Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 1 of 179 302 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, : REDACTED : Criminal Action Plaintiff, : No. 19-CR-018 : : DAY 2 : Afternoon Session vs. : : Washington, D.C. : November 6, 2019 ROGER JASON STONE, JR., : Time: 2:02 p.m. : Defendant. : ______________________________________________________________ TRANSCRIPT OF JURY TRIAL HELD BEFORE THE HONORABLE AMY BERMAN JACKSON UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE ______________________________________________________________ A-P-P-E-A-R-A-N-C-E-S For the Plaintiff: JONATHAN IAN KRAVIS, Esquire MICHAEL JOHN MARANDO, Esquire ADAM C. JED, Esquire AARON SIMCHA JON ZELINSKY, Esquire U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia 555 Fourth Street, NW Washington, DC 20530 (202) 252-7698 Email: Jonathan.kravis3@usdoj.gov Email: Asjz@usdoj.gov Email: Michael.marando@usdoj.gov Email: Adam.Jed&usdoj.gov For the Defendant: Bruce S. Rogow, Esquire Law Office of Bruce S. Rogow, P.A. 100 NE 3rd Avenue Suite 1000 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301 (954) 767-8909 Appearances continued: Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 2 of 179 303 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 For the Defendant: ROBERT C. BUSCHEL, Esquire TARA A. CAMPION, Esquire Buschel & Gibbons, P.A. 100 S.E. Third Avenue Suite 1300 Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33394 (954) 530-5301 Email: Buschel@bglaw-pa.com Email: Campion@bglaw-pa.com GRANT J. SMITH, Esquire StrategySmith, P.A. 401 East Las Olas Boulevard Suite 130-120 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301 (954) 328-9064 Email: Gsmith@strategysmith.com CHANDLER PAIGE ROUTMAN, Esquire Law Office of Chandler P. Routman 501 East Las Olas Blvd. Suite #331 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316 (954) 235-8259 Email: Routmanc@gmail.com _____________________________________________________________ Court Reporter: Lisa Walker Griffith, RPR Official Court Reporter United States District Court District of Columbia 333 Constitution Avenue, NW Room 6507 Washington, DC 20001 (202) 354-3247 18 Email: Lisa_griffith@dcd.uscourts.gov 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 P-R-O-C-E-E-D-I-N-G-S Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 3 of 179 304 1 2 THE DEPUTY CLERK: This is Criminal Case 19-18. United States of America versus Roger Stone, Jr. 3 THE COURT: Mr. Rogow, are you ready to proceed? 4 MR. ROGOW: Yes, I am. 5 THE COURT: Let's bring the jury in. 6 (Jury present.) 7 THE COURT: Members of the jury, good afternoon. I 8 trust you were able to resist discussing the case during your 9 lunch break. 10 11 12 13 14 We're now going to hear the opening statement on behalf of the defendant. OPENING STATEMENT ON BEHALF OF THE DEFENDANT MR. ROGOW: Good afternoon. I'm Bruce Rogow, and I represent Roger Stone. I agree with Mr. Zelinsky when he says that all the 15 words are there for you to see. 16 And because of that, the texts, the e-mails, all of that, the 17 questions from the committee members, Mr. Stone's answers, 18 they're all there for you to see. 19 you to see is Mr. Stone's state of mind. 20 This is an unusual case. But what isn't there for And state of mind is important in this case because 21 as the Judge will instruct you at the end of the case, there 22 are certain elements that have to be met. 23 answers must meet those elements in order for the government 24 to be successful. 25 elements for the reasons I'm going to tell you. And Mr. Stone's And we think that they will not meet those Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 4 of 179 305 This case, first of all, you heard the government's 1 2 opening statement, and it talks about WikiLeaks and Julian 3 Assange. 4 it set the criteria and the parameters for its investigation. 5 And I want to take you through some of those committee 6 statements, some of the committee members' statements 7 themselves, Mr. Stone's statements. 8 to start with the beginning of this, how did Mr. Stone come 9 to speak to the committee. But that isn't what the committee talked about when And I also really want 10 Well, I think that it becomes interesting when you 11 realize that his lawyers wrote to the committee volunteering 12 to appear. 13 take a look, and this will be Government's Exhibit 7, which 14 we put up on the screen, you will see, it's hard to see, I 15 know, in the small print, but you will see that Mr. Buschel, 16 who is with us at counsel table, one of Mr. Stone's lawyers, 17 said that Mr. Stone is eager to voluntarily appear in open 18 session in front of the Permanent Select Committee on 19 Intelligence without the necessity of a subpoena. 20 think the evidence will show that that is something exactly 21 about what he did. 22 think the evidence will show, that's not the usual way that 23 people go to a committee hearing, certainly if they're 24 intending to lie. 25 Mr. Stone was not subpoenaed. And so, if you And I He went without a subpoena, which, I He went voluntarily without a subpoena. And you see the bottom of that page, "Thank you Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 5 of 179 306 1 very much for your attention, our client will cooperate fully 2 with the Permanent Select Committee and seek a fair 3 opportunity to rebut and address the false assertions that 4 were made." 5 some of that as we go on. And we'll get to that, the evidence will show And I'm just giving you a little bit, a little 6 7 taste of how this started and the fact that Mr. Stone 8 volunteered. Then you'll see on May 9, 2017, the committee wrote 9 10 back to him, or somebody representing the committee, and 11 said, and this becomes important in terms of what the mindset 12 of Mr. Stone was. 13 directed at the 2016 U.S. election, the committee requests 14 that your client produce certain documents and other 15 materials and participate in a voluntary transcribed 16 interview at the committee's offices." "As part of its bipartisan investigation And then, you see at the next page, it talks about 17 18 the committee staff will work with you. But here again is 19 the language that is so important, "the interview may cover 20 any topic within the publicly announced parameters of the 21 committee's investigation." And here is what the publicly announced parameters 22 23 were. "Russian cyber activities directed against the U.S. 24 election, potential links between Russia and individuals 25 associated with political campaigns and U.S. Government's Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 6 of 179 307 1 response." There were four pillars to this investigation. 2 The 3 first two were Russia, Russia investigation. When you heard 4 the government's opening statement, you didn't hear much 5 about Russia. 6 you think about this, that's the beginning of the mindset of 7 Mr. Stone when he agreed voluntarily to go. 8 Russian investigation. You heard about WikiLeaks and Assange. But if This was a And the fact that it was a Russian investigation 9 10 colored all of his answers. And you'll see this as we go 11 through the various documents. 12 And take a look at the next page in this letter 13 from the committee, because they set it out specifically. 14 What Russian cyber activity and other active measures were 15 directed against the United States and its allies. 16 no mention of WikiLeaks. There's There's no mention of Assange. And then there's a second category, did the Russian 17 18 active measures include links between Russia and individuals 19 associated with political campaigns or any other U.S. 20 persons. You heard mention of that -- that Mr. Stone talked 21 22 to the Trump campaign. Of course, he's known Trump for 23 years. 24 talking to the Trump campaign. 25 Russia. And so there's nothing illegal, nothing wrong with But there's no talk about Russia is not present in this, and there's been no Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 7 of 179 308 1 findings, no discussion about Russia and the Trump campaign. 2 So when you look at the parameters, the parameters are 3 important because when you're going in to testify before the 4 House Committee, you want to know what the subject matter is. 5 And they've safely stated what the subject matter is. 6 to do with Russia. It has 7 And then you take a look at the next page. This is 8 Government Exhibit, I think it's going to be 10, and it's the 9 May 22nd, 2017 letter from Mr. Buschel again. And take a 10 look at the two paragraphs that are highlighted. 11 has no documents, records or electronically stored 12 information regardless of form, other than those widely 13 available that reasonably could lead to discovery of any 14 facts within the investigation's publicly announced 15 parameters." 16 "Mr. Stone These parameters created the structure, created the 17 backdrop for Mr. Stone's appearance. And the next paragraph, 18 "Let us reiterate, Mr. Stone has made it clear that he wants 19 to testify in publicly," publicly, and you'll learn later on 20 that this was not public. 21 was conducted at the committee's offices on the Hill. 22 not public. 23 if he's about to lie and to lie publicly like that, that 24 reflects the fact that his state of mind was not going in 25 with any idea of lying. This hearing before the committee But he wanted to testify publicly. It was Once again, Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 8 of 179 309 And he goes, again, it goes on, that he's going to 1 2 testify about incorrect assertions about Mr. Stone's 3 involvement with Russian interests and the Trump 2016 4 campaign. No Russian interests in Stone and the Trump 5 campaign. And the evidence is going to show that. 6 And so we move on from that letter to the response 7 from the committee, and this is that Mr. Stone, and you'll 8 see this is Defendant's Exhibit 175, "If Mr. Stone agrees to 9 this interview, there will not be a subpoena issued and 10 Mr. Stone may present an opening remark that must be less 11 than five minutes in length and under oath." 12 Then again, the next page, this is an exhibit that 13 has several pages, "Let me reiterate that Mr. Stone favors a 14 public hearing rather than a closed hearing." 15 a look at the last paragraph on this page. 16 Mr. Stone's lawyer, from Mr. Buschel. 17 assurance that the committee's questioning be limited solely 18 to Mr. Stone's activities in the 2016 United States 19 presidential campaign which the questioning members believe 20 in good faith relate to the matters of potential Russian 21 interference in election." 22 And then take And this is from "We request your So the scope of this is set forth in the letters 23 from counsel limiting, not limiting, but saying to the 24 committee, this is what you've told us. 25 ready to respond and answer those questions. And we're coming and And then, of Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 9 of 179 310 1 course, you see at the end of that, a letter confirming that 2 that's the subject matter of the investigation. 3 there's an answer from the fellow from the committee saying, 4 we greatly -- we want to get an answer about dates. 5 end up figuring out the dates. And then They do 6 And then there's another letter from the committee, 7 the members for the majority will be Representative Rubio and 8 Representative Gowdy. "If Mr. Stone agrees to this interview 9 there will not be a subpoena issued. And Mr. Stone may 10 present an opening remark that must be less than five minutes 11 in length and under oath." 12 Now, you're going to see a couple of things. One, 13 in the transcript, and you'll get to see the transcript, the 14 transcript is over a hundred pages. 15 hour committee hearing, not a hearing, a committee deposition 16 basically of Mr. Stone. 17 you'll get to see the whole transcript. 18 It's a two and a half He's there with his counsel. And And Mr. Stone also gave a statement that's longer 19 than the first five minutes that he gave, that they were 20 giving to him. 21 this next exhibit, which is Exhibit 9, he goes on and gives 22 his statement about what he knows, and looking at the next 23 page, page 9 of his statement, "I understand the committee's 24 interest in me. 25 to achieve my goals." So, he understands, and if you take a look at I use all the clauses of the First Amendment Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 10 of 179 311 That's an important concept here. 1 You know, the 2 First Amendment provides that the government cannot inhibit 3 free speech. 4 communications, none of which were illegal, are certainly 5 protected communications. And so, Mr. Stone's speech, Mr. Stone's And Mr. Stone says, and this is true and there's 6 7 nothing to hide from about it, "I am out there, I am 8 provocative and nonpartisan." 9 the president. Of course, he was supporting But supporting the president is not a crime 10 of any sort, of a candidate for presidency is not a crime of 11 any sort, "But let's be clear, I have no involvement in the 12 alleged activities that are within the publicly stated scope 13 of the committee's investigation." Once again, it's reaffirming the publicly stated 14 15 scope, and the publicly stated scope was what was Russia was 16 doing. 17 WikiLeaks doing, what was Julian Assange doing. 18 like -- and then he goes on to say, "I have every right to 19 express my views in the public square. 20 participate in matters of great public concern." 21 Nothing in that publicly stated scope says what was The mantra I actively And then he talks about something that is also at 22 the heart of his state of mind. "The mantra like repetition 23 of the claim by 17 intelligence agencies that Russians 24 colluded with the Trump campaign in the 2016 election does 25 not make it so." We are not here to try Russian collusion. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 11 of 179 312 1 There's been no finding of Russian collusion with regard to 2 Mr. Stone, no finding of Russian collusion with regard to the 3 campaign. 4 belief, his state of mind that the Russians did not collude 5 with him or with the Trump campaign. 6 into this And so what we're talking about here is his And that's how he goes So they have already stated the parameters, the 7 8 criteria, Russian collusion. 9 about Russian collusion. He says, I don't know anything And then you take a look at the next page on this, 10 11 it's in green, from Mr. Gowdy, Congressmen Gowdy. 12 to start with this, but it's not too late. 13 only looking at four things." Our committee is Now, two of those things are what I told you about 14 15 before: 16 States citizens. 17 investigative powers of the United States. 18 relate. 19 really relate to what we're talking about. 20 "I meant Russian activity and Russian activity with United The other two have to do with the And they don't There are four pillars, but only these two pillars So, throughout this interview by Congress, 21 Mr. Stone's state of mind is Russian activities. And do I 22 know anything about Russian activities. 23 the next page of this exhibit, Mr. Stone is asked a question 24 by Mr. Schiff, and this has to do -- and now Mr. Schiff does 25 say something about Julian Assange. And then you see at And Mr. Stone says, "I Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 12 of 179 313 1 have no answer as that's correct, not to my knowledge." 2 don't have any of these documents that Mr. Schiff asked him 3 about. 4 met again, the precise criteria of your request and we 5 complied. 6 be happy to go back and do it." But remember, look at the next sentence. I "I think we Again, if you have a more specific request, I'll So once again, he is focusing on the criteria. 7 8 goes into this, into this bare, naked. 9 there, but he has to answer the questions. He His lawyers are And he goes into 10 this using the criteria that they have set forth. So, his 11 answers reflect his state of mind with regard -- state of 12 mind created really by the committee itself and what its 13 criteria were. And so, there's more sections here that I can go 14 15 through with you. And if you take a look at the next page, 16 page 85, this is so important in terms of what we think the 17 evidence is going to show and why the evidence is going to 18 show that his state of mind undermines any argument that he 19 did this in a conscious, evil, purposeful way to mislead the 20 committee. 21 had set forth the criteria. He answered the questions according to what they And so look at the top of page 85 that you'll see 22 23 on your screen now. In connection with Russian collusion, 24 consistent with your exact and precise request, yes, he has 25 nothing. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 13 of 179 314 And then Mr. Schiff even uses the words. 1 2 Mr. Schiff: "Our request was as to facts within the 3 investigation's publicly announced parameters." You will not find in those publicly announced 4 5 parameters, the parameters that were mentioned in the 6 exchange of correspondence with Mr. Stone's counsel, the 7 parameters that were mentioned in the committee report, 8 ultimate committee report, the parameters that were mentioned 9 when they started the committee investigation. And Mr. Schiff says, "Our request was as to facts 10 11 in the investigation's publically announced parameters." 12 That is key to this. 13 parameters? 14 only did he understand what they were, his lawyers insisted 15 that if he was coming, the committee would stick to those 16 parameters and, indeed, they did. What were the publicly announced Did Mr. Stone understand what they were? Not And Mr. Stone goes on, and there's a part here that 17 18 is more amusing than it is informative. 19 about books. 20 you had with Guccifer 2 or the allegations surrounding it?" 21 And if you turn the page, "No, my book is about how proper 22 gentlemen should dress." 23 okay. 24 25 Mr. Schiff asked him "And does your book discuss the communications And Mr. Schiff says, "Oh, well, That's certainly not pertinent to our investigation." But nor pertinent to its investigation, according to its criteria, were the issues of Assange and WikiLeaks as Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 14 of 179 315 1 stated in their criteria. I understand that the government 2 has morphed this into something beyond what the criteria 3 were. 4 he was answering these questions. But what's critical here is what was in his mind when And if what was in his mind was being responsive to 5 6 the criteria, then he did not willfully, intentionally 7 mislead, consciously act with evil purpose in trying to 8 mislead the committee. 9 standard. They set the criteria. And he was responding to that. They set the And even once 10 again, Mr. Schiff, in the middle of this page that you have 11 in front of you now, Mr. Schiff: "The publicly announced 12 parameters of the investigation. So you have deleted nothing 13 from any of those accounts that are pertinent to?" 14 And Mr. Stone interrupts and says, "I have not." 15 And Mr. Schiff then says, "The publicly announced 16 17 18 19 parameters of the investigation." Mr. Stone: "Nothing pertaining to that list of items you just read." And it goes on, you'll have the whole transcript. 20 Indeed, you'll have more than the whole transcript. 21 get to hear the whole committee inquiry. 22 the audio of what was said. You will You'll get to hear 23 And I don't know how many of you have children, but 24 I think one of the things you learn from listening is how you 25 judge people and their honesty and their candor. And if you Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 15 of 179 316 1 listen and hear, then you will get a sense of Mr. Stone's 2 responsiveness throughout the committee investigation. 3 a three hour audio tape. 4 it's like audio books. 5 thing. 6 Not just plucking out, as the government has done, five 7 questions and answers and say that's it. 8 hundreds, you'll see the transcript. 9 There were hundreds of questions and answers. 10 But you will be there. It's And so, You know, you get to hear the whole And you get to hear the real voices of the people. There were You'll hear the audio. I think it's a total of 600. It's hard. There 11 were 14 members of the committee that were there in the 12 committee room where they had this hearing. 13 staff members of the committee that were there. 14 was there, Mr. Smith was there with him. There were eight Mr. Buschel 15 So all these people are crowded in a room. 16 hundred questions being asked, and the government has plucked 17 out half a dozen questions, five questions actually, I think, 18 to try to make a case that this was lying. 19 Six We'll talk about through the case what constitutes 20 lying, but what I'm trying to bring to your attention in 21 terms of what I think the evidence is going to show, that if 22 you have in your mind the picture of what the questions are 23 directed to because the questioner has set forth the 24 identifying factors of what they want, then that certainly 25 colors and tailors the way you're going to be answering. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 16 of 179 317 And when you go through that whole committee 1 2 hearing, both the transcript and the audios, you'll see that 3 Mr. Stone was addressing his answers in the context of what 4 the committee had said its criteria and its parameters are. And if you take a look at page 111 of this same 5 6 exhibit, we have to skip a few pages to get there, you will 7 see, when it comes up, yes, Mr. Schiff: 8 have no records whatsoever responsive to the committee 9 request. 10 11 "You said that you I just want to be absolutely clear, since you're under oath, that that is a true and accurate statement." Mr. Stone: "I believe the request said outside of 12 materials that can be found in the public domain. 13 that would have ended up in the public domain I wouldn't have 14 turned over. 15 anything that meets that criteria." 16 Anything But I don't have any specific recollection of Now, the public domain is interesting because I'm 17 going to show this to you in a few minutes, when the 18 committee does its report, this is September 26th, 2017, the 19 committee does a report in March 2018. 20 report of March 2018, they do not find that Mr. Stone knew 21 anything other than what was in the public arena. 22 And in the committee Now, the government has said something about 23 Mr. Stone being a braggart. And he did brag about his 24 ability to try to find out what was going on. 25 intermediary. But he had no He found out everything in the public domain. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 17 of 179 318 1 And if we take a look at the report, and you'll see the -- 2 part of the report, it's a long report, 250 page report. 3 by the way, it only mentions WikiLeaks a few times, I think 4 maybe 12 times in the whole report, 250 pages. 5 see that report, and let's put the report up, this is, first 6 of all in the report, it starts out with, and this is 7 introduction and overview, "The bipartisan parameters focus 8 the investigation in this report." 9 parameters I've been telling you about. And And when you And it goes to the same There's been no 10 change. They don't change their minds, they don't 11 recalculate, they don't recalibrate the inquiry. 12 They've said it in their final report in March 28. This is it. And then, of course, they have a section on Roger 13 14 Stone. 15 about Mr. Stone, remember this is March 2018, they've had the 16 Stone testimony for six months, and now they issue the 17 report. 18 Mr. Stone. 19 Mr. Stone sought to clarify something about Assange, and that 20 he subsequently identified the intermediary, that's 21 Mr. Credico, who, by the way, the evidence is going to show 22 was no intermediary, there was no go between, there was no 23 intermediary. 24 people were playing Mr. Stone. 25 And it's at page 75 of the report. And they talk They devote a paragraph, a few paragraphs to And the first one at paragraph 75, it says that Mr. Corsi was not an intermediary. And Mr. Stone took the bait. These And so that's why he Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 18 of 179 319 1 thought he had an intermediary. There was no intermediary. 2 There were no intermediaries. 3 show that. 4 confirm that he was not an intermediary. And the evidence is going to And I think when Mr. Credico testifies, he will And what is an intermediary? 5 What is a go-between? 6 An intermediary is someone between me and the other party. 7 And the other party, the way the government has constructed 8 this, was Julian Assange. 9 between Mr. Stone and Julian Assange. And there was no intermediary Does it play in politics? 10 11 newspaper articles and public? 12 things? 13 don't hide from those clips. 14 these things. 15 It's made up stuff. Does it play in terms of Did Mr. Stone say these You saw the clips that are going to be played. They occurred. We Mr. Stone said But he was playing others himself by creating for 16 himself that notion that he had some kind of direct contact, 17 which he later on renounced and publicly renounced it and 18 said that is not what I meant, that is not what was 19 happening. 20 Credico was a direct intermediary, a go-between between Stone 21 and Julian Assange, Mr. Credico will destroy that notion. 22 Mr. Corsi will destroy that notion. 23 And to the extent that anybody thinks that All these people were playing one another in terms 24 of their political machinations, trying to be important 25 people, trying to say that they had more than they really had Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 19 of 179 320 1 in terms of value and perhaps value to the committee, I mean, 2 value to the campaign. 3 But take a look at the next page in this report. 4 It's only a few paragraphs about Mr. Stone in this report. 5 Look at this, this is you. 6 the committee did not find any evidence contradicting Stone's 7 claim that any information disseminated via social media 8 regarding the timing of the release of the DNC data or others 9 was from publicly available sources." "Despite these multiple contacts 10 The government tries to claim some kind of 11 malignant connection between Mr. Stone, the campaign 12 committee, that somehow or another, there was inside 13 information, the information, this is the committee's 14 finding, the information that Stone had was publicly 15 available sources. 