THE WHISTLEBLOWER COMPLAINT TO
BE USED IN THE IMPEACHMENT OF PRESIDENT TRUMP
PRESENTED BY LUCY WARNER
SEPTEMBER 26, 2019
CBS IS DESCRIBING THIS AS THE
"UNCLASSIFIED VERSION." IT MAY MEAN LITTLE, BUT I DON'T LIKE THOSE
WORDS. I DON'T EXPECT THE PUBLIC TO HAVE IT, BUT I WANT CONGRESS TO GET THE
FULL, UNREDACTED AND UNMODIFIED VERSION OF THE COMPLAINT, ALONG WITH ANY LETTER
OF INTRODUCTION OR COMMENTS BY ANY MIDDLEMEN, SUCH AS ATTORNEY GENERAL BARR AND
THE NAME OF THE OFFICIAL WHO REPORTED THIS. THERE HAS BEEN A STATEMENT BY REP.
ADAM SCHIFF THAT THE ORIGINATOR OF THE WHISTLEBLOWER COMPLAINT WANTS TO APPEAR TO
TESTIFY IN CONGRESS, "PERHAPS AS EARLY AS THURSDAY." THAT'S TODAY.
WHAT WOULD CAUSE ONE PART TO BE
CLASSIFIED AND WITHHELD FROM THE PROPER AUTHORITIES, ESPECIALLY WHEN IT ISN'T
THE BODY OF THE COMPLAINT ITSELF, AS I UNDERSTAND IS THE CASE HERE? WHAT TIDBIT
OF INFORMATION ARE THEY HIDING? THE NAME OF THE PRESIDENT OR AG BILL BARR,
PERHAPS, OR A NOTE STATING THAT IT SHOULD BE BURIED RATHER THAN SHARED? HOWEVER,
HERE IS WHAT WE DO HAVE FOR PUBLIC CONSUMPTION. IT ISN'T TOO VERY LONG.
Read the
unclassified version of the whistleblower complaint against Trump
SEPTEMBER 26,
2019 / 12:25 PM / CBS NEWS
This is the complaint sent by a whistleblower
in the intelligence community to the community's inspector general, about an
"urgent concern" that "the President of the United States is
using the power of his office to solicit interference from a foreign country in
the 2020 U.S. election. The interference, the whistleblower wrote, includes
"pressuring a foreign country to investigate one of the President's main
domestic political rivals."
The complaint is central to the impeachment
inquiry launched by House Democrats.
UNCLASSIFIED
August 12,
2019
The Honorable Richard Burr
Chairman
Select Committee on Intelligence
United States Senate
The Honorable Adam Schiff
Chairman
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
United States House of Representatives
The Honorable Richard Burr
Chairman
Select Committee on Intelligence
United States Senate
The Honorable Adam Schiff
Chairman
Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
United States House of Representatives
Dear Chairman Burr and Chairman Schiff:
I am reporting an
"urgent concern" in accordance with the procedures outlined in 50
U.S.C. §3033(k)(5)(A). This letter is UNCLASSIFIED when separated from the
attachment.
In the course of my
official duties, I have received information from multiple U.S. Government
officials that the President of the United States is using the power of his
office to solicit interference from a foreign country in the 2020 U.S.
election. This interference includes, among other things, pressuring a foreign
country to investigate one of the President's main domestic political rivals. The
President's personal lawyer, Mr. Rudolph Giuliani, is a central figure in this
effort. Attorney General Barr appears to be involved as well.
- Over the past
four months, more than half a dozen U.S. officials have informed me of
various facts related to this effort. The information provided herein was
relayed to me in the course of official interagency business. It is
routine for U.S. officials with responsibility for a particular regional
or functional portfolio to share such information with one another in
order to inform policymaking and analysis.
- I was not a
direct witness to most of the events described. However, I found my
colleagues' accounts of these events to be credible because, in almost all
cases, multiple officials recounted fact patterns that were consistent
with one another. In addition, a variety of information consistent with
these private accounts has been reported publicly.
I am deeply
concerned that the actions described below constitute "a serious or
flagrant problem, abuse, or violation of law or Executive Order" that
"does not include differences of opinions concerning public policy
matters," consistent with the definition of an "urgent concern"
in 50 U.S.C. §3033(k)(5)(G). I am therefore fulfilling my duty to report this
information, through proper legal channels, to the relevant authorities.
