Since the 1970s, Stone has worked on the campaigns of Republican politicians, including
Richard Nixon,
Ronald Reagan,
Jack Kemp,
Bob Dole,[8]George W. Bush,[9] and
Donald Trump. In addition to frequently serving as a campaign adviser, Stone was a political lobbyist. In 1980, he co-founded a Washington, D.C.–based lobbying firm with
Paul Manafort and
Charles R. Black Jr.[10][11][12] The firm recruited
Peter G. Kelly and was renamed
Black, Manafort, Stone and Kelly (BMSK) in 1984.[13]: 124 During the 1980s, BMSK became a top lobbying firm by leveraging its White House connections to attract high-paying clients, including U.S. corporations and trade associations, as well as foreign governments. By 1990, it was one of the leading
lobbyists for American companies and foreign organizations.[13]: 125 His personal style of achieving his clients' goals have been described as "a renowned infighter", "a seasoned practitioner of hard-edged politics",[14] "a Republican strategist",[15][16][17][18][19] and "a political fixer".[20] Stone has referred to himself as "an agent provocateur".[21][22][23] He has described his own political modus operandi as "Attack, attack, attack – never defend" and "Admit nothing, deny everything, and launch a counterattack."[24]
Stone first suggested Trump run for president in early 1998 while he was Trump's
casino business lobbyist in Washington.[25] Stone officially left the Trump campaign on August 8, 2015. In 2018, two associates of Stone alleged that Stone claimed to have had contact with
Julian Assange during the 2016 presidential campaign. In response, Assange told The Washington Post that he had not met with Stone in the spring of 2016 and WikiLeaks said it had had no contact with Stone. Stone said he could recall only one occasion on which he mentioned meeting with Assange, and said that mention was made as a joke.[26][27] Court documents released in 2020 showed Stone and Assange exchanged messages in June 2017.[28] Nearly three dozen search warrants were unsealed in April 2020 which revealed contacts between Stone and Assange in 2017, and that Stone orchestrated hundreds of fake
Facebook accounts and bloggers to run a political influence scheme on social media.[29][30][31]
On January 25, 2019, Stone was arrested at his
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, home in connection with
Robert Mueller's Special Counsel investigation and charged in an indictment with witness tampering,
obstructing an official proceeding, and five counts of making false statements.[32][33] In November 2019, a jury convicted him on all seven
felony counts.[34][35][36] He was sentenced to 40 months in prison.[37][38] On July 10, 2020, days before Stone was scheduled to report to prison, Trump commuted his sentence.[34] On August 17, 2020, he dropped the appeal of his convictions.[39] Trump pardoned Stone on December 23, 2020.[34][40]
Early life and political work
Stone was born on August 27, 1952,[24] in
Norwalk, Connecticut,[41] to Gloria Rose (Corbo) and Roger J. Stone.[42] He grew up in the community of Vista, part of the town of
Lewisboro, New York, on the Connecticut border. His mother was the president of Meadow Pond Elementary School PTA, a Cub Scout den mother, and occasionally a small-town reporter;[43] his father "Chubby" (also Roger J. Stone) was a well driller[44] and sometime chief of the Vista volunteer Fire Department. He has described his family as
middle-class,
blue-collar Catholics.[41] His ancestry includes Hungarian and Italian.[45][46]
Stone said that as an elementary school student during the
1960 presidential election, he broke into politics to further
John F. Kennedy's
presidential campaign: "I remember going through the cafeteria line and telling every kid that
Nixon was in favor of school on Saturdays ... It was my first political trick."[44]
When he was a junior and vice president of student government at
John Jay High School in northern
Westchester County, New York,[47] he manipulated the ouster of the student government president and succeeded him. Stone recalled how he ran for election as president for his senior year: "I built alliances and put all my serious challengers on my ticket. Then I recruited the most unpopular guy in the school to run against me. You think that's mean? No, it's smart."[48]
Stone's political career began in earnest on the 1972 Nixon campaign, with activities such as contributing money to a possible rival of Nixon in the name of the
Young Socialist Alliance and then slipping the receipt to the Manchester Union-Leader. Eventually Magruder and
Herbert Porter hired Stone to spy on rival presidential campaigns during the
1972 Democratic Party presidential primaries. Stone subsequently hired Michael McMinoway to infiltrate campaigns of candidates such as
Edmund Muskie and
Hubert Humphrey.[50] He also hired a spy in the Humphrey campaign who became Humphrey's driver. According to Stone, during the day he was officially a scheduler in the Nixon campaign, but "By night, I'm trafficking in the black arts. Nixon's people were obsessed with intelligence."[8] Stone maintains he never did anything illegal during the
Watergate scandal.[24] The
Richard Nixon Foundation later clarified that Stone had been a 20-year-old junior scheduler on the campaign, and that to characterize Stone as one of Nixon's aides or advisers was a "gross misstatement".[51]
Stone met Donald Trump in 1979, introduced by Trump attorney and mentor
Roy Cohn. Stone was the New York regional political director seeking to raise money for the
1980 Reagan campaign, of which Trump joined the finance committee. Stone said Trump directed him to visit his father,
Fred Trump, who gave him $200,000 for the Reagan campaign. Stone recalled in 2017 that he and Donald Trump "hit it off immediately."[56][57]
Stone, the "keeper of the Nixon flame",[58] was an adviser to the former President in his post-presidential years, serving as "Nixon's man in Washington".[59] Stone was a protégé of former Connecticut Governor
John Davis Lodge, who introduced the young Stone to former Vice President Nixon in 1967.[60] After Stone was indicted in 2019, the Nixon Foundation released a statement distancing Stone's ties to Nixon.[61][62][63]John Sears recruited Stone to work in
Ronald Reagan's 1980 presidential campaign, coordinating the
Northeast. Stone said that Roy Cohn helped him arrange for independent candidate
John B. Anderson to get the nomination of the
Liberal Party of New York, a move that would help split the opposition to Reagan in the state. Stone said Cohn gave him a suitcase that Stone avoided opening and that, as instructed by Cohn, he dropped off at the office of a lawyer influential in Liberal Party circles.
