"And what will be the sign of Your coming, and of the end of the age?” Matthew 24:3b
Thursday, February 21, 2019
Mueller’s ‘Foreign Agent’ Prosecutions May Lead to Probes of Green Groups
By invoking a law regulating foreign agents to pursue prosecution of
former Trump campaign officials, special counsel Robert Mueller opened
the door to more intense scrutiny of some U.S. environmental groups,
according to legal analysts who say China and Russia use such groups to
influence America’s energy policy.
But these legal analysts said they also see a danger that Mueller’s
Russia investigation could set a precedent for the Justice Department to
“selectively enforce” the Foreign Agents Registration Act in a manner
that undermines the rule of law and potentially jeopardizes national
security.
The Trump administration, they say, should closely examine the
relationship between environmental advocacy groups and foreign
governments that are considered strategic competitors of the U.S.
“If the Mueller probe has any real benefit, it is that it opened the
door for the Justice Department to employ FARA as a basis to investigate
green groups that are undermining our country and aiding
socialist/communist regimes,” lawyer Mark Fitzgibbons told The Daily
Signal.
Because these same environmental groups persistently
lobby for policy changes to restrict U.S. energy use and the projection
of U.S. military power, the groups may operate at the direction and
encouragement of hostile foreign actors, Fitzgibbons and other reform
proponents argue.
The Foreign Agents Registration Act, which predates World War II,
requires anyone who acts as an agent of foreign principals “in a
political or quasi-political capacity” to disclose that relationship
periodically, as well as “activities, receipts, and disbursements in
support of those activities,” according to the Justice Department.
But because FARA has not been strictly enforced, little case history
and precedent exist for investigations into the actions of possible
foreign agents who decline to disclose their activities, Tom Fitton,
president of Judicial Watch, a Washington-based nonprofit government
watchdog, told The Daily Signal in a phone interview.
Americans and their elected representatives have been deprived of the
openness and transparency they need to evaluate the political activism
and legal tactics of environmental advocacy groups, Fitton said.
‘Selectively Enforced’
The disclosure requirements
of the Foreign Agents Registration Act explicitly state that
information made available through registration would help ensure that
citizens and officials can get the specifics they need to evaluate the
activities of anyone who registers “in light of their function as
foreign agents.”
But Fitton expressed concern that the law could be misused and
misapplied to advance a political agenda detached from its stated
purpose.
“We already know the law has been selectively enforced,” Fitton said
of the Foreign Agents Registration Act. “Violations of FARA have
typically been handled administratively. If you didn’t file paperwork,
you were told to file it. But the Mueller special counsel operation,
desperate for prosecutions, started criminally prosecuting FARA
regulations where they had never been criminally prosecuted before.”
Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein appointed
Mueller to serve as special counsel on May 17, 2017, to investigate
allegations that the Russian government interfered with the 2016
presidential election.
Mueller, a former FBI director, also is probing allegations that the
Trump presidential campaign coordinated with Russian operatives in its
efforts to win the election.
So far, the Mueller investigation has resulted in dozens of
indictments and eight guilty pleas, none of which involves coordination
or collusion between Moscow and the Trump campaign. An updated list of
charges, pleas, and resulting convictions is available here.
Paul Manafort, Trump’s campaign chairman for two months, pleaded
guilty in September to charges that he violated FARA because he failed
to disclose to the Justice Department that he worked as an agent of
Ukraine’s government and as a lobbyist for pro-Russian political forces
in that country.
Richard Gates, a former Trump campaign aide and business associate of
Manafort’s, also pleaded guilty to FARA violations in connection with
his lobbying efforts in Ukraine. No Comment From Special Counsel
Mueller has pointed to potential violations of foreign agent registration rules in his prosecution of 13 Russian individuals and three Russian companies accused of trying to manipulate the 2016 election through internet and social media campaigns.
Fitton favors counterintelligence investigations into the actions of
groups and individuals who appear to skirt registration requirements,
but has expressed concern with how the law has been applied against
Trump campaign officials.
“In my view, the Mueller team has been manufacturing dubious FARA
charges against Trump campaign people,” Fitton told The Daily Signal.
“In the case of Manafort, he was really working for political parties,
not a foreign government. So this is a pretty dramatic expansion of
FARA.”
