tv The Rachel Maddow Show MSNBC October 22, 2019 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT
6:00 pm
independent of the candidate. >> yes, indeed. we have grassroots organizations who are doing it. we have, you know, elected officials on the local level who are doing it. just to remind neera, the yankees lost. >> exactly. >> saying they're going to win doesn't mean they can't win. >> thank you both for joining us. that is "all in" for this evening. "the rachel maddow show" starts right now. >> thanks to you at home for joining us this hour. and i quote, ambassador sondland told me that he now recognized he made a mistake by earlier telling the ukrainian officials to whom he spoke that a white house meeting with president zelensky was dependent on a public announcement of investigations. in fact, ambassador sondland said, everything was dependent on under which such an announcement including security assistance, by which he means military assistance. he said president trump want president zelensky in a public box by making a public statement about ordering such
6:01 pm
investigations. president trump wanted president zelensky in a public box by making public statements ordering such investigations. we knew after the first members of the impeachment committees came out and talked to reporters today in the middle of ambassador bill taylor's deposition and those members of congress told reporters that what was going on in that hearing room was a sea change, that what was happening was likely to escalate the impeachment proceedings, perhaps to speed them up as well. we knew from those initial reports from people who had been inside the room that something really serious was going on today with this deposition at the impeachment proceedings for president trump. but it wasn't until late in the afternoon when we got a copy of ambassador bill taylor's opening zamt for his deposition that we could see what exactly that sea change was all about. honestly, just how bad this is now looking for president trump.
6:02 pm
because this testimony today is so damning and, apparently so well corroborated with notes and contemporaneous documentation, we should expect the president and his supporters will try to not just attack this testimony, but to attack the testifier. they'll try to destroy the reputation of ambassador bill taylor, they'll smear him as a democratic partisan because we know that's how they will have to respond to this. that's what they're going to do to him because it might be helpful to note how he introduced himself today, which gives a good brief bioof who he is and where he's been. he says, quote, i've dedicated my life to serving u.s. interests at home and abroad. my background and experience are nonpartisan and i've been honored to serve under any administration, republican and democratic since 1985. for 50 years i have served this
6:03 pm
country, starting as a cadet at west point, then as an infantry officer including with the 101st airborne division, then at the department of energy, member of senate staff, nato, then with the state department here and abroad, in afghanistan, in iraq, in jerusalem and ukraine. we've seen the president and his supporters are going to go after bill taylor nevertheless as if he's some plant, some democratic partisan, someone they can impugn personally. it is hard to see that working both because of who bill taylor is, but also just because of the gravity of what he has spelled out under oath. quote, on may 28th of this year, i met with secretary of state mike pompeo who asked me to return to kiev to lead our embassy in ukraine. it is a critical time. volodymyr zelensky had just been elected president and ukraine remained at war with russia.
6:04 pm
as the summer approached, a new ukrainian government would be seated, parliamentary elections were imminent and the ukrainian political trajectory would be set for the next several years. i cared about ukraine's future and the important u.s. interests there. so when secretary pompeo asked me to go back to kiev, i wanted to say "yes" but it was not an easy decision. the former ambassador masha yovanovitch was treated poorly, caught in match nations both in kiev and washington. those problems were still present. when i talked to her, she urged me to go both for policy reasons and for the morale of the embassy. i consulted a senior republican official who's been a mentor to me. my wife in no uncertain terms opposed the idea. the mentor counseled if your country asks you to do something, you do it, if you can be effective.
6:05 pm
bill taylor despite those conflicting feelings and that strong advice otherwise from his wife, he says yes to the posting, comes out of private life and rejoins essentially the diplomatic corps. once i arrived in kiev, i discovered a weird combination of encouraging, confusing, and ultimately alarming circumstances. i found it confusing and unusual arrangement for making u.s. policy towards ukraine. there appeared to be two channels of u.s. policy-making and implements, one regular and one highly irregular. as the chief of mission at the embassy, i had authority over the formal diplomatic processes, including the bulk of the u.s. effort to support ukraine against russian invasion and to help it defeat corruption. this regular channel of u.s. policy-making has consistently had strong bipartisan support both in congress and in all administrations since ukraine's independence from russia in 1991. at the same time, however, there was an irregular, informal channel of u.s. policy-making with respect to ukraine, one
6:06 pm
which included then-special envoy kurt volker, ambassador gordon sondland, secretary of energy, rick perry, and, as i subsequently learned, rudolph giuliani. taylor arrived back at the kiev embassy on june 17th. he says within ten days of his arrival amid efforts to set up a meeting between zelensky and trump, he tells congress today that he got a call from one of the people operating this, quote, informal, irregular channel. quote, on june 27th, ten days after he's arrived at the embassy, ambassador sondland told me in a phone conversation that president zelensky needed to make the clear to president trump that he, president zelensky, was not standing in the way of investigations. taylor says i sensed something odd when the ambassador told me on june 28th that he did not wish to include most of the regular interagency participants in a call planned with president zelensky for later that day.
