James Baker, the former General Counsel for the Federal Braueo of Investigations (who resigned his post in 2018) is thought by many to be the man most likely to turn state’s evidence against the Spygate conspirators.
There have long been rumors that Baker is a straight shooter and is not willing to go down with the ship, or for the ship, so to speak. The fact that he was one of the few prominent player to resign due to the scandal suggests this could be the case.
While I have little to no faith that the Biden ‘JustUs’ Department will actually let anyone expose any truth or wrong doing in the effort to depose Donald Trump, it is interesting to see that Durham is still around and has not committed ‘suicide’ just yet …
Cristina Laila of The Gateway Pundit writes:
Special Counsel John Durham will call former FBI lawyer James Baker to testify in the case against Hillary Clinton’s campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann.
Recall, Sussmann was indicted last month for lying to the FBI
According to the indictment, Sussmann falsely told James Baker he wasn’t doing work “for any client” when he asked for a meeting with the FBI where he presented bogus evidence the Trump Tower was secretly communicating with Kremlin-tied Alfa Bank.
James Baker resigned as FBI General Counsel in May 2018.’
Furthermore, Fox News is reporting:
‘Special Counsel John Durham plans to call former FBI General Counsel James Baker to testify in the case against former Clinton campaign attorney Michael Sussmann, who was recently indicted for making false statements to the FBI
During a virtual status hearing Tuesday, government prosecutors on Durham’s team signaled their intention to call Baker to testify as part of the Sussmann case. Sussmann has pleaded not guilty to one count of making a false statement to a federal agent.
The indictment against Sussmann says he lied to Baker when he presented data linking the Trump Organization to a secret server that communicated with Alfa Bank. The indictment indicates Durham may be expanding his investigation to bring separate charges again Sussmann or additional defendants.
U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper on Tuesday asked both the government and Sussmann’s defense to continue moving forward in their discovery process, which could take months, due to the thousands of pages of classified material involved.’