16 Was his ear to the ground better than others? 17 it was, because he pays attention to these things. 18 had no direct connection. 19 committee finding. Yes, But he And so, here's that ultimate 20 Now, one other thing about the committee. 21 happens if a congressional committee thinks that someone has 22 testified? 23 MR. ZELINSKY: Objection. 24 THE COURT: 25 (Bench conference.) Counsel approach the bench. What Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 20 of 179 321 THE COURT: 1 2 Go ahead and finish the sentence you were about to say. MR. ROGOW: 3 What happens if a congressional 4 committee thinks that someone has not testified honestly, 5 then they have the opportunity to send to the Department of 6 Justice a referral letter. 7 THE COURT: 8 MR. ZELINSKY: 9 That's all. And what is your objection? We've been over already, this is an attempt to backdoor the referral necessary for any kind of 10 prosecution in this case. 11 sending referrals is immaterial to why Mr. Stone lied on this 12 occasion. THE COURT: 13 The committee's sending or not They will have the entire transcript. 14 As I recall, there was some discussion of this at the 15 pretrial. 16 that you're arguing after that? 17 MR. ROGOW: 18 So what's the point? What is the next sentence That if they didn't send a referral letter, then they didn't think that Mr. Stone -THE COURT: 19 Doesn't matter what they think. The 20 jury think he lied. The referral -- no, they didn't have the 21 e-mails. 22 not relevant, that's a legal argument. 23 they didn't think it was material, as you have consistently 24 for the past 30 minutes. 25 state of mind and materiality. So how would they know that he lied or not? It's You get to argue that No one stopped you from arguing his But there is no need for a Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 21 of 179 322 1 congressional referral. And you do have the letter that the 2 deputy, the entire transcript was sent to the Department of 3 Justice. Does it matter at whose request? 4 MR. ROGOW: Well -- 5 THE COURT: Does it matter how this case came to be 6 prosecuted? We have already said prior to this trial it's 7 not an issue for the jury, we're not trying the investigation 8 or the investigators. 9 referral. There's no legal requirement for So I'm sustaining the objection. 10 MR. ROGOW: I understand. 11 (Open court.) 12 MR. ROGOW: So we simply come back to the 13 committee's finding in its report, in its March 2018 report. 14 And I think once again, the statement that was made that all 15 the words are there for you to see, I think is an important 16 statement, and I agree with it. 17 Mr. Stone's defense. 18 committee report and you see its findings with regard to him, 19 that is a very, very important fact in terms of their 20 decisions with regard to the Stone testimony. 21 And we agree with it in And I think that when you see this Now, so the first part of this case are the false 22 statements, is the committee testimony. I've taken you 23 through just a little bit of the testimony. 24 through what supports Mr. Stone's state of mind with regard 25 to that testimony. I've taken you And so, I need to move to the second leg. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 22 of 179 323 1 And it really is the second leg of the government's 2 prosecution of Mr. Stone, the Credico leg. You will, as has been promised, get to see 3 4 Mr. Credico, get to hear directly from Mr. Credico. 5 get to judge for yourself what kind of person Mr. Credico is 6 and whether or not he's telling the truth. 7 again, what you see is a situation in which Credico 8 admittedly, I think you will hear him admit that he was 9 playing himself up, being a bigger man than he really was. So we have some texts. 10 You will Because once In this relationship, and 11 it was described, I think accurately by the government. 12 a longtime relationship, and it is a strange relationship. 13 Mr. Credico, you will hear, is a liberal. 14 and Mr. Stone worked together in matters that seemed 15 different from Mr. Stone's usual, more conservative approach, 16 but they worked together on certain matters and struck up a 17 friendship and a relationship. 18 relationship that there are hundreds, maybe thousands of 19 texts. 20 It's And Mr. Credico A friendship and a And I think many of them are going to be in evidence. They're profane, they're rude, they're crude, 21 they're not nice, they're not easy to read. But they're not 22 evidence of any kind of a crime, but what they are evidence 23 of is that Mr. Credico was playing Mr. Stone. 24 these machinations that occur afterwards are an outgrowth of 25 Mr. Credico playing Mr. Stone. And so all of And they're also an outgrowth Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 23 of 179 324 1 of the fact that Mr. Credico, because he sees himself as a 2 liberal, did not want to be associated with Roger Stone. 3 thought that that would somehow or other compromise his 4 reputation in terms of being a liberal. He And you will hear from Mr. Credico himself that 5 6 this is part of what was in his mind in terms of his 7 relationship with Stone. 8 mean, the stuff, and you'll see many of these texts that they 9 said back and forth to one another is odious, just in terms 10 of the crudity of it. 11 talked to one another. Was he afraid of Stone? That shows that 13 whatever the Pantangeli, you heard about the Pantangeli 14 thing. 15 And Mr. Credico is an impressionist. 16 too. 17 people, including Pantangeli. 18 to the kind of tampering that the government is arguing 19 occurred between Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico. 20 I And yet, this is the way these two men And so, what does that show? 12 No. This was a continuing dialogue with these people. And you'll hear that He does impressions, he does impressions of various So all of this doesn't amount Mr. Credico did take the Fifth Amendment. By the 21 way, if you tell someone to take the Fifth Amendment, if 22 you're not a lawyer, then -- 23 MR. ZELINSKY: 24 THE COURT: 25 Objection. Let him finish the sentence, then I will hear your objection. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 24 of 179 325 1 MR. ROGOW: I couldn't hear, Your Honor. 2 THE COURT: I just wanted to hear your full 3 sentence before I ruled on whether it was objectionable. 4 MR. ROGOW: What I was going to say -- 5 THE COURT: Why don't you just come to the bench 6 and we'll do this quickly. 7 (Bench conference.) 8 THE COURT: What were you about to say? 9 MR. ROGOW: That if he tells Credico to take the 10 Fifth Amendment, that is not a crime in itself. MR. ZELINSKY: 11 Your Honor, whether or not he tells 12 Credico to take the Fifth Amendment, we have also, if there 13 is a corrupt intent, if it is simply asserting as a blanket 14 matter, telling someone to take the Fifth Amendment is not a 15 crime because you are not a lawyer is a misstatement of the 16 law. 17 pretrial proceedings. And it's already been considered by this Court in the THE COURT: 18 Well, a person to advise another person 19 to take the Fifth Amendment typically, of course, people are 20 obviously -- I don't think this was a question of advising 21 him. 22 that he didn't have corrupt intent that he's been charged 23 with, what he tells him to do. 24 25 I mean, I think you just simply say, without saying MR. ZELINSKY: Your Honor, the government's objection is to the statement Mr. Rogow just said he was Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 25 of 179 326 1 making, which was as a blanket matter, if you are not a 2 lawyer -- that is not the law. 3 government is making in this case. 4 Court -THE COURT: 5 6 9 That's not what this If you're trying to do it to obstruct, I mean, that's the question. 7 8 That is not the argument the MR. ROGOW: And so he can argue that, he can prove THE COURT: But you're not supposed to be arguing that. 10 right now or giving the jury legal instructions. You've gone 11 so far beyond simply saying what the evidence will show. 12 can't give them a legal argument. 13 evidence will show that he did it without corrupt intent. 14 But you can't talk about the law. 15 (Open court.) 16 MR. ROGOW: You can say that the So Mr. Stone told Mr. Credico, take the 17 Fifth Amendment, but he said it without corrupt intent. 18 That's what we think the evidence is going to show. 19 You Anyway, these texts, and there are so many of them, 20 that it shows a continuing, continuing relationship with 21 them, a relationship that continued, the evidence will show, 22 even after Mr. Credico suggested that somehow or other he was 23 being affected by Mr. Stone's statements to him. 24 will see evidence that post this period of time when there's 25 some conflict between them, on two or three occasions, And you Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 26 of 179 327 1 2 Mr. Credico was inviting Mr. Stone to be on his radio show. So I think when you look at all of this, it will 3 give you a picture of the relationship between Stone and 4 Credico and that there was no corrupt intent in Mr. Stone's 5 relationship or statement to Mr. Credico. 6 Now, there are a couple of other people that will 7 probably be involved in this case. 8 been mentioned. 9 already mentioned. Mr. Gates, he's already Mr. Bannon, already mentioned. Mr. Prince, We'll let the evidence reflect what those 10 relationships were and whether or not there were any corrupt 11 intent in it. 12 reflect, because those were people interested in Mr. Trump's 13 success in his candidacy, the only thing that those 14 connections, that those relationships, that those statements 15 to one another reflect is an effort, a joint effort to get 16 President Trump elected, then Mr. Trump, to get him elected 17 as president. 18 right that people have to do. The only thing that those relationships That is not a crime. That's a First Amendment 19 And so, as this case unfolds, you've heard the 20 government's opening statement, you've heard our opening 21 statement. 22 think the evidence will show, that there was no corrupt 23 intent in whatever was said or done by Mr. Stones. The essence of our opening statement is, as we 24 Thank you. 25 THE COURT: All right. Government can call its Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 27 of 179 328 1 first witness. MR. KRAVIS: 2 3 Thank you, Your Honor. The government calls Ms. Michelle Taylor. 4 THE DEPUTY CLERK: 5 MICHELLE TAYLOR, GOVERNMENT WITNESS, SWORN 6 DIRECT EXAMINATION 7 Please raise your right hand. BY MR. KRAVIS: 8 Q. Good afternoon, ma'am. 9 A. Hi. 10 Q. What is your name? 11 A. Michelle Taylor. 12 Q. How do you spell your last name? 13 A. T-A-Y-L-O-R. 14 Q. Ms. Taylor, for the record, on your way up to the 15 witness stand, I handed you a binder that contains some of 16 the documents that I'm going to ask you about during your 17 testimony. Have you got that in front of you? 18 A. Yes. 19 Q. And I've also passed up copies to the Court and to 20 defense counsel. Ms. Taylor, what do you do for a living? 21 A. I work at a consulting firm here in Washington, 24 Q. How long have you been a consultant? 25 A. Three months. 22 23 D.C. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 28 of 179 329 1 Q. And what did you do before you were a consultant? 2 A. I was an FBI agent. 3 Q. How long were you an FBI agent for? 4 A. Almost 14 years. 5 Q. And before the FBI? 6 A. I was an intelligence officer in the Army. 7 Q. Ms. Taylor, in the course of your work with the 8 FBI, was there a time in your career when you were assigned 9 to work on the investigation led by then Special Counsel 10 Robert Mueller? 11 A. Yes. 12 Q. And in particular in the course of your work on the 13 special counsel's investigation, did you participate in the 14 piece of the investigation that concerned the defendant in 15 this case, Roger Stone? 16 A. Yes, I did. 17 Q. What was your role on that piece of the special 18 counsel's investigation? 19 A. I was one of the case agents on the investigation 20 of Mr. Stone. 21 Q. And in the course of your work as one of the case 22 agents, did you review and become familiar with documents and 23 other evidence gathered in the course of that investigation? 24 A. I did. 25 Q. I'm going to ask you now about some of those Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 29 of 179 330 1 documents. 2 that we have with us today a demonstrative timeline of 3 events? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. And would showing that demonstrative assist you in 6 7 presenting your testimony to the jury today? A. Yes, it would. MR. KRAVIS: 8 9 But before I do that, Ms. Taylor, am I correct With the Court's permission I'd now like to publish Government's Exhibit 600, demonstrative only. 10 THE COURT: All right. 11 MR. ROGOW: No objection. 12 THE COURT: All right. 13 MR. KRAVIS: the easel. MR. KRAVIS: 22 Yes, Your Honor. The defense does have a copy of the timeline. THE COURT: 20 21 So you're going to put the documents on the screen from the -- do they have a copy of it? 18 19 I'm sorry, 200, and we'll put it on Thank you. THE COURT: 16 17 You can put it on the screen. 14 15 Any objection? Okay, all right. BY MR. KRAVIS: Q. Now, Ms. Taylor, in the course of your work on the 23 Stone investigation, did you look at some public statements 24 from the spring and summer of 2016 about the Democratic 25 National Committee and WikiLeaks? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 30 of 179 331 1 A. Yes, I did. 2 Q. What is the Democratic National Committee? 3 A. The Democratic National Committee is the governing 4 body for the Democratic party. 5 Q. And what is WikiLeaks? 6 A. WikiLeaks is an international organization that 7 publishes classified material and leaked material often from 8 anonymous sources. 9 10 Q. And in the spring of 2016, who was the head of WikiLeaks? 11 A. Julian Assange. 12 Q. And in the course of this investigation, did you 13 also look at the defendant, Roger Stone's public statements 14 and private communications on these topics from that same 15 time period? 16 A. Yes, I did. 17 Q. I'd like to ask you some questions now about those 18 topics. 19 Mr. Assange made some statements in an interview about having 20 some e-mails related to a presidential candidate? 21 22 A. Did there come a time in June of 2016 when Yes, he did. MR. KRAVIS: And with the Court's permission, I'd 23 like to publish now what's been marked and previously 24 admitted as Government's Exhibit Number 151. 25 THE COURT: Any objection? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 31 of 179 332 1 MR. ROGOW: No objection. 2 THE COURT: You can publish it however you plan to 3 publish it. (Government's Exhibit Number 151 was 4 5 6 7 played in open court.) BY MR. KRAVIS: Q. Now, the interview that we just saw, Government's 8 Exhibit 151, does that appear on the timeline that I have up 9 on the easel? 10 A. Yes, it's the top box on the left. 11 Q. A few days after that interview, did the Democratic 12 National Committee announce they it believed it had been 13 hacked? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. And I'd like to now show you and publish for the 16 jury what's been marked and previously admitted as 17 Government's Exhibit 161. 18 binder. MR. ROGOW: 19 20 This appears at tab 1 of your No objection. BY MR. KRAVIS: 21 Q. What is Government's Exhibit 161? 22 A. This is a newspaper article from "The Washington 23 24 25 Post" dated June 14th, 2016. Q. How much time passed between the interview with Mr. Assange that we just saw a moment ago and the publication Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 32 of 179 333 1 of this article, Government's Exhibit 161? 2 A. Two days. 3 Q. And does this article appear on the timeline? 4 A. Yes, it's the first box on the bottom. 5 Q. Can you read for us, please, the first paragraph of 6 7 Government's Exhibit 161? A. Sure. "Russian government hackers penetrated the 8 computer network of the Democratic National Committee and 9 gained access to the entire database of opposition research 10 on GOP's presidential candidate Donald Trump, according to 11 committee officials and security experts who responded to the 12 breach." 13 Q. On the day that this article was published, did 14 Mr. Stone have a phone call with anyone associated with the 15 Trump campaign? 16 A. Yes, he did. 17 Q. I'd like to now publish for the witness and the 18 jury what's been marked and previously admitted as 19 Government's Exhibit 148. 20 binder. 21 A. Okay. 22 Q. And I'd like to direct your attention to the three That appears at tab 2 of your 23 highlighted phone calls at the top of the first page of 24 Government's Exhibit 148. 25 A. Yes. Do you see them? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 33 of 179 334 Q. 1 THE COURT: 2 3 Now, the first of those three highlighted calls -Well, first can you just explain what Government's Exhibit 148 is? THE WITNESS: 4 Yes, this is a printout showing 5 telephone calls related to Mr. Stone's cell phone number. 6 BY MR. KRAVIS: Q. 7 And the first of the three highlighted calls, on 8 the exhibit you have in front of you, what is the listed 9 connection date and time of the call? 10 A. June 15th, 2016, 1:03 A.M. 11 Q. What time zone is 1:03 A.M. in? 12 A. It's UTC or universal coordinated time. 13 Q. Are you familiar with how to convert from universal 14 coordinated time to eastern standard time? A. 15 16 Yes. So, in June it would be subtracting four hours. Q. 17 So for the first highlighted call here, converting 18 the time of the call to eastern standard time, what would the 19 day and time be? A. The first call would be June 14th, 2016 at 9:03 Q. And that's the same date of the article we just 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. Now, do you see the column there that says "seizure 20 21 P.M. 22 23 saw? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 34 of 179 335 1 time"? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. What is seizure time on these records? 4 A. Seizure time is the cell phone tower making a 5 connection from one phone to another. 6 Q. And the next column, E.T., what is that? 7 A. Elapsed time, that's the duration of the call. 8 Q. So what is the difference between seizure time and 9 elapsed time on the records you have in front of you? 10 A. Eight seconds. 11 Q. I'm sorry. 12 13 14 What is the difference between what the two columns show? A. The elapsed time shows how long the call was. The seizure times just shows that a call was placed. 15 Q. So this first call, who was this call from? 16 A. Mr. Stone's cell phone. 17 Q. Who was the call to? 18 A. Donald Trump's home phone. 19 Q. And what was the seizure time of the call? 20 A. Eight seconds. 21 Q. And how about the elapsed time, like how long the 22 time lasted? 23 A. Zero seconds. 24 Q. I want to direct your attention now to the second 25 highlighted call. Again, converting this back to eastern Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 35 of 179 336 1 standard time, what was the date and time of this phone call? 2 A. This one would be June 14th, 2016 at 9:53 P.M. 3 Q. Who was this call from? 4 A. Mr. Trump's cell phone. 5 Q. And who was the call to? 6 A. To Mr. Stone's cell phone. 7 Q. What was the elapsed time of this phone call? 8 A. Two minutes and 25 seconds. 9 Q. And how much time passed between the first call we 10 saw and this call? 11 A. Fifty minutes. 12 Q. Directing your attention to the final highlighted 13 call at the top of page 1, converting again to eastern 14 standard time, what was the date and time of that phone call? 15 A. June 14th, 2016 at 9:56 P.M. 16 Q. And who was that call from? 17 A. Mr. Trump's cell phone to Mr. Stone's cell phone. 18 Q. And what was the elapsed time of that phone call? 19 A. One minute and 53 seconds. 20 Q. So all three of these calls were the same day as 21 the "Post" article we saw a moment ago? 22 A. Yes, they were. 23 Q. And are these calls reflected on the timeline we 24 25 have on the easel, Government's Exhibit 200? A. Yes, they're the third bullet, the first green box Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 36 of 179 337 1 2 there. Q. Now, I think we just saw in "The Washington Post" 3 article an announcement by the Democratic National Committee 4 of a hack on June 14th, 2016. Do I have that right? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. Did there come a time shortly after that 7 announcement when someone claimed credit for the hack on 8 line? 9 A. Yes. 10 Q. I want to direct your attention now to Government's 11 Exhibit 149. 12 jury, please. 15 And that appears at tab 3 of the binder. What is Government's Exhibit 149? 13 14 If I could publish that for the witness and the A. This is a Word Press web page and post that says it's written by Guccifer 2, dated June 15th, 2016. 16 Q. What is Word Press? 17 A. It's a site where you can publish free content. 18 People use it for blogs and things like that. 19 Q. And is that content publicly available? 20 A. Yes. 21 Q. And what is the date of this Word Press post by 22 Guccifer 2? 23 A. June 15th, 2016. 24 Q. And does this post appear on the timeline on the 25 easel? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 37 of 179 338 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. Can you please read for us the first two sentences 3 4 It's the second box on the bottom. of the Guccifer 2 Word Press post from June 15th, 2016? A. Sure. "Worldwide known cyber security company 5 CrowdStrike announced that the Democratic National Committee, 6 DNC, servers had been hacked by sophisticated hacker groups. 7 I'm very pleased the company appreciated my skills so highly, 8 but, in fact, it was easy, very easy." 9 Q. How much time passed between "The Washington Post" 10 article we saw reporting the Democratic National Committee's 11 announcement and this Word Press post? 12 A. Three days. 13 Q. Did this same author, Guccifer 2.0, post another 14 message about the hack a few weeks later? 15 A. He did. 16 Q. I'd like to publish now, please, for the witness 17 and the Court -- and the jury, excuse me, Government's 18 Exhibit 150, which appears at tab 4 of your binder. What is Government's Exhibit 150? 19 20 21 22 23 A. This is another Word Press post by Guccifer 2 dated June 30, 2016. Q. Does this second Word Press post by Guccifer 2 appear on the timeline? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. Where is it? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 38 of 179 339 1 A. It's the third box on the top. 2 Q. And how much time passed between the first Guccifer 3 2 post we saw and this one? 4 A. About two weeks. 5 Q. I want to direct your attention now to page 4 of 6 the exhibit. 7 "There were lots of questions"? Do you see the top of the page where it begins, 8 A. Yes. 9 Q. Can you read for us, please, the first four 10 paragraphs underneath that sentence in bold that begins, 11 "There were lots of questions"? 12 A. "I don't want to disappoint anyone, but none of the 13 candidates has my sympathies. 14 the closet, and I think people have a right to know the truth 15 about the politicians. 16 Each of them has skeletons in "As for me, I see great differences between Hillary 17 Clinton and Donald Trump. 18 She got all her money from political activities and lobbying. 19 She's a slave of moguls. 20 had to work hard and never risked everything she had. 21 words don't meet her actions. 22 turned the primary into farce. 23 Hillary seems so much false to me. She's bought and sold. She never Her And her collision with the DNC "Opposite to her, Donald Trump has earned his money 24 himself, and at least he is sincere in what he says. 25 position is straight and clear." His Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 39 of 179 340 1 Q. Now, I think you said a moment ago that this post 2 appeared on Word Press on June 30th, 2016. 3 right? Do I have that 4 A. Correct. 5 Q. On the same day that this post appeared, did 6 Mr. Stone have any phone calls with anyone associated with 7 the Trump campaign? 8 A. Yes, he did. 9 Q. I'd like to now publish once again for the witness 10 and the jury Government's Exhibit Number 148, the phone 11 records from tab 2. And Ms. Taylor, I think you said a moment ago that 12 13 these are phone records from Mr. Stone's phone number? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. I'd like to direct your attention, please, to the 16 second page of the exhibit to the highlighted calls there. 17 Do you see those calls? 18 A. Yes. 19 Q. Now, am I correct that the first seven of those 20 calls all have an elapsed time of ten seconds or less? 21 A. Yes, that's correct. 22 Q. I want to direct your attention now to the eighth 23 call, the bottom one. 24 standard time, what was the date and time of that phone call? 25 A. Converting that back for us to eastern So this would still be June 30, 2016, but the time Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 40 of 179 341 1 would be 2:20 P.M. 2 Q. And who was this call from? 3 A. Mr. Stone's cell phone. 4 Q. Who is the call to? 5 A. Mr. Trump's cell phone. 6 Q. And what is the elapsed time of that phone call? 7 A. Two minutes and 37 seconds. 8 Q. And does that call appear on the timeline on the 9 10 11 12 easel, Government's Exhibit 200? A. Yes, it's the second green box. It's on the bottom there. Q. Now, sometime after that second Guccifer 2.0 Word 13 Press post we just saw, did WikiLeaks make a public 14 announcement about the release of some Democratic National 15 Committee documents? 16 A. They did. 17 Q. I'd like to publish now for the witness and the 18 jury Government's Exhibit 152 which appears at tab 5 of the 19 binder. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 152? 20 21 22 23 24 25 A. This is a screen shot of a tweet from the at WikiLeaks' account, which is dated July 22, 2016. Q. Can you read for us, please, the text of this tweet from the at WikiLeaks' account on July 22nd, 2016? A. Sure. It says, "Release, 19,252 e-mails from the Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 41 of 179 342 1 2 3 U.S. Democratic National Committee. Q. WikiLeaks dot org." And I think you said that the date of this message, Government's Exhibit 152, was July 22nd, 2016? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. Was there another tweet published from a different 6 account about these same released e-mails on that same day? 7 A. Yes, there was. 8 Q. I'm going to direct your attention now, and I'd 9 like to publish for the witness and the jury, please, 10 Government's Exhibit 153, which appears at tab 6 of the 11 binder. What is Government's Exhibit 153? 12 13 A. This is a screen shot of a tweet from the at 14 Guccifer, underscore, 2 account, which re-tweeting the 15 WikiLeaks' tweet we just looked at. 16 Q. And how does the name of the account that this 17 tweet came from compare with the name of the author of those 18 Word Press posts we saw a few moments ago about the hack? 19 A. They are the same. 20 Q. And these two twitter messages from July 22nd, 21 2016, do they appear on the timeline on the easel? 22 A. Yes, they are the last two boxes on the chart. 23 Q. So, between June 14th, 2016 and July 22nd, 2016, 24 how many times did we see in these exhibits Guccifer 2.0 25 publish a statement about the DNC hack? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 42 of 179 343 1 A. Three times. 2 Q. I want to direct your attention now to an e-mail 3 from a few days later. 4 and the jury Government's Exhibit 35. 5 to the second board on the timeline. appears at tab 7 of the binder I handed you on your way up. What is Government's Exhibit 35? 8 9 10 And I'm going to move And just for record, Government's Exhibit 35 6 7 I'd like to publish for the witness A. This is an e-mail from Mr. Stone to Jerome Corsi, dated July 25th, 2016. 11 Q. And what did Mr. Stone write to Mr. Corsi on July 12 25th, 2016? 13 A. He wrote, "Get to Assange at Ecuadorian Embassy in 14 London and get the pending WikiLeaks' e-mails. 15 with foundation allegedly." 16 Q. They deal Now, how much time passed between the WikiLeaks' 17 tweet you saw a moment ago, Government's Exhibit 152, and 18 this e-mail from Mr. Stone to Mr. Corsi? 19 A. Three days. 20 Q. And does this e-mail appear on the timeline? 21 A. Yes, it's the first box on this one. 22 Q. Now, on that first sentence do you see a reference 23 to the Ecuadorian Embassy in London? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. Where was Mr. Assange living at this time? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 43 of 179 344 1 A. At the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. 2 Q. And the last clause, they deal with foundation 3 allegedly. Do you see that? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. Based on your work on this investigation, are you 6 familiar with a foundation associated with a 2016 7 presidential candidate? 8 A. Yes. 9 Q. Which foundation would that be? 10 A. The Clinton Foundation associated with Hillary 11 12 Clinton. Q. Now, around the same time of this e-mail, was 13 Mr. Stone communicating with people associated with the 14 presidential campaign of Donald Trump? 15 A. Yes, he was. 16 Q. I'd like to publish now for the witness and the 17 jury, please, Government's Exhibit 24, which appears at tab 8 18 of the binder in front of you. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 24? 19 20 21 A. This is an e-mail from Mr. Stone to Paul Manafort dated July 29th, 2016. 22 Q. Now, who is Paul Manafort? 23 A. At the time this was written, he was the campaign 24 25 chairmen for Mr. Trump's presidential campaign. Q. And what did Mr. Stone write to Chairman Manafort Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 44 of 179 345 1 2 3 4 on July 29th, 2016? A. 7:30. "I was on writing deadline and have radio until Will try you then. Q. Good shit happening. R." Now, how much time passed between when Mr. Stone 5 wrote to Mr. Corsi, "get to Assange," tab 7 in the binder, 6 and when Mr. Stone wrote to Mr. Manafort, "Good shit 7 happening"? 8 A. Four days. 9 Q. And this e-mail to Mr. Manafort, does this appear 10 11 on the timeline on the easel? A. Yes, this is the second bullet. 12 THE COURT: 13 MR. KRAVIS: 14 THE COURT: 15 What's the exhibit number? This is Exhibits 24. Thank you. BY MR. KRAVIS: 16 Q. Did Mr. Stone send Mr. Corsi another e-mail a few 17 days later? 18 A. He did. 19 Q. I'd like to publish now, please, for the witness 20 and the jury Government's Exhibit 36, which appears at tab 9 21 of the binder. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 36? 22 23 24 25 A. This is an e-mail from Mr. Stone to Mr. Corsi dated July 31st, 2016. Q. Now, how much time passed between Mr. Stone's Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 45 of 179 346 1 original e-mail to Mr. Corsi, "Get to Assange," and this 2 e-mail that you have in front of you, Exhibit 36? 3 A. Six days. 4 Q. Can you read for us, please, what Mr. Stone wrote 5 6 to Mr. Corsi on July 31st, 2016? A. "Malloch should see Assange. Malloch should find 7 Bernie Sanders' brother who called Bill a rapist. 8 for Trump. 9 proof of Bill getting kicked out." 10 11 Q. Turn him Malloch should find Eileen Wellstone or more Do you see the reference in all three of those sentences to Malloch? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. Who is Malloch? 14 A. That's a reference to Theodore Malloch, he's an 15 associate of Mr. Stone and Mr. Corsi's. 16 Q. And where was Mr. Malloch living at this time? 17 A. He was living in England. 18 Q. Now, before Mr. Stone sends this e-mail to 19 Mr. Corsi on July 31st, 2016, did he have a phone call with 20 anyone associated with the Trump campaign? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. I'd like to turn you back to Government's Exhibit 23 148, which is back to tab 2 of the binder. 24 these are Mr. Stone's phone records? 25 A. Yes, they are. Am I right that Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 46 of 179 347 1 Q. A portion of them. And I'd like to direct your 2 attention to the third page of the exhibit. Do you see the 3 three highlighted calls on the third page of the exhibit? 4 A. Yes. 5 Q. Starting with the first call, again converting back 6 from UTC to eastern standard time, what was the day and time 7 of this phone call? 8 9 A. This phone call would have been July 31st, 2016 at 9:15 P.M. 10 Q. Who was the phone call from? 11 A. Mr. Stone's cell phone. 12 Q. Who was the phone call to? 13 A. The cell phone for Rick Gates. 14 Q. And what is the elapsed time or duration of this 15 call? 16 A. Five minutes and 36 seconds. 17 Q. Turning your attention to the next highlighted 18 call, converting back to eastern time, what's the date and 19 time of the call? 20 A. July 31st, 2016 at 9:25 P.M. 21 Q. Who was this call from? 22 A. Mr. Stone's cell phone. 23 Q. Who was this call to? 24 A. Mr. Trump's cell phone. 25 Q. What is the elapsed time of this call? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 47 of 179 348 1 A. Five minutes and nine seconds. 2 Q. Now, directing your attention to the third 3 highlighted call, converting back to eastern time, what's the 4 date and time of this call? 5 A. July 31st, 2016 at 9:36 P.M. 6 Q. Now, the terminating number or the number that the 7 call was placed to, what number is that? 8 A. This shows a call placed to Mr. Stone's cell phone. 9 Q. And if you look in the column for originating 10 number, what do you get for this call? 11 A. Which is dash 1. 12 Q. In the course of your work on the investigation, 13 did you find another set of phone records that shows a phone 14 call to Mr. Stone's number, that number right around this 15 time? 16 A. Yes. 17 Q. I want to direct your attention to Government's 18 Exhibit 164, which appears at tab 10 of the binder. And 19 could I publish that, please, for the witness and the members 20 of the jury. I want to direct your attention, Ms. Taylor, to the 21 22 one call that is not blacked out here. 23 time of that call? What is the date and 24 A. July 31st, 2016 at 9:35 P.M. 25 Q. And so right around the time of that negative one Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 48 of 179 349 1 call we saw? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. So who is this call from? 4 A. This call is from Mr. Trump's home phone. 5 Q. And who is this call to? 6 A. Mr. Stone's cell phone. 7 Q. So all three of these phone calls that we just saw, 8 am I right that these were all placed on the same day as that 9 e-mail from Mr. Stone to Mr. Corsi dated July 31st, 2016? 10 A. That's correct. 11 Q. And all the calls were before the e-mail was sent, 12 the time? 13 A. Yes. 14 Q. Now, did Mr. Corsi send Mr. Stone an e-mail a few 15 days after these phone calls? 16 A. Yes, he did. 17 Q. Before I ask you that, the calls that we just saw, 18 are those calls depicted on the timeline, Government's 19 Exhibit 200? 20 A. 21 22 Yes, they are the second box on the top, July 31st, 2016. Q. All right. Now, back to that Corsi e-mail. Can I 23 publish, please, for the witness and the jury Government's 24 Exhibit 37, which appears at tab 11 of the binder. 25 Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 37? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 49 of 179 350 1 2 A. This is an e-mail from Mr. Corsi to Mr. Stone dated August 2nd, 2016. 3 Q. And what is the subject of this e-mail? 4 A. "In Italy." 5 Q. And can you read for us, please -- well, before I 6 ask you to read actually, how much time passed between that 7 first e-mail from Mr. Stone to Mr. Corsi, "Get to Assange," 8 and this e-mail from Mr. Corsi to Mr. Stone, "In Italy"? 9 A. A little over a week. 10 Q. And can you read for us, please, what Mr. Corsi 11 12 wrote to Mr. Stone on August 2nd, 2016? A. Yes. "With family. Twenty-fifth wedding 13 anniversary, August 9. 14 friend in embassy plans two more dumps." 15 Q. Return home August 12th. And let me just stop you right there. Word is Where it 16 says, "Word is friend in embassy plan two more dumps," where 17 was Mr. Assange, the head of WikiLeaks, living at this time? 18 A. In the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. 19 Q. Okay. 20 A. "One shortly after I'm back. Can you keep going, please? 21 Impact planned to be very damaging. 22 me on mid-August. 23 shine to surface victor for now. 24 artifact of rigged polling. 25 Q. Second in October. Signs are Fox will have More post-air shakeup underway. Expect Post DNC bump for HRC an Won't last." And let me just stop you there. Do you see the Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 50 of 179 351 1 letters in all caps, "HRC" in that last sentence you just 2 read? 3 A. Yes. 4 Q. Was there a person who was running for president in 5 2016 with those initials? 6 A. Yes. 7 Q. Who is that person? 8 A. Hillary Rodham Clinton. 9 Q. Can you continue reading, please? 10 A. "I expect presidential campaign to get serious 11 starting September. 12 more than Podesta to be exposed as in bed with enemy if they 13 are not ready to drop HRC." 14 15 Q. Still in preseason game. I'm going to stop you again there. Time to let Do you see the name Podesta in that sentence? 16 A. Yes. 17 Q. Who is Podesta? 18 A. John Podesta was Hillary Clinton's campaign 19 chairman. 20 Q. Thank you. If you'd keep reading, please. 21 A. "That appears to be the game hackers are now about. 22 Would not hurt to start suggesting HRC old, memory bad, had 23 stroke, neither he nor she well. 24 dump focus setting stage for foundation debacle. I 25 reorganized my financial services ops from here. Farrah I expect that much of next Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 51 of 179 352 1 having money problems. 2 from Indi when I get back. 3 it for now from Firenze. 4 Q. Will make move to raise funds for PAC I badly needed the rest. That's Jerry." And just directing your attention to that sentence 5 in the third paragraph from the bottom, the last sentence, "I 6 expect that much of next dump focus," do you see the word 7 "foundation" in there? 8 A. Yes. 9 Q. Was there a foundation associated with the 10 presidential candidate at this time? 11 A. Yes. 12 Q. What was that? 13 A. The Clinton Foundation associated with Hillary 14 15 Clinton. Q. Now, after Mr. Stone received this e-mail from 16 Mr. Corsi, did Mr. Stone again contact Mr. Manafort, the 17 Trump campaign chairman? 18 A. Yes, he did. 19 Q. I'd like to publish now for the witness and the 20 jury, please, Government's Exhibit 25, which appears at tab 21 12 of the binder. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 25? 22 23 24 25 A. This is an e-mail from Mr. Stone to Mr. Manafort dated August 3rd, 2016. Q. And what did Mr. Stone write to Chairman Manafort Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 52 of 179 353 1 2 3 4 on August 3rd, 2016? A. He writes in the subject line, "I have an idea." And in the body, "to save Trump's ass. Q. Call me, please. R." Now, how much time passed between when Mr. Corsi, 5 wrote to Mr. Stone, "Word is friend in embassy plans two more 6 dumps," and when Mr. Stone wrote to Mr. Manafort, "I have an 7 idea to save Trump's ass"? 8 A. It was the next day. 9 Q. After this e-mail to Mr. Manafort, did Mr. Stone 10 begin making public statements about his contact with 11 WikiLeaks? 12 A. Yes, he did. MR. KRAVIS: 13 And with the Court's permission I'd 14 like to publish for the jury, Government's Exhibit 142, the 15 August 8th, 2016 video. THE COURT: 16 17 All right. All of these exhibits have already been admitted in evidence. You can play it. 18 MR. KRAVIS: 19 (Government's Exhibit 142 was played in 20 21 22 23 Thank you, Your Honor. open court.) BY MR. KRAVIS: Q. Does that video from August 8, 2016 appear on the timeline, Government's Exhibit 200? 24 A. Yes, it's the last box on the top in yellow. 25 Q. And I forgot to ask, by the way, do the colors have Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 53 of 179 354 1 any significance here? 2 A. 3 statements. 4 Mr. Corsi. 5 Mr. Stone and campaign associates. 6 Q. The red ones are e-mails between Mr. Stone and And the green ones are communications between Thank you. And can we now please publish Government's Exhibit 143, the August 12th, 2016 video? (Government's Exhibit 143 was played in 9 10 The yellow ones are videos or Mr. Stone's MR. KRAVIS: 7 8 Yes. open court.) 11 MR. KRAVIS: 12 (Government's Exhibit 142 continued.) 13 14 15 And the next clip from the exhibit. BY MR. KRAVIS: Q. And, Ms. Taylor, that clip that we just saw, Government's Exhibit 143, where was that from? 16 A. Info Wars. 17 Q. And what is Info Wars? 18 A. It is a show hosted by Alex Jones. 19 Q. Can we publish now -- the clip we just saw a moment 20 ago, does that appear on the timeline on the easel? 21 A. 22 bottom. 23 Q. 24 25 Yes, it's the last box, the yellow box on the And can we publish now, please, Government's Exhibit 144, the August 16th, 2016 video? (Government's Exhibit No. 144 was played Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 54 of 179 355 1 2 3 4 in open court.) BY MR. KRAVIS: Q. Ms. Taylor, that clip we just saw, Government's Exhibit 144, where is that from? 5 A. Also Info Wars. 6 Q. Same show as the last exhibit? 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. And does that statement appear on the timeline, 9 I've now turned us to page 3? 10 A. Yes, it's the second box on the top, it's yellow. 11 Q. On the same day as that Info Wars appearance, did 12 Mr. Stone also make a statement on the Dana Loesch show? 13 A. Yes, he did. 14 Q. Can we publish, please, for the jury Government's 15 Exhibit 145. (Government's Exhibit 145 was played in 16 17 18 19 20 open court.) BY MR. KRAVIS: Q. timeline on the easel? 21 A. 22 yellow. 23 Q. 24 25 And that statement, does that appear on the Yes, it's the second box on the bottom, it's Two days later, did Mr. Stone make some statements on this topic on C-SPAN? A. Yes, he did. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 55 of 179 356 MR. KRAVIS: 1 May we publish for the jury, please, 2 Government's Exhibit 146, the August 18th, 2016 C-SPAN video? 3 (Government's Exhibit No. 146 was played in open court.) 4 5 BY MR. KRAVIS: Q. 6 7 Ms. Taylor, the clip that we just saw, Government's Exhibit 146, where is that clip from? 8 A. The show Newsmakers on C-SPAN. 9 Q. And does that statement appear on the timeline on 10 the easel? 11 A. Yes, it's the third box on the top, it's yellow. 12 Q. On the same day as that C-SPAN statement, did 13 Mr. Stone make more statements on this topic on a recorded 14 conference call? A. 15 MR. KRAVIS: 16 17 (Government's Exhibit Nod. 147 was played in open court.) 19 BY MR. KRAVIS: Q. 21 22 25 And that recorded statement, Ms. Taylor, does that appear on the timeline on the easel? 23 24 Can we publish for the jury now, please, the audio of Government's Exhibit Number 147. 18 20 Yes, he did. A. Yes, it's the third box on the bottom, the yellow Q. Now, in the exhibit that we just saw and heard, one. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 56 of 179 357 1 Exhibits 142 through 147, between August 8th, 2016 and August 2 18th, 2016, how many times did Mr. Stone mention a channel or 3 intermediary or mutual friend communicating with Assange? 4 A. Six times. 5 Q. During this time period, did Mr. Stone receive some 6 more written communications from Mr. Corsi? 7 A. He did. 8 Q. If I could publish for the witness and jury, 9 10 please, Government's Exhibit 38, which appears at tab 13 of the binder in front of you. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 38? 11 A. 12 13 Mr. Stone and Mr. Corsi. Q. 14 15 This is -- this shows text messages between And what is the date and time of the first of these messages? 16 A. August 13th, 2016 at 2:19 P.M. 17 Q. Who is that message from? 18 A. Mr. Corsi. 19 Q. Who is the message to? 20 A. Mr. Stone. 21 Q. And what does Mr. Corsi write to Mr. Stone on 22 August 13th, 2016? A. 23 24 25 can. "I'm now back from Italy. Give me a call when you J." Q. And how about the second message, what is the date Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 57 of 179 358 1 and time of that message? 2 A. August 15th, 2016, and -- 3 Q. Go ahead. 4 A. Oh, it's 12:16 P.M., UTC, so it's converted to 5 eastern, that would be 8:16 A.M. 6 Q. And who is that message from? 7 A. Mr. Corsi. 8 Q. Who is that message to? 9 A. Mr. Stone. 10 Q. What does Mr. Corsi write? 11 A. He says, "Give me a call today if you can. Despite 12 MSM drum roll that HRC is already elected, it's not over yet. 13 More to come than anyone realizes. 14 until after Labor Day. Won't really get started I'm in NYC this week. J." 15 Q. And are you familiar with acronym MSM? 16 A. Yes. 17 Q. What does that stand for? 18 A. Mainstream media. 19 Q. And again, you see the letters "HRC and HRC is 20 already elected" in that second sentence? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. Who was the presidential candidate on 2016 with the 23 initials HRC? 24 A. Hillary Rodham Clinton. 25 Q. Now, on the date of this second text message, did Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 58 of 179 359 1 Mr. Corsi also send an e-mail to Mr. Stone? 2 A. Yes, he did. 3 Q. I want to publish, please, for the jury and the 4 witness Government's Exhibit 39, which appears at tab 14 of 5 the binder. What is Government's Exhibit Number 39? 6 A. 7 8 August 15th, 2016. Q. 9 10 This is an e-mail from Mr. Corsi to Mr. Stone dated What did Mr. Corsi -- so it's the same date as the last text message we just saw? 11 A. Correct. 12 Q. What did Mr. Corsi write to Mr. Stone on August 13 15th, 2016? 14 A. He writes, "Give me a call today if you can. 15 Despite MSM drum roll that HRC is already elected, it's not 16 over yet. 17 get started until after Labor Day. 18 J." 19 Q. More to come than anyone realizes. Won't really I'm in NYC this week. And the text messages and the e-mail we just saw 20 from Mr. Corsi to Mr. Stone, do those appear on the timeline 21 on the easel? 22 A. 23 yellow boxes. 24 Q. 25 Yes, they're on the far left, right before the Now, after Mr. Stone received this e-mail to Mr. Corsi, did he send an e-mail, this e-mail from Mr. Corsi, Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 59 of 179 360 1 did he send an e-mail to someone named Steve Bannon? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. I want to direct your attention, and I'd like to 4 publish for the jury and the witness, Government's Exhibit 5 28, which appears at tab 15 of your binder. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 28? 6 7 A. 8 Steve Bannon. 9 Q. Who is Steve Bannon? 10 A. At the time of this e-mail, Mr. Bannon had just 11 12 This is an e-mail exchange between Mr. Stone and come on the Trump campaign as the campaign CEO. Q. And how much time passed between the e-mail we just 13 saw from Mr. Corsi to Mr. Stone and this e-mail exchange 14 between Mr. Stone and Mr. Bannon? 15 A. Three days. 16 Q. Starting with the bottom with Mr. Stone's e-mail at 17 1:02 A.M., can you read this exchange for us, please? 18 A. 19 running out. 20 how to win this, but it ain't pretty. 21 been good at playing the new media. 22 when you can talk." 23 ASAP." 24 25 Q. Mr. Stone writes, "Trump can still win, but time is Early voting begins in six weeks. I do know Campaign has never Lots to do. Let me know And Mr. Bannon responds, "Let's talk Now, shortly after these two e-mail exchanges, did Mr. Stone exchange some text messages about Assange with a Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 60 of 179 361 1 person named Randy Credico? 2 A. Yes, he did. 3 Q. And just before we get there, the e-mail exchange 4 between Mr. Stone and Mr. Bannon, is that on the timeline on 5 the easel? 6 A. Yes, it's the green box on the bottom. 7 Q. Now, I'd like to direct your attention to and 8 publish, please, for the jury and the witness, Government's 9 Exhibit Number 189, which appears at tab 16 of the binder. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 189? 10 11 12 13 14 A. This is a series of text messages between Mr. Stone and Randy Credico. Q. Just to orient us here, who is sending the text that appear on the left in gray? 15 A. Mr. Credico. 16 Q. And who is sending the text on the right that 17 appear in green? 18 A. Mr. Stone. 19 Q. Now, I want to direct your attention, please, to 20 the message from Mr. Credico at 7:52 P.M. on August 19th, 21 2016. Do you see that one? 22 A. Yes. 23 Q. Can you read that for us, please? 24 A. "You okay with that? 25 I'm going to have Julian Assange on my show next Thursday." Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 61 of 179 362 1 Q. And the next message down, please? 2 A. "Kunstler's wife is his lawyer or at least one of 3 them." Q. 4 5 Now, I think you may have mentioned this a moment ago, but who is Julian Assange? 6 A. Julian Assange is the head of WikiLeaks. 7 Q. And how about Kunstler wife, do you know who that A. Kunstler wife is a reference to Margaret Kunstler, 8 is? 9 10 a friend of Mr. Credico. Q. 11 Now, how much time passed between Mr. Stone's 12 statement in Broward County, the very first of the videos we 13 saw, Exhibit 142, and this text message? 14 15 16 17 A. A month. Q. Take another look back at Exhibit 142 at the message from Broward County. MR. KRAVIS: Can we go back to the second page, please? 20 THE WITNESS: 21 This is August 19th, so 11 days. 22 BY MR. KRAVIS: 23 It was the next day. 18 19 Oh, wait, no, I'm sorry. Q. Okay. Oh, Broward County was August 8th. Sorry. These text messages from Mr. Credico to 24 Mr. Stone were approximately 11 days after the statement in 25 Broward County? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 62 of 179 363 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. Now, in the course of your work on this 3 investigation, did you review text messages and e-mails 4 between Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. Before this message that we're looking at now, 7 first page of Government's Exhibit 189, did you find any text 8 messages or e-mails between Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico that 9 mentioned Julian Assange or WikiLeaks? 10 A. Before this one? No. 11 Q. So this is the first one? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. Before the date of this message, August 19th, 2016, 14 how many e-mails did you find between Mr. Stone and Mr. Corsi 15 that mention Assange or WikiLeaks? 16 A. Four. 17 Q. I want to direct your attention to the text on the 18 next page of this exhibit, to a text on the next page of this 19 exhibit -THE COURT: 20 Mr. Kravis, let me just stop you for a 21 second. I have promised the jurors midafternoon breaks. I 22 know you're trying to cover a lot of ground. 23 sure that there's going to be any particularly good logical 24 breaking point as you march through this. 25 one, could you let me know probably in the text ten minutes But I'm not So if this isn't Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 63 of 179 364 1 when we have come to one? 2 MR. KRAVIS: 3 THE COURT: 4 MR. KRAVIS: 5 THE COURT: 6 9 Okay, let's do that, then. Okay. Does that work for the jurors? All right, thank you. MR. KRAVIS: 7 8 I've got one in like five minutes. Okay. BY MR. KRAVIS: Q. On the second page of this exhibit, the text 10 message from Mr. Credico at 3:17 P.M. on August 20th, 2016, 11 do you see that? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. What does Mr. Credico write to Mr. Stone on August 14 20th, 2016 at 3:17 P.M.? 15 A. "I have Julian Assange either Tuesday or Thursday." 16 Q. And does that, the text message you read from the 17 first page -- the text message you read from the first page, 18 is that on the timeline? 19 A. Yes. 20 Q. And where is it? 21 A. It's the purple box on the top. 22 Q. Now, and this message is from the next day, the day 23 after that one? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. Moving your attention a little further down the Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 64 of 179 365 1 page, directing your attention to the message at the bottom 2 of this page of the exhibit, the one from Mr. Credico at 6:32 3 P.M., can you read that one for us, please? 