- I am also
concerned that these actions pose risks to U.S. national security and
undermine the U.S. Government's efforts to deter and counter foreign
interference in U.S. elections.
To the best of my
knowledge, the entirety of this statement is unclassified when separated from
the classified enclosure. I have endeavored to apply the classification
standards outlined in Executive Order (EO) 13526 and to separate out
information that I know or have reason to believe is classified for national
security purposes.1
- If a
classification marking is applied retroactively, I believe it is incumbent
upon the classifying authority to explain why such a marking was applied,
and to which specific information it pertains.
I. The 25 July
Presidential phone call
Early in the
morning of 25 July, the President spoke by telephone with Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy. I do not know which side initiated the call. This was the
first publicly acknowledged call between the two leaders since a brief
congratulatory call after Mr. Zelenskyy won the presidency on 21 April.
Multiple White
House officials with direct knowledge of the call informed me that, after an
initial exchange of pleasantries, the President used the remainder of the call
to advance his personal interests. Namely, he sought to pressure the Ukrainian
leader to take actions to help the President's 2020 reelection bid. According
to the White House officials who had direct knowledge of the call, the
President pressured Mr. Zelenskyy to, inter alia:
- initiate or
continue an investigation 2 into the activities of former Vice President
Joseph Biden and his son, Hunter Biden;
- assist in
purportedly uncovering that allegations of Russian interference in the
2016 U.S. presidential election originated in Ukraine, with a specific
request that the Ukrainian leader locate and turn over servers used by the
Democratic National Committee (DNC) and examined by the U.S. cyber
security firm Crowdstrike,3 which initially reported that Russian hackers
had penetrated the DNC's networks in 2016; and
- meet or speak
with two people the President named explicitly as his personal envoys on
these matters, Mr. Giuliani and Attorney General Barr, to whom the
President referred multiple times in tandem.
- Apart from
the information in the Enclosure, it is my belief that none of the
information contained herein meets the definition of "classified
information" outlined in EO 13526, Part 1, Section 1.1. There is
ample open-source information about the efforts I describe below,
including statements by the President and Mr. Giuliani. In addition, based
on my personal observations, there is discretion with respect to the
classification of private comments by or instructions from the President,
including his communications with foreign leaders; information that is not
related to U.S. foreign policy or national security—such as the
information contained in this document, when separated from the
Enclosureis generally treated as unclassified. I also believe that
applying a classification marking to this information would violate EO
13526, Part 1, Section 1.7, which states: "In no case shall
information be classified, continue to be maintained as classified, or
fail to be declassified in order to: (1) conceal violations of law,
inefficiency, or administrative error; [or] (2) prevent embarrassment to a
person, organization, or agency."
- It is
unclear whether such a Ukrainian investigation exists. See Footnote #7 for
additional information.
- I do not know
why the President associates these servers with Ukraine. (See, for
example, his comments to Fox News on 20 July: "And Ukraine. Take a
look at Ukraine. How come the FBI didn't take this server? Podesta told
them to get out. He said, get out. So, how come the FBI didn't take the
server from the DNC?")
The President also
praised Ukraine's Prosecutor General, Mr. Yuriy Lutsenko, and suggested that
Mr. Zelenskyy might want to keep him in his position. (Note: Starting in March
2019, Mr. Lutsenko made a series of public allegations—many of which he later
walked back-about the Biden family's activities in Ukraine, Ukrainian
officials' purported involvement in the 2016 U.S. election, and the activities
of the U.S. Embassy in Kyiv. See Part IV for additional context.)
The White House
officials who told me this information were deeply disturbed by what had
transpired in the phone call. They told me that there was already a
"discussion ongoing" with White House lawyers about how to treat the
call because of the likelihood, in the officials' retelling, that they had
witnessed the President abuse his office for personal gain.
The Ukrainian side
was the first to publicly acknowledge the phone call. On the evening of 25
July, a readout was posted on the website of the Ukrainian President that
contained the following line (translation from original Russian-language
readout);
- "Donald
Trump expressed his conviction that the new Ukrainian government will be
able to quickly improve Ukraine's image and complete the investigation of
corruption cases that have held back cooperation between Ukraine and the
United States."
