Friday, March 10, 2023

FOCUS: Prosecutors Signal Criminal Charges for Trump Are Likely

 

 

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10 March 23

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The former president was told that he could appear before a Manhattan grand jury next week if he wishes to testify, a strong indication that an indictment could soon follow. (photo: Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times)
FOCUS: Prosecutors Signal Criminal Charges for Trump Are Likely
William K. Rashbaum, Ben Protess and Jonah E. Bromwich, The New York Times
Excerpt: "The former president was told that he could appear before a Manhattan grand jury next week if he wishes to testify, a strong indication that an indictment could soon follow." 


The former president was told that he could appear before a Manhattan grand jury next week if he wishes to testify, a strong indication that an indictment could soon follow.


The Manhattan district attorney’s office recently signaled to Donald J. Trump’s lawyers that he could face criminal charges for his role in the payment of hush money to a porn star, the strongest indication yet that prosecutors are nearing an indictment of the former president, according to four people with knowledge of the matter.

The prosecutors offered Mr. Trump the chance to testify next week before the grand jury that has been hearing evidence in the potential case, the people said. Such offers almost always indicate an indictment is close; it would be unusual for the district attorney, Alvin L. Bragg, to notify a potential defendant without ultimately seeking charges against him.

In New York, potential defendants have the right to answer questions in the grand jury before they are indicted, but they rarely testify, and Mr. Trump is likely to decline the offer. His lawyers could also meet privately with the prosecutors in hopes of fending off criminal charges.


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Trump RESPONDS to WORST NEWS He Has Received in His Life

 



Donald Trump has issued a dangerous and bizarre press release on his social media platform responding to the news that the Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg is likely to criminally indict Trump very soon for hush money payments to Stormy Daniels.

Laura Ingraham’s Brother REVEALS Horrifying Secrets about Sister

 


With the release of the new filings in the defamation lawsuit brought by Dominion, MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas shares the interview he and his brothers did with Laura Ingraham’s brother where he described her deceitful pathology perfectly.




BREAKING: Silicon Valley Bank shut down by regulators, FDIC

 



Silicon Valley Bank, a major lender to tech startups and the 16th largest bank in the U.S. is shutting down. CNBC's Dominic Chu reports on what triggered SVB's downfall and whether concerns around the bank are connected to its concentration in the tech sector.



Boebert accidentally humiliates Trump on live TV

 

atAdvocacy

OD Action is now atAdvocacy!

Kick Marjorie Taylor Greene off the Homeland Security Committee!

Today’s Action: Celebrate Abortion Provider Appreciation Day!

Daily Dose of Democracy:

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VIDEO OF THE DAY: Boebert humiliates herself in her own hearing

The gun-nut congresswoman put her ignorance on full display once again and even managed to embarrass Donald Trump in the process this time.

Take Action: Hold the greedy railway company accountable for the toxic spill in Ohio!


Manhattan prosecutors signal to Trump that indictment is coming
The Manhattan district attorney has presented Trump with an offer to go before the grand jury currently hearing evidence about his role in a hush-money arrangement with porn star Stormy Daniels. Such offers almost always signify an impending indictment.

Take Action: Tell Congress to give free lunches for EVERY student!


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The next presidential election could be at stake

Wisconsin Democrats: With the balance of the state's Supreme Court on the line, progressive champion Judge Janet Protasiewicz and radical MAGA extremist Dan Kelly have emerged as the nominees for the vacated all-important swing seat. This April 4th election is an absolute MUST-WIN for everything we hold dear — abortion rights, LGBTQ rights, the right to vote, and potentially even a free and fair election for the next President of the United States. Can you chip in to make sure Janet has the resources she needs to win and flip the Supreme Court of the most important swing state to a progressive majority?


Internal text reveals Tucker Carlson reads the work of infamous Holocaust denier writing for vile, white nationalist outlet
The embarrassment of riches from the Dominion lawsuit against Fox News continues to flow. Following Trump's loss in 2020, Fascism Tonight! host Tucker Carlson shared the work of David Cole, a Holocaust denier who writes for a vile, white nationalist outlet that carries headlines like “The Trouble with Blacks” and “Our De Facto Antiwhite Apartheid,” with an unnamed contact. But don't you dare call Tuck Tuck a racist!