6:07 pm
ambassador sondland said he wanted to make sure that no one was transcribing or monitoring the call as they added president zelensky to the line. before president zelensky joined the call, ambassador volker separately told the u.s. participants in the call that he, ambassador volcker, planned to be explicit with president zelensky in a one-on-one meeting planned for toronto july 2nd. he planned to be explicit with president zelensky about what he should do to get his white house meeting. at that point, june 28th, 11 days since taylor's been in the country, he says, quote, at that point it was not clear to me on that call what this meant. what this means, what exactly the president of ukraine has to do in order to get his white house meeting, what exactly they're going to make so explicit to him. with an couple of weeks, though, by mid-july, taylor says that he's starting to figure it out. it was become clear to me the meeting that president zelensky wanted was conditioned on the
6:08 pm
investigations of burisma and alleged ukrainian interference in the 2016 elections, and that's what the irregular, informal part of u.s. policy towards ukraine was trying to achieve. this is where taylor then starts to put it together that it's not just a meeting with the white house that is conditioned on those investigations, it's also the military aid from the united states that's being made contingent on ukraine coughing up these investigations that rudy giuliani was demanding. taylor says, quote, on july 10th in kiev i met with president zelensky's chief of staff and his foreign policy adviser who said they learned from rudy giuliani that a phone call between president trump and president zelensky was unlikely to happen. they were alarmed and disappointed. days later in a regular national security council secure conference call, taylor says, quote, i heard a staff person from the office of management and budget say there was a hold on security assistance, meaning military aid to ukraine, but could not say why.
6:09 pm
quote, toward the end of an otherwise normal meeting, a voice on the call, the person was off screen, said that she was from omb, the office of management and budget, and that her boss instructed her not to approve any additional spending of security assistance for ukraine until further notice. taylor says i and others sat in astonishment. ukrainians were fighting the russians and counted on not only the training and weapons, but also the assurance of u.s. support. all the omb staffer said the directive had come from the president, from the president to the chief of staff to omb. the following day, two senior national security council officers including fiona hill spoke by phone with bill taylor. they gave me an account of the july 10th meeting with ukrainian officials at the white house. specifically they told me ambassador gordon sondland had connected investigations with an oval office meeting for president zelensky. later that same day, i received
6:10 pm
text messages on a three-way whatsapp text conversation with ambassadors volker and sondland, a record of which i understand has already been provided to the committees. he says ambassador sondland said a call between trump and zelensky would take place soon. ambassador volker said that what was most important was for zelensky to say that he will help with the investigation. the following day, taylor says, quote, i had a phone conversation with the ukrainian national security adviser during which he conveyed to me that president zelensky did not want to be used as a pawn in a u.s. re-election campaign. by this point it's clear that the answer to that, to ukraine, is too bad, that's what's happening, that's what we're using you for. so that happens -- he arrives mid-june. we get this sort of time line of what happens in very short order through mid-june through end of june, through july. the following month in august with the military aid still not being released by the white
6:11 pm
house, bill taylor says he started calling washington to express his concerns as to whether or not ukraine was going to get that crucial military aid. he says he called the counselor at the state department. he says he called fiona hill's new replacement at the national security council because by that point she had left. taylor says, quote, on august 22nd during a phonemorrison, tai asked him if there was a change in policy of strong support for ukraine. to which he responded, it remains to be seen. he also told me during this call that the president doesn't want to provide any assistance to ukraine at all. that was extremely troubling to me because i had told secretary pompeo in may when he asked me to come back to the kiev embassy that if the support were to change, i would have to resign based on my call with mr. morrison, i was prepared to do
6:12 pm
so. taylor also says at this point he sent a direct cable, a first-person cable to secretary of state mike pompeo directly relay his concerns about what was going on with this military aid, calling it folly what the u.s. was doing holding up this military assistance. taylor says he received no response from pompeo to that memo. just days later on september 1st, there's vice president pence in warsaw. sent to meet with president zelensky of ukraine in the place of trump who had to stay home to monitor the hurricane response. but he did spend that weekend playing golf. during that warsaw trip, tim morrison from the national security council again called bill taylor to brief him on what was going on at the warsaw meeting. during this phone call i had with mr. morrison, he described a conversation that ambassador gordon sondland had with an assistant to president zelensky in warsaw. ambassador sondland told him that the security assistance money for ukraine would not come
6:13 pm
until president zelensky committed to pursue the burisma investigation. taylor says, quote, i was alarmed by what mr. morrison told me about that conversation. this is first time i heard that security assistance not just the white house meeting, but also that military aid, was conditioned on these investigations. he says, quote, very concerned on that same day i sent gordon sondland a text message asking are we now saying that security assistance and a white house meeting are conditioned on investigations? ambassador sondland responded asking me to call him, which i did. during that phone call, gordon sondland told me that president trump told him he wants president zelensky to state publicly that ukraine will investigate burisma and alleged ukrainian interference in the 2016 u.s. election. ambassador sondland also told me he now recognized that he had made a mistake by earlier telling the ukrainian officials to whom he spoke that a white house meeting was dependent on a public announcement of an investigation.
