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Porn Users Forum » WHY DOESN'T POTUS ARREST BILL CLINTON, HILARY CLINTON, AND OBAMA? |
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08-23-18 09:26am - 2270 days | #1001 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Is the law fair? Of course not. Taxpayers are spending millions of dollars investigating Trump. Why not stop the investigation, and put Trump in jail. Where he obviously belongs. Here is a case of a woman who gave information about Russian interference in the 2016 election to a US newspaper. She was sentenced to more than 5 years in prison. After completing her 63 months in prison, Winner has been ordered to serve three years of supervised release. For giving information about Russian interference in the 2016 election? She was a whistleblower. Giving news about Russian interference that the US government wanted to hide. 5 plus years in prison, plus 3 more years on probation? Based on her punishment, Trump and his allies deserve life sentences in prison, without the possibility of parole. Also, hard time, on a work gang, clearing swamps, to make up for the evil they have done. Million dollar graft, corruption, and they will, at best, get a slap on the hand. ------------- ------------- Reality Winner, National Security Agency Leaker, Sentenced To 5 Years HuffPost Sebastian Murdock,HuffPost 1 hour 9 minutes ago Reality Winner, the U.S. intelligence contractor charged with leaking classified National Security Agency material, is seen in these undated booking photos in Lincolnton, Georgia. (Handout . / Reuters) A former government contract employee who leaked information to the press about Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election was sentenced Thursday to more than five years in prison. Reality Winner, 26, worked for federal contractor Pluribus International Corp. in Augusta, Georgia, when she was arrested last year after “removing classified materials from a government facility and mailing it to a news outlet,” a criminal complaint said at the time. The former Air Force linguist sent a National Security Agency memo that detailed Russia’s attempts to gain access to “multiple U.S. state or local electoral boards” to The Intercept. She had faced a maximum of 10 years in prison, but reached a plea deal with prosecutors. Still, her sentence of 63 months is the longest yet for a government leaker, prosecutors said when requesting the sentence. U.S. Attorney Bobby Christine said Winner “knowingly and intentionally betrayed the trust of her colleagues and her country” in a statement following the sentencing. “Make no mistake: THIS WAS OT[sic] A VICTIMLESS CRIME,” the statement from Trump-appointed Christine said. “Winner’s purposeful violation put our nation’s security at risk.” During her sentencing, Winner apologized to the government, the court and her family. Since her arrest, Winner has spent every day in jail after being denied bail. In June, Winner pleaded guilty to a charge of violating the Espionage Act, a law passed more than 100 years ago in an effort to combat foreign spies. Barack Obama was the first president to use the act to target whistleblowers. “People automatically hear ‘espionage’ and think she’s a traitor to her country, and I don’t want people thinking that she’s a traitor to the U.S.,” her mother, Billie Winner-Davis, told HuffPost in June. “I don’t agree with how the government uses the Espionage Act. She should not be labeled a traitor.” During her time in county jail, Winner has had limited access outside, has shared a shower and toilet with multiple other inmates, and was only recently given a second pair of pants to wear, her mother said. Transferring to a new prison system is “going to improve her situation drastically,” Winner-Davis said. “I think she has maintained her strength and sanity [while incarcerated,]” Winner-Davis told HuffPost on Tuesday before her sentencing. “She maintains her sense of humor which helps her through it. People who have written to her have helped keep her going, kept her strong.” Winner-Davis added she hopes her daughter will be moved to a prison closer to her and her family in Texas. After completing her 63 months in prison, Winner has been ordered to serve three years of supervised release. This article originally appeared on HuffPost. | |
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08-23-18 09:36am - 2270 days | #1002 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Whistleblower gave evidence that Russia interferred in the 2016 election to a news outlet. She was sentenced to 63 months in prison, plus a 3 year probation once she is released. For giving evidence the US government wanted to hide. "She blatantly violated the trust put in her by the United States. This sentence will deter others from committing the same offense," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Jennifer Solari. Based on that reasoning, Trump and his allies should all be put in prison for life. If you are a Republican, you are guilty of treason. ----------- ----------- Reality Winner sentenced to more than 5 years for leaking info about Russia hacking attempts U.S. news Reality Winner sentenced to more than 5 years for leaking info about Russia hacking attempts The Georgia woman, who leaked a secret report on Russian hacking of the U.S. election, faced a maximum penalty of 10 years. by Bianca Seward and Elizabeth Chuck / Aug.23.2018 / 8:05 AM ET / Updated 9:23 AM ET Image: Reality Winner Reality Winner arrives at a courthouse in Augusta, Georgia on Thursday.Michael Holahan / AP AUGUSTA, Georgia — A former government contractor who pleaded guilty to leaking U.S. secrets about Russia's attempts to hack the 2016 presidential election was sentenced Thursday to five years and three months in prison. It was the sentence that prosecutors had recommended — the longest ever for a federal crime involving leaks to the news media — in the plea deal for Reality Winner, the Georgia woman at the center of the case. Winner was also sentenced to three years of supervised release and no fine, except for a $100 special assessment fee. The crime carried a maximum penalty of 10 years. U.S. District Court Judge J. Randal Hall in Augusta, Georgia, was not bound to follow the plea deal, but elected to give Winner the amount of time prosecutors requested. Winner, 26, who contracted for the National Security Agency, pleaded guilty in June to copying a classified report that detailed the Russian government's efforts to penetrate a Florida-based voting software supplier. U.S. intelligence agencies later confirmed Russia had meddled in the election. Authorities have never confirmed what exactly the report said, or identified the news organization that received it. But a leaked document that was published by the online news outlet The Intercept in June 2017 bore the same May 5 date as the NSA report that Winner had leaked. The Justice Department announced it had arrested Winner on the same day as the Intercept report came out. Ex-NSA contractor Reality Winner speaks out in jailhouse interview Dec.22.201703:00 Thursday's hearing lasted less than 45 minutes. Winner entered the courtroom in handcuffs, her hair down and smiling. She held her hands behind her back for most of the hearing, except when she delivered her personal statement. "I would like to apologize profusely for my actions. I want to apologize to my family. Nothing is worth time spent away from loved ones," she said. Winner's attorneys called her a good person with an otherwise clean criminal record, and said that she suffers from depression and bulimia. Recommended President Trump on defense after Cohen guilty plea Air Force sergeant’s wife opens up about accepting his posthumous Medal of Honor Prosecutors said her offense was serious, and urged Hall to sentence her to the recommended 63 months. "She blatantly violated the trust put in her by the United States. This sentence will deter others from committing the same offense," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Jennifer Solari. Hall acknowledged the need to deter others and said the sentence reflected the seriousness of the offense. Winner has been held with no bail since she was arrested last June and charged under the Espionage Act. The former Air Force linguist speaks languages used in Afghanistan, including Arabic and Farsi, and had a top-secret security clearance while working for national security contractor Pluribus International at Fort Gordon in Georgia when she was charged. In her guilty plea, Winner told the court that she did "all of these actions I did willfully, meaning I did them of my own free will," the Atlanta Journal-Constitution had reported. Bianca Seward reported from Augusta, Georgia, Elizabeth Chuck reported from New York. | |
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08-23-18 09:51am - 2270 days | #1003 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Trump aides' felony convictions spur calls to oppose Kavanaugh nomination David Knowles 21 hours ago In the words of Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., Tuesday’s legal developments are a “game-changer” for the confirmation of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh. Democrats quickly seized on the guilty plea by President Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen and the guilty verdicts in the case against former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort as fresh justification for their long-shot bid to stop Kavanaugh’s confirmation. Schumer’s rationale is based on an article Kavanaugh authored in 2009 for the Minnesota Law Review in which he argued that presidents should not be subject to legal proceedings while in office. “I believe it vital that the President be able to focus on his never-ending tasks with as few distractions as possible. The country wants the President to be ‘one of us’ who bears the same responsibilities of citizenship that all share. But I believe that the President should be excused from some of the burdens of ordinary citizenship while serving in office,” Kavanaugh wrote. While Manafort still faces the prospect of a retrial on the 10 counts that the jury in federal court in Alexandria, Va., failed to decide, he also will be tried separately on charges of money laundering, obstruction of justice and failing to register as a foreign agent. Trump argued Tuesday that Manafort’s convictions had nothing to do with him, which appears to be true, but it is unclear if the president will be implicated in the upcoming trial. Trump is in far greater legal jeopardy regarding Cohen, who in his statement to the court tied the president to campaign finance felonies. Cohen told a judge in federal court in Manhattan on Tuesday that Trump had directed him to pay off Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal to hide allegations of extramarital affairs that were seen as damaging to his presidential campaign. Cohen admitted that he knew the payments constituted illegal and unreported political contributions. The president has not been charged with a crime in the case, and it is not known if he is under investigation, but legal observers have said he faces a potential legal liability. President Trump announcing the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, in the East Room of the White House on July 9. (Photo: Alex Brandon/AP) Thus, according to Democrats in the Senate, Kavanaugh’s nomination presents a clear conflict of interest, a point that Schumer attempted to hammer home on Wednesday. Several other Democrats joined Schumer’s call to stop Kavanaugh from reaching the Supreme Court. At Wednesday’s briefing, White House press secretary Sarah Sanders called the notion that the Manafort and Cohen cases have changed the outlook for Kavanaugh’s nomination “desperate.” Some senators, like New Hampshire’s Jean Shaheen, did not go so far as to argue that Kavanaugh was now effectively disqualified from being considered, but called for a delay. But others, like Hawaii Sen. Mazie Hirono, saw Cohen’s guilty plea as the end of the line. For many Democrats, “co-conspirator” was the favored way to describe Trump. Of course, Trump had his own verdict on the matter. | |
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08-23-18 09:55am - 2270 days | #1004 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Relationship between Trump, Enquirer goes beyond headlines Associated Press DAVID BAUDER and JEFF HORWITZ,Associated Press 3 hours ago NEW YORK (AP) — The plea deal reached by Donald Trump's former attorney Michael Cohen has laid bare a relationship between the president and the publisher of the National Enquirer that goes well beyond the tabloid's screaming headlines. Besides detailing the tabloid's involvement in payoffs to porn star Stormy Daniels and Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal to keep quiet about alleged affairs with Trump, court papers showed how David Pecker, a longtime friend of the president and head of Enquirer parent company American Media Inc., offered to help Trump stave off negative stories during the 2016 campaign. Court papers say that Pecker "offered to help deal with negative stories about (Trump's) relationships with women by, among other things, assisting the campaign in identifying such stories so they could be purchased and their publication avoided." The accusations threaten Pecker's company, American Media Inc., both legally and in the court of public opinion. The relationship between Trump and the Enquirer has been cozy for decades. Former National Enquirer employees who spoke to the AP said that negative stories about Trump were dead on arrival dating back to when he starred on NBC's reality show "The Apprentice." In 2010, at Cohen's urging, the National Enquirer began promoting a potential Trump presidential candidacy, referring readers to a pro-Trump website Cohen helped create. With Cohen's involvement, the publication began questioning President Barack Obama's birthplace and American citizenship in print, an effort that Trump promoted for several years, former staffers said. The Enquirer endorsed Trump for president in 2016, the first time it had ever officially backed a candidate. In the news pages, Trump's coverage was so favorable that the New Yorker magazine said the Enquirer embraced him "with sycophantic fervor." Positive headlines for Trump were matched by negative stories about his opponents: an Enquirer front page from 2015 said "Hillary: 6 Months to Live" and accompanied the headline with a picture of an unsmiling Clinton with bags under her eyes. Campaign finance laws generally prohibit corporations from cooperating with a campaign to affect an election, though media organizations are exempted from that restriction so long as they're performing a journalistic function. AMI's problem, said campaign finance expert Richard Hasen, is that Cohen's prosecutors don't appear to think hush money payments qualify as journalism. "AMI and Pecker have not been charged, but they might be charged," he said. Though a novel legal case might be made that paying sources for silence is in fact standard tabloid reporting practice, he said, Cohen's plea agreement doesn't give that theory much weight. The Cohen case outlined a tabloid strategy known as "catch and kill," or paying for exclusive rights to someone's story with no intention of publishing it in order to keep it out of the news altogether. McDougal reached a deal to be paid $150,000 for her story about an alleged affair in 2006 and 2007, prosecutors said. Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, negotiated a $130,000 payment through Cohen for her story — and both were successfully buried until after the campaign. When negotiations lagged on the Clifford deal shortly before the election, her lawyer told the Enquirer that she was close to reaching a deal with another outlet to tell her story. An editor at the tabloid, in turn, texted Cohen to say something needed to be done "or it could look awfully bad for everyone," according to court papers. The deal was quickly reached, and Cohen agreed to make the payment. In court on Tuesday, Cohen said that he had agreed to work with Pecker to make the deals "in coordination with, and at the direction of, a candidate for federal office" — clearly Trump. AMI did not respond to requests for comment. The accusations raise the question — can the Enquirer, indeed all of American Media, really be considered a media company when people become more familiar with its political activities? Through an aggressive acquisition strategy, AMI has lately cornered a large part of the celebrity publication market. Besides tabloids like the Enquirer, Star and Globe, it also owns Us Weekly, In Touch and Life & Style. "I think AMI is probably squirming," said Jerry George, a former editor at the Enquirer, on Wednesday. "They've painted themselves into a corner." Despite a reputation for fanciful stories, the Enquirer has a history of some aggressive political reporting; the tabloid's stories on John Edwards and Gary Hart helped end the chances of both men becoming president. The Enquirer's willingness to bend journalistic rules and potentially the law on Trump's behalf tarnishes that reputation, George said. And while a juicy political scandal involving adult film star, hush money and the President of the United States might seem like ideal tabloid fare, the Enquirer is steering clear. On the tabloid's web site Wednesday, the emphasis was on celebrity news — an old story about feuding on the set of "Golden Girls" and squabbling between Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie. | |
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08-23-18 04:43pm - 2270 days | #1005 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
AP: National Enquirer hid damaging Trump stories in a safe Associated Press Jeff Horwitz, Associated Press,Associated Press 28 minutes ago WASHINGTON (AP) -- The National Enquirer kept a safe containing documents on hush money payments and other damaging stories it killed as part of its cozy relationship with Donald Trump leading up to the 2016 presidential election, people familiar with the arrangement told The Associated Press. The detail came as several media outlets reported on Thursday that federal prosecutors had granted immunity to National Enquirer chief David Pecker, potentially laying bare his efforts to protect his longtime friend Trump. Trump's former lawyer Michael Cohen pleaded guilty this week to campaign finance violations alleging he, Trump and the tabloid were involved in buying the silence of a porn actress and a Playboy model who alleged affairs with Trump. Several people familiar with the National Enquirer's parent company, American Media Inc., who spoke to the AP on the condition of anonymity because they signed non-disclosure agreements, said the safe was a great source of power for Pecker, the company's CEO. The Trump records were stored alongside similar documents pertaining to other celebrities' catch-and-kill deals, in which exclusive rights to people's stories were bought with no intention of publishing to keep them out of the news. By keeping celebrities' embarrassing secrets, the company was able to ingratiate itself with them and ask for favors in return. But after The Wall Street Journal initially published the first details of Playboy model Karen McDougal's catch-and-kill deal shortly before the 2016 election, those assets became a liability. Fearful that the documents might be used against American Media, Pecker and the company's chief content officer, Dylan Howard, removed them from the safe in the weeks before Trump's inauguration, according to one person directly familiar with the events. It was unclear whether the documents were destroyed or simply were moved to a location known to fewer people. American Media did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Pecker's immunity deal was first reported Thursday by Vanity Fair and The Wall Street Journal, citing anonymous sources. Vanity Fair reported that Howard also was granted immunity. Court papers in the Cohen case say Pecker "offered to help deal with negative stories about (Trump's) relationships with women by, among other things, assisting the campaign in identifying such stories so they could be purchased and their publication avoided." The Journal reported Pecker shared with prosecutors details about payments that Cohen says Trump directed in the weeks and months before the election to buy the silence of McDougal and another woman alleging an affair, porn star Stormy Daniels. Daniels was paid $130,000, and McDougal was paid $150,000. While Trump denies the affairs, his account of his knowledge of the payments has shifted. In April, Trump denied he knew anything about the Daniels payment. He told Fox News in an interview aired Thursday that he knew about payments "later on." In July, Cohen released an audio tape in which he and Trump discussed plans to buy McDougal's story from the Enquirer. Such a purchase was necessary, they suggested, to prevent Trump from having to permanently rely on a tight relationship with the tabloid. "You never know where that company — you never know what he's gonna be —" Cohen says. "David gets hit by a truck," Trump says. "Correct," Cohen replies. "So, I'm all over that." While Pecker is cooperating with federal prosecutors now, American Media previously declined to participate in congressional inquiries. Last March, in response to a letter from a group of House Democrats about the Daniels and McDougal payments, American Media general counsel Cameron Stracher declined to provide any documents, writing that the company was "exempt" from U.S. campaign finance laws because it is a news publisher and it was "confident" it had complied with all tax laws. He also rebuffed any suggestion that America Media Inc., or AMI, had leverage over the president because of its catch-and-kill practices. "AMI states unequivocally that any suggestion that it would seek to 'extort' the President of the United States through the exercise of its editorial discretion is outrageous, offensive, and wholly without merit," Stracher wrote in a letter obtained by The Associated Press. Former Enquirer employees who spoke to the AP said that negative stories about Trump were dead on arrival dating back more than a decade when he starred on NBC's reality show "The Apprentice." In 2010, at Cohen's urging, the National Enquirer began promoting a potential Trump presidential candidacy, referring readers to a pro-Trump website Cohen helped create. With Cohen's involvement, the publication began questioning President Barack Obama's birthplace and American citizenship in print, an effort that Trump promoted for several years, former staffers said. The Enquirer endorsed Trump for president in 2016, the first time it had ever officially backed a candidate. In the news pages, Trump's coverage was so favorable that the New Yorker magazine said the Enquirer embraced him "with sycophantic fervor." Positive headlines for Trump, a Republican, were matched by negative stories about his opponents, including Hillary Clinton, a Democrat: An Enquirer front page from 2015 said "Hillary: 6 Months to Live" and accompanied the headline with a picture of an unsmiling Clinton with bags under her eyes. Associated Press writers Chad Day and Jake Pearson contributed to this report. | |
