tv The Rachel Maddow Show MSNBC April 27, 2017 9:00pm-10:01pm PDT
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the 11th hour. good night. i'm going to show you a piece of tape that i find funny. it's not funny, but i will admit that i find it funny. on march 31st, they did that thing in the oval office that they've gotten pretty good at now. they have the executive orders in big leather folders like men use. the president had his ceremonial pens. they had them laid out, they had the podium set up where he could make remarks ahead of time. you don't have to do them in this ornate, staged way, but they do. they want reporters and photographers to be there to witness these signings. and the problem with that system is that sometimes those reporters ask questions even when you don't want them to.
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and there is now -- we now have good evidence. there's one category of question that basically works like freeze tag on this president. you ask him about this one thing, tag, and he freezes. he forgets what he's doing. and the photo op falls apart. he just left the room. >> thank you very much. >> were you trying to tell the justice department to grant immunity to michael flynn? was that your intention, mr. president, sir? was that your intention, sir? >> thank you, guys. >> thank you, guys. >> so he didn't sign it. >> he did not sign it. >> the little menu still sitting there on the desk.
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mike pence is like -- he has to go get them, follow the president out. that happened march 31st. the president was doing a photo op to sign two executive orders front of reporters with stakeholders standing nearby, but he got asked about michael flynn, and that apparently was it. forget it, no signing, this thing is over. so mike pence has to go back and get the executive orders off the desk and brings them to the other room where presumably the president signed them later. they do say he signed those eventually, just not what he was supposed to. that was march 31st. today that same game of freeze tag got played again in the oval office, again at a signing ceremony with an executive orders and little menu and is everything.
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at least this time, though, he had already signed the things in the menus before somebody said the magic words that froze him like a stone. >> do you have any regrets about michael flynn? >> thank you very much. >> if you want to turn this president to stone, ask him about mike flynn. and this particular game of freeze tag does not just afflict the president. its also, i think it's the same affliction for this congressman, congressman devin nunes. as chair of the intelligence committee investigating the russian attack on the election last year, the intelligence committee under devin nunes held one blockbuster public hearing. and after that first hearing they had a second one scheduled
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for the following week, their second public hearing was to include public testimony from sally yates, before trump fired her for refusing to defend his muslim ban in the courts. sally yates was not due to testify before the intelligence committee. about getting fired. she was due to testify about michael flynn. everybody turned to stone. there was very intense interest about what sally united states -- yates would say about mike flynn because she appears to have had a key role in the process that led to him being fired as national security adviser. but the sequence of events that led up to that firing, particularly with regard to sally yates' involvement in it, that sequence of events really is insane. and still totally unexplained, and she is one of the only people who might be able to shed some light on it other than the top people in the white house. who so far aren't talking about
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it. think about how that stacked up. in the transition after the election but before the inauguration, we now know that mike flynn had fairly extensive discussions with russian officials including repeated discussions with them about u.s. sanctions on russia. russia obviously wants sanctions against them lifted, some of the sanctions are on them because of the attack on our elections. this is a sensitive thing for mike flynn to be talking to them about. we know we have those conversations during the transition. that said, he denied that he was having those conversations at that time. and the white house was denying it on his behalf, as well. >> what i can confirm having spoken to him about it is that those conversations that happened to occur around the time that the united states took action to expel diplomats had nothing whatsoever to do with those sanctions. >> but that still leafs open the possibility there might have been over conversations about the sanctions -- >> i don't believe there were more conversations.
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i can confirm those elements were not part of that discussion. >> so there's been one call. i talked to general flynn about this again last night. one call talked about about four subjects. one was the loss of life that occurred in the plane crash that took their military choir. two was christmas and holiday greetings. three was to talk about a conference in syria on isis and four was to set up -- to talk about after the inauguration setting up a call between putin and the president. >> white house spokesman. that was january 23rd, his first briefing. two days after the swearing in. he's saying we talked to flynn about this. he was not talking to them act about sanctions. definitely nothing about sanctions.