Take Action: Tell Congress: Pass the DREAM Act of 2023!


Ex-GOP Ohio speaker, lobbyist guilty in $60 million bribery scheme
The moment one Republican corruption scandal starts to fade from public consciousness a new one seems to burst onto the scene. The cycle makes sense when you consider today's GOP is essentially a legal crime syndicate, albeit a woefully inept one. Case in point — former GOP Ohio House Speaker Larry Householder and former state Republican Party Chair Matt Borges have been convicted in a $60 million bribery scheme that federal prosecutors have called the largest corruption case in state history. Oops.

Take Action: Tell Amazon to negotiate with the labor union!


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Former roommate says George Santos led ATM fraud scheme

A Brazilian man who pleaded guilty to fraud in a 2017 ATM skimming scheme has alleged that the head honcho of the Seattle-based operation was world thumb-wrestling champion and 7-Michelin-star chef George Santos. At this point it would be quicker to list the crimes Santos hasn't committed than to reel off the ever-growing litany of ones he has.

Take Action: Demand the Senate Judiciary Committee hold hearings on the unaccountable Supreme Court!


Republicans kill child marriage ban bill in West Virginia
Family values Republicans defeated a bill that would have banned child marriage in West Virginia, because, well, you just cannot make this stuff up. The vote came shortly after the bill's main sponsor, Democratic Del. Kayla Young, testified that there have been MORE THAN 3,600 MARRIAGES in the state involving one or more CHILDREN since 2000. Opponents of the bill argued out loud in public with actual words coming out of their face holes that teenage marriages are simply a part of life in West Virginia. State Republican Sen. and professional mouth breather Mike Stuart said his vote to kill the bill “wasn’t a vote against women” and went on to explain that his mother was married when she was 16 and pregnant with him, making him "the luckiest guy in the world.” Well, then. Case closed!


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Biden finally shuts down Marjorie Taylor Greene

No Lie with Brian Tyler Cohen About time.


Mexico cartel turns in own men over US kidnappings
A splinter group of the Gulf Cartel, called the Scorpions Group, issued an apology for kidnapping four US citizens — and killing two of them — last week, and has turned over five men it alleges are responsible. The news comes as a deranged, increasingly vocal faction of the GOP is calling for a literal invasion of Mexico to attack the cartels — a truly bonkers idea that would cause mass suffering and civilian bloodshed while failing to solve the fundamental underlying cartel problem: the empowerment of brutal criminal organizations due to the perpetuation of the inarguably failed and supremely wasteful "War on Drugs."


Proud Boys deployed foot soldiers in sedition plot
While Republicans and Fox News are working hard to rewrite history to whitewash Donald Trump's failed insurrection, federal prosecutors are keeping their eyes on the prize. As they wrap up their seditious conspiracy case, they're arguing that Proud Boys chief Enrique Tarrio and other leaders of the group handpicked and mobilized a loyal group of foot soldiers — or “tools” — to supply the force necessary to carry out their plot to stop the transfer of power from Trump to Joe Biden after the 2020 election.


Pentagon accused of blocking effort to hand Russia war crimes evidence to ICC
Despite all the righteous condemnation of Vladimir Putin for the heinous war crimes committed in Ukraine by his Russian army, the US military is being accused of withholding information about those war crimes from the International Criminal Court just in case it sets a precedent where *our* soldiers might be held responsible for war crimes that they commit. It's disappointing and hypocritical and an affront to the justice this nation is supposed to stand for, but hey, that's the Pentagon for ya — whose official policy is to LITERALLY INVADE THE HAGUE if the ICC ever detains and charges an American troop. Seriously. Look it up.


Shell CEO pay up 50% as soaring energy prices boosted profit
Good thing these oil companies aren't literally poisoning the planet and endangering the lives of every person on it. We should definitely make sure they keep getting bigger and bigger paychecks!


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Today’s Action: Celebrate Abortion Provider Appreciation Day!

