How the Mueller Team Thinks of ConFraudUs

I’ve written before how I think Conspiracy to Defraud the United States (ConFraudUs) provides Mueller a way to charge a variety of conduct with conspiracy charges that additional defendants can be dropped into, all of which might form an interlocking series of ConFraudUs indictments that map out the entire election crime. In this post, I observed how the charge worked in the Manafort and Internet Research Agency indictments. In this one, I described how it might work to charge Jared (and everyone else) for pretending to be serving US foreign policy interests while actually making bank.

In response to a challenge from Concord Consulting in the IRA indictment, the Mueller team has laid out how they think of ConFraudUs. The filing hints at how and why they may be using this as a backbone for their pursuit of the 2016 election tampering culprits.

In a blustery motion claiming that Mueller only charged Concord with ConFraudUs because he needed to charge some Russians, any Russians, to justify his appointment, Concord demanded access to the grand jury instructions on the ConFraudUs charge, claiming that the charge requires willfulness. (Click through to read the footnotes here, which include a gratuitous Casablanca reference and complaints about US tampering in elections.)

Now, some twenty years later, the Deputy Attorney General acting for the recused Attorney General has rejected the history and integrity of the DOJ, and instead licensed a Special Counsel who for all practical political purposes cannot be fired, to indict a case that has absolutely nothing to do with any links or coordination between any candidate and the Russian Government.2 The reason is obvious, and is political: to justify his own existence the Special Counsel has to indict a Russian – any Russian. 3 Different from any election case previously brought by the DOJ, the Special Counsel used the catch-all provision of the federal criminal code, the defraud prong of conspiracy, 18 U.S.C. § 371, to allege that a foreign corporate defendant with no presence in the United States and having never entered the United States, engaged in the make-believe crime of conspiring to “interfere” in a United States election. Indictment, Dkt. 1, ¶ 2. Presumably to bolster these allegations (which have a strong odor of hypocrisy) 4 , the Special Counsel has pleaded around the knowledge requirements of all related substantive statutes and regulations by asserting that Concord conspired to obstruct the functions of the United States Departments of Justice (“DOJ”) and State (“DOS”), and the Federal Election Commission (“FEC”).5 But violations of the relevant federal campaign laws and foreign agent registration requirements administered by the DOJ and the FEC require the defendant to have acted “willfully,” a word that does not appear anywhere in Count One of the Indictment. See 52 U.S.C. § 30109(d) and 22 U.S.C. § 618(a).6

Violations of the federal campaign laws and foreign agent registration … require the defendant to have acted “willfully,” say the Russians who trolled our election.

That’s true, Mueller concedes.

Then points out they haven’t charged those underlying crimes. They’ve just charged ConFraudUs. And the standard for ConFraudUs is “intent to defraud the US;” there’s no “willfullness” standard required.

As an initial matter, the government agrees that the plain language of the statutory provisions Concord Management has identified in the Federal Election Campaign Act, 52 U.S.C. § 30109(d), and the Foreign Agent Registration Act 22 U.S.C. § 618(a), set forth a “willfulness” standard with respect to knowledge. The government, however, did not charge Concord Management with substantive violations of FECA, FARA, or for that matter, visa fraud — an offense that requires only a “knowing” standard. See 18 U.S.C. § 1546. Concord Management is alleged to have conspired to defraud the United States, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. As described in more detail below, the mens rea for that offense is intent to defraud the United States, not to willfully commit substantive offenses that are not charged in the Indictment

Which brings them to where they lay out precisely what ConFraudUs requires:

The essential elements of a conspiracy to defraud the United States consist of the following: (1) two or more persons formed an agreement to defraud the United States; (2) the defendant knowingly participated in the conspiracy with the intent to defraud the United States; and (3) at least one overt act was committed in furtherance of the common scheme. See United States v. Treadwell, 760 F.2d 327, 333 (D.C. Cir. 1985); United States v. Coplan, 703 F.3d 46, 61 (2d Cir. 2012), cert. denied, 571 U.S. 819 (2013). The agreement to defraud must be one to obstruct a lawful function of the Government or its agencies by deceitful or dishonest means. Coplan, 703 F.3d at 60–61; see United States v. Davis, 863 F.3d 894, 901 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (explaining that a charge under the defraud clause requires proof that a defendant “knowingly agreed with [the codefendant] (or another person) to defraud the federal government of money or to deceptively interfere with the lawful functions of” a particular government agency). The mens rea is a specific intent to defraud the United States, not willfulness. See United States v. Khalife, 106 F.3d 1300, 1303 (6th Cir. 1997), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 1045 (1998); United States v. Jackson, 33 F.3d 866, 871–72 (7th Cir. 1994), cert. denied, 514 U.S. 1005 (1995). The mens rea requirements of particular substantive crimes, in short, do not carry over to defraud-clause prosecutions. See, e.g., Jackson, 33 F.3d at 870–72 (government need not establish the level of willfulness required to prove a “structuring” offense when it charges the same behavior as a conspiracy to defraud); Khalife, 106 F.3d at 1303 (same).4

So,

(1) two or more persons formed an agreement to defraud the United States;

(2) [each] defendant knowingly participated in the conspiracy with the intent to defraud the United States; and

(3) at least one overt act was committed in furtherance of the common scheme.