The Daily Signal sought comment from the Special Counsel’s Office on
concerns that the law might be “selectively” or “unevenly” applied in a
manner that enables some environmental activists to escape scrutiny.
“We will decline to comment,” Mueller spokesman Peter Carr replied in an email Tuesday morning.
Duringa December hearing
by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, Fitton
commented on how some actions of nonprofit advocacy groups and their
relationships with foreign governments could activate requirements of
the Foreign Agents Registration Act.
In response to questions from Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., Fitton said
that if advocacy groups are found to be “taking orders from a foreign
government” or “beholden to them financially,” they probably should be
required to register under the law.
During his exchange with Fitton, Gosar said environmental advocacy
groups that oppose natural gas development and the process of hydraulic
fracturing (also known as fracking) have received millions of dollars in
grant money that congressional investigators traced back to the Russian
government. >>> Related: The Connection Between Russia and 2 Green Groups Fighting Fracking
Environmental groups such as the Natural Resources Defense Council
“have undermined the energy sector in the United States and even got
fracking banned in the cash-strapped state of New York,” Gosar said. ‘Cozy’ With the Chinese
If there is genuine concern on the part of Mueller, the media, and
other members of Congress about Russian meddling in American affairs,
the Arizona Republican said, then environmental advocacy groups working
to disrupt American energy while receiving financial support from the
Russian government should be subjected to investigations.
Gosar, who also sits on the House Natural Resources Committee, took
the opportunity to focus attention on the relationship between
environmental activists and China’s communist government. In 2018, the
Natural Resources Committee sent letters to several environmental groups, inquiring about their relationship with government entities in China and Japan.
The Natural Resources Defense Council, for example, has “gotten cozy
with the environmentally unfriendly Chinese government while suing the
U.S. government whenever it can,” Gosar said during his exchange with
Fitton.
He suggested that the environmental group’s lawsuits against the Navy
and its “weapons development programs” could work to the strategic
advantage of China’s communist government. >>> Related: Lawmakers Suggest Lawsuit-Happy Environmentalists Help China, Hurt National Security
The letters, signed by then-Chairman Rob Bishop, R-Utah, and Rep.
Bruce Westerman, R-Ark., who chaired the Subcommittee on Oversight and
Investigations, asked environmental organizations either to provide
documentation showing they are in compliance with FARA or to explain why
they are not registered as foreign agents.
The committee’s June 5, 2018, letter
to the Natural Resources Defense Council describes how the
environmental group took an “adversarial approach” toward the U.S. while
refraining from criticizing Chinese officials.
“Over the last two decades, your organization has sued the U.S. Navy
multiple times to stop or drastically limit Naval training exercises in
the Pacific arguing that naval sonar and anti-submarine warfare drills
harm marine life,” the letter says. “We are unaware of the NRDC having
made similar efforts to curtail naval exercises by the Chinese.”
In their letter, Bishop and Westerman say the Natural Resources
Defense Council “sought to shape public opinion” by working to
“discredit those skeptical of China’s commitment to pollution reduction
targets or to honestly reporting environmental data.” Funding for Green Groups
The New York-based NRDC, which is devoted to opposing the use of
fossil fuels, “has more than $180 million in assets to fund its
programs,” according to Influence Watch, a project of the Capital Research Center. Recent tax records
show NRDC reported $155.2 million in revenue and $126.7 million in
expenses. It received more than $15 million in grants from the San
Francisco-based Sea Change Foundation, which has received funding from a
Bermuda-based company that members of Congress view as the key
component of a“paperless money trail” from the government of Russian President Vladimir Putin to the coffers of U.S. environmental groups.
The Energy Foundation, also based in San Francisco, has received $64 million in grants
from the Sea Change Foundation, making it the single biggest recipient
of such grants to date. The Energy Foundation also provided NRDC with
tens of millions of dollars in grants, according to foundation records.
Green activism centered on the United Nations’ Paris climate
agreement, which requires industrialized countries to curb greenhouse
gas emissions, attracted the attention of some in Congress. The reason
is an apparent concerted effort by activists to provide China with
political cover to avoid complying with the terms of the U.N. agreement,
according to the letters from the House Natural Resources Committee.
In a Sept. 5, 2018, letter
to the World Resources Institute, the committee points out that the
environmental group “hailed China’s 2015 pledge for the Paris agreement
to ‘peak’ greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 as a ‘serious and credible
contribution’ despite claims that it merely amounted to ‘continuing with
business as usual.’ Conversely, WRI advocated for unrealistic Paris
Agreement commitments by the United States.”