Reagan carried the state with 46% of the vote. Speaking after the
statute of limitations for
bribery had expired, Stone later said, "I paid his law firm. Legal fees. I don't know what he did for the money, but whatever it was, the Liberal party reached its right conclusion out of a matter of principle."[8]
In 1980, after their key roles in the Reagan campaign, Stone and Manafort decided to go into business together, with partner
Charlie Black, creating a
political consulting and
lobbying firm to cash in on their relationships within the new administration. Black, Manafort & Stone (BMS), became one of Washington D.C.'s first mega-lobbying firms[64][65] and was described as instrumental to the success of
Ronald Reagan's 1984 campaign. Republican political strategist
Lee Atwater joined the firm in 1985, after serving in the #2 position on Reagan-Bush 1984.
In 1987 and 1988, Stone served as senior adviser to
Jack Kemp's presidential campaign, which was managed by consulting partner Charlie Black.[69] In that same election, his other partners worked for
George H. W. Bush (Lee Atwater as campaign manager, and
Paul Manafort as director of operations in the fall campaign).[70]
In the 1990s, Stone and Manafort sold their business. Although their careers went in different directions, their relationship remained close.[citation needed] Stone married his first wife Anne Elizabeth Wesche in 1974. Using the name Ann E.W. Stone, she founded the group
Republicans for Choice in 1989. They divorced in 1990.[72]
Stone was for many years a lobbyist for Donald Trump on behalf of his
casino business[25] and also was involved in opposing expanded casino gambling in New York State, a position that brought him into conflict with Governor
George Pataki.[74]
Stone resigned from a post as a consultant to the
1996 presidential campaign for Senator
Bob Dole after The National Enquirer reported that Stone had placed ads and pictures on websites and
swingers' publications seeking sexual partners for himself and Nydia Bertran Stone, his second wife. Stone initially denied the report.[44][48] On the Good Morning America program he falsely stated, "An exhaustive investigation now indicates that a domestic employee, who I discharged for substance abuse on the second time that we learned that he had a drug problem, is the perpetrator who had access to my home, access to my computer, access to my password, access to my postage meter, access to my post-office box key."[44] In a 2008 interview with The New Yorker, Stone admitted that the ads were authentic.[24]
2000s: Florida recount, Killian memos, conflict with Eliot Spitzer
Later that year, according to Stone and the film Recount, Stone was recruited by
James Baker to assist with public relations during the
Florida recount.
During the
2004 presidential campaign, Stone was an advisor (apparently unpaid) to
Al Sharpton, a candidate in the
Democratic primaries.[76] Defending Stone's involvement, Sharpton said, "I've been talking to Roger Stone for a long time. That doesn't mean that he's calling the shots for me. Don't forget that
Bill Clinton was doing more than talking to
Dick Morris."[77] Critics suggested that Stone was only working with Sharpton as a way to undermine the Democratic Party's chances of winning the election. Sharpton denies that Stone had any influence over his campaign.[78]
In that election a blogger accused Stone of responsibility for the
Kerry–
Specter campaign materials which were circulated in Pennsylvania.[79] Such signs were considered controversial because they were seen as an effort to get Democrats who supported Kerry to vote for then Republican Senator Arlen Specter in heavily Democratic Philadelphia.[citation needed]
In 2007, Stone, a top adviser at the time to
Joseph Bruno (the
Majority Leader of the New York State Senate), was forced to resign by Bruno after allegations that Stone had threatened
Bernard Spitzer, the then-83-year-old father of Democratic gubernatorial candidate
Eliot Spitzer.[81][82] On August 6, 2007, an expletive-laced message was left on the elder Spitzer's answering machine threatening to prosecute the elderly man if he did not implicate his son in wrongdoing. Bernard Spitzer hired a private detective agency that traced the call to the phone of Roger Stone's wife. Roger Stone denied leaving the message, despite the fact that his voice was recognized, claiming he was at a movie that was later shown not to have been screened that night. Stone was accused on an episode of Hardball with Chris Matthews on August 22, 2007, of being the voice on an expletive-laden voicemail threatening Bernard Spitzer, father of Eliot, with subpoenas.[83][84] Donald Trump is quoted as saying of the incident, "They caught Roger red-handed, lying. What he did was ridiculous and stupid."[24]
Stone consistently denied the reports. Thereafter, however, he resigned from his position as a consultant to the New York State Senate Republican Campaign Committee at Bruno's request.[82]
Former Trump aide
Sam Nunberg considers Stone his mentor during this time, and "surrogate father".[86]
2010–2014: Libertarian Party involvement and other political activity
In February 2010, Stone became campaign manager for
Kristin Davis, a
madam linked with the Eliot Spitzer prostitution scandal, in her bid for the
Libertarian Party nomination for governor of New York in the
2010 election. Stone said that the campaign "is not a hoax, a prank or a publicity stunt. I want to get her a half-million votes."[87] However, he later was spotted at a campaign rally for Republican gubernatorial candidate
Carl Paladino,[88] of whom Stone has spoken favorably.[89] Stone admittedly had been providing support and advice to both campaigns on the grounds that the two campaigns had different goals: Davis was seeking to gain permanent ballot access for her party, and Paladino was in the race to win (and was Stone's preferred candidate). As such, Stone did not believe he had a conflict of interest in supporting both candidates.[90] While working for the Davis campaign,
Warren Redlich, the Libertarian nominee for Governor, alleged that Stone collaborated with a group entitled "People for a Safer New York" to send a flyer labeling Redlich a "sexual predator" and "sick, twisted pervert" on the basis of a blog post Redlich had made in 2008.[91] Redlich later sued Stone in a New York court for defamation over the flyers, and sought $20 million in damages. However, the jury in the case returned a verdict in favor of Stone in December 2017, finding that Redlich failed to prove Stone was involved with the flyers.[92]
In February 2012, Stone said that he had changed his party affiliation from the Republican Party to the
Libertarian Party. Stone predicted a "Libertarian moment" in 2016 and the end of the Republican party.[95]
In June 2012, Stone said that he was running a
super PAC in support of former
New Mexico governor and Libertarian presidential candidate
