New Documents Reveal Democrats’ Plot To Frame Trump With Ukraine Call
Newly declassified documents released by the House Intelligence Committee, following action by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, are drawing renewed scrutiny to the origins of the Ukraine impeachment proceedings, offering additional details about how the complaint against President Donald Trump developed and was handled, The Federalist reports today.
The materials include previously undisclosed interview transcripts with Inspector General Michael Atkinson, along with related documentation. Taken together, they outline how a complaint tied to Trump’s 2019 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was processed and ultimately advanced to Congress.
According to the records, the complaint—filed by then–National Security Council staffer Eric Ciaramella—alleged that Trump sought to influence the 2020 election during the call. Ciaramella claimed that Trump was attempting to “solicit interference from a foreign country in the 2020 U.S. elections” and was encouraging Ukraine to investigate his “main political rival,” Joe Biden. He also suggested that Rudy Giuliani and Attorney General Bill Barr were involved.
The documents show that Atkinson permitted the complaint to move forward despite it being based on indirect information rather than firsthand knowledge. At the time, whistleblower complaints had traditionally required direct knowledge, but that standard was modified, allowing second- and third-hand accounts to be considered.
Atkinson addressed the timing of that change in the newly released material, stating, “So the timing is unfortunate. It looks suspicious, I get that.”
The timeline surrounding the call has also drawn attention. The July 25, 2019 conversation occurred one day after Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s congressional testimony, which marked a turning point in the Russia investigation. The proximity of the two events has been noted in discussions about the sequence of developments.
The complaint itself relied on accounts that were passed along through multiple officials. According to the documents, individuals within the National Security Council relayed summaries of the call to one another, with at least one official relying on a transcript they had only briefly reviewed. That information was then conveyed to Ciaramella and ultimately submitted to the inspector general.
The released materials indicate that this chain of reporting involved several layers of communication between the original call and the final complaint. In contrast, the official transcript of the call—made public in 2019—provides a direct record of the conversation itself.
The call transcript shows Trump referencing public matters, including Joe Biden’s past statements about U.S. loan guarantees to Ukraine and the dismissal of a prosecutor connected to the Burisma investigation. These references were part of broader discussions already circulating publicly at the time.
Additional details that later surfaced, including materials from Hunter Biden’s laptop, included communications related to Burisma’s internal concerns and expectations regarding investigations. These elements became part of the broader context surrounding the Ukraine issue.
The documents also revisit the internal handling of the complaint and the standards applied. Historically, whistleblower systems were designed to rely on firsthand reporting to reduce the risk of inaccuracies. In this case, however, the complaint moved forward despite relying on multiple layers of indirect information.
The records further detail how information about the call moved between officials before reaching the inspector general, highlighting the complexity of how the complaint was assembled.
The documents also shed light on Ciaramella’s prior role within the National Security Council, including involvement in Ukraine-related policy matters during the Obama administration. His background and connections to the issue became part of later discussions during the impeachment process.
During congressional questioning at the time, issues surrounding contacts between Ciaramella and members of Congress were raised. In one exchange referenced in the materials, clarification was offered regarding the nature of those interactions and how they were described publicly.
The broader role of media coverage during the impeachment proceedings is also revisited in light of the new material. At the time, the identity of the whistleblower was widely shielded, limiting public discussion of his background and involvement.
The newly released documents add further detail to the sequence of events that led to Trump’s impeachment, which became the third such proceeding in U.S. history. They provide additional insight into how the complaint was developed, reviewed, and ultimately used as the basis for congressional action.
While the documents offer more information about the process, they also arrive years after the events in question, revisiting a chapter that played a central role in the political landscape leading up to the 2020 election.
{Matzav.com}
