Materials from the Committee's Investigation into Russian Active Measures
In 2017 and 2018, the House Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence (HPSCI) undertook an investigation into Russia’s
interference campaign targeting the 2016 U.S. election. The Committee’s
investigation came on the heels of an Intelligence Community assessment, which found:
“Russian President Vladimir Putin
ordered an influence campaign in 2016 aimed at the US presidential
election. Russia’s goals were to undermine public faith in the US
democratic process, denigrate Secretary Clinton, and harm her
electability and potential presidency. We further assess Putin and the
Russian Government developed a clear preference for President-elect
Trump.”
Democrats on the Committee affirmed that judgement, as did Special Counsel Robert Mueller, and the bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee.
Throughout its investigation, the Committee uncovered significant
evidence of Trump campaign efforts to seek, make use of, and cover up
Russian help in the 2016 presidential election. To date, two witnesses
have been convicted and sentenced to prison terms for lying and
attempting to obstruct the Committee’s investigation.
Ultimately, this pattern of misconduct and deceit continued when
President Trump once again sought to coerce a foreign government into
providing him illicit assistance with his reelection campaign, this time
from Ukraine. For his efforts, President Trump was impeached in the House and became the first ever U.S. President to to receive bipartisan votes to convict in the Senate.
As part of its commitment to transparency, today the Committee is
releasing fifty-seven transcripts of witness interviews during the
course of the Russia inquiry, as well as additional relevant material,
so that every American can see the facts and decide for themselves:
Is this conduct ok?
After releasing the transcripts, Chairman Adam Schiff (D-CA) stated:
“From 2017 to 2018, the House
Intelligence Committee conducted an investigation into Russia’s
interference in the 2016 election. Despite the many barriers put in our
way by the then-Republican Majority, and attempts by some key witnesses
to lie to us and obstruct our investigation, the transcripts that we are
releasing today show precisely what Special Counsel Robert Mueller also
revealed: That the Trump campaign, and Donald Trump himself, invited
illicit Russian help, made full use of that help, and then lied and
obstructed the investigations in order to cover up this misconduct.
Unfortunately, the President’s
misconduct did not end with his election in 2016 or his attempts to
cover up that effort. Rather, in the course of his presidency, he
continued to seek illicit foreign help in his campaign by coercing
another nation, Ukraine, to smear his opponent. After making use of
Russia’s help with his first presidential campaign, President Trump
pressed the Ukrainian president to help him in 2020 by withholding
critical military aid to that country and a coveted head of state
meeting.
These acts ultimately led to the
President’s impeachment in the House of Representatives and the first
bipartisan vote in the Senate in our history in support of a conviction
of a President of the United States. The President’s efforts to make use
of the help of a foreign power to win an election, and then to extort
yet another foreign power to try to win again, represent a grave threat
to the health of our democracy now and in the future.
The transcripts released today richly
detail evidence of the Trump campaign’s efforts to invite, make use of,
and cover up Russia’s help in the 2016 presidential election. Special
Counsel Robert Mueller identified in his report similar, and even more
extensive, evidence of improper links between individuals associated
with the Trump campaign and the Russian government. A bipartisan Senate
investigation also found that Russia sought to help the candidacy of
Donald Trump in 2016.
While Special Counsel Mueller found
insufficient evidence to prove the crime of criminal conspiracy beyond a
reasonable doubt, he refused to draw any conclusion on the issue of
collusion — contrary to false representations made by Attorney General
Bill Barr and others. There is ample evidence of the corrupt
interactions between the Trump campaign and Russia, both direct and
circumstantial, in the record:
- In June of 2016, a Russian delegation offered dirt on Donald
Trump’s rival—presidential candidate Hillary Clinton—to the highest
levels of the Trump campaign, and did so in writing. Donald Trump’s son,
Donald Trump Jr., accepted that offer, and then set up a secret meeting
between the Russian delegation, himself, Trump campaign chairman Paul
Manafort, and Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, to discuss that
illicit help. When news of the meeting was about to break, Trump and his
son drafted a false statement for the press together in order to cover
up the true purpose of the meeting. This written offer of illegal help
by the Russians and its acceptance by the President’s campaign, and the
secret meeting that followed, provide some of the most damning and
direct evidence of the President’s to make use of Russia’s assistance in
the election.
- Throughout the summer of 2016, the Trump campaign and
candidate Trump himself repeatedly sought damaging information on
Clinton from Russia. In July of 2016, Trump publicly called on Russia to
hack Clinton’s emails, and – as the Special Counsel found – that night,
Russian military intelligence officers did precisely that. Our
transcripts show that numerous individuals affiliated with or working
for the Trump campaign were in communication with individuals offering
help to set up private backchannels with the Russian government.