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08-23-18 05:01pm - 2270 days | #1006 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Flash news: Michael Cohen pleads guilty. He says he helped in a payment to 2 women at the direction of a candidate for federal office. That would be a criminal matter, because it would be an attempt to influence a federal election. However Michael Cohen did not identify who he was working for. Could Cohen have been working for Mike Pence, who was running for Vice President. Pence is thought of as a straight arrow. But if Pence was playing around with women who were not his wife, that would be horrible news to Mike Pence fans. Inquiring minds want to know: How many women has Mike Pence played around with? How many underage boys has Pence played with? Get Ken Starr to investigate Mike Pence, to help drain the Washington swamp. Starr is an expert investigator, who came very close to bringing down Bill Clinton. Starr should have a much easier time bringing down Trump and Pence, if Starr puts his energy into the investigation. But remember: Starr is a dyed in the wool Republican, who is blind to any faults a Republican might have. Starr is much better attacking Democrats. | |
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08-23-18 05:03pm - 2270 days | #1007 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders says Trump did nothing wrong. So why are people investigating Trump? It's a witch hunt. The proof is that Trump himself has said the investigation is a witch hunt. Trump is a free man. He's the leader of the Untied States of Trumpland. Seig Heil, Trump, Neo-Nazi leader for life of the Great White Moral Majority. ---- ---- Politics Sanders says Trump did 'nothing wrong' in wake of Cohen allegations ABC News NATALY PAK, JORDYN PHELPS and ALEXANDER MALLIN,ABC News 10 hours ago Sanders says Trump did 'nothing wrong' in wake of Cohen allegations originally appeared on abcnews.go.com White House press secretary Sarah Sanders insisted Wednesday that President Donald Trump has done "nothing wrong" in the wake of statements in court from his former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, that he made illegal campaign contributions "in coordination and at the direction of a candidate for federal office.” Sanders repeated that answer when asked about a Fox News interview with the president, taped Wednesday, in which Trump makes the case that because the payments to Karen McDougal and Stormy Daniels, who both claimed to have had affairs with Trump, were not made with campaign funds, they don't amount to campaign finance violations. (MORE: Michael Cohen, Trump’s former longtime personal attorney, pleads guilty to illegal campaign contributions 'at the direction of a candidate for federal office' Trump, in backing up his press secretary's backing of himself, wrote in a tweet at 1:10 a.m. EST on Thursday: "NO COLLUSION - RIGGED WITCH HUNT!" "They weren’t taken out of campaign finance, that’s the big thing. That’s a much bigger thing. Did they come out of the campaign? They didn’t come out of the campaign, they came from me," the president said. He admits that he did know about the payments, but only "later on" despite an audio of him apparently talking about the payment to McDougal beforehand. Trump has denied the women's allegations. PHOTO: White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders speaks during the daily briefing in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, on Aug. 22, 2018. (Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images) When asked whether Trump had lied to the American people about the payments, Sanders called it a "ridiculous accusation" and said, " I don't think the president is concerned at all” when asked if the president is concerned about what Cohen might tell special counsel Robert Mueller. Earlier Wednesday, the president contended in a tweet that two of the counts to which Cohen pleaded guilty don’t amount to crimes. In another tweet, Trump mocked Cohen, calling his professional competence into question. "If anyone is looking for a good lawyer, I would strongly suggest that you don’t retain the services of Michael Cohen!" the president tweeted Wednesday morning. Shortly after the Cohen tweets, the president expressed sympathy toward his former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, who was found guilty on eight counts of financial crimes Tuesday. Manafort served on the president’s campaign for nearly five months, serving in the highest ranking position of campaign chairman for much of that time, and overseeing the presidential campaign through the critical Republican National Convention in the summer of 2016. (MORE: Manafort found guilty on 8 counts in tax fraud trial) PHOTO: President Donald Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort stands before Judge T.S. Ellis as he was found guilty of eight of the 18 charges he faced in a case of bank and tax fraud at U.S. District Courthouse in Alexandria, Va., Aug. 21, 2018. (Bill Hennessy/Reuters) Trump said Manafort, "unlike Michael Cohen," did not "make up stories in order to get a ‘deal.’" For more than a decade, Cohen was one of the president’s most ardent and loyal aides and the keeper of his secrets as his so-called fixer. Soon after Cohen's homes and office were raided by the FBI in April, the president declared on Twitter that “Attorney-client privilege is dead!” even as he also predicted that Cohen would remain loyal to him and “never flip.” PHOTO: Michael Cohen leaves Federal court, Aug. 21, 2018, in New York. (Mary Altaffer/AP Photo) But in July, Cohen told ABC News' George Stephanopoulos that his first loyalty was to his family and country, not the president. “My wife, my daughter and my son have my first loyalty and always will. I put family and country first,” he said. (MORE: EXCLUSIVE: Michael Cohen says family and country, not President Trump, is his 'first loyalty' The formerly close relationship between the two men further devolved in recent months after Cohen released an audio recording of him and then-candidate Trump discussing what Cohen's lawyer has said is a payoff deal for Karen McDougal. Cohen has also said that Trump had advance knowledge of a 2016 Trump Tower meeting with a Russian promising dirt on Hillary Clinton. Edited on Aug 23, 2018, 05:14pm | |
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08-23-18 06:06pm - 2270 days | #1008 | |
Loki (0)
Active User Posts: 395 Registered: Jun 13, '07 Location: California |
The Democratic Party thinks it has a winning message for the midterms with it's anti-corruption focus. Since approval of the president is in the 80s with Republicans, and the majority of congressional districts are either safe Republican districts or Republican-leaning, I doubt it. "A man talking sense to himself is no madder than a man talking nonsense not to himself." | |
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08-23-18 06:33pm - 2270 days | #1009 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
WARNING: Gather your assault rifles and 10,000 rounds of ammo. Prepare for an American revolution if the crazy Commie Democrat slimeballs impeach Donald Trump, the bestest, most honest, hard-working President the US has ever had. Give me liberty or give me death. I will fight to clear the good name of Donald Trump. ------- ------- 1. STORMY CLOUDS 6 hours ago Giuliani Warns: ‘American People Would Revolt’ if Trump Is Impeached Alex Wong/Getty President Trump’s lawyer Rudy Giuliani said Thursday that “the American people would revolt” if Trump were impeached. During the same interview with Sky News, conducted on a golf course in Scotland, Giuliani called Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen a “liar.” When asked if if Trump could be impeached, the former NYC mayor replied: “Hardly. I think it’s inevitable that he won’t.” He continued: “You have this Cohen guy. He doesn’t know anything about Russian collusion, doesn’t know anything about obstruction. He’s a massive liar. If anything, it’s turned very much in the president’s favor.” Giuliani also said that “everything Cohen’s said has been disproved,” and maintained that the president did not collude with the Russians or obstruct justice. In a plea deal earlier this week, Cohen pleaded guilty to campaign finance, tax and bank fraud charges. The former Trump fixer said that he paid off two women before the 2016 election at Trump’s direction for “the principal purpose of influencing the election.” | |
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08-24-18 12:20am - 2270 days | #1010 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Newt Gingrich thinks Bill Clinton deserved to be impeached because he committed perjury (lying under oath) and obstruction of justice. Gingrich does not think Donald Trump deserves to be impeached because he has not committed perjury. Trump lies daily, to the American public and to the news, but Trump is not under oath. Therefore he has not committed perjury. It takes a lawyer to understand the difference of lying to the public and the news, which both Clinton and Trump did (except that Trump lies a lot more than Clinton ever did), and perjury. The reason Trump has not committed perjury is that Trump has refused to testify under oath. Even though Mueller has been after Trump for many months to testify. So, according to Newt Gingrich, Clinton deserved to be impeached, while Trump does not deserve to be impeached. However, Trump, like Clinton was, could be impeached for obstruction of justice. And also for a number of other possible crimes that Clinton was never charged with. So, in spite of Newt Gingrich's opinions, if the Democrats win enough seats in Congress, Trump could be impeached. And even if Trump is not impeached, he could be prosecuted under both federal and state laws for crimes he committed both before and during his term of president. ------- ------- Politics Why Bill Clinton Deserved to Be Impeached but President Trump Doesn't, According to Newt Gingrich Time Katie Reilly,Time 11 hours ago The fallout from Tuesday’s federal court proceedings involving two of Donald Trump’s former top associates seemed to spell trouble for the President. But his supporters don’t see it that way. Former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen’s guilty plea and ex–Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort’s conviction sparked questions among some pundits and activists about impeachment, a prospect that remains far-fetched based on the current makeup of Congress. Some experts argue that Cohen’s plea, which he directly connected to his work for the President’s campaign, could become a legal argument for impeachment. But Newt Gingrich — the former Republican House Speaker who led successful impeachment proceedings against former President Bill Clinton, one of only two U.S. presidents to ever be impeached — doesn’t see it that way at all. Gingrich argues that impeachment proceedings against Trump would amount to a distraction by Democratic lawmakers, who have thus far hesitated to seriously discuss impeachment. “The elites in Washington get tremendously excited about things which are totally irrelevant to normal people,” Gingrich tells TIME in an interview the day after the Cohen plea and the Manafort verdict. “They’re just background noise that people pay no attention to.” He defends Kenneth Starr’s independent investigation into Clinton, but now calls Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation a “witch hunt,” a phrase Trump has often used. In 1998, Gingrich accused Clinton of degrading the presidency through the Monica Lewinsky investigation. “This has nothing to do with vendettas or witch-hunts or partisan advantage,” Gingrich said at the time. “This is very simply about the rule of law, and the survival of the American system of justice. This is what the Constitution demands, and what Richard Nixon had to resign over.” Clinton was impeached later that year, in a vote largely along party lines, on charges of perjury and obstruction of justice. The proceedings grew to focus too heavily on “salacious details,” Gingrich says now. Clinton was subsequently acquitted by the Senate — an outcome that Gingrich now considers appropriate. “It probably was the right result,” he says. “[Clinton] was primarily defined in history as an impeached president, which he deserved. And he did lose his right to practice law. He had to pay a big penalty, and people generally agree what he did was wrong. But on the other hand, it probably didn’t rise to the level of replacing the president of the United States.” Gingrich does not think the Constitution “demands” similar action when it comes to Trump. “The argument of our whole case was that [Clinton], as governor, had imposed his will on a state employee and then committed perjury by lying about it. Now, perjury is a felony, and the question is: Is anybody about to suggest that Donald Trump has done something comparable? Federal election law rules don’t quite rise to the same level as exploiting his own employee,” he says. “Which one would you rank higher in dubiousness? That’s the problem the Democrats have.” Trump, who has also been accused of sexual misconduct by multiple women, was implicated in a felony when Cohen pleaded guilty Tuesday to fraud and campaign finance violations. Cohen said he arranged payments to women to keep them quiet about alleged affairs with Trump and did so “in coordination with and at the direction of a candidate for federal office.” Trump has denied any wrongdoing. “Just because Michael Cohen made a plea deal doesn’t mean that that implicates the President on anything,” White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said at a press briefing Wednesday. “The idea of an impeachment is frankly a sad attempt by Democrats,” Sanders added. However, Democratic leaders remain unwilling to call for impeachment. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi told the Associated Press on Wednesday that impeaching Trump was still “not a priority” for Democrats and said Mueller should be left to conclude his investigation. “Impeachment has to spring from something else,” she said. “It’s not a priority on the agenda going forward unless something else comes forward.” Even if Democrats win control of Congress in the midterms, removing a president from office requires a two-thirds vote in the Senate, which means the effort would need some Republican support. That’s why Princeton professor Keith Whittington, who studies impeachment, does not think Trump’s latest legal troubles increase the likelihood of impeachment. “I just find it a little implausible that the President’s own partisans are going to be motivated by a campaign finance violation to think that that’s sufficient rationale to remove a president from office,” Whittington says. Gingrich thinks of it in terms of the public perception of the chief executive. “President Trump is 80% a historic figure, and 20% a reality TV personality,” he says, “and when you get that, you understand what’s going on. And the country — a majority of the country in the next election — will accept that equation.” Gingrich notes that impeachment can quickly become unpopular, as it did during the Clinton proceedings, when public opinion of Republicans fell, while Democrats and Clinton experienced a surge. A CNN poll in June suggested that 42% of Americans support impeaching Trump, close to the 43% who supported impeaching Nixon in March 1974. A CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll from October 1998, suggested 34% of Americans supported impeaching Clinton. There is little doubt impeachment of Trump would be divisive — perhaps more divisive than impeaching Nixon would have been. Recent polls show that Republicans are far more likely oppose impeachment, view Mueller unfavorably, and see Cohen as “not honest and trustworthy.” “The Trump base has concluded that he’s achieving real things,” Gingrich says, “and the rest of this is noise.” | |
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08-24-18 02:50pm - 2269 days | #1011 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Fake news: Trump pardons Manafort of all crimes. Fires Mueller for incompetence and wasting government funds. Places Manafort in charge of the Russian investigation. Manafort promises speedy results and a final conclusion on the Russia probe. Tells the American public that all the facts will be exposed. Although Manafort can not promise, he says that he will be investigating both Bill Clinton and Hilary Clinton for interference in the 2016 election: and that there will be a recount of the popular vote, which, in his opinion, will expose the truth that Trump was the winner of the popular vote by a wide margin. The truth will set you free. Trump, the bestest, most honorable and hardest-working President the US has ever had. God save Trump, leader of the White Moral Majority. | |
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08-24-18 03:20pm - 2269 days | #1012 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Real news: Trump taking charge. Wants political foes investigated. Is prison the next stop for Hilary Clinton, Comey, Mueller, McCabe, Strzok, Page, Ohr, Christopher Steele and so many other slimeball Democrats who have slandered the good name of Donald Trump? ---- ---- Donald Trump Tweet-Directs Attorney General To Investigate Political Foes by Lisa de Moraes August 24, 2018 6:23am The President of the United States this morning directed the U.S. Attorney General to investigate his political rivals. Related Attorney General Jeff Sessions Punches Back After Donald Trump Questions His Fitness And Manhood... One day after telling Fox & Friends he only gave Jeff Sessions the job because he thought he was loyal (during the same interview, he questioned Sessions’ manhood), Trump mocked Sessions’ rare response. “‘Department of Justice will not be improperly influenced by political considerations,’ Jeff, this is GREAT,” Trump tweeted snidely, then directed Sessions to investigate those Trump believes to be his political rivals. Many of the names also are on Trump’s Enemies List of current and former government folks whose security clearances Trump says he plans to pull. Sessions who had previously stayed mum when Trump has publicly throttled him over his recusal in the Russia election-tamper probe, punched back after Trump’s Fox & Friends interview, saying, “While I am Attorney General, the actions of the Department of Justice will not be improperly influenced by political considerations. I demand the highest standards, and where they are not met, I take action.” Jeff Sessions On Twitter, Trump detailed who he wanted investigated. “[L]ook into the other side, including deleted Emails, Comey lies & leaks, Mueller conflicts, McCabe, Strzok, Page, Ohr, FISA abuse, Christopher Steele & hi phony and corrupt Dossier, the Clinton Foundation, illegal surveillance of Trump Campaign, Russian collusion by Dems – and so much more.” “Open up the papers & documents without redaction? Come on Jeff, you can do it, the country is waiting!” Referencing the sentencing of Reality Winner, Trump added, “Ex-NSA contractor to spend 63 months in jail over ‘classified’ information. Gee, this is ‘small potatoes’ compared to what Hillary Clinton did! So unfair Jeff, Double Standard.” Trump also tweeted this week in service of the impeach-me-and-you-will-become-poor” argument he had unveiled on Fox & Friends one day earlier. “Target CEO raves about the Economy. ‘This is the best consumer environment I’ve seen in my career.’ A big statement from a top executive. But virtually everybody is saying this, & when our Trade Deals are made, & cost cutting done, you haven’t seen anything yet!” Trump tweeted. “Economy is setting records on virtually every front – Probably the best our country has ever done,” he added. “Tremendous value created since the Election. The World is respecting us again! Companies are moving back to the U.S.A.” | |
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08-24-18 08:45pm - 2269 days | #1013 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Trump Changed Washington D.C. People Now Stab Each Other in The Front. Graves were meant to be danced on. Jackie Kucinich 08.24.18 9:41 PM ET For Trump’s Team of Enemies there is nothing more satisfying than seeing a rival vanquished and then being able to comment on it in the immediate aftermath. But unlike other administrations, where the misfortunes of colleagues are gossiped about behind the scenes, Team Trump prefers to stab each other in the front. After all, it’s more personal that way. After a colleague is fired, charged with a crime, or otherwise smited by fate, their former colleagues have routinely taken to Twitter or television to dole out sick burns on said person’s political corpse. The latest was Corey Lewandowski who appeared on NPR hours after former Trump fixer/lawyer/ “guy who he didn’t know very well,” Michael Cohen, pleaded guilty to tax fraud and campaign finance violations. “Well, I know Michael Cohen very well. I ran the campaign,” Lewandowski said. “Michael has been a serial liar for the last...Three years that I've known him.” His bloodthirst not quite quenched, Lewandowski then let Paul Manafort — who helped push Lewandowski out of the campaign — have it too. It’s a culture that, of course, comes from the top. Because no one loves to kick a perceived enemy when they are down more than the President of the United States. This week it was Cohen who drew Trump’s ire. Previously it was former FBI agent Peter Strzok. Others who received mean tweets in the wake of bad news or tough career decisions include former FBI director James Comey, former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe, Sens. Jeff Flake (R-AZ) and Bob Corker (R-TN) and former Trump aide Sam Nunberg. The practice dates back to the early days of the Trump campaign, before Trump won the Republican election. When Lewandowski was fired after a series of missteps including grabbing a female reporter, lying about it and getting caught on tape lying about it, then-Trump adviser Michael Caputo tweeted “Ding dong the witch is dead!” complete with GIF of the wicked witch of the East, striped socks and ruby red slippers (Caputo quickly resigned from the campaign - but the tweet remains). The street fighting continued through the transition. Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie was unceremoniously booted from the transition after, he said, Jared Kushner, then-Chief of Staff Reince Priebus and Chief Strategist Steve Bannon united against him. This may have been the second round of previous brawl as Christie had put Kushner’s dad in jail. But then came round three. After Bannon was fired in August 2017, Christie did a victory lap. “Now that he has been fired, no one is going to care about anything else Steve Bannon has to say,” Christie told PBS Newshour.” “[T]his I suspect is his last 15 minutes of fame. I hope he enjoys it.” The hits have come from the podium as well. After Omarosa Manigault Newman’s dramatic exit from the administration, White House spokesman Raj Shah was ready for questions about her departure, complete with a witty dig. "Omarosa was fired three times on The Apprentice and this was the fourth time we let her go," Shah said. "She had limited contact with the president while here. She has no contact now." Sometimes the public burying is done accidentally. Anthony Scaramucci, Trump’s communications director for ten days, famously burned a whole slew of staffers in a profanity-laced New Yorker tirade. He thought it was off-the-record but never bothered to check first. That particular saga was different from the others for one major reason. The Mooch attacked his colleagues while he, and they, were still in their job. But not for long. Scaramucci was soon fired. He has since tried to be diplomatic with respect to his former colleagues. He indicated that Bannon should be fired days before he eventually was. But one of the only departures that Scaramucci has publicly celebrated was that of former White House press secretary Sean Spicer, who had quit when he heard Scaramucci had been hired. During an interview on The View in September 2017, Scaramucci told the hosts he referred to Spicer as “Liar Spice.” Spicer, for his part, declined to celebrate Scaramucci’s departure during one of his myriad TV hits since leaving his post. “I don't think it's right to relish in somebody else's problems,” Spicer told Jimmy Kimmel in an interview a few months after Scaramucci’s stint as communications director came to an end. “And so I just as a person, I don't think that's right. But again, I think it proved my point. And that to do this job is one in which you have to have the proper background." Instead, he opted for a much more Beltway approach when throwing daggers: he delivered them in a book lamenting his rival’s “betrayal of Donald Trump, Reince Priebus and the good people who were to serve under him.” “What had originally stopped Scaramucci from getting a coveted White House job was the approval of a government office in the Department of Treasury to sell his company to a Chinese conglomerate,” Spicer wrote. “Months after his brief stint, the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States...still did not approve the sale, and the Chinese conglomerate pulled out of the deal.” Cold. —With additional reporting by Asawin Suebsaeng | |