6:14 pm
in fact, ambassador sondland said, everything was dependent on such an announcement, including the military assistance. he said president trump wanted president zelensky in a public box by making a public statement about ordering such investigations. it's important that you say it out loud. if the whole point is to use them for your re-election effort, then people have to know about the investigations, right? you need a public announcement. within a week of that, he says, disturbing conversation, ambassador taylor received another readout about the president's behavior as part of this scheme. morrison briefed taylor on a phone conversation that took place on september 7th between president trump and ambassador sondland. here's how taylor described how that went. he says, quote, mr. morrison said he had a sinking feeling after learning about this conversation from ambassador sondland. according to mr. morrison, president trump insisted on that
6:15 pm
phone call that president zelensky must go to a microphone and say he is opening investigations of biden and 2016 election interference. the following day on september 8th, ambassador sondland and i, meaning bill taylor, speak on the phone. he said he talked to president trump. during our call on september 8th, ambassador sondland tried to explain to me that president trump is a businessman. when a businessman is about to sign a check to someone who owes him something, he said the businessman asks him to pay up before signing the check. i argued that the explanation made no sense, the ukrainians didn't owe president trump anything and holding up military assistance for our domestic political gain was crazy. gordon sondland told bill taylor after he spoke with president trump he then spoke once again with the ukrainian president and with the ukrainian president's assistant. ambassador sondland said this conversation accounted with
6:16 pm
president zelensky agreeing to make a public statement in an interview with cnn. quote, after that call with ambassador sondland, i expressed my strong reservations in a text message to him stating my nightmare is that they, the ukrainians, give that interview, and then they still don't get the security assistance. quote, the russians love it, and i quit. i was serious. he says. so bill taylor, 50 years in service to this country, was going to quit this job because this was selling out ukraine to the russians. here, putin, take ukraine, take what you want. we no longer support them. you can have it. we're not giving them military support anymore. and, of course, along the way to that betrayal, ukraine will be used to conjure up some politically useful thing for president trump for his re-election effort, something that will be collected and used by the president and then maybe he's going to screw them anyway
6:17 pm
and still not give them that military aid and the russians will love it, quote, and i will quit. it's one thing to put people who are comfortable with this kind of scheme in charge of carrying it out. that is apparently what president trump did. that's apparently why gordon sondland, ambassador to the eu, was in ukraine. ukraine is not part of the eu. that's apparently what volker was doing that as envoy to ukraine. that's apparently what rick perry, secretary of energy, was doing inserted into this process. that's what rudy giuliani was there for, of course. it's also apparently why they got rid of the previous ukrainian ambassador, marie yovanovitch. but they did have find a real person to hold down the ambassador after they fired her. unfortunately, for them, they picked a nonpartisan 50-year veteran diplomat who not only knows how things are supposed to run in u.s. policy, he knows something about the country in which he's operating, and he could see not only what a disaster this was in terms of
6:18 pm
president trump directly soliciting something from a foreign country that he wanted to use in his re-election campaign, which is a crime, he could see what he was doing to that country for this craven and illegal u.s. policy action to put that country in this position. and so today, with this remarkable testimony, we get this belated, but robust, sort of cry of conscious from bill taylor. and he took notes from this process. so this is really proceeding, i think, along three different lanes here. this investigation in congress has basically filled out the narrative about how this scheme worked and what they were trying to do and who was involved. the secretary of state clearly knew about it. he was not only listening in on the phone call between president trump and zelensky that led to this impeachment, he was involved in the firing of the
6:19 pm
previous ambassador. he knew why she was being fired, right? he was the recipient of that whole stash of documents from giuliani laying out the scheme, that stash of documents that was ultimately provided to congress by the inspector general of the state department. we now know from this testimony today that the top official representative of the u.s. government in ukraine, bill taylor, the man in charge at the mission, at the kiev embassy, we know he wrote to secretary of state pompeo directly and personally to inform him about what was happening in ukraine, to inform him about his grave concerns about it, to inform him about what this white house inform informal cabal appeared to be forming there. secretary of state was part of the scheme. the secretary of energy, rick perry, who announced his relaxed, also appears to have been part of it. the vice president, who went to warsaw and told the ukrainian president there that he wasn't going to get his military aid, he appears to have been part of
6:20 pm
it as well. despite the involvement of those very senior cabinet officials and the vice president, they all kept it quiet. we also know that the attorney general knew all about it. he was cited multiple times by the president in that phone call between the presidents of the united states and ukraine. he was cited multiple times by president trump as one of two people, the other being rudy giuliani, who the ukrainian president should work with to give him his deliverables on this scheme. bill barr and his justice department not only saw the transcript of that call, they also received multiple criminal referrals about the president's behavior in this scheme. so barr knew about it and barr kept it quiet, and barr, in fact, try to intervene to make sure congress would never learn about it. barr tried to make sure that the justice department would never investigate it. but these efforts at the top of the trump administration, right, three cabinet officials, including the top law enforcement official in the country, plus the vice
6:21 pm
president, and, of course, the president himself, they were all in on it. they were all part of it, they all kept it quiet or overtly tried to cover it up. the efforts to keep everybody else quiet about it, though, have failed, spectacularly. and i don't know in what form the impeachment committees are going to ultimately compile this information and report it to the rest of congress. i don't know how fast they're going to do it. i don't know how many depositions they're going to take and whether they want to get ambassador gordon sondland back under oath if it appears he may have lied or evaded the truth in his earlier sworn testimony. but the consistent narrative now told by all these people who are coming forward as witnesses to this scheme, who are defying the efforts by the white house and the state department to stop them from saying what they know, the consistent narrative from all of them is that this was an illegal effort involving people inside the government and outside the government that, at its correspond, was directed in detail by the president of the united states.