Since SCOTUS’ devastating overturning of Roe v. Wade last summer, abortion has been center stage in America. There are only 20 states where abortion is completely accessible, while 12 states have banned it entirely. Access in the remaining 18 states is dwindling quickly, with abortion providers and progressives fighting tooth and nail to protect the fundamental right to reproductive healthcare. Abortion providers are on the frontline, sometimes risking their lives to deliver critical care, often to our most vulnerable communities.

America’s abortion care providers are indispensable and save countless lives only to be met with Republican vitriol. Without them, post-Roe America would look a lot different. Today is Abortion Provider Appreciation Day, and we hope you’ll join us in saying THANK YOU for the work they’ve done and continue to do to protect our reproductive rights.

Some of the ways you can give back this weekend include (but are certainly not limited to) donating to independent abortion clinics, hosting a fundraiser, recording a video explaining why you celebrate care providers, sending crucial wish list items collected by Abortion Access Front, or using their social media toolkit to post your support. There are so many ways to help — Planned Parenthood has three whole pages of actions to choose from! No matter how you choose to acknowledge and celebrate our care providers, please take a moment today to do so!

A massive THANK YOU to abortion providers across the country who continue to fight for what’s right no matter the risk. You are the best of us!

PS — Please don't forget to sign the petition kicking Marjorie Taylor Greene off the Homeland Security Committee, and be sure to follow us on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.

 @advocacy | 1002 Hull St., Louisville, KY 40204





Trump’s Most SHAMEFUL Post YET Exposes his PERVERTED Obsession

 





POLITICO NIGHTLY: Can you ‘make it right’ after a toxic train disaster?

 

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BY CHARLIE MAHTESIAN

Norfolk Southern President and CEO Alan Shaw holding his hand up while sitting at a table in a hearing room.

Norfolk Southern President and CEO Alan Shaw testifies before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

HARD SELL — It’s been over a month since a toxic train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, sparked a massive fireball, an evacuation of local residents and concerns about a budding ecological disaster. The train wreck led to intense criticism over Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg’s response to the crisis, but also focused scrutiny on Norfolk Southern — which operated the chemical-carrying,150-car train — and past Republican actions that rolled back Obama administration rail safety regulations.

Amid ongoing investigations, today marked the first congressional hearing on the catastrophe in northeastern Ohio. Nightly spoke to POLITICO Transportation editor Kathryn A. Wolfe to get some perspective on prospects for a bipartisan rail safety bill — and the politics standing in the way.

What did we learn from today’s congressional hearing on the derailment?

That, like in so many parts of life and politics, agreement frays the closer you look.

Everybody agrees that trains should be safe, and that the communities that live near tracks should be safe. I live close to the CSX track that runs out of Washington, D.C.’s Union Station, so I pay extra attention to this topic myself. But rifts form when you start asking questions about how the government should ensure that safety — or who is responsible when something goes wrong.

You saw those cracks at the hearing today. And while there was plenty of blame to go around, where each party primarily focused its finger-pointing was clear. Democrats went after Norfolk Southern. And Republicans went after the Environmental Protection Agency.

Norfolk Southern CEO Alan Shaw was one of the witnesses today. What kind of reception — or grilling — did he get from committee members?

Shaw didn’t have any defenders on the committee today, but he started out with what lawmakers most wanted to hear: contrition for what happened and a promise to “make it right.” He talked a lot — and, with conviction — about how much time he had spent in East Palestine, and how he’s sat in the living rooms of families who were worried and angry.

But again, the devil’s in the details. What does it mean to “make it right?” Democrats asked repeatedly for specific promises — about reimbursing the community for tanked home values, about whether Norfolk Southern will commit to paying for peoples’ long-term health care costs. His response was typically that his company would do “what’s right.”

“All of us are committed to doing what’s right,” Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) shot back at one point.

In the early days after the East Palestine crash, it appeared as if there was bipartisan support for new rail safety measures. Is that still the case or are partisan fault lines forming?

