Mueller Investigation – more than ¥130k

2021-01-05 Update:

Robert Mueller’s was in contact with Facebook since 2011, lectured in Stanford University in Silicon Valley, and served  Big Tech clients of WilmerHale, including Apple, in 2013-2017. Apple depends more on the government of China than on all of its consumers in the US taken together. Apparently, taking money originating with unfriendly powers became natural for Mueller.

Mueller’s clients also transferred technology to Russia in Skolkovo.

2018-10-14 Update: Added clarifications and remarks on the relationships of the Mueller’s law firm WilmerHale with the government of China are added near the end. Also, the words “expectation of future business with China” were changed to “expectation of future income contingent on approval of Chinese government” to better reflect the structure of his compensation in WilmerHale.

In March 2017, two months before his appointment as Special Counsel, Robert Mueller received $24,000 (~ ¥130,000) from a firm owned by a top official of the Chinese government and the Communist Party of China. Almost certainly, he had expectation of future income contingent on approval of Chinese government. In exchange, he accepted, articulated, and publicly committed himself to the DNC conspiracy theory that “Russia had hacked the democracy”. Russia has hacked neither democracy nor the Democrats (despite them being near opposites). The DNC had an incompetent information systems team and an unprotected network that could have been hacked by anybody. For eight months the DNC fought FBI attempts to help, while possibly being suspicious of the FBI because of Hillary’s bathroom server. Persons who published the DNC’s dirty laundry or gave it to WikiLeaks are likely not connected to Russia at all and might be Americans. We don’t know their names because the Democratic Party made up the narrative that Putin ordered the DNC hacking and leaking of documents to aid Trump. Obama administration sent the FBI, CIA, DHS, and ODNI to confirm this narrative, rather than to investigate who had accessed the DNC voter’s database, believed to contain very detailed personal profiles of almost all adult Americans. The conspiracy theory of a Trump-Russia collusion was built on top of this narrative.

The firm that paid Mueller his ¥130k is the International Data Group (IDG), a subsidiary of China Oceanwide Holdings Group. IDG owns many information technology publications and venues, including security-focused CIO.com and csoonline.com. China Oceanwide announced acquisition of the IDG on January 19, 2017 – the last day of the Obama administration. A closer look at the China Oceanwide structure and operation of the IDG suggests that the IDG was acquired by China to serve as an espionage and influence vehicle. Note that China has an annual surplus of $375B in the trade with the US. Trump’s policy to reduce or even eliminate this deficit makes him an exceptionally inconvenient US president for China.

But in exchange for ¥130k and a promise or expectation of future China-related income, former FBI Director Robert Mueller publicly announced his support for the anti-Trump theory of “Russian hacking” and made the key decision for his future investigation as Special Counsel.  It is not known whether this deal with China led Mueller to seek the appointment as Special Counsel, but Mueller also lied about this transaction in his financial disclosure. When appointed Special Counsel tasked with investigation, Mueller didn’t bother to even pretend he was investigating. It looks like the ¥uans have done the investigation for him. Mueller used the results of this “investigation” to launch an unprecedented prosecution of the elected President.

On March 7, 2017, and as part of the deal, Mueller delivered a 45-minute presentation titled The Growing Cyber Security Threat at a trade conference pompously named Security Executive Summit, hosted by IDG in partnership with CDW. Mueller was quoted as saying:

“What the Russians are doing is a huge threat,” said Mueller, adding that such cyberthreats to democracy are, in a sense, “more devastating than terrorist attacks — the one-offs that you currently have in the United States.” (Forbes, 2017-09-21, CDW website)

“In terms of the top cybersecurity threats the U.S. government faces today, Mueller laid out five threat vectors: 1) Protecting democracy from Russian hackers and others that want to undercut democracy …” (FedTechMag, 2017-03-08)

Even the alleged Intelligence Community Assessment (cooked by John Brennan and James Clapper using the Steele dossier and oddly interpreting the DNC refusal to collaborate with the FBI on its suspected Russian hacking as the proof of Trump-Russia collusion) did not go that far. The ICA was announced on January 6, 2017 – and refuted within hours! Two days later, Fox News published a long article by former CIA analyst Fred Fleitz Was Friday’s declassified report claiming Russian hacking of the 2016 election rigged?  In few weeks, Brennan’s hostility towards Trump and the refutation of CrowdStrike allegations of “Russian hacking” of Ukrainian artillery finally exposed ICA as a hoax. CrowdStrike was the DNC contractor that incorrectly attributed the DNC hacking to Russia in May-June and doubled down on this misattribution in December 2016. The MSM made huge efforts to keep the narrative going until Mueller breathed new life into it.

