In Mueller’s Russia troll case, ‘Animal House’ and accusation of bias

0
322

In Mueller's Russia troll case, 'Animal House' and accusation of bias

In a defiant response, Dubelier said he was merely “telling the truth” and said it was only the judge’s opinion that his remarks had been unprofessional.

(MORE: Is Russia playing a double game in Mueller court battle?)

In Mueller's Russia troll case, 'Animal House' and accusation of bias

STOCK/Getty ImagesThe Kremlin in Moscow in an undated stock photo.

Dubelier, an attorney at Reed Smith, accused the judge of showing “some bias” against him and, because of that, he said, he would have to confer with Concord about whether he should continue to represent them.

Dubelier is known for filing colorful motions that have included sarcastic quips and quotes from pop culture. Most recently, on Friday Dubelier quoted the 1970s movie “Animal House” in criticizing a special counsel motion.

“Flounder, you can’t spend your whole life worrying about your mistakes! You f**ked up… you trusted us. Hey, make the best of it,” read the quote.

On Monday, Friedrich said “clever quotes from movies [or] cartoons” will not be effective in persuading the court.

(MORE: Russian firm wants to disclose ‘sensitive’ US government info in court fight with Mueller)

In Mueller's Russia troll case, 'Animal House' and accusation of bias

Andrew Harnik/AP, FILEFormer FBI Director Robert Mueller, the special counsel probing Russian interference in the 2016 election, departs Capitol Hill following a closed door meeting in Washington, June 21, 2017.

Concord and the special counsel for weeks have been locked in an argument over whether Concord’s attorney can share some information — marked “sensitive” by the government — with officers of Concord, including Yevgeniy Prigozhin, known to be an associate of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Concord was among three Russian business entities and 13 Russian individuals, including Prigozhin, accused by the special counsel of involvement in a massive troll factory operation in which Russian nationals allegedly created hundreds of online personas, pretending to be Americans, with the goal of swaying the 2016 U.S. presidential election and, more generally, sowing social and political discord in America. Concord, the only defendant to answer the charges in court, is accused of funding the operation and has pleaded not guilty to a conspiracy charge.

(MORE: Former employees expose inner workings of Russian troll farm)

The question of how sensitive information is shared is a critical one both to the case and to the broader Mueller investigation. Previously, legal and national security experts told ABC News there was a concern that information provided to Concord for their defense could end up at the Kremlin, exposing U.S. secrets to an adversary.

Before sealing the courtroom from the public so the two sides could discuss the discovery question, Friedrich set the next court hearing for the case for March 7.

Sourse: abcnews.go.com

In Mueller’s Russia troll case, ‘Animal House’ and accusation of bias

0.00 (0%) 0 votes

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here