In 2019, Donald Trump’s Justice Department appointed John Durham to investigate the FBI’s inquiry into the Trump campaign’s relationship with Russia in advance of the 2016 presidential election. Durham, later promoted to special counsel by Attorney General Bill Barr to protect his investigation under President Biden, was granted access to likely hundreds of thousands of documents pertaining to Trump’s communication with Russian operatives, the federal government’s interactions with Russia, and the FBI’s investigation thereof. Like the Mueller investigation before it, Durham’s report was years in the making, involving hundreds of interviews, and culminated largely in disappointment—the special counsel indicted only three FBI agents, two of whom were acquitted. Unlike Mueller’s investigation, however, the Durham report was not a major news story. It was not anxiously anticipated in Congress or on social media. The Washington Post did not rush a copy of it onto the shelves of Barnes & Noble.