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he was talking about the conversations. that was the 23rd. the next day, the 24th, we now know general flynn was interviewed by the fbi on this matter. he reportedly told the fbi what had by now become the administration's public line on this subject, nope, definitely no discussions with the russians about sanctions, didn't talk to them about that at all. that conversation happened on japan 24th. incidentally it is a crime to lie to the fbi. if general flynn denied he had conversations with russian officials about sanctions what he had in fact had those conversations, that would be a big deal. and if he did tell them that he didn't talk to the russians about sanctions. if he tried to sell that to the fbi, the fbi would have known at that time that that was not true. because we know general flynn's actual conversations with with
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the russians were subject to fbi surveillance. so they know what he was talking to them about. two days after he had his interview with the fbi where he reportedly lied to them about his contacts with the russians and what he was saying it's russians, two days after that, this remarkable decision was made, the apex of the drama scene in the movie where sally yates faced with this information about the national security adviser and what he's saying, and what she knows has actually happened thanks-to-to that fbi surveillance, she makes this remarkable decision to go directly to the white house to warn them about their national security adviser. quoting from the "washington post" the acting attorney general warned the trump white house that the national security adviser was potentially vulnerable to russian blackmail.
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because he had been lying about his contacts with the russian government, and the justice department and the fbi knew about it. they had proof. so she brings that bombshell to the white house. this is flashing red light. national security adviser to the president might be getting black mailed by the russians because he's having contacts with the russians that he's lying about. has anything like that ever happened before in the history of the american presidency? not that we know of. huge deal. how does the white house respond? they do not respond. at least as far as we can tell, no visible response. that flashing red warning comes from the department of justice six days after the inauguration, january 26th. there is no visible response at all on the 26th or the 27th. on the 28th we see flynn in the oval office. that's him sitting in on the disastrous call where president trump hung up on the prime minister of australia. there he was staring at the back of donald trump's head while he held one of his signing photo ops.
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this was before the mere mention of michael flynn's name. three days after that he's there next to jared. into february, flynn is still there in the white house briefing room putting iran on notice. remember that? what did that mean anyway? no response. there's mike flynn at the national prayer breakfast. meanwhile, they fire sally yates. they fire the woman who had come up from the justice department to the white house to warn them directly about their national security adviser and him lying about his ties to a foreign government and the prospect that the russians might be black mailing him. they fire her. they keep flynn. they keep him on and on and on and on. meanwhile, luckily, journalism continues on this subject.
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on february 8th, "washington post" asks flynn directly if he had discussed sanctions with the russian government. quote, asked in an interview if he had ever done so, he twice said "no." that's the 8th of february. then the the next day, he issues a new statement saying, when flynn said "no" yesterday, what he actually meant was more like he can't remember. might have done, might not have done. by february 10th that story blowing up in "the washington post" is getting not only serious about flynn but it's starting to get seriously weird that the white house hasn't commented on it. >> what do you make of reports that general flynn had conversations with the russians before you were sworn in. >> i don't know about it. what report is that?
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>> i'll look at that. >> i haven't seen that. president says, i haven't seen that. i haven't heard anything about this. flynn? contacts with the russians about sanctions? really? says he's never heard of this before. that was february 10th. the president has been informed about this on january 26th. and the act attorney general came to the white house and told them about this. there's trump more than two weeks later professing total ignorance? what's this? finally the trip from sally yates to the justice department back up to the white house with that blistering warning. they're final able to report that meeting happened. the whole thing gets so