4 A. Yes. Mr. Credico says, "I have to know now. 5 you on Tuesday or not because I have Julian Assange on 6 Thursday so I'm completely tied up on that day." 7 8 Q. Okay. Are Do you see the reference that Mr. Credico makes there to having Assange on his show on a Thursday? 9 A. Yes. 10 Q. Did Mr. Credico send Mr. Stone a text message the 11 following Friday, so the next day? 12 A. Yes, he did. 13 Q. I'd like to direct your attention now to page 4 of 14 this exhibit. 15 August 25th, 2016 at 8:17 A.M., can you read the exchange for 16 us, please? 17 A. Friday, August 26th, 2016? 18 Q. Yes, please. 19 A. Mr. Credico says, "Julian Assange talk about you 20 last night." 21 Q. And continuing to the next page? 22 A. Mr. Credico says, "He didn't say anything bad, we And starting with the message on Friday, Mr. Stone responded, "What did he say?" 23 were talking about how the press is trying to make it look 24 like you and he are in cahoots. 25 the podcast. I'll send you the link to I told him that I worked with you before. I Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 65 of 179 366 1 said he has a wide range of support from Cornell West to 2 Roger Stone. 3 give to Julian." 4 5 Q. In fact Cornell West texted me a message to And this text message string from August 26th, 2016, does this appear on the timeline on the easel? 6 A. Yes, it's the last box. 7 Q. Finally, I want to direct your attention to one 8 more text message. If you could look at page 6 of the 9 exhibit, the bottom of the page, please, do you see the 10 message from Mr. Credico to Mr. Stone at 6:07 P.M. on August 11 27, 2016? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. What does Mr. Credico write to Mr. Stone on August 14 15 27th, 2016 at 6:07 P.M.? A. "Julian Assange has kryptonite on Hillary." MR. KRAVIS: 16 Your Honor, I was going to move to 17 another section now, so I think this would be a good time for 18 that break. THE COURT: 19 All right. We're going to take a 20 midafternoon break now. You have approximately ten minutes. 21 Please leave your notebooks on your chairs. 22 discuss the case with anyone including among yourselves. 23 We're just at the beginning of receiving evidence in the 24 case. 25 quarter of four. Please do not So, the parties will be excused and we'll resume at Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 66 of 179 367 1 (Jury out.) 2 (A brief recess was taken.) 3 THE COURT: How long do you expect this witness's 4 testimony to be in total, just your piece before we get to 5 the cross? 6 MR. KRAVIS: 7 THE COURT: I expect about three hours total. Okay. And I may break earlier rather 8 than later today because the jury had to report early this 9 morning. They have yet really to have the opportunity to 10 inform their families and employers that they're going to be 11 here for a while and arrange their affairs. 12 we'll go until about 4:30, possibly, you know, 4:45 after the 13 break to try to come to a logical point at that point so -- 14 MR. KRAVIS: I will. 15 (A brief recess was taken.) 16 (Jury present.) 17 THE COURT: So I think maybe Thank, Your Honor. All right. Good afternoon, we're going 18 to resume with the testimony of this witness. 19 you've been here since early this morning, and a number of 20 you may need to make phone calls or communicate with people 21 about where you are about to be for the next several days. 22 So, we're only going to go for about another 45 minutes or 23 so, and then we'll break for the evening. 24 25 MR. KRAVIS: I know that You can resume. Thank you, Your Honor. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 67 of 179 368 1 2 3 DIRECT EXAMINATION (Cont'd) BY MR. KRAVIS: Q. Ms. Taylor, I think, before the break we were 4 looking at some text message exchanges between Mr. Credico 5 and Mr. Stone. Do you remember those? 6 A. Yes. 7 Q. I'd like to fast-forward now to September of 2016. 8 Did there come a time in September 2016 when Mr. Stone sent 9 Mr. Credico a text message asking him to do something with 10 respect to Mr. Assange? 11 A. Yes. 12 Q. I want to publish now please for the jury and the 13 witness Government's Exhibit 48 which appears at Tab 17 of 14 the binder. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 48? 15 16 17 18 19 A. This is a series of text message exchanges between Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico. Q. And can you just remind us please, the gray messages, the ones on the left are from? 20 A. Mr. Credico. 21 Q. And the green messages on the right are from? 22 A. Mr. Stone. 23 Q. Now, do you see the message exchange that begins on 24 25 the morning of Sunday, September 18, 2016? A. Yes. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 68 of 179 369 1 Q. Can you start there and read down for us please? 2 A. Yes. Mr. Credico says, "Making progress on the 3 interview across the sea." 4 e-mailing you a request to pass on to Assange on another 5 matter." Q. 6 7 Mr. Stone responds, "I'm Mr. Credico writes, "Okay." And did Mr. Stone in fact e-mail Mr. Credico such a request? 8 A. Yes, he did. 9 Q. I want to ask you about that e-mail. But first, 10 did Mr. Credico send Mr. Stone another text message about 11 Mr. Assange later on this same day? 12 A. Yes, he does. 13 Q. I want to direct your attention to the text message 14 at the bottom of the page from September 18, 2016 at 3:28 15 P.M. What does Mr. Credico write to Mr. Stone at that time? A. 16 He writes, "Just remember, do not name me as your 17 connection to Assange. 18 to." You had one before that you referred 19 Q. Does Mr. Stone respond to that message on that day? 20 A. No, he does not. 21 Q. And the text messages we just saw, do those appear 22 on the timeline on the easel? 23 A. Yes. 24 Q. Where are they? 25 A. They are right there where I'm pointing. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 69 of 179 370 1 2 Q. Now, I think you said a moment ago that Mr. Stone did in fact e-mail Mr. Credico a request? 3 A. Yes. 4 Q. I'd like to publish please for the witness and the 5 jury Government's Exhibit 50 which appears at Tab 18 of the 6 binder. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 50? 7 8 9 10 11 A. This is an e-mail from Mr. Stone to Mr. Credico dated September 18, 2016, and it's an e-mail that includes an attachment that's called Clinton in Libya final dot PDF. Q. And so, just comparing this with the text message 12 exchange we saw a moment ago, so this e-mail was sent on the 13 same day as that text message exchange? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. I want to direct your attention to the last 16 sentence on this first page of the exhibit. 17 there. It's in bold Oh, by the way, who is this message from? 18 A. Mr. Stone. 19 Q. Who is the message to? 20 A. Mr. Credico. 21 Q. And can you read for us please what Mr. Stone 22 23 writes in this e-mail to Mr. Credico on September 18, 2016? A. Mr. Stone writes, "Please ask Assange for any state 24 or H.R.C. e-mail from August 10 to August 30, particularly on 25 August 20, 2011, that mentioned Dr. R.K. Paul or confirm this Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 70 of 179 371 1 narrative." 2 Q. 3 4 Now, without reading the verbatim the whole text of the e-mail, what is this e-mail about? A. The e-mail says that this individual, Dr. Paul, 5 undertook a peace mission in Libya in conjunction with the 6 State Department at the time Hillary Clinton was the 7 Secretary of State and that, in spite of that, she commenced 8 with a campaign and Gaddafi was killed. 9 10 Q. And are there attachments to this email from Mr. Stone to Mr. Credico on September 18th? 11 A. Yes. 12 Q. And are they on the same subject? 13 A. Yes. 14 Q. And does this e-mail appear on the timeline? 15 A. Yes. 16 Q. Thank you. It is right here on the bottom. Does Mr. Credico respond to this e-mail? 17 18 A. Yes. 19 Q. I'm going to ask to publish for the jury and the 20 witness please Government's Exhibit 51 which appears at Tab 21 19 of the binder in front of you. 22 attention first to -- okay, what is Government's Exhibit 51? 23 A. And I want to direct your This is an e-mail exchange between Mr. Stone and 24 Mr. Credico where they're going back and forth. The messages 25 start on September 18th, the one I just read, and go to Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 71 of 179 372 1 2 September 19, 2016. Q. Starting on the second page of the exhibit, 3 Government's Exhibit 51, the e-mail on this page, the 4 September 18, 2016 e-mail from Mr. Stone, am I right that 5 this is the e-mail we just saw a moment ago, Government's 6 Exhibit 50? 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. Okay, going back to the first page of the exhibit, 9 10 11 can you read up in the text message exchange, or the e-mail exchange rather, from there? A. Yes. Mr. Credico responds to that e-mail and says, 12 "Can we talk about this tomorrow? 13 funny, the woman who wrote the book on the Liberian new 14 president is on my show Tuesday, have been presenting 15 something at the UN." 16 I conking out early. It's And Mr. Credico responds again, "Who can I have on 17 my show tomorrow to talk about this?" And Mr. Stone 18 responds, "No one, unless I can get some kind of confirmation 19 from Assange." 20 on the WikiLeaks site if they exist." 21 do we assume WikiLeaks has released everything they have?" 22 Mr. Credico writes, "Roger, I think he's on my show tomorrow. 23 So just give me a little bit of time." 24 writes again, "Do you think that this story is on the level?" 25 Mr. Stone responds, "100 percent." Mr. Credico writes, "Those e-mails would be Mr. Stone writes, "Why And Mr. Credico And Mr. Credico responds, Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 72 of 179 373 1 "That batch probably coming out in the next drop. 2 ask them favors every other day. 3 They have major legal headaches right now. Q. 4 I can't I asked one of his lawyers. Relax." And that last e-mail that you just read from 5 Mr. Credico to Mr. Stone, "That batch probably coming out," 6 what was the date of that e-mail? 7 A. September 19, 2016. 8 Q. On that same day, September 19, 2016, did Mr. Stone 9 send Mr. Credico a text about the same subject? 10 A. Yes, he did. 11 Q. I would like to publish please for the jury and the 12 witness Government's Exhibit 190 which appears at Tab 20 of 13 the binder. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 190? 14 A. 15 16 This is a set of text messages between Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico. Q. 17 I want to direct your attention to the very first 18 text message on the very first page of this exhibit, the one 19 from Mr. Stone to Mr. Credico on September 19, 2016 at 9:51 20 A.M. Are you with me? 21 A. Yes. 22 Q. What does Mr. Stone write to Mr. Credico on that 23 date? 24 A. He writes, "Pass my message re Libya to Assange." 25 Q. And does this text message appear on the timeline Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 73 of 179 374 1 on the easel? 2 A. Yes, it's right here, the third data point. 3 Q. Did Mr. Stone send Mr. Credico -- or, I'm sorry, 4 did Mr. Credico and Mr. Stone exchange another set of e-mails 5 about this topic on the same day we've been looking at, 6 September 19, 2016? 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. I want to direct your attention to and publish 9 please for the jury and the witness Government's Exhibit 53 10 which appears at Tab 21 of the binder. 11 Exhibit 53? 12 A. 13 14 15 What is Government's This is an e-mail exchange between Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico dated September 19, 2016. Q. So the same day as the text message we just saw, "Pass my message re Libya to Assange"? 16 A. Yes. 17 Q. I want to direct your attention to the e-mail from 18 Mr. Credico in the middle of this exchange, the one that 19 begins, "Frank sent me the talking points." Do you see that? 20 A. Yes. 21 Q. Can you read for us please the last sentence of 22 that e-mail that Mr. Credico wrote to Mr. Stone on September 23 19, 2016? 24 25 A. e-mails. Yes. "As for my friend J.A., they do not edit out They put out entire blocks, so it maintains Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 74 of 179 375 1 integrity, and it doesn't look like they're picking and 2 choosing." Q. 3 4 Okay, do you see the initials J.A. in that sentence? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. Who was the head of WikiLeaks at this time? 7 A. Julian Assange. 8 Q. Can you read the exchange up for us from there? 9 A. Yes. Mr. Stone responds, "So, does any block 10 contain information about Rev. R.K. Paul in Libya?" 11 Mr. Credico responds, "Working on it." Q. 12 13 And And did Mr. Credico and Mr. Stone e-mail about this subject some more the next day? 14 A. Yes. 15 Q. So, I want to direct, publish please for the jury 16 and the witness Government's Exhibit 54 which appears at Tab 17 22 of the binder. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 54? 18 A. 19 20 This is an e-mail from Mr. Credico to Mr. Stone dated September 20, 2016. Q. 21 Now, the e-mail at the bottom of this thread, the 22 one that appears on the first page from Mr. Stone on 23 September 18th at 10:37 P.M., am I right that that's the very 24 first e-mail we saw from September 18th, a couple of exhibits 25 ago? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 75 of 179 376 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. And how does Mr. Credico respond to that e-mail on 3 September 20th at 1:09 P.M.? 4 A. He writes, "I have someone on this today." 5 Q. And did Mr. Credico, in fact, forward Mr. Stone's 6 request to someone else? 7 A. Yes, he did. 8 Q. I'd like to publish now please for the witness and 9 10 11 for the jury Government's Exhibit 55 which appears at Tab 23 of the binder. A. What is Government's Exhibit 55? This is an e-mail from Mr. Credico to Margaret 12 Ratner Kunstler, blind copying Mr. Stone, dated September 20, 13 2016. 14 Q. And what is blind copying? 15 A. When you put someone in the blind copy line of an 16 e-mail, the person that it's to doesn't see all of those 17 recipients. 18 Q. And who is Margaret Ratner Kunstler? 19 A. A friend of Mr. Credico's. 20 Q. And does this exhibit, Government's Exhibit 55, 21 appear on the timeline on the easel? 22 A. Yes, it does. 23 Q. Where is it? 24 A. It is right here, the third box on the top. 25 Q. And what does Mr. Credico write to Ms. Kunstler, Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 76 of 179 377 1 2 bcc-ing Mr. Stone, on September 20, 2016? A. He writes, "Can you find out from J.A. if there is 3 a state or H.R.C. e-mail from August 10 to August 30, 4 particularly on August 20, 2011, that mentioned Dr. R.K. Paul 5 or confirmed this narrative." 6 Q. 7 below that? 8 A. 9 10 11 And what is the text on the rest of the exhibit It's the same text from the August, or the e-mail, the original e-mail from the 18th. Q. The original e-mail that Mr. Stone sent to Mr. Credico on September 18th? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. Did Mr. Stone respond to this e-mail on which he is 14 blind copied? 15 A. Yes, he did. 16 Q. I'd like to publish now please for the jury and the 17 witness Government's Exhibit 56 which appears at Tab 24 of 18 the binder. What is Government's Exhibit 56? 19 20 21 22 A. This is an e-mail exchange between Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico from September 20, 2016. Q. Now, the e-mail in the middle, that begins in the 23 middle of the first page, the one from Mr. Credico on 24 September 20, 2016 at 9:13 A.M., am I correct that this is 25 the same e-mail we just saw a moment ago, the one that Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 77 of 179 378 1 Mr. Credico sends to Ms. Kunstler, blind copying Mr. Stone? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. Moving further up the chain, how does Mr. Stone 4 respond to that e-mail? 5 A. He responds, "TYPO, it's Rev. K.A. Paul. 6 Q. And how does Mr. Credico reply? 7 A. "Not my fault." 8 Q. And does this exchange appear on the timeline? 9 A. Yes. 10 Q. Where is it? 11 A. It's here, the third box on the bottom, TYPO. 12 Q. And did Mr. Credico and Mr. Stone exchange an 13 R." e-mail about this again the next day? 14 A. Yes, they did. 15 Q. I'm going to, I'd like to publish please for the 16 jury and the witness Government's Exhibit 57 which appears at 17 Tab 25 of the binder. 18 19 20 21 22 A. What is Government's Exhibit 57? This is an e-mail from Mr. Credico to Mr. Stone dated September 21, 2016. Q. And what does Mr. Credico write to Mr. Stone on September 21, 2016? A. The subject is WikiLeaks, and then he writes, 23 "Nothing was edited from whatever don't they put in and 24 there's tens of thousands of e-mails, and you have to find 25 someone that can access the site, download it, and look Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 78 of 179 379 1 through all 20, 30,000 e-mails." 2 Q. And does this e-mail appear on the timeline? 3 A. Yes. 4 Q. Where is it? 5 A. It is on the top right here. 6 Q. And did Mr. Stone follow up again by text message a 7 few days after that? 8 A. Yes, he did. 9 Q. So, I'll ask to publish for the jury and the 10 witness please Government's Exhibit 190 which is back at Tab 11 20 of the binder. 12 to the message exchange from September 25, 2016. 13 that there? 14 A. I'm getting there. 15 Q. Can you read for us please the text message And I would like to direct your attention Do you see Yes. 16 exchange between Mr. Credico and Mr. Stone from September 25, 17 2016? 18 A. Yes. Mr. Credico writes, "I have Jill Stein on my 19 special Tuesday post-debate coverage. 20 first hour for 10 minutes and you at some point. 21 David I think as well. 22 And Mr. Stone responds, "Get me docs on R.A. Paul." 23 Mr. Credico responds, "Will be seeing the man on Tuesday, 24 actually on Wednesday night. 25 Q. I need Johnson on Have Larry I'm flying to London after show." It's part of the agenda." So, between that first e-mail on September 18, Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 79 of 179 380 1 2016, or that first text message rather on September 18, 2 2016, and this text message exchange on September 25, 2016, 3 how many e-mails and text messages did we just see Mr. Stone 4 send Mr. Credico about this request to pass on to Assange? 5 6 7 A. Mr. Stone sent six messages about passing a message. Q. Now, on this e-mail exchange or text message 8 exchange from September 25th, do you see where Mr. Credico 9 writes, "I'm flying to London after show"? 10 A. Yes. 11 Q. Where was Julian Assange, the head of WikiLeaks, 12 living at that time? 13 A. In the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. 14 Q. And did Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico e-mail again a 15 few days later? 16 A. Yes. 17 Q. I'd like to publish now please for the jury and the 18 witness Government's Exhibit 59 which appears at Tab 26 of 19 the binder. 20 to flip to the next easel. Okay, Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 59? 21 22 23 And while you're looking at that, I'm just going A. This is an e-mail exchange between Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico dated October 2, 2016. 24 Q. What is the subject of this e-mail? 25 A. WTF, question mark. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 80 of 179 381 Q. 1 2 And starting at the bottom, what does Mr. Stone send to Mr. Credico on October 2, 2016 at 1:45 P.M.? A. 3 He sends a link to an article on heat street dot 4 com. 5 planned an announcement and cancelled it. 6 And the article discusses the fact that WikiLeaks had Q. And how does Mr. Credico respond to that e-mail 7 from Mr. Stone with the link to the article you just 8 described? 9 A. He writes, "Head fake." 10 Q. Now, did Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico text about this 11 subject later on that same day, October 2, 2016? 12 A. Yes, they did. 13 Q. I'm going to ask you about that, but first, this 14 e-mail exchange, the WTF e-mail, does that appear on the 15 timeline? 16 A. Yes. 17 Q. Where is it? 18 A. It's the first one on this chart, right there. 19 Q. I'm going to now ask to publish for the jury and 20 the witness please Government's Exhibit 190 which is back at 21 Tab 20 of the binder. 22 to page four of the exhibit. The message that Mr. Stone sends on October 2, 2016 23 24 25 And I'm going to direct your attention at 8:59 P.M., do you see that one? A. Yes. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 81 of 179 382 1 2 Q. Am I right, this is a message on the same day as that WTF e-mail we just saw? 3 A. Yes. 4 Q. Okay. 5 A. Mr. Stone writes, "Did Assange back off?" Can you read this exchange for us please? 6 Mr. Credico responds, "I can't tall about it." 7 responds, "yes or no, asshole." 8 patient please. 9 please." Are you in NYC? And Mr. Stone Mr. Credico responds, "Be Please keep my name out, Mr. Stone responds, "No one is using your name. 10 Stop being as asshole. 11 Mr. Credico responded, "Have you read some of the stories 12 today? 13 understand and that is Hillary is a scary, serious and 14 dangerous person who will kill without conscience the same 15 way Luca Brasi did." 16 17 Q. Wait 12 hours. I need to know something." I'm a wreck. One thing you failed to Just pausing for a second, do you recognize the Luca Brasi reference? 18 A. Yes. 19 Q. What is that a reference to? 20 A. Luca Brasi is a character in the movie The 21 Godfather. 22 Q. Can you keep reading from there please? 23 A. Mr. Stone responds, "Don't be a pussy. 24 your profile, the safer you will be." 25 "I'm not worried about me. The higher Mr. Credico responds, I don't know if you read the Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 82 of 179 383 1 papers today. 2 already." 3 4 Q. Forget about Nadler. That's old news And then, as we move to the next page, do you see the photograph that Mr. Credico sends to Mr. Stone? 5 A. Yes. 6 Q. Who's the person in the photograph? 7 A. Mr. Credico. 8 Q. And do you recognize the building behind 9 Mr. Credico in this photograph? 10 A. That is the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. 11 Q. I think you've testified where Mr. Assange was 12 living at this time? 13 A. Yes. 14 Q. Can you read for us the messages that appear in 15 16 this exchange? A. Mr. Credico wrote, "How safe do you think anyone is 17 in that little building?" 18 then Mr. Credico sent a link to an article from RT dot com, 19 and that article discusses Hillary Clinton proposing a drone 20 strike on Mr. Assange. 21 it is on for tomorrow." 22 Q. And he sent another photo. And And then Mr. Credico writes, "I think Okay, now, am I right that all of the text messages 23 you just read, everything after "did Assange back off", those 24 were all sent on October 3rd of 2016. 25 A. Yes. Do I have that right? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 83 of 179 384 1 Q. And do those appear on the timeline here? 2 A. Yes. 3 Q. For the last one? 4 A. -- right here. 5 Q. Now, on the same day of those messages we just saw They are -- 6 between Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico, October 3, 2016, did 7 Mr. Stone communicate with someone else about WikiLeaks? 8 A. Yes. 9 Q. I'd like to publish please for the jury and the 10 witness Government's Exhibit 31 which appears at Tab 27 of 11 the binder. 12 A. 13 Erik Prince. 14 Q. Who is Erik Prince? 15 A. Erik Prince is an associate of the Trump campaign. 16 Q. And what is the date of this e-mail exchange? 17 A. October 3, 2016. 18 Q. So the same date as all those text messages we just 20 A. Yes. 21 Q. I want to direct your attention now to the top 19 What is Government's Exhibit 31? This is an e-mail exchange between Mr. Stone and saw? 22 e-mail, the one from Mr. Stone to Mr. Prince on October 3, 23 2016. Are you with me there? 24 A. Yes. 25 Q. Can you read the last two sentences of that e-mail Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 84 of 179 385 1 2 3 4 for me please? A. Yes. "Spoke to my friend in London last night. The pay load is still coming. Q. R." Okay, now, am I right that Mr. Stone's e-mail to 5 Mr. Prince saying, "Spoke to my friend in London last night. 6 The pay load is still coming", is on the same day that 7 Mr. Credico wrote, "I think it's on for tomorrow" in that 8 text message exchange we just saw? 9 A. Correct. 10 Q. Now, this e-mail exchange between Mr. Stone and 11 Mr. Prince, is it on the timeline, by the way? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. Where is it? 14 A. It's right here, this green box. 15 Q. October 3, 2016, right? 16 A. Yes. 17 Q. Now, did WikiLeaks in fact end up releasing any 18 documents the next day, October 4, 2016? 19 A. They did not. 20 Q. On that date, October 4th, when WikiLeaks did not 21 actually release any documents, did Mr. Stone communicate 22 with Steve Bannon? 23 A. Yes, he did. 24 Q. Ask to publish please for the jury and the witness 25 Government's Exhibit 32 which appears at Tab 28 of the Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 85 of 179 386 1 binder. What is Government's Exhibit 32? 2 3 4 5 6 7 A. This is an e-mail exchange between Mr. Bannon and Mr. Stone dated October 4, 2016. Q. So, starting at the bottom, what does Mr. Bannon write to Mr. Stone, and how does Mr. Stone respond? A. Mr. Bannon writes, "What was that this morning?" 8 Mr. Stone responded, "Fear. 9 thinks they're going to kill him and the London police are 10 11 12 standing done. Q. Serious security concern. He However, a load every week going forward." And does this e-mail exchange between Mr. Bannon and Mr. Stone appear on the timeline on the easel? 13 A. Yes. It's the green box here on the top. 14 Q. And directing your attention back to that text 15 message exchange between Mr. Credico and Mr. Stone, how much 16 time passed between when Mr. Credico wrote to Mr. Stone, "How 17 safe do you think anyone is in that little building?" and 18 when Mr. Stone wrote to Mr. Bannon, "Fear. 19 concern"? 20 A. It was -- well, hold on. 21 double check. 22 Q. Serious security Let me just, let me It was the next day. Now, those e-mails between Mr. Bannon and 23 Mr. Stone, I think you said they were on October 4, 2016. 24 I have that right? 