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08-25-18 08:06am - 2269 days | #1014 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Politics Trump news: Top Democrat calls for House Intel Committee investigation to be reopened after Cohen guilty plea The Independent Tom Embury-Dennis, Clark Mindock, Chris Riotta,The Independent 20 hours ago Donald Trump's disastrous week continues to rumble on, as the US president attempts to change a narrative that is swiftly spiralling out of his control and once again leading opponents to call for thorough investigations. On Tuesday, two former associates of Mr Trump were convicted of a number of charges, with the president's former lawyer admitting to a pair of campaign finance violations during the presidential election. Michael Cohen, Mr Trump's so-called legal "fixer" implicated the president when he told the court his client had directed him to make payments to two women for the "purpose of influencing the election". Cohen admitted paying the hush money to adult film actress Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen McDougal, two women who have alleged they had extramarital affairs with Mr Trump. The developments have once again raised the spectre of impeachment, with one Democratic congressman warning the "countdown" is underway. The threat to Mr Trump's presidency was raised once again on Friday, when Representative Eric Swalwell, a Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said that the committee's now-closed Russia investigation should be reopened in the light of the disclosures from Cohen. Omarosa Manigault Newman, a former White House aide, has added fuel to the fire, saying she is "fully willing and ready" to testify in impeachment proceedings against the president. Paul Manafort, Mr Trump's one-time campaign manager, was also found guilty on Tuesday over numerous charges of financial and tax fraud, the same day Cohen admitted his guilt. The convictions stemmed from special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into alleged ties between Russia and the Trump campaign, as well as the Kremlin's interference in the 2016 election. On Thursday, it was revealed the White House opposed a bill which would significantly bolster America's defences against future election hacking. Mr Trump has consistently dismissed the threat posed by Russia, and has flip flopped on whether he believes Moscow interfered in the last election. | |
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08-25-18 08:32am - 2268 days | #1015 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Omarosa is a true patriot. She is willing to testify at Trump's impeachment trial. She is willing to face Trump's war of tweets and his hit squad of Neo-Nazi slimeballs to protect United States citizens from Trump's racist policies. God save Donald Trump, the most corrupt President the United States has ever had. ------------- ------------- Politics Omarosa Manigault Newman says she's ready to testify at Trump's impeachment trial Michael Isikoff Fri, Aug 24 2:00 AM PDT Donald Trump, Omarosa Manigault Newman. (Photo illustration: Yahoo News; photos: Andrew Harnik/AP, Mary Altaffer/AP) WASHINGTON — Former White House aide Omarosa Manigault Newman says she is ready to testify to Congress “anytime, anyplace” about what she knows about Russian ties to President Trump’s campaign and offered to appear as a witness at a potential Senate impeachment trial. “I have the truth on my side as well as a hundred emails and documents and other things,” said Newman in an interview with the Yahoo News podcast “Skullduggery.” Asked specifically about serving as an impeachment witness against the president, she replied: “I think I’ve made it very clear that I am fully willing and ready to testify, to cooperate, to help advance this investigation.” Even though Manigault Newman first floated the idea that she had information relating to the Russia investigation 10 days ago, she said that so far none of the congressional committees have reached out to her to seek her testimony. It remains far from clear, what she knows — if anything — that might be relevant to the Russia probes. While Manigault Newman insisted she has been “cooperating” with special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation since the spring, she only hinted at her role on the last page of her new bestselling book, “Unhinged: An Insider’s Account of the Trump White House.” In that passage, she wrote that in early 2018 “I, too, received a call from the FBI.” But she has been coy about what that cooperation has consisted of — and what she has to say about Trump’s knowledge of Russian assistance to his campaign. “I don’t want to compromise” Mueller’s probe, Manigault Newman told “Skullduggery.” (She also said she wanted to include more details in her book but her publisher’s lawyers made her take them out.) But Manigault Newman — who was fired as a White House staffer last December — was more than willing to discuss Michael Cohen, Trump’s longtime lawyer who pleaded guilty this week to eight federal felonies, including arranging “hush money” payments to two women in violation of federal election laws. Download or subscribe on iTunes: “Skullduggery” by Yahoo News According to Manigault Newman, Trump habitually mocked and belittled Cohen over the years, even humiliated him at his son’s bar mitzvah. “Michael wanted Donald Trump to come to his son’s bar mitzvah,” Manigault Newman said. “And he basically begged the president to come — it would mean so much to his son … And Donald came and in front of the entire group said that ‘the only reason I came is because Michael begged me to be here. He literally begged me.’” Trump “said this in front of all of Michael’s sons, friends, peers, Michael Cohen’s family,” added Manigault Newman, who also attended the bar mitzvah. “And he was very demeaning about it… He could have just shown up and said, ‘Yeah, I’m here, OK, let’s go.’ But instead, in front of his family, in front of his friends, peers, in front of his religious community, Donald Trump took a shot at him.” Manigault Newman said she called Cohen on Wednesday, the day after his court appearance. “Michael Cohen and I are still close,” she said. “I talked to him today and I wanted him to know and reassure him that his friends are still his friends. We still have his back.” The interview with “Skullduggery” took place not long after Trump, in a Wednesday morning tweet, once again mocked Cohen. (In another tweet that same morning, Trump contrasted Cohen with his just convicted former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, noting that “unlike Michael Cohen, Manafort refused to ‘break’ – make up stories in order to get a ‘deal.’”) Manigault Newman said she was “very upset about the president’s tweet” commenting on Cohen’s skills as a lawyer. “Why kick a man while he’s down, you know? This man is facing jail time, he has a family, he has a beautiful wife. His daughter was my intern at the White House. I love this family and, you’re right, Michael Cohen was 100 percent loyal to Donald Trump. And so I have to tell you that the way he’s been portrayed is completely inaccurate.” She added: “He would not be paying off porn stars if Donald Trump had not slept with them and had these illicit relationships with them and If Donald Trump had not directed him to pay these women off.” | |
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08-25-18 08:09pm - 2268 days | #1016 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Real news: Trump White House blocks passage of a bill that would help prevent Russia from interfering in US elections. Why? Possibly Trump favors Russian interference in US elections, if it improves Republican chances of winning. Does Putin have tapes of Trump and Russian whores playing games together? --------- --------- Politics News August 24, 2018 12:59PM ET Why Is the White House Trying to Block a Key Election Security Bill? Despite significant bipartisan support, the Election Security Act hit a massive roadblock this week By Ryan Bort Susan Watts/NY Daily News via Getty Images Hours after the Justice Department indicted 12 Russian intelligence officers for interfering in the 2016 election, Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats warned that Russia is still very much a threat to America’s democratic process. “The warning lights are blinking red again,” he said. “Today, the digital infrastructure that serves this country is literally under attack.” President Trump doesn’t seem to share his intelligence director’s concern. On Wednesday Yahoo reported that the White House intervened to block a bipartisan Senate bill that would have fortified election security nationwide. Introduced by Sen. James Lankford (R-OK) and co-sponsored by a powerful bipartisan cadre of lawmakers including Sens. Kamala Harris (D-CA), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Susan Collins (R-ME), the Secure Elections Act would have fostered greater coordination between states and the federal government in combating election interference. Top state election officials would have been given clearance to receive information regarding threats, an advisory board would have been established to outline the best ways to combat cybersecurity threats and states would have been required to conduct an audit following federal elections. The bill also focused on creating a paper record of votes that could not be manipulated by hacking efforts. “Paper is not antiquated,” Lankford said while defending the bill. “It’s reliable.” Lankford and the co-sponsors had already secured bipartisan support, and the bill was scheduled to go up for a vote in October. Senate Rules Committee Chairman Roy Blunt (R-MO) was set to conduct a markup of the bill on Wednesday, but the review was abruptly canceled after Blunt claimed it lacked enough Republican support. According to congressional sources interviewed by Yahoo, it was the White House that stepped in to kill the effort. “Elections are the responsibility of the states and local governments,” White House spokesperson Lindsay Walters said in a statement. “We cannot support legislation with inappropriate mandates or that moves power or funding from the states to Washington for the planning and operation of elections.” Lankford disagreed, arguing that states should not be expected to protect against attacks from foreign adversaries, and that because the elections in question are federal, the federal government should work with states to ensure their integrity. “Your election in Delaware affects the entire country,” the senator told Yahoo. “Your election in Florida affects the entire country.” Klobuchar added in a statement that “each and every day Vladimir Putin, hostile nations, and criminal forces devise new schemes to muck up our democracy and other infrastructure” and that “when our nation is under attack from foreign governments there is a federal obligation to act.” The bill was thwarted on the same day senators were briefed on Russia’s current efforts to influence U.S. elections. “Everything we’ve done on Russia has not worked,” Graham said as he was leaving the briefing, which was attended by all 100 senators. Despite the clarity of the threat — as well as several recent reports of attempts to interfere in the midterms — many feel that not enough has done to bolster America’s election security ahead of the November midterms. In July, Rep. Mike Quiqley (D-IL) introduced an amendment that would have added election security grants to an appropriations bill. “The American people should be very worried about the commitment of this president and his Republican allies in Congress to securing our elections,” Rep. David N. Cicilline (D-RI) said in defense of the amendment. “This is a party that has worked with this administration to undermine and minimize the investigation surrounding Russian interference in our presidential election.” The amendment was voted down. The lack of action can be traced to the White House, which hasn’t projected any consistent sense of urgency in safeguarding America’s electoral system against cyberattacks. More specifically, it can be traced to Trump, who has neglected the issue almost entirely. It’s unclear what exactly is behind Trump’s apathy when it comes to election security. Maybe he feels acknowledging interference in some way diminishes the magnitude of his victory over Hillary Clinton. Maybe he sees that Democrats are targeted more than Republicans and wants all the help he can get. Maybe he is in some way indebted to Putin. One thing that’s clear is that the president is still (publicly) skeptical that Russia interfered in the 2016 election, despite the overwhelming consensus of the U.S. intelligence community, as well as every legislative body that has investigated the matter. After siding with Putin in Helsinki last month, Trump was pressured into professing his faith in the intelligence community. As time as passed he’s reverted to questioning their findings. While speaking with Reuters earlier this week, the president once again expressed doubt that Russia meddled in the election. “[Special Counsel Mueller’s investigation] played right into the Russians,” Trumps aid. “If it was Russia, they played right into the Russians’ hands.” | |
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08-25-18 08:18pm - 2268 days | #1017 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Politics Money and loyalty: A look inside dramatic Trump-Cohen rift Associated Press JONATHAN LEMIRE,Associated Press 4 hours ago FILE - In this Dec. 16, 2016, file photo, Michael Cohen, then an attorney for President-elect Donald Trump, arrives in Trump Tower in New York. For Cohen and Donald Trump, it’s always been about money and loyalty. Those were guiding principles for Cohen when served as more than just a lawyer for Trump during the developer’s rise from celebrity to president-elect. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File) NEW YORK (AP) — For Michael Cohen and Donald Trump, it's always been about money and loyalty. Those were guiding principles for Cohen when he served as more than just a lawyer for Trump during the developer's rise from celebrity to president-elect. Cohen brokered deals for the Trump Organization, profited handsomely from a side venture into New York City's real estate and taxi industries and worked to make unflattering stories about Trump disappear. Money and loyalty also drove Cohen to make guilty pleas this past week in a spinoff from the swirling investigations battering the Trump White House. Feeling abandoned by Trump and in dire financial straits, the man who once famously declared that he would "take a bullet" for Trump now is pledging loyalty to his own family and actively seeking to cooperate with special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation. The unraveling of their relationship was laid bare Tuesday when Cohen pleaded guilty to eight criminal charges and said in federal court that he broke campaign finance laws as part of a cover-up operation that Trump had directed. In the days after Cohen's guilty plea, two close associates — the magazine boss who helped him squash bad stories and the top financial man at the president's business — have been granted immunity for their cooperation. These moves could have a ripple effect on the legal fortunes of Cohen and, perhaps, Trump. For years, Cohen was a fixture in Trump's orbit. Working alongside Trump and Trump's three adult children — Don Jr., Ivanka, Eric — in Trump Tower, Cohen took on a number of roles for the developer, including emissary for projects in foreign capitals and enforcer of Trump's will. At times a bully for a family-run business, Cohen was known for his hot temper as he strong-armed city workers, reluctant business partners and reporters. He was there in the lobby of Trump Tower in June 2015 when his boss descended an escalator and changed history by declaring his candidacy for president. But Cohen's place in Trump's political life ended up being peripheral. Cohen did become a reliable surrogate on cable TV — he created a viral moment by repeating "Says who?" when told Trump was down in the polls — and founded the candidate's faith-based organization. But Cohen was never given a prominent spot in the campaign. And despite telling confidants that he thought he had a shot at White House chief of staff after the election, Cohen was never given a West Wing job. He remained in New York when Trump moved to Washington. Cohen found ways to profit from the arrangement, making millions from corporations by selling access to Trump, but felt adrift and isolated from Trump, according to two people familiar with his thinking who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss private conversations. But early one April morning, more than three dozen federal agents raided Cohen's home, office and hotel room. A chief focus for investigators was Cohen's role in making payments during Trump's campaign to women who claimed they had sex with Trump, and whether campaign finance laws were violated. In the fall of 2016, weeks before the election, Cohen had set up a limited liability company in Delaware to hide the deal he made to silence the pornographic film actress Stormy Daniels about an affair she said she had with Trump. Worry grew within the White House about what had been seized. That April day, Trump berated the raid as "an attack on all we stand for." But then, in a "Fox & Friends" interview, Trump began to dramatically play down his relationship with Cohen. "I have nothing to do with his business," Trump said, asserting that Cohen was just one of many lawyers and was responsible for "a tiny, tiny fraction" of Trump's legal work. A dispute soon broke out between Cohen and Trump over who would pay the former fixer's mounting legal bills. Holed up in a Park Avenue hotel after his apartment flooded, Cohen began to worry about his financial future, according to the two people. By all appearances, Cohen's lifestyle was lavish. He bought a $6.7 million Manhattan apartment last fall, though the sale didn't close until April and no one could move in until the summer. With bills piling up for his team of expensive lawyers, the suddenly unemployed Cohen began to tell confidants that he was worried about his job prospects and ability to support his family. Meanwhile, the broadsides from the White House kept coming. Trump and Cohen had long stopped speaking, but word would get back to the lawyer that the president was belittling him. The president's attorney and frequent attack dog Rudy Giuliani went from calling Cohen "an honest, honorable lawyer" in May to deriding him as a "pathological liar" in July. Cohen began wondering to friends whether loyalty with Trump had become a one-way street, the people said. Eager to hit back and attempt to regain some hold on the story, Cohen hired Lanny Davis, a former Bill Clinton attorney, to be his public relations lawyer. Davis began striking back at the White House and lobbed a clear warning shot at the president when he released a secret recording of a conversation in which Trump appears to have knowledge about hush-money payments to former Playboy model Karen McDougal, who also alleged an affair with the developer. Cohen was embraced by the cable news networks as an irresistible foil to Trump. Some on the left styled him as a star of the resistance. Cohen's camp made some effort to play into the role, reaching out to Watergate whistleblower John Dean and, after Cohen's plea, establishing an online fundraising tool that seemed to predominantly receive backing from liberals. Cohen, who could get about four years to five years in prison, is due to be sentenced Dec. 12. Davis has strongly telegraphed that Cohen is willing to cooperate with Mueller's investigation. But a deal has yet to be struck and there are doubts about what Cohen can prove or whether the special counsel would want to rely on an untrustworthy witness. Cohen has stayed out of sight and has remained emotional since his plea, according to the people close to him. The attacks from Trump have continued. "If anyone is looking for a good lawyer, I would strongly suggest that you don't retain the services of Michael Cohen!" Trump tweeted Wednesday. ___ Follow Lemire on Twitter at http://twitter.com/@JonLemire | |