I think this bill, with the mandates that it includes, was always going to be a hard sell especially in a divided Congress. From the start, Republicans in the House, including those responsible for rail oversight, have been saying they want to wait until crash probes that could take up to a year-and-a-half are done before trying to change the law. And it’s not just the House — just this week the second most senior Republican senator, John Thune of South Dakota, also said he wanted to take it slow. There wasn’t anything in the hearing to dissuade me from that view. It’s not impossible, especially with the White House backing the bill. But it seems like long odds to me.

The rail lobby is among the more muscular interests in Washington and has been able to beat back rail safety and other regulatory efforts in the past. Is there any evidence suggesting this time will be any different?

We’re still in early days, but not that I’ve seen. Norfolk Southern and the freight rail trade group, the Association of American Railroads, have pledged to shore up safety in a narrowly-tailored way — focused on what appears to be the preliminary cause of the derailment, which was an overheating wheel that wasn’t detected soon enough. I’ve seen nothing that would suggest to me that railroads have any intention of dropping opposition to broader safety changes that advocates have been calling for, for decades at this point — like more advanced braking systems, and crew size minimums.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at cmahtesian@politico.com or on Twitter at @PoliticoCharlie .

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING : What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today .

  

WHAT'D I MISS?

 George Santos masterminded 2017 ATM fraud, former roommate tells feds: Rep. George Santos (R-N.Y.) orchestrated a 2017 credit card skimming operation in Seattle , the man who was convicted of the fraud and deported to Brazil said in a sworn declaration submitted to federal authorities Wednesday. “I am coming forward today to declare that the person in charge of the crime of credit card fraud when I was arrested was George Santos / Anthony Devolder,” Gustavo Ribeiro Trelha wrote in the declaration.

— McConnell hospitalized for concussion: Mitch McConnell is being treated for a concussion and will remain in the hospital for several days after a fall , according to a statement from his office. David Popp, a McConnell spokesperson, said today that “Leader McConnell tripped at a dinner event Wednesday evening and has been admitted to the hospital and is being treated for a concussion,” before adding “he is expected to remain in the hospital for a few days of observation and treatment.”

 ‘Spill’ of classified info derails Proud Boys trial: Federal prosecutors inadvertently disclosed likely classified material to Proud Boys defense attorneys , Justice Department officials indicated today, a snafu that has derailed — for at least a full day — the most important trial to emerge from the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. The admission in court by a top DOJ official came in connection with testimony from FBI Special Agent Nicole Miller, one of the lead investigators in the Proud Boys case.

— Vallas dissed Biden and Obama in Chicago: One of two Democrats left standing in the race for Chicago mayor, Paul Vallas, went on a conservative radio show last year and mocked the last two Democratic presidents . In the nation’s third-largest city, where Barack Obama remains a revered figure, it could end up tipping the balance.

NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

THE IOWA BOOK TOUR — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis will be in Des Moines, Iowa, meeting with Republican lawmakers on Friday , according to Bloomberg. His trip falls in the midst of a national tour promoting his new book “The Courage to Be Free,” but the stop in Iowa, still the first in the nation caucus state for Republicans, further advances speculation that DeSantis will soon announce he is running for president.

WHY NOT HER? — After announcing her longshot candidacy for president on March 4, Marianne Williamson sat down for an interview with The Nation’s John Nichols . They discussed her vision for the country, her frustrations with the Democratic Party, and if she could actually, somehow, pull off a victory on her second try. “Anything is possible,” she argued.

CARTEL CONSENSUS — The entire GOP presidential field is rallying around a new idea: designating drug cartels as terrorist organizations . Every declared Republican presidential candidate told RealClearPolitics that they support this idea, as more fentanyl coming across the U.S.-Mexico border has led to an increase in drug-related violence. The White House doesn’t believe the designation will help with the problem; “Designating these cartels as [foreign terrorist organizations] would not grant us any additional authorities that we don’t really have at this time,” press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters Wednesday.

 

DOWNLOAD THE POLITICO MOBILE APP: Stay up to speed with the newly updated POLITICO mobile app, featuring timely political news, insights and analysis from the best journalists in the business. The sleek and navigable design offers a convenient way to access POLITICO's scoops and groundbreaking reporting. Don’t miss out on the app you can rely on for the news you need, reimagined. DOWNLOAD FOR iOS – DOWNLOAD FOR ANDROID .

