George Washington University law professor and FOX News contributor Jonathan Turley in an interview with 'Special Report' host Bret Baier on Thursday discussed the trial of Clinton attorney Michael Sussmann, how the FBI did nothing about his lie to then-FBI general counsel James Baker about a Trump-Alpha Bank relationship, the Steele dossier, and more. Turley said while it is obvious Sussmann lied to the FBI, special counsel John Durham is facing a tough jury that includes 3 Clinton donors, 1 AOC donor, and one person that has a child on a sports team with the defendant's daughter. "We have learned a lot," Turley said of the trial. "There has been questions raised as to why the Mueller investigation did not uncover or reveal some of these details. What we now have is a very clear pattern in both the Steele dossier and the Alpha Bank scandal." "Both of them originated with the Clinton campaign," Turley said. "The Clinton campaign hid the funding of the Steele dossier - was recently fined by the FEC for doing that," he said. "So they pushed these two separate parallel tracks. Both went to the FBI. Both went to the CIA. Both went to favorable people in the media. And they unleashed this torrent of media attention." <blockquote>JONATHAN TURLEY, GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, FOX NEWS CONTRIBUTOR: Well, the evidence is overwhelming, the defense really didn't lay a glove on the evidence, there is a very damning text message the day before this meeting where Sussmann says that, expressly says I'm not here representing a client, I'm just coming forth basically a citizen. The Durham prosecution team made really short work of that and showed that he was billing for that time and he was intimately involved in the creation and distribution of the Alpha Bank scandal, which proved to be completely groundless. But there were moments of the trial that were really quite breathtaking. I mean, you could see what Durham is up against. At one point he asked Baker, the former FBI general counsel, one of the lawyers asked why did you wait to give us -- hand over that incriminating text? And he just says Sussmann is a friend of mine. This is your investigation. Not mine. All of us were like wow, because you were one of the top people at the FBI and you are talking to the Justice Department... We have learned a lot. There has been questions raised as to why the Mueller investigation did not uncover or reveal some of these details. What we now have is a very clear pattern in both the Steele dossier and the Alpha Bank scandal. Both of them originated with the Clinton campaign. The Clinton campaign hid the funding of the Steele dossier - was recently fined by the FEC for doing that. So they pushed these two separate parallel tracks. Both went to the FBI. Both went to the CIA. Both went to favorable people in the media. And they unleashed this torrent of media attention. BRET BAIER, FOX NEWS 'SPECIAL REPORT' HOST: Without telling them that it originally came from somebody tied to the campaign. TURLEY: That's right. What was really telling is this came out towards the end of the trial. One of the FBI agents sent a note saying that James Comey, the former director of the FBI and all of his leadership aides were 'fired up' to get going on the Alpha Bank allegations. What was striking about that is that the researchers that put this together said that they were afraid they would be mocked. <b>They actually said what if these people are smart enough to see through this? How are we going to answer that?</b> And the response was we just need a narrative. Well, you know what? The Clinton people were right. Because when it went over to the FBI, apparently, according to this agent, James Comey and the rest of the FBI were chomping at the bit... The problem for Durham is the jury and the judge. I mean, he is facing a jury that has three Clinton donors, an AOC donor, and a woman whose daughter is on the same sports team with Sussmann's daughter. I mean, with the exception of randomly selecting people out of the DNC headquarters, you could not come up with a worse jury. </blockquote>