Aside from the
above-mentioned "cases" purportedly dealing with the Biden family and
the 2016 U.S. election, I was told by White House officials that no other
"cases" were discussed.
Based on my
understanding, there were approximately a dozen White House officials who
listened to the call-a mixture of policy officials and duty officers in the
White House Situation Room, as is customary. The officials I spoke with told me
that participation in the call had not been restricted in advance because
everyone expected it would be a "routine" call with a foreign leader.
I do not know whether anyone was physically present with the President during
the call.
- In addition
to White House personnel, I was told that a State Department official, Mr.
T. Ulrich Brechbuhl, also listened in on the call.
- I was not the
only non-White House official to receive a readout of the call. Based on
my understanding, multiple State Department and Intelligence Community
officials were also briefed on the contents of the call as outlined above.
II. Efforts to
restrict access to records related to the call
In the days following the phone call, I learned from multiple U.S. officials that senior White House officials had intervened to "lock down" all records of the phone call, especially the official word-for-word transcript of the call that was produced – as is customary – by the White House Situation Room. This set of actions underscored to me that White House officials understood the gravity of what had transpired in the call.
In the days following the phone call, I learned from multiple U.S. officials that senior White House officials had intervened to "lock down" all records of the phone call, especially the official word-for-word transcript of the call that was produced – as is customary – by the White House Situation Room. This set of actions underscored to me that White House officials understood the gravity of what had transpired in the call.
- White House
officials told me that they were "directed" by White House
lawyers to remove the electronic transcript from the computer system in
which such transcripts are typically stored for coordination,
finalization, and distribution to Cabinet-level officials.
- Instead, the
transcript was loaded into a separate electronic system that is otherwise
used to store and handle classified information of an especially sensitive
nature. One White House official described this act as an abuse of this
electronic system because the call did not contain anything remotely
sensitive from a national security perspective.
I do not know
whether similar measures were taken to restrict access to other records of the
call, such as contemporaneous handwritten notes taken by those who listened
in.
III. Ongoing
concerns
On 26 July, a day
after the call, U.S. Special Representative for Ukraine Negotiations Kurt
Volker visited Kyiv and met with President Zelenskyy and a variety of Ukrainian
political figures. Ambassador Volker was accompanied in his meetings by U.S. Ambassador
to the European Union Gordon Sondland. Based on multiple readouts of these
meetings recounted to me by various U.S. officials, Ambassadors Volker and
Sondland reportedly provided advice to the Ukrainian leadership about how to
"navigate" the demands that the President had made of Mr.
Zelenskyy.
I also learned from
multiple U.S. officials that, on or about 2 August, Mr. Giuliani reportedly
traveled to Madrid to meet with one of President Zelenskyy's advisers, Andriy
Yermak. The U.S. officials characterized this meeting, which was not reported
publicly at the time, as a "direct follow-up" to the President's call
with Mr. Zelenskyy about the "cases" they had discussed.
- Separately,
multiple U.S. officials told me that Mr. Giuliani had reportedly privately
reached out to a variety of other Zelenskyy advisers, including Chief of
Staff Andriy Bohdan and Acting Chairman of the Security Service of Ukraine
Ivan Bakanov.4
- I do not know
whether those officials met or spoke with Mr. Giuliani, but I was told separately
by multiple U.S. officials that Mr. Yermak and Mr. Bakanov intended to
travel to Washington in mid-August.
On 9 August, the
President told reporters: "I think [President Zelenskyy] is going to make
a deal with President Putin, and he will be invited to the White House. And we
look forward to seeing him. He's already been invited to the White House, and
he wants to come. And I think he will. He's a very reasonable guy. He wants to
see peace in Ukraine, and I think he will be coming very soon, actually."
IV.
Circumstances leading up to the 25 July Presidential phone call
Beginning in late
March 2019, a series of articles appeared in an online publication called The
Hill. In these articles, several Ukrainian officials – most notably,
Prosecutor General Yuriy Lutsenko – made a series of allegations against other
Ukrainian officials and current and former U.S. officials. Mr. Lutsenko and his
colleagues alleged, inter alia:
4 In a report
published by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) on 22
July, two associates of Mr. Giuliani reportedly traveled to Kyiv in May 2019
and met with Mr. Bakanov and another close Zelenskyy adviser, Mr. Serhiy
Shefir.