  

AROUND THE WORLD

Gas emanating from a leak on the Nord Stream gas pipeline in the Baltic Sea.

Gas emanating from a leak on the Nord Stream gas pipeline in the Baltic Sea. | Swedish Coast Guard via Getty Images

WHODUNIT? Nearly six months after the subsea gas pipeline explosions which sent geopolitical shockwaves around the world, there is still no conclusive answer to the question of who blew up Nord Stream , writes Charlie Cooper .

Since the day of the attack, four states — Russia, the U.S., Ukraine and the U.K. — have been publicly blamed for the explosions, with varying degrees of evidence. In the information vacuum since, various theories have surfaced as to the culprit and their motive.

Theory 1: Putin, the energy bully — In the days immediately after the attack, the working assumption of many analysts in the West was that this was a brazen act of intimidation on the part of Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin. Blowing up Nord Stream, in this reading of the situation, was a final declaration of Russia’s willingness to cut off Europe’s gas supply indefinitely.

Theory 2: The Brits did it — From the beginning, Russian leaders have insinuated that either Ukraine or its Western allies were behind the attack. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said two days after the explosions that accusations of Russian culpability were “quite predictable and predictably stupid.”

Theory 3: U.S. black ops — In February, with formal investigations in Germany, Sweden and Denmark still yet to report, an article by the U.S. investigative journalist Seymour Hersh triggered a new wave of speculation. Hersh’s allegation: U.S. forces blew up Nord Stream on direct orders from President Joe Biden.

Theory 4: The mystery boatmen — The latest clues — following reports on Tuesday from the New York Times and German media — center on a boat, six people with forged passports and the tiny Danish island of Christiansø. According to these reports, a boat that set sail from the German port of Rostock, later stopping at Christiansø, is at the center of the Nord Stream investigations.

NIGHTLY NUMBER

$6.9 trillion

The cost of Biden’s proposed budget , released today. The plan, which has no chance of passing Congress, is nevertheless an opening salvo in negotiations and a potential campaign blueprint for 2024 — it proposes tax hikes on the wealthiest Americans and corporations, the most funding ever for the military and $3 trillion in deficit-slashing policies over a decade.

RADAR SWEEP

UNUSUAL MORTALITY EVENTS — Between December 2016 and February 2017, 10 whales washed up along a 200-mile stretch spanning Virginia and North Carolina. The spate of deaths marked the beginning of what is called an “unusual mortality event.” And after a slight decline, deaths appear to be spiking again; between December 2022 and March 2023, 16 more whales were found stranded or near shorelines from North Carolina to New York. The causes of these whale deaths are still somewhat of a mystery, but some politicians and activists are advancing a theory — that they relate at least in part to the development of offshore wind turbines. Andrew S. Lewis reports for Yale Environment 360.

PARTING IMAGE

On this day in 1981: Hundreds of United Mine Workers union members gather outside UMW headquarters in Washington to begin a day-long protest against the Reagan administration’s proposed cuts in black lung benefits.

On this day in 1981: Hundreds of United Mine Workers union members gather outside UMW headquarters in Washington to begin a day-long protest against the Reagan administration’s proposed cuts in black lung benefits. | AP Photo

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FOCUS: Seymour Hersh | My Fifty Years With Dan Ellsberg

 


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09 March 23

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STARVING FOR CASH, RUNNING OUT OF TIME — The amount of cash we have on hand to run Reader Supported News is dangerously low. We have to draw the line now to right the ship. We will turn as much attention to funding as needed to keep RSN live. Who can donate?
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Daniel Ellsberg, the whistleblower who leaked the Pentagon Papers figure, holds up a copy of a book entitled 'The Senate Watergate Report' as he appears as a panelist at a conference on the Central Intelligence Agency and covert activities, Sept. 13, 1974, in Washington. (photo: Henry Griffin/AP)
FOCUS: Seymour Hersh | My Fifty Years With Dan Ellsberg
Seymour Hersh, Seymour Hersh's Substack
Hersh writes: "I think it best that I begin with the end. On March 1, I and dozens of Dan's friends and fellow activists received a two-page notice that he had been diagnosed with incurable pancreatic cancer and was refusing chemotherapy because the prognosis, even with chemo, was dire. He will be ninety-two in April." 