Basically, the Mueller team argues, Concord and all its trolls only have to agree to pull a fast one on the American electoral regulatory apparatus, with at least one overt act like … a trollish tweet. They don’t have to individually willfully violate the underlying law.

We’ll see what Judge Dabney Friedrich has to say about this argument (though as far as I understand it, the Mueller argument is not at all controversial). As a reminder, Rick Gates has already pled guilty to this charge.

However Friedrich rules, however, you can how this would apply to a number of other known actions. Did Don Jr conspire with Aras Agalarov and his surrogates to defraud the fair management of elections when he stated, in the context of receiving dirt on Hillary Clinton, that he would revisit the Magnitsky Act sanctions when his father won the election (several witnesses gave sworn testimony that this happened)? Did Roger Stone conspire with Guccifer 2.0 when they (as reported but not yet substantiated with evidence) discussed how to find Russian hackers who had stolen Hillary’s emails? Did Brad Parscale conspire with Cambridge Analytica, not just to permit foreigners to illegally provide assistance to the Trump campaign, but also to use stolen models to heighten discontent among Democratic voters?

Importantly, Mueller would not have to prove that all participants in all these conspiracies had the mens rea required by the underlying charges. It’s enough that they’re trying to deceitfully thwart the lawful functioning of a government process.

Obviously, Mueller hasn’t yet charged any of these ConFraudUs conspiracies, if indeed they happened. But you can see why he might use ConFraudUs to do so.

image_print
37 replies
  1. orionATL says:

    “… Did Don Jr conspire with Aras Agalarov and his surrogates to defraud the fair management of elections when he stated, in the context of receiving dirt on Hillary Clinton, that he would revisit the Magnitsky Act sanctions when his father won the election (several witnesses gave sworn testimony that this happened)?… ”

    holy smokes. i missed this testimony completely (no surprise there)!

    ew, can you suggest where i might look, including which of your articles i overlooked. otherewise, i assume it was congressional testimony?

  2. SteveB says:

    “Willfully” is a lower mens rea requirement than”with intent to”, I understand. Thus the objection to the formulation of the charge seems both ultra technical and bizarre.

    • Avattoir says:

      I wouldn’t choose to argue it that way, but certainly that’s arguable. I’d be more:

      Specific intent is at the very tippy top of the intentionality food chain- but if overall what’s being alleged is quite broad, then even despite the potential for veins of almost unimaginable complexity being opened up in the details of particular pieces that make up the puzzle being executed on, attaching yourself WITH SPECIFIC INTENT to that ultra-broad goal is pretty much asking for exposure to a host of quite specifically intended misadventures in ratfucking undertaken by dipshits.

      The problems for a lot of the line malefactors in wide-ranging conspiracies is mostly cosmetic – by that, I mean in the sense of how difficult it can be for one’s attorney to convince the jury that, Yeah sure, you agreed to drive for Team Badguys in the armored car heist, but you couldn’t begin to conceive of let alone intend for the heist to be carried out at the same time as a plot point in a scheme to assassinate a certain crooked LE-connected “biz-a-ness-man” (I’ve had such a case. It can be easier to argue on appeal, but not much.).

      So, maybe “bizarre” in some world of completely known facts,  perfect logic and reason throughout – but not really unusual on Bizarro World.

  3. Avattoir says:

    A lot of we who e-comment tend to do so mostly on blogs and sites where we like or prefer the leader’s PsOV. Since the bias is so subject to unconsciousness, neither I nor anyone else who does this can be read with great credibility on whether one among a given commenter’s favorite online writers is ‘cutting edge’.

    That said (and leaving aside that I myself tend deliberately to review regularly posts at such as Drudge, HotAir, AceofSpadesHQ, NRO, Mediaite, and even (still! despite all!) the NYT, and even more so in light the teachable from how the MSM did its business all over the period from when Bill Clinton was sworn in as POTUS  thru 2005 at least, from when you first posted on ConFraudUS, I’ve watched close for, and continue to be surprised at, how no one else in Internetland – not just on MSM sites but on specialty sites as well – has picked up what, as of today, the OSC admits in the plainest possible language.

    Indeed, it’s put so much more straightforwardly in this Response than in typical DoJ filings, that it’s difficult to conclude otherwise than the thing had to have been drafted for the benefit of media orgs and lay readers as much as for Judge Friedrich (who, despite being a Trump appointment, bears all the DNA of an actually competent federal court judge).

