By Susan Hennessey, Benjamin Wittes Via Lawfare
What is one to make of the apparent inability of press and
government alike to verify the allegations in the Trump dossier combined
with the cache of documents’ apparent staying power?
The unverified allegations against Donald Trump are not
just salacious, they are specific. These are facts which should be
verifiable as either true or false. Did a meeting take place between the
people described, at the place and time described? Even if some
specific details are wrong—as is often the case in HUMINT—are the
essential allegations, or some of them anyway, accurate?
We now know that the FBI has been looking into the material in these documents for approximately seven months; a large number of reporters have been diligently working to verify leads for nearly as long. What does it mean that, currently and at the time of the briefings to the President and President-elect, no specific allegations have been verified?
Full Article
We now know that the FBI has been looking into the material in these documents for approximately seven months; a large number of reporters have been diligently working to verify leads for nearly as long. What does it mean that, currently and at the time of the briefings to the President and President-elect, no specific allegations have been verified?
Full Article