25 A. Correct. Do Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 86 of 179 387 1 2 Q. On that same date, did Mr. Stone also exchange some text messages on this subject with Mr. Prince? 3 A. He did. 4 Q. Let me ask to publish now for the jury and the 5 witness please Government's Exhibit 33 which appears at Tab 6 29 of the binder. What is Government's Exhibit 33? 7 8 9 A. This is a series of text messages between Mr. Prince and Mr. Stone. 10 Q. And do these text messages appear on the timeline 11 on the easel? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. Where are they? 14 A. Right here, October 4th. 15 Q. And can you read for us please the text message 16 exchange between Mr. Prince and Mr. Stone from October 4, 17 2016? 18 A. 19 out?" 20 Monday. 21 Q. 22 23 Sure. Mr. Prince writes, "Did Assange chicken Mr. Stone responded, "Not sure. This was set as of Checking." And further down, the exchange that begins at 10:16 P.M.? A. Mr. Prince writes, "You hear any more from London?" 24 Mr. Stone responded, "Yes, want to talk on a secure line. 25 Got WhatsApp?" Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 87 of 179 388 1 Q. Just to interrupt you there, what is WhatsApp? 2 A. WhatsApp is a secure messaging app that people can 3 use on their telephones. 4 Q. And how does Mr. Prince respond? 5 A. He responds, "Sorry, just about to take off from 6 JFK. Just tell me, good or bad news?" 7 "Good. 8 wrote, "Will ring you tomorrow." 9 "10-4." 10 Q. Mr. Stone responds, Contact me when you can get update." And Mr. Prince And Mr. Stone wrote, And I think you said a moment ago that this text 11 message exchange that we're looking at now was on October 4, 12 2016? 13 A. Yes. 14 Q. A few days after that, on October 7, 2016, did 15 WikiLeaks release more documents? 16 A. Yes, they did. 17 Q. And do you know approximately what time WikiLeaks 18 made that release? 19 A. It was about 4:32 P.M. 20 Q. And on the day of that release, did Mr. Stone 21 receive a text message from someone associated with the Trump 22 campaign? 23 A. He did. 24 Q. I'd like to publish now for the jury and the 25 witness Government's Exhibit 34 which appears at Tab 30 of Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 88 of 179 389 1 the binder. Ms. Taylor, what is Government's Exhibit 34? 2 3 4 A. This shows a text message from Alexandra Preate to Mr. Stone. 5 Q. Who is Alexandra Preate? 6 A. She worked for Steve Bannon. 7 Q. And what does Ms. Preate write to Mr. Stone on 8 August 7, 2016? 9 A. "Well done." 10 Q. And that was the same day as the WikiLeaks 11 releases? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. Now, starting on October 7, 2016, did WikiLeaks 14 just one release or were there like multiple releases? 15 A. Multiple releases. 16 Q. And what is the material that WikiLeaks began 17 18 19 20 21 releasing on October 7, 2016? A. They released e-mails that had been hacked from John Podesta's email account. Q. And who was -- I think you may have said this before, but who is John Podesta? 22 A. He was Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman. 23 Q. And after that WikiLeaks release, did the FBI begin 24 25 looking into that matter? A. They did. Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 89 of 179 390 1 2 Q. And some time after that, did Mr. Stone and Mr. Credico exchange some more text messages about WikiLeaks? 3 A. They did. 4 Q. I'd like to publish please for the -- oh, wait. 5 Before I do that, the "well done" text message, is that on 6 the timeline? 7 A. Yes, it is. 8 Q. Where is it? 9 A. It's right here, right after the WikiLeaks release. 10 Q. And the WikiLeaks release is also on the timeline? 11 A. Yes, right here. 12 Q. Great. I'd like to direct your attention now to 13 Government's Exhibit 1, and publish please for the members of 14 the jury and the witness, Government's Exhibit 191 which 15 appears at Tab 31 of the binder. Just to orient, what is Government's Exhibit 191? 16 17 18 A. This is text messages between Mr. Credico and Mr. Stone. 19 Q. And what is the date on which this exchange starts? 20 A. October 15, 2016. 21 Q. So, this is about eight days after the WikiLeaks 22 release you were just talking about? 23 A. Correct. 24 Q. Do you see the text message from Mr. Credico at 25 11:06 A.M.? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 90 of 179 391 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. Can you read that for us please? 3 A. Mr. Credico wrote, "All I did in London is deliver 4 a letter from WBAI's station manager to invite them to have 5 their own weekly radio show." 6 Q. Do you see the reference to London? 7 A. Yes. 8 Q. Where was Julian Assange, the head of WikiLeaks, 9 living at this time? 10 A. In the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. 11 Q. Do you see the reference to WBAI? 12 A. Yes. 13 Q. What is WBAI? 14 A. WBAI was a radio station in New York City that 15 16 hosted Mr. Credico's radio show. Q. The last thing I want to ask you about here on this 17 topic is another set of messages between Mr. Stone and 18 Mr. Credico in the same exhibit. 19 please to page three of Government's Exhibit 191? 20 the message from Mr. Stone at 4:24 P.M., "Had to run to 21 airport"? Can I direct your attention Do you see 22 A. Yes. 23 Q. Can you read for us -- and this, by the way, am I 24 right, is on the same day as the exchange we were just 25 looking at, October 15, 2016? Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 91 of 179 392 1 A. Yes. 2 Q. Can you start with "Had to run to airport" and read 3 4 from there for us please? A. Mr. Stone wrote, "Had to run to airport." 5 Mr. Credico responded, "So you left town?" Mr. Stone wrote, 6 "Just ahead of the FBI who showed up at apartment a half hour 7 after I left." 8 the matter is you got nothing to worry about because no one's 9 communicated directly with Assange except for on my radio Mr. Credico wrote, "Seriously. I just delivered a letter to him." The fact of 10 show. And Mr. Stone 11 responded, "I suggest we stonewall it, plead the Fifth, 12 anything to save the plan." 13 Stop busting my balls." 14 telling the FBI I'm not talking and Credico isn't talking 15 either." Mr. Credico wrote, "What plan? Mr. Stone wrote, "Don't worry. I'm 16 Q. And how does Mr. -- yeah. 17 A. And Mr. Credico responded with a thumbs up emoji. 18 Q. And all of that was on October 15, 2016? 19 A. Correct. 20 21 MR. KRAVIS: Your Honor, I'm about to move to a different subject. 22 THE COURT: All right. I think this has probably 23 been a long day for the jurors. 24 break for the evening at this point. 25 evening that I'm sending you home with the admonition that And so, I think we should This is your first Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 92 of 179 393 1 you're going to hear quite frequently in this case. This 2 evening, as I noted earlier, you should not discuss this case 3 with anyone. 4 learn anything more about the case. And you should not do any research or try to Everything you're going to learn is going to be in 5 6 this courtroom. 7 attention, please turn it off. 8 to something else. 9 not to try to bring matters to your attention or to discuss 10 And if any news inadvertently comes to your Please direct your attention And please instruct anyone you live with the case with you. I hope you have a very pleasant evening. 11 We will 12 resume at 9:30 tomorrow morning. I believe you already have 13 your instructions about where to report tomorrow morning. 14 can tell you that we will have something in the form of 15 breakfast for you when you arrive. 16 omelette maker, but we will have fruit. 17 pastries. 18 of breakfast when you arrive. 19 evening. I I can't promise an We will have little There will be something for you to eat in the form Thank you and have a pleasant 20 (Jury out). 21 MR. KRAVIS: Your Honor, may we approach briefly? 22 THE COURT: Yes, and I want to actually maybe talk 23 about the easel for a minute also, but we can do that at the 24 bench. 25 The witness, yes, can step down. (Witness excused). Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 93 of 179 394 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 (Bench conference sealed and redacted by Order of Court.) (Whereupon, at approximately 5:00, the trial was in recess.) - o - Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 94 of 179 395 1 I-N-D-E-X 2 WITNESSES 3 Direct 4 On behalf of the Government: 5 Michelle Taylor (By Mr. Kravis) Cross Redirect Recross 328 6 7 8 9 10 11 MISCELLANY 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Page No.: Opening Statement on behalf of the Defendant ...... 304 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 95 of 179 396 1 2 CERTIFICATE OF REPORTER 3 I, Lisa Walker Griffith, certify that the foregoing 4 is a correct transcript from the record of proceedings in the 5 above-entitled matter. 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 ______________________________________ Lisa Walker Griffith, RPR _11-7-19 Date 320/25 321/6 MR. KRAVIS: [22] 321/12 321/18 322/4 324/23 328/1 330/7 325/1 325/4 330/13 330/17 325/7 325/17 331/21 345/12 326/4 326/8 353/12 353/17 327/24 330/9 354/6 354/10 330/11 330/15 355/25 356/15 330/19 331/24 362/17 364/1 332/1 334/1 364/3 364/6 345/11 345/13 366/15 367/5 353/15 363/19 367/13 367/23 364/2 364/4 392/19 393/20 366/18 367/2 MR. ROGOW: 367/6 367/16 [15] 304/3 392/21 393/21 304/11 321/2 THE DEPUTY 321/16 322/3 CLERK: [2] 322/9 322/11 303/25 328/3 324/25 325/3 THE WITNESS: 325/8 326/6 [2] 334/3 326/15 330/10 362/19 331/25 332/18 MR. ZELINSKY: 0 [5] 320/22 018 [1] 302/3 321/7 324/22 325/10 325/23 1 THE COURT: [36] 10 [5] 308/8 348/18 370/24 304/2 304/4 377/3 379/20 304/6 320/23 10-4 [1] 388/9 100 [3] 302/21 303/2 372/25 1000 [1] 302/21 10:16 [1] 387/21 10:37 [1] 375/23 11 [3] 349/24 362/21 362/24 11-7-19 [1] 396/10 111 [1] 317/5 11:06 [1] 390/25 12 [3] 318/4 352/21 382/12 120 [1] 303/7 12:16 [1] 358/4 12th [2] 350/13 354/8 13 [1] 357/9 130-120 [1] 303/7 1300 [1] 303/3 13th [2] 357/16 357/22 14 [3] 316/11 329/4 359/4 142 [6] 353/14 353/19 354/12 357/1 362/13 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 96 of 179 152 [4] 341/18 341/20 342/3 142... [1] 343/17 362/16 153 [2] 342/10 143 [3] 354/8 342/12 354/9 354/15 144 [3] 354/24 15th [7] 334/10 337/15 337/23 354/25 355/4 338/3 358/2 145 [2] 355/15 359/8 359/13 355/16 16 [1] 361/9 146 [3] 356/2 161 [4] 332/17 356/3 356/7 332/21 333/1 147 [3] 356/17 333/6 356/18 357/1 148 [5] 333/19 164 [1] 348/18 16th [1] 354/24 333/24 334/3 340/10 346/23 17 [2] 311/23 368/13 149 [2] 337/11 175 [1] 309/8 337/13 14th [6] 332/23 18 [9] 304/1 368/24 369/14 334/20 336/2 370/5 370/9 336/15 337/4 370/22 372/4 342/23 379/25 380/1 15 [4] 360/5 390/20 391/25 189 [3] 361/9 361/10 363/7 392/18 150 [2] 338/18 18th [8] 356/2 357/2 371/10 338/19 371/25 375/23 151 [3] 331/24 375/24 377/9 332/4 332/8 1 377/11 19 [9] 371/21 372/1 373/7 373/8 373/19 374/6 374/13 374/23 396/10 19,252 [1] 341/25 19-18 [1] 304/1 19-CR-018 [1] 302/3 190 [4] 373/12 373/14 379/10 381/20 191 [3] 390/14 390/16 391/19 19th [3] 361/20 362/21 363/13 1:02 [1] 360/17 1:03 [2] 334/10 334/11 1:09 [1] 376/3 1:45 [1] 381/2 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 97 of 179 2 2.0 [3] 338/13 341/12 342/24 20 [11] 370/25 373/12 375/20 2 375/17 22nd [5] 308/9 341/24 342/3 342/20 342/23 23 [1] 376/9 235-8259 [1] 303/12 24 [4] 344/17 344/19 345/13 377/17 25 [7] 336/8 352/20 352/22 378/17 379/12 379/16 380/2 250 [2] 318/2 318/4 252-7698 [1] 302/17 25th [4] 343/10 343/12 365/15 380/8 26 [1] 380/18 26th [3] 317/18 365/17 366/4 27 [2] 366/11 384/10 27th [1] 366/14 28 [4] 318/12 360/5 360/6 385/25 29 [1] 387/6 29th [2] 344/21 345/1 2:02 [1] 302/7 2:19 [1] 357/16 2:20 [1] 341/1 2nd [2] 350/2 350/11 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 98 of 179 20... [8] 376/12 377/1 377/4 377/21 377/24 379/1 379/11 381/21 200 [5] 330/14 336/24 341/9 349/19 353/23 20001 [1] 303/17 2011 [2] 370/25 377/4 2016 [113] 2017 [3] 306/9 308/9 317/18 2018 [4] 317/19 317/20 318/15 322/13 2019 [1] 302/6 202 [2] 302/17 303/17 20530 [1] 302/16 20th [3] 364/10 364/14 376/3 21 [3] 374/10 378/19 378/21 22 [2] 341/22 3 30 [6] 321/24 338/21 340/25 370/24 377/3 388/25 30,000 [1] 379/1 304 [1] 395/13 30th [1] 340/2 31 [3] 384/10 384/11 390/15 31st [9] 345/24 346/5 346/19 347/8 347/20 348/5 348/24 349/9 349/20 32 [2] 385/25 386/2 3247 [1] 303/17 328 [1] 395/5 3:28 [1] 369/14 55 [3] 376/9 3rd [4] 302/21 376/10 376/20 328-9064 [1] 352/24 353/1 555 [1] 302/16 303/8 383/24 56 [2] 377/17 33 [2] 387/5 377/19 387/7 4 57 [2] 378/16 331 [1] 303/11 401 [1] 303/7 378/17 333 [1] 303/16 45 [1] 367/22 59 [2] 380/18 33301 [2] 48 [2] 368/13 380/21 302/22 303/8 368/15 5:00 [1] 394/3 33316 [1] 4:24 [1] 391/20 303/12 4:30 [1] 367/12 6 33394 [1] 303/3 4:32 [1] 388/19 600 [2] 316/10 34 [2] 388/25 4:45 [1] 367/12 330/9 389/2 4th [2] 385/20 6507 [1] 303/16 35 [3] 343/4 387/14 6:07 [2] 366/10 343/6 343/8 366/14 5 354-3247 [1] 6:32 [1] 365/2 50 [3] 370/5 303/17 7 370/7 372/6 36 [4] 345/20 501 [1] 303/11 75 [2] 318/14 345/22 346/2 51 [3] 371/20 318/18 347/16 371/22 372/3 767-8909 [1] 37 [3] 341/7 302/22 349/24 349/25 53 [3] 336/19 374/9 374/11 7698 [1] 302/17 38 [2] 357/9 530-5301 [1] 7:30 [1] 345/3 357/11 303/4 7:52 [1] 361/20 39 [2] 359/4 5301 [1] 303/4 359/6 8 54 [2] 375/16 3:17 [2] 364/10 8259 [1] 303/12 375/18 364/14 3 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 99 of 179 8 A-P-P-E-A-R-A-N-C -E-S [1] 302/12 A.M [8] 334/10 334/11 358/5 360/17 365/15 373/20 377/24 390/25 AARON [1] 302/14 ability [1] 317/24 able [1] 304/8 about [91] 305/2 305/3 305/21 306/17 307/5 307/5 307/6 307/24 308/1 308/23 309/2 309/2 310/4 310/22 311/7 311/21 312/3 312/9 312/14 312/19 312/22 312/25 313/3 314/19 314/21 316/19 317/22 317/23 318/9 318/15 318/19 320/4 320/20 321/2 324/13 325/8 326/14 328/16 329/25 330/24 331/17 331/19 335/21 338/14 339/4 339/15 341/14 342/6 342/18 342/25 351/21 353/10 357/25 360/25 362/7 365/19 365/23 367/6 367/12 367/21 367/21 367/22 369/9 369/10 371/3 372/12 372/17 373/9 374/5 375/10 375/12 378/13 380/4 380/5 381/10 381/13 382/6 382/25 383/1 384/7 388/5 388/19 390/2 390/21 390/22 391/16 392/8 392/20 393/4 393/13 393/23 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 100 of 179 85 [2] 313/16 313/22 8909 [1] 302/22 8:16 [1] 358/5 8:17 [1] 365/15 8:59 [1] 381/24 8th [3] 353/15 357/1 362/20 9 9064 [1] 303/8 954 [4] 302/22 303/4 303/8 303/12 9:03 [1] 334/20 9:13 [1] 377/24 9:15 [1] 347/9 9:25 [1] 347/20 9:30 [1] 393/12 9:35 [1] 348/24 9:36 [1] 348/5 9:51 [1] 373/19 9:53 [1] 336/2 9:56 [1] 336/15 A a friend [1] 362/10 A 339/21 admonition [1] active [2] 307/14 392/25 307/18 advise [1] actively [1] 325/18 311/19 advising [1] activities [6] 325/20 306/23 309/18 affairs [1] 311/12 312/21 367/11 312/22 339/18 affected [1] activity [3] 326/23 307/14 312/15 afraid [1] 324/7 312/15 after [26] actually [5] 321/16 326/22 316/17 350/6 332/11 337/6 379/24 385/21 341/12 349/15 393/22 350/20 352/15 ADAM [1] 302/14 353/9 358/14 Adam.Jed [1] 359/17 359/24 302/19 360/24 362/24 address [1] 364/23 367/12 306/3 379/7 379/21 addressing [1] 380/9 383/23 317/3 388/14 389/23 admit [1] 323/8 390/1 390/9 admitted [4] 390/21 392/7 331/24 332/16 afternoon [5] 333/18 353/17 302/5 304/7 admittedly [1] 304/12 328/8 323/8 367/17 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 101 of 179 above [1] 396/5 above-entitled [1] 396/5 absolutely [1] 317/9 access [2] 333/9 378/25 according [3] 313/20 314/24 333/10 account [6] 341/22 341/24 342/6 342/14 342/16 389/19 accounts [1] 315/13 accurate [1] 317/10 accurately [1] 323/11 achieve [1] 310/25 acronym [1] 358/15 across [1] 369/3 act [1] 315/7 Action [1] 302/3 actions [1] 343/17 354/20 362/5 370/1 afterwards [1] 370/12 372/5 323/24 375/25 377/25 again [24] 388/10 306/18 308/9 agree [3] 304/14 308/22 309/1 322/16 322/16 309/12 311/14 agreed [1] 307/7 313/4 313/5 agrees [2] 309/8 313/7 315/10 310/8 322/14 323/7 335/25 336/13 ahead [3] 321/1 358/3 392/6 340/9 347/5 351/14 352/16 ain't [1] 360/20 358/19 372/16 air [1] 350/22 372/24 378/13 airport [3] 391/21 392/2 379/6 380/14 392/4 against [2] 306/23 307/15 Alex [1] 354/18 Alexandra [2] agencies [1] 389/3 389/5 311/23 all [40] 304/14 agenda [1] 304/16 304/18 379/24 agent [2] 329/2 305/1 307/10 310/24 316/15 329/3 318/6 319/23 agents [2] 321/6 322/14 329/19 329/22 ago [14] 332/25 323/23 324/17 327/2 327/25 336/21 340/1 330/10 330/12 340/12 342/18 A 330/20 336/20 339/18 340/20 346/10 349/7 349/8 349/11 349/22 351/1 353/16 353/16 364/5 366/19 367/17 376/16 379/1 383/22 383/24 384/18 391/3 392/18 392/22 allegations [1] 314/20 alleged [1] 311/12 allegedly [2] 343/15 344/3 allies [1] 307/15 Almost [1] 329/4 already [13] 312/7 321/8 322/6 325/16 327/7 327/8 327/9 353/17 358/12 358/20 359/15 383/2 393/12 also [13] 305/7 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 102 of 179 314/18 AMY [1] 302/10 also... [12] 310/18 311/21 anniversary [1] 350/13 323/25 325/12 328/19 331/13 announce [1] 332/12 355/5 355/12 announced [10] 359/1 387/1 306/20 306/22 390/10 393/23 308/14 314/3 am [14] 304/4 314/4 314/11 311/7 311/7 314/12 315/11 330/1 340/19 315/15 338/5 346/23 349/8 announcement 372/4 375/23 [5] 337/3 337/7 377/24 382/1 338/11 341/14 383/22 385/4 381/5 391/23 Amendment [10] anonymous [1] 331/8 310/24 311/2 324/20 324/21 another [21] 310/6 319/23 325/10 325/12 320/12 324/9 325/14 325/19 324/11 325/18 326/17 327/17 327/15 335/5 AMERICA [2] 338/13 338/20 302/2 304/2 342/5 345/16 among [1] 348/13 362/16 366/22 366/17 367/22 amount [1] 369/4 369/10 324/17 374/4 383/17 amusing [1] A 391/17 answer [5] 309/25 310/3 310/4 313/1 313/9 answered [1] 313/20 answering [2] 315/4 316/25 answers [7] 304/17 304/23 307/10 313/11 316/7 316/9 317/3 any [28] 306/20 307/19 308/13 308/25 311/10 311/11 313/2 313/18 315/13 317/14 320/6 320/7 321/9 323/22 327/10 330/10 331/25 340/6 354/1 363/7 363/23 370/23 375/9 385/17 385/21 387/23 393/3 393/6 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 103 of 179 A 359/20 361/14 361/17 366/5 369/21 371/14 373/25 376/21 378/8 379/2 381/14 383/14 384/1 386/12 387/10 appearance [2] 308/17 355/11 Appearances [1] 302/25 appeared [2] 340/2 340/5 appears [33] 332/17 333/19 337/12 338/18 341/18 342/10 343/7 344/17 345/20 348/18 349/24 351/21 352/20 357/9 359/4 360/5 361/9 368/13 370/5 371/20 373/12 374/10 375/16 375/22 376/9 377/17 378/16 380/18 384/10 385/25 387/5 388/25 390/15 appreciated [1] 338/7 approach [3] 320/24 323/15 393/21 approximately [4] 362/24 366/20 388/17 394/3 are [59] 304/3 304/15 304/22 308/2 308/10 311/4 311/12 311/25 312/14 312/18 313/8 315/13 316/15 316/22 317/4 319/12 322/15 322/21 323/18 323/19 323/22 323/24 325/15 325/19 326/1 326/19 327/6 334/13 336/23 340/13 342/19 342/22 344/5 346/24 346/25 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 104 of 179 anybody [1] 319/19 anyone [11] 333/14 339/12 340/6 346/20 358/13 359/16 366/22 383/16 386/17 393/3 393/8 anything [8] 312/8 312/22 317/12 317/15 317/21 365/22 392/12 393/4 Anyway [1] 326/19 apartment [1] 392/6 app [1] 388/2 appear [31] 305/12 305/17 332/8 333/3 337/24 338/23 341/8 342/21 343/20 345/9 353/22 354/20 355/8 355/19 356/9 356/22 arrive [2] 393/15 359/9 360/11 393/18 363/24 369/16 are... [24] 370/13 374/14 349/18 349/20 article [13] 332/22 333/1 374/24 379/21 350/21 351/13 333/3 333/13 382/1 382/10 351/21 354/2 334/22 336/21 383/3 384/18 354/3 354/4 337/3 338/10 387/19 389/10 358/15 365/4 381/3 381/4 391/24 393/2 365/24 367/21 381/7 383/18 ASAP [1] 360/23 368/19 368/21 383/19 Asjz [1] 302/18 369/24 369/25 articles [1] ask [16] 328/16 371/9 371/12 319/11 329/25 331/17 373/20 382/8 artifact [1] 349/17 350/6 384/2 384/23 350/24 353/25 369/9 386/9 387/13 370/23 371/19 arena [1] 317/21 as [45] 304/21 373/2 379/9 argue [2] 321/22 306/5 306/12 307/10 313/1 381/13 381/19 326/7 314/2 314/10 385/24 387/4 arguing [4] 314/25 316/6 391/16 321/16 321/24 321/14 321/23 asked [5] 312/23 324/18 326/9 323/3 324/1 313/2 314/18 argument [4] 325/13 326/1 316/16 373/2 313/18 321/22 327/17 327/19 asking [1] 368/9 326/2 326/12 Army [1] 329/6 327/21 329/21 ass [2] 353/3 331/24 332/16 353/7 around [3] 333/18 336/20 Assange [50] 344/12 348/14 339/16 349/8 305/3 307/5 348/25 351/12 355/6 307/16 311/17 arrange [1] 355/11 356/12 312/25 314/25 367/11 A Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 105 of 179 382/10 assigned [1] Assange... [44] 329/8 318/19 319/8 assist [1] 330/5 319/9 319/21 331/11 331/19 associate [2] 346/15 384/15 332/25 343/13 associated [12] 343/25 345/5 306/25 307/19 346/1 346/6 324/2 333/14 350/7 350/17 340/6 344/6 357/3 360/25 344/10 344/13 361/25 362/5 346/20 352/9 362/6 363/9 352/13 388/21 363/15 364/15 associates [1] 365/5 365/8 354/5 365/19 366/15 assume [1] 368/10 369/4 372/21 369/11 369/17 370/23 372/19 assurance [1] 309/17 373/24 374/15 attachment [1] 375/7 380/4 370/10 380/11 382/5 383/11 383/20 attachments [1] 371/9 383/23 387/18 attempt [1] 391/8 392/9 321/9 asserting [1] attention [41] 325/13 306/1 316/20 assertions [2] 320/17 333/22 306/3 309/2 asshole [2] 382/7 335/24 336/12 A 337/10 339/5 340/15 340/22 342/8 343/2 347/2 347/17 348/2 348/17 348/21 352/4 360/3 361/7 361/19 363/17 364/25 365/1 365/13 366/7 369/13 370/15 371/22 373/17 374/8 374/17 379/11 381/21 384/21 386/14 390/12 391/18 393/7 393/7 393/9 Attorney's [1] 302/15 audio [5] 315/22 316/3 316/4 316/8 356/17 audios [1] 317/2 August [38] 350/2 350/11 350/13 350/13 350/22 352/24 353/1 353/15 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 106 of 179 324/9 335/25 340/23 346/22 August... [30] 346/23 347/5 353/22 354/8 347/18 348/3 354/24 356/2 349/22 350/20 357/1 357/1 352/2 357/23 357/16 357/22 362/16 362/18 358/2 359/8 371/24 372/8 359/12 361/20 379/10 381/20 362/20 362/21 382/5 383/23 363/13 364/10 386/14 364/13 365/15 backdoor [1] 365/17 366/4 321/9 366/10 366/13 370/24 370/24 backdrop [1] 308/17 370/25 377/3 bad [3] 351/22 377/3 377/4 365/22 388/6 377/8 389/8 badly [1] 352/2 author [2] 338/13 342/17 bait [1] 318/25 balls [1] 392/13 available [4] Bannon [16] 308/13 320/9 327/8 360/1 320/15 337/19 360/8 360/9 Avenue [3] 360/10 360/14 302/21 303/2 360/22 361/4 303/16 385/22 386/3 B 386/5 386/7 back [24] 306/10 386/11 386/18 313/6 322/12 386/22 389/6 A bare [1] 313/8 Based [1] 344/5 basically [1] 310/16 batch [2] 373/1 373/5 bcc [1] 377/1 bcc-ing [1] 377/1 be [48] 304/22 304/24 305/13 308/8 309/9 309/10 309/17 310/7 310/9 310/10 311/11 313/6 316/3 316/25 317/9 317/12 319/12 319/24 322/5 323/19 324/2 326/9 327/1 327/7 334/15 334/19 334/20 336/2 340/25 341/1 344/9 350/21 351/12 351/21 358/5 363/23 366/17 366/24 367/4 367/10 367/21 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 107 of 179 374/5 389/18 being [7] 315/5 316/16 317/23 be... [7] 372/19 392/23 before [23] 323/9 324/4 379/23 382/7 302/10 308/3 326/23 382/10 382/23 382/24 308/20 312/15 belief [1] 312/4 393/5 393/17 325/3 329/1 believe [3] because [14] 329/5 330/1 309/19 317/11 304/16 304/20 346/18 349/11 393/12 307/13 308/3 349/17 350/5 believed [1] 316/23 317/16 359/22 361/3 332/12 320/17 323/6 363/6 363/10 below [1] 377/7 324/1 325/15 363/13 365/25 bench [6] 327/12 365/5 367/4 368/3 320/24 320/25 367/8 392/8 369/17 389/21 325/5 325/7 become [1] 390/5 393/24 394/1 329/22 began [1] 389/16 BERMAN [1] becomes [2] 305/10 306/11 begin [2] 353/10 302/10 389/23 Bernie [1] 346/7 bed [1] 351/12 beginning [3] better [1] been [23] 305/8 307/6 320/16 307/25 312/1 366/23 between [59] 318/9 318/9 begins [7] 339/6 306/24 307/18 321/8 323/3 339/10 360/19 318/22 319/5 325/16 325/22 368/23 374/19 319/6 319/9 327/8 328/24 377/22 387/21 319/20 319/20 331/23 332/12 320/11 324/19 332/16 333/18 behalf [4] 304/10 304/11 326/25 327/3 338/6 347/8 395/4 395/13 332/24 335/8 353/17 360/21 367/19 372/14 behind [1] 383/8 335/11 336/9 B Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 108 of 179 bigger [1] 323/9 between... [43] Bill [2] 346/7 346/9 338/9 339/2 339/16 342/23 binder [36] 328/15 332/18 343/16 345/4 333/20 337/12 345/25 350/6 338/18 341/19 353/4 354/3 342/11 343/7 354/4 357/1 344/18 345/5 357/12 360/7 345/21 346/23 360/12 360/14 348/18 349/24 361/4 361/11 352/21 357/10 362/11 363/4 359/5 360/5 363/8 363/14 361/9 368/14 368/4 368/16 370/6 371/21 371/23 373/15 373/13 374/10 374/12 377/20 375/17 376/10 379/16 379/25 377/18 378/17 380/22 384/6 379/11 380/19 384/12 385/10 381/21 384/11 386/3 386/11 386/1 387/6 386/15 386/16 389/1 390/15 386/22 387/8 387/16 390/17 bipartisan [2] 306/12 318/7 391/17 beyond [2] 315/2 bit [3] 306/6 322/23 372/23 326/11 bglaw [2] 303/4 blacked [1] 348/22 303/5 bglaw-pa.com [2] blanket [2] B 325/13 326/1 blind [5] 376/12 376/14 376/15 377/14 378/1 block [1] 375/9 blocks [1] 374/25 blogs [1] 337/18 Blvd [1] 303/11 board [1] 343/5 body [2] 331/4 353/3 bold [2] 339/10 370/16 book [3] 314/19 314/21 372/13 books [2] 314/19 316/4 both [1] 317/2 bottom [19] 305/25 333/4 338/1 340/23 341/10 352/5 354/22 355/21 356/23 360/16 361/6 365/1 366/9 369/14 371/15 375/21 378/11 381/1 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 109 of 179 303/4 303/5 366/18 366/20 BUSCHEL [7] 367/7 367/13 303/1 303/2 bottom... [1] 367/23 368/3 303/4 305/15 386/5 392/24 308/9 309/16 bought [1] breakfast [2] 316/13 339/19 393/15 393/18 busting [1] Boulevard [1] breaking [1] 392/13 303/7 box [22] 332/10 363/24 C breaks [1] 333/4 336/25 C-SPAN [4] 363/21 338/1 339/1 355/24 356/2 brief [2] 367/2 341/10 343/21 356/8 356/12 367/15 349/20 353/24 cahoots [1] briefly [1] 354/21 354/21 365/24 393/21 355/10 355/21 call [59] 327/25 bring [3] 304/5 356/11 356/23 333/14 334/9 316/20 393/9 361/6 364/21 334/17 334/18 brother [1] 366/6 376/24 334/20 335/7 346/7 378/11 385/14 335/13 335/14 Broward [4] 386/13 335/15 335/15 362/12 362/17 boxes [2] 342/22 335/17 335/19 362/20 362/25 359/23 335/25 336/1 Bruce [3] 302/20 brag [1] 317/23 336/3 336/5 302/20 304/12 braggart [1] 336/7 336/9 building [3] 317/23 336/10 336/13 383/8 383/17 Brasi [3] 382/15 336/14 336/16 386/17 382/17 382/20 336/18 340/23 bullet [2] 336/25 breach [1] 340/24 341/2 345/11 333/12 341/4 341/6 bump [1] 350/23 break [8] 304/9 B Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 110 of 179 came [2] 322/5 349/22 350/5 350/10 350/19 call... [30] 341/8 342/17 campaign [28] 351/9 353/17 346/19 347/5 307/22 307/24 354/7 354/19 347/7 347/8 308/1 309/4 354/23 355/14 347/10 347/12 309/5 309/19 356/16 