    So now all that changes? (M. Wolf: ‘And they say romance is dead.’).

    • emptywheel says:

      It’s a nice filing. No one will read it, bc Concord won’t be going to prison. But Mueller is wandering around wearing a sandwich board.

  4. orionATL says:

    “…  Did Don Jr conspire with Aras Agalarov and his surrogates to defraud the fair management of elections when he stated, in the context of receiving dirt on Hillary Clinton, that he would revisit the Magnitsky Act sanctions when his father won the election (several witnesses gave sworn testimony that this happened)? Did Roger Stone conspire with Guccifer 2.0 when they (as reported but not yet substantiated with evidence) discussed how to find Russian hackers who had stolen Hillary’s emails? Did Brad Parscale conspire with Cambridge Analytica, not just to permit foreigners to illegally provide assistance to the Trump campaign, but also to use stolen models to heighten discontent among Democratic voters?..”

    there are two of the three legs of the stool of a conspiracy to use a foreign power’s assistance to win a federal election (leaving stone out for now). but where does the ira activity fit in? is that the third, an independent activity bty the russians?

  5. Bob Conyers says:

    I’m curious where this leaves all of the other potential charges we hear about which aren’t directly tied to the conspiracy – money laundering, tax violations, Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, heck, probably using illegal herbicides on the algae in the Mar A Lago lagoon.

    If Mueller uncovers evidence of other crimes (and I realize none of this is certain) what does the process look like? What would determine if it’s a Mueller team case or a case referred to another unit? Does it make a difference if it’s someone like the Trump boys who are charged or Trump himself?

    • bmaz says:

      Difficult question. More of them than you may think could – could – possibly fit into the larger conspiracy, but that would be fact intensive and, without having more facts, there is no way to know. Others may be ancillary, but still chargeable under the OSC scope. Or not. We just do not know.

      That is one of the beautiful things about the Mueller shop, despite all the shit thrown at it by Trump, the Trumpalos, HPSCI, Fox News etc, there have really been about zero leaks out of OSC. They are months, if not nearly a full year, ahead of even the best followers of the case.

  6. Rugger9 says:

    One of the more interesting reports today had to do with a theoretical method to prevent the Kaiser from pardoning himself: just indict him in secret under seal. Assuming this is on the level could the legal beagles here explain what that means, and perhaps answer these Qs:

    1. How would the sealed indictment go live after the Kaiser leaves office, especially if Mueller is cut loose? This is regarding the process to move it along.
    2. How could this indictment be kept secret from the DOJ and JeffBo?
    3. Would Mueller (assuming he’s not fired) have to include this indictment in his report to Congress that is expected in due course? Of course that means Nunes will leak it in selected pieces and alert the palace for pardons.

    https://www.rawstory.com/2018/06/bombshell-report-reveals-trump-indicted-seal-without-knowledge/

  7. Mitch Neher says:

    If I understand correctly [?], the ConFraudUs case that Ms. Wheeler has outlined would not require Mueller to prove that Russia hacked the DNC and Podesta emails nor that Wikileaks got them from Russia. But could such defendants as Trump Jr., Kushner and Manafort, still try to raise reasonable doubt about the Russian hack and leak operation in an effort to defend themselves against ConFraudUs charges? Would such a defense strategy even be relevant to the charges?

    And why is it easier to think like a criminal than to think like a lawyer?

  8. klynn says:

    After hearing the Michael Cohen tape today, released by NPR, at some point my guess is we will have ConFraudUS and conspiracy charges among others.

  9. jill says:

    This is an audio version of some of the more relevant Strzok and Page texts if anyone missed it. The actors do a decent job.

    They live and breathe in a closed world. Not one mention of national security which is their job.

    https://youtu.be/3xyPFfozPDE

  10. Pete says:

    I have little doubt that EW and certainly many of you that pass by Twitter have seen this, but it just got retweeted and appears to be a new Intercept podcast by Jeremy Scahill whom I have a lot of respect for.

    ========================================================================

    Jeremy Scahill breaks down the Trump Tower meeting Blackwater founder Erik Prince set up with a representative of the Saudi and Emirati royals and an Israeli who runs propaganda and media manipulation operations. There is one major common link that runs through the agenda of all the participants in this Trump Tower meeting, and it is one which has gotten very little attention. And that is their shared hatred of Iran and their desire for regime change. We shouldn’t force everything into the box of Russia, Russia, Russia, especially when the evidence is so overwhelming that there are also motives relating to Iran that may explain part of the agenda that these nations and Erik Prince were pushing when they embarked on a campaign to secretly support Donald Trump’s election.

    ===========================================================================

    But not all of you do the little blue bird so: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B2FlQHwi300&feature=youtu.be&app=desktop

    bmaz – please clean up the link if needed.