Gary Johnson, whom he had met at a Reason magazine Christmas party two years earlier.[96] Stone told
The Huffington Post that Johnson had a real role to play, although "I have no allusions [sic] of him winning."[96]
2015–2021: Donald Trump campaign and media commentary
Stone served as an adviser to the
2016 presidential campaign of Donald Trump.[98] Stone left the campaign on August 8, 2015, amid controversy, with Stone claiming he quit and Trump claiming that Stone was fired.[99] Despite this, Stone still supported Trump.[100][101] A few days later, Stone wrote an
op-ed called "The man who just resigned from Donald Trump's campaign explains how Trump can still win" for Business Insider.[102]
Despite calling Stone a "stone-cold loser" in a 2008 interview[24] and accusing him of seeking too much publicity in a statement shortly after Stone left the campaign,[99] Donald Trump praised him during an appearance in December 2015 on
Alex Jones' radio show that was orchestrated by Stone. "Roger's a good guy," Trump said. "He's been so loyal and so wonderful."[103] Stone remained an informal adviser to and media surrogate for Trump throughout the campaign.[104][105]
During the course of the 2016 campaign, Stone was banned from appearing on
CNN and
MSNBC after making a series of offensive
Twitter posts disparaging television personalities.[107] Stone specifically referred to the CNN commentator
Ana Navarro as an "entitled diva bitch" and imagined her "killing herself", and called another CNN personality
Roland Martin a "stupid negro" and a "fat negro".[108][109]Erik Wemple, media writer for The Washington Post, described Stone's tweets as "nasty" and "bigoted".[108] In February 2016, CNN said that it would no longer invite Stone to appear on its network, and MSNBC followed suit, confirming in April 2016, that Stone had also been banned from that network.[109] In a June 2016 appearance on On Point, Stone told
Tom Ashbrook: "I would have to admit that calling Roland Martin a 'fat negro' was a two-martini tweet, and I regret that. As for my criticism of Ana Navarro not being qualified ... I don't understand why she's there, given her lack of qualifications."[107]
In March 2016, an article in the
tabloid magazine National Enquirer stated that
Ted Cruz, Trump's Republican primary rival, had extramarital affairs with five women. The article quoted Stone as saying, "These stories have been swirling about Cruz for some time. I believe where there is smoke there is fire."[110] Cruz denied the allegations (calling it "garbage" and a "tabloid smear") and accused the Trump campaign, and Stone specifically, of planting the story as part of an orchestrated smear campaign against him.[110] Cruz stated, "It is a story that quoted one source on the record, Roger Stone, Donald Trump's chief political adviser. And I would note that Mr. Stone is a man who has 50 years of dirty tricks behind him. He's a man for whom
a term was coined for copulating with a rodent."[110][111] In April 2016, Cruz again criticized Stone, saying on The Sean Hannity Show of Stone: "He is pulling the strings on Donald Trump. He planned the Trump campaign, and he is Trump's henchman and dirty trickster. And this pattern, Donald keeps associating himself with people who encourage violence."[112] Stone responded by comparing Cruz to Richard Nixon and accusing him of being a liar.[113]
In April 2016, Stone formed a pro-Trump activist group, Stop the Steal, and threatened "
Days of Rage" if Republican party leaders tried to deny the nomination to Trump at the
Republican National Convention in
Cleveland.[114][104]The Washington Post reported that Stone "is organizing [Trump] supporters as a force of intimidation", noting that Stone "has ... threatened to publicly disclose the hotel room numbers of delegates who work against Trump".[104]Republican National Committee ChairmanReince Priebus said that Stone's threat to publicize the hotel room numbers of delegates was "just totally over the line".[115]
Stone called
Saudi Arabia "an enemy" and criticized Trump's visit to
Riyadh in May 2017.[117] He suggested that the
Saudi government or members of the
Saudi royal family directly
supported or financed the
September 11 attacks, tweeting that "Instead of meeting with the Saudis @realDonaldTrump should be demanding they pay for the attack on America on 9/11 which they financed."[118]
During the campaign, Stone frequently promoted conspiracy theories, including the false claim that Clinton aide
Huma Abedin was connected to the
Muslim Brotherhood.[119] In December 2018, as part of a defamation settlement, Stone agreed to retract a false claim he had made during the campaign: that
Guo Wengui had donated to
Hillary Clinton.[120]
On September 10, 2020, Stone told InfoWars'Alex Jones that, if Trump appeared to lose the
2020 United States presidential election, he should consider declaring
martial law via the
Insurrection Act and confiscate ballots, particularly in Nevada, where they were "completely corrupted" and so "should be seized by federal marshals."[121][122] Further, Stone advised that the president invoke federal law to arrest the leading businessmen
Tim Cook and
Mark Zuckerberg as well as the politicians Bill and Hillary Clinton for "illegal activity" and shut down the opinion website The Daily Beast, arresting its staff for "seditious" activities; "this is war," announced Stone.[123][122][124]
Stone has repeatedly indicated he would back Trump if he decided to run for a second non-consecutive term in the
2024 United States presidential election, and criticized
Ron DeSantis for "disloyalty" amid rumors that he would run his presidential campaign.[127]
On April 25, 2022, the
Ontario Party announced that Stone had joined their campaign team as a Senior Strategic Advisor for the
2022 Ontario general election.[130] According to the media release issued by the Ontario Party, Stone had previously joined party leader
Derek Sloan to address the party's candidate convention and criticized Ontario
PremierDoug Ford's approach to conservatism.[130]
2023
During the 2024 presidential campaign, Stone responded to a tweet by former Republican congressional candidate Mike Crispi with "SeeYouNextTuesday", an apparent reference to
Casey DeSantis using slang phrasing to spell out “cunt”.[131]
In early 2018, ahead of an appearance at the annual Republican Dorchester Conference in
Salem, Oregon, Stone sought out the
Proud Boys, a
radical right group known for street violence, to act as his "security" for the event; photos posted online showed Stone drinking with several Proud Boys.[132][133][134] After his arraignment at the Miami federal courthouse in January 2019, they joined him on its steps holding signs that read, "Roger Stone is innocent," and promoting right-wing conspiracy theorist
Alex Jones and his InfoWars website. Proud Boys founder
Gavin McInnes said Stone was "one of the three approved media figures allowed to speak" about the group. When Stone was asked by a local reporter about the Proud Boys' claim that he had been initiated as a member of the group, he responded by calling the reporter a member of the
