladimir Putin personally oversaw this operation which actually shouldn't come as that much of a surprise. The Putin regime has a history of trying to sway foreign elections and also Trump's policy positions were broadly much more favorable to Putin than Clinton's policy positions. I mean as far back as 2007 Trump said that Putin was doing a great job. The Trump campaign even cut proposed language from the official Republican Party platform about supporting Ukraine in their ongoing conflict with Russia. Okay so the Putin regime meddled in our election in at least three ways via a disinformation campaign in which they created and shared inaccurate news stories by trying to breach election data in several states and by hacking the Democratic National Committee and DNC leader John Podesta to access their emails which they then released to WikiLeaks. Now you may not believe all of that and certainly both WikiLeaks and the Russian government deny it but there is overwhelming agreement not just within U.S. intelligence circles but also among both Republican and Democratic members of Congress who as you may have noticed struggle to find common ground on pretty much anything. The email hack in particular made a significant impact because it created a huge imbalance of information. The public had access to all these Democratic emails many of which one might charitably describe as sleazy but not to any similar Republican emails that might have existed. It's a bit like saying can you believe all this crap in candidate X's tax returns when candidate Y doesn't release their tax returns at all. Now you can say and you ought to that political parties just shouldn't be sleazy but my point is only that it created an information imbalance and that by choosing whose emails we saw Putin had a lot of say in the election narrative. Of course none of that means the election was illegitimate it wasn't or that Trump didn't win he did and benefiting from a foreign government's propaganda initiative is not a crime however colluding with that government is probably. U.S. election law says that a foreign national be they Canadian or Russian or Martian cannot make a contribution or a donation of any thing of value in connection with the U.S. election. It also says that no American can solicit or knowingly accept a donation or any thing of value from a foreign national. I suspect we're going to hear the phrase thing of value a lot in the coming months by the way in part because the courts haven't been super clear at deciding what it means. If hypothetically you receive damning information about your opponent from a foreign national and then share that information that is probably receiving a thing of value but it hasn't been entirely established. And there are a lot of nuances here have you received a thing of value if you know about the thing and to prove of sharing it but don't share it yourself. Did you solicit a thing of value if you set up a meeting with a foreign national in the hopes they would provide something they didn't provide etc. So many people in Trump's campaign had past relationships with Putin's regime. Trump's one-time campaign manager Paul Manafort received around 30 million dollars working for Oleg Deripaska who is seen as one of Putin's closest business confidants. Michael Caputo an early Trump advisor had previously worked on a Russian campaign to improve Putin's image among Americans. Trump's attorney general Jeff Sessions had to recuse himself from the Russia investigation after it was revealed he'd had previously undisclosed meetings with Sergei Kislyak Russia's ambassador to the United States. And Michael Flynn Trump's first national security advisor failed to disclose payments that were made to him by an arm of the Russian government. And failure to disclose such payments is illegal for former military officers. Flynn also talked several times to Sergei Kislyak during the transition the period after the election but before Trump became president. One of those calls occurred on December 29th which happened to be the same day the US announced new sanctions on Russia. Flynn initially denied that he'd discussed sanctions on that call but it became apparent that there was evidence to the contrary because Kislyak's calls are routinely monitored by US intelligence. Discussing sanctions policy on that call was possibly illegal. I mean Flynn was not yet the national security advisor but he was trying to negotiate foreign policy. But a greater concern is that the day after Trump learned that Flynn had lied about discussing sanctions, Trump asked FBI Director James Comey for loyalty. And then the day after Flynn eventually resigned, Trump asked Comey to drop the Flynn investigation altogether. This is alarming because in the United States the Justice Department and the FBI are supposed to operate independently from the White House. That's part of the reason FBI directors serve a 10-year term. They're supposed to be above party politics and not beholden to one particular leader. Trump asking Comey to drop the Flynn investigation was a significant breach of protocol. In fact some have argued that it amounts to obstruction of justice which is the charge that Richard Nixon was eventually impeached for. And then a few months later, Trump fired James Comey. Initially the White House said the FBI director was being fired for his mishandling of the Hillary Clinton email case but then after a few days of trying on various justifications, Trump acknowledged that it was mostly about the collusion with Russia investigation. But if firing Comey was intended to make the investigation end, that gambit definitely failed because a few days later the Department of Justice appointed a special counsel, Robert Mueller. He is tasked with building a team to look into collusion and any matters that arise from the investigation. Since then Mueller's been doing just that and it's been reported that he's working with at least two grand juries to decide who, if anyone, should be charged with crimes. The most serious evidence of collusion that has emerged so far involves a meeting with a Kremlin connected Russian lawyer that was attended by Donald Trump Jr, Paul Manafort, and Jared Kushner, the president's son-in-law and senior advisor. So during the setup for the meeting Donald Trump Jr was told via email that the lawyer had, quote, incriminating information about Hillary Clinton that she wanted to share as, quote, part of Russia and its government support for Mr. Trump. That should have been a huge red flag, like the correct response there is, I cannot accept anything of value from a foreign national in connection with a campaign, especially not if it's part of a foreign government support for my candidate. But instead Donald Trump Jr replied in part, if it's what you say I love it, especially later in the summer. The meeting that ensued remained secret for over a year until July of 2017 when The New York Times published a report about it. Donald Trump Jr initially said the meeting was about adoption but then a day later said that the meeting had been about Hillary Clinton but that the lawyer had no meaningful information. Even if that's true some legal scholars still think the meeting itself was illegal depending on your definition of soliciting and thing of value. Kushner, meanwhile, failed to mention this and also several other meetings with Russian officials on his initial security clearance application. He also apparently asked the Russian government for a so-called back channel that would have allowed Kushner to communicate directly with Moscow without U.S. intelligence listening in. Much of this is suspicious. Trump Jr, Kushner, Manafort, and Flynn have all been caught in lies about the extent and nature of their contacts with the Russian government. But, one, none of it is unambiguous evidence of collusion or cooperation with foreign nationals. And two, none of what is known publicly involves the president himself except for him asking Comey to drop the investigation. That said, Trump's behavior toward Russia has at times been strange. As president, he had a private meeting with Putin without a U.S. interpreter present which is extremely unusual. Trump has also gone to great lengths not to criticize Putin and he has refused to publicly acknowledge or condemn the Putin regime's interference in our election. But none of that is illegal and connecting the dots can lead to a very misleading picture when you don't have many dots. What we know is that the Russian government sought to influence the U.S. presidential election in Trump's favor, that at least one person in Trump's campaign knew about this and that several people close to Trump had interactions with Russian foreign nationals that they either failed to disclose or lied about. None of the meetings reported so far involved the president himself, although he did try to interfere with the ensuing investigation. So that's what we know. What we don't know is almost everything. We don't know what was discussed in the meetings, whether any American accepted anything of value from a foreign national and we certainly don't know if any American participated in collusion with the Russian government's efforts. Also, we don't even know for sure what a thing of value is. I think it's important to follow this story because it has big implications for the present and future of our democracy, but I also think it's really important to remember that we are living in the middle of the story and we don't know how it's going to end. Now if you're looking for information to confirm your pre-existing biases, you'll find plenty of that on both sides, but the whole truth, we just don't know that yet. I hope we will someday. Hank, I'll see you on Friday.