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08-26-18 04:06am - 2268 days | #1018 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Real news: If Allen Wiesselberg cooperates fully, Trump may be forced to pardon himself. And then move to Russia or some country where there is no extradition treaty with the US. Why? Because a presidential pardon only covers federal crimes. It does not cover state crimes. So New York and California could both go after Donald Trump. ---------- ---------- Politics For Trump, Allen Weisselberg may be the man who knew too much [Yahoo News] Luppe B. Luppen and Hunter Walker ,Yahoo News•August 24, 2018 As the long-tenured finance chief of the Trump Organization, Allen Weisselberg spent decades working as one of the senior figures in the president’s real estate business. Now, his reported cooperation with a probe related to Donald Trump’s financial dealings could have ramifications for both federal and states investigations into the president and his business dealings. Prosecutors investigating Trump’s inner circle reportedly now reportedly have a limited deal with Weisselberg, who has provided testimony against former Trump lawyer Michael Cohen. If his cooperation expanded, it could play a crucial role in multiple ongoing investigations. According to the Wall Street Journal, federal prosecutors granted immunity to Weisselberg in exchange for information about payments to Cohen, which were made to two women during the 2016 presidential campaign in order to suppress their stories of alleged affairs with Trump. Cohen pleaded guilty to eight felonies on Tuesday, including charges related to his personal finances and campaign finance law violations stemming from the payments designed to shield Trump from the damaging allegations during the 2016 presidential race. The U.S. attorney’s office in the Southern District of New York, which led the Cohen investigation, declined to comment on this story. The Associated Press subsequently reported that the immunity deal was “restricted to Weisselberg’s grand jury testimony last month in the Cohen case.” Weisselberg is in a unique position to fully lay bare the inner workings of Trump’s empire. If prosecutors were able to secure Weisselberg’s broader cooperation, there could be dramatic ramifications. He almost certainly has valuable information on much more than the hush money payments. A source familiar with the Trump Organization said Weisselberg, who did not respond to requests for comment, was intimately involved in every aspect of the company’s finances and even helped craft the statement Trump debuted during the campaign describing his net worth. “Every bill went through him,” the source said of Weisselberg. Trump has attacked allies who turned on him by either airing dirty laundry in the press or a courtroom. In the three days since Cohen’s guilty plea, the president has excoriated his former attorney in a series of tweets, including one where he criticized Cohen for breaking under pressure. In an interview with Fox News that aired Thursday, Trump had harsh words for colleagues who offer information about him in order make deals with prosecutors. “It’s called flipping and it almost ought to be illegal,” Trump said in the interview, later adding, “It almost ought to be outlawed; it’s not fair.” The Trump Organization did not respond to a request for comment. However, there were indications Trump might not have given up on Weisselberg just yet and may be hoping the executive stays loyal. A source close to the Trump family spoke highly of Weisselberg, even after the reports of the immunity deal surfaced on Friday. “Allen is an amazing person. Truly a class act. I have the highest respect for him,” the source said. Trump’s attorney, Rudy Giuliani, dismissed the deal in a text message to Yahoo News. “Old news,” wrote Giuliani. “SDNY checking the boxes.” Giuliani also said he believes Weisselberg “still works” at the Trump Organization. Weisselberg played a crucial part in the payments Cohen set up to secure the silence of the women, Karen McDougal and Stormy Daniels. After Cohen brokered deals with each of the women, Weisselberg arranged for Cohen to be reimbursed from Trump’s own funds. After news of Weisselberg’s immunity deal broke, CNN reported that his interview with federal prosecutors occurred weeks ago and was indeed focused on the payments. In the case of McDougal, a surreptitious recording Cohen made of Trump features the two men talking about the plan. Cohen notes on the tape that he collaborated with Weisselberg on the project, seeking his input on how best to form a shell company that was used to give a tabloid publisher $150,000 so it could buy the exclusive rights to McDougal’s story while never actually planning to run an article about it. In the case of Daniels, the plan Cohen admitted in his guilty plea was less intricate. Cohen negotiated a $130,000 payment to Daniels in exchange for her signature on a nondisclosure agreement. Once again, the money came through a shell company, but this time Cohen initially paid out of pocket and went into debt. Weisselberg comes into this story when Cohen sought reimbursement for the $130,000. Cohen created fake invoices to submit to the Trump Organization, and eventually the Trump Organization’s executives, reportedly including Weisselberg, decided to pay Cohen $420,000 spread out over several months in what they would call a “monthly retainer.” The amount was greater than $130,000 to allow Cohen to recoup the hush money expenses, cover his taxes, and to provide him some additional compensation. Weisselberg was in charge of making these “retainer” payments. Federal and local prosecutors have been cooperating on various Trump probes. The U.S. attorney’s office for the Southern District of New York began its investigation of Cohen based on a referral from special counsel Robert Mueller, who is investigating Russia’s interference in the 2016 election and whether the Trump campaign cooperated with those efforts. Mueller is continuing to investigate Cohen’s role in a plan to build a Trump Tower in Moscow. If Weisselberg decided to fully open his kimono and reveal all he knows, the federal investigation in the Southern District of New York would be the most obvious potential beneficiary. However, in some ways, the nature of that office’s interest in Trump is the most mysterious. As of Friday afternoon, it is not known what other subjects that federal investigation is pursuing. If Trump Organization executives, or even the president, are in its cross hairs, then Weisselberg could offer key insights. Special counsel Mueller’s investigation, headquartered in Washington, D.C., is another potential beneficiary. For Mueller’s investigators, Weisselberg could detail the nature and extent of the financing the Trump Organization has received from sources connected to Russia. He could also offer them insight into any investments or potential investments Trump has made either in Russia or with Russian partners. A spokesperson for the special counsel’s office declined to comment for this story. Weisselberg could also potentially be a valuable material witness in the New York attorney general’s state-level investigation into President Trump’s charitable foundation. In June, New York Attorney General Barbara Underwood filed a lawsuit against the Trump Foundation alleging a “pattern of illegal conduct,” including “willful self-dealing.” Weisselberg has long been the treasurer of the Trump Foundation. In preparation for its lawsuit, the attorney general’s office conducted a lengthy interview with Weisselberg and obtained his emails. The investigators allege that Weisselberg collaborated with Trump and campaign officials in advance of the 2016 Iowa primary to use the charity’s funds to benefit the campaign. The New York attorney general’s office declined to comment on Weisselberg. After Weisselberg’s deal became public on Friday morning, speculation intensified about the information that such a well-placed cooperative witness could provide to investigators looking into Trump’s business and personal affairs. Bloomberg Opinion Executive Editor Tim O’Brien was among the chorus on Twitter. “Weisselberg’s cooperation takes the Mueller and SDNY investigations out of some of the penny ante stuff in play so far and into the heart of the Trump Organization and President Trump’s business history. The game gets started here,” O’Brien wrote. With Weisselberg’s deal relatively limited in scope, that game will have to wait — for now. Updated at 9:32 pm with comments from Rudy Giuliani. | |
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08-26-18 04:22am - 2268 days | #1019 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Great news for Donald Trump. He's been firing so many people working for him that he needs new blood. Here is a man and women (a married couple) who can fill some empty positions. The man has political experience, because he is a US Congressman. A Republican, of course. Also, the man's wife served as his campaign manager. Both the man and his wife have been indicted on corruption charges. But that's no problem for Trump: Trump is an expert dealing with corruption. --------- --------- U.S. Rep. Duncan Hunter Blames Wife For Campaign Spending Under Inquiry [HuffPost] Carla Baranauckas ,HuffPost•August 24, 2018 Scroll back up to restore default view. Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.), who has been indicted on corruption charges related to the use of his campaign money, appeared to blame his wife for the predicament when he said in an interview Thursday night that she handled the finances for their family and his campaign. Hunter and his wife Margaret, who was also indicted, entered pleas of not guilty in federal court Thursday morning. They face 60 charges related to the alleged misuse of $250,000 in campaign money. Prosecutors say the couple used the money to illegally pay for personal expenses, including lavish vacations, dental fees and a plane ticket for their pet rabbit. Among the allegations is that Hunter called his wife when he wanted to buy some Hawaii shorts and that she told him to purchase them at the pro shop of a golf club so they could be listed as golf balls for the Wounded Warriors Project, a veterans charity. Hunter denied that accusation. On Thursday evening, Fox News host Martha MacCallum asked Hunter, “Are you saying it’s more her fault than your fault?” Hunter, a Republican from San Diego who served in the Marines, replied: “I’m saying when I went to Iraq in 2003, the first time, I gave her power of attorney and she handled my finances throughout my entire military career and that continued on when I got into Congress. Because I’m gone five days a week, I’m home for two.” “And she was also the campaign manager,” he added. “Whatever she did, that will be looked at too, I’m sure. But I didn’t do it. I didn’t spend any money illegally. I did not use campaign money, especially for Wounded Warriors stuff, there’s no way.” Hunter, who is running for re-election in November, said the charges were politically motivated. “This is pure politics and the prosecutors can make an indictment read like a scandalous novel if they want to,” he said. “They’ve had a year and a half to do this. There’s no way for me now to go out and be able to talk to my people or get this done in court before my election. They’ve had this for a long time. This is a late hit.” Hunter did admit that he said “f**k the Navy” after his request for a tour of a naval base in Italy was turned down. The proposed tour was allegedly intended to be used as a cover story for a family vacation. This article originally appeared on HuffPost. | |
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08-26-18 08:16am - 2268 days | #1020 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Reality Winner sentenced to 63 months in prison for leaking classified information that Russia was meddling in the United States 2016 election. She leaked it to a US newspaper. The US wanted to keep that knowledge secret from the American public. So she get a prison sentence of 63 months. Trump and his shithole adminstrators deserve a lifetime prison sentence for doing far worse crimes to the American public. But they are too big and important to get what they deserve. --------- --------- Rolling Stone Issue 1318: August 1st, 2018 Politics Politics News August 25, 2018 9:43PM ET Why Did Reality Winner Do It? How an Air Force vet exposed Russian interference in our election — and got 63 months in prison By Tessa Stuart Reality Winner, 26, walks out of the Federal Courthouse in Augusta, Ga., Tuesday, June 26, 2018 after pleading guilty to leaking a classified document allegedly taken while she was working as a NSA contractor at Fort Gordon, Ga. She has been held in custody for nearly 13 months on a charge of violating the federal Espionage Act. (Michael Holahan/The Augusta Chronicle via AP) Reality Winner stood in a county jail in rural Georgia, phone receiver pressed to her ear, staring at a brick wall and racking her brain, trying to remember the minimum sentence for violating Chapter 18, Section 793(e) of the U.S. Criminal Code. She’d signed papers acknowledging the penalty so many times — it was a requirement for anyone who handled classified information — but whatever recess of her mind the details were tucked away in, she was having trouble accessing it. The date was June 4th, 2017. Winner was 25 years old, blonde, blue-eyed, 5-foot-5, approximately 145 pounds, according to an FBI search warrant executed the day before. She’d spent exactly one night in jail. She didn’t fully recognize it yet, but life as she knew it — her day job as a subcontractor for the National Security Agency, the yoga classes she taught in her spare time, the date she’d missed because of her arrest — was rapidly slipping away from her. On the other end of the phone line, an automated voice repeated, “We are attempting to receive acceptance information from your called party… Please continue to hold.” The only thing she was focusing on in that moment was getting through to her sister. She’d called before, but Brittany, who was busy finishing up her Ph.D in Michigan, didn’t recognize the jail’s number, assumed it was an aggressive telemarketer and ignored the calls. This time she picked up. “Oh boy, Britty, I screwed up,” Reality said. Brittany, the elder sister, knew from speaking to their mother that Reality had been arrested. “Probably not wise to tell me any details about what they think you did,” she warned. Then, to lighten the mood, she cracked a joke, asking if Reality was in trouble for something like misremembering her brother-in-law’s birthday on a government background check. “No,” Reality replied. “I leaked a document. And they were able to trace it back to me. And it’s kind of an important one… So there’s a minimum sentence.” She just couldn’t remember what that sentence was. Brittany was right to be cautious. The jail was recording that call, and all of Reality’s calls. Government lawyers were preparing to use them — and her emails, Facebook messages, diary entries and Internet search history — to portray her as a radical, vindictive would-be terrorist instead of a whistleblower determined to reveal the extent of the government’s knowledge of a hostile foreign power’s attempts to compromise a U.S. election. Winner, who was sentenced to 63 months on August 23rd, should, by all rights, be the poster child of #TheResistence. While others were play acting on Twitter, she was a real life @AltNatSecAgency — a veteran who had planned to leave government service, but changed her mind when Trump was elected. She sought a job, seemingly, with the express purpose of infiltrating an administration she opposed — then she actually did it, releasing information that the government appeared intent on hiding. The fact that her case failed to catch on as a cause célèbre for the mainstream left is a tribute, at least in part, to Department of Justice lawyers who made sure particular details — a throwaway comment that she “hate[ed] America” because of capitalism and a note she’d scribbled in her diary expressing a desire to “burn the White House down” — ultimately defined the public narrative about her. When she spoke to her sister that night in June, Winner was still hopeful that she might be released from jail the very next day. She had a bail hearing scheduled, and her mother was driving from Texas to Georgia, ready to offer the family’s home as collateral. But she was drastically underestimating the Department of Justice’s determination to make an example of her — the first arrest they’d made in President Trump’s war on leakers. Billie Winner-Davis, mother of Reality Winner, carries a sign in support of her daughter outside the Lincoln County Law Enforcement Center in Lincolnton, Ga., Sunday evening June 3, 2018. Winner-Davis and other supporters gathered outside the jail a year after Reality Winner's arrest. Winner worked for the national security contractor Pluribus International at Fort Gordon in Georgia when she was charged last June with mailing a classified U.S. report to an unidentified news organization. (Michael Holahan/The Augusta Chronicle via AP) About a month before Winner’s arrest, an envelope postmarked May 10th, 2017, in Augusta, Georgia — no return address — had arrived at the Manhattan offices of First Look Media, parent company of the Intercept, the online outlet founded in 2013, in part, to continue reporting on the massive trove of classified documents secretly spirited out of the NSA by Edward Snowden. Folded inside the envelope was a five-page document. Classified as Top Secret/Special Intelligence, it contained details of Russian Military Intelligence efforts to hack at least one electronic voting software provider and more than 100 local election officials nationwide ahead of the 2016 presidential election. Today, we know the federal government was aware as early as January 2017 that voter registration systems in at least seven states — Alaska, Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Texas and Wisconsin — were compromised, and systems in an additional 14 states were targeted by Russian hackers before the election. At the time, though, the government had only acknowledged the hackers’ success accessing “multiple U.S. state or local electoral boards.” Journalists who report on national security often spend years gaining a source’s trust before that person feels comfortable enough sharing documents that might put them at risk of prosecution. It’s unusual — even at an outlet like the Intercept, which offers detailed instructions on how to leak information to its reporters — for a classified document to arrive in the mail, out of the blue, with no indication of who provided it or why. When the envelope showed up, reporters were skeptical of its authenticity. If real, it had major implications. The report represented the first evidence that — contrary to the Obama administration’s assurances — the Russian government penetrated systems involved in tallying the 2016 vote. Verifying the document without knowing anything about its origin, however, would be challenging. It remains unclear how the government was first tipped off to the leak, but an FBI agent would later testify about interviewing a witness in Tampa, Florida, who was approached by an Intercept reporter attempting to authenticate the document. That person’s texts with the reporter were described in court, but prosecutors requested an exhibit containing the messages itself remain restricted, ensuring the person’s identity and any details of the conversation are still secret. “When the identity of a source is unknown, you have to find some other way to authenticate the materials — and that process always entails risk,” Intercept editor-in-chief Betsy Reed told Rolling Stone in a statement. “The risk can be minimized, but it is always there. It is far preferable to know who has given you documents, so you can better understand the risks the source may face and also gain perspective on the authenticity and context of the materials.” It took four Intercept reporters several weeks to verify the report and to reach out for comment from the government agencies and software vendor it mentioned. The story was published on June 5th, 2017. Later the same day, the Department of Justice put out a press release trumpeting Winner’s arrest, which had occurred two days prior. The blowback was instant. There was fevered speculation that the Intercept — an outlet that prides itself on specializing in digital security — had burned its source, and badly. (The Intercept, which has steadfastly maintained it has no knowledge of the source who provided the report in its story, has since instituted new newsroom procedures. Its parent company, First Look Media, volunteered to help finance Winner’s defense.) In a statement, Reed said, “It’s regrettable that the media has largely covered this case as a whodunit, bank robbery-type story, when it is really a story about a courageous whistleblower facing persecution by a vindictive and politically motivated Justice Department.” CONTINUED IN NEXT POST | |
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08-26-18 08:20am - 2268 days | #1021 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