- that they
possessed evidence that Ukrainian officials—namely, Head of the National
Anticorruption Bureau of Ukraine Artem Sytnyk and Member of Parliament
Serhiy Leshchenko-had "interfered" in the 2016 U.S. presidential
election, allegedly in collaboration with the DNC and the U.S. Embassy in
Kyiv;5
- that the U.S.
Embassy in Kyiv-specifically, U.S. Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch, who had
criticized Mr. Lutsenko's organization for its poor record on fighting
corruption – had allegedly obstructed Ukrainian law enforcement agencies'
pursuit of corruption cases, including by providing a "do not
prosecute" list, and had blocked Ukrainian prosecutors from traveling
to the United States expressly to prevent them from delivering their
"evidence" about the 2016 U.S. election;6 and
- that former
Vice President Biden had pressured former Ukrainian President Petro
Poroshenko in 2016 to fire then Ukrainian Prosecutor General Viktor Shokin
in order to quash a purported criminal probe into Burisma Holdings, a
Ukrainian energy company on whose board the former Vice President's son,
Hunter, sat.7
In several public
comments,8 Mr. Lutsenko also stated that he wished to communicate directly with
Attorney General Barr on these matters.9
The allegations by
Mr. Lutsenko came on the eve of the first round of Ukraine's presidential
election on 31 March. By that time, Mr. Lutsenko's political patron, President
Poroshenko, was trailing Mr. Zelenskyy in the polls and appeared likely to be
defeated. Mr. Zelenskyy had made known his desire to replace Mr. Lutsenko as
Prosecutor General. On 21 April, Mr. Poroshenko lost the runoff to Mr.
Zelenskyy by a landslide. See Enclosure for additional information.
5. Mr. Sytnyk and
Mr. Leshchenko are two of Mr. Lutsenko's main domestic rivals. Mr. Lutsenko has
no legal training and has been widely criticized in Ukraine for politicizing
criminal probes and using his tenure as Prosecutor General to protect corrupt
Ukrainian officials. He has publicly feuded with Mr. Sytnyk, who heads
Ukraine's only competent anticorruption body, and with Mr. Leshchenko, a former
investigative journalist who has repeatedly criticized Mr. Lutsenko's record.
In December 2018, a Ukrainian court upheld a complaint by a Member of
Parliament, Mr. Boryslav Rozenblat, who alleged that Mr. Sytnyk and Mr.
Leshchenko had "interfered" in the 2016 U.S. election by publicizing
a document detailing corrupt payments made by former Ukrainian President Viktor
Yanukovych before his ouster in 2014. Mr. Rozenblat had originally filed the
motion in late 2017 after attempting to flee Ukraine amid an investigation into
his taking of a large bribe. On 16 July 2019, Mr. Leshchenko publicly stated
that a Ukrainian court had overturned the lower court's decision.
6. Mr. Lutsenko
later told Ukrainian news outlet The Babel on 17 April that Ambassador
Yovanovitch had never provided such a list, and that he was, in fact, the one
who requested such a list. ? Mr. Lutsenko later told Bloomberg on 16 May that
former Vice President Biden and his son were not subject to any current
Ukrainian investigations, and that he had no evidence against them. Other
senior Ukrainian officials also contested his original allegations; one former
senior Ukrainian prosecutor told Bloomberg on 7 May that Mr. Shokin in fact was
not investigating Burisma at the time of his removal in 2016.
8. See, for
example, Mr. Lutsenko's comments to The Hill on 1 and 7 April and his interview
with The Babel on 17 April, in which he stated that he had spoken with Mr.
Giuliani about arranging contact with Attorney General Barr.
9. In May, Attorney
General Barr announced that he was initiating a probe into the
"origins" of the Russia investigation. According to the
above-referenced OCCRP report (22 July), two associates of Mr. Giuliani claimed
to be working with Ukrainian officials to uncover information that would become
part of this inquiry. In an interview with Fox News on 8 August, Mr. Giuliani
claimed that Mr. John Durham, whom Attorney General Barr designated to lead
this probe, was "spending a lot of time in Europe" because he was
"investigating Ukraine." I do not know the extent to which, if at
all, Mr. Giuliani is directly coordinating his efforts on Ukraine with Attorney
General Barr or Mr. Durham.
