"Informant" in Russian got closer meaning to "confidential informant" CI as used in police, but given that she was "informing" whilst being abroad that makes her a spy
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Replying to @DmitryDibenko @LazyDogTweets and
She was describing providing info to the prosecutor that they would use to deny US legal request (which we do all the time on the equivalent RU requests for Browder's arrest), no?
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Replying to @emptywheel @LazyDogTweets and
What it means is that she lied in the past claiming she did not work for the Russian Govt, she had to say it because of reports that emails to that effect were found, so she tried to label it as "informant" - did not work out as she expected
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Replying to @DmitryDibenko @LazyDogTweets and
Uh, what scrap of proof was there that she was working for the RU govt? Is there some secret transcript of the interview that provides any?
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Replying to @emptywheel @DmitryDibenko and
Interview states that based on the email she edited the response provided by the Russian government to a US questionnaire (authorized by a US court) re: her client. The point is she/RU gov't were to be independent of each other and they weren't.
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Replying to @blankslate2017 @emptywheel and
No Q, based on emails, that she advised the Prosecutor General on RU govt's response to USG request for coop in obtaining documents potentially harmful to *her client* in a U.S. criminal prosecution. That undoubtedly crossed some lines, at least in terms of U.S. practice.+
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Replying to @RickPetree @blankslate2017 and
The U.S. case in which she was involved was politically sensitive for the Russians. So maybe not a total surprise they'd be guided by someone known to and trusted by them, who was on the spot in the courtroom.+
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Replying to @RickPetree @blankslate2017 and
Issue is whether that, together w/ her acknowledgement that she has been, since 2013, a 'confidential informant' for Prosecutor General (meaning only, perhaps, she tells him things she picks up from time to time) makes her a full-blown "agent" and a seasoned 'operative.'+
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Replying to @RickPetree @blankslate2017 and
Thousands of East Germans were 'confidential informants' for the Stasi in GDR, and same in Poland. Anyone needing or wanting to preserve useful govt. access played the game. Question is whether she's more than that.+
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Replying to @RickPetree @blankslate2017 and
There was something in the interview abt. her having a relationship with 'military intelligence,' which ppl have deduced referred to GRU. I've looked for a full transcript of the interview, but can't find one. Does anyone have it ?
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Replying to @emptywheel @RickPetree and
She is not GRU type, she is SVR, and no I don't have secret source to share publicly in order to back it up
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