6:22 pm
and it was not only a crime scheme, a criminal scheme directed by the president, it was supposed to be a good ally of ours in a very important part of the world. and so the congressional investigation has now produced this damning indictment of the president and the other people who he involved in this who didn't blow the whistle and who helped to cover it up. the impeachment proceedings against the president remain sort of a question mark in terms of how exactly they're going to prosecute this case against him, how much more they will need, how they may try to tailor these charges to achieve his removal in the senate, not just his impeachment in the house. when the first members of congress heard this deposition, came outside and said to reporters this new information may accelerate the time frame in terms of when the president gets impeached, you can see why. now that we know at least in part that bill taylor testified to. how much more do they need after this? how much more do you need to
6:23 pm
hear? how much more evidence is anybody going to need to see? so there's the investigation, there's the question about the impeachment of the president, but alongside those two proceedings, there's this third lane, right, that's proceeding alongside and adjacent to this idiotic spy movie that is such a simple plot, it doesn't even have time for a twist. and that other lane is the criminal proceedings here. i mean, bill barr and brian bench kowski may have decided that definitely nobody should look into this. but that's not holding everywhere. i mean, when it came to carrying out what bill taylor described today as the highly irregular channel of u.s. policy-making that was running this scheme on behalf of the president, everybody involved in that is, like, in jail or going to jail or fighting going to jail. this was a scheme in which rudy
6:24 pm
giuliani consulted with the president's imprisoned former campaign chairman. he employed some mysterious services of two men who are now under criminal indicted for fudge illegal foreign campaign contributions. they're due to be rained in federal court in new york tomorrow. at least one of them will be using one of paul manafort's lawyers at his arraignment. the two of them also used malice aforethought malice aforethought's lawyers in virginia at their initial court appearance after being arrested at dulles trying to leave the country. the oligarch who funded paul manafort's old pro-putin work in ukraine back in the day, to whom paul manafort is still reportedly had financial ties while he was serving as trump's campaign chairman, who was reportedly, according to reuters, financing the operations of these guys who were working with giuliani on this scheme, that ukrainian oligarch himself is under federal indictment in this country as well. he's fighting extradition to the united states to face charges in a huge bribery case.
6:25 pm
and the president's lawyer, rudy giuliani, is now being described as person of interest in two federal investigations, one of which appears to be potentially a counterintelligence investigation. so everybody involved with rudy giuliani in this scheme, the irregular outside the government part of this scheme that ambassador bill taylor described today in his sworn deposition, everyone involved is either already modeling the latest in gps ankle monitors, or is nevertheless looking forward to a future career as a fine distiller of prison wine made from toilet water and old fruit packets of sugar. those guys are a piece of work, from manafort on down. the administration officials who are involved in this are either coming forward now and telling what they know, or they're hiding from from subpoenas or some combination thereof. of course, the president himself is basically perfume exposed at this point. i mean, all these claims about
6:26 pm
the president being immune from investigation and nobody who's ever worked in the government is ever allowed to testify about any behavior of the president, that only works as far as you can throw it, apparently. this is going fast now. but i think that these depositions are very important on their own terms. they're also incredibly important in terms of who they're in front, the credibility of these people giving these depositions, and the fact that they are all thus far mutually enforcing. the only people who have testified anything differently than the way it's been described by every other witness are the people who are most implicated in the scheme as being closest to the president while he was trying to carry it out. lots more to get to tonight. we'll speak with a member of congress who was there for this deposition today. stay with us. on today stay with us it opens our minds, changes our perspective, connects us, and pushes us further.