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business, that ultimately michael flynn resigns. whatever you think about michael flynn, the behavior of the house is very strange. the vice president lied on tv. the white house spokesman lied in the briefing room. all according to them because of untrue information that was conveyed to them personally by mike flynn. the nature of those lies was such the acting attorney generally thought national security adviser might b susceptible to blackmail. informed of that though, the white house just, eh, sat on it for a few weeks. so you can imagine the questions, right? sally yates, ms. yates, thank you for being here. do we have this story right? is that really what happened? what can you tell us about what happened? the house intelligence committee gets into that. they have this hearing, a
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blockbuster hearing where james comey admits, yes, there was an ongoing counterintelligence investigation as to whether or not it cooperated in the russian attack on the united states last year. after that bombshell, we are next going to hear from yates. the next hearing in a few days is going to be the one that has sally yates on it. she's not going to be talking about the muslim ban, she's going to be talking about michael flynn. and so now, freeze tag, now is devin nunes's time to be a pillar of salt. the day after the comey hearing, devin nunes apparently decides to pull the rip cord, eject, eject, i got to get out of this thing. famously he pulls this stunt where he goes to the white house, meets with one of his former staffers who's working there now as well as a michael flynn protege who the white
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house insisted on keeping. he meets with those guys and they provide him with documents maybe. what was clear to everybody at the time was that devin nunes was behaving strangely, that he was explaining things in a way that didn't make sense, that he was clearing trying to create a smoke screen, it was cartoonishly obvious that he was trying to do. first of all, inexplicably, despite the fact it had no connection to that at all, the first thing is that the sally yates hearing got canceled. oh, good. that was weeks ago now. sally yates hearing, canceled. they would still like to talk to her but they have not rescheduled. the other material consequence of that devin nunes stunt is he got kicked off the
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investigation. when they finally do that sally yates hearing, if they ever do it, devin nunes will not be in the room when she explains what she knows about mike flynn and thousand white house responded when she told them the current sitting national security adviser is susceptible to blackmail by the russians and lying about his contacts with them. who would want to be the trump transition committee member republican chairman of an oversight committee with the details of the mike flynn and the white house story come out? would you like to be overseeing the committee at that time? so the name mike flynn has this remarkable effect on people. you want to say president freeze want to point he forgets what he's doing? ask him a question about mike flynn. you want to say devin nunes freak out and take himself taken off the board?
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well, get him closer to the real story about mike flynn. but that intelligence committee investigation is not only board on which that game is being played, and that story is next. "how to win at business." step one: point decisively with the arm of your glasses. abracadabra. the stage is yours. step two: choose la quinta. the only hotel where you can redeem loyalty points for a free night-instantly and win at business. helping small businesses.ut, jamie -- damage your vehicle? we got you covered.
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taking money from russia is not the same thing as colluding with the russian government in an attack on the united states. taking money before it russia or from any foreign government is something you legally cannot do without specific permission to do it if you are a retired senior military officer of the united states armed forces. on that very specific, almost
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technical matter, the house oversight committee decided it would get itself involved in that, in just that little part of the trump/russia investigation. they decided that's it. they'll take this little piece of the mike flynn part of it, don't want to get too much into this. if you are republican oversight committee chairman jason chaffetz you want to seem like you're doing something. you like to find a little piece of it that you can bite off and chew and swallow easily so it looked like you had done your part. turns out this little piece of it ended up being not that easy to chew and it has not gone down well. they started an exchange of information and requests for documentation with various
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pentagon agencies about this very specific issue, former national security adviser mike flynn having taken money from foreign governments. from that exchange of letters and requests, we know it's going to get bigger. he never asked for permission to take money from russia or money from turkey which he now admits he did after registering are there -- retro actively. he did not ask for that permission to take the foreign money. it's just definitely and clearly something he needed to do and that he knew he needed to do. and we have learned that the defense department inspector general opened a new investigation into mike flynn on these matters. poor jason chaffetz.