Reader Supported News
09 March 23

Live on the homepage now!
Reader Supported News

STARVING FOR CASH, RUNNING OUT OF TIME — The amount of cash we have on hand to run Reader Supported News is dangerously low. We have to draw the line now to right the ship. We will turn as much attention to funding as needed to keep RSN live. Who can donate?
Marc Ash • Founder, Reader Supported News

Sure, I'll make a donation!

 

Daniel Ellsberg, the whistleblower who leaked the Pentagon Papers figure, holds up a copy of a book entitled 'The Senate Watergate Report' as he appears as a panelist at a conference on the Central Intelligence Agency and covert activities, Sept. 13, 1974, in Washington. (photo: Henry Griffin/AP)
FOCUS: Seymour Hersh | My Fifty Years With Dan Ellsberg
Seymour Hersh, Seymour Hersh's Substack
Hersh writes: "I think it best that I begin with the end. On March 1, I and dozens of Dan's friends and fellow activists received a two-page notice that he had been diagnosed with incurable pancreatic cancer and was refusing chemotherapy because the prognosis, even with chemo, was dire. He will be ninety-two in April." 


The man who changed America


Ithink it best that I begin with the end. On March 1, I and dozens of Dan’s friends and fellow activists received a two-page notice that he had been diagnosed with incurable pancreatic cancer and was refusing chemotherapy because the prognosis, even with chemo, was dire. He will be ninety-two in April.

Last November, over a Thanksgiving holiday spent with family in Berkeley, I drove a few miles to visit Dan at the home in neighboring Kensington he has shared for decades with his wife Patricia. My intent was to yack with him for a few hours about our mutual obsession, Vietnam. More than fifty years later, he was still pondering the war as a whole, and I was still trying to understand the My Lai massacre. I arrived at 10 am and we spoke without a break—no water, no coffee, no cookies—until my wife came to fetch me, and to say hello and visit with Dan and Patricia. She left, and I stayed a few more minutes with Dan, who wanted to show me his library of documents that could have gotten him a long prison term. Sometime around 6 pm—it was getting dark—Dan walked me to my car, and we continued to chat about the war and what he knew—oh, the things he knew—until I said I had to go and started the car. He then said, as he always did, “You know I love you, Sy.”

So this is a story about a tutelage that began in the summer of 1972, when Dan and I first connected. I have no memory of who called whom, but I was then at the New York Times and Dan had some inside information on White House horrors he wanted me to chase down—stuff that had not been in the Pentagon Papers.

I was planning to write about my friendship with Dan after he passed away but last weekend my youngest son reminded me that he still had some of the magic trick materials that Dan had delighted him with in the mid-1980s, when Dan was crashing with our family, as he often did when visiting Washington. “Why not write about him now?” he asked. Why not?

I first learned of Dan’s importance in the summer of 1971, when he was outed for delivering the Pentagon Papers to the New York Times a few weeks after the newspaper began a series of shattering stories about the disconnect between what we were told and what really had been going on. Those papers remain today the most vital discussion of a war from the inside. Even after the New York Times exposures, their seven thousand pages would be rarely read in full.

I was then working for the New Yorker on a Vietnam project and had learned that it was Dan who did the leaking a week or so before his name became public. His outing was inevitable, and on June 26, after hiding out in Cambridge, Dan strolled to the U.S Attorney’s office in Boston—there were scores of journalists waiting—and had a brief chat with the reporters before turning himself in for what all expected would be the trial of the decade. He told the crowd that he hoped that “the truth will free us of this war.” And then, as he fought his way to the courthouse steps, a reporter asked him how he felt about going to prison. His response struck me then and still makes me tingle: “Wouldn’t you go to prison to help end this war?”