6:27 pm
the most inspiring minds, the most compelling stories: audible. doprevagen is the number oneild mempharmacist-recommendeding? memory support brand. you can find it in the vitamin aisle in stores everywhere. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. and i recently had hi, ia heart attack. it changed my life. but i'm a survivor. after my heart attack, my doctor prescribed brilinta. it's for people who have been hospitalized for a heart attack. brilinta is taken with a low-dose aspirin. no more than 100 milligrams as it affects how well brilinta works. brilinta helps keep platelets from sticking together and forming a clot. in a clinical study, brilinta worked better than plavix. brilinta reduced the chance of having another heart attack... ...or dying from one. don't stop taking brilinta without talking to your doctor, since stopping it too soon increases your risk of clots in your stent, heart attack, stroke, and even death. brilinta may cause bruising or bleeding more easily, or serious, sometimes fatal bleeding. don't take brilinta if you have bleeding, like stomach ulcers,
6:28 pm
a history of bleeding in the brain, or severe liver problems. slow heart rhythm has been reported. tell your doctor about bleeding new or unexpected shortness of breath any planned surgery, and all medicines you take. if you recently had a heart attack, ask your doctor if brilinta is right for you. my heart is worth brilinta. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help.
6:29 pm
6:30 pm
6:31 pm
furthest boundaries of what any career diplomat would have thought possible. >> all i have to say is that in my 10 short months in congress, it's not even noon, right? this is my most disturbing day in congress so far. very troubling. thanks. >> senator can you share about why it's disturbing. >> no. >> members of congress emerging from the testimony today at the top american desperate in ukraine appearing to be somewhat shaken by what they heard. ambassador bill taylor spent the better part of ten hours in his deposition before the impeachment committees today. joining us now is value demings, law enforcement veteran, longtime police chief, member of congress with a seat on the intelligence committee. representative demings, i know today was a long day. >> it's great to be with you, rachel. >> some of your colleagues did seem to be sort of shaken by ambassador taylor's testimony today. what was your reaction? >> i tell you what.
6:32 pm
ambassador taylor's testimony was refreshing. let me say that, number one. but his testimony was powerful. this weekend i had an opportunity to visit the vietnam war memorial, and to be in that room today in the presence of ambassador taylor, a vietnam veteran who has already had 50 years of public service, who came today, respected a lawful purpose, rachel, on his mind, that is, to tell the truth. and that he did. his testimony was credible but it was extremely powerful. >> i know you can't tell us about what happened. this was a closed-door deposition for reasons that have been articulated by the committee. but it's clear to us from the opening statement we've seen that as a professional with five decades of experience in this field, one of the things he was trained to do is take a lot of
6:33 pm
notes to make memos to file, to memorialize things in writing. was the committee able to obtain notes and documentation from him today? or was all that material given to the state department and you guys don't have it? >> well, you're absolutely correct. i tell you, ambassador taylor, i've interviewed a lot of people, of course, in my former life, but he's definitely the kind of witness that any person conducting an investigation would want to talk to. we did not -- i did not have an opportunity to review any of his documentation or notes, but clearly he's very meticulous. he obviously took extensive notes. his recall today, different from some other witnesses, was near perfect. he's a consummate professional. there's no doubt about that, but someone who really, rachel, gave me hope about the state of our country right now.
6:34 pm
obviously ambassador taylor remembered the oath, multiple oaths he's taken having served with several administrations since 1985. his testimony today was, as i said, just extremely powerful and really critical to this investigation that we're involved in. >> are you getting different stories about the same set of circumstances from different witnesses? clearly some of what he described today, at least as far as we can tell on the outside, did not seem to line up with the kind of testimony that we heard described from ambassador gordon sondland, for example. are you hearing conflicting stories where the committee will be responsible essentially for figuring out who's telling the truth or you may need to recall some witnesses who already testified? >> one of the things i can tell you, and i know you already know that this impeachment inquiry, we're being very methodical, we're being very thorough. we're going to interview witnesses who can provide critical information. the answer to your question is
6:35 pm
"yes." there was some testimony that was given today that that was in direct conflict with some things that we've heard earlier, some of the things that ambassador sondland said. so i know this is a decision that i certainly would not make, but i would love to see the ambassador and perhaps some others come back before our committee and give them an opportunity to clear up the statements that they gave, earlier testimony that they gave. >> val demings, thank you so much. >> thank you. >> much more ahead tonight, i have been advise of breaking news we just got in. i'll know on the other side of this commercial, i swear. e of this commercial, i swear about 50% of people with severe asthma have too many cells called eosinophils in their lungs. eosinophils are a key cause of severe asthma. fasenra is designed to target and remove these cells.
6:36 pm
fasenra is an add-on injection for people 12 and up with asthma driven by eosinophils. fasenra is not a rescue medicine or for other eosinophilic conditions. fasenra is proven to help prevent severe asthma attacks, improve breathing, and can lower oral steroid use. fasenra may cause allergic reactions. get help right away if you have swelling of your face, mouth, and tongue, or trouble breathing. don't stop your asthma treatments unless your doctor tells you to. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection or your asthma worsens. headache and sore throat may occur. haven't you missed enough? ask an asthma specialist about fasenra. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help.