The World Resources Institute, a Washington-based nonprofit
environmental research organization, has more than $2 million in assets,
more than $3 million in total revenue, and about $1.6 million in
expenses, according to Influence Watch.
Evidence gathered by House committees in the past year points to a
deliberate strategy by green activists “to tank” America’s free market
system while aiding foreign governments, Fitzgibbons, a lawyer and
conservative strategist based in Virginia, told The Daily Signal in an
email.
“DOJ should unleash what are called ‘civil investigative demands’
(CIDs) on many green groups that are believed to be violating FARA,” he
said, referring to the Justice Department. “I believe CIDs are
unconstitutional because they are searches of private papers without
probable cause, but perhaps when socialist green groups get the sting of
these menaces, the left’s erstwhile civil liberties groups will see the
light about them. In the meantime, the DOJ seems to clearly have
grounds to investigate green groups suspected of violating FARA.
To date, none of the green groups addressed in congressional
correspondence have agreed to register under the Foreign Agents
Registration Act, and all deny operating as foreign agents.
However, email records obtained through Freedom of Information Act
lawsuits show that green activists cited in the House committee’s
letters are advancing foreign governments’ policy goals in a manner
consistent with the actions of foreign agents, according to sources who
have examined the emails. Policing ‘Unregistered Activity’
The Institute for Energy Research, a Washington-based nonprofit that
favors free market energy policies, filed the FOIA lawsuits last year
against the Treasury and State departments seeking information about
foreign governments’ support to environmental advocacy campaigns in the
U.S.
The Treasury Department did not respond to The Daily Signal’s request
for comment on the FOIA suits; the State and Justice departments
declined to comment.
Chris Horner, a lawyer with Government Accountability and Oversight, a
public interest law firm, said in an email to The Daily Signal that he
shares Fitton’s concerns about how the Foreign Agents Registration Act
might be “selectively applied” going forward.
“Either the special counsel’s invocation of the FARA law represents
remarkably selective policing of possible unregistered activity on
behalf of foreign governments, depending upon one’s political
associations, or signals that DOJ has decided to take this law seriously
and has noticed, e.g., congressional probes into other potential
violations,” said Horner, who filed the FOIA lawsuits on behalf of the
Institute for Energy Research.
Horner added:
Given some rather startling
information made public thanks to a congressional investigation—now
neutered by the new [House] majority—surely this includes inquiries into
environmentalist pressure groups. If that is not the case, then we have
yet one more case of laws being unevenly applied, or selectively
applied, depending upon ideological or political affiliation.
After reaching a settlement with the State Department in December,
the Institute for Energy Research received email records from the
department that provide insight into the relationship between the World
Resources Institute and Chinese government officials.
In a series of emails dating back to April 2015, a World Resources
Institute staffer explains to State Department officials that a Chinese
government entity “approached” WRI for the purpose of opening up
channels of communication with U.S. government officials and think
tanks.
Bonner Cohen, a senior fellow with the National Center for Public
Policy Research, said he finds the emails revealing because they show
China was working to shape U.S. policy on climate change.
“If WRI’s services on behalf of China aimed at influencing U.S.
climate policy by diminishing American energy output do not constitute a
violation of FARA, then what does?” Cohen said in an email to The Daily
Signal, adding:
The Trump administration is
already cracking down on China’s stealing our intellectual property and
violating our cybersecurity. Given the crucial role energy plays in our
economy and national security, the Trump Justice Department needs to
join the fray and investigate possible violations of FARA by WRI and any
other group colluding with foreign interests against the United States.
Otherwise, China, Russia, and others will continue to avail themselves
of their American fifth column.
“Any accusation that WRI is a foreign agent is completely without
merit,” a spokesperson for World Resources Institute said in an email to
The Daily Signal.
The Daily Signal also sought comment from the Natural Resources
Defense Council, but had not received a response by publication time.
Earlier this month, the Institute for Energy Research began to
receive records from the Treasury Department in response to its FOIA
request related to Russia’s support for U.S. environmental groups. The
nonprofit is reviewing those records. Kevin Mooney, who reported and wrote this story, has done work in the past for Capital Research Center.
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