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but looking into this turned up tough stuff about mike flynn but turned up way bigger political problems for chaffetz. now this guy, this ambitious committee chairman who used to love being on television. created himself as a hard, tough super tenacious oversight guy, now having built up that reputation, now he's having moments like this in his interviews. >> do you think michael flynn broke the law. >> it doesn't appear as of he complied with the law. >> breaking the law is such harsh language. the law is still there for others to comply with, so it's not broken. in addition to what they have turned up about mike flynn, apparently his income from foreign governments, the
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chaffetz committee stumbled onto much, much bigger problem, a particularly big problem if you're a republican congressman doing this oversight. it's about the white house. i will interject for a second to say i believe the white house made a tactical error here in handling this scandal. i don't think they are tactically did you mean and i'm not sure why they made this error. maybe i'll be proven wrong wrong. but if you study the history of american political scandal, when you have to stone wall, you have to build the stone wall piece by piece. that's way too left arming to people who are watching you supposedly try to be reasonable. you're supposed to start looking accommodating, mature, reasonable ability these matures, and then you work up to your stone wall so you don't set up the alarm bells at the beginning. when it comes to mike flynn,
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turn to stone, they would refuse to hand over any documents whatsoever about him. this was national security adviser. he was fired because of lying about his foreign government contacts. he retroactively registered as a foreign agent after they fired him. the white house was explicitly warned about him. this is not someone who they can brush off questions about and say it's inappropriate that anybody would be asking about him or they would have to answer to anything related to this particular hire. but the white house has decided to provide zero documents on flynn. which now makes the white house as much the subject of this part of this scandal as flynn himself. >> this week the white house refused, absolutely refused to
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produce even a single document, not a single document in response to the bipartisan document requests i sent with our republican chairman. i watched sean spicer make all kinds of excuses about how hard it would be to comply with our request. come on, man. look, general flynn served in his position for 24 days. so that excuse from the white house will not fly. i did not understand why the white house is covering up for michael flynn. i don't get it. after the president fired him for lying. so the president fired him for lying about a communications with the russian ambassador. they should be bending over backwards to help us. it doesn't make sense, and i tell you, makes the american people think the white house has
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something to hide. there's obviously a paper trail, ladies and gentlemen, that is white house doesn't want our committee to follow. but let it be known that we will follow it. we will follow it with everything we've got. >> elijah cummings. top democrat on the oversight committee. his reaction to the white house refusing to hand over documentation about mike flynn's time in the white house before he was fired. all the democrats on that oversight committee followed up that blistering statement by sending a let to their own chairm chairman. they are demanding that he not let this slide from the white house. he as always seen himself as tenacious oversight chairman. the democrats on the committee are now demanding of their own chairman that he at least not taking that lying down, that he at least request a meeting with the white house to press for those documents which they are refuse to hand over.
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and jason chaffetz faced with this kind of pressure, the mike flynn and the white house stone wall part of the story now. jason chaffetz has decided to poof himself out of this story. bye. he anounszed he would not run for re-election. since this flynn stuff blew up and specifically since the white house announced that it wouldn't produce a single document related to mike flynn, jason chaffetz has since discovered, ow, a preexisting condition. i got to go right now. he hurt his food a long time ago. and now he has announced on instagram as of late last night he's leaving congress immediately. he's definitely leaving the oversight committee because he has to go take care of his foot urgently. and we wish him a speedy recovery. the mike flynn story is one
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piece, only one piece of what we don't understand about this white house, and its connections to russian officials and any potential connections between the trump campaign and that russian attack mike flynn story is only one part of it. one thing we know to be true is anytime any high-ranking republican with access to classified information gets close to the mike flynn part of this story gets asked pointed questions is potentially going to sit there in a committee om while more is discussed about the mike flynn part of the story, they freeze like a deer in headlights from the president on down. that's not a good sign. watch this space. 7 hidden in every swing, every chip, and every putt, is data that can make the difference between winning and losing. the microsoft cloud helps the pga tour turn countless points of data into insights that
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i'm interrupting what i was planning on doing at this point in the show because i want to bring you this as breaking news tonight. i think this is important. this should not have been a news-making event. the president didn't oval office interview ahead of his hundred's day in office with reuters tonight. they just went to air with what he said. this is the sortf thing that may have international consequences. some of it is anadine. it would be weird for anybody else to an dine when when it comes to trump. it's about north korea. asked about whether he considered kim jong-un to be rational, he was operating from the assumption that he is rational.