6:37 pm
that life of the party look walk it off look one more mile look reply all look own your look... ...with fewer lines. there's only one botox® cosmetic. it's the only one... ...fda approved... ...to temporarily make frown lines... ...crow's feet... ...and forehead lines... ...look better. the effects of botox® cosmetic, may spread hours to weeks after injection, causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness may be a sign of a life-threatening condition. do not receive botox® cosmetic if you have a skin infection. side effects may include allergic reactions, injection site pain, headache, eyebrow, eyelid drooping, and eyelid swelling. tell your doctor about your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions, and medications including botulinum toxins as these may increase the risk of serious side effects.
6:38 pm
so, give that just saw a puppy look. and whatever that look is. look like you... with fewer lines. see results at botoxcosmetic.com so that early retirement we planned. it's going ok? great. now i'm spending more time with the kids. i'm introducing them to crab. crab!? they love it. so, you mentioned that that money we set aside. yeah. the kids and i want to build our own crab shack. ♪ ♪ ahhh, you're finally building that outdoor kitchen. yup - with room for the whole gang. ♪ ♪ see how investing with a j.p. morgan advisor can help you. visit your local chase branch.
6:39 pm
because it's the 9:00 p.m. hour on a day that ends in "y," some new breaking news from "the washington post." quote, prosecutors flagged possible ties between ukrainian gas tycoon and giuliani associates. tell me more. the ukrainian gas tycoon in question here is the subject of chapter 19 of my new book. didn't know it was going to be this relatively, dmitry firtash a putin-connected oligarch who has high level ties to organized crime. he has been indicted in the united states, is fighting an effort to extradite him here. firtash also turned up in the impeachment story because he has connections, including financial ties, with these two guys who
6:40 pm
rudy giuliani was apparently working with to dig up dirt for president trump in ukraine to help him get elected. we have these pretty pictures of these gentlemen because they have been charged on criminal campaign finance charges. they are due to be rained in federal court tomorrow. it was reported that one of these guys was hired as a translator for firtash's lawyers. but now this new scoop from the po"the post" furthers this part of the story in a big way. according to the post tonight, the federal prosecutors in chicago who've been investigating dmitry firtash, trying to get him extraindicted to that court, this prosecutors previously came across the two men, lev parnas and igor true m trueman. par gnash was working as an trespasser for the lawyers as of late july. there might be a broader relationship among firtash, parnas, and truman.
6:41 pm
chicago prosecutors reached out to their counterparts to offer their assistance. so the criminal case against firtash, those prosecutors are now working with the criminal case against giuliani's guys. i mean, this is lev and igor, the guys trying to dig up dirt for giuliani in this scheme for which the president is now being kbreec impeached, they are turning up in that gigantic bribery case. prosecutors in chicago offering to help the prosecutors in new york. yeah. the most important stuff always comes from following the flow of money in these things, always. it's the most surprising stuff and the most important stuff. toward that end, i will tell you, tomorrow is going to be one of the biggest days we have had in the entire trump presidency when it comes to following the money. that story is flying under the radar right now because of all of this impeachment stuff, but i will tell you what it is next. you will want to see this. stay with us.
6:42 pm
how are we doing? fabulous. ♪ i wonder how the firm's doing without its fearless leader. ♪ you sure you want to leave that all behind? yeah. stay restless, with the icon that does the same. the new rx crafted by lexus. lease the 2020 rx 350 all wheel drive for $439/month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. for your worst sore throat pain try vicks vapocool drops. it's not candy, it's powerful relief. ahhhhhh! vaporize sore throat pain with vicks vapocool drops. to put on our website? i mean i would have but i'm a commercial vehicle so i don't have hands... or a camera...or a website. should we franchise? is the market ready for that? can we franchise? how do you do that? meg! oh meg! we should do that thing where you put the business cards in the fishbowl and somebody wins something. -meg: hi. i'm here for...
