Former President Donald Trump has filed a 16-count lawsuit against Hillary Clinton, the Democratic National Committee, and the rest of the gang that hoked up the Russian Collusion hoax.
The filing names some 50 defendants, including not only Clinton, but also Christopher Steele, the British intelligence agent who fabricated the debunked dossier used in the smear campaign. A source for Steele was defendant Igor Danchenko, a Russian whom Special Counsel John Durham has indicted for lying to the FBI.
Of course, the defendants are laughing it off as another stunt typical of Trump. Problem for them is, the narrative in the lawsuit is true. And they know it.
Clinton, the DNC, and their henchmen hatched a plan to smear Trump. The Obama administration knew about it, and by not stopping it, tacitly approved it.
At first, the goal was to wreck Trump’s candidacy and keep him out of the White House. When that failed, the goal became derailing his presidency.
Worse Than Watergate
That plot, the lawsuits says, “shocks the conscience and is an affront to this nation’s democracy,” the lawsuit begins:
Acting in concert, the Defendants maliciously conspired to weave a false narrative that their Republican opponent, Donald J. Trump, was colluding with a hostile foreign sovereignty. The actions taken in furtherance of their scheme — falsifying evidence, deceiving law enforcement, and exploiting access to highly-sensitive data sources — are so outrageous, subversive and incendiary that even the events of Watergate pale in comparison.
The lawsuit says the defendants conspired to accomplish a “single, self-serving purpose: to vilify Donald J. Trump. Indeed, their far-reaching conspiracy was designed to cripple Trump’s bid for the presidency by fabricating a scandal that would be used to trigger an unfounded federal investigation and ignite a media frenzy.”
That, of course, is exactly what happened.
The lawsuit says “top-level officials” in Clinton’s campaign and at the DNC coordinated the plot, but that Clinton hid behind a “wall of third parties.”
The scheme worked this way: Clinton’s hatchet men hired a law firm, Perkins Coie, to hide their nefarious scheme under the shield of lawyer-client privilege. The law firm’s job was to “to find — or fabricate — proof of a sinister link between” Trump and Russia. It did so by employing a cut-out, GPS Fusion, which in turn hired Steele to produce the bogus dossier that accused Trump of kinky sexual activities in Russia, among other things.
Another prong of the conspiracy was the attempt to find “a secret ‘back channel’ connection” between Trump and a Russian bank. When the Clinton Mafia found that “no such channel existed, the Defendants resorted to truly subversive measures — hacking servers at Trump Tower, Trump’s private apartment, and, most alarmingly, the White House.”
And on and on for 108 pages. The allegations include violations of the RICO Act, conspiracy as defined by RICO, injurious falsehood and malicious prosecution, and conspiracy to commit both.
Involved in the conspiracy to destroy Trump were disgraced FBI agents Peter Strzok and Lisa Page.
After Trump won, the conspiracy to get of him continued. Such was the concern inside the bureau about it that FBI agents were afraid they might land in scalding water.
Agents even purchased liability insurance to protect themselves if they were caught participating in what amounted to a plot to overthrow the president.
The lawsuit seeks at least $24 million.
Divert Attention From E-mail Scandal
Clinton torpedoes are chuckling about the lawsuit and dismiss it as a farrago of nonsense. They know a leftist, Deep State Trump hater in the federal judiciary might simply dismiss it.
That aside, the question is why Clinton and her gang of political cutthroats cooked up the plot.
Answer: To divert the media’s and public’s attention from the scandal brewing around her illegal use of a private e-mail server to send and receive classified government information; i.e., government secrets.
Such was the scheme’s success that the FBI tapped the phones of Trump campaign official Carter Page, but only after the bureau lied to a judge to get the warrant.
The bureau failed to disclose that the information offered to justify the warrant, which came from the Steele Dossier, was likely the work of a Clinton campaign button man.