Law Nellie Ohr's Congressional Testimony Released - Transcripts of testimony to the Judiciary Committee released to public

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
a7ae19fb541a59a496b8fd5bd5b1a0cb.png

  • Former Fusion GPS contractor Nellie Ohr told Congress in October that she “favored” Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump during the 2016 presidential election.
  • A transcript of Ohr’s testimony was published Thursday.
  • Nellie Ohr, whose husband is DOJ official Bruce Ohr, detailed her work for Fusion GPS, the opposition research firm that commissioned the Steele dossier.
  • Nellie Ohr said that a Ukrainian lawmaker was one of Fusion GPS’s sources.
Nellie Ohr, a former Fusion GPS contractor and wife to Justice Department official Bruce Ohr, told Congress that she “favored” Hillary Clinton during the 2016 presidential campaign, and would not have researched the Democrat as she did Donald Trump.


“I would probably have been less comfortable doing opposition research that would have gone against Hillary Clinton,” Nellie Ohr told a congressional task force on Oct. 19, according to a transcript released Thursday.

“And why is that?” a congressional staffer asked Nellie Ohr.

“Because I favored Hillary Clinton as a presidential candidate,” said Nellie Ohr.

She gave research she did on Trump and his associates to her husband, Bruce Ohr, in hopes that he would provide it to the FBI.

Bruce Ohr did exactly that. He testified during his own congressional hearing that he provided a flash drive containing his wife’s research to the FBI. What the bureau did with the information remains a mystery, but it is another example of potentially biased information being provided to investigators working on a probe of the Trump campaign.

Republican lawmakers interviewed the Ohrs and several Justice Department and FBI officials as part of an investigation into the FBI’s handling of its Trump-Russia probe. Republicans have accused the FBI of misrepresenting the infamous Steele dossier in applications for surveillance warrants against Carter Page, the former Trump campaign adviser.

BruceOhr.jpg

Former associate deputy U.S. attorney general Bruce Ohr, right, prepares to meet with Republican lawmakers Tuesday on Capitol Hill. (Chris Wattie/ Reuters)

The FBI’s warrant applications did not reveal that Fusion GPS, the firm that commissioned the dossier, was working against Trump on behalf of the Clinton campaign and DNC. The applications also did not contain information provided by Bruce Ohr that Steele had said he was “desperate” to see Trump lose the election.

Bruce Ohr, who served as deputy assistant attorney general at the time, served as a back channel of sorts between the FBI and Steele, a former MI6 officer.

The Ohrs met with Steele on July 30, 2016, to discuss Steele’s investigation of Trump’s possible ties to the Russian government.

As part of their investigation of the FBI, Republican lawmakers have tried to understand the labyrinthine relationship between the Ohrs, Fusion GPS, Steele and the FBI.

Steele and Fusion GPS founder Glenn Simpson attempted to push information from the dossier through the FBI, Justice Department, State Department and the media.

In her interview, Nellie Ohr discussed the nature of her work for Fusion. She said that she did not recognize any of her work in the Steele dossier.

One of the more startling revelations in Nellie Ohr’s testimony is that a Ukrainian politician was a source for Fusion GPS.

As TheDCNF first reported, Nellie Ohr testified that Serhiy Leshchenko, a former investigative journalist turned lawmaker, provided information to Fusion GPS.

Leshchenko revealed in August 2016 a so-called “black ledger” that listed alleged kickback payments from the Ukrainian government to Paul Manafort. The veracity of the ledger has come under scrutiny, and Leshchenko has faced charges in Ukraine for meddling in the 2016 U.S. election.

There is no indication that Leshchenko’s work ended up in the dossier.

Nellie Ohr said that she worked for Fusion GPS from October 2015 through September 2016, earning $55 per hour for an average of 30 hours of work a week.

She said that she conducted open source research of various Russian businessmen. She also researched Trump associates, including Manafort, Page, Michael Flynn, and Donald Trump’s children.

Nellie Ohr was pressed about her discussions with her husband regarding her work for Fusion GPS, but she largely escaped those questions by invoking marital privilege.