The night Donald Trump was elected president, Winner was finishing out the last days of a six-year stint with the Air Force. She’d enlisted straight out of high school, turning down a full-ride to Texas A&M University, Kingsville, to pursue a dream of deploying to Afghanistan. Her father, an amateur religious scholar, ignited her fascination with both religion and religious extremists after September 11th. (He also gave her her name — as her mother, Billie Winner-Davis, tells it, he told Billie, “I want a real Winner.”) “I just remember being 11 years old, in the reference section of the library, with the A encyclopedia. I’d draw my own maps of Afghanistan and I’d trace Arabic letters,” Winner told Rolling Stone last fall. It was only after joining that she learned the vast majority of Air Force linguists never make it overseas. Winner spent the entirety of her career stateside, much of it eavesdropping on foreign nationals and using information gleaned from their conversations to help pinpoint drone targets abroad. She earned a commendation during her time at Maryland’s Fort Meade for, among other accomplishments, “geolocating 120 enemy combatants during 734 [air missions]… and removing more than 100 enemies from the battlefield.” By November 2016, Winner was preparing to leave the service, and making plans to move abroad. Her mother says she hoped to put the language skills she gained in the military to work at a humanitarian organization. (Winner is fluent in Farsi, Dari and Pashto). According to a record of her Internet search history later presented in court, in the days immediately preceding the election, she was Googling flights to Erbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan. “Well. People suck. #ElectionNight,” Winner tweeted from a pseudonymous account at 10:34 p.m. on November 8th, 2016. (She’d voted absentee, in Texas, for Hillary Clinton.) Later that night, she floated the idea of a mass exodus in protest of the election. “50 million Americans defecting to #syria will end the civil war, revive real estate in the country, and defeat #ISIS w/ #starbucks #done.” After the election, though, Winner began actively searching for government contractor jobs in the United States — specifically jobs that could make use of her security clearance — while also retweeting accounts like @RogueNASA, @AltForestServ and @AltUSDA, that imagined an army of anonymous civil servants inside the government who were actively resisting the Trump agenda. In December 2016, she accepted what she would later tell FBI agents was “the only job I could get” — as a linguist for Pluribus International Corporation, an NSA contractor at Fort Gordon in Augusta, Georgia. She started on February 9th, three weeks after Trump’s inauguration. Over the past 20 years, the NSA’s outpost at Fort Gordon has transformed from a small 50-person operation into one of the agency’s most important hubs, with a workforce of several thousand focused on intercepting communications from Europe, the Middle East and North Africa. (It was a pair of whistleblowers from Fort Gordon who, in 2008, provided one of the earliest indications that the agency was eavesdropping on U.S. citizens living abroad.) As a contractor, Winner was required to go through a security orientation that warned new employees to be on the look-out for insider threats. She’d later tell Brittany on Facebook, “It was hard not to laugh when he was like, ‘Yeah, so, uh, we have guys like Edward Snowden who, uhh, thought they were doing the right thing, but you know, they weren’t so, uh, we, uh, have to keep an eye out for that insider threat, especially with contractors…” In chats that were later introduced as evidence by the prosecution, Winner spoke of her admiration for Snowden and Wikileaks’ Julian Assange; discussed how “awesome” it was that Wikileaks’ published Vault 7 (internal documents that detailed the CIA’s cyber warfare capabilities) and joked to her sister, “I have to take a polygraph where they’re going to ask if I’ve ever plotted against the govt. #gonna fail.” Presumably, she passed the polygraph and background checks, because she was soon assigned to the Iranian Aerospace Forces office, on the second floor of the Whitelaw Building at the Georgia Cryptologic Center inside Fort Gordon, translating documents from Farsi to English. Security at the building was so tight that every day Winner had to open her lunchbox and allow the guard to inspect her Tupperware. Nonetheless, on May 9th — the day Donald Trump fired James Comey — Winner printed the report on Russian hacking. She folded it in half, stuck it down her pantyhose and smuggled it out of the building undetected. Later that day, parked at a shopping center across the street from the studio where she taught yoga, Winner looked up the news outlet’s mailing address on her phone. (It took “three minutes of scrolling” she’d later say, which “felt like an eternity sitting in my car.”) She took a stamp out of her glove box, applied it and dropped the envelope in a mailbox. A month later, after she confessed, FBI agents asked her why she did it. The best Winner could offer was: “It was just that day, that week — it was too much. And [to] just sit back, and watch it, and think, ‘Why do I have this job if I’m just going to sit back and be helpless?’…I just thought that was the final straw.” This past Thursday, Reality Winner shuffled out of the Lincolnton County jail handcuffed, in a standard-issue orange jumpsuit, to learn her fate. Her light-blonde hair had darkened and her features had softened since her arrest, but Winner smiled and flashed a peace sign as she climbed into a van that would transport her to the federal courthouse an hour away in Augusta. It had been 446 days since she’d come home from grocery shopping to find a cadre of federal agents waiting in her driveway, handed over her cell phone, the keys to her white Nissan Cube covered in bumper stickers and voluntarily answered the agents’ questions. On her phone, the FBI would gain access to her messages and find a screenshotted list, made by @Anonymous, about how to securely leak documents to several news outlets, including the Intercept; in her car, they’d find a box of envelopes and stamps; in her house, the diaries prosecutors would introduce as evidence in court. “I did not even think about the consequences for, like, a second,” Winner told her sister by phone after that first night in jail. “I wish there was a reset button.” Winner was denied bail the next day, deemed a flight risk and a threat to national security. She was denied again in October 2017. “I thought I was going to get out of here,” she told Rolling Stone back in the fall. “And then it kind of sunk in that I am not getting out of here. They’re not going to let me go back to my life. Now it’s just been a battle of trying to keep the smallest portion of who I am.” In court on Thursday, Winner, who admitted to leaking a single document, apologized “profusely” for the “undeniable mistake I made.” She was formally sentenced to 63 months in prison with three years of supervised release. Her sentence — the longest ever handed down for an “unauthorized disclosure to the media” — was intended, prosecutors said, to deter other would-be leakers inside the government. The next morning, President Trump tweeted, “Ex-NSA contractor to spend 63 months in jail over ‘classified’ information. Gee, this is ‘small potatoes’ compared to what Hillary Clinton did! So unfair Jeff, Double Standard.” | |
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08-28-18 09:48am - 2265 days | #1022 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Real news: Is there such a thing as truth in the Donald Trump era? Everyone seems to have such a spin on events, that black is white and black is red and there is no such thing as black. ------- ------- Yahoo Cohen’s lawyer says senators failed to ask the right ‘follow-up questions’ in collusion probe Michael IsikoffChief Investigative Correspondent Yahoo News•August 24, 2018 Michael Cohen’s lawyer Lanny Davis says that members of the Senate Intelligence Committee failed to ask the right “follow-up questions” when his client appeared before the panel last year and therefore failed to elicit crucial answers about President Trump’s prior knowledge of Russian hacking of Democratic emails during the 2016 election. Davis was questioned on the Yahoo News podcast “Skullduggery” about Cohen’s testimony to the Senate intelligence panel last September in which Cohen testified, in a prepared statement: “I never saw anything — not a hint of anything — that demonstrated [President Trump’s] involvement in Russian interference in our election or any form of Russian collusion.” But Davis, in multiple television appearances this week, gave an apparently conflicting account, suggesting that Cohen has information he is now prepared to tell special counsel Robert Mueller about Trump’s prior knowledge of the hacking. “Was he telling the truth?” Davis was asked during the “Skullduggery” interview about Cohen’s previous testimony to the Senate. “He was telling the truth, but there’s a problem in some of the words used there,” Davis replied. “Those were his words,” it was pointed out to Davis. Davis then replied that the senators failed to ask the right follow-ups to Cohen’s prepared statement — about Trump’s “level of awareness” of the hacking, seeming to draw a distinction between awareness and “involvement.” “If he were asked, ‘Were you aware of Mr. Trump’s level of awareness before the hacking illegally done by a foreign government? Were you aware that Mr. Trump might have known and didn’t call the FBI?’ I don’t think you would’ve gotten the answer that you just read. But that question wasn’t asked.” Davis’s response was significant because Cohen’s previous denials of any knowledge of Russian collusion could expose him to a further felony charge and additional prison time if he now says something else to Mueller. And Senate Intelligence leaders have already flagged the issue, saying this week they wanted to reinterview Cohen after he pleaded guilty to multiple felonies, including campaign finance crimes for paying hush money during the 2016 campaign to women who claimed to have had affairs with Trump. But Davis insisted that “when the time comes” for Cohen to tell his new story to Mueller — and the special counsel is able to “digest” it and piece it together with other evidence — “it could be an impeachable offense” on the part of the president. Davis, who has practically beseeched Mueller this week to call his client as a witness, has steadfastly refused to specify what Cohen would say about Trump’s knowledge of Russian hacking. He also declined to say whether Mueller has even reached out to Cohen yet, despite Davis’s repeated television interviews offering his client’s testimony. Davis then wrapped up the “Skullduggery” interview by saying: “Being on this podcast and being asked questions, especially by Michael Isikoff, no offense intended, is the functional equivalent of a root canal without anesthetics.” _____ | |
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08-28-18 10:04am - 2265 days | #1023 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Trump: fighting to drain the swamp in Washington. But the swamp seems determined to drown Trump in a sea of lies. Trump claims Google rigged searches against him. Google denies that it rigged searches against Trump. But who are you going to believe? The President of the United States, a moral man who has promised to drain the swamp of Washington? Or Google, a vast, overpowering tech giant that is thirsting for profits, that attacks the privacy of all individuals? Hail Trump, Neo-Nazi leader of the Christian Moral Majority of White America. He warns that Google is dangerous, suppressing the views of conservatives and hiding important information from the American public. Can Trump shut down Google as a terrorist tool? Stay Tuned for further developments in Trump's fight for the American people. ------ ------ Trump claims Google 'rigged' searches against him but company denies it Good Morning America KARMA ALLEN and ALEXANDER MALLIN,Good Morning America 1 hour 34 minutes ago Trump claims Google 'rigged' searches against him but company denies it originally appeared on abcnews.go.com President Donald Trump attacked Google in Tuesday morning tweets that accused the company of prioritizing "fake news" in its search results, which the company denies. The results are “rigged” against him and other conservatives, he wrote on Twitter. Trump also alleged that 96 percent “of results on 'Trump News' are from National Left-Wing Media” but he did not identify a source or any evidence. He appeared to be referring to a story published over the weekend by conservative media company PJ Media that reported “96 Percent of Google Search Results for 'Trump' News Are from Liberal Media Outlets.” “Google search results for 'Trump News' shows only the viewing/reporting of Fake New Media," he said. "In other words, they have it RIGGED, for me & others, so that almost all stories & news is BAD. Fake CNN is prominent. Republican/Conservative & Fair Media is shut out. Illegal? 96% of results on “Trump News” are from National Left-Wing Media, very dangerous. “Google & others are suppressing voices of Conservatives and hiding information and news that is good. They are controlling what we can & cannot see. This is a very serious situation-will be addressed," he added. A Google spokesperson pushed back on the president's allegations, however, saying its search engine algorithm doesn't include any consideration of politics. "When users type queries into the Google Search bar, our goal is to make sure they receive the most relevant answers in a matter of seconds," the spokesperson said in a statement. "Search is not used to set a political agenda and we don't bias our results toward any political ideology. "We continually work to improve Google Search and we never rank search results to manipulate political sentiment," the spokesperson added. A White House spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment expanding on what the president meant by saying the situation "will be addressed." The president’s tweets come as more tech companies, including Google and Facebook, make investments to limit the spread of misinformation online. Alphabet, Google’s parent company, said in March it planned to invest $300 million over the next three years to combat false content on its platforms, including Google Search and YouTube. “We’re focused on combating misinformation during breaking news situations. Bad actors often target breaking news on Google platforms, increasing the likelihood that people are exposed to inaccurate content,” Richard Gringas, vice president of news products, said in reference to Google Search. “So we’ve trained our systems to recognize these events and adjust our signals toward more authoritative content. “While we take great care to present the most authoritative information, there are many cases where users can and will find information that’s not authoritative.” The company is trying to find other ways to help people understand that “not all the results they see are indeed authoritative or accurate,” he added. Trump's attack on Google is just his latest foray into championing recent grievances issued by conservative media figures who have accused tech companies of unfairly targeting conservative voices. The president has also threatened to probe allegations of Twitter’s “shadowbanning” conservative accounts, making it more difficult for their profiles to be discovered in the search engine. And most recently, Trump told a crowd at a campaign rally in West Virginia that he rejected Facebook and Twitter's recent move to suspend or remove accounts that it accused of spreading fake news or hate speech in social posts, including platforms like conspiracy theorist Alex Jones' InfoWars. "You have Twitter, or whatever you have, you have Facebook. But you can't pick one person and say, 'We don't like what he's been saying, he's out,'" Trump said. "So we will live with fake news.” | |
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08-28-18 10:14am - 2265 days | #1024 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Trump must be brave. Trump must be strong. He must realize that America is in danger from the slime-ball Democrats and aliens from shit-hole countries that are tearing down the moral fiber of America. Trump must declare martial law. And assume the powers that God Almighty granted him, to lead America in the proper paths. Arrest all slime-ball Democrats and illegal immigrants and any persons who endanger America. Put them in prison. And if there is not enough room in prison, shoot the bastards! Hard times demand hard solutions. Hail Trump, leader of a Free America and keep it White! | |
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08-28-18 02:56pm - 2265 days | #1025 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Real news Judge does not buy President Trump's authority. The judge should be arrested and shot for treason. Judges must respect the law of the land, and Trump is the chief lawgiver. -------------- -------------- Lawyer tries Trump argument that flippers should be outlawed Associated Press LARRY NEUMEISTER,Associated Press 2 hours 19 minutes ago NEW YORK (AP) — A New York defense lawyer wasted no time in trying to use President Donald Trump's argument that cooperators, or flippers, in criminal cases "almost ought to be illegal." Kafahni Nkrumah didn't get very far in his closing argument Thursday when he tried to bring up Trump's statement to disparage a cooperator who was testifying against his client in a drug case. A judge disallowed it, calling the attempt "out of line." "I am not going to permit you to argue here regarding statements made by the president of the United States in a case that has nothing to do with this one," U.S. District Judge Gregory H. Woods said in a conversation with lawyers outside earshot of the jury. Trump's remark aired earlier the same day during a "Fox & Friends" interview in which he suggested it should be illegal for people facing prosecution to cooperate with the government in exchange for a reduced sentence. As for Trump's comment that the decision by those under legal scrutiny to cooperate "almost ought to be illegal," the judge said: "As we all know, and as I am going to instruct the jury, it is not illegal." Nkrumah's client, Jamal Russell, was eventually convicted on a drug charge and exonerated on a weapons count. Nkrumah did not return a message seeking comment Tuesday. The courtroom development illustrated the concern of some lawyers that Trump's comments and tweets about the criminal justice system were starting to intrude on actual court cases. "The president is the leader of the country. What he says can have effect and potentially prejudice trials in lots of different ways," said Carl Tobias, a University of Richmond Law School professor. In his closing argument, Nkrumah urged jurors to disregard the testimony of a cooperator, saying it wasn't true. Then, Nkrumah referenced the financial fraud trial of Trump's former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, which relied in part on cooperating witnesses, saying: "You know what's funny? Yesterday, Manafort was convicted." Assistant U.S. Attorney Adam S. Hobson objected and the judge immediately called lawyers into a private conversation. Nkrumah argued, unsuccessfully, that Trump's comments were relevant "because it is concerning cooperators and people's opinions of cooperators. ... I believe that the president's opinion of cooperators is just as pertinent as anyone else's." After the jury left the room, the judge reiterated that he rejected Trump's opinion because "it is a politically charged, polemic issue that need not be introduced into this case." Trump went on "Fox & Friends" after his former personal attorney, Michael Cohen, entered a guilty plea to eight felony charges, including violations of campaign finance law for payments made to two women who had alleged affairs with Trump. Trump told "Fox and Friends" that for "30, 40 years I've been watching flippers. Everything's wonderful and then they get 10 years in jail and they — they flip on whoever the next highest one is, or as high as you can go." Trump said cooperators "make up things" to get leniency at sentencing and become "a national hero." A 2016 report by the U.S. Sentencing Commission found that the majority of more than 10,000 federal defendants who received a reduced sentence from 2009 to 2014 for cooperating with the government were used in drug cases. Annemarie McAvoy, a former Brooklyn federal and state prosecutor, said cooperators were necessities in the American justice system. "It was inartful at best," she said of Trump's remarks. "I'm hoping it was inartful." | |
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08-28-18 03:07pm - 2265 days | #1026 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Texas is a state that does not honor police officers. A Texas jury found an ex-police officer guilty of murdering a black teen. If the ex-police officer killed the black teen, it was a justified shooting: the cop was defending both himself and his partner, and shooting at criminals that were evading arrest. The dead black was 15 years old. The dead black was unarmed. But he was in a car, and any car can be considered a deadly weapon. So the officer that fired the deadly shot could be considered to have fired in self-defense. Even though the car was driving away from the officer. Don't people realize the car could have reversed direction, and tried to run down the officer? Cops only kill in self-defense. Cops are fearful of their lives, and must be brave and able to protect themselves. Shame on Texas, for not honoring all cops. Sentencing will come later. My hope is that the judge will be a law-abiding man, who sentences the cop to 1 day in jail, with time served already. So the cop can be free to walk the streets a proud man, and ready to be hired by a different police force who will employ a man who does his duty. (Cops that are fired by a police force often get hired by a different police force: because cops know they must stick together.) --------- --------- Texas jury finds ex-police officer guilty of murdering black teen Reuters By Jon Herskovitz,Reuters 1 hour 1 minute ago Defendant Roy Oliver, former Balch Springs police officer who is charged with the murder of 15-year-old Jordan Edwards, talks with his wife while the jury deliberates during his trial of at the Frank Crowley Courts Building in Dallas on Monday, Aug. 27, 2018.(Rose Baca/The Dallas Morning News via AP, Pool) By Jon Herskovitz AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - A Texas jury on Tuesday found a white former policeman guilty of murder for fatally shooting a black teenager in a car moving away from him in a 2017 case in a Dallas suburb that fueled a national debate over possible racial bias in U.S. policing. The police officer, Roy Oliver, 38, was fired by the Balch Springs Police Department for violating department policy a few days after he fatally shot Jordan Edwards, 15, a standout high school student and athlete. Edwards was shot in the head. The conviction was a rare instance in which an officer was found guilty of murdering an unarmed person. Oliver faces up to life in prison; sentencing will come later. Oliver, along with another officer, had responded to reports of underage drinking at a house party in the predominantly black and Hispanic city of Balch Springs, about 15 miles (25 km) southeast of Dallas. Oliver fired his rifle several times into a car with several other teens inside, prosecutors said. The jurors deliberated for about 12 hours over two days before reaching its verdict, following a trial that started in mid-August. First Assistant District Attorney Michael Snipes said Oliver was a trigger-happy policeman who sent the teenager to an early grave. "This guy is an angry, out-of-control, walking bomb," Snipes said in closing arguments. The arrest warrant for Oliver said he and the other officer tried to stop a car at an intersection near the party. The other officer broke a passenger window with the butt of his gun. Police body camera images showed to jurors indicated that the car was moving away from Oliver when he fired at it. Oliver's defense attorney, Jim Lane, said the vehicle was a threat to Oliver's partner that night and he reacted to save his partner by firing into the car. "Roy Oliver reasonably made the decision that he had to make," Lane said in closing arguments. Video footage shown in court showed the car was pointed away from the officers at the time of the incident, and still frames from body camera footage showed that Oliver turned his body to follow the car after it had passed by his partner and kept shooting, the Dallas Morning News reported from the courtroom. Two of Edwards’ brothers were in the car with him and watched him die, a family lawyer said. (Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Alistair Bell and Leslie Adler) | |