I had done my bit in exposing the My Lai massacre and publishing a book about it in 1970. I was then in the process of writing a second book on the Army’s cover-up of the slaughter. “Hell, no,” I thought to myself, “No way I would go to jail—especially for telling an unwanted truth.” I followed Ellsberg’s subsequent trial in a Los Angeles federal court and even wrote about the wrongdoing of the White House creeps who broke into the office of Ellsberg’s psychoanalyst—at the request of President Nixon. (The government’s case was thrown out after the extent of the White House-ordered spying on Ellsberg became public.)

It was early in the election year summer of 1972 when Ellsberg and I got in touch with each other. I was banging away on the losing Vietnam war and CIA misdeeds for the Times. Nixon looked like a sure thing, despite continuing the hated war, because of stumble after stumble for the campaign of the Democratic nominee, Senator George McGovern. Dan had two stories that he thought could change the dynamics of the November election.

I liked him right off the bat. He was so earnest, so bright, as handsome as a movie star, and so full of the kind of inside information about the Vietnam War that few others had. And so willing to share them with no worry about the consequences. He understood that as the source of highly secret information and procedures he was taking all the risks and that as a reporter I was going to write stories that would get acclaim and put me at no risk. At some point in our chats, I brought him home for a good meal. His campaign against the Vietnam War was literally consuming him, and he immediately engaged with my wife and our two small children. He did magic tricks, he was marvelous on the piano—Dan could play the Beatles and Beethoven—and he connected with all of us. Our friendship was locked in—forever. I confess that late at night—we were both night owls—he and I would walk the dog and find time to sit on a curb somewhere and smoke a few Thai sticks. How Dan always managed to have a supply of these joints from Southeast Asia I chose not to ask. He would talk about all the sealed and locked secret files of the Vietnam War that he could recall, with his photographic memory, in near perfect detail.

In the early 1980s I was writing a long and very critical book about Henry Kissinger’s sordid days as Nixon’s national security adviser and secretary of State, with a focus on Vietnam. At one point, Dan spent more than a week in our home, rising at 6 am to read the 2,300 pages of typed manuscript. He understood that I did not want his analyses or disagreements with my conclusions, but only factual errors. One morning Dan told me I had misread a mid-1960s Washington Post piece on the war by Joe Kraft, whose column was then a must-read. I argued, and he was adamant. So I drove downtown to my office, dug through boxes of files and found the column. Dan had remembered the details of a two-decade-old column in a daily newspaper. His memory was scary.

There were two White House abuses he wanted me to expose before the presidential election in the fall of 1972. Dan told me that Nixon and Kissinger—for whom Dan had written an important early policy paper after he was appointed national security adviser—had been wiretapping aides and cabinet members. The second tip Dan had for me was that Kissinger had ordered some of his aides to produce a plan for using tactical nuclear weapons in South Vietnam, in case they were needed to end the war on American terms. If I could get one or two sources—by this time there were a number of former Kissinger aides who had quietly resigned over the Vietnam War—on the record, Dan said, it just might get the Democrats into office. It was the longest of long shots, but I tried like hell all summer to find someone who had firsthand information, as Dan did not, and who was willing to confirm Dan’s information, even if on background. Of course, it was understood I would have to tell Abe Rosenthal, executive editor of the Times, who my off-the-record source was.

It was a lousy summer for me, because there were a few former Kissinger aides who easily confirmed Dan’s information, but would not agree to my providing their names to the Times. In one case, with a very decent guy who very much hoped he would get a senior job in a future administration, I came close, aided by the fact that his wife—I always conducted such visits at night—said to her husband, “Oh, for God’s sakes just tell him the truth.” She said it over and over. Talk about a painful experience. Needless to say, their marriage did not last long. The wife’s anger that the truth was not being told helped me understand Dan’s obsession with a war whose worst elements were simply not known to the public. I wasn’t able to get any source on the record in time for the election, but in subsequent years I did get the stories.

There was one story Dan told me in late 1993 that seemed to capture the secret life on the inside of a major war. He had gone back and forth on short missions to South Vietnam while working as a senior State Department official, but he jumped at a chance in mid-1965 to join a team in Saigon committed to pacification—winning hearts and minds—of the villagers in the South. Its leader was Ed Lansdale, a CIA hero of counterinsurgency for his earlier efforts in routing communist insurgents in the Philippines.