Communist Party.[134] He is particularly close to the group's former leader,
Enrique Tarrio, who has commercially monetized his position.[134] At a televised Trump rally in Miami, Florida, on February 18, 2019, Tarrio was seated directly behind President Trump wearing a "Roger Stone did nothing wrong" tee shirt.[135]
Relations with Israel before the 2016 United States elections
According to The Times of Israel, Roger Stone "was in contact with one or more apparently well-connected
Israelis at the height of the 2016 US presidential campaign, one of whom warned Stone that Trump was "going to be defeated unless we intervene" and promised "we have critical intell[sic]." The exchange between Stone and this Jerusalem-based contact "appears in FBI documents made public".[137][30]
Connections with WikiLeaks and Russian espionage before the 2016 United States elections
During the 2016 campaign, Stone was accused by
Hillary Clinton 2016 presidential campaign chairman
John Podesta of having prior knowledge of the publishing by
WikiLeaks of
Podesta's private emails obtained by Russian hackers.[138] Stone tweeted before the leak, "It will soon [sic] the Podesta's time in the barrel". Five days before the leak, Stone tweeted, "Wednesday Hillary Clinton is done. #Wikileaks."[139] Stone has denied having any advance knowledge of the Podesta email hack or any connection to Russian intelligence, stating that his earlier tweet was referring to reports of the
Podesta Group's own ties to Russia.[140][141] In his opening statement before the
United States House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence on September 26, 2017, Stone reiterated this claim: "Note that my tweet of August 21, 2016, makes no mention, whatsoever, of Mr. Podesta's email, but does accurately predict that the Podesta brothers' business activities in Russia ... would come under public scrutiny."[142]
Stone said he had established a back-channel with WikiLeaks founder
Julian Assange to obtain information on
Hillary Clinton and said this intermediary was the source for his advance knowledge about the release of Podesta's e-mails by WikiLeaks.[143][138][142] Stone ultimately named
Randy Credico, who had interviewed both Assange and Stone for a radio show, as his intermediary with Assange.[144] A January 2019 indictment claimed Stone communicated with additional contacts knowledgeable about WikiLeaks plans.[145][146]
In February 2017, The New York Times reported that as part of its investigation into the Trump campaign, the FBI was looking into any contacts Stone may have had with Russian operatives.[147] The following month The Washington Times reported that Stone had direct-messaged alleged DNC hacker
Guccifer 2.0 on Twitter. Stone acknowledged contacts with the mysterious persona and made public excerpts of the messages. Stone said the messages were just innocent praise of the hacking.[148] U.S. intelligence agencies believe Guccifer 2.0 to be a persona created by
Russian intelligence to obscure its role in the DNC hack.[149] The Guccifer 2.0 persona was ultimately linked with an
IP address associated with the Russian military
GRU intelligence agency in Moscow when a user with a Moscow IP address logged into one of the Guccifer social media accounts without using a
VPN.[150]
In March 2017, the
Senate Intelligence Committee asked Stone to preserve all documents related to any Russian contacts.[151] The Committee Vice Chair, Senator
Mark Warner (D-VA), called on Stone to testify before the committee, saying he "hit the trifecta" of shady dealings with Russia: "He had been in contact with WikiLeaks. He knew about [John] Podesta being 'in the barrel,' and he acknowledged recently, he had contact with a Russian agent."[139] Stone denied any wrongdoing in an interview on Real Time with Bill Maher on March 31, 2017, and said he was willing to testify before the committee.[139] The Committee's final report of August 2020 found that Stone had access to WikiLeaks and that Trump had spoken to Stone and other associates about it multiple times. Immediately after the
Access Hollywood tape was released in October 2016, Stone directed his associate
Jerome Corsi to tell
Julian Assange to "drop the
Podesta emails immediately", which WikiLeaks did minutes later. However, the drop had been announced three days previously, and the Mueller investigation was only able to establish Corsi talked to
Ted Malloch, who was not an Assange associate.[152][153] The Committee also found that WikiLeaks "very likely knew it was assisting a Russian intelligence influence effort". In written responses to the
Mueller investigation, Trump had stated he did not recall such discussions with Stone.[154][155][156]
On October 28, 2017, following a news report by CNN that indictments would be announced within a few days, Stone's Twitter account was
suspended by Twitter for what it called "targeted abuse" of various CNN personnel in a series of derogatory, threatening and obscenity-filled tweets.[158]
On December 1, 2017, Stone texted
Randy Credico, a prosecution witness: "If you testify you're a fool. Because of tromp (sic), I could never get away with a certain (sic) my
Fifth Amendment rights but you can. I guarantee you you (sic) are the one who gets indicted for perjury if you're stupid enough to testify." According to his indictment, page 20, on April 9, 2018, Stone emailed these threats to the witness, including a comment regarding his security dog that he would: "...take that dog away from you," "You are a rat. A stoolie. You backstab your friends-run your mouth my lawyers are dying Rip you to shreds." "I am so ready. Let's get it on. Prepare to die cock sucker." In a May 21, 2018, email, Stone wrote: "You are so full of shit. You got nothing. Keep running your mouth and I'll file a bar complaint against your friend."[159][160][161][162][163]
In a December 2017 interview with the Florida television station
WBBH-TV, following the sentencing of
Michael Cohen, Stone said that Cohen shouldn't have lied under oath, and Cohen was a "rat" because he turned on the president, something that Stone said he would never do.[164]
On March 13, 2018, two sources close to Stone, former Trump aide
Sam Nunberg and a person speaking on condition of anonymity, told The Washington Post that Stone had claimed to have made contact with Julian Assange and that the two had a telephone conversation discussing emails related to the Clinton campaign which had been leaked to WikiLeaks.[26] According to Nunberg, Special Counsel Robert Mueller had asked him to recount Stone's description of the telephone call with Assange.[26] Stone said Nunberg had called him and asked about his plans for the weekend and Stone had replied he was travelling to London to visit Assange as "a throwaway line to get [Nunberg] off the phone.[26] The other source, who spoke on anonymity, stated that the conversation occurred before it was publicly known that hackers had obtained the emails of Podesta and of the Democratic National Committee, documents that WikiLeaks released in July and October 2016.[26] Stone said in 2018 that he did not contact Assange in 2016 and did not know in advance about the leaked emails.[165]
