Information from his First term
As you are aware, Russia interfered in both the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections. Below we follow this information from the beginning to the end. Recently, our suspicions of the Trump campaign working directly with Russia in the 2016 presidential election were confirmed. We encourage you to stay informed on this matter. We will add new reports as they become available.
We encourage you to read the Report on the Investigation into Russian Interference in the 2016 Presidential Election. This report will give you the hows, whys, who, whats and whens regarding the information warfare committed against the United States of America by Russia before, during, and after the 2016 election.
There are a number of ways you can obtain a copy. Below is a list of trustworthy sources:
Download PDF from the Justice Department
Listen to the Audio Version on Audible (note: you can obtain the audible app for free and the report is available for free)
We encourage you to read the Inspector General’s report, as it indicates the FBI investigation was not motivated by bias in the Russia investigation. You can download it here, directly from our government’s website. Please note: this report is redacted.
We encourage you to read the articles of impeachment as submitted by the Committee on the Judiciary House of Representatives. You can read them directly from government’s website by clicking here.
Letter from the President to Nancy Pelosi detailing many false claims. You can read his letter by going directly to the government website or by clicking here. The PDF copy is available for download on wikimedia or by clicking here.
You can review fact checking by reading the New York Times article, “Read Trump’s Letter to Pelosi Protesting Impeachment” or by clicking here. Please note, this article does site it’s sources.
Senate Intelligence Report: Bipartisan report released Tuesday, August 18, 2020. The fifth and final volume focuses on the counterintelligence threat, outlining a wide range of Russian efforts to influence the Trump Campaign and the 2016 election. In this volume the Committee lays out its findings in detail by looking at many aspects of the counterintelligence threat posed by the Russian influence operation. For example, the Committee examined Paul Manafort' s connections to Russian influence actors and the FBI' s treatment of reporting produced by Christopher Steele. While the Committee does not describe the final result as a complete picture, this volume provides the most comprehensive description to date of Russia's activities and the threat they posed. This volume presents this information in topical sections in order to address coherently and in detail the wide variety of Russian actions. The events explained in these sections in many cases overlap, and references in each section will direct the reader to those overlapping parts of the volume. Immediately below is a summary of key findings from several sections.
Click here to read the report.
This document is a declassified version of a classified report that the Intelligence Community provided to the President, senor Executive Branch officials, and Congressional leadership and intelligence oversight committees on January 7, 2021. The Intelligence Community rarely can publicly reveal the full extent of its knowledge or the specific information on which it bases its analytic conclusions, as doing so could endanger sensitive sources and methods and imperil the Intelligence Community’s ability to collect critical foreign intelligence. The analytic judgements outlined in the PDF are identical to those in the classified version, but this declassified document does not include the full supporting information and does not discuss specific intelligence reports, sources, or methods. Click here to read this report.