357/24 347/15 347/18 311/24 312/3 358/11 359/14 347/19 347/21 312/5 320/2 360/17 360/18 347/23 347/25 320/11 333/15 360/22 361/23 348/3 348/4 340/7 344/14 362/18 365/3 348/7 348/8 344/23 344/24 365/15 367/23 348/10 348/14 346/20 351/10 368/18 369/1 348/22 348/23 351/18 352/17 370/21 372/9 349/1 349/3 354/5 360/11 372/12 372/16 349/4 349/5 360/11 360/20 372/18 374/21 353/3 356/14 371/8 384/15 375/8 377/2 357/23 358/11 388/22 389/22 378/25 379/15 359/14 382/4 382/22 called [2] 346/7 campaigns [2] 306/25 307/19 383/14 384/25 370/10 387/15 388/2 calls [18] 328/3 CAMPION [2] 303/1 303/5 388/7 391/2 333/23 334/1 can [63] 313/14 391/18 391/23 334/5 334/7 317/12 326/7 392/2 393/14 336/20 336/23 326/7 326/12 393/23 393/24 340/6 340/16 327/25 330/12 can't [5] 326/12 340/17 340/20 332/2 333/5 326/14 373/1 347/3 349/7 334/2 337/17 382/6 393/15 349/11 349/15 338/2 339/9 cancelled [1] 349/17 349/18 341/23 346/4 381/5 367/20 C Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 111 of 179 335/4 335/16 channel [1] 336/4 336/6 357/2 candidacy [1] 336/17 336/17 character [1] 327/13 341/3 341/5 382/20 candidate [6] 347/11 347/13 charged [1] 311/10 331/20 347/22 347/24 325/22 333/10 344/7 348/8 349/6 chart [2] 342/22 352/10 358/22 CEO [1] 360/11 381/18 candidates [1] certain [3] check [1] 386/21 339/13 304/22 306/14 Checking [1] candor [1] 323/16 387/20 315/25 chicken [1] cannot [1] 311/2 certainly [4] 305/23 311/4 387/18 caps [1] 351/1 career [1] 329/8 314/23 316/24 children [1] case [23] 304/1 CERTIFICATE [1] 315/23 396/2 choosing [1] 304/8 304/15 304/20 304/21 certify [1] 396/3 375/2 chain [1] 378/3 citizens [1] 305/1 316/18 312/16 316/19 321/10 chairman [5] 344/25 351/19 City [1] 391/14 322/5 322/21 352/17 352/25 claim [3] 311/23 326/3 327/7 389/22 320/7 320/10 327/19 329/15 claimed [1] 329/19 329/21 chairmen [1] 344/24 337/7 366/22 366/24 chairs [1] 366/21 clarify [1] 393/1 393/2 CHANDLER [2] 318/19 393/4 393/10 303/10 303/10 classified [1] category [1] change [2] 331/7 307/17 318/10 318/10 clause [1] 344/2 cell [15] 334/5 C Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 112 of 179 311/24 373/1 373/5 collusion [6] 385/3 385/6 clauses [1] 311/25 312/1 commenced [1] 310/24 371/7 clear [4] 308/18 312/2 312/8 312/9 313/23 committee [60] 311/11 317/9 colored [1] 304/17 305/3 339/25 305/5 305/6 client [2] 306/1 307/10 colors [2] 316/25 305/9 305/11 306/14 353/25 305/18 305/23 Clinton [10] 306/2 306/9 339/17 344/10 COLUMBIA [3] 302/1 302/15 306/10 306/13 344/11 351/8 303/15 306/18 307/13 352/13 352/14 308/4 308/20 358/24 370/10 column [3] 334/25 335/6 309/7 309/24 371/6 383/19 348/9 310/3 310/6 Clinton's [2] 310/15 310/15 351/18 389/22 columns [1] 335/12 312/12 313/12 clip [6] 354/11 313/20 314/7 354/14 354/19 com [2] 381/4 383/18 314/8 314/9 355/3 356/6 come [11] 305/8 314/15 315/8 356/7 315/21 316/2 clips [2] 319/12 322/12 325/5 331/18 337/6 316/11 316/12 319/13 358/13 359/16 316/13 317/1 closed [1] 360/11 364/1 317/4 317/8 309/14 317/18 317/19 closet [1] 339/14 367/13 368/8 comes [2] 317/7 317/19 320/1 collision [1] 393/6 320/6 320/12 339/21 320/19 320/20 collude [1] 312/4 coming [6] 309/24 314/15 320/21 321/4 colluded [1] C Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 113 of 179 342/17 committee... [12] comparing [1] 322/18 322/22 370/11 completely [1] 330/25 331/2 365/6 331/3 332/12 complied [1] 333/8 333/11 313/5 337/3 338/5 compromise [1] 341/15 342/1 committee's [10] 324/3 306/16 306/21 computer [1] 333/8 308/21 309/17 310/23 311/13 concept [1] 311/1 320/13 321/10 322/13 338/10 concern [3] communicate [3] 311/20 386/8 386/19 367/20 384/7 concerned [1] 385/21 329/14 communicated conducted [1] [1] 392/9 308/21 communicating conference [4] [2] 344/13 320/25 325/7 357/3 communications 356/14 394/1 [6] 311/4 311/5 confirm [2] 319/4 370/25 314/19 331/14 confirmation [1] 354/4 357/6 372/18 company [2] confirmed [1] 338/4 338/7 377/5 compare [1] C confirming [1] 310/1 conflict [1] 326/25 Congress [1] 312/20 congressional [3] 320/21 321/3 322/1 Congressmen [1] 312/11 conjunction [1] 371/5 conking [1] 372/12 connection [6] 313/23 320/11 320/18 334/9 335/5 369/17 connections [1] 327/14 conscience [1] 382/14 conscious [1] 313/19 consciously [1] 315/7 conservative [1] 323/15 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 114 of 179 context [1] 317/3 considered [1] continue [1] 325/16 351/9 consistent [1] continued [3] 313/24 302/25 326/21 consistently [1] 354/12 321/23 continuing [4] constitutes [1] 324/14 326/20 316/19 Constitution [1] 326/20 365/21 contradicting [1] 303/16 320/6 constructed [1] convert [1] 319/7 334/13 consultant [2] converted [1] 328/24 329/1 358/4 consulting [1] converting [7] 328/22 Cont'd [1] 368/1 334/17 335/25 336/13 340/23 contact [4] 347/5 347/18 319/16 352/16 348/3 353/10 388/7 cooperate [1] contacts [1] 306/1 320/5 coordinated [2] contain [1] 334/12 334/14 375/10 copied [1] contains [1] 377/14 328/15 copies [1] content [2] 328/19 337/17 337/19 C copy [3] 330/17 330/19 376/15 copying [3] 376/12 376/14 378/1 Cornell [2] 366/1 366/2 correct [13] 313/1 330/1 340/4 340/19 340/21 349/10 359/11 377/24 385/9 386/25 390/23 392/19 396/4 correspondence [1] 314/6 corrupt [7] 325/13 325/22 326/13 326/17 327/4 327/10 327/22 Corsi [36] 318/23 319/22 343/9 343/11 343/18 345/5 345/16 345/23 346/1 346/5 346/19 349/9 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 115 of 179 County [4] 362/12 362/17 Corsi... [24] 362/20 362/25 349/14 349/22 couple [3] 350/1 350/7 310/12 327/6 350/8 350/10 375/24 352/16 353/4 course [13] 354/4 357/6 307/22 310/1 357/13 357/18 311/8 318/13 357/21 358/7 325/19 329/7 358/10 359/1 329/12 329/21 359/7 359/9 329/23 330/22 359/12 359/20 331/12 348/12 359/25 359/25 363/2 360/13 363/14 court [18] 302/1 Corsi's [1] 303/14 303/14 346/15 could [6] 308/13 303/15 322/11 325/16 326/4 337/11 348/19 326/15 328/19 357/8 363/25 332/5 338/17 366/8 353/20 354/10 couldn't [1] 355/1 355/17 325/1 356/4 356/19 counsel [7] 394/2 305/16 309/23 Court's [3] 330/8 310/16 314/6 331/22 353/13 320/24 328/20 courtroom [1] 329/9 393/6 counsel's [2] 329/13 329/18 cover [2] 306/19 C 363/22 coverage [1] 379/19 CR [1] 302/3 created [3] 308/16 308/16 313/12 creating [1] 319/15 Credico [124] Credico's [2] 376/19 391/15 credit [1] 337/7 crime [6] 311/9 311/10 323/22 325/10 325/15 327/17 Criminal [2] 302/3 304/1 criteria [14] 305/4 312/8 313/4 313/7 313/10 313/13 313/21 314/25 315/1 315/2 315/6 315/8 317/4 317/15 critical [1] 315/3 cross [2] 367/5 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 116 of 179 340/24 342/2 347/18 348/4 cross... [1] 348/22 357/14 395/3 357/25 358/25 crowded [1] 359/9 363/13 316/15 CrowdStrike [1] 373/6 373/23 384/16 384/18 338/5 crude [1] 323/20 385/20 387/1 390/19 396/10 crudity [1] dated [18] 324/10 cyber [3] 306/23 332/23 337/15 338/20 341/22 307/14 338/4 343/10 344/21 D 345/23 349/9 D.C [2] 302/6 350/1 352/24 328/23 359/7 370/9 damaging [1] 374/13 375/20 350/21 376/12 378/19 Dana [1] 355/12 380/23 386/4 dangerous [1] dates [2] 310/4 382/14 310/5 dash [1] 348/11 David [1] 379/21 data [2] 320/8 day [37] 302/4 374/2 333/13 334/19 database [1] 336/20 340/5 333/9 342/6 347/6 date [23] 334/9 349/8 353/8 334/22 336/1 355/11 356/12 336/14 337/21 358/14 359/17 C 362/15 364/22 364/22 365/6 365/11 369/11 369/19 370/13 373/2 373/8 374/5 374/14 375/13 378/13 381/11 382/1 384/5 385/6 385/18 386/21 388/20 389/10 391/24 392/23 days [18] 332/11 333/2 338/12 343/3 343/19 345/8 345/17 346/3 349/15 355/23 360/15 362/21 362/24 367/21 379/7 380/15 388/14 390/21 DC [2] 302/16 303/17 dcd.uscourts.gov [1] 303/18 deadline [1] 345/2 deal [2] 343/14 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 117 of 179 342/1 335/8 335/11 deal... [1] 344/2 demonstrative [3] differences [1] 330/2 330/5 339/16 debacle [1] 330/9 different [3] 351/24 Department [3] 323/15 342/5 debate [1] 321/5 322/2 392/21 379/19 371/6 direct [36] decisions [1] depicted [1] 319/16 319/20 322/20 349/18 320/18 328/6 defendant [8] deposition [1] 333/22 335/24 302/8 302/20 310/15 337/10 339/5 303/1 304/10 304/11 329/14 deputy [1] 322/2 340/15 340/22 342/8 343/2 331/13 395/13 described [2] 323/11 381/8 347/1 348/17 Defendant's [1] Despite [3] 348/21 360/3 309/8 320/5 358/11 361/7 361/19 defense [3] 359/15 363/17 365/13 322/17 328/20 destroy [2] 366/7 368/1 330/18 319/21 319/22 369/13 370/15 deleted [1] devote [1] 371/21 373/17 315/12 374/8 374/17 deliver [1] 391/3 318/17 dialogue [1] 375/15 379/11 delivered [1] 324/14 381/21 384/21 392/10 390/12 391/18 Democratic [11] did [117] didn't [7] 307/4 393/7 395/3 330/24 331/2 321/17 321/18 directed [4] 331/3 331/4 321/20 321/23 306/13 306/23 332/11 333/8 325/22 365/22 307/15 316/23 337/3 338/5 directing [5] 338/10 341/14 difference [2] D Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 118 of 179 do [75] 308/6 310/4 312/16 directing... [5] 312/21 312/24 336/12 348/2 313/6 317/20 352/4 365/1 322/1 325/6 386/14 325/23 326/5 directly [2] 327/18 328/12 323/4 392/9 328/21 328/21 disappoint [1] 329/1 330/1 339/12 330/17 333/24 discovery [1] 334/25 337/4 308/13 339/6 340/2 discuss [4] 340/17 342/21 314/19 366/22 343/22 344/3 393/2 393/9 346/10 347/2 discusses [2] 348/10 350/25 381/4 383/19 351/14 352/6 discussing [1] 353/25 359/20 304/8 360/19 360/21 discussion [2] 361/21 362/7 308/1 321/14 disseminated [1] 364/3 364/11 365/7 366/9 320/7 366/21 367/3 DISTRICT [6] 368/5 368/9 302/1 302/1 368/23 369/16 302/11 302/15 369/21 372/21 303/15 303/15 372/24 374/19 DNC [5] 320/8 374/24 375/3 338/6 339/21 379/12 380/8 342/25 350/23 D 381/24 382/16 383/3 383/8 383/16 383/24 384/1 386/17 386/23 387/10 388/17 390/5 390/24 391/6 391/11 391/19 393/3 393/23 docs [1] 379/22 documents [12] 306/14 307/11 308/11 313/2 328/16 329/22 330/1 330/16 341/15 385/18 385/21 388/15 does [62] 311/24 312/24 314/19 317/18 317/19 319/10 319/10 322/3 322/5 324/12 324/16 324/16 330/18 332/8 333/3 337/24 338/22 341/8 342/16 343/20 345/9 353/22 354/20 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 119 of 179 317/16 317/25 don't [17] 312/8 does... [39] 312/17 313/2 355/8 355/19 315/23 317/14 356/9 356/21 318/10 318/10 357/21 358/10 318/11 319/13 358/17 364/5 325/5 325/20 364/13 364/16 339/12 339/21 366/5 366/13 378/23 382/23 369/12 369/15 382/25 392/13 369/19 369/20 371/14 371/17 Donald [5] 333/10 335/18 373/22 373/25 339/17 339/23 375/9 376/2 344/14 376/20 376/22 done [5] 316/6 376/25 378/3 327/23 386/10 378/6 378/8 389/9 390/5 378/20 379/2 dot [4] 342/1 381/1 381/6 370/10 381/3 381/14 386/5 383/18 386/6 386/11 double [1] 388/4 389/7 386/21 392/16 down [5] 362/1 doesn't [4] 364/25 369/1 321/19 324/17 387/21 393/24 375/1 376/16 doing [3] 311/16 download [1] 378/25 311/17 311/17 dozen [1] domain [4] 316/17 317/12 317/13 D Dr. [3] 370/25 371/4 377/4 Dr. Paul [1] 371/4 Dr. R.K [2] 370/25 377/4 dress [1] 314/22 drone [1] 383/19 drop [2] 351/13 373/1 drum [2] 358/12 359/15 dump [2] 351/24 352/6 dumps [3] 350/14 350/16 353/6 duration [2] 335/7 347/14 during [3] 304/8 328/16 357/5 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 120 of 179 E e-mail [97] e-mailing [1] 369/4 e-mails [18] 304/16 321/21 331/20 341/25 E 376/21 380/20 Eileen [1] 346/8 386/12 387/11 either [2] 393/23 364/15 392/15 East [2] 303/7 elapsed [10] 303/11 335/7 335/9 eastern [9] 335/13 335/21 334/14 334/18 336/7 336/18 335/25 336/13 340/20 341/6 340/23 347/6 347/14 347/25 347/18 348/3 elected [5] 358/5 327/16 327/16 easy [3] 323/21 358/12 358/20 338/8 338/8 359/15 eat [1] 393/17 election [4] Ecuadorian [7] 306/13 306/24 343/13 343/23 309/21 311/24 344/1 350/18 electronically [1] 380/13 383/10 308/11 391/10 elements [3] edit [1] 374/24 304/22 304/23 edited [1] 304/25 378/23 else [3] 376/6 effort [2] 327/15 384/7 393/8 327/15 email [11] eight [4] 316/12 302/17 302/18 335/10 335/20 302/18 302/19 390/21 303/4 303/5 eighth [1] 303/9 303/13 340/22 303/18 371/9 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 121 of 179 e-mails... [14] 342/6 343/14 354/3 363/3 363/8 363/14 372/19 374/4 374/25 378/24 379/1 380/3 386/22 389/18 E.T [1] 335/6 Each [1] 339/13 eager [1] 305/17 ear [1] 320/16 earlier [2] 367/7 393/2 early [4] 360/19 367/8 367/19 372/12 earned [1] 339/23 easel [21] 330/15 332/9 336/24 337/25 341/9 342/21 345/10 354/20 355/20 356/10 356/22 359/21 361/5 366/5 369/22 374/1 302/13 302/13 302/14 302/14 email... [1] 302/20 303/1 389/19 303/1 303/6 embassy [10] 303/10 343/13 343/23 essence [1] 344/1 350/14 327/21 350/16 350/18 even [3] 314/1 353/5 380/13 315/9 326/22 383/10 391/10 emoji [1] 392/17 evening [6] 367/23 392/24 employers [1] 392/25 393/2 367/10 393/11 393/19 end [4] 304/21 events [1] 330/3 310/1 310/5 every [3] 311/18 385/17 373/2 386/10 ended [1] everything [5] 317/13 317/25 339/20 enemy [1] 372/21 383/23 351/12 393/5 England [1] evidence [23] 346/17 305/20 305/22 entire [4] 306/4 309/5 321/13 322/2 313/17 313/17 333/9 374/25 316/21 318/21 entitled [1] 319/2 320/6 396/5 Erik [3] 384/13 323/19 323/22 323/22 326/11 384/14 384/15 326/13 326/18 Esquire [9] E 326/21 326/24 327/9 327/22 329/23 353/17 366/23 evil [2] 313/19 315/7 exact [1] 313/24 exactly [1] 305/20 EXAMINATION [2] 328/6 368/1 except [1] 392/9 exchange [43] 314/6 360/7 360/13 360/17 360/25 361/3 365/15 368/23 370/12 370/13 371/23 372/9 372/10 374/4 374/12 374/18 375/8 377/20 378/8 378/12 379/12 379/16 380/2 380/7 380/8 380/22 381/14 382/4 383/15 384/12 384/16 385/8 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 122 of 179 351/12 exchange... [11] express [1] 311/19 385/10 386/3 386/11 386/15 extent [1] 319/19 387/1 387/16 387/21 388/11 F 390/2 390/19 fact [13] 306/7 391/24 307/9 308/24 exchanges [3] 322/19 324/1 360/24 368/4 338/8 366/2 368/16 369/6 370/2 excuse [1] 376/5 381/4 338/17 385/17 392/7 excused [2] factors [1] 366/24 393/25 316/24 exhibit [135] facts [3] 308/14 exhibits [5] 314/2 314/10 342/24 345/13 failed [1] 382/12 353/16 357/1 fair [1] 306/2 375/24 faith [1] 309/20 exist [1] 372/20 fake [1] 381/9 expect [6] false [3] 306/3 350/22 351/10 322/21 339/17 351/23 352/6 familiar [4] 367/3 367/6 329/22 334/13 experts [1] 344/6 358/15 333/11 families [1] explain [1] 334/2 367/10 exposed [1] E family [1] 350/12 far [2] 326/11 359/22 farce [1] 339/22 Farrah [1] 351/25 fast [1] 368/7 fast-forward [1] 368/7 fault [1] 378/7 favors [2] 309/13 373/2 FBI [7] 329/2 329/3 329/5 329/8 389/23 392/6 392/14 Fear [2] 386/8 386/18 fellow [1] 310/3 few [14] 317/6 317/17 318/3 318/17 320/4 332/11 338/14 342/18 343/3 345/16 349/14 379/7 380/15 388/14 fifth [9] 324/20 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 123 of 179 F firm [1] 328/22 first [50] 305/1 307/3 310/19 310/24 311/2 318/5 318/18 322/21 327/17 328/1 333/4 333/5 333/23 334/1 334/2 334/7 334/17 334/20 335/15 336/9 336/25 338/2 339/2 339/9 340/19 343/21 343/22 347/5 350/7 357/14 362/12 363/7 363/11 364/17 364/17 369/9 370/16 371/22 372/8 373/17 373/18 375/22 375/24 377/23 379/20 379/25 380/1 381/13 381/18 392/24 five [8] 309/11 310/10 310/19 316/6 316/17 347/16 348/1 364/2 FL [4] 302/22 303/3 303/8 303/12 flip [1] 380/20 flying [2] 379/21 380/9 focus [3] 318/7 351/24 352/6 focusing [1] 313/7 follow [1] 379/6 following [1] 365/11 foregoing [1] 396/3 Forget [1] 383/1 forgot [1] 353/25 form [3] 308/12 393/14 393/17 Fort [3] 302/22 303/8 303/12 forth [6] 309/22 313/10 313/21 316/23 324/9 371/24 forward [3] Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 124 of 179 fifth... [8] 324/21 325/10 325/12 325/14 325/19 326/17 350/12 392/11 Fifty [1] 336/11 figuring [1] 310/5 final [3] 318/12 336/12 370/10 Finally [1] 366/7 financial [1] 351/25 find [11] 314/4 317/20 317/24 320/6 346/6 346/8 348/13 363/7 363/14 377/2 378/24 finding [5] 312/1 312/2 320/14 320/19 322/13 findings [2] 308/1 322/18 finish [2] 321/1 324/24 Firenze [1] 352/3 gathered [1] 350/16 353/5 329/23 357/3 362/10 forward... [3] 374/24 376/19 gave [2] 310/18 368/7 376/5 310/19 385/2 385/5 386/10 gentlemen [1] found [2] 317/12 friendship [2] 323/17 323/17 314/22 317/25 front [9] 305/18 get [31] 306/4 foundation [9] 315/11 328/17 310/4 310/13 343/15 344/2 334/8 335/9 310/17 315/21 344/6 344/9 344/18 346/2 315/21 316/1 344/10 351/24 357/10 371/21 316/4 316/5 352/7 352/9 fruit [1] 393/16 317/6 321/22 352/13 Ft [1] 303/3 323/3 323/4 four [9] 307/2 323/5 327/15 312/13 312/18 full [1] 325/2 fully [1] 306/1 327/16 343/13 334/15 339/9 funds [1] 352/1 343/14 345/5 345/8 363/16 366/25 381/22 funny [1] 372/13 346/1 348/10 350/7 351/10 further [3] Fourth [1] 352/2 358/13 364/25 378/3 302/16 359/17 361/3 387/21 Fox [1] 350/21 367/4 372/18 Frank [1] 374/19 G 379/22 388/7 free [2] 311/3 Gaddafi [1] getting [2] 346/9 337/17 371/8 379/14 frequently [1] gained [1] 333/9 Gibbons [1] 393/1 game [2] 351/11 303/2 Friday [3] 351/21 365/11 365/14 Gates [2] 327/7 give [7] 326/12 327/3 357/23 365/17 347/13 358/11 359/14 friend [9] 350/14 F Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 125 of 179 G 304/25 308/3 308/8 308/24 309/1 309/5 310/12 313/17 313/17 316/21 316/25 317/17 317/24 318/21 319/2 319/12 323/19 325/4 326/18 328/16 329/25 330/16 342/8 343/4 350/19 351/14 361/24 363/23 366/16 366/19 367/10 367/17 367/22 371/19 371/24 372/8 378/15 380/19 381/13 381/19 381/21 386/9 386/10 393/1 393/5 393/5 gone [1] 326/10 good [12] 304/7 304/12 309/20 328/8 345/3 345/6 360/21 363/23 366/17 367/17 388/6 388/7 GOP's [1] 333/10 got [5] 328/17 339/18 364/2 387/25 392/8 governing [1] 331/3 government [17] 304/23 308/8 311/2 315/1 316/6 316/16 317/22 319/7 320/10 323/11 324/18 326/3 327/25 328/2 328/5 333/7 395/4 government's [108] Gowdy [3] 310/8 312/11 312/11 GRANT [1] 303/6 gray [2] 361/14 368/18 great [3] 311/20 339/16 390/12 greatly [1] 310/4 green [9] 312/11 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 126 of 179 give... [2] 366/3 372/23 gives [1] 310/21 giving [3] 306/6 310/20 326/10 gmail.com [1] 303/13 go [16] 305/23 306/5 307/7 307/10 313/6 313/14 317/1 318/22 319/5 319/20 321/1 358/3 362/18 367/12 367/22 371/25 go-between [2] 319/5 319/20 goals [1] 310/25 Godfather [1] 382/21 goes [10] 309/1 309/1 310/21 311/18 312/5 313/8 313/9 314/17 315/19 318/8 going [47] 304/9 389/18 hacker [1] 338/6 green... [8] 336/25 341/10 hackers [2] 333/7 351/21 354/4 361/6 361/17 368/21 had [25] 313/21 314/20 316/12 385/14 386/13 317/4 317/24 griffith [4] 318/15 319/1 303/14 303/18 319/16 319/25 396/3 396/10 319/25 320/14 ground [2] 320/18 332/12 320/16 363/22 groups [1] 338/6 338/6 339/20 Gsmith [1] 303/9 339/20 351/22 360/10 367/8 Guccifer [11] 369/17 381/4 314/20 337/15 389/18 391/20 337/22 338/3 392/2 392/4 338/13 338/20 half [3] 310/14 338/22 339/2 316/17 392/6 341/12 342/14 hand [1] 328/4 342/24 handed [2] H 328/15 343/7 H.R.C [2] 370/24 happening [3] 377/3 319/19 345/3 hack [5] 337/4 345/7 337/7 338/14 happens [2] 342/18 342/25 320/21 321/3 hacked [3] happy [1] 313/6 332/13 338/6 hard [3] 305/14 G 316/10 339/20 has [24] 308/5 308/11 308/18 309/13 312/24 313/9 313/24 315/2 316/6 316/16 316/23 317/22 319/7 320/21 321/4 323/3 339/13 339/13 339/23 360/20 366/1 366/15 372/21 392/22 have [85] 304/22 311/11 311/18 312/7 312/16 313/1 313/2 313/5 313/10 315/10 315/12 315/14 315/19 315/20 315/23 316/22 317/6 317/8 317/13 317/13 317/14 318/13 321/5 321/13 321/20 321/23 322/1 322/6 323/10 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 127 of 179 H 393/16 393/18 having [3] 331/19 352/1 365/8 he [116] he's [9] 307/22 308/23 309/1 310/16 323/6 325/22 327/7 346/14 372/22 head [7] 331/9 350/17 362/6 375/6 380/11 381/9 391/8 headaches [1] 373/3 hear [18] 304/9 307/4 315/21 315/21 316/1 316/4 316/5 316/8 323/4 323/8 323/13 324/5 324/15 324/25 325/1 325/2 387/23 393/1 heard [8] 305/1 307/3 307/5 307/21 324/13 327/19 327/20 356/25 hearing [8] 305/23 308/20 309/14 309/14 310/15 310/15 316/12 317/2 heart [1] 311/22 heat [1] 381/3 HELD [1] 302/10 her [5] 339/18 339/20 339/21 339/21 339/23 here [29] 306/18 306/22 311/1 311/25 312/3 313/14 314/17 315/3 328/22 334/17 348/22 351/25 354/1 361/13 367/11 367/19 371/15 374/2 376/24 378/11 379/5 384/1 384/4 385/14 386/13 387/14 390/9 390/11 391/16 here's [1] 320/18 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 128 of 179 have... [56] 325/12 325/22 327/18 328/17 328/24 330/2 330/17 330/19 332/8 333/14 334/8 335/9 336/24 337/4 339/14 340/2 340/6 340/20 345/2 346/2 346/19 347/8 350/21 353/2 353/6 353/16 353/25 361/24 362/4 363/21 364/1 364/15 365/4 365/5 366/20 367/9 367/9 372/14 372/16 372/21 373/3 376/4 378/24 379/18 379/20 382/11 383/24 386/24 389/20 391/4 393/11 393/12 393/14 393/16 346/7 365/25 368/9 386/9 Hi [1] 328/9 392/10 hide [2] 311/7 himself [6] 319/13 319/15 319/16 higher [1] 323/9 324/1 382/23 highlighted [11] 324/5 339/24 308/10 333/23 his [31] 305/11 307/10 308/24 334/1 334/7 310/16 310/22 334/17 335/25 310/23 311/22 336/12 340/16 312/3 312/4 347/3 347/17 313/8 313/10 348/3 highly [1] 338/7 313/11 313/18 314/14 315/3 Hill [1] 308/21 315/5 317/3 Hillary [12] 317/23 320/16 339/16 339/17 321/24 324/3 344/10 351/8 324/6 324/6 351/18 352/13 327/1 327/13 358/24 366/15 339/23 339/24 371/6 382/13 353/10 362/2 383/19 389/22 him [18] 306/10 365/8 373/2 hold [1] 386/20 310/20 312/5 home [4] 335/18 313/2 314/18 349/4 350/13 316/14 322/18 392/25 323/8 324/24 325/21 325/23 honestly [1] 321/4 326/23 327/16 H honesty [1] 315/25 Honor [11] 325/1 325/11 325/24 328/2 330/18 353/18 366/16 367/14 367/24 392/20 393/21 HONORABLE [1] 302/10 hope [1] 393/11 hosted [2] 354/18 391/15 hour [4] 310/15 316/3 379/20 392/6 hours [3] 334/16 367/6 382/12 House [1] 308/4 how [46] 305/8 306/7 312/5 314/21 315/23 315/24 321/21 322/5 328/12 328/24 329/3 332/24 334/13 335/13 335/21 335/21 336/9 338/9 339/2 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 129 of 179 H I 362/14 363/22 365/6 369/3 369/25 371/19 374/3 378/15 379/14 379/21 380/9 380/19 381/13 381/19 381/21 382/12 382/25 392/13 392/14 392/20 392/25 I've [6] 318/9 322/22 322/23 328/19 355/9 364/2 I-N-D-E-X [1] 395/1 IAN [1] 302/13 idea [3] 308/25 353/2 353/7 identified [1] 318/20 identifying [1] 316/24 illegal [2] 307/23 311/4 immaterial [1] 321/11 Impact [1] Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 130 of 179 how... [27] I'd [31] 330/8 342/16 342/24 331/17 331/22 343/16 345/4 332/15 333/17 345/25 350/6 333/22 338/16 353/4 357/2 340/9 340/15 357/25 360/12 341/17 342/8 360/20 362/7 343/3 344/16 362/11 363/14 345/19 346/22 365/23 367/3 347/1 352/19 376/2 378/3 353/13 360/3 378/6 380/3 361/7 365/13 381/6 383/16 368/7 370/4 386/6 386/15 376/8 377/16 386/16 388/4 378/15 380/17 392/16 384/9 388/24 however [2] 390/4 390/12 332/2 386/10 I'll [3] 313/5 HRC [9] 350/23 365/24 379/9 351/1 351/13 I'm [40] 304/12 351/22 358/12 304/25 306/6 358/19 358/19 316/20 317/16 358/23 359/15 322/9 328/16 hundred [2] 329/25 330/14 310/14 316/16 335/11 338/7 hundreds [3] 342/8 343/4 316/8 316/9 350/20 351/14 323/18 357/23 358/14 hurt [1] 351/22 359/17 361/24 306/24 307/18 329/6 Info [4] 354/16 intending [1] Impact... [1] 354/17 355/5 305/24 350/21 355/11 intent [7] important [9] 325/13 325/22 304/20 306/11 inform [1] 367/10 326/13 326/17 306/19 308/3 information [6] 327/4 327/11 311/1 313/16 308/12 320/7 327/23 319/24 322/15 320/13 320/13 intentionally [1] 322/19 315/6 impressionist [1] 320/14 375/10 informative [1] interest [1] 324/15 314/18 310/24 impressions [2] interested [1] 324/16 324/16 ing [1] 377/1 inadvertently [1] inhibit [1] 311/2 327/12 initials [3] 351/5 interesting [2] 393/6 358/23 375/3 305/10 317/16 include [1] inquiry [2] interests [2] 307/18 315/21 318/11 309/3 309/4 includes [1] inside [1] 320/12 interference [1] 370/9 insisted [1] 309/21 including [2] 314/14 intermediaries 324/17 366/22 instruct [2] [1] 319/2 incorrect [1] 304/21 393/8 intermediary [13] 309/2 instructions [2] 317/25 318/20 indeed [2] 326/10 393/13 318/22 318/23 314/16 315/20 integrity [1] 318/23 319/1 Indi [1] 352/2 375/1 319/1 319/4 individual [1] intelligence [3] 319/5 319/6 371/4 305/19 311/23 319/8 319/20 individuals [2] I Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 131 of 179 329/23 330/23 331/12 344/5 intermediary... 