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08-28-18 03:14pm - 2265 days | #1027 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Texas is a state that does not honor police officers. A Texas jury found an ex-police officer guilty of murdering a black teen. If the ex-police officer killed the black teen, it was a justified shooting: the cop was defending both himself and his partner, and shooting at criminals that were evading arrest. The dead black was 15 years old. The dead black was unarmed. But he was in a car, and any car can be considered a deadly weapon. So the officer that fired the deadly shot could be considered to have fired in self-defense. Even though the car was driving away from the officer. Don't people realize the car could have reversed direction, and tried to run down the officer? Cops only kill in self-defense. Cops are fearful of their lives, and must be brave and able to protect themselves. Shame on Texas, for not honoring all cops. Sentencing will come later. My hope is that the judge will be a law-abiding man, who sentences the cop to 1 day in jail, with time served already. So the cop can be free to walk the streets a proud man, and ready to be hired by a different police force who will employ a man who does his duty. (Cops that are fired by a police force often get hired by a different police force: because cops know they must stick together.) --------- --------- Texas jury finds ex-police officer guilty of murdering black teen Reuters By Jon Herskovitz,Reuters 1 hour 1 minute ago Defendant Roy Oliver, former Balch Springs police officer who is charged with the murder of 15-year-old Jordan Edwards, talks with his wife while the jury deliberates during his trial of at the Frank Crowley Courts Building in Dallas on Monday, Aug. 27, 2018.(Rose Baca/The Dallas Morning News via AP, Pool) By Jon Herskovitz AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - A Texas jury on Tuesday found a white former policeman guilty of murder for fatally shooting a black teenager in a car moving away from him in a 2017 case in a Dallas suburb that fueled a national debate over possible racial bias in U.S. policing. The police officer, Roy Oliver, 38, was fired by the Balch Springs Police Department for violating department policy a few days after he fatally shot Jordan Edwards, 15, a standout high school student and athlete. Edwards was shot in the head. The conviction was a rare instance in which an officer was found guilty of murdering an unarmed person. Oliver faces up to life in prison; sentencing will come later. Oliver, along with another officer, had responded to reports of underage drinking at a house party in the predominantly black and Hispanic city of Balch Springs, about 15 miles (25 km) southeast of Dallas. Oliver fired his rifle several times into a car with several other teens inside, prosecutors said. The jurors deliberated for about 12 hours over two days before reaching its verdict, following a trial that started in mid-August. First Assistant District Attorney Michael Snipes said Oliver was a trigger-happy policeman who sent the teenager to an early grave. "This guy is an angry, out-of-control, walking bomb," Snipes said in closing arguments. The arrest warrant for Oliver said he and the other officer tried to stop a car at an intersection near the party. The other officer broke a passenger window with the butt of his gun. Police body camera images showed to jurors indicated that the car was moving away from Oliver when he fired at it. Oliver's defense attorney, Jim Lane, said the vehicle was a threat to Oliver's partner that night and he reacted to save his partner by firing into the car. "Roy Oliver reasonably made the decision that he had to make," Lane said in closing arguments. Video footage shown in court showed the car was pointed away from the officers at the time of the incident, and still frames from body camera footage showed that Oliver turned his body to follow the car after it had passed by his partner and kept shooting, the Dallas Morning News reported from the courtroom. Two of Edwards’ brothers were in the car with him and watched him die, a family lawyer said. (Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Alistair Bell and Leslie Adler) | |
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08-28-18 03:15pm - 2265 days | #1028 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Former US ambassador to Canada gives a cruel opinion of Trump. But that's all right, because the former ambassador served under Obama. And everyone knows that Obama was a fake president, who was born in a shithole country and lied to become eligible to serve as president. (I got that from President Trump himself, who can recognize a liar at 300 yards away.) --------- --------- Former U.S. ambassador to Canada: Trump 'is the arsonist that becomes the firefighter' Julia La Roche 3 hours ago Former U.S. ambassador to Canada Bruce Heyman described Donald Trump as “the arsonist that becomes the firefighter” when it comes to the president’s dealmaking rhetoric. “I think one of the strategies that the president has done, and he’s done this in a lot of areas, … He’s the arsonist that becomes the firefighter,” Heyman, who served from April 2014 to the end of President Obama’s tenure, told Yahoo Finance’s Dion Rabouin. “So he creates these false accomplishments. Because he created this drama. Whether he [does] it with the flag or whether he does it with the trade negotiations.” ‘Everyone should just pause a minute’ On Monday, President Donald Trump announced the U.S. and Mexico reached a bilateral trade agreement to replace NAFTA, which Trump calls the United States—Mexico Trade Agreement. During a televised phone call, Mexico’s outgoing President Enrique Peña Nieto told Trump that he wants to see Canada incorporated in the deal. “[The] announcement of an agreement — and I think that should be [considered] a soft agreement, preliminary agreement, or an understanding with Mexico — gave people a look at the path out of all of the tariffs that the president has been placing on so many of our allies and the issue he’s had with NAFTA,” Heyman said. Bruce Heyman. Photographer: Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press via AP Photo “The path ahead, though, is one that everyone should just pause a minute,” Heyman added. “The legal authority right now is for a trilateral deal — NAFTA. And so Canada needs to be part of this. Mexico wants Canada a part of it. And I think the president’s language was more a negotiating strategy than an outright say that he’s going to do separate agreements.” ‘I’m hopeful we can see that same approach’ During Tuesday’s televised call, Trump indicated that Canada could do a separate deal with the U.S. or one that’s incorporated into the new bilateral deal with Mexico. He added that he’d call Prime Minister Justin Trudeau “very soon” and start negotiations. “[And] if they’d like to negotiate fairly, we’ll do that,” Trump said. “You know, they have tariffs of almost 300 percent on some of our dairy products, and we can’t have that. We’re not going to stand for that. I think with Canada, frankly, the easiest thing we can do is to tariff their cars coming in. It’s a tremendous amount of money, and it’s a very simple negotiation. It could end in one day, and we take in a lot of money the following day.” This is the sort of rhetoric that Heyman interprets as part of Trump’s negotiating style of being an arsonist and then a firefighter. “These auto provisions, this is only one industry, and he stood up and declared victory,” Heyman said. “Remember, he promised a wall being paid for by Mexico. He’s really lambasted Mexicans as a population here. And so, now he declares victory and he loves them. It’s again, the arsonist then becoming the firefighter.” Heyman, noting that Trump seems to have “a hard time with multilateral agreements,” added that he hoped the president’s negotiating tactics will lead to more positive developments on trade. “I’m hopeful we can see that same approach with Canada and make peace here.” — Julia La Roche is a finance reporter at Yahoo Finance. Follow her on Twitter. | |
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08-29-18 12:55am - 2265 days | #1029 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Trump's next wife? Trump seems to have problems with his current wife. Maybe he needs to trade her in for a newer model. The woman in the article might be a perfect fit, because she has a realistic view of how her love life should be financed: with lots of money from her friends and acquaintances. --------- --------- Celebrity This Bride Cancelled Her Wedding After Guests Refused to Pay Her $1,500 Attendance Fee Brides Christina Oehler,Brides Mon, Aug 27 9:20 AM PDT We don't need to tell you that weddings can get expensive. Even with the most meticulous budgeting, a few unexpected costs are bound to crop up. While most brides tend to accept this as fact, one Canadian woman, who is only known as "Susan," attempted to circumvent all wedding costs by asking her friends and family to pay up to attend her wedding. It went about as well as you'd expect. "Susan" is causing quite the debate online after posting a bizarre Facebook rant about her now-cancelled wedding. Yup, the couple called off the wedding just days before their I dos, after their guests refused to pay the $1,500 attendance fee Susan was demanding in order to pay for her CAD $60,000 ($46,020 USD) dream wedding. In her long-winded, expletive-filled explanation, the (former) bride accused her friends and family of ruining her marriage and her life. “How could we have our wedding that we dreamed of without proper funding? We'd sacrificed so much and only asked each guest for around $1,500. We talked to a few people who even promised us more to make our dream come true," she reportedly wrote on Facebook. "My maid of honor pledged $5,000 along with her planning services. We tearfully thanked and accepted. My ex's family offered to contribute $3,000. So our request for $1,500 for all other guests was not f***ing out of the ordinary. Like, we made it clear. If you couldn't contribute, you weren't invited to our exclusive wedding. It's a once and a lifetime party.” She continued, "We just needed a little push. Our dream wedding amounted to $60,000... All we asked was for a little help from our friends and family to make it happen." Surprise, surprise, none of that went over very well. After the couple sent out their invitations (and money requests), only eight guests RSVP'd. "We were f***ing livid," Susan wrote. "How was this supposed to happen without a little help from our friends. To make matters worse, my ex's family took back their offer. Suddenly, more people backed out, including the...maid of honor. My best friend since childhood. My second family. I was so shocked and tearful." Realizing they would not be able to afford their dream wedding, Susan's fiancé suggested tying the knot in Las Vegas. The bride quickly shut down the idea, asking, "Am I supposed to get married in the heart of shady gamblers, alcoholics and the get rich fast fallacy?" "I just wanted to be a Kardashian for a day and then live my life like normal," she said, totally and completely reasonably (JK), adding that her maid of honor advised her to stick to her budget, as she was asking for way too much from her guests. Oh, and then she accused her fiancé of talking behind her back, too. "I overheard him talking in the basement when he called me a stuck up b****. Anyway I am exhausted. I am bone tired. My heart is not the same. It's stone cold," she wrote. The Daily Mail only has screenshots of Susan's post, as she seemingly deactivated her Facebook account following the incident. They also managed to capture a few of the comments left underneath the post, including one of which that read, "I have no words. You're out of your mind, Susan." Yeah, we're going to have to agree... | |
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08-29-18 09:07am - 2264 days | #1030 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
This man is my hero, right after Donald Trump. This man knows that women drivers should be illegal. And that the sole reason women exist is to give birth to male babies. That is why Texas is persecuting this man: for standing up for his beliefs. Texas is a terrible place to live. Trump should kick them out of the Union and make Texas part of Mexico. --------- --------- Texas Man Back Behind Bars After Allegedly Shooting a Woman While Driving for a Second Time: Reports News 11:36 AM PDT, August 27, 2018 - JOHANNA LI Nicholas Dagostino, 29, of Katy, Texas was arrested again Thursday. Nicholas Dagostino, 29, of Katy, Texas was arrested again Thursday. (Harris County Sheriff’s Office) A Texas man is back behind bars for the second time in weeks after prosecutors said he shot at female drivers because he doesn’t believe women should be behind the wheel. Nicholas Dagostino, 29, of Katy, was arrested Thursday and charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon after shooting a woman in the arm while she was driving, according to court documents. The unnamed victim was reportedly driving out of a Shell gas station when she heard a loud noise, and felt pain in her arm. She didn’t immediately realize she had been shot, according to reports. Investigators believe Dagostino is specifically targeting "female motorists in Katy," citing his Facebook posts in which "he rants and rambles on about motorists and how incompetent they are that their sole purpose is to give birth to male children," court documents stated. The latest incident comes just three days after he was released on bond related to the charges for a similar incident in July, for which he spent more than a month behind bars, when a 39-year-old woman was shot in the arm by the driver of a Ford Explorer on a main road last month, authorities said. "Just a few more inches and it could have been a fatal wound," the Harris County Sheriff’s Office told reporters. “We’re very lucky she survived her injuries.” Dagostino told investigators at the time that she had been "swerving into the lane twice" and that he fired his gun in "self-defense," authorities said. The victim denied there had been any road-rage incident leading up to the attack, and authorities said further investigation uncovered there may be more incidents in which he attacked other motorists. "Here’s the interesting twist: He did admit through statements and other information we’ve received that he’s been involved in at least five other similar situations,” the Harris County Sheriff’s Office said. “Five other similar situations in which he discharged his firearm at other vehicles." Dagostino’s defense attorney Ken Mingledorff reportedly said the allegations and charges come as a shock, telling local reporters, “The family […] is very very sorry for any problems or pain this has caused anyone.” Authorities said they are still considering additional charges, and asks anyone with more information to come forward. Dagostino is currently held on bonds totaling $400,000, and his next court date is Sept. 6. | |
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08-29-18 09:54am - 2264 days | #1031 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Here is a perfect candidate for Trump's Attorney General. I don't know if the guy is a lawyer. But that doesn't matter: Trump knows the law, so Trump can guide the man on any questions regarding the law. And this man should act as Trump directs: The man has had anger issues in the past: He stabbed his girlfriend 23 times, but he claimed it was in self-defense. Trump, are you listening? This man would be a better attack dog than Rudy Guiliani! --------- --------- ’40-Year-Old Virgin’ Actor Granted Parole After 2010 Attempted Murder Conviction “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” actor Shelley Malil has been granted parole after he was convicted of attempted murder in 2010. According to the Los Angeles Times, Malil appeared before a panel of parole commissioners in Riverside County on Tuesday. The panel was set to revisit a previous ruling that the 45-year-old actor should be paroled due to him being at low risk of committing violence again in the future. Gov. Jerry Brown had spoken out against the decision, arguing that there still was no explanation as to why Malil’s “rage escalated so far out of control, and resulted in such a prolonged horror.” Malil was found guilty of assault with a deadly weapon in 2010 and convicted of attempted murder for repeatedly stabbing his girlfriend at her San Marcos home. The attack, which occurred in August 2008, left Kendra Beebe with 23 deep stab wounds and chunks of her skin on her chin “nearly sliced off,” scars of which she still sees today, she’s said. According to the San Diego Union Tribune, Beebe was at home with a friend when Malil stabbed her in the torso. Initially, Malil said the attack had been self-defense, but he admitted during a hearing in January that he had grabbed a knife and driven from his home to San Marcos with intent to “annihilate” Beebe after he had felt slighted by her the previous day. According to the outlet, the actor slashed at Beebe with a broken wine glass and also tried to smother her with a pillow. He was sentenced to 12 years to life in prison. Malil will be released in two weeks and will remain on supervised parole for five years. The Union Tribune reported that Malil told the panel that he takes “full responsibility for everything I did” and that the attack was “infinitely inexcusable — and I am sorry.” After the hearing, the outlet received a text message from Beebe, in which she said she was “shocked” about the decision. “Today, these men had a chance to take real action showing that we, as a society, value women and will protect them,” Beebe said. “For this I am sad. Because of their inaction, I will continue to live in fear.” | |
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08-29-18 05:58pm - 2264 days | #1032 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Trump blasts CNN. Says Carl Bernstein is a sloppy reporter who tells lies. Can anyone believe CNN, after Trump blasts CNN for fake news? Donald Trump, the source of the greatest fake news stories since George Washington became president. But Trump is greater than Washington, more popular than Lincoln. Just read Trump's tweets if you want the truth. Hail Donald Trump, leader of the Moral Majority for a White America. Digger-up of the news stories on Obama's birth in a shithole country (not the United States), and on how attractive his daughter Ivanka is, if she wasn't his daughter he'd be dating her right now--even though she is a married woman with children. ----- ----- The Wrap Trump Blasts CNN and ‘Sloppy’ Carl Bernstein Over Disputed Story: ‘Caught in a Major Lie’ “CNN stands by our reporting and our reporters. There may be many fools in this story but @carlbernstein is not one of them,” network responds Itay Hod | August 29, 2018 @ 4:35 PM Last Updated: August 29, 2018 @ 4:51 PM Donald Trump attacked both Carl Bernstein and CNN, calling the veteran reporter “sloppy” for what Trump said was a “major lie” in a recent article. “CNN is being torn apart from within based on their being caught in a major lie and refusing to admit the mistake,” the president tweeted Wednesday. “Sloppy @carlbernstein, a man who lives in the past and thinks like a degenerate fool, making up story after story, is being laughed at all over the country! Fake News.” A representative for CNN did not immediately respond to a request for comment from TheWrap, but on Twitter, the network responded forcefully, saying in part that “CNN does not lie. We report the news. And we report when people in power tell lies.” Bernstein, who now works for CNN, was one of three reporters who wrote a bombshell CNN in July. The article said that the president’s longtime personal lawyer, Michael Cohen was prepared to tell special counsel Robert Mueller about Trump’s involvement in a the now infamous Trump Tower meeting during the 2016 presidential campaign. The story received fresh attention this week after Davis admitted that he was the source for the story. He then appeared to contradict the news during an appearance on “Anderson Cooper 360,” revising his position and saying that he was no longer certain Cohen has witnessed Trump Sr. being informed. CNN has consistently said it stands by the story, and that it was based on accounts from more than just one source. | |
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08-29-18 11:41pm - 2264 days | #1033 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Real news: President Trump issues a warning: America will go to hell if Republicans lose in midterms. Not only will the stock market crash, but there could be massive violence in the streets. Trump warns people to stock up on rifles and handguns and lots of ammo to fight off the looters and rapists and people from shithole countries that will invade America if Democrats win more seats in Congress. Trump will have to declare martial law and order US troops to defend our cities and towns from civil unrest. Vote in the upcoming elections, people. Vote for Trump. Wait. Trump is not running yet. He will be re-elected in the 2020 election. So, for now, vote Republican. Yes. Save America from the slimeball Democrats. ------ ------ Politics Trump warns change would come 'violently' if Republicans lose in midterms ABC News MERIDITH MCGRAW,ABC News 5 hours ago Trump warns change would come 'violently' if Republicans lose in midterms originally appeared on abcnews.go.com President Trump told Evangelical leaders during a closed door dinner at the White House that there will be "violence" if Democrats take control in the November election. Trump invited Evangelical leaders for a special state dining room event on Monday at the White House and rattled off a list of promises his administration kept for the Christian community. Among them, nominating conservative judges and recent White House commitments to defend religious freedom. But he also talked about what he thinks is at stake in the upcoming 2018 midterms, and said those accomplishments could come under attack "quickly and violently" if Republicans lose. "You're one election away from losing everything that you've got," Trump told the room. Trump said if Republicans lose, "they will overturn everything that we've done and they'll do it quickly and violently." "When you look at Antifa and you look at some of these groups — these are violent people," Trump stated. Antifa is a group of anti-fascists activists who have protested against white supremacists, neo-Nazis, and the Trump administration. President Trump appeared to equate Antifa and white supremacists after fighting in Charlottesville last year that left one woman dead. Trump said there was "blame on both sides." Family Research Council’s Tony Perkins was a guest at the dinner and confirmed the reported quotes from NBC and the Washington Post from an audio recording to ABC News, but said he interpreted Trump’s comments differently. ABC News did not listen to or obtain an audio recording of the president’s remarks. "The audio is accurate, but it was selectively released and you have to understand it in the context of the entire evening," Perkins said. The White House did not respond to a request for comment. Perkins said President Trump returned to the podium after reporters left the room, and "as he does, speaks off the cuff, but reiterated his list of things that have been accomplished." "I think the people in the room interpreted that all those things that we talked about, we cared about -- that elections have consequences," Perkins said. "I did not take from his comments that based on the outcome of the election there would be violence in the streets or the churches." "We know the intent, the violence behind the left, because of what we have witnessed from Antifa," Perkins said. "What I interpreted it as him saying is that it’s not a time for complacency." When asked about his comments about violence potentially breaking out if Republicans lose, Trump said on Wednesday he hopes there "won't be violence." "There’s a lot of unnecessary violence all over the world, but also in this country and I don’t want to see this," Trump said. | |