     

  11. Trip says:

    OT, but I can’t get over this: Richard Nixon punched his wife Pat in the face and it landed her in the hospital, and Sy Hersh never reported it. Dick was an even worse person than imagined.

    And, not related, but no one is reporting on where Melania is. She went in the hospital and then slipped off the face of the earth.

    • SpaceLifeForm says:

      https://theintercept.com/2018/06/02/seymour-hersh-memoir-reporter/

      In 1968, Jerry Brown and Eugene McCarthy, whose presidential campaign Hersh was working on, told him they’d never smoked pot and had Hersh rustle up some joints for them. CIA operatives told Hersh that they didn’t like collaborating with people from the National Security Agency because they’re all “dweebs with protectors in their pockets who are always looking down at their brown shoes.”

      • Trip says:

        Um, Nixon sent his wife to the hospital after punching her in the face. The other stuff is gossip. Nixon was a wife beater.

        • SpaceLifeForm says:

          ‘CIA operatives told Hersh that they didn’t like collaborating with people from the National Security Agency’

          I doubt Hersh would make that up.

          The pot story, yeah, who knows, who cares.

  12. SpaceLifeForm says:

    So, allegedly, Mifsud is alive.  As I suspected. But in hiding.  Lots of dots in article, and not sure I buy all of the arguments, but interesting.

    https://www.realclearinvestigations.com/articles/2018/05/26/the_maltese_phantom_of_russiagate_.html

    A new book by former colleagues of Mifsud’s – Stephan Roh, a 50-year-old Swiss-German lawyer, and Thierry Pastor, a 35-year-old French political analyst – reports that he is alive and well. Their account includes a recent interview with him.

  13. Mitch Neher says:

    Willis Warren asked, “Why would Mueller have any trouble proving the Russians hacked the DNC?”

    As far as I’m concerned Mueller wouldn’t have any trouble proving the Russians hacked the DNC and Podesta. However, the folks that bmaz refers to as Trumpalos have all kinds of whacky theories about the Russian hack and leak operation. It might be useful to put an end to such denials, even if it’s not strictly necessary.

    • SpaceLifeForm says:

      The other angle is that Attribution is Hard.

      Bad actors, using Tor and VPNs.
      Malware with false flags.
      Attribution is not always clear cut.

  14. orionATL says:

    in my view emptywheel has greatly advanced the argument that the june 9, 2016 meeting in trump tower between trump campaign and russians was not an unanticipated, isolated event, but part of a communication process between the trump campaign and agents of the russian government.

    the postings that do that are:

    – her 6-1 post “how the mueller team…” :

    “… Don Jr… stated, in the context of receiving dirt on Hillary Clinton, that he would revisit the Magnitsky Act sanctions when his father won the election (several witnesses gave sworn testimony that this happened)?…

    – a may 28 post (“the same day aras agalarov…) :

    ” … On November 18, Ike Kaveladze texted Aras Agalarov, following up on a phone conversation they had already had, reporting on Rob Goldstone’s outreach to the Trump team to set up a second meeting with Natalia Veselnitskaya to discuss Magnitsky sanctions again….
    The Kaveladze transcript and his text messages reveal that the efforts to get Veselnitskaya back in to meet with the Trump team continued for the rest of November… ”

    – a june 2 post (the evasion in trumps’ response…) :

    “… TRUMP: We talked about Russian adoption. Yeah. I always found that interesting. Because, you know, he ended that years ago. And I actually talked about Russian adoption with him, which is interesting because it was a part of the conversation that Don [Jr., Mr. Trump’s son] had in that meeting…”.

    the importance of these cites is that they introduce the notion of time into the agenda of the june 9 meeting. i take continuing to act on a matter over time as implying intentionality.

    – several times after the meeting don jr. commented on revisiting the magnitsky sanctions.

    – 5 months after the meeting and just after trump’s election, the agalarov team pursued another meeting for veselnetskya. and they pursued the matter for the month of november.

    – a year after the meeting trump and putin had a tete a tete about “adoption” which meant about magnitsky sanctions against russia.

    now that it seems certain the meeting, including the fact that agalarov was to be the contact person, was matter of design, an interesting question is where did the idea for the june 9 meeting come from? i have no idea, but there are three individuals who might have had a hand in arranging for it to happen – michael flynn, jeff sessions, or paul manafort. flynn and sessions thru their conversations with ambassador kisylak. manafort thru his russian contacts.

    as for sanctions relief, it was probably an unlucky day for putin and his rich supporters when sally yates gave michael flynn a major concussion that took him out of the tournament permanently. had he remained as national security advisor i would have expected sanctions to be eased.

    finally, that trump and putin chatted about adoptions in july 2017 says to me that they both heads of state knew about the wikileaks dnc/podesta email scheme to influence the 2016 election.

Comments are closed.