Details

The IDG/CDW conference has web presence on cio.com, a website of IDG Communications, Inc, a subsidiary of IDG. Mueller appears here: https://cdwevents.cio.com/ehome/cdw/speakers/

Keynote Speaker Mueller with picture

Under the law, Mueller had to file the OGE Form 278e within a month of the appointment. He requested and was given an extension of time. When he filed the form on 07/19/2017, two months after the appointment, he concealed this transaction. Instead of the International Data Group, Mueller named a small and unrelated consultancy IDG Enterprise, also located in MA. This is the copy of the entry:

Robert Mueller IDG entry

At that time, his witch hunt was in full swing and hardly anybody was paying attention to his disclosure.

IDG owner China Oceanwide Holdings Group is headed by Mr. Lu Zhiqiang, a high-level official of the government and Communist Party of China. Its website says (emphasis added):

China Oceanwide Holdings Group was founded in 1985 by Mr. Lu Zhiqiang, the founder, legal representative, Communist Party secretary, chairman and president of the group.”

“Mr. Lu Zhiqiang is the founder, legal representative, Communist Party secretary, chairman of the Group, who also serves as a member of the standing committee of the 12th Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, vice president of the China Chamber of Commerce, deputy chairman of the Oceanwide Foundation, deputy chairman of the China Foundation for Guangcai Program, vice chairman of the Chinese Art and Literature Foundation, and deputy chairman of China Minsheng Bank …

Mr. Lu Zhiqiang officially became the Chairman the Board of IDG on March 29, 2017.


2018-10-14 Update

When people hear of this article without reading it in full, they are often incredulous. It is hard to believe that Robert Mueller sold out for $24k; the article didn’t actually say that. In addition to this amount, there was expectation of future business dependent on the government of China. After the publication, I found out that Mueller probably had past obligations to China from his work in WilmerHale.

More importantly, I think Mueller underestimated what he bargained out. Because of his perceived authority as a former FBI Director, Mueller was asked to go to a Chinese-sponsored conference related to U.S. cyber-defense/security, and to voice his support to some lies beneficial for the Chinese interests. The “Russian election interference” narrative was not only undermining President Trump, but also pushing Russia away from the U.S. into an alliance with China. A decent man would neither go there nor say what Mueller did. Mueller did both, and his compensation much exceeded $24,000. From that point forth he went down a slippery slope. When presented with an opportunity to become Special Counsel with power to damage or even eliminate Trump, he might have been compelled to back his words with actions. Then, he found out he could not back out from the whole affair.

This is a classic story. Where I grew up, similar stories set in daily circumstance were taught to children to warn them away from crime.

Many of Mueller’s accomplices in #spygate also started with what they thought was small misconduct with very low probability to get caught. Then the actions of their accomplices aggravated their own crimes, and they were faced with the choice that street gangsters have: rat on your accomplices and they throw you under the bus by them, or stay in the ranks of your gang and try to fight your way out together.

Since the original publication I have updated the article to include past payouts from the law firm WilmerHale, a super-lobbyist for China. WilmerHale boasts:

“we have helped develop or shape key trade initiatives and legislation both in and outside government, including Congress’ landmark grant of Permanent Normal Trade Relations to China; negotiating priorities in the Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade agreement negotiations …”

“our team includes the chief US architect and negotiator of China’s entry into the WTO”

In WilmerHale, Mueller was swimming in the sea of Chinese interests. Apple, one of his clients and investments, is practically a Chinese company that maintains just enough presence in the U.S. to meddle in our internal affairs and to support “the resistance.”

Lying on the financial form about $24k received from what looks like Chinese intelligence, and the unprecedented refusal to disclose conflicts of interest serve as evidence of the guilty mind. The conflicts-of-interest waiver granted to Mueller by Rod Rosenstein and other officials of the DOJ deserves a separate notice.

Minor update was made on 2023-06-23.

The initial (2018-10-11) version of the article is preserved at https://archive.is/IMfzy.

Unrelated: among all critics of the “Russian hacking” conspiracy theory, only the Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) gained some attention from the MSM. That might be because their key argument – the calculated speed of data copying – is wrong. They made other inaccurate statements, too.