On July 3, 2018, U.S. District Judge
Ellen Huvelle dismissed a lawsuit brought by political activist group
Protect Democracy, alleging that Trump's campaign and Stone conspired with Russia and WikiLeaks to publish hacked Democratic National Committee emails during the 2016 presidential election race. The judge found that the suit was brought in the wrong jurisdiction.[168][169] The next week, Stone was identified by two government officials as the anonymous person mentioned in the indictment released by Deputy Attorney General
Rod Rosenstein that
charged twelveRussian military intelligence officials with conspiring to interfere in the 2016 elections, as somebody the Russian hackers operating the online persona
Guccifer 2.0 communicated with, and who the indictment alleged was in regular contact with senior members of the presidential campaign.[170]
Charges
Arrest and indictment
On January 25, 2019, in a pre-dawn raid by 29 FBI agents acting on both an arrest warrant and a search warrant[171] at his
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, home, Stone was arrested on seven criminal charges of an indictment in the Mueller investigation: one count of
obstructing an official proceeding, five counts of false statements, and one count of witness tampering.[32][172][173] The same day, a federal magistrate judge released Stone on a US$250,000 signature
bond and declared that he was not a flight risk.[174][175] Stone said he would fight the charges, which he called politically motivated, and would refuse to "bear false witness" against Trump.[176] He called
Robert Mueller a "rogue prosecutor".[177] In the charging document, prosecutors alleged that after the first WikiLeaks release of hacked DNC emails in July 2016, a senior Trump campaign official was directed to contact Stone about any additional releases and determine what other damaging information WikiLeaks had regarding the Clinton campaign. Stone thereafter told the Trump campaign about potential future releases of damaging material by WikiLeaks, the indictment alleged. The indictment also alleged that Stone had discussed WikiLeaks releases with multiple senior Trump campaign officials.[178][179]
On February 18, 2019, Stone posted on
Instagram a photo of the federal judge overseeing his case,
Amy Berman Jackson, with what resembled rifle scope crosshairs next to her head.[180] Later that day, Stone filed an apology with the court. Jackson then imposed a full gag order[181] on Stone, citing her belief that Stone would "pose a danger" to others without the order.[182]
Trial and conviction
Stone's trial began on November 6, 2019, at the
United States District Court for the District of Columbia.[183]Randy Credico testified that Stone urged and threatened him to prevent him testifying to Congress.[184] Stone had testified to Congress that Credico was his WikiLeaks go-between, but prosecutors said this was a lie in order to protect
Jerome Corsi. During the November 12 testimony, former Trump campaign deputy chairman
Rick Gates testified that Stone told campaign associates in April 2016 of WikiLeaks' plans to release documents, far earlier than previously known. Gates also testified that Trump had spoken with Stone about the forthcoming releases.[185] After a week-long trial and two days of deliberations, the jury convicted Stone on all counts – obstruction, making false statements, and witness tampering – on November 15, 2019.[186][187][188] After the trial, one of the jurors emphasized that the jury did not convict Stone based on his political beliefs.[189] On November 25, a decision denying a defense motion for acquittal was released. The judge wrote that the testimony of
Steven Bannon and Rick Gates was sufficient to conclude that Stone lied to Congress.[190]
Sentencing
Intervention by Trump and Justice Department officials
On February 10, 2020, prosecutors from the
U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia requested that Stone be sentenced to seven to nine years in prison for his crimes after securing convictions on all seven charges.[191] Around midnight, Trump characterized the sentencing recommendation as "horrible and very unfair situation" in
tweeted, "Cannot allow this miscarriage of justice!"[192] The next morning a senior Justice Department official said the department would recommend a lighter sentence, adding that the decision had been made before Trump commented.[193][194] That afternoon the Department of Justice filed a revised sentencing memorandum, saying the initial recommendation could be "considered excessive and unwarranted under the circumstances." All four of the Assistant U.S. Attorneys who were prosecuting the case – Jonathan Kravis, Aaron Zelinsky, Adam Jed and Michael Marando – withdrew from the case, and Kravis resigned from the U.S. Attorney's Office altogether.[195] Senate Minority Leader
Chuck Schumer sent a letter to the
Department of Justice Inspector General requesting a probe into the reduced sentencing recommendation, over fears of potential improper political interference in the process.[196] Trump later said he had not asked the Justice Department to recommend a lighter sentence, but also asserted he had an "absolute right" to intervene.[197][198][199] The next day he praised U.S. Attorney General
William Barr for "taking charge" of the case and thanked Justice Department officials for recommending a lesser sentence than was proposed by the prosecutors who tried the case.[200]
The politicization of Stone's sentencing by Trump and senior Trump administration officials at the Justice Department caused controversy and prompted allegations of political interference;[201][202] the Justice Department's unusual decision to overrule the prosecutors on the case, as well as Stone's close association with Donald Trump, led to the affair being described as a crisis in the
rule of law in the U.S.[200] More than 2,000 former employees of the Department of Justice signed an
open letter calling on Barr to resign, and the Federal Judges Association convened an emergency meeting on the matter.[203] In testimony before the
House Judiciary Committee, Zelinsky, one of the prosecutors who withdrew from the case after the Justice Department intervened to recommend a lighter sentence for Stone, said that the "highest levels" of Justice Department had been "exerting significant pressure" on prosecutors "to cut Stone a break" and "water down and in some cases outright distort" Stone's conduct.[204] Zelinsky testified that "What I heard – repeatedly – was that Roger Stone was being treated differently from any other defendant because of his relationship to the president."[204] Zelinsky also testified that acting U.S. Attorney