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this is the quote from the president. quote, he's 27 years old, his father dies, took over a regime. say what you want but that's not easy, especially at that age. i'm not giving him credit. i'm just saying that's a hard thing to do. as to whether or not he's rational, i have no opinion. i hope he's rational. first remarks on whether or not the leader of north korea is sane. but then there's this. apparently reuters asked him about the prospect of being military conflict between the united states and north korea. president said, we'd love to solve things diplomatically. it's very difficult. and then he said this. this is the sort of thing that american presidents don't say. this is why i'm interrupting our broadcast to bring you this because this has the potential to resonate in a bad way. what the president apparently said is there is a chance we could end up having a major, major conflict in north korea, absolutely. north korea's whole public
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stance is they're trying to defend themselves from military belligerence from an impending attack from the united states. this is the threat of an imminent military attack by the united states. i have no idea if that's how the president meant it, but this is the kind of remark that a u.s. president usually says about a sensitive situation like this. again, quote, we could end up having a major, major conflict with north korea, absolutely. just spoken tonight. reuters just posted it. we'll be right back. t's go, she. [ whimpers ] find ping-pong. okay, let's go. find your awesome with the xfinity x1 voice remote. that's amazing!
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say carl, we have a question about your brokerage fees. fees? what did you have in mind? i don't know. $4.95 per trade? uhhh. and i was wondering if your brokerage offers some sort of guarantee? guarantee? where we can get our fees and commissions back if we're not happy. so can you offer me what schwab is offering? what's with all the questions? ask your broker if they're offering $4.95 online equity trades and a satisfaction guarantee. if you don't like their answer, ask again at schwab. it's a performance machine. of engineering... with this degree of intelligence... it's a supercomputer. with this grade of protection... it's a fortress. and with this standard of luxury... it's an oasis. the 2017 e-class. it's everything you need it to be...and more. lease the e300 for $549 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer.
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geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides. after a few days of blistering reports about the senate intelligence investigation into the trump/russia story thus far filing no document requests and issuing no subpoenas and interviewing no key witnesses, after days of the senate intelligence committee getting hammered by those reports, now new news on that front. the senate intelligence committee has hired for its trump russia investigation a former top intelligence lawyer with 13 years' experience at the national security agency. excellent. her name is april f. doss. she was reportedly hired by mark warner. the democrats on the committee added her to the staff. i should tell you the republicans on the committee including the republican chairman so far they say they see no need for any more bodies working on this thing.
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>> to date we feel like we've good sufficient amount of bodies to do the job. but if we find out that additional ones are needed, we'll add them. >> we're fine, we're fine, relax. but the democratic side of the committee hired this new senior council. judging by her public record she seems like somebody who kind of takes no guff basing that on her public comments. in january she told reports that a proposal to search your browser history and search your phone contact list, if you wanted to enter the united states, she said that proposal, doing that to everybody who comes into the u.s. would do more harm than good. there's no fashion in which all the information for every person who wants to enter on a visa has nothing to do with.
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national security or lawfully intelligence gathering activities. it would be quite detrimental to intelligence committees because she would get so much garbage that has nothing to do with anything. well, all right then. she's going to be special council to the trump/russia investigation. the only other thing i can tell you about her according to a highly confidential source known as linkedin, her middle initial "f" stands for falcon. april falcon doss joins on may 1st. it definitely makes me want to name somebody falcon from here on out. now you know what i know. i will let you know if we learn anymore. meanwhile the investigation in congress continues to uncover more and strange and off plum details. we learned today from documents turned up by the house oversight
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committee that mike flynn got warned from the pentagon about taking payments from foreign governments. he went ahead without getting the permission. and now as we learn more about what happened with flynn, and we wonder more about how he ended up as national security adviser in the first place, they will provide zero documents about him to the oversight committee that's asking for them. not a single piece of paper. now we're on to more serious line of questioning about this. the white house may just be embarrassed they didn't do a very good job vetting someone for such a high-level and sensitive national security position given all these red flags we now know about him. that's the best-case scenario. they're embarrassed and they don't want to show what they knew. the worse case is they did know about the contacts with the russians and him lying about the
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contacts with the russians and the foreign payments. they knew all that and that's part of what they knew they were getting and that's part of what they wanted. that's, of course, the worse case scenario. it's hard for me to understand the implications if that's true. joining me is clint watts testified gin today at the senate armed services committee on russia. mr. watts, i appreciate your time tonight. thank you for being here. >> thanks for having me. >> let me ask you about the mike flynn story big picture. you did a lot to educate people about how russia approached their attack on the u.s. election, what they're trying to get, how they think strategically on these matters. house does the flynn part of
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this story make sense in terms of the overall russia situation? >> well, the one issue that they could come to terms with and really match would you please flynn on was finding what flynn would call radical islam. but also throughout the entire fight globally. where his down fall really comes from is his vengeance, revenge against the obama administration which let him go against his will and clinton being an extension of that. he took on with such zeal that he accepted money from a state propaganda outlet from russia. it's bizarre he wouldn't take advice from the lawyers at the dod. and that he would try to hide these things. even filing the form saying you've taken money from a foreign government is admitting you were trying to deceive before. it's puzzling why the guy in charge of counterintelligence for the entire military at one time, a briefing that you get every day or year, excuse me,
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that you're in the military would do something like partner up or cozy with them. >> in terms of the counterintelligence aspect of this, from a counterintelligence perspective, the reporting that we've got, and it won't be all borne out until tend, what appears to be the case about mike flynn is him not telling the truth about the number of contacts he had with the russian government, him not telling the truth about what he was talking russian officials about, him not requesting permission to take money from foreign sources, him not disclosing foreign source income that he took from at least four different sources, three of which were russians. he appears to have been deceitful about those things. how does that factor into the counterintelligence angle?