Asked about her and Bruce Ohr’s meeting with Steele, Nellie Ohr said that the ex-spy told of his investigation of Trump, and said that he hoped his information would be passed to the FBI.

She worked on one other project for Fusion GPS, and was aware of the firm’s work with Natalia Veselnitskaya, the Russian attorney who attended the now-infamous meeting at Trump Tower in June 2016.

Veselnitskaya worked with Fusion GPS at the time of that meeting on behalf of Prevezon Holdings, a Russian company whose owner opposes U.S. sanctions against Russia. Nellie Ohr said that she did not work on the Veselnitskaya project.

Nellie Ohr testified that while her research for Fusion did not appear to have made its way into the dossier, she recognized some of her work in the media.
Full Article | Archive | Testimony

I love how half of the testimony is filled with the usual "I don't recall" and "I don't remember" that these people are so damned fond of. They sure do have an awful fucking memory when it comes to remembering key information in their own lives. My favorite part is how every time things started to get dicey, she'd invoke marital privilege to prevent having to discuss questions related to her husband.

I haven't finished parsing through the entire thing just yet, but I do think it's odd that she lied about the date she acquired her HAM radio license. I always thought that HAM license's timing was really unusual, I'm glad to see they were sharp enough to bring that up in the testimony.
 
I love that these people are falling apart. Just amazing, so amazing.
 
Of course they say "I don't recall", otherwise its way too easy to trip up and have your verbal slip-up be counted as perjury
 
But what's the point of questioning them if you're going to get a bunch of non-answers?
That’s the sad thing about the literal state of truth. You can logic almost any statement into a truth or a falsehood by torturing wording.

And as someone said above, there’s no quarter in today’s political battleground. Even if it is a reasonable, honest mistake, sorry, you’re disbarred.
 
America needs to start offing people for treason on the regular again or this two-tiered, government funded anti-justice system is going to result in some seriously Cartel-esque backlash from people with nothing to lose and the skillsets to fight back.

I think I just acidentally created the plot to Taken 4.
 
So... why couldn't the various republican figures questioned for no apparent reason able to "not recall" their way into avoiding perjury charges?
If I remember right, most of them didn't even realize they were "on the record" or something to that effect. They felt blindsided.

I'm sure @It's HK-47 knows more.
 
If I remember right, most of them didn't even realize they were "on the record" or something to that effect. They felt blindsided.

I'm sure @It's HK-47 knows more.
7fc1ad5452bf1260dfac308717af9626.png


If you're talking about people like Flynn and Papadopoulos, that's pretty much what happened. Hell, the Papadopoulos arrest happened so quickly that they didn't even get the arrest warrant until after they'd already clapped him in handcuffs, and his arraignment hearing only took four minutes in a sealed courtroom. They put the hurry on for these people; they wanted this over and done and swept under the rug as quickly as they could do it.
 
Hell, the Papadopoulos arrest happened so quickly that they didn't even get the arrest warrant until after they'd already clapped him in handcuffs, and his arraignment hearing only took four minutes in a sealed courtroom. They put the hurry on for these people; they wanted this over and done and swept under the rug as quickly as they could do it.
?this whole catastrophe would make an amazing political thriller one day if somebody were to make one?
 
"My presidency will result in a modest net reduction of the total Washington swamp!" just doesn't have the same ring for a campaign slogan.
Well come on, you know campaign promises are always wild exaggerations, if they're not outright lies.

But yeah, "I will be a little less corrupt, and a little less stupid than the other person" is honestly the best I can hope for.
 
e552002ad8935c58a279b06d30f58d1d.png


A FOIA was filed in order to verify the date that Nellie Ohr said she obtained her HAM radio license, since she testified that she got it somewhere around 2014-2015, before her time working for Fusion GPS. Her application for the license was submitted and approved on the same day: May 23rd of 2016, well within the time frame that she was working for Fusion GPS. HAM radio licenses are good for 10 years, so this wasn't a renewal.
 
Back
Top Bottom