Timothy Shea made the request for a lighter sentence for Stone after coming under "heavy pressure from the highest levels of the Department of Justice" and out of fear of Trump.[204] Zelinsky testified that in his career as a prosecutor, United States v. Roger Stone was the sole occasion in which he witnessed "political influence play any role in prosecutorial decision making,"[205] and that he opted to resign from the case and his temporary appointment in the U.S. Attorney's Office in D.C. "rather than be associated with the Department of Justice's actions at sentencing.[204] Former Attorney General
Eric Holder tweeted, "do not underestimate the danger of this situation: the political appointees in the DOJ are involving themselves in an inappropriate way in cases involving political allies of the President"; former director of the
Office of Government EthicsWalter Shaub tweeted, "a corrupt authoritarian and his henchmen are wielding the Justice Department as a shield for friends and a sword for political rivals. It is impossible to overstate the danger."[206]Channing D. Phillips, who previously served as U.S. Attorney for D.C., said that the events were "deeply troubling" and that the withdrawal of all four line prosecutors suggested "undue meddling by higher ups at DOJ or elsewhere."[207] CNN reported that other prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney's Office for D.C. had discussed resigning over the matter.[208]The New York Times reported that federal prosecutors around the nation – already leery of taking cases that might catch Trump's attention – had become increasingly concerned after the Stone developments.[209] In late June, Attorney General Barr agreed to testify before the
House Judiciary Committee at an
oversight hearing on July 28, 2020,[200][202] which would be Barr's first congressional testimony since his confirmation in early 2019.[202] Barr agreed to appear before the committee one day after Chairman
Jerry Nadler said he would issue a
subpoena to compel Barr's testimony if he did not appear voluntarily.[202]
On February 11, 2020 – the same day the four Stone prosecutors withdrew from the case after the Justice Department intervened in the sentencing recommendation – Trump withdrew the nomination of
Jessie K. Liu, former U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, to become an
Under Secretary of the Treasury, two days before her scheduled confirmation hearing. As U.S. attorney, Liu had overseen some ancillary cases referred by the
Mueller investigation including the Stone prosecution, as well as a politically charged case involving former FBI deputy director
Andrew McCabe, until attorney general Barr replaced her with his close advisor Shea in January 2020.[207] CNN reported the next day that Liu's nomination was withdrawn because she was perceived to be insufficiently involved in the Stone and McCabe cases.[210]
Post-trial motions and sentencing
On February 12, Judge
Amy Berman Jackson denied Stone's motion for a new trial. Stone had asserted that a juror was biased against him.[211] Stone again requested a new trial on February 14, after the jury foreperson of his trial publicly voiced support for the four prosecutors who withdrew from the Stone case. All jurors in the Stone trial had been vetted for potential bias by Judge Jackson, the defense team, and prosecutors.[212]
On February 20, 2020, Judge Jackson sentenced Stone to 40 months in
federal prison and a $20,000 (~$23,199 in 2023) fine for his crimes, but allowed him to delay the start of his sentence pending resolution of Stone's post-trial motions.[213] Jackson stated in the sentencing hearing, "The truth still exists. The truth still matters [in spite of] Roger Stone's insistence that it doesn't [pose] a threat to our most fundamental institutions, to the very foundation of our democracy."[213] Jackson also rejected Trump's attacks on the investigators and prosecutors, saying, "There was nothing unfair, phony, or disgraceful about the investigation or the prosecution."[213] Jackson said "Roger Stone will not be sentenced for who his friends are, or who his enemies are."[213]
On February 23, 2020, Judge Jackson rejected a request by Stone's lawyers that she be removed from the case.[214]
On April 16, Judge Jackson denied Stone's motion for a new trial and ordered Stone to federal prison within 2 weeks.[215] On April 30,
ABC News reported that they had learned through sources that the
Federal Bureau of Prisons planned to delay Stone's surrender date by at least 30 days due to concerns relating to the
COVID-19 pandemic.[216] On May 28, Stone was ordered by Judge Jackson to report to prison by June 30.[217] On June 24, Stone filed a motion to delay his transfer to prison, alleging potential health concerns connected to the COVID-19 pandemic.[218] On June 27, Judge Jackson rescheduled Stone's surrender date as July 14,[219][220][221] but also ordered him to immediately begin serving time in home confinement before reporting to prison.[222]
Commutation and pardon
After Stone's conviction, Trump repeatedly indicated that he was considering a
pardon for Stone.[203] Trump also repeatedly attacked the prosecutors, judge, and jury in Stone's trial,[203] and contended, without evidence, that the foreperson of the
jury (which unanimously convicted Stone), was dishonest in the jury questionnaire,[223] however she had previously made anti-Trump social media posts and had retweeted a social media post about Roger Stone's initial arrest shortly after it happened (before the trial).[224] Another juror stated that had she not been there, they would have returned the same verdict but faster, insisting that the jury forewoman was impartial and focused on process.[223] Stone publicly lobbied for clemency, stressing his loyalty to the president, saying: "He knows I was under enormous pressure to turn on him. It would have eased my situation considerably. But I didn't."[34] Within Trump's circle,
Fox News commentator
Tucker Carlson, Trump aide
Larry Kudlow, and Republican congressman
Matt Gaetz urged Trump to grant clemency to Stone,[34] as did Republican Senator
Lindsey Graham.[225] Carlson reportedly visited the White House and met with
Jared Kushner to demand clemency for Stone.[226][227]
Other Trump advisors, including chief of staff
Mark Meadows, son-in-law and senior adviser Jared Kushner, and White House Counsel
Pat A. Cipollone were concerned about granting clemency to Stone,[34] viewing a grant of clemency as a political liability for Trump.[34][225]
On July 10, 2020, Trump
commuted Stone's sentence by entirely removing his jail time a few days before he was to report to prison.[34][203] Trump personally called Stone to inform him that his sentence was being commuted.[34] In a lengthy statement containing an array of grievances, Trump attacked the prosecutors as "overzealous" and said, "Roger Stone has already suffered greatly. He was treated very unfairly, as were many others in this case. Roger Stone is now a free man!"[34] The Trump White House statement contained multiple statements and claims regarding Stone's prosecution and the Mueller investigation.[228][229] The commutation was announced