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>> you're looking for two things. lies of comission which is committing the lie, you're deliberate i deceiving and lies of omission, things that are left out mysteriously. this is a repeated pattern for the flynn investigation. you can go back over a year long period and see the repeated pattern coming up. i know when i was in the military general flynn was a respected person. but it seems whenever he had his downfall at the dia, he started to have these judgment errors. was he doing russia's bidding for them or was he so vengeful against the obama administration that let him go? in the fight against radical islam that he would compromise himself and actually partner with another country that was trying to influence our elections. >> the department of defense inspector general says that that office opened up a new investigation into general flynn. the oversight committee chairman appears to being driving it trying to recoup money from him, the money he accepted without
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having permission to take it from foreign sources. there is this other element that won't be about repercussions for him. it's about the questions the white house has to answer. what is your take, clint, on the white house saying that they have no documentation about mike flynn's time as the national security adviser? nothing about his vetting or about his hiring and nothing about his firing that they are willing to turn over to congress. >> i don't think it's so much about hiding things. i think it's about incompetence. they partnered with people to win a campaign and they didn't know who they were getting into bed with. this is perfect from the russian perspective about how you influence someone to your position. you use useful idiots and agents of influence. and you pair them around a person that would not necessarily vet or question who was saddling up to him. trump is a businessman and he
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takes on partners and lets them go based on success and failure. when he needs them, here's their biggest champion, and then when he doesn't need them, he says he doesn't know them anymore. when you see that, that makes them rife for manipulation. russia can use several different avenues. carter paige, general flynn, to shape the president's view. this is what's most dangerous about it is the white house probably isn't aware, probably didn't do any vetting. and the reason there's no documents to turn over is they never had documents o begin with. >> and that lack of vetting itself is essentially creating a keyhole that the russians can insert a key into and do whatever they want. that essentially opens a line of attack for them. >> i can't imagine any other republican candidate going into the election last year that would see flynn appear at an rt event and speak would bring them inside their administration. it's hard to fathom.
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>> form er -- >> thank you for helping us understand this. you have a value perspective on this. thank you. >> thanks, rachel. >> we have a story with cheerleaders and baton twirlers and tens of millions of unaccounted for dollars. that's next. stay with us. there's nothing more than my vacation.me so when i need to book a hotel room, i want someone that makes it easy to find what i want. booking.com gets it.
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tyler hicks: i see fear. i see desperation. but i also see hope. thousands of people arriving every day, risking their lives to find a place to live, and find a place to be accepted. i feel it's important to take photographs that are going to make a difference. ( ♪ ) i'm tyler hicks, photojournalist for the new york times.
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we have a follow up tonight on a story we have been covering that you guys have had a huge response to. it's funny. been doing the show for a few years now and you never know what is like -- it's like tap on somebody's knee that triangle shaped hammer. every once in a while we do a story and don't see it coming but get a ton of feedback. this is one of the stories. we have had a ton of feedwalk and requests for supplemental information about this story. well, now tonight i do have some follow up news to share with you on this. it's about the oversubscribed fundraising for the inauguration this year. when newly elected barack obama brought in $53 million to pay for his inaugural in 2009 that was unprecedented fundraising. it blew everybody away.