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08-30-18 09:10am - 2263 days | #1034 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Politics Trump stands by warning of 'violence' if Dems win midterms Associated Press Jill Colvin, Associated Press,Associated Press 2 hours 29 minutes ago WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump urged evangelical leaders this week to get out the vote ahead of the upcoming midterm elections and warned of "violence" by opponents if they fail. Trump made the dire warning at a White House dinner Monday evening attended by dozens of conservative Christian pastors, ministers and supporters of his administration. Trump was stressing the stakes in November when he warned that, if Democrats win, they "will overturn everything that we've done and they'll do it quickly and violently," according to attendees and audio of his closed-door remarks obtained by media outlets, including The New York Times. He specifically mentioned self-described antifa, or anti-fascist groups, describing them as "violent people." Asked Wednesday what he meant, Trump told reporters, "I just hope there won't be violence." "If you look at what happens ... there's a lot of unnecessary violence all over the world, but also in this country. And I don't want to see it," Trump said. At the dinner, Trump talked up his administration's efforts to bolster conservative Christian causes and urged those gathered to get their "people" to vote, warning the efforts could quickly be undone. "I just ask you to go out and make sure all of your people vote," Trump said, according to the Times. "Because if they don't — it's Nov. 6 — if they don't vote we're going to have a miserable two years and we're going to have, frankly, a very hard period of time because then it just gets to be one election — you're one election away from losing everything you've got." Ohio Pastor Darrell Scott, an early Trump supporter who attended the dinner, said he interpreted the comments differently than the media has portrayed them. "It wasn't any kind of dire warning," Scott said, "... except the things that we've been working on as a body of voters will be reversed and overturned." "What he was saying," Scott continued, is that "there are some violent people ... but it wasn't that we've got to worry about murder on the streets and chaos and anarchy ... just that the things we've worked for will be overturned." Tony Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council and another attendee, said he, too, interpreted Trump's message as a warning not to be complacent. While Trump did make a reference to antifa, Perkins told CNN, "I don't think anybody in the room suggested that there was going to be violence across the nation." "I did not interpret him to say that the outcome of the election is going to lead (to) violence in the streets, and violence in the churches," he told CNN. | |
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08-30-18 09:29am - 2263 days | #1035 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Trump does not believe some Americans should have US passports. Just like he did not believe Obama was born in America, and was a fake president who shoud not have been elected. Trump, fighting to keep America for real Americans, and trying to keep people from shithole countries out of the country: Remember, people from Mexico are rapists and murderers, and should never enter the United States of White America. The State Department said it hasn’t changed any policy or practice on passport applications. It seems the State Department has a problem with truth: under Trump, not just Trump himself, but many of the people he has hired, the truth seems to be a moving target, and Trump has his own version of the truth. Which can change over time. -------- -------- Trump Administration Denies Passports To Americans Living On Border: Report HuffPost Liza Hearon,HuffPost 4 hours ago The Trump administration is accusing hundreds and possibly thousands of Hispanic Americans along the Texas-Mexico border of obtaining their citizenship using fraudulent birth certificates and the government is denying them passports as a result, according to a Washington Post report. Some passport applicants have been turned down in the United States and sent to immigration detention facilities, while others have been left stuck in Mexico because their passports are getting suddenly revoked when they try to re-enter the country. Individuals that the Post spoke to said they’re baffled and have been using their birth certificates since they were babies. According to the Post, it’s unclear precisely how many people are affected by this issue. But it comes as the Trump administration has increasingly gone after U.S. citizens in its crackdown on legal and illegal immigration. Over the last year, the administration has created a “denaturalization task force” to strip citizenship from people it says obtained it through fraud and has attempted to discharge immigrant military recruits who were seeking citizenship. The State Department said it hasn’t changed any policy or practice on passport applications. “There are numerous reasons why a customer may be asked to provide additional documentation or information. The burden of proving one’s identity and citizenship falls on the applicant for a U.S. passport regardless of where the application was submitted,” a Department of State spokesperson said in a statement. The State Department said it is looking for additional documentation from applicants with birth certificates filed by midwives or “other birth attendants” who are suspected of fraudulent activities. Midwifery is common in rural and underserved communities along the border. It’s unclear why the crackdown on birth certificates from midwives appears to be happening now. In federal court cases in the 1990s, several midwives admitted to fraudulently filing Texas birth certificates for babies who were born in Mexico. This led to the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations to deny passports for people born to midwives in the Rio Grande Valley. In 2009, the ACLU settled a case with the government over the issue, and the number of passport denials seemed to fall, The Washington Post reported. The State Department didn’t respond to a question from HuffPost on why the denials were happening again. This article originally appeared on HuffPost. | |
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08-30-18 04:21pm - 2263 days | #1036 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
President Donald Trump appeals to United States citizens: stop the press from lying about me. Give me the power to declare martial law, and to nationalize the TV and newspaper and radio news outlets, so Americans can, once more, respect the news they will be getting. America needs a truthful and honest press. Only Donald Trump can deliver on that promise. Trump, leader of the Moral Majority of White Americans. ----- ----- Trump, without evidence, says NBC 'fudging' 2017 interview on Russia Thomson Reuters WASHINGTON, Aug 30 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump on Thursday, without offering any evidence, accused NBC News of "fudging" a May 2017 interview that he gave days after he fired then FBI Director James Comey and in which he cited the federal Russia investigation. Representatives for NBC News and its parent, Comcast Corp , could not be immediately reached for comment. Representatives for the White House did not immediately respond to a question about Trump's accusation. In the interview last year, Trump appeared to try to underscore that Comey's dismissal was tied to his performance at the Federal Bureau of Investigation and not about the U.S. Special Counsel Office's probe into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. RELATED: Trump's tweets about the Mueller Russia probe | |
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08-31-18 09:11am - 2262 days | #1037 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Trump, leader of the free world. Trump says 85 percent of journalists are “just dishonest, terrible people.” He also claimed, without evidence, that networks turn off cameras at his rallies. I don't understand why Trump does not nationalize the press (TV, radio, newspapers, and news outlets on the internet) to provide a better source of news to the American people. Trump, leader for life of the Moral Majority for a White America. --------- --------- Trump Volunteer Tries To Block Journalist From Photographing Protester At Rally HuffPost Ed Mazza,HuffPost 9 hours ago A volunteer for President Donald Trump attempted to physically block a photojournalist from taking a picture of a protester at a campaign rally in Indiana on Thursday night. AP photographer Evan Vucci snapped an image of the unidentified member of Trump’s advance team putting his hand in front of a journalist’s camera: AP reported that Trump “paced on stage” as the protester was escorted from the arena. “And now tomorrow, you’re gonna read headlines: ‘Trump had protesters all over the place,’” Trump said, according to Business Insider, which noted that the rally was interrupted by demonstrators several times. Trump has repeatedly called the media the “enemy of the people” and accused the press of spreading “fake” stories about him. He’s also told supporters not to believe what they see or read. “Just remember, what you are seeing and what you are reading is not what’s happening,” Trump said in July. At the event in Indiana on Thursday, Trump told the crowd that 85 percent of journalists are “just dishonest, terrible people.” He also claimed, without evidence, that networks turn off cameras at his rallies. This article originally appeared on HuffPost. | |
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08-31-18 10:15am - 2262 days | #1038 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Evil, slimeball Democrats are attacking the greatest President the US has ever had. They are even attacking his charitable foundation, which wants to spread Donald Trump's wealth to the poor and unwashed that Donald Trump loves. Shame on the Democrats, who are evil slimeballs from shithole countries. Furthermore, the Clinton charitable foundation is guilty of terrible crimes, because it is part of the Clinton empire of evil. Trump has resisted putting Bill and Hilary Clinton in prison, because Trump is such a warm-hearted man, who forgives his enemies. But now is the time that Trump must do his Christian duty, and let the law and his Attorney General, the ball-less Jeff Sessions (who recused himself from the Mueller investigation) prosecute the Clintons. --------- --------- New York attorney general: No backing down on Trump lawsuit Associated Press TOM McELROY,Associated Press 5 hours ago FILE - In this Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2018, file photo, President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House, in Washington. Lawyers for Trump have asked a judge to dismiss a lawsuit brought against his charitable foundation by New York’s attorney general, arguing that it was politically motivated. Attorney Alan Futerfas argued in a motion filed late Thursday, Aug. 30, 2018, that former Attorney General Eric Schneiderman used his public antipathy for Trump to solicit campaign donations. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File) NEW YORK (AP) — Lawyers for President Donald Trump asked a judge to dismiss a lawsuit brought against his charitable foundation by New York's attorney general, arguing that it was politically motivated. In the motion Thursday, Trump attorney Alan S. Futerfas argued that former New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman "made it his stated mission to 'lead the resistance' and attack Mr. Trump whenever possible" and "used his public antipathy for Mr. Trump to solicit donations for his own re-election campaign and advance his career interests and aspirations." Trump very publicly announced his intention to dissolve the foundation and donate all of its remaining funds to charity, but the AG "actively stonewalled dissolution," Futerfas wrote. "At the same time, the NYAG turned a blind eye to serious and significant allegations of misconduct involving the Clinton Foundation, including claims that it, and its subsidiaries, violated New York law by failing to disclose $225 million in donations from foreign governments," Futerfas wrote. Schneiderman began investigating the Trump Foundation in 2016 following Washington Post reports that its spending personally benefited the presidential candidate. Schneiderman ordered the foundation to stop fundraising in New York. Schneiderman resigned in May after allegations that he physically abused women he had dated; he denied the claims. His successor, Democratic Attorney General Barbara Underwood, filed the lawsuit in June, claiming the Trump Foundation "was little more than a checkbook for payments from Mr. Trump or his businesses to nonprofits, regardless of their purpose or legality." The suit seeks $2.8 million in restitution and the foundation's disbandment. The filing said Underwood continued the "inflammatory rhetoric, stating publicly that she considers her battles with the President 'the most important work (she) has ever done' and has vowed that such 'work will continue.'" Trump's lawyers also argued that several impermissible donations by the foundation were due to clerical errors and were all corrected when brought to the attention of foundation officials. In a statement Thursday, the attorney general's office said it won't back down from "holding Trump and his associates accountable for their flagrant violations of New York law." "As our lawsuit detailed, the Trump Foundation functioned as a personal piggy bank to serve Trump's business and political interests," the statement said. | |
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09-01-18 05:35am - 2262 days | #1039 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
This is terribly unfair. So what if a Ukraine tycoon paid $50,000 for 4 tickets to Trump's inauguration? It might have been illegal, but it was for a good cause: giving money to Trump. That deserves a presidential pardon, if there ever was a person who deserved a pardon. Shame on slimeball Democrats, for attacking people who support Trump and the Republican party. The investigation into Russian meddling is a witch hunt, and Trump is totally blameless. Even if the high-level people who worked for Trump are found guilty of crimes in a court of law, Trump himself is blameless, as he keeps tweeting. Does Mueller understand the power of the tweet? ----------- ----------- U.S. Manafort associate admits paying Trump inauguration $50,000 in Ukrainian cash The Telegraph Agence France-Presse,The Telegraph 10 hours ago Sam Patten, an associate of Paul Manafort, leaves court in Washington DC - Getty Images North America A Republican consultant linked to President Donald Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort admitted on Friday he illegally funnelled money from a Ukraine tycoon to Mr Trump's inauguration. Sam Patten, who worked with Manafort to advise and lobby for Ukraine's pro-Russia Opposition Bloc, was the newest person to be charged out of special counsel Robert Mueller's sprawling Russia collusion investigation. In a deal with prosecutors Patten, 47, agreed to plead guilty to one charge of failing to register as a foreign agent, a relatively light charge that was conditioned on his cooperation with Mr Mueller and other investigations. A court filing said he earned more than $1 million between 2015 and 2017 representing the interests of the Opposition Bloc, which Manafort also previously consulted for. The work was performed by Patten's joint company with a Russian national who is unnamed in the court filing but appears to be Konstantin Kilimnik, a former linguist of Moscow's powerful GRU spy agency. US officials say Mr Kilimnik continues to maintain close ties to Russian intelligence. The charges said Patten worked with his Russian partner to set up meetings between an unnamed "prominent Ukraine oligarch" and member of the US Congress and their staff "to influence United States policy." Patten also, in January 2017, arranged for the Ukrainian oligarch to attend Mr Trump's inauguration. To obtain four tickets, the Ukrainian funneled $50,000 through Patten and another American. "Patten was aware at the time that the Presidential Inauguration Committee could not accept money from foreign nationals," the charges said. The Patten case came 10 days after Manafort, a longtime Republican consultant who was chairman of Trump's election campaign in 2016, was convicted of tax and bank fraud as a part of Mr Mueller's investigation. The Patten court filings indicate that he has been cooperating with Mr Mueller's investigation, and require him to continue to do so before he is sentenced. Manafort still faces more charges, including obstruction allegations against him and Mr Kilimnik for alleged witness tampering. | |
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09-01-18 11:45am - 2261 days | #1040 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Fake news: President Trump breaks down in tears after watching "First Man" movie about American hero Neil Armstrong. Trump confesses that he is a Russian agent, who has worked for Vladimir Putin since being blackmailed with pornographic tapes the Russians made of Trump during Trump's visit to Russia. Trump can't help himself: he can not resist lovely women, and the Russians caught the sex and pissing action of Trump in an orgy with Russian prostitutes. Trump asks for God's forgiveness, and explains that's why he chose Mike Pence, a God-fearing man as his running mate, who would try to bring Trump back into the straight and narrow life of a moral Christian. Except that Trump has appetites: for massive wealth, for pride in crushing the dreams of immigrants and low-life scum that litter the American soil. If Trump is impeached, he will not go down without a fight: he will use every dirty trick he knows, to bring down not just the Democrats, but the Republican party as well. Hail Trump, leader of the Moral Majority to keep America white and rich. ------------ ------------ Rolling Stone Movie News September 1, 2018 11:02AM ET Neil Armstrong’s Sons Defend ‘First Man’ Biopic Against ‘Anti-American’ Claims “To address the question of whether this was a political statement, the answer is no,” director Damian Chazelle says of biopic’s decision to omit American flag-planting on Moon By Daniel Kreps Ryan Gosling’s upcoming film First Man about Neil Armstrong Neil Armstrong’s sons have defended First Man, the upcoming biopic about the astronaut, against claims that the film is “anti-American” for not capturing the moment Armstrong planted the American flag on the Moon. Following the premiere of First Man – directed by Damien Chazelle and starring Ryan Gosling as Armstrong – at the Venice Film Festival, conservative pundits attacked the film as unpatriotic for omitting the historic moment on the lunar surface. However, Armstrong’s sons Rick and Mark, along with First Man author James R. Hansen, defended Chazelle’s cinematic decision. “This story is human and it is universal. Of course, it celebrates an America achievement. It also celebrates an achievement ‘for all mankind,'” the Armstrongs and Hansen said in a statement (via the Associated Press). “The filmmakers chose to focus on Neil looking back at the earth, his walk to Little West Crater, his unique, personal experience of completing this journey, a journey that has seen so many incredible highs and devastating lows.” Chazelle similarly addressed the controversy at the Venice Film Festival, where First Man was met with acclaim following its debut. “The flag being physically planted into the surface is one of several moments of the Apollo 11 lunar EVA that I chose not to focus upon,” Chazelle said. “To address the question of whether this was a political statement, the answer is no. My goal with this movie was to share with audiences the unseen, unknown aspects of America’s mission to the moon — particularly Neil Armstrong’s personal saga and what he may have been thinking and feeling during those famous few hours.” First Man, Chazelle’s first film since he won Best Director for La La Land, opens October 12th. | |
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09-01-18 12:00pm - 2261 days | #1041 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