348/12 363/3 [1] 357/3 international [1] investigation's [3] 308/14 314/3 331/6 314/11 interrupt [1] investigative [1] 388/1 312/17 interrupts [1] investigators [1] 315/14 322/8 interview [10] 306/16 306/19 invite [1] 391/4 inviting [1] 309/9 310/8 327/1 312/20 331/19 involved [1] 332/7 332/11 327/7 332/24 369/3 introduction [1] involvement [2] 309/3 311/11 318/7 investigation [28] is [279] isn't [4] 304/18 305/4 306/12 305/3 363/24 306/21 307/2 392/14 307/3 307/8 issue [2] 318/16 307/9 310/2 322/7 311/13 314/9 314/23 314/24 issued [2] 309/9 310/9 315/12 315/16 issues [1] 314/25 316/2 318/8 it [92] 305/2 322/7 329/9 305/4 305/10 329/13 329/14 306/17 307/9 329/18 329/19 I 307/13 308/5 308/18 308/21 309/1 311/7 311/25 313/6 314/18 314/20 315/19 316/7 317/7 318/3 318/6 318/8 318/11 318/12 318/18 319/10 319/10 319/17 320/17 321/23 322/3 322/5 322/16 322/16 323/1 323/11 323/12 324/10 325/3 325/13 326/5 326/13 326/17 326/20 327/2 327/11 330/7 330/12 330/14 330/17 332/2 332/3 332/12 332/12 334/15 337/18 338/8 338/25 339/6 341/25 350/15 352/3 353/8 353/17 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 132 of 179 339/1 341/10 it... [29] 354/18 341/10 343/21 353/24 354/21 360/20 362/14 355/10 355/10 364/20 365/23 355/21 355/21 371/15 374/25 356/11 356/11 375/1 375/11 356/23 358/4 376/22 376/23 358/4 358/12 376/24 378/10 359/9 359/15 378/25 379/4 361/6 364/21 379/5 381/5 366/6 370/9 381/17 382/6 370/16 372/12 383/21 385/11 374/2 376/16 385/13 386/20 377/8 378/5 386/21 388/19 378/11 379/24 390/7 390/8 381/18 385/7 392/11 393/7 it's [60] 305/14 385/14 386/13 390/9 308/8 308/8 310/14 311/14 Italy [3] 350/4 350/8 357/23 312/11 312/12 items [1] 315/18 316/2 316/4 316/10 316/10 its [13] 305/4 306/12 307/15 318/2 318/14 313/12 314/24 319/9 320/4 314/25 317/4 321/21 322/6 317/4 317/18 323/11 325/16 322/13 322/13 332/10 333/4 322/18 327/25 334/12 337/15 itself [2] 313/12 337/17 338/1 I 325/10 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 133 of 179 J J.A [3] 374/24 375/3 377/2 JACKSON [1] 302/10 JASON [1] 302/7 JED [1] 302/14 Jerome [1] 343/9 Jerry [1] 352/3 JFK [1] 388/6 Jill [1] 379/18 JOHN [4] 302/13 351/18 389/19 389/21 Johnson [1] 379/19 joint [1] 327/15 JON [1] 302/14 JONATHAN [1] 302/13 Jonathan.kravis3 [1] 302/17 Jones [1] 354/18 JR [2] 302/7 304/2 judge [4] 302/11 337/15 337/23 385/24 387/4 338/3 338/21 388/24 390/14 judge... [3] 340/2 340/25 393/20 304/21 315/25 342/23 just [68] 306/6 323/5 Julian [19] 305/2 jurors [3] 363/21 315/18 316/6 364/5 392/23 317/9 322/23 311/17 312/25 jury [50] 302/9 324/9 325/2 319/8 319/9 304/5 304/6 325/5 325/21 319/21 331/11 304/7 321/20 325/25 332/7 361/24 362/5 322/7 326/10 332/25 334/2 362/6 363/9 330/6 332/16 334/22 335/14 364/15 365/5 333/18 337/12 337/2 341/13 365/19 366/3 338/17 340/10 342/15 343/6 366/15 375/7 341/18 342/9 349/7 349/17 380/11 391/8 350/15 350/25 July [18] 341/22 343/4 344/17 345/20 348/20 351/1 352/4 341/24 342/3 349/23 352/20 354/14 354/19 342/20 342/23 353/14 355/14 355/3 356/6 343/10 343/11 356/1 356/16 356/25 359/10 344/21 345/1 357/8 359/3 359/19 360/10 345/24 346/5 360/4 361/8 360/12 361/3 346/19 347/8 367/1 367/8 361/13 363/20 347/20 348/5 367/16 368/12 366/23 367/4 348/24 349/9 370/5 371/19 368/18 369/16 349/20 373/11 374/9 369/21 370/11 June [15] 375/15 376/9 371/25 372/5 331/18 332/23 377/16 378/16 372/23 373/4 334/10 334/15 379/9 380/17 374/14 377/25 334/20 336/2 381/19 384/9 380/3 380/19 336/15 337/4 J Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 134 of 179 know [20] 305/15 308/4 just... [17] 311/1 312/8 381/7 382/2 312/22 315/23 382/16 383/23 316/4 321/21 384/5 384/18 339/14 360/19 385/8 386/20 360/21 362/7 388/1 388/5 363/22 363/25 388/6 389/14 365/4 367/12 390/16 390/22 367/18 382/10 391/24 392/6 382/25 388/17 392/10 Justice [2] 321/6 knowledge [1] 313/1 322/3 known [2] K 307/22 338/4 K.A [1] 378/5 knows [1] keep [4] 350/19 310/22 351/20 382/8 KRAVIS [3] 382/22 302/13 363/20 key [1] 314/12 395/5 kicked [1] 346/9 kryptonite [1] kill [2] 382/14 366/15 386/9 Kunstler [7] killed [1] 371/8 362/7 362/9 kind [7] 319/16 362/9 376/12 320/10 321/9 376/18 376/25 323/5 323/22 378/1 324/18 372/18 Kunstler's [1] knew [1] 317/20 362/2 J L Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 135 of 179 Labor [2] 358/14 359/17 language [1] 306/19 Larry [1] 379/20 Las [2] 303/7 303/11 last [21] 309/15 328/12 342/22 344/2 350/24 351/1 352/5 353/24 354/21 355/6 359/10 365/20 366/6 370/15 373/4 374/21 384/3 384/25 385/2 385/5 391/16 lasted [1] 335/22 late [1] 312/12 later [10] 308/19 319/17 338/14 343/3 345/17 355/23 367/8 369/11 380/15 381/11 Lauderdale [4] 302/22 303/3 L legal [5] 321/22 322/8 326/10 326/12 373/3 length [2] 309/11 310/11 less [3] 309/10 310/10 340/20 let [13] 308/18 309/13 324/24 327/9 350/15 350/25 351/11 360/21 363/20 363/25 386/20 386/20 387/4 let's [5] 304/5 311/11 318/5 360/22 364/3 letter [10] 307/12 308/9 309/6 310/1 310/6 321/6 321/18 322/1 391/4 392/10 letters [3] 309/22 351/1 358/19 level [1] 372/24 liberal [3] 323/13 324/2 324/4 Liberian [1] 372/13 Libya [5] 370/10 371/5 373/24 374/15 375/10 lie [3] 305/24 308/23 308/23 lied [3] 321/11 321/20 321/21 like [43] 308/23 311/18 311/22 316/4 330/9 331/17 331/23 332/15 333/17 333/22 335/21 337/18 338/16 340/9 340/15 341/17 342/9 343/3 344/16 345/19 346/22 347/1 352/19 353/14 360/3 361/7 364/2 365/13 365/24 368/7 370/4 373/11 375/1 376/8 377/16 378/15 379/11 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 136 of 179 Lauderdale... [2] 303/8 303/12 law [5] 302/20 303/10 325/16 326/2 326/14 lawyer [5] 309/16 324/22 325/15 326/2 362/2 lawyers [5] 305/11 305/16 313/8 314/14 373/2 lead [1] 308/13 leaked [1] 331/7 learn [4] 308/19 315/24 393/4 393/5 least [2] 339/24 362/2 leave [1] 366/21 led [1] 329/9 left [6] 332/10 359/22 361/14 368/19 392/5 392/7 leg [3] 322/25 323/1 323/2 386/17 393/16 like... [6] 380/17 live [1] 393/8 living [8] 328/21 384/9 388/24 343/25 346/16 389/14 390/4 346/17 350/17 390/12 380/12 383/12 limited [1] 391/9 309/17 load [3] 385/3 limiting [2] 385/6 386/10 309/23 309/23 lobbying [1] line [4] 337/8 339/18 353/2 376/15 Loesch [1] 387/24 355/12 link [4] 365/24 logical [2] 381/3 381/7 363/23 367/13 383/18 links [2] 306/24 London [15] 343/14 343/23 307/18 Lisa [4] 303/14 344/1 350/18 379/21 380/9 303/18 396/3 380/13 383/10 396/10 385/2 385/5 list [1] 315/17 listed [1] 334/8 386/9 387/23 listen [1] 316/1 391/3 391/6 391/10 listening [1] long [7] 318/2 315/24 328/24 329/3 little [9] 306/6 335/13 335/21 306/6 322/23 367/3 392/23 350/9 364/25 372/23 383/17 longer [1] L 310/18 longtime [1] 323/12 look [24] 305/13 307/12 308/2 308/7 308/10 309/15 310/20 312/10 313/3 313/15 313/22 317/5 318/1 320/3 320/5 327/2 330/23 331/13 348/9 362/16 365/23 366/8 375/1 378/25 looked [1] 342/15 looking [9] 310/22 312/13 363/6 368/4 374/5 380/19 388/11 389/24 391/25 lot [1] 363/22 lots [3] 339/7 339/11 360/21 Luca [3] 382/15 382/17 382/20 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 137 of 179 major [1] 373/3 manager [1] 391/4 lunch [1] 304/9 majority [1] mantra [2] lying [3] 308/25 310/7 316/18 316/20 make [9] 311/25 311/17 311/22 316/18 341/13 many [8] 315/23 M 352/1 355/12 323/19 324/8 ma'am [1] 328/8 355/23 356/13 326/19 342/24 machinations [2] 365/23 367/20 357/2 363/14 319/24 323/24 maker [1] 380/3 made [6] 306/4 393/16 MARANDO [1] 308/18 319/9 makes [1] 365/8 302/13 322/14 331/19 making [5] 326/1 march [6] 388/18 326/3 335/4 317/19 317/20 mail [97] 353/10 369/2 318/12 318/15 mailing [1] 369/4 malignant [1] 322/13 363/24 mails [18] 320/11 Margaret [3] 304/16 321/21 Malloch [7] 362/9 376/11 331/20 341/25 346/6 346/6 376/18 342/6 343/14 346/8 346/11 mark [1] 380/25 354/3 363/3 346/13 346/14 marked [3] 363/8 363/14 346/16 331/23 332/16 372/19 374/4 man [2] 323/9 333/18 374/25 378/24 379/23 material [4] 379/1 380/3 Manafort [10] 321/23 331/7 386/22 389/18 344/20 344/22 331/7 389/16 Mainstream [1] 344/25 345/6 materiality [1] 358/18 345/9 352/16 321/25 maintains [1] 352/23 352/25 materials [2] 374/25 353/6 353/9 306/15 317/12 L Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 138 of 179 363/25 366/2 men [1] 324/10 369/16 372/23 mention [5] matter [12] 373/20 374/19 307/16 307/16 308/4 308/5 379/22 382/25 307/21 357/2 310/2 321/19 384/23 385/1 363/15 322/3 322/5 386/20 386/20 mentioned [10] 325/14 326/1 387/4 388/6 314/5 314/7 369/5 389/24 388/7 314/8 327/8 392/8 396/5 mean [4] 320/1 327/8 327/9 matters [5] 324/8 325/21 362/4 363/9 309/20 311/20 326/6 370/25 377/4 323/14 323/16 meant [2] mentions [1] 393/9 318/3 may [11] 306/9 312/11 319/18 measures [2] message [62] 306/19 308/9 307/14 307/18 338/14 342/2 309/10 310/9 media [3] 320/7 357/17 357/19 356/1 362/4 358/18 360/21 357/25 358/1 367/7 367/20 389/20 393/21 meet [3] 304/23 358/6 358/8 358/25 359/10 maybe [4] 318/4 304/24 339/21 323/18 367/11 meets [1] 317/15 361/20 362/1 members [8] 362/13 362/17 393/22 363/6 363/13 me [30] 309/13 304/7 304/17 309/19 310/7 364/10 364/16 310/24 319/6 316/11 316/13 364/17 364/22 338/17 339/16 348/19 390/13 365/1 365/10 339/17 350/15 365/14 366/2 350/22 350/25 members' [1] 305/6 366/4 366/8 353/3 357/23 366/10 368/4 358/11 359/14 memory [1] 351/22 368/9 368/16 360/21 363/20 M Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 139 of 179 M 387/2 387/8 387/10 390/2 390/17 391/17 messaging [1] 388/2 met [2] 304/22 313/4 MICHAEL [1] 302/13 Michael.marando [1] 302/18 Michelle [4] 328/3 328/5 328/11 395/5 mid [1] 350/22 mid-August [1] 350/22 midafternoon [2] 363/21 366/20 middle [4] 315/10 374/18 377/22 377/23 mind [15] 304/19 304/20 308/24 311/22 312/4 312/21 313/11 313/12 313/18 315/3 315/5 316/22 321/25 322/24 324/6 minds [1] 318/10 mindset [2] 306/11 307/6 minute [2] 336/19 393/23 minutes [15] 309/11 310/10 310/19 317/17 321/24 336/8 336/11 341/7 347/16 348/1 363/25 364/2 366/20 367/22 379/20 MISCELLANY [1] 395/11 mislead [3] 313/19 315/7 315/8 mission [1] 371/5 misstatement [1] 325/15 moguls [1] 339/19 moment [12] 332/25 336/21 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 140 of 179 message... [32] 368/23 369/10 369/13 369/19 370/11 370/13 370/17 370/19 372/9 373/18 373/24 373/25 374/14 374/15 379/6 379/12 379/15 380/1 380/2 380/6 380/7 381/23 382/1 385/8 386/15 387/15 388/11 388/21 389/3 390/5 390/24 391/20 messages [26] 342/20 357/12 357/15 359/19 360/25 361/11 362/23 363/3 363/8 368/19 368/21 369/21 371/24 373/15 380/3 380/5 383/14 383/22 384/5 384/18 393/4 350/17 368/10 369/11 383/11 moment... [10] morning [6] 367/9 367/19 383/20 340/1 340/12 368/24 386/7 Mr. Bannon [10] 343/17 354/19 393/12 393/13 360/10 360/14 362/4 370/1 morphed [1] 360/22 361/4 370/12 372/5 315/2 386/3 386/5 377/25 388/10 move [7] 309/6 386/7 386/11 moments [1] 322/25 343/4 386/18 386/22 342/18 352/1 366/16 Mr. Buschel [4] Monday [1] 383/3 392/20 305/15 308/9 387/20 movie [1] 382/20 309/16 316/13 money [3] Mr. Corsi [32] 339/18 339/23 Moving [2] 364/25 378/3 319/22 343/11 352/1 Mr [22] 307/7 345/5 345/16 month [1] 309/7 312/2 345/23 346/1 362/14 318/23 318/25 346/5 346/19 months [2] 327/8 340/13 349/9 349/14 318/16 328/25 350/1 350/7 more [22] 313/5 343/18 343/18 343/25 348/8 350/8 350/10 313/14 314/18 353/5 363/20 352/16 353/4 315/20 319/25 369/6 371/10 354/4 357/6 323/15 346/8 374/3 374/4 357/13 357/18 350/14 350/16 374/4 381/7 357/21 358/7 350/22 351/12 389/7 392/16 358/10 359/1 353/5 356/13 395/5 359/7 359/9 357/6 358/13 Mr. [440] 359/12 359/20 359/16 366/8 359/25 359/25 375/13 387/23 Mr. Assange [7] 331/19 332/25 360/13 363/14 388/15 390/2 M Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 141 of 179 314/2 314/10 314/18 314/22 Mr. Corsi's [1] 315/10 315/11 346/15 Mr. Credico [111] 315/15 317/7 Mr. Smith [1] Mr. Credico's [2] 316/14 376/19 391/15 Mr. Stone [193] Mr. Stone's [35] Mr. Gates [1] 304/17 304/19 327/7 304/22 305/7 Mr. Gowdy [1] 305/16 308/17 312/11 309/2 309/16 Mr. Malloch [1] 309/18 311/3 346/16 Mr. Manafort [6] 311/3 312/21 314/6 316/1 345/6 345/9 322/17 322/24 352/16 352/23 323/15 326/23 353/6 353/9 327/4 334/5 Mr. Prince [11] 335/16 336/6 327/8 384/22 336/17 341/3 385/5 385/11 345/25 346/24 387/2 387/9 347/11 347/22 387/16 387/18 348/14 349/6 387/23 388/4 354/2 360/16 388/7 362/11 376/5 Mr. Rogow [2] 385/4 304/3 325/25 Mr. Stones [1] Mr. Schiff [12] 327/23 312/24 312/24 Mr. Trump [1] 313/2 314/1 M 327/16 Mr. Trump's [7] 327/12 336/4 336/17 341/5 344/24 347/24 349/4 Mr. Zelinsky [1] 304/14 Ms [4] 344/19 368/3 375/18 389/7 Ms. [26] 328/3 328/14 328/21 329/7 330/1 330/22 340/12 341/20 345/22 348/21 349/25 352/22 354/14 355/3 356/6 356/21 357/11 360/6 361/10 368/15 370/7 373/14 376/25 378/1 380/21 389/2 Ms. Kunstler [2] 376/25 378/1 Ms. Michelle [1] 328/3 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 142 of 179 330/25 331/2 389/15 must [3] 304/23 331/3 332/12 Ms. Taylor [23] 333/8 337/3 309/10 310/10 328/14 328/21 mutual [1] 357/3 338/5 338/10 329/7 330/1 330/22 340/12 my [21] 310/25 341/14 342/1 311/19 313/1 NE [1] 302/21 341/20 345/22 314/21 338/7 necessary [1] 348/21 349/25 339/13 351/25 321/9 352/22 354/14 361/25 372/14 necessity [1] 355/3 356/6 372/17 372/22 305/19 356/21 357/11 373/24 374/15 need [5] 321/25 360/6 361/10 374/24 378/7 322/25 367/20 368/15 370/7 379/18 382/8 379/19 382/10 373/14 380/21 needed [1] 385/2 385/5 389/2 352/2 MSM [3] 358/12 392/9 392/13 negative [1] 358/15 359/15 N much [17] 306/1 Nadler [1] 383/1 348/25 neither [1] 307/4 332/24 naked [1] 313/8 351/23 336/9 338/9 name [8] 328/10 network [1] 339/2 339/17 328/12 342/16 333/8 343/16 345/4 342/17 351/15 never [3] 339/19 345/25 350/6 369/16 382/8 339/20 360/20 351/23 352/6 382/9 new [3] 360/21 353/4 360/12 named [2] 360/1 372/13 391/14 362/11 386/15 361/1 news [3] 383/1 Mueller [1] narrative [2] 388/6 393/6 329/10 371/1 377/5 Newsmakers [1] multiple [3] National [10] 356/8 320/5 389/14 M Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 143 of 179 308/1 308/11 309/4 311/11 newspaper [2] 312/1 312/2 319/11 332/22 next [35] 306/17 313/1 314/21 317/8 317/24 307/12 308/7 318/9 318/22 308/17 309/12 318/22 318/22 310/21 310/22 319/1 319/2 312/10 312/23 319/8 320/18 313/3 313/15 321/20 321/24 320/3 321/15 321/25 322/8 335/6 347/17 324/7 327/4 351/23 352/6 327/22 330/11 353/8 354/11 332/1 332/19 361/25 362/1 354/25 356/3 362/14 363/18 362/14 363/10 363/18 364/22 369/20 372/18 365/11 365/21 382/7 382/9 367/21 373/1 392/8 395/12 375/13 378/13 Nod [1] 356/18 380/20 383/3 385/18 386/21 none [2] 311/4 nice [1] 323/21 339/12 night [4] 365/20 nonpartisan [1] 311/8 379/24 385/2 not [73] 304/24 385/5 305/12 305/22 nine [1] 348/1 307/25 308/20 no [43] 302/3 308/22 308/24 307/16 307/16 309/9 309/23 307/24 307/25 N 310/9 310/15 311/9 311/10 311/25 311/25 312/4 312/12 313/1 314/4 314/13 314/23 315/6 315/14 316/6 317/20 318/23 319/4 319/18 319/18 320/6 321/4 321/10 321/21 321/22 322/7 322/7 323/6 323/21 323/21 323/21 324/2 324/22 325/10 325/11 325/14 325/15 326/1 326/2 326/2 326/3 326/9 327/10 327/17 348/22 351/13 351/22 358/12 359/15 363/22 365/5 366/21 369/16 369/20 374/24 378/7 382/25 385/19 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 144 of 179 NW [2] 302/16 not... [6] 385/20 303/16 387/19 392/14 NYC [3] 358/14 359/17 382/8 393/2 393/3 393/9 O notebooks [1] oath [3] 309/11 366/21 310/11 317/10 noted [1] 393/2 objection [11] nothing [9] 320/23 321/7 307/23 307/23 322/9 324/23 311/7 311/16 324/25 325/25 313/25 315/12 330/10 330/11 315/17 378/23 331/25 332/1 392/8 332/19 notion [3] objectionable [1] 319/16 319/21 325/3 319/22 obstruct [1] November [1] 326/5 302/6 obviously [1] now [102] 325/20 number [16] occasion [1] 331/24 332/4 321/12 334/5 340/10 occasions [1] 340/13 345/12 326/25 348/6 348/6 occur [1] 323/24 348/7 348/10 occurred [2] 348/14 348/14 319/13 324/19 356/17 359/6 October [23] 361/9 367/19 N 350/20 380/23 381/2 381/11 381/23 383/24 384/6 384/17 384/22 385/15 385/18 385/20 386/4 386/23 387/14 387/16 388/11 388/14 389/13 389/17 390/20 391/25 392/18 odious [1] 324/9 off [4] 382/5 383/23 388/5 393/7 Office [3] 302/15 302/20 303/10 officer [1] 329/6 offices [2] 306/16 308/21 Official [1] 303/14 officials [1] 333/11 often [1] 331/7 oh [6] 314/22 358/4 362/14 362/20 370/17 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 145 of 179 336/2 336/19 339/3 340/23 oh... [1] 390/4 okay [19] 314/23 343/21 348/22 348/25 350/20 330/20 333/21 356/24 361/21 350/19 361/24 362/2 363/10 362/23 364/3 363/11 363/25 364/4 364/7 364/1 364/2 365/7 367/7 364/23 365/2 369/5 371/22 365/3 366/7 372/8 375/3 369/17 371/25 380/21 382/4 372/18 373/2 383/22 385/4 373/18 374/18 Olas [2] 303/7 375/22 377/23 303/11 377/25 381/18 old [2] 351/22 381/24 382/9 383/1 382/12 384/3 omelette [1] 384/22 389/14 393/16 once [7] 308/22 one's [1] 392/8 ones [4] 354/2 311/14 313/7 354/3 354/4 315/9 322/14 368/19 323/6 340/9 one [49] 305/16 only [9] 312/13 312/18 314/14 310/12 315/24 318/3 320/4 318/18 319/23 327/11 327/13 320/20 321/24 330/9 367/22 324/9 324/11 327/15 329/19 open [10] 305/17 322/11 329/21 335/5 O 326/15 332/5 353/20 354/10 355/1 355/17 356/4 356/19 opening [10] 304/9 304/11 305/2 307/4 309/10 310/10 327/20 327/20 327/21 395/13 opportunity [3] 306/3 321/5 367/9 Opposite [1] 339/23 opposition [1] 333/9 ops [1] 351/25 order [2] 304/23 394/1 org [1] 342/1 organization [1] 331/6 orient [2] 361/13 390/16 original [3] 346/1 377/9 377/10 originating [1] Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 146 of 179 388/19 391/20 outgrowth [2] originating... [1] 323/24 323/25 pa.com [2] 303/4 303/5 outside [1] 348/9 317/11 PAC [1] 352/1 other [14] 306/14 307/14 over [6] 310/14 page [53] 305/25 317/14 321/8 306/17 307/12 307/19 308/12 350/9 358/12 308/7 309/12 312/16 317/21 359/16 309/15 310/23 319/6 319/7 overview [1] 310/23 312/10 320/20 324/3 318/7 312/23 313/15 326/22 327/6 own [1] 391/5 313/16 313/22 329/23 373/2 314/21 315/10 others [3] P 317/5 318/2 319/15 320/8 P-R-O-C-E-E-D-I-N 318/14 320/3 320/16 -G-S [1] 303/25 333/23 336/13 our [7] 306/1 P.A [3] 302/20 337/14 339/5 312/12 314/2 303/2 303/6 314/10 314/23 p.m [25] 302/7 339/6 340/16 347/2 347/3 327/20 327/21 334/21 336/2 355/9 362/18 out [21] 307/13 336/15 341/1 363/7 363/18 310/5 311/7 347/9 347/20 363/18 364/9 316/6 316/17 348/5 348/24 364/17 364/17 317/24 317/25 357/16 358/4 365/1 365/2 318/6 346/9 361/20 364/10 365/13 365/21 348/22 360/19 364/14 365/3 366/8 366/9 367/1 372/12 366/10 366/14 369/14 370/16 373/1 373/5 369/15 375/23 372/2 372/3 374/24 374/25 376/3 381/2 372/8 373/18 377/2 382/8 381/24 387/22 375/22 377/23 387/19 393/20 O Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 147 of 179 317/4 318/7 318/9 page... [4] part [6] 306/12 381/22 383/3 314/17 318/2 391/19 395/12 pages [4] 309/13 322/21 324/6 379/24 310/14 317/6 participate [3] 318/4 PAIGE [1] 303/10 306/15 311/20 329/13 Pantangeli [3] 324/13 324/13 particular [1] 329/12 324/17 papers [1] 383/1 particularly [3] 363/23 370/24 paragraph [6] 377/4 308/17 309/15 318/17 318/18 parties [1] 366/24 333/5 352/5 party [3] 319/6 paragraphs [4] 319/7 331/4 308/10 318/17 pass [4] 369/4 320/4 339/10 parameters [21] 373/24 374/15 380/4 305/4 306/20 passed [13] 306/22 308/2 328/19 332/24 308/2 308/15 336/9 338/9 308/16 312/7 339/2 343/16 314/3 314/5 345/4 345/25 314/5 314/7 350/6 353/4 314/8 314/11 360/12 362/11 314/13 314/16 386/16 315/12 315/16 P passing [1] 380/5 past [1] 321/24 pastries [1] 393/17 patient [1] 382/8 Paul [8] 344/20 344/22 370/25 371/4 375/10 377/4 378/5 379/22 pausing [1] 382/16 pay [2] 385/3 385/6 pays [1] 320/17 PDF [1] 370/10 peace [1] 371/5 pending [1] 343/14 penetrated [1] 333/7 people [18] 305/23 315/25 316/5 316/15 318/24 319/23 319/25 324/14 324/17 325/19 327/6 327/12 327/18 337/18 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 148 of 179 333/14 333/23 329/17 367/4 334/5 335/4 pillars [3] 307/2 people... [4] 335/5 335/16 312/18 312/18 339/14 344/13 335/18 336/1 placed [4] 367/20 388/2 336/4 336/6 335/14 348/7 percent [1] 336/7 336/14 348/8 349/8 372/25 336/17 336/17 Plaintiff [2] perhaps [1] 336/18 340/6 302/3 302/13 320/1 340/10 340/13 plan [4] 332/2 period [3] 340/13 340/24 350/16 392/12 326/24 331/15 341/3 341/5 392/12 357/5 341/6 346/19 planned [2] Permanent [2] 346/24 347/7 350/21 381/5 305/18 306/2 347/8 347/10 plans [2] 350/14 permission [3] 347/11 347/12 353/5 330/8 331/22 347/13 347/22 play [3] 319/10 353/13 319/10 353/17 person [9] 323/5 347/24 348/8 348/13 348/13 played [8] 325/18 325/18 349/4 349/6 319/12 332/5 351/4 351/7 349/7 349/15 353/19 354/9 361/1 376/16 367/20 354/25 355/16 382/14 383/6 photo [1] 383/17 356/3 356/18 persons [1] photograph [3] playing [7] 307/20 383/4 383/6 318/24 319/15 pertaining [1] 383/9 319/23 323/9 315/17 picking [1] 375/1 323/23 323/25 pertinent [3] 360/21 314/23 314/24 picture [2] 316/22 327/3 plead [1] 392/11 315/13 piece [3] 329/14 pleasant [2] phone [41] P Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 149 of 179 P 375/15 376/8 377/16 378/15 379/10 379/15 380/17 381/20 382/4 382/8 382/8 382/9 382/22 384/9 385/1 385/24 387/5 387/15 390/4 390/13 391/2 391/19 392/3 393/7 393/7 393/8 pleased [1] 338/7 plucked [1] 316/16 plucking [1] 316/6 podcast [1] 365/25 Podesta [5] 351/12 351/15 351/17 351/18 389/21 Podesta's [1] 389/19 point [7] 321/15 363/24 367/13 367/13 374/2 379/20 392/24 pointing [1] 369/25 points [1] 374/19 police [1] 386/9 political [4] 306/25 307/19 319/24 339/18 politicians [1] 339/15 politics [1] 319/10 polling [1] 350/24 portion [1] 347/1 position [1] 339/25 possibly [1] 367/12 post [20] 326/24 332/23 336/21 337/2 337/14 337/21 337/24 338/3 338/9 338/11 338/13 338/20 338/22 339/3 340/1 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 150 of 179 pleasant... [2] 393/11 393/18 please [76] 328/4 333/5 337/12 338/2 338/16 339/9 340/15 341/23 342/9 344/17 345/19 346/4 348/19 349/23 350/5 350/10 350/19 351/9 351/20 352/20 353/3 354/7 354/23 355/14 356/1 356/17 357/9 359/3 360/17 361/8 361/19 361/23 362/1 362/19 365/3 365/16 365/18 366/9 366/21 366/21 368/12 368/18 369/1 370/4 370/21 370/23 371/20 373/11 374/9 374/21 327/16 327/17 post... [5] 340/5 351/4 372/14 341/13 350/22 presidential [9] 309/19 331/20 350/23 379/19 333/10 344/7 post-air [1] 344/14 344/24 350/22 351/10 352/10 post-debate [1] 358/22 379/19 posts [1] 342/18 press [11] 337/14 337/16 potential [2] 337/21 338/3 306/24 309/20 338/11 338/20 powers [1] 338/22 340/2 312/17 Preate [3] 389/3 341/13 342/18 365/23 389/5 389/7 precise [2] 313/4 pretrial [2] 321/15 325/17 313/24 pretty [1] preseason [1] 360/20 351/11 previously [3] present [5] 331/23 332/16 304/6 307/25 333/18 309/10 310/10 primary [1] 367/16 339/22 presenting [2] Prince [14] 330/6 372/14 327/8 384/13 presidency [1] 384/14 384/15 311/10 384/22 385/5 president [6] 385/11 387/2 311/9 311/9 P 387/9 387/16 387/18 387/23 388/4 388/7 print [1] 305/15 printout [1] 334/4 prior [1] 322/6 private [1] 331/14 probably [5] 327/7 363/25 373/1 373/5 392/22 problems [1] 352/1 proceed [1] 304/3 proceedings [2] 325/17 396/4 produce [1] 306/14 profane [1] 323/20 profile [1] 382/24 progress [1] 369/2 promise [1] 393/15 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 151 of 179 314/11 publication [1] promised [2] 332/25 323/3 363/21 proof [1] 346/9 publicly [20] 306/20 306/22 proper [1] 308/14 308/19 314/21 308/19 308/22 proposing [1] 308/23 311/12 383/19 311/14 311/15 prosecuted [1] 311/16 314/3 322/6 314/4 314/12 prosecution [2] 315/11 315/15 321/10 323/2 319/17 320/9 protected [1] 320/14 337/19 311/5 prove [1] 326/7 publish [48] 330/9 331/23 provides [1] 332/2 332/3 311/2 332/15 333/17 provocative [1] 337/11 337/17 311/8 338/16 340/9 public [15] 341/17 342/9 308/20 308/22 342/25 343/3 309/14 311/19 344/16 345/19 311/20 317/12 348/19 349/23 317/13 317/16 352/19 353/14 317/21 317/25 354/7 354/19 319/11 330/23 354/23 355/14 331/13 341/13 356/1 356/16 353/10 357/8 359/3 publically [1] P 360/4 361/8 368/12 370/4 371/19 373/11 374/8 375/15 376/8 377/16 378/15 379/9 380/17 381/19 384/9 385/24 387/4 388/24 390/4 390/13 published [2] 333/13 342/5 publishes [1] 331/7 purple [1] 364/21 purpose [1] 315/7 purposeful [1] 313/19 pussy [1] 382/23 put [8] 305/14 318/5 330/12 330/14 330/16 374/25 376/15 378/23 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 152 of 179 Q quarter [1] raise [2] 328/4 375/8 379/15 352/1 382/4 382/11 quarter... [1] Randy [2] 361/1 382/25 383/14 366/25 361/12 383/23 384/25 question [4] 312/23 325/20 range [1] 366/1 387/15 391/2 rapist [1] 346/7 391/23 392/2 326/6 380/25 rather [4] reading [4] questioner [1] 309/14 367/7 351/9 351/20 316/23 372/10 380/1 371/2 382/22 questioning [2] ready [3] 304/3 309/17 309/19 Ratner [2] 376/12 376/18 309/25 351/13 questions [14] reaffirming [1] 304/17 309/25 re [3] 342/14 373/24 374/15 311/14 313/9 313/20 re Libya [1] real [1] 316/5 315/4 316/7 373/24 realize [1] 316/9 316/16 305/11 316/17 316/17 re-tweeting [1] 342/14 realizes [2] 316/22 331/17 read [35] 315/18 358/13 359/16 339/7 339/11 really [9] 305/7 quickly [1] 325/6 323/21 333/5 312/19 313/12 quite [1] 393/1 338/2 339/9 341/23 346/4 319/25 323/1 R 350/5 350/6 323/9 358/13 R.A [1] 379/22 350/10 351/2 359/16 367/9 R.K [3] 370/25 360/17 361/23 reasonably [1] 375/10 377/4 364/16 364/17 308/13 radio [6] 327/1 365/3 365/15 reasons [1] 345/2 391/5 369/1 370/21 304/25 391/14 391/15 371/25 372/9 rebut [1] 306/3 392/9 373/4 374/21 recalculate [1] Q Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 153 of 179 346/24 348/13 recalculate... [1] Recross [1] 395/3 318/11 red [1] 354/3 recalibrate [1] redacted [2] 318/11 recall [1] 321/14 302/2 394/1 Redirect [1] receive [2] 395/3 357/5 388/21 reference [9] received [2] 343/22 346/10 352/15 359/24 346/14 362/9 receiving [1] 365/7 382/17 366/23 recess [3] 367/2 382/19 391/6 391/11 367/15 394/4 referral [6] recipients [1] 321/6 321/9 376/17 321/17 321/20 recognize [2] 322/1 322/9 382/16 383/8 recollection [1] referrals [1] 321/11 317/14 referred [1] record [3] 369/17 328/14 343/6 reflect [4] 396/4 313/11 327/9 recorded [2] 327/12 327/15 356/13 356/21 reflected [1] records [8] 336/23 308/11 317/8 reflects [1] 335/3 335/9 308/24 340/11 340/13 R regard [6] 312/1 312/2 313/11 322/18 322/20 322/24 regarding [1] 320/8 regardless [1] 308/12 reiterate [2] 308/18 309/13 relate [3] 309/20 312/18 312/19 related [2] 331/20 334/5 relationship [10] 323/10 323/12 323/12 323/17 323/18 324/7 326/20 326/21 327/3 327/5 relationships [3] 327/10 327/11 327/14 Relax [1] 373/3 release [12] 320/8 341/14 341/25 385/21 388/15 388/18 388/20 389/14 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 154 of 179 R 314/7 314/8 317/18 317/19 317/20 318/1 318/2 318/2 318/2 318/4 318/5 318/5 318/6 318/8 318/12 318/14 318/17 320/3 320/4 322/13 322/13 322/18 367/8 393/13 Reporter [3] 303/14 303/14 396/2 reporting [1] 338/10 represent [1] 304/13 Representative [2] 310/7 310/8 representing [1] 306/10 reputation [1] 324/4 request [14] 309/16 313/4 313/5 313/24 314/2 314/10 317/9 317/11 322/3 369/4 369/7 370/2 376/6 380/4 requests [1] 306/13 requirement [1] 322/8 research [2] 333/9 393/3 resist [1] 304/8 respect [1] 368/10 respond [9] 309/25 369/19 371/17 376/2 377/13 378/4 381/6 386/6 388/4 responded [9] 333/11 365/20 382/11 386/8 387/19 387/24 392/5 392/11 392/17 responding [1] 315/9 responds [20] 360/22 369/3 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 155 of 179 release... [4] 389/23 390/9 390/10 390/22 released [3] 342/6 372/21 389/18 releases [3] 389/11 389/14 389/15 releasing [2] 385/17 389/17 relevant [1] 321/22 remark [2] 309/10 310/10 remember [4] 313/3 318/15 368/5 369/16 remind [1] 368/18 renounced [2] 319/17 319/17 reorganized [1] 351/25 repetition [1] 311/22 reply [1] 378/6 report [24] 329/22 363/3 risked [1] responds... [18] Rick [1] 347/13 339/20 ROBERT [2] 372/11 372/16 rigged [1] 350/24 303/1 329/10 372/18 372/25 right [47] 311/18 Rodham [2] 372/25 375/9 326/10 327/18 351/8 358/24 375/11 378/5 327/25 328/4 ROGER [9] 302/7 379/22 379/23 330/10 330/12 304/2 304/13 382/6 382/7 330/20 337/4 318/13 324/2 382/7 382/9 339/14 340/3 329/15 331/13 382/23 382/24 346/23 348/14 366/2 372/22 388/5 388/6 348/25 349/8 Rogow [5] response [2] 349/22 350/15 302/20 302/20 307/1 309/6 353/16 359/22 304/3 304/12 responsive [2] 361/16 364/6 325/25 315/5 317/8 366/19 367/17 role [1] 329/17 responsiveness 368/21 369/25 roll [2] 358/12 [1] 316/2 371/15 372/4 359/15 rest [2] 352/2 373/3 374/2 room [3] 303/16 377/6 375/23 376/24 316/12 316/15 resume [4] 379/5 381/18 ROUTMAN [2] 366/24 367/18 382/1 383/22 303/10 303/10 367/23 393/12 383/24 384/4 Routmanc [1] Return [1] 385/4 385/14 303/13 350/13 385/15 386/24 RPR [2] 303/14 Rev [1] 378/5 396/10 Rev. [1] 375/10 387/14 390/9 390/9 390/11 RT [1] 383/18 Rev. R.K [1] 391/24 392/22 Rubio [1] 310/7 375/10 ring [1] 388/8 rude [1] 323/20 review [2] R Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 