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but then that 2009 obama inaugier al did turn out to be the biggest inauguration ever by a lot. actually, the biggest washington, d.c. live event of any kind ever. january 2009. then eight years later a strange thing happened because the next president's inauguration in january, it was comparatively small. i do not say that to be mean, but just as a matter of fact as inaugurations go the inauguration this year was not all that well attended. that is important because to pay for that smaller relatively modest not particularly star studded inauguration that happened this year the trump folks raised more than double the amount of money that obama had raised eight years ago for his gigantic inauguration in 2009. obama raised $53 million for the
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biggest inauguration ever. the trump folks raised 107 million for their small inauguration. why did they do that? still not sure. we are starting to get some interesting pieces of the answer. last week the trump inaugural committee filed its donor data. it was over 500 pages long with over 1,500 individual donors listed. and we reported here after that filing came out that one of the donors, a man who donated over $600,000 to the committee, his son ended up getting a private ameeting with members of the national security council. so he could pitch them on his ten point plan, his ten point foreign policy plan for changing our relations with venezuela and dropping u.s. sanctions on that country. that, of course, raised the question of how he got that meeting. whether the administration was effectively selling access to
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the national security council and got a second meeting with steve bannen and selling foreign policy audiences with the president's top staffers. is the white house selling those things to their donors in exchange for donations to the inaugural committee which is mysteriously enormous? that is as far as we are able to report that story. since then other people have been doing their own reporting including something called the citizen slush project. the lead of what is a crowd sourcing effort and everyone pitch in and google these guys effort to trace the donors, the names, the llc names, to tra all of the initials associated with those 1,500 inauguration donors, to trace them and their donations. what they have found through their citizen sleuth effort is basically already a farce and a
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mess. this is a legal document. this is supposed to be for real. folks at "huffington post" found really big errors like comically big errors. the trump folks attributed a $25,000 donation to katherine johnson. does that name ring a bell? did you see the movie hidden figures? the nasa mathematician. the trump folks reported her as a $25,000 donor to the trump inauguration. and maybe they meant a different katherine johnson. they listed the address as nasa headquarters. just to make it really, really clear. i have to tell you, katherine johnson of nasa did not make a $25,000 donation to trump's
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inauguration. the committee has apologized for that. but they are also saying they are going to go back and clean up the filing all together. they have told "huffington post" we plan to amend our report to reflect changes we have become aware of including many donor records or technical glitches that we have become aware of. so that's something. the larger question still stands. where is all the money? what is this giant fund for? they did not spend the money on this inaugural. if it cost 50 million for the most elaborate in 2009 it did not cost twice than that to put on this inauguration. it just didn't. so what did they do with the money? where is the money now? i'm not teeing up this question because i have some big cable
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news reveal of an answer to share with you. really, nobody seems to know what happened to those tens of millions of dollars that they collected that went into the trump inaugural committee for the inauguration that could not have been spent on the inauguration. where is that money? all we do know is enough to worry about the likely existence of a large multimillion dollar unaccounted for slush fund that is attached loosely to the new white house. all we know is enough to keep sticking a pin on that on cable tv news until the white house explains this or congress starts an investigation. this would be the type of thing that congress would investigate. i am all for citizen sleuths at the huffington posts rr. i am all for the mike.com which did initial reporting on meeting about the venezuela ten point plan. i am all for us here on msnbc
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tying these things together. this is the kind of flashing red light follow the money thing now it's time for "the last word" with the great lawrence o'donnell. good evening, lawrence. >> there is no great moment in the history of the modern presidency where something like this would not have already been deeply investigated. it would be the suggest of an ongoing investigation by this time. >> yes, exactly. >> just astonishing. >> and the one thing that congress likes to look into, ever since watergate is money. and on this it's like 40th on the list. maybe we'll get to it. >> so rachel, you broke the news tonight about donald tmp's statement about north korea which i'm holding in my hand. >> yeah.
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