- Multiple witnesses sought to hide and cover up illicit
activity related to Russia during the presidential campaign. One-time
campaign advisor and close confidant to Trump, Roger Stone, has been
sentenced to prison for lying to the Committee about his advanced
knowledge of impending WikiLeaks releases of Clinton campaign
information. Former personal attorney to Trump, Michael Cohen, was
imprisoned in part on charges that he lied to the Committee about
Trump’s role in arranging a lucrative business deal in Russia during the
course of his campaign and early presidency. The President’s pursuit of
Trump Tower Moscow — potentially the most lucrative deal of his life —
while lying to the American people about his business interests in
Russia, provided the most serious counterintelligence risk to the United
States.
- Another associate of Trump, Erik Prince, misled our
Committee about his efforts to take part in a secret backchannel with a
senior Russian government official while he was unofficially supporting
the Trump campaign.
- And the transcripts also show that during the transition
period in late 2016, the incoming National Security Advisor Michael
Flynn undertook efforts to undermine U.S. sanctions on Russia imposed by
the previous administration over Russia’s interference in the election
on Trump’s behalf. Flynn would later lie to the FBI about these
efforts, and the President would try to pressure then-FBI Director Comey
to shut down any investigation into Flynn. It would take the firing of
then Attorney General Jeff Sessions and the later appointment of an
unscrupulous Attorney General, Bill Barr, for the President to achieve
his aim of seeking dismissal of the case against Flynn, and only after
Flynn pled guilty to lying to the FBI.
Despite taking part in this
investigation and hearing these facts first-hand, the transcripts reveal
how House Republicans used witness interviews not to gain the facts,
but to press President Trump’s false narrative of ‘no collusion, no
obstruction.’ It would be a pattern they would follow throughout the
Russia investigation and into the President’s subsequent Ukraine
misconduct. To that end, House Republicans sought to use the Committee’s
Russia investigation to undermine the Intelligence Community’s
assessment that Russia sought to hurt Hillary Clinton and help Donald
Trump in the 2016 presidential election. That assessment has been
affirmed by this Committee’s Democrats, the bipartisan Senate
Intelligence Committee, and Special Counsel Mueller.
These transcripts should have been
released long before now, but the White House held up their release to
the public by refusing to allow the Intelligence Community to make
redactions on the basis of classified information, rather than White
House political interests. Only now, and during a deadly pandemic, has
the President released his hold on this damning information and
evidence.
Like the Ukraine investigation that
would follow it, the investigation into the Trump campaign’s effort to
seek and utilize Russian help in 2016 and to obstruct justice, reveal a
President who believes that he is above the law. But we are a country
where the truth still matters and where right still matters. Our
investigation into the Trump campaign, and the evidence we uncovered
despite formidable obstruction, affirms that.”
Read the full statement here.
Correspondence
Interview Transcripts
- Interview Transcript of Rinat Akhmetshin (November 13, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Stephen Bannon (January 16, 2018)
- Interview Transcript of Stephen Bannon (February 15, 2018)
- Interview Transcript of Andrew Brown (August 30, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Michael Caputo (July 14, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of John Carlin (July 27, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Thomas Catan (October 18, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of James Clapper (July 17, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Samuel Clovis (December 12, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Dan Coats (June 22, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Michael Cohen (October 24, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Rick Dearborn (January 17, 2018)
- Interview Transcript of Diana Denman (December 5, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Marc Elias (December 13, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Boris Ephsteyn (September 28, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Evelyn Farkas (June 26, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Peter Fritsch (October 18, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Michael Goldfarb (December 12, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Rob Goldstone (December 18, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Jeffrey Gordon (July 26, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Rhona Graff (December 22, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Shawn Henry (December 5, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Hope Hicks (February 27, 2018)
- Interview Transcript of Ike Kaveladze (November 2, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of David Kramer (December 19, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of David Kramer (January 10, 2018)
- Interview Transcript of Jared Kushner (July 25, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Corey Lewandowski (January 17, 2018)
- Interview Transcript of Corey Lewandowski (March 8, 2018)
- Interview Transcript of Loretta Lynch (October 20, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Simona Mangiante (July 18, 2018)
- Interview Transcript of Andrew McCabe (December 19, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Mary McCord (November 1, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Alexander Nix (December 14, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Carter Page (November 2, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Brad Parscale (October 24, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Walid Phares (December 8, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of John Podesta (June 27, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of John Podesta (December 4, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Samantha Power (October 13, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Erik Prince (November 30, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Benjamin Rhodes (October 25, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Susan Rice (September 8, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Jonathan Saffron (October 12, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Anatoli Samochornov (November 28, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Felix Sater (December 20, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Keith Schiller (November 7, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Jefferson Sessions (November 30, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Roger J. Stone, Jr. (September 26, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Jake Sullivan (December 21, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Michael Sussman (December 18, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Matthew Tait (October 6, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Yared Tamene Wolde-Yohannes (August 30, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Donald Trump, Jr. (December 6, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Witness Name Redacted (December 20, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Sally Yates (November 3, 2017)
- Interview Transcript of Christopher Wylie (April 25, 2018)
Report
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