I always took good notes in my meetings with Dan, not because I planned to write about him at some point—I knew he would write his own memoirs—but because I was getting a seminar on how things really worked on the inside. Read his words, and you can judge for yourself how complicated life could be at the top.

“In 1965,” Dan began, “I had done a study of the Cuban missile crisis and I had four operational clearances above top secret, including U-2 clearances” and National Security Agency clearances. He had also interviewed Bobby Kennedy two times about his role in the crisis. Ellsberg’s clearances were so sacrosanct that he was supposed to register in a special office upon arrival in Saigon and from then on he would not be allowed to travel outside of Saigon without an armored car or in a two-engine airplane or better. He got around the system by not deigning to register, a rarity in a world of war where top secret clearances were seen by many as evidence of machismo.

And so Ellsberg went off to work in Saigon with Lansdale. “For one and one half years,” Ellsberg said, “I spent nearly every evening listening to Lansdale talk about his covert operations in the Philippines and earlier in North Vietnam in the 1950s. By this time I’d been working with secrets for years and thought I knew what kind of secrets could be kept from whom. I also thought Ed and I had a good working knowledge of each other and our secrets. Every piece of information was cataloged in your mind and you knew to whom you could say and what you could say. In all of this, Jack Kennedy was mentioned and so was Bobby, but there was no mention by Lansdale of Cuba and no mention that Lansdale had ever worked for Jack and Bobby Kennedy.”

A decade later, after both Kennedy brothers had been assassinated, I wrote a series for the New York Times on the CIA’s spying on hundreds of thousands of American anti-Vietnam war protesters, members of Congress and reporters—all in direct violation of the agency’s 1947 charter barring any domestic activity. It led to the establishment of the Senate’s Church Committee in 1975. It was the most extensive Congressional inquiry into the activities of the CIA since the agency’s beginning. The committee exposed the assassination activities of the CIA, operations undertaken on orders that clearly came from Jack and Bobby Kennedy, although no direct link was published in the committee’s final report. But the committee reported extensively on a secret group authorized by Jack Kennedy and run by his brother Bobby to come up with options to terrorize Cuba and assassinate Fidel Castro. The covert operation had the code name Mongoose. And it was led, the committee reported, in 1961 and 1962 by Ed Lansdale.

Ellsberg told me he was flabbergasted. “When I heard about Lansdale and Mongoose,” he said, “it revealed to me an ability to keep secrets on an insider level that went far beyond what I had imagined. It was like discovering your next-door neighbor and your weekend fishing companion”—Ellsberg, it should be noted, never went fishing in his life—“and close, dear friend who, when he died, turned out to have been the secretary of State.

“It was astounding, because Mongoose was exactly the kind of operation I’d expected to hear about from Lansdale. He told about covert operations all the time. I think Ed had been told by President Kennedy to ‘keep his fucking mouth shut.’

“When you’ve been in a system with as high a level as possible of secrecy, you understand that things do get talked about. And you get a sense of what is usually held back. I was hearing all about other covert operations, but somebody—not Landsdale—had put a lid on Mongoose.”

After the assassination of Jack Kennedy, Ellsberg theorized, “any far reaching investigation into his death would have to lead to many covert operations.” His point was that there was no evidence that the Warren Commission set up to investigate the assassination had done so.

In all of Dan’s many hours of tutoring, as I understood years later, he understood and empathized with my eagerness—even my need—to learn all that I could about his world of secrets and lies, things said out loud and hidden in top-secret documents. And so he happily became my tutor and taught me where and how to look inside the recessed corners of the American intelligence community.

In return, I gave him my friendship and welcomed him into my family. He loved long talks with my wife, a doctor, teaching the kids magic tricks, and playing Billy Joel songs and similar stuff on the piano for them. We all sensed early on that there was a need for him to be an innocent kid, too, if only to serve as a brief respite from his constant anxiety and the guilt he carried in his soul about what his America had done to the Vietnamese people.

Dan was showing me an insider’s love, just as he and Patricia radiated love and acceptance to all their many friends and admirers who, like me, will never forget the lessons he taught us and what we learned.

No way I’m going to wait for him to move along without saying what I want to say right now.



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