6:43 pm
i'm here for the evans' wedding. -we've got the cake in the back, so, yeah. -meg: thank you. -progressive knows small business makes big demands. -you're not gonna make it, you're not gonna make it! ask her if we can do her next wedding too! -so we'll design the insurance solution that fits your business. -on second thought, don't...ask that. ahh, it's too expensive.. actually, our unitedhealthcare medicare plans have renew active. a gym membership and more- at no extra cost. no excuses now. renew active. only from unitedhealthcare medicare. if ylittle thingsate tcan be a big deal., that's why there's otezla. otezla is not a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight
6:44 pm
6:45 pm
all right. here is why you are going to be up tomorrow morning listening to streaming audio on the c-span website starting at 10:00 a.m. eastern. i don't know if any tv network including ours is going to be broadcasting the audio live as it happens, but i do know the c-span website is going to have it. we just learned tonight nbcnews.com also got permission. c-span website, nbcnews.com, both have received permission from the court to stream this audio tomorrow morning. and so i'll tell you, that's what i'm going to be doing on the stationary bike at the gym while everybody else is going fast and concentrating, i'll be in the corner with headphones, going slow, taking notes, not getting a workout at all. what this is about is -- it's kind of a thing we've been waiting for. the impeachment proceedings on capitol hill are riveting right now, even just what's able to
6:46 pm
seep out from behind closed doors like this bill taylor deposition today. the criminal case unfolding alongside and adjacent to the impeachment, that too is turning out to be fascinating, this rock 'em sock 'em robots, fast-developing story. the whole thing is nuts. alongside all of that, we are coming to what has been an absolutely desperate effort by the president to keep his financial records and his taxes out of the hands of investigators. as you probably know, there's a bunch of legal cases on this now. the president has hired a whole stand-alone team of lawyers just to fight all these cases to try to keep his taxes and his financial records secret. so far that legal team is doing terribly. the president and his keep my taxes and financial records secret legal team have lost every one of these cases so far. as they continue to win their way through the courts. president's legal team has lost at every step of the process, even though he now has william barr and the justice department to start weighing in on these
6:47 pm
the cases on his behalf, which is something that dropped jaws in legal circles all over the country when the doj agreed to do that. that, frankly, should have shook loose a whistle-blower or two at the justice department itself, even though we haven't seen evidence of that. but tomorrow morning, 10:00 a.m. eastern time, streaming live on c-span and nbcnews.com, this is really the one that those of us observing the process so far have been waiting because what's going to happen tomorrow is about this particular ruling, which is going to the appeals court level tomorrow. just listen to this. this is from the ruling that went against the president that is going to the federal appeals cowardly level tomorrow, first time any of these cases has gone that high. quote, the president asserts an extraordinary claim in the dispute now before this court. he contends in his duties and the government powers between the branches under the
6:48 pm
constitution, he contends the person who serves as president while in office enjoys absolute immunity from criminal process of any kind. consider the reach of the president's argument as the court reads it, presidential immunity would stretch to cover every phase of criminal proceedings, including grand jury subpoenas, diejts prosecution, arrest, trial, conviction, and incarceration. that constitutional protection presumably would encompass any conduct at any time in any forum, whether federal or state, and whether the president acted alone or in concert with other individuals. hence, according to this categorical doctrine, the constitutional dimensions of the president shield from judicial process are virtually limitless. until the president leaves office, his exemption from criminal proceedings would extent to not only his duties in an official capacity, but also to one's arising from his
6:49 pm
private affairs, and all other conduct undertaken by him as an ordinary citizen both during and before his tenure in office. such immunity would operate to frustrate the administration of justice by insulating from scrutiny not only matters occurring during the president's tenure in office, but potentially also records relate to go transactions and illegal actions the president and others may have committed before he assumed the presidency. this court cannot endorse such a categorical and limitless assertion of presidential immunity from judicial process as being countenanced by the nation's constitutional plan, especially in the light of the fundamental concerns over excessive irrigation of power that animated the constitutions structure and badly authority among the three branches of the national government. the expansesive notion of constitutional immunity invoked here to shield the president from judicial process would constitute an overreach of executive power.
6:50 pm
as articulated, such sweeping doctrine finds no support in the fusi constitution's text or history notion that the founders rejebted at the inception of this republic. and that the supreme court has since unequivocally repudiated. that is a constitutional domain exists in this country in which not only the president, but relatives and persons and business entities associated with him in potentially unlawful private activities are, in fact, above the law. this court finds aspects of such a doctrine repugnant to the nation's governmental structure and constitutional values." repugnant. so, that was the somewhat clarion ruling of the district court, the federal district court, that is getting reviewed on appeal tomorrow. it's going to be an hour-long argument before a panel of three federal judges. this is a federal appeals court,
6:51 pm
so they're sitting in a court just one level below the supreme court, 10:00 a.m. eastern time streaming live on c-span and nbcnews.com. this is an appeal of this federal court ruling calling the president's claim to executive immunity from crimes he committed while in office or before, calling that, quote, repugnant to the nation's governmental structure. i wonder how the appeal's going to go. if you are able to check it out, i will say the thing to listen for is not only whether the subject of this case is going to get resolved, whether the president's financial records and his tax returns are finally going to be handed over in response to the subpoena. obviously, that's a significant public interest and that will be something to watch for in terms of listening to those hearings -- listening to that hearing tomorrow. beyond that, the other thing to really listen for is that this ruling against trump that is being appealed tomorrow, it not only smacks down the president for this incredible executive overreach in terms of what he