- It was also
publicly reported that Mr. Giuliani had met on at least two occasions with
Mr. Lutsenko: once in New York in late January and again in Warsaw in
mid-February. In addition, it was publicly reported that Mr. Giuliani had
spoken in late 2018 to former Prosecutor General Shokin, in a Skype call
arranged by two associates of Mr. Giuliani.10
- On 25 April
in an interview with Fox News, the President called Mr. Lutsenko's claims
"big" and "incredible" and stated that the Attorney
General "would want to see this."
On or about 29
April, I learned from U.S. officials with direct knowledge of the situation
that Ambassador Yovanovitch had been suddenly recalled to Washington by senior
State Department officials for "consultations" and would most likely
be removed from her position.
- Around the
same time, I also learned from a U.S. official that "associates"
of Mr. Giuliani were trying to make contact with the incoming Zelenskyy
team.11
- On 6 May, the
State Department announced that Ambassador Yovanovitch would be ending her
assignment in Kyiv "as planned."
- However,
several U.S. officials told me that, in fact, her tour was curtailed
because of pressure stemming from Mr. Lutsenko's allegations. Mr. Giuliani
subsequently stated in an interview with a Ukrainian journalist published
on 14 May that Ambassador Yovanovitch was "removed...because she was
part of the efforts against the President."
On 9 May, The New
York Times reported that Mr. Giuliani planned to travel to Ukraine to press the
Ukrainian government to pursue investigations that would help the President in
his 2020 reelection bid.
- In his
multitude of public statements leading up to and in the wake of the
publication of this article, Mr. Giuliani confirmed that he was focused on
encouraging Ukrainian authorities to pursue investigations into alleged
Ukrainian interference in the 2016 U.S. election and alleged wrongdoing by
the Biden family. 12
- On the
afternoon of 10 May, the President stated in an interview with Politico
that he planned to speak with Mr. Giuliani about the trip.
- A few hours
later, Mr. Giuliani publicly canceled his trip, claiming that Mr.
Zelenskyy was "surrounded by enemies of the [U.S.] President... and
of the United States."
On 11 May, Mr.
Lutsenko met for two hours with President-elect Zelenskyy, according to a
public account given several days later by Mr. Lutsenko. Mr. Lutsenko publicly
stated that he had told Mr. Zelenskyy that he wished to remain as Prosecutor
General.
10. See, for
example, the above-referenced articles in Bloomberg (16 May) and OCCRP (22
July).
11. I do not know
whether these associates of Mr. Giuliani were the same individuals named in the
22 July report by OCCRP, referenced above.
12. See, for
example, Mr. Giuliani's appearance on Fox News on 6 April and his tweets on 23
April and 10 May. In his interview with The New York Times, Mr. Giuliani stated
that the President "basically knows what I'm doing, sure, as his
lawyer." Mr. Giuliani also stated: "We're not meddling in an
election, we're meddling in an investigation, which we have a right to do...
There's nothing illegal about it... Somebody could say it's improper. And this
isn't foreign policy - I'm asking them to do an investigation that they're
doing already and that other people are telling them to stop. And I'm going to
give them reasons why they shouldn't stop it because that information will be
very, very helpful to my client, and may turn out to be helpful to my
government."
Starting in
mid-May, I heard from multiple U.S. officials that they were deeply concerned
by what they viewed as Mr. Giuliani's circumvention of national security
decisionmaking processes to engage with Ukrainian officials and relay messages
back and forth between Kyiv and the President. These officials also told
me:
- that State Department
officials, including Ambassadors Volker and Sondland, had spoken with Mr.
Giuliani in an attempt to "contain the damage" to U.S. national
security; and
- that
Ambassadors Volker and Sondland during this time period met with members
of the new Ukrainian administration and, in addition to discussing policy
matters, sought to help Ukrainian leaders understand and respond to the
differing messages they were receiving from official U.S. channels on the
one hand, and from Mr. Giuliani on the other.