late on a Friday evening, a common time for the release of prospectively damaging news.[34] Stone's commutation followed a number of occasions in which
Trump granted executive clemency to his supporters or political allies,[34][225] or following personal appeals or campaigns in
conservative media,[203] as in the cases of
Rod Blagojevich,
Michael Milken,
Joe Arpaio,
Dinesh D'Souza, and
Clint Lorance, as well as
Bernard Kerik.[34] Trump's grant of clemency to Stone,[230] however, marked "the first figure directly connected to the president's campaign to benefit from his clemency power."[34] On July 15, 2020, counsel for two constitutional law professors sought leave of Judge Jackson to file an amicus brief addressing whether the commutation "may not be constitutionally valid".[231] Judge Jackson denied their motion on July 30, saying that the matter was no longer in her court, so she lacked jurisdiction.[232]
In rare public comments, prosecutor Robert Mueller forcefully rebutted Trump's claims in an op-ed in The Washington Post.[233] Democrats condemned Trump's commutation of Stone's sentence, viewing it as abuse of the rule of law[34] that distorted the U.S. justice system to protect Trump's friends and undermine Trump's rivals.[203] Representatives
Jerrold Nadler and
Carolyn B. Maloney, who chair two House committees, said that "No other president has exercised the clemency power for such a patently personal and self-serving purpose" and said that they would investigate whether Stone's commutation was a reward for protecting Trump.[34] Most Republican elected officials remained silent on Trump's commutation of Stone.[225] Exceptions were Republican Senators
Mitt Romney, who termed the commutation "unprecedented, historic corruption," and
Pat Toomey, who called the commutation a "mistake" due in part to the severity of the crimes of which Stone was convicted.[234][34][235]
On December 23, 2020, President Trump issued a full
pardon to Stone.[236]
2020 United States presidential election and January 6 United States Capitol attack
On November 5, 2020, two days after the
presidential election, Stone dictated a message saying that "any legislative body" that has "overwhelming evidence of fraud" can choose their own electors to cast Electoral College votes.[237]
A video released to the public in August 2023 showed that Stone had been pushing to overturn the states' election results two days before the election was called for Joe Biden. According to the
New Republic, this contradicted Donald Trump's defense that he and his allies genuinely believed they had won the race.[238]
On December 12, at a Washington, DC rally, Stone urged followers to "fight until the bitter end".[239] He appeared at the "
Stop the Steal" rally on January 5, at
Freedom Plaza, telling the crowd that the president's enemies sought "nothing less than the heist of the 2020 election and we say, No way!" And "… we will win this fight or America will step off into a thousand years of darkness. We dare not fail. I will be with you tomorrow shoulder to shoulder."[240][241]
On November 22, 2021, the
House Select Committee on the January 6 Attack subpoenaed Stone and Alex Jones for testimony and documents by December 17 and 6, respectively.[243] Stone agreed to appear before the committee, but invoked the
Fifth Amendment and refused to answer the committee's questions during a 51 minute period.[244][245] Stone also sued to prevent a subpoena of his
AT&T cell phone
metadata by the committee.[246] The committee also revealed ties between Stone and the
Proud Boys extremist group.[247]
On December 23, 2021, Stone urged a judge to dismiss a lawsuit filed against him by eight
Capitol Police officers, alleging that he is responsible for inciting a crowd of former President Donald Trump's supporters to riot on January 6, 2021.[248] Video evidence later surfaced of him telling Trump supporters on November 2, 2020, that they had "the right to violence."[249]
In January 2024, further controversy arose from a tape being released in which Stone discusses assassinating Democratic politicians
Eric Swalwell and
Jerry Nadler.[250] Stone denied the recording as a "poorly fabricated AI-generated fraud", while it was reported that the US Capitol Police were investigating the matter after the audio's release.[251]
Federal civil tax evasion suit
In April 2021, the Justice Department filed a civil suit against Stone and his wife to recover about $2 million (~$2.22 million in 2023) in alleged unpaid federal taxes, asserting they had used a commercial entity to shield their income and fund their personal expenses.[252][253] In 2022, Stone agreed to pay more than $2 million in taxes as part of a settlement.[254]
Books and other writings
Since 2010, Stone has been an occasional contributor to the conservative website The Daily Caller.[255][256] Stone also writes for his own fashion blog, Stone on Style.[256]
The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJ (with Mike Colapietro contributing) (Skyhorse Publishing, 2013): Stone contends that
Lyndon B. Johnson was behind a
conspiracy to kill John F. Kennedy and was complicit in at least six other murders.[260] In a review for The Washington Times,
Hugh Aynesworth wrote: "The title pretty much explains the book's theory. If a reader doesn't let facts get in the way, it could be an interesting adventure."[261] Aynesworth, who covered the assassination for the Dallas Morning News, said that the book "is totally full of all kinds of crap".[258]
Nixon's Secrets: The Rise, Fall and Untold Truth about the President, Watergate, and the Pardon (Skyhorse Publishing, 2014): Stone discusses
Richard Nixon and his career. About two-thirds of the book "is a conventional biography that is by no means a whitewash of Nixon. Stone writes that the President took campaign money from the mob, had a long-running affair with a Hong Kong woman who may have been a
Chinese spy, and even once unwittingly smuggled three pounds (1.4 kg) of
marijuana into the United States when carrying the suitcase of jazz great
Louis Armstrong." The remaining one-third of the book is an unconventional account of the
Watergate scandal.[258] Stone portrays Nixon as a "confused victim" and claims that
John Dean orchestrated the break-in (which he depicts as ordinary politics of the time[262]) to cover up involvement in a
prostitution ring. This account is rejected by experts, such as Watergate researchers
Anthony Summers and
Max Holland. Holland said of Stone: "He's out of his ever-lovin' mind."[258] Dean said in 2014 that Stone's book and his defense of Nixon are "typical of the alternative universe out there" and "pure bullshit".[263]