6:52 pm
says he can get away with, it also basically dismantles the internal memos at the justice department that say that is a president can't be indicted. i mean, the president's lawyers and attorney general william barr basically hinge their case that the president can't be investigated on these internal justice department memos which, in fact, say that a president can't be indicted. these are the same memos that supposedly constrained robert mueller from recommending any charges against president trump in his report. right? so that the drkoj policy that ss a president can't be charged. well, the judge in this case that smacked down trump for trying to say that he is immune from any investigation, the judge in this case in this ruling also says those justice department memos shouldn't be seen as having, quote, substantial legal force. it says those memos, quote, do not constitute authoritative judicial interpretation of the constitution concerning these issues. the ruling says those doj memos are, quote, flawed by ambiguities if not outright
6:53 pm
conflicts. the ruling says that in short, quote, the court rejects the justice department memos' position. by which the justice means specifically that this ruling rejects the position those memos take, which is the position that a president can't be criminally charged while in office. that whole idea that we have that the president can't be indicted, that comes from those doj memos, part of this ruling that is being appealed tomorrow is a ruling that says actually those doj memos shouldn't be enforced here. there shouldn't be a rule that says the president can't be indicted. that's crazy. that's what that fight is going to be about at the 2nd circuit tomorrow. bring your headphones to work. you could pretend you're listening to an important conference call or something. 10:00 a.m. eastern time. c-span's website. nbcnews.com. i'll be the one on the stationary bike in the corner with the clipboard scribbling down by notes listening. g.feel . ancestry® specifically showed
6:54 pm
the regions that my family was from. greater details. richer stories. and now with health insights. get your dna kit at ancestry.com. at outback, steak & oh no, it's gone.ck. phew, it's back with lobster mac & cheese. it's gone again. oh, it's back with shrimp now! steak & lobster starting at only $15.99. hurry in before these three are gone again. outback steakhouse. of millions of americans during the recession. so, my wife kat and i took action. we started a non-profit community bank with a simple theory - give people a fair deal and real economic power. invest in the community, in businesses owned by women and people of color, in affordable housing. the difference between words and actions matters. that's a lesson politicians in washington could use right now. i'm tom steyer, and i approve this message. with moderate to severe ulcerative colitis or crohn's, your plans can change in minutes.
6:55 pm
your head wants to do one thing, but your gut says, "not today." if your current treatment isn't working, ask your doctor about entyvio. entyvio acts specifically in the gi tract to prevent an excess of white blood cells from entering and causing damaging inflammation. entyvio has helped many patients achieve long-term relief and remission. infusion and serious allergic reactions can happen during or after treatment. entyvio may increase risk of infection, which can be serious. pml, a rare, serious, potentially fatal brain infection caused by a virus may be possible. tell your doctor if you have an infection, experience frequent infections or have flu-like symptoms or sores. liver problems can occur with entyvio. ask your doctor about the only gi-focused biologic just for ulcerative colitis and crohn's. entyvio. relief and remission within reach.
6:56 pm
6:57 pm
mora cooper is the deputy assistant secretary of defense for russia, ukraine and eurasia. she's also the first pentagon official who's been called to testify in the impeachment proceedings. part of the impeachment scandal, of course, is the military assistance that was supposed to go to ukraine, that is legally obligated for that purpose and so the white house blocking it for months to try to get dirt on joe biden from ukraine and sort of leveraging that military aid, that was arguably an illegal act by the white house. so far we haven't heard anything
6:58 pm
from the pentagon side about this, but we are about to. secretary of defense mark esper blew off a subpoena from the impeachment committees that told him that he needed to hand over documents from the defense department. but this defense department official, laura cooper, is due to testify tomorrow morning presumably i'm guessing the trump administration will try to block her from testifying as well, but wel s'll see. the precedent has been set by career defense department officials, if you get subpoenaed, you can go, give your testimony even if the trump administration is trying to stop you. watch this space. but when your team is always dealing with device setups, app updates, and support calls... you can never seem to get anywhere. that's why dell technologies created unified workspace, powered by vmware. ♪ a revolutionary solution that lets you deploy, manage, support and secure all your devices from the cloud. so you can stop going in circles, and start moving forward.
7:00 pm
doprevagen is the number oneild mempharmacist-recommendeding? memory support brand. you can find it in the vitamin aisle in stores everywhere. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. that is going to do it for us tonight. whew. this has been a busy day and a busy night. i feel like we haven't even kept track of the news even just in terms of what has developed over the course of this hour, but we'll just redouble our efforts to try to do better tomorrow. see you again then. now it's time for "the last word with lawrence o'donnell." good evening, lawrence. >> rachel, that's exactly why we're doing another hour of coverage right now because i couldn't possibly cover everything that you covered in the last hour. i'm going to have some things that were not in your hour. and it feels like we're still just trying to catch up to it. >> yeah. i mean, i could do -- i could have written the whole show like by noon, and then by 5:00, a whole
99 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
MSNBC West Television Archive Television Archive News Search Service The Chin Grimes TV News ArchiveUploaded by TV Archive on