During this same
timeframe, multiple U.S. officials told me that the Ukrainian leadership was
led to believe that a meeting or phone call between the President and President
Zelenskyy would depend on whether Zelenskyy showed willingness to "play
ball" on the issues that had been publicly aired by Mr. Lutsenko and Mr.
Giuliani. (Note: This was the general understanding of the state of affairs as
conveyed to me by U.S. officials from late May into early July. I do not know
who delivered this message to the Ukrainian leadership, or when.) See Enclosure
for additional information.
Shortly after
President Zelenskyy's inauguration, it was publicly reported that Mr. Giuliani
met with two other Ukrainian officials: Ukraine's Special Anticorruption
Prosecutor, Mr. Nazar Kholodnytskyy, and a former Ukrainian diplomat named
Andriy Telizhenko. Both Mr. Kholodnytskyy and Mr. Telizhenko are allies of Mr.
Lutsenko and made similar allegations in the above-mentioned series of articles
in The Hill.
On 13 June, the
President told ABC's George Stephanopoulos that he would accept damaging
information on his political rivals from a foreign government.
On 21 June, Mr.
Giuliani tweeted: "New Pres of Ukraine still silent on investigation of
Ukrainian interference in 2016 and alleged Biden bribery of Poroshenko. Time
for leadership and investigate both if you want to purge how Ukraine was abused
by Hillary and Clinton people."
In mid-July, I
learned of a sudden change of policy with respect to U.S. assistance for
Ukraine. See Enclosure for additional information.
ENCLOSURE: Classified appendix
UNCLASSIFIED
TOP SECRET
August 12, 2019
(U) CLASSIFIED APPENDIX
TOP SECRET
August 12, 2019
(U) CLASSIFIED APPENDIX
(U) Supplementary
classified information is provided as follows:
(U) Additional
information related to Section II
According to
multiple White House officials I spoke with, the transcript of the President's
call with President Zelenskyy was placed into a computer system managed
directly by the National Security Council (NSC) Directorate for Intelligence
Programs. This is a standalone computer system reserved for codeword-level
intelligence information, such as covert action. According to information I
received from White House officials, some officials voiced concerns internally
that this would be an abuse of the system and was not consistent with the
responsibilities of the Directorate for Intelligence Programs. According to
White House officials I spoke with, this was "not the first time"
under this Administration that a Presidential transcript was placed into this
codeword-level system solely for the purpose of protecting politically
sensitive – rather than national security sensitive – information.
(U) Additional
information related to Section IV
SA I would like to expand upon two issues mentioned in Section IV that might have a connection with the overall effort to pressure the Ukrainian leadership. As I do not know definitively whether the below-mentioned decisions are connected to the broader efforts I describe, I have chosen to include them in the classified annex. If they indeed represent genuine policy deliberations and decisions formulated to advance U.S. foreign policy and national security, one might be able to make a reasonable case that the facts are classified.
- I learned
from U.S. officials that, on or around 14 May, the President instructed
Vice President Pence to cancel his planned travel to Ukraine to attend
President
Zelenskyy's
inauguration on 20 May; Secretary of Energy Rick Perry led the delegation
instead. According to these officials, it was also "made clear" to
them that the President did not want to meet with Mr. Zelenskyy until he saw
how Zelenskyy "chose to act" in office. I do not know how this
guidance was communicated, or by whom. I also do not know whether this action
was connected with the broader understanding, described in the unclassified
letter, that a meeting or phone call between the President and President
Zelenskyy would depend on whether Zelenskyy showed willingness to "play
ball" on the issues that had been publicly aired by Mr. Lutsenko and Mr.
Giuliani.
- On 18 July,
an Office of Management and Budget (OMB) official informed
Departments and Agencies that the President "earlier that month"
had issued instructions to suspend all U.S. security assistance to
Ukraine. Neither OMB nor the NSC staff knew why this instruction had been
issued. During interagency meetings on 23 July and 26 July, OMB officials
again stated explicitly that the instruction to suspend this assistance
had come directly from the President, but they still were unaware of a
policy rationale. As of early August, I heard from U.S. officials that
some Ukrainian officials were aware that U.S. aid might be in jeopardy,
but I do not know how or when they learned of it.
First published
on September 26, 2019 / 12:25 PM
© 2019 CBS
Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Comments
Post a Comment