The Clintons' War on Women (with
Robert Morrow of
Austin, Texas) (Skyhorse Publishing, 2015): This book, according to Politico, is a "
sensational" work that contains "explosive, but highly dubious, revelations about both
Bill Clinton and
Hillary Clinton", with a focus on
Bill Clinton sexual misconduct allegations, and a claim that
Webster Hubbell is the biological father of
Chelsea Clinton. This book was promoted by Trump, who posted a Twitter message containing the book's
Amazon.com page.[264]David Corn, writing in Mother Jones, writes that the book is "apparently designed to smear the
Clintons – by depicting Bill as a
serial rapist, Hillary as an enabler, and both members of the power couple as a diabolical duo bent on destroying anyone who stands in their way" and said that the book was part of a wider "extreme anti-Clinton project" by Stone.[257]
Jeb! and the Bush Crime Family: The Inside Story of an American Dynasty (with Saint John Hunt) (Skyhorse Publishing, 2016): The book focuses on
Jeb Bush and the
Bush family.[259]
The Making of the President 2016: How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution (Skyhorse Publishing, 2017): Susan J. McWilliams, Professor of Politics at
Pomona College, wrote in her review of the book that "[a]side from some minor revelations about how long Trump planned what would later appear to be spontaneous decisions – he trademarked the slogan "
Make America Great Again" in 2013 – there's very little Trump, doing very little orchestrating, in these pages" and that "[t]here are many provocative political musings here, but they get lost in Stone's avaricious appetite for self-promotion and grudge-holding."[265]
Stone's Rules: How to Win at Politics, Business, and Style (Skyhorse Publishing, 2018)
The Myth of Russian Collusion: The Inside Story of How Donald Trump REALLY Won (Skyhorse Publishing, 2019) (paperback edition of Stone's 2016 book The Making of the President 2016 with an added "Introduction 2019")[266]
Personal style and habits
Stone's personal style has been described as flamboyant.[76][267] In a 2007 Weekly Standard profile written by
Matt Labash, Stone was described as a "lord of mischief" and the "boastful black prince of Republican sleaze".[8][268] Labash wrote that Stone "often sets his pronouncements off with the utterance 'Stone's Rules,' signifying to listeners that one of his shot-glass commandments is coming down, a pithy dictate uttered with the unbending certitude one usually associates with the
Book of Deuteronomy." Examples of Stone's Rules include "Politics with me isn't theater. It's performance art, sometimes for its own sake."[8]
Stone does not wear socks – a fact that
Nancy Reagan brought to her husband's attention during his
1980 presidential campaign.[269] Labash described him as "a
dandy by disposition who boasts of having not bought off-the-rack since he was 17", who has "taught reporters how to achieve perfect double-dimples underneath their tie knots".[268] Washington journalist
Victor Gold has noted Stone's reputation as one of the "smartest dressers" in Washington.[270] Stone's longtime tailor is
Alan Flusser. Stone dislikes single-vent jackets (describing them as the sign of a "heathen"), saying he owns 100 silver-colored neckties and has 100 suits in storage.[8] Fashion stories have been written about him in GQ and Penthouse.[8] Stone has written of his dislike for jeans and
ascots and has praised
seersuckerthree-piece suits, as well as
Madras jackets in the summertime and velvet blazers in the winter.[256][260]
In 1999, Stone credited his facial appearance to "decades of following a regimen of
Chinese herbs, breathing therapies,
tai chi and
acupuncture."[48] Stone wears a diamond
pinky ring in the shape of a horseshoe and in 2007 he had Richard Nixon's face tattooed on his back.[8] He has said: "I like English tailoring, I like Italian shoes. I like
French wine. I like
vodka martinis with an olive, please. I like to keep physically fit."[271] Stone's office in Florida has been described as a "Hall of Nixonia" with framed pictures, posters, bongs,[272] and letters associated with Nixon.[8]
^Name as rendered in the 2019 federal indictment.[1] As The Washington Post put it: "He was born Roger Joseph Stone Jr. in Norwalk, Conn., on Aug. 27, 1952... Birth and college records list his name that way, but at some point Stone adopted 'Jason' as his middle name".[2]
^Warner, Margaret (February 29, 1996).
"Money and the Presidency". NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.
PBS. Archived from
the original on June 17, 1997. Retrieved November 17, 2019.
^Edsall, Thomas B. (May 14, 2012).
"The Lobbyist in the Gray Flannel Suit". The Opinion Page. The New York Times Blog.
Archived from the original on December 12, 2020. Retrieved June 16, 2017.
^
abDuffy, Michael; Cooper, Matthew (September 20, 1999).
"Take my party, please". CNN.
Archived from the original on March 8, 2021. Retrieved November 17, 2019.
^Assumed to be Roger Stone (August 2007).
Bernard Spitzer's voicemail(MP3) (voicemail). The New York Times.
Archived from the original on November 20, 2020. Retrieved November 17, 2019. And there's not a goddamn thing your phony, psycho, piece-of-shit son can do about it.
^Vielkind, Jimmy (April 6, 2010).
"Hi, Roger!". Capitol Confidential, Albany Times Union. Archived from
the original on April 12, 2010. Retrieved April 6, 2010.
^Stone, Roger (March 24, 2010).
"New York GOP Rumble". The Stone Zone. Archived from
the original on November 17, 2011. Retrieved April 6, 2010.
^Victor, Daniel; Stack, Liam (November 14, 2016).
"Stephen Bannon and Breitbart News, in Their Words". The New York Times.
ISSN0362-4331.
Archived from the original on December 24, 2020. Retrieved March 4, 2017. A June 2016 article by Dan Riehl chronicled the belief of Mr. Stone, a Trump adviser, that Ms. Abedin, an aide to Hillary Clinton, was connected to a terrorist conspiracy.
^"United States of America v. Roger J. Stone et al"(PDF). Courtlistener.com.
Archived(PDF) from the original on April 18, 2021. Retrieved July 9, 2022. Plaintiff, the United States of America, brings this civil action to reduce to judgment and collect unpaid federal income tax liabilities owed by Defendants Roger J. Stone and Nydia B. Stone (collectively "Roger and Nydia Stone" or "the Stones") for the years 2007 through 2011 and 2018.
^Taylor, Stuart; Binder, David (August 11, 1988).
"Washington Talk: Briefing; Sockless Strategist". The New York Times.
Archived from the original on September 22, 2016. Retrieved February 12, 2017. 'I told him, "I'm not wearing socks until the Soviets are out of Afghanistan,"' Mr. Stone recalled. 'I had to say something, and that answer seemed acceptable to Governor Reagan.'
^Gold, Victor (February 17, 1994). "Hail to the tie". San Antonio Express-News.
^Metz, Andrew, "Golisano's Not-So-Secret Weapon / Adviser lobs political bombs", Newsday, September 23, 2002, accessed via Newsbank.com subscription archive April 28, 2008