156 of 179 R 386/17 safely [1] 308/5 safer [1] 382/24 said [23] 305/17 306/11 315/22 317/4 317/7 317/11 317/22 318/12 319/13 319/18 322/6 324/9 325/25 326/17 327/23 340/1 340/12 342/2 366/1 370/1 386/23 388/10 389/20 same [35] 317/5 318/8 331/14 334/22 336/20 338/13 340/5 342/6 342/6 342/19 344/12 349/8 355/6 355/11 356/12 359/9 369/11 370/13 371/12 373/8 373/9 374/5 374/14 377/8 377/25 381/11 382/1 382/14 384/5 384/18 385/6 387/1 389/10 391/18 391/24 Sanders' [1] 346/7 save [3] 353/3 353/7 392/12 saw [34] 319/12 332/7 332/25 334/23 336/10 336/21 337/2 338/10 339/3 341/13 342/18 343/17 349/1 349/7 349/17 354/14 354/19 355/3 356/6 356/25 359/10 359/19 360/13 362/13 369/21 370/12 372/5 374/14 375/24 377/25 382/2 384/5 384/19 385/8 say [12] 311/18 312/25 316/7 319/11 319/25 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 157 of 179 ruled [1] 325/3 run [3] 391/20 392/2 392/4 running [2] 351/4 360/19 Russia [10] 306/24 307/3 307/3 307/5 307/18 307/25 307/25 308/1 308/6 311/15 Russian [19] 306/23 307/8 307/9 307/14 307/17 309/3 309/4 309/20 311/25 312/1 312/2 312/8 312/9 312/15 312/15 312/21 312/22 313/23 333/7 Russians [2] 311/23 312/4 S S.E [1] 303/2 safe [2] 383/16 scope [5] 309/22 say... [7] 321/2 311/12 311/15 311/15 311/16 325/4 325/8 325/21 326/12 screen [6] 305/14 313/23 365/20 365/22 330/13 330/17 saying [5] 341/21 342/13 309/23 310/3 325/21 326/11 sea [1] 369/3 sealed [1] 394/1 385/5 says [22] 304/14 second [23] 307/17 322/25 311/6 311/16 323/1 335/24 312/8 312/25 338/1 338/22 314/10 314/22 340/16 341/10 315/14 315/15 341/12 343/5 318/18 334/25 345/11 349/20 337/14 339/24 350/20 355/10 341/25 350/16 355/21 357/25 358/11 365/4 358/20 358/25 365/19 365/22 362/18 363/21 369/2 371/4 364/9 372/2 372/11 scary [1] 382/13 382/16 seconds [9] Schiff [12] 335/10 335/20 312/24 312/24 335/23 336/8 313/2 314/1 336/19 340/20 314/2 314/10 341/7 347/16 314/18 314/22 348/1 315/10 315/11 Secretary [1] 315/15 317/7 S 371/7 section [2] 318/13 366/17 sections [1] 313/14 secure [2] 387/24 388/2 security [4] 333/11 338/4 386/8 386/18 see [61] 304/15 304/18 304/19 305/14 305/14 305/15 305/25 306/9 306/17 307/10 309/8 310/1 310/12 310/13 310/17 312/22 313/22 316/8 317/2 317/7 318/1 318/5 322/15 322/17 322/18 323/3 323/7 324/8 326/24 333/24 334/25 339/6 339/16 340/17 342/24 343/22 344/3 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 158 of 179 321/17 345/16 see... [24] 346/6 349/14 359/1 359/25 360/1 346/10 347/2 365/10 365/24 350/25 351/14 369/10 373/9 352/6 358/19 374/3 380/4 361/21 364/11 381/2 365/7 366/9 368/23 374/19 sending [5] 321/10 321/11 375/3 376/16 361/13 361/16 379/12 380/3 392/25 380/8 381/24 sends [5] 346/18 383/3 390/24 378/1 381/3 391/6 391/11 381/23 383/4 391/19 sense [1] 316/1 seeing [1] sent [10] 322/2 379/23 349/11 368/8 seek [1] 306/2 370/12 374/19 seemed [1] 377/10 380/5 323/14 383/17 383/18 seems [1] 383/24 339/17 sentence [15] sees [1] 324/1 313/3 321/1 seizure [6] 321/15 324/24 334/25 335/3 325/3 339/10 335/4 335/8 343/22 351/1 335/14 335/19 351/15 352/4 Select [2] 352/5 358/20 305/18 306/2 send [14] 321/5 370/16 374/21 S 375/4 sentences [3] 338/2 346/11 384/25 September [35] 317/18 351/11 368/7 368/8 368/24 369/14 370/9 370/22 371/10 371/25 372/1 372/4 373/7 373/8 373/19 374/6 374/13 374/22 375/20 375/23 375/24 376/3 376/12 377/1 377/11 377/21 377/24 378/19 378/21 379/12 379/16 379/25 380/1 380/2 380/8 series [3] 361/11 368/16 387/8 serious [4] 351/10 382/13 386/8 386/18 Seriously [1] Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 159 of 179 shit [2] 345/3 345/6 Seriously... [1] shortly [3] 337/6 392/7 servers [1] 338/6 350/20 360/24 shot [2] 341/21 services [1] 342/13 351/25 session [2] 302/5 should [7] 314/22 346/6 305/18 346/6 346/8 set [13] 305/4 392/23 393/2 307/13 309/22 393/3 313/10 313/21 show [33] 315/8 315/8 305/20 305/22 316/23 348/13 306/4 309/5 373/15 374/4 313/17 313/18 387/19 391/17 316/21 317/17 setting [1] 318/21 319/3 351/24 seven [1] 340/19 324/12 326/11 326/13 326/18 several [2] 326/21 327/1 309/13 367/21 327/22 332/15 shakeup [1] 335/12 354/18 350/22 355/6 355/12 she [6] 339/18 356/8 361/25 339/19 339/20 365/8 372/14 351/23 371/7 372/17 372/22 389/6 She's [2] 339/19 379/21 380/9 391/5 391/15 339/19 shine [1] 350/23 392/10 S showed [1] 392/6 showing [2] 330/5 334/4 shows [8] 324/12 326/20 335/13 335/14 348/8 348/13 357/12 389/3 significance [1] 354/1 Signs [1] 350/21 SIMCHA [1] 302/14 simply [4] 322/12 325/13 325/21 326/11 since [2] 317/9 367/19 sincere [1] 339/24 site [3] 337/17 372/20 378/25 situation [1] 323/7 six [6] 316/15 318/16 346/3 357/4 360/19 380/5 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 160 of 179 334/15 334/17 331/17 331/19 335/8 335/15 331/20 341/14 skeletons [1] 336/20 338/7 355/23 357/5 339/13 339/17 340/25 360/25 368/4 skills [1] 338/7 342/23 348/25 372/18 375/13 skip [1] 317/6 379/20 382/11 slave [1] 339/19 349/3 349/7 387/1 390/1 small [1] 305/15 358/4 359/9 390/2 SMITH [2] 303/6 362/21 363/11 363/24 365/6 somebody [1] 316/14 365/11 366/17 306/10 so [78] 305/12 366/24 367/11 somehow [3] 306/19 307/23 367/13 367/22 320/12 324/3 308/2 309/6 367/23 370/11 326/22 309/22 310/20 370/12 372/23 someone [13] 311/3 311/25 374/14 374/25 319/6 320/21 312/3 312/7 375/9 375/15 321/4 324/21 312/20 313/7 379/9 379/25 325/14 337/7 313/10 313/14 384/18 386/5 360/1 376/4 313/16 313/22 390/21 392/5 376/6 376/15 315/12 316/3 392/23 378/25 384/7 316/15 318/25 320/18 321/15 social [1] 320/7 388/21 sold [1] 339/19 something [12] 321/21 322/9 322/12 322/21 solely [1] 309/17 305/20 311/21 322/25 323/10 some [26] 305/5 312/25 315/2 305/6 306/5 317/22 318/19 323/23 324/12 319/16 320/10 368/9 372/15 324/17 326/7 321/14 323/10 382/10 393/8 326/11 326/16 326/25 328/15 393/14 393/17 326/19 327/2 329/25 330/23 sometime [1] 327/19 330/16 S Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 161 of 179 spell [1] 328/12 360/16 365/14 372/2 381/1 sometime... [1] spite [1] 371/7 Spoke [2] 385/2 386/5 389/13 341/12 starts [2] 318/6 sophisticated [1] 385/5 spring [2] 330/24 390/19 338/6 state [15] sorry [6] 330/14 331/9 304/19 304/20 335/11 362/14 square [1] 311/19 308/24 311/22 362/21 374/3 staff [2] 306/18 312/4 312/21 388/5 313/11 313/11 sort [2] 311/10 316/13 stage [1] 351/24 313/18 321/25 311/11 stand [2] 328/15 322/24 370/23 sought [1] 358/17 371/6 371/7 318/19 standard [7] 377/3 sources [3] 315/9 334/14 stated [7] 308/5 320/9 320/15 334/18 336/1 311/12 311/14 331/8 311/15 311/16 SPAN [4] 355/24 336/14 340/24 347/6 312/7 315/1 356/2 356/8 standing [1] statement [25] 356/12 304/9 304/11 speak [1] 305/9 386/10 305/2 307/4 special [4] 329/9 start [6] 305/8 312/12 351/22 310/18 310/22 329/13 329/17 369/1 371/25 310/23 317/10 379/19 392/2 322/14 322/16 specific [2] started [4] 306/7 325/25 327/5 313/5 317/14 314/9 358/13 327/20 327/21 specifically [1] 359/17 327/21 342/25 307/13 355/8 355/12 speech [2] 311/3 starting [8] 347/5 351/11 355/19 356/9 311/3 S Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 162 of 179 S 385/3 385/6 STONE [218] Stone's [39] 304/17 304/19 304/22 305/7 305/16 308/17 309/2 309/16 309/18 311/3 311/3 312/21 314/6 316/1 320/6 322/17 322/24 323/15 326/23 327/4 331/13 334/5 335/16 336/6 336/17 340/13 341/3 345/25 346/24 347/11 347/22 348/8 348/14 349/6 354/2 360/16 362/11 376/5 385/4 Stones [1] 327/23 stonewall [1] 392/11 stop [6] 350/15 350/25 351/14 363/20 382/10 392/13 stopped [1] 321/24 stored [1] 308/11 stories [1] 382/11 story [1] 372/24 straight [1] 339/25 strange [1] 323/12 StrategySmith [1] 303/6 strategysmith.co m [1] 303/9 street [2] 302/16 381/3 strike [1] 383/20 string [1] 366/4 stroke [1] 351/23 struck [1] 323/16 structure [1] 308/16 stuff [2] 319/9 324/8 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 163 of 179 statement... [5] 356/12 356/21 362/12 362/24 395/13 statements [13] 305/6 305/6 305/7 322/22 326/23 327/14 330/23 331/13 331/19 353/10 354/3 355/23 356/13 STATES [9] 302/1 302/2 302/11 303/15 304/2 307/15 309/18 312/16 312/17 station [2] 391/4 391/14 Stein [1] 379/18 step [1] 393/24 Steve [5] 360/1 360/8 360/9 385/22 389/6 stick [1] 314/15 still [5] 340/25 351/11 360/18 351/22 T Suite [4] 302/21 T-A-Y-L-O-R [1] subject [13] 303/3 303/7 308/4 308/5 328/13 303/11 310/2 350/3 tab [36] 332/17 summer [1] 353/2 371/12 333/19 337/12 330/24 373/9 375/13 338/18 340/11 378/22 380/24 Sunday [1] 341/18 342/10 368/24 381/11 387/2 343/7 344/17 support [1] 392/21 345/5 345/20 366/1 subpoena [5] 346/23 348/18 305/19 305/21 supporting [2] 349/24 352/20 311/8 311/9 305/24 309/9 357/9 359/4 supports [1] 310/9 360/5 361/9 322/24 subpoenaed [1] 368/13 370/5 supposed [1] 305/12 371/20 373/12 subsequently [1] 326/9 374/10 375/16 sure [6] 333/7 318/20 376/9 377/17 338/4 341/25 subtracting [1] 378/17 379/10 363/23 387/18 334/15 380/18 381/21 387/19 success [1] 384/10 385/25 surface [1] 327/13 387/5 388/25 350/23 successful [1] 390/15 surrounding [1] table [1] 305/16 304/24 314/20 such [1] 369/6 tailors [1] sustaining [1] suggest [1] 316/25 322/9 392/11 take [22] 305/5 SWORN [1] 328/5 305/13 307/12 suggested [1] sympathies [1] 326/22 308/7 308/9 339/13 suggesting [1] 309/14 310/20 S Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 164 of 179 tampering [1] 324/18 take... [15] 312/10 313/15 tape [1] 316/3 TARA [1] 303/1 317/5 318/1 taste [1] 306/7 320/3 324/20 Taylor [30] 324/21 325/9 328/3 328/5 325/12 325/14 328/11 328/14 325/19 326/16 328/21 329/7 362/16 366/19 330/1 330/22 388/5 taken [4] 322/22 340/12 341/20 344/19 345/22 322/23 367/2 348/21 349/25 367/15 talk [11] 307/24 352/22 354/14 355/3 356/6 316/19 318/14 356/21 357/11 326/14 360/22 360/6 361/10 360/22 365/19 368/3 368/15 372/12 372/17 370/7 373/14 387/24 393/22 talked [3] 305/3 375/18 380/21 389/2 395/5 307/21 324/11 telephone [1] talking [8] 334/5 307/24 312/3 312/19 365/23 telephones [1] 388/3 374/19 390/22 392/14 392/14 tell [4] 304/25 324/21 388/6 talks [3] 305/2 393/14 306/17 311/21 telling [4] 318/9 tall [1] 382/6 T 323/6 325/14 392/14 tells [3] 325/9 325/11 325/23 ten [3] 340/20 363/25 366/20 tens [1] 378/24 terminating [1] 348/6 terms [10] 306/11 313/16 316/21 319/10 319/23 320/1 322/19 324/4 324/6 324/9 testified [3] 320/22 321/4 383/11 testifies [1] 319/3 testify [4] 308/3 308/19 308/22 309/2 testimony [9] 318/16 322/20 322/22 322/23 322/25 328/17 330/6 367/4 367/18 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 165 of 179 388/21 389/3 316/7 318/20 318/25 321/6 text [61] 341/23 390/2 390/5 390/17 390/24 321/22 326/3 357/12 358/25 359/10 359/19 texted [1] 366/2 326/6 326/18 360/25 361/11 texts [5] 304/16 327/17 334/22 323/10 323/19 335/7 340/21 361/13 361/16 324/8 326/19 346/14 349/10 362/13 362/23 than [15] 308/12 352/2 370/10 363/3 363/7 309/11 309/14 375/23 383/1 363/17 363/18 310/10 310/19 their [11] 315/1 363/25 364/9 314/18 315/20 315/25 315/25 364/16 364/17 317/21 319/25 318/10 318/12 365/10 366/4 320/16 323/9 319/24 322/19 366/8 368/4 351/12 358/13 367/10 367/11 368/9 368/16 359/16 367/8 388/3 391/5 369/10 369/13 them [11] 369/21 370/11 thank [13] 305/25 327/24 323/19 326/12 370/13 371/2 328/2 330/15 326/19 326/21 372/9 373/9 345/14 351/20 326/25 333/24 373/15 373/18 353/18 354/6 339/13 347/1 373/25 374/14 364/6 367/14 362/3 373/2 377/6 377/8 367/24 371/16 391/4 379/6 379/15 393/18 themselves [1] 380/1 380/2 that [375] 305/7 380/3 380/7 then [32] 306/9 381/10 383/22 that's [26] 305/22 307/6 306/17 307/17 384/18 385/8 310/2 310/18 308/7 309/12 386/14 387/2 311/1 312/5 309/14 309/25 387/8 387/10 313/1 314/23 310/2 310/6 387/15 388/10 T Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 166 of 179 T 319/2 319/8 320/12 321/14 321/25 322/15 323/18 325/12 326/19 327/4 327/6 327/10 327/22 329/8 331/18 334/25 337/1 337/6 339/7 339/11 340/16 341/11 342/5 342/7 350/15 350/25 351/4 351/14 352/7 352/9 361/3 365/8 368/8 369/1 369/25 370/17 371/9 372/10 375/8 377/2 379/13 379/14 381/18 382/22 384/23 388/1 389/14 392/3 393/17 there's [17] 307/15 307/16 307/17 307/23 307/24 307/25 310/3 310/6 311/6 312/1 313/14 314/17 318/9 322/8 326/24 363/23 378/24 these [33] 308/16 312/18 313/2 315/4 316/15 318/23 319/11 319/14 319/23 320/5 320/17 323/24 324/8 324/10 324/14 326/19 331/14 335/3 336/20 336/23 340/13 342/6 342/20 342/24 346/24 349/7 349/8 349/15 353/16 357/14 360/24 362/23 387/10 they [70] 304/24 307/13 310/4 310/19 312/7 312/17 313/10 313/20 314/9 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 167 of 179 then... [23] 311/18 311/21 312/10 312/22 314/1 315/6 315/15 316/1 316/24 318/13 321/5 321/18 324/22 324/24 327/16 329/9 345/3 364/3 367/23 378/22 383/3 383/18 383/20 Theodore [1] 346/14 there [73] 304/15 304/18 304/18 304/21 307/2 309/9 310/9 310/16 311/7 312/18 313/9 316/3 316/7 316/9 316/10 316/11 316/12 316/13 316/14 316/14 317/6 318/22 318/22 319/1 T 385/19 386/23 315/24 316/10 387/13 388/16 316/17 316/21 389/18 389/25 318/3 319/3 390/3 321/18 321/19 they're [15] 321/20 321/23 304/18 305/23 322/14 322/15 323/20 323/20 322/17 323/8 323/20 323/21 323/11 323/19 323/21 323/21 325/20 325/21 323/25 336/25 326/18 327/2 359/22 367/10 327/22 337/2 371/24 375/1 339/14 340/1 386/9 340/12 342/2 they've [3] 308/5 362/4 366/17 318/12 318/15 367/11 368/3 thing [7] 316/5 370/1 372/22 320/20 324/14 372/24 379/21 327/11 327/13 383/11 383/16 382/12 391/16 383/20 385/7 things [8] 310/12 386/17 386/23 312/13 312/14 388/10 389/20 315/24 319/12 392/22 392/23 319/14 320/17 thinks [4] 337/18 319/19 320/21 think [52] 321/4 386/9 304/24 305/10 third [12] 303/2 305/20 305/22 336/25 339/1 307/6 308/8 347/2 347/3 313/3 313/16 348/2 352/5 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 168 of 179 they... [61] 314/13 314/14 314/16 315/8 315/8 316/12 316/24 317/20 318/10 318/10 318/11 318/13 318/14 318/16 318/17 319/13 319/25 319/25 321/5 321/13 321/17 321/18 321/19 321/20 321/21 321/23 323/16 323/22 324/8 330/17 332/12 336/22 341/16 342/19 342/21 342/22 343/14 344/2 346/25 349/20 351/12 367/9 369/24 369/25 371/12 372/20 372/21 373/3 374/24 374/25 378/14 378/23 381/12 384/2 T thread [1] 375/21 three [16] 316/3 326/25 328/25 333/22 334/1 334/7 336/20 338/12 343/1 343/19 346/10 347/3 349/7 360/15 367/6 391/19 through [10] 305/5 307/11 313/15 316/19 317/1 322/23 322/24 357/1 363/24 379/1 throughout [2] 312/20 316/2 thumbs [1] 392/17 Thursday [4] 361/25 364/15 365/6 365/8 tied [1] 365/6 time [82] 302/7 326/24 329/8 331/15 331/18 332/24 334/9 334/11 334/12 334/14 334/14 334/18 334/18 334/19 335/1 335/3 335/4 335/7 335/8 335/9 335/13 335/19 335/21 335/22 336/1 336/1 336/7 336/9 336/14 336/14 336/18 337/6 338/9 339/2 340/20 340/24 340/24 340/25 341/6 343/16 343/25 344/12 344/23 345/4 345/25 346/16 347/6 347/6 347/14 347/18 347/19 347/25 348/3 348/4 348/15 348/23 348/25 349/12 350/6 350/17 351/11 352/10 353/4 357/5 357/14 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 169 of 179 third... [5] 356/11 356/23 374/2 376/24 378/11 this [271] those [35] 304/23 304/24 305/5 308/12 309/25 312/14 314/4 314/15 315/13 319/13 327/9 327/11 327/12 327/13 327/14 327/14 329/25 331/17 334/1 340/17 340/19 342/17 346/10 349/18 351/5 359/20 368/5 369/21 372/19 376/16 383/23 384/1 384/5 384/18 386/22 thought [2] 319/1 324/3 thousands [2] 323/18 378/24 T 390/6 390/10 times [7] 318/3 318/4 335/14 342/24 343/1 357/2 357/4 timing [1] 320/8 today [8] 330/2 330/6 358/11 359/14 367/8 376/4 382/12 383/1 together [2] 323/14 323/16 told [4] 309/24 312/14 326/16 365/25 tomorrow [8] 372/12 372/17 372/22 383/21 385/7 388/8 393/12 393/13 too [2] 312/12 324/16 took [1] 318/25 top [15] 313/22 332/10 333/23 336/13 339/1 339/6 349/20 353/24 355/10 356/11 364/21 376/24 379/5 384/21 386/13 topic [5] 306/20 355/24 356/13 374/5 391/17 topics [2] 331/14 331/18 total [3] 316/10 367/4 367/6 tower [1] 335/4 town [1] 392/5 transcribed [1] 306/15 transcript [12] 302/9 310/13 310/13 310/14 310/17 315/19 315/20 316/8 317/2 321/13 322/2 396/4 trial [3] 302/9 322/6 394/4 tries [1] 320/10 true [2] 311/6 317/10 Trump [23] 307/22 307/22 307/24 308/1 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 170 of 179 time... [17] 358/1 360/10 360/12 360/18 362/11 366/17 368/8 369/15 371/6 372/23 375/6 380/12 383/12 386/16 388/17 390/1 391/9 timeline [36] 330/2 330/19 332/8 333/3 336/23 337/24 338/23 341/8 342/21 343/5 343/20 345/10 349/18 353/23 354/20 355/8 355/20 356/9 356/22 359/20 361/4 364/18 366/5 369/22 371/14 373/25 376/21 378/8 379/2 381/15 384/1 385/11 386/12 387/10 365/23 326/25 333/2 Tuesday [5] 335/12 336/8 Trump... [19] 364/15 365/5 338/2 339/4 309/3 309/4 372/14 379/19 341/7 342/20 311/24 312/5 379/23 342/22 350/14 327/16 327/16 333/10 333/15 turn [4] 314/21 350/16 353/5 346/7 346/22 355/23 360/24 339/17 339/23 393/7 384/25 340/7 344/14 turned [3] typically [1] 346/8 346/20 317/14 339/22 325/19 352/17 360/11 355/9 TYPO [2] 378/5 360/18 384/15 Turning [1] 378/11 388/21 347/17 Trump's [10] U tweet [7] 341/21 327/12 335/18 U.S [6] 302/15 341/23 342/5 336/4 336/17 306/13 306/23 342/13 342/15 341/5 344/24 306/25 307/19 342/17 343/17 347/24 349/4 342/1 tweeting [1] 353/3 353/7 ultimate [2] 342/14 trust [1] 304/8 314/8 320/18 Twenty [1] truth [2] 323/6 UN [1] 372/15 350/12 339/14 under [3] 309/11 Twenty-fifth [1] try [7] 311/25 310/11 317/10 350/12 316/18 317/24 undermines [1] twitter [1] 345/3 367/13 313/18 342/20 393/3 393/9 underneath [1] two [22] 307/3 trying [8] 315/7 339/10 308/10 310/14 316/20 319/24 underscore [1] 312/14 312/16 319/25 322/7 342/14 312/18 324/10 326/5 363/22 T Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 171 of 179 U 310/5 317/7 317/13 318/5 319/9 323/9 323/16 328/14 328/19 332/8 343/7 365/6 372/9 375/8 378/3 379/6 385/17 392/6 392/17 update [1] 388/7 us [30] 305/16 308/18 309/24 330/2 333/5 338/2 339/9 340/23 341/23 346/4 350/5 350/10 355/9 360/17 361/13 361/23 365/3 365/16 368/18 369/1 370/21 374/21 375/8 379/15 382/4 383/14 387/15 391/2 391/23 392/3 usdoj.gov [4] 302/17 302/18 302/18 302/19 use [3] 310/24 337/18 388/3 uses [1] 314/1 using [2] 313/10 382/9 usual [2] 305/22 323/15 UTC [3] 334/12 347/6 358/4 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 172 of 179 understand [6] 310/23 314/13 314/14 315/1 322/10 382/13 understands [1] 310/20 undertook [1] 371/5 underway [1] 350/22 unfolds [1] 327/19 UNITED [9] 302/1 302/2 302/11 303/15 304/2 307/15 309/18 312/15 312/17 universal [2] 334/12 334/13 unless [1] 372/18 until [4] 345/2 358/14 359/17 367/12 unusual [1] 304/15 up [20] 305/14 V value [3] 320/1 320/1 320/2 various [2] 307/11 324/16 verbatim [1] 371/2 versus [1] 304/2 very [11] 306/1 322/19 322/19 338/7 338/8 350/21 362/12 373/17 373/18 375/23 393/11 via [1] 320/7 victor [1] 350/23 video [5] 353/15 353/22 354/8 V 335/24 337/10 324/21 328/14 339/5 339/12 343/7 353/25 340/22 343/2 370/17 382/15 348/17 348/21 385/11 391/23 359/3 360/3 WBAI [3] 391/11 361/19 363/17 391/13 391/14 366/7 368/12 WBAI's [1] 391/4 369/9 369/13 we [83] 304/24 370/15 371/21 305/14 306/5 373/17 374/8 307/10 309/6 374/17 375/15 309/16 310/4 384/21 387/24 310/4 311/25 391/16 393/22 313/3 313/4 wanted [2] 313/16 317/6 308/22 325/2 318/1 319/12 wants [1] 308/18 322/6 322/12 Wars [4] 354/16 322/16 323/10 354/17 355/5 325/12 326/18 355/11 327/21 330/2 was [148] 332/7 332/25 Washington [7] 334/22 336/9 302/6 302/16 336/21 336/23 303/17 328/22 337/2 338/10 332/22 337/2 339/3 341/13 338/9 342/15 342/18 way [15] 305/22 342/24 349/1 313/19 316/25 349/7 349/17 318/3 318/21 354/7 354/14 319/7 324/10 354/19 354/19 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 173 of 179 video... [2] 354/24 356/2 videos [2] 354/2 362/12 views [1] 311/19 voices [1] 316/5 voluntarily [3] 305/17 305/24 307/7 voluntary [1] 306/15 volunteered [1] 306/8 volunteering [1] 305/11 voting [1] 360/19 W wait [3] 362/14 382/12 390/4 Walker [3] 303/14 396/3 396/10 want [33] 305/5 305/7 308/4 310/4 316/24 317/9 324/2 312/19 322/7 306/4 306/23 363/6 366/19 307/2 307/3 we... [40] 366/23 367/17 307/14 310/19 354/23 355/3 367/22 388/11 311/4 313/13 355/14 356/1 we've [2] 321/8 314/5 314/7 356/6 356/16 374/5 314/8 314/12 356/25 359/10 359/19 360/12 web [1] 337/14 314/13 314/14 wedding [1] 314/25 315/3 361/3 362/12 350/12 316/7 316/9 362/18 364/1 Wednesday [1] 316/11 316/11 365/22 367/4 379/24 316/12 316/13 368/3 369/21 week [4] 350/9 318/24 319/2 370/12 372/5 358/14 359/17 319/23 321/2 372/12 372/21 386/10 325/8 327/10 374/14 375/24 weekly [1] 391/5 327/10 327/12 377/25 380/3 weeks [3] 329/1 329/3 382/2 383/3 338/14 339/4 329/8 336/20 384/5 384/18 360/19 336/22 339/7 385/8 391/24 392/11 392/23 well [11] 305/10 339/11 349/8 314/22 322/4 349/11 362/24 393/11 393/14 325/18 334/2 365/23 368/3 393/16 393/16 350/5 351/23 383/24 386/23 393/21 393/23 379/21 386/20 389/14 390/22 we'll [8] 306/4 389/9 390/5 391/24 316/19 325/6 Wellstone [1] West [2] 366/1 327/9 330/14 346/8 366/2 366/24 367/12 went [2] 305/21 what [156] 367/23 what's [8] 315/3 we're [11] 304/9 305/24 were [48] 304/8 321/15 331/23 309/24 312/3 W Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 174 of 179 W Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ what's... [5] 332/16 333/18 345/12 347/18 348/3 whatever [3] 324/13 327/23 378/23 WhatsApp [3] 387/25 388/1 388/2 whatsoever [1] 317/8 when [36] 304/14 305/3 305/10 307/3 307/7 308/2 308/3 314/9 315/3 317/1 317/7 317/17 318/4 319/3 322/17 326/24 327/2 329/8 331/18 337/7 345/4 345/6 352/2 353/4 353/6 357/23 360/22 364/1 368/8 376/15 385/20 386/16 386/18 388/7 393/15 393/18 where [28] 316/12 337/17 338/25 339/6 343/25 346/16 350/15 350/16 354/15 355/4 356/7 364/20 367/21 369/24 369/25 371/24 376/23 378/10 379/4 380/8 380/11 381/17 383/11 385/13 387/13 390/8 391/8 393/13 Whereupon [1] 394/3 whether [4] 323/6 325/3 325/11 327/10 which [44] 305/13 305/21 309/19 310/21 311/4 319/17 323/7 326/1 338/18 341/18 341/22 342/10 342/14 344/9 344/17 345/20 346/23 348/11 348/18 349/24 352/20 357/9 359/4 360/5 361/9 368/13 370/5 371/20 373/12 374/10 375/16 376/9 377/13 377/17 378/16 379/10 380/18 381/20 384/10 385/25 387/5 388/25 390/14 390/19 while [2] 367/11 380/19 who [45] 305/16 318/21 331/9 333/11 335/15 335/17 336/3 336/5 336/16 341/2 341/4 344/22 346/7 346/13 347/10 347/12 347/21 347/23 349/3 Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 175 of 179 362/7 362/9 WikiLeaks [37] who... [26] 305/2 307/5 349/5 351/4 307/16 311/17 351/7 351/17 314/25 318/3 357/17 357/19 330/25 331/5 358/6 358/8 331/6 331/10 358/22 360/9 341/13 342/1 361/13 361/16 350/17 353/11 362/5 362/7 362/6 363/9 370/17 370/19 363/15 372/20 372/13 372/16 372/21 375/6 375/6 376/18 378/22 380/11 382/14 384/14 381/4 384/7 389/5 389/20 385/17 385/20 389/21 392/6 Who's [1] 383/6 388/15 388/17 whole [8] 310/17 389/10 389/13 389/16 389/23 315/19 315/20 390/2 390/9 315/21 316/4 390/10 390/21 317/1 318/4 391/8 371/2 whose [1] 322/3 WikiLeaks' [5] why [5] 313/17 341/22 341/24 342/15 343/14 318/25 321/11 343/16 325/5 372/20 wide [1] 366/1 will [49] 304/21 304/24 305/13 widely [1] 305/14 305/15 308/12 305/20 305/22 wife [3] 362/2 W Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ 306/1 306/4 306/18 309/9 310/7 310/9 314/4 315/20 316/1 316/3 317/6 319/3 319/21 319/22 321/13 323/3 323/4 323/8 323/13 324/5 324/25 326/11 326/13 326/21 326/24 327/2 327/6 327/22 345/3 350/21 352/1 366/24 367/14 379/23 382/14 382/24 388/8 393/11 393/14 393/16 393/16 393/17 willfully [1] 315/6 win [2] 360/18 360/20 within [4] 306/20 308/14 311/12 314/2 without [8] Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 176 of 179 W Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ without... [8] 305/19 305/21 305/24 325/21 326/13 326/17 371/2 382/14 witness [39] 328/1 328/5 328/15 333/17 337/11 338/16 340/9 341/17 342/9 343/3 344/16 345/19 348/19 349/23 352/19 357/8 359/4 360/4 361/8 367/18 368/13 370/4 371/20 373/12 374/9 375/16 376/8 377/17 378/16 379/10 380/18 381/20 384/10 385/24 387/5 388/25 390/14 393/24 393/25 witness's [1] 367/3 Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Worldwide Page 177 of 179 [1] WITNESSES [1] 395/2 338/4 woman [1] worried [1] 372/13 382/25 Won't [3] 350/24 worry [2] 392/8 358/13 359/16 392/13 word [14] would [20] 337/14 337/16 314/15 317/13 337/21 338/3 321/21 324/3 338/11 338/20 330/5 330/7 338/22 340/2 334/15 334/18 341/12 342/18 334/20 336/2 350/13 350/16 340/25 341/1 352/6 353/5 344/9 347/8 words [4] 304/15 351/22 358/5 314/1 322/15 366/17 372/19 339/21 373/11 379/11 work [12] wouldn't [1] 306/18 328/22 317/13 329/7 329/9 wreck [1] 329/12 329/21 382/12 330/22 339/20 write [14] 344/5 348/12 343/11 344/25 363/2 364/5 352/25 357/21 worked [4] 358/10 359/12 323/14 323/16 364/13 366/13 365/25 389/6 369/15 373/22 Working [1] 376/25 378/20 375/11 386/6 389/7 316/8 317/2 388/8 391/3 392/4 392/5 318/1 324/8 writes [23] 324/15 392/7 392/12 353/2 359/14 you're [13] 392/13 360/18 369/5 369/16 370/22 WTF [3] 380/25 308/3 310/12 381/14 382/2 316/25 317/9 370/23 372/19 321/16 324/22 372/20 372/22 Y 372/24 373/24 yeah [1] 392/16 326/5 326/9 330/16 363/22 376/4 377/2 years [2] 307/23 380/19 393/1 378/22 379/18 329/4 393/5 380/9 381/9 yellow [8] you've [6] 382/5 383/20 353/24 354/2 309/24 326/10 386/7 387/18 354/21 355/10 327/19 327/20 387/23 355/22 356/11 367/19 383/11 writing [1] 345/2 356/23 359/23 your [90] 304/8 written [3] yes [163] 306/1 306/14 337/15 344/23 yet [4] 324/10 309/16 313/4 357/6 358/12 359/16 313/23 313/24 wrong [1] 367/9 314/19 316/20 307/23 York [1] 391/14 316/22 321/7 wrote [23] you [288] 324/25 325/1 305/11 306/9 you'd [1] 351/20 325/2 325/11 343/13 345/5 you'll [16] 306/9 325/24 328/2 345/6 346/4 307/10 308/19 328/4 328/10 350/11 353/5 309/7 310/13 328/12 328/14 353/6 372/13 310/17 313/22 328/16 329/7 374/22 383/16 315/19 315/20 329/8 329/12 385/7 386/16 315/21 316/8 329/17 329/21 386/18 388/8 W Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 178 of 179 Y 390/12 391/18 392/20 392/24 393/6 393/7 393/9 393/13 393/21 yourself [1] 323/5 yourselves [1] 366/22 Case 1:19-cr-00018-ABJ Document 297 Filed 02/14/20 Page 179 of 179 your... [63] 330/6 330/18 330/22 332/17 333/19 333/22 335/24 336/12 337/10 338/18 339/5 340/15 340/22 342/8 343/2 343/7 344/5 347/1 347/17 348/2 348/12 348/17 348/21 352/4 353/18 360/3 360/5 361/7 361/19 363/2 363/17 364/25 365/1 365/13 366/7 366/16 366/21 366/21 367/4 367/14 367/24 369/13 369/16 370/15 371/21 373/17 374/8 374/17 379/11 381/21 382/9 382/24 384/21 386/14 Z ZELINSKY [2] 302/14 304/14 Zero [1] 335/23 zone [1] 334/11