A Theory of Trump Kompromat Why the President is so nice to Putin, even when Putin might not want him to be. By Adam Davidson July 19, 2018 President Trump’s persistent deference to Vladimir Putin has led many people to speculate that the Russian President is holding something over him. Photograph by Brendan Smialowski / AFP / Getty The former C.I.A. operative Jack Devine watched Donald Trump’s performance standing next to Vladimir Putin in Helsinki on Monday, and his first thought was, “There is no way Trump is a Russian agent.” The proof, he told me, was right in front of us. If Trump were truly serving as a Russian intelligence asset, there would have been an obvious move for him to make during his joint press conference with Putin. He would have publicly lambasted the Russian leader, unleashing as theatrical a denunciation as possible. He would have told Putin that he may have been able to get away with a lot of nonsense under Barack Obama, but all that would end now: America has a strong President and there will be no more meddling. Instead, Trump gave up his single best chance to permanently put to rest any suspicion that he is working to promote Russian interests. During a three-decade career in intelligence, Devine ran the C.I.A.’s effort to get the Soviet Union out of Afghanistan, and then served as the No. 2 (and, briefly, acting head) of its clandestine service. Along the way, he tangled with, and carefully studied, Russian intelligence officers. He was involved in two major hunts for American intelligence operatives who were secretly working for the K.G.B.: Devine was the supervisor of Aldrich Ames, the C.I.A. officer who pleaded guilty, in 1994, to spying for Moscow, and he oversaw the investigation of Robert Hanssen, the F.B.I. counterintelligence officer who confessed, in 2001, to being a double agent. Hanssen, for instance, was like Trump, narcissistic, with a broad set of grievances about the many ways that his special qualities were not being recognized. But, unlike Trump, he harbored those grievances quietly and found satisfaction in secretly upending the system in which he operated. Trump shows no signs that he can be gratified by secret triumphs. He seems to need everyone, everywhere, to see whatever it is that he thinks deserves praise. His need for public attention is a trait that would likely cause most spies to avoid working with Trump. There is no need to assume that Trump was a formal agent of Russian intelligence to make sense of Trump’s solicitousness toward Putin. Keith Darden, an international-relations professor at American University, has studied the Russian use of kompromat—compromising material—and told me that he thinks it is likely that the President believes the Russians have something on him. “He’s never said a bad word about Putin,” Darden said. “He’s exercised a degree of self-control with respect to Russia that he doesn’t with anything else.” Darden said that this is evidence that Trump isn’t uniformly reckless in his words: “He is capable of being strategic. He knows there are limits, there are bounds on what he can say and do with respect to Russia.” Because the word kompromat is new to most Americans, and has been introduced in the context of a President whose behavior confuses many of us, it is natural to assume that it must be a big, rare, scary thing, used in extraordinary circumstances to force compliance and achieve grand aims. But, Darden explained to me, kompromat is routinely used throughout the former Soviet Union to curry favor, improve negotiated outcomes, and sway opinion. Intelligence services, businesspeople, and political figures everywhere exploit gossip and damaging information. However, Darden argues, kompromat has a uniquely powerful role in the former Soviet Union, where the practice is so pervasive, he coined the term “blackmail state” to describe the way of governance. Kompromat can be a single, glaring example of wrongdoing, recorded by someone close to the Kremlin and then used to control the bad actor. It can be proof of an embarrassing sex act. Darden believes it is unlikely that sexual kompromat would be effective on Trump. Allegations of sexual harassment, extramarital affairs, and the payment of hush money to hide indiscretions have failed to significantly diminish the enthusiasm of Trump’s core supporters. But another common form of kompromat—proof of financial crimes—could be more politically and personally damaging. Trump has made a lot of money doing deals with businesspeople from the former Soviet Union, and at least some of these deals bear many of the warning signs of money laundering and other financial crimes. Deals in Toronto, Panama, New York, and Miami involved money from sources in the former Soviet Union who hid their identities through shell companies and exhibited other indications of money laundering. In the years before he became a political figure, Trump acted with impunity, conducting minimal corporate due diligence and working with people whom few other American businesspeople would consider fit partners. During that period, he may have felt protected by the fact that U.S. law-enforcement officials rarely investigate or prosecute Americans who engage in financial crimes overseas. Such cases are also maddeningly difficult to prove, and the F.B.I. has no subpoena power in other countries. If, however, someone had evidence that proved financial crimes and shared it with, say, the special counsel, Robert Mueller, other American law-enforcement officials, or the press, it could significantly damage Trump’s business, his family, and his Presidency. Alena Ledeneva, a professor of politics at University College London and an expert on Russia’s political and business practices, describes kompromat as being more than a single powerful figure weaponizing damning evidence to blackmail a target. She explained that to make sense of kompromat it is essential to understand the weakness of formal legal institutions in Russia and other former Soviet states. Ledeneva argued that wealth and power are distributed through networks of political figures and businesspeople who follow unspoken rules, in an informal hierarchy that she calls sistema, or system. Sistema has a few clear rules—do not defy Putin being the most obvious one—and a toolkit for controlling potentially errant members. It is primarily a system of ambiguity. Each person in sistema wonders where he stands and monitors the relative positions of friends and rivals. Gleb Pavlovsky, one of the leading political thinkers in Russia, is known to be an adviser to Putin and well connected to the power structure. In a 2016 article in Foreign Affairs, he endorsed Ledeneva’s sistema framework. Many observers imagine Putin to be some all-powerful genius, Pavlovsky wrote, but he “has never managed to build a bureaucratically successful authoritarian state. Instead, he has merely crafted his own version of sistema, a complex practice of decision-making and power management that has long defined Russian politics and society and that will outlast Putin himself. Putin has mastered sistema, but he has not replaced it with ‘Putinism’ or a ‘Putin system.’ Someday, Putin will go. But sistema will stay.” Ledeneva said that the key to understanding Trump’s interaction with sistema is to look at the people with whom he did business. “Trump never dealt with anybody close to the Kremlin, close to Putin,” she said. “Or even many Russians.” Trump’s business deals, she told me, were with tertiary figures. Sistema is rooted in local, often familial, trust, so it is common to see networks rooted in ethnic or national identity. My own reporting has shown that Trump has worked with many ethnic Turks from Central Asia, such as the Mammadov family, in Azerbaijan; Tevfik Arif, in New York; and Aras and Emin Agalarov, in Moscow. Trump also worked with large numbers of émigrés from the former Soviet Union. If there truly is damaging kompromat on Trump, it could well be in the hands of Trump’s business partners, or even in those of their rivals. Trump’s Georgian partners, for example, have been in direct conflict with other local business networks over a host of crucial deals involving major telecommunications projects in the country. His Azerbaijani partners were tightly linked to Iranians who were also senior officers in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. The work of Ledeneva and Darden suggests that Trump’s partners and their rivals would likely have gathered any incriminating information they could find on him, knowing that it might one day provide some sort of business leverage—even with no thought that he could someday become the most powerful person on Earth. Ledeneva is skeptical that Putin, years ago, ordered an effort to collect kompromat on Trump. Instead, it is possible that there is kompromat in the hands of several different business groups in the former Soviet Union. Each would have bits and pieces of damaging information and might have found subtle (or not so subtle) ways to communicate that fact to both Trump and Putin. Putin would likely have gathered some of that material, but he would have known that he couldn’t get everything. Ledeneva told me that each actor in sistema faces near-constant uncertainty about his status, aware that others could well destroy him. Each actor also knows how to use kompromat to destroy rivals but fears that using such material might provoke an explosive response. While each person in sistema feels near-constant uncertainty, the over-all sistema is remarkably robust. Kompromat is most powerful when it isn’t used, and when its targets aren’t quite clear about how much destructive information there is out there. If everyone sees potential land mines everywhere, it dramatically increases the price for anybody stepping out of line. CONTINUED IN NEXT POST: | |
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09-01-18 12:01pm - 2261 days | #1042 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
The scenario that, to my mind, makes the most sense of the given facts and requires the fewest fantastical leaps is that, a decade or so ago, Trump, naïve, covetous, and struggling for cash, may have laundered money for a business partner from the former Soviet Union or engaged in some other financial crime. This placed him, unawares, squarely within sistema, where he remained, conducting business with other members of a handful of overlapping Central Asian networks. Had he never sought the Presidency, he may never have had to come to terms with these decisions. But now he is much like everyone else in sistema. He fears there is kompromat out there—maybe a lot of it—but he doesn’t know precisely what it is, who has it, or what might set them off. Trump and many of his defenders have declared his businesses, including those in the former Soviet Union, to be off-limits to the Mueller investigation. They argue that the special counsel should focus only on the possibility of explicit acts of collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russian government. This neatly avoids the reality of sistema. As Pavlovsky wrote, “Under Putin, sistema has become a method for making deals among businesses, powerful players, and the people. Business has not taken over the state, nor vice versa; the two have merged in a union of total and seamless corruption.” Ledeneva explained to me that, in sistema, when faced with uncertainty, every member knows that the best move is to maintain whatever alliances he has, and to avoid grand steps that could antagonize powerful figures; in such times, the most one can hope for is simply to survive. Adam Davidson is a staff writer at The New Yorker. | |
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09-01-18 01:03pm - 2261 days | #1043 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
This is shameful. People have no right to criticize President Trump for tweeting and playing golf during John McCain's funeral. John McCain died. He is finished. Trump is alive and well. So he has the right to enjoy a game of golf (Trump is an avid golfer who criticized Obama as president for playing golf while in office, and Trump promised he would never play golf while in office, because he would focus on doing his job as president--but once in office, Trump changed his mind, which is something he does quite often, and has played far more golf than Obama ever did). So Trump has the right and privilege of playing golf and tweeting (Trump enjoys both golf and tweeting) during McCain's funeral. He is the president, after all. --------- --------- Trump criticized for tweeting and playing golf during John McCain's funeral The Independent Adam Forrest,The Independent 2 hours 13 minutes ago Mr Trump, who regularly clashed with Mr McCain, was not invited to his funeral: Ian MacNicol/Getty Images Donald Trump has been criticized for playing golf and launching a Twitter rant about Canada during John McCain’s funeral. Leading political figures, including three former presidents - Barack Obama, George Bush and Bill Clinton - came together to pay tribute to the late senator from Arizona. But the current US leader, who was not invited to the memorial at the Washington National Cathedral, decided to head to a Virginia golf course. There, he tweeted about the dispute about the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with the Canadian government. “There is no political necessity to keep Canada in the new NAFTA deal," he wrote. "If we don’t make a fair deal for the US after decades of abuse, Canada will be out. Congress should not interfere w/ these negotiations or I will simply terminate NAFTA entirely & we will be far better off...” Shortly afterwards, he followed up with: “Remember, NAFTA was one of the WORST Trade Deals ever made. The US lost thousands of businesses and millions of jobs.” Some Twitter users quickly urged Mr Trump to "show some respect,” asking him to stay off the platform while Mr McCain’s funeral took place at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. Among those paying tribute were the former presidents George W Bush and Barack Obama, along with his children and wife Cindy McCain. Mr Trump did not mention the senator's funeral. Shortly after his tweets, Robert Reich, a professor at the University of California, Berkley and well known political commentator, tweeted: “Only a true egomaniac would throw a tantrum to distract from a funeral.” US rapper Twista wrote: “Respect the dead, hold your tweets till after the funeral.” Author and editor Christopher Dickey said Mr Trump’s tweets “keep interrupting the feeds from the McCain funeral, which is so much more important to the future of the United States than your imagined prowess as a deal maker.” Immigration lawyer Mana Yegani added: “He doesn’t know what to do but send out irrelevant tweets. Trump getting completely ignored on this day of Remembrance.” The US president reportedly arrived at the golf course just as the funeral was getting underway. He had earlier tweeted about the Russia investigation, attacking the FBI, Justice Department and the infamous dossier compiled by former British spy Christopher Steele. | |
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09-02-18 01:04pm - 2260 days | #1044 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
South Pasadena officials caution against making judgments in fatal shooting of "ER" actress. However, the officials also say the the cops who shot the actress acted appropriately. So, cops can shoot people, and it's appropriate. But no member of the public can question whether there was any error, until the cops and other authorities have investigated, and can claim the shooting was justified. Officials can state the shooting was justified, before the 2 investigations into the shooting are finished. But the public has to wait until the investigations are completed and made public, before the public is told the public can form an opinion. And as everyone knows, well over 90%+ of all investigations come to the conclusion that any police shooting is justified. Even when the victim has no weapon. But this appears to be a case where the victim has physical and mental issues. Justice is a two way street? One way for cops and people of wealth: A different way for the public or blacks or minorities, who don't have the power to defend themselves. Go Trump, leader of the Moral Majority for a white America. -------- -------- September 2, 2018 9:06AM PT South Pasadena Officials Caution Against ‘Making Judgements’ in Fatal Shooting of ‘ER’ Actress South Pasadena city leaders cautioned the public against making preliminary judgements about the fatal shooting of “ER” actress Vanessa Marquez at her home on Thursday. In a statement released on Saturday, city officials said two separate, independent investigations are being conducted by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and District Attorney’s Office into the officer-involved shooting. “We believe our officers acted appropriately under a tragic set of circumstances,” South Pasadena City Manager Stephanie DeWolfe said in a press release. “We are asking the public to respect the investigative process and allow the Sheriff’s Department and D.A.’s office to gather and release the facts.” The incident occurred at Marquez’s home in Pasadena, Calif., after a landlord called the police to check on her wellbeing. When officers arrived at her apartment, they said she was suffering seizures and appeared unable to take care of herself, so they called for paramedics and a mental health clinician. After an hour and a half, Marquez armed herself with a BB gun and pointed it at the officers, causing them to open fire, according to Sheriff’s Lt. Joe Mendoza. “We look forward to hearing the results of the investigation,” DeWolfe said. “In the meantime, we are asking the public to be patient and wait until the facts of the case are confirmed before making judgements about the incident.” DeWolfe continued, “We support our officers and stand by them during this investigation. We believe the facts will show that our officers, along with a mental health professional, made every attempt to resolve this situation peacefully before the use of a deadly force became necessary.” In addition to her work opposite George Clooney on “ER,” Marquez appeared with Edward James Olmos in 1988’s “Stand and Deliver,” along with the series “Malcom & Eddie” and “Wiseguy.” Last October, she alleged that she was blacklisted from “ER” by Clooney after she complained of racial discrimination and sexual harassment. Edited on Sep 02, 2018, 06:17pm | |
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09-03-18 12:18pm - 2259 days | #1045 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
President Trump revealed to be a pussy. Trump's lawyer shouts Trump is sure to block the release of the full Mueller report. This is wrong: Trump is a disgrace. He needs to show his manhood, his balls, and declare martial law, then order secret service agents to arrest Mueller and all slimeball Democrats and illegal immigrants from shithole countries. If any of them resist, shoot to kill orders will be issued. Clean the swamp in Washington! Trump must fight these thugs and criminals with force. ------- ------- Politics Rudy Giuliani On White House Blocking Release Of Full Mueller Report: ‘I’m Sure We Will’ HuffPost Dominique Mosbergen,HuffPost 3 hours ago Rudy Giuliani says the White House would likely attempt to block a full public release of Robert Mueller’s anticipated final report about the Russia investigation ― bolstering long-held fears that the special counsel’s ultimate findings may never see the light of day. Giuliani’s startling admission was tucked inside an expansive New Yorker profile of the former New York City mayor and Trump attorney, published online Monday. Giuliani, who like the president has repeatedly described the Russia probe as a “witch hunt,” told journalist Jeffrey Toobin that Trump’s original legal team had struck a deal with Mueller about his expected final report that would allow the White House to “object to the public disclosure of information that might be covered by executive privilege.” “I asked Giuliani if he thought the White House would raise objections,” wrote Toobin in the profile. “I’m sure we will,” Giuliana responded, noting that it would be the president who “would make the final call.” Giuliani, whom Trump hired in April amid a change in the president’s legal representation in the special counsel probe, said that his team was preparing a lengthy report which they planned to release at the same time as Mueller’s to “refute its expected findings.” As Vox explained in an earlier article, Mueller is only required by law to deliver a final report to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who will ultimately decide whether to release any or all of Mueller’s findings to Congress or the public. Victoria Nourse, a Georgetown law professor, told Vox that Trump could also “order” Rosenstein not to release it. “But,” she added, “that’s a bit like firing Mueller, as many Republicans have warned — it just ups the case for impeachment because the president appears to be hiding something.” Whatever the White House’s reaction ends up being to Mueller’s ultimate findings, the assessment is expected to trigger contentious political bickering as Rosenstein is pressured from different sides to release ― or suppress ― the information. “It’ll be a moment that polarizes the country, exposing just how divided the country is about this investigation and who’s on the other side,” former House speaker Newt Gingrich told The Washington Post in June. This article originally appeared on HuffPost. | |
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09-03-18 03:54pm - 2259 days | #1046 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
President Trump blasts Jeff Sessions, the poorest Attorney General since Benedict Arnold. Why does Trump allow his Attorney General to be a traitor to his Administration and to the Country? Sessions should be jailed, and executed for the coward he is. Trump's heart is broken by Sessions' cowardice. ------------ ------------ ABC News Trump steams at Attorney General Jeff Sessions, reigniting his attacks ABC News AVERY MILLER and DEVIN DWYER,ABC News 53 minutes ago Trump steams at Attorney General Jeff Sessions, reigniting his attacks (ABC News) President Trump found it apparently too hot outside to play golf this morning, but now inside the White House residence, he again seems to be getting hot under the collar — unleashing a fresh round of sharp criticism on his Attorney General Jeff Sessions. "Two long running, Obama era, investigations of two very popular Republican Congressmen were brought to a well publicized charge, just ahead of the Mid-Terms, by the Jeff Sessions Justice Department," Trump tweeted Monday. He appeared to be referring to Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., and Rep. Chris Collins, R-N.Y., both recently indicted by federal juries in separate corruption cases. "Two easy wins now in doubt because there is not enough time. Good job Jeff," Trump said. Hunter, along with his wife, were indicted by the Department of Justice last month for alleged illegal use of campaign funds to pay personal expenses — from luxury vacations and health care to family meals. Collins was indicted earlier this summer on insider trading charges; he subsequently ceased his bid for re-election and announced he would resign from Congress at the end of his term. Both Hunter and Collins were the first congressmen to endorse Trump for President back in February 2016. Both Hunter and Collins have denied the allegations against them. It's not clear whether Trump believes the indictments themselves are misguided — in addition to the timing of the charges — or both. The White House did not immediately respond to request for comment on the tweets. "The Democrats, none of whom voted for Jeff Sessions, must love him now," Trump continued on Twitter. "Same thing with Lyin’ James Comey. The Dems all hated him, wanted him out, thought he was disgusting - UNTIL I FIRED HIM! Immediately he became a wonderful man, a saint like figure in fact. Really sick!" Trump renews attack on Attorney General Jeff Sessions, claiming 'real corruption goes untouched' A spokeswoman for House Speaker Paul Ryan seems to side with Sessions - who pronounced last month that the DOJ should be free from political influence - and backed the recent indictments of two sitting GOP congressmen. "DOJ should always remain apolitical, and the speaker has demonstrated he takes these charges seriously," Ryan spokeswoman AshLee Strong said in a statement to ABC News. "For more, you can ask him at his press conferences this week.” Very shortly after the indictments against Collins and Hunter were each announced, Ryan moved to strip both of their committee assignments pending outcome of the cases. A Justice Department spokeswoman declined to comment on the president's tweets. For months, Trump has ratcheted up attacks on Sessions, accusing him of disloyalty for — in his view — failing to align the investigative priorities of the Justice Department against Trump's political enemies. The president has said he resents Sessions' decision to recuse himself from all matters related to the Russia investigation -- and blames him for allowing the appointment of special counsel Robert Mueller. Trump, who won the 2016 presidential election in the shadow of an investigation of Hillary Clinton's emails, has also accused Sessions of not doing enough to investigate alleged crimes by Democrats and Clinton during the campaign. After Trump in a recent interview accused Sessions of not having "control" of the Justice Department, Sessions shot back in a rare, direct rebuke. Sessions hits back at Trump: Won't be influenced by 'political considerations' "I took control of the Department of Justice the day I was sworn in," Sessions said in a statement on Aug. 23. "While I am Attorney General, the actions of the Department of Justice will not be improperly influenced by political considerations." Trump to Sessions: Shut down Russia probe Last week, Trump — who was said to be angered by Sessions' statement — gave the clearest indication yet that a shake-up is coming soon at DOJ. In an interview with Bloomberg News, he would not say if Sessions' job is safe past the Nov. 6 midterm elections. Several top Republican lawmakers have publicly tried to convince the president to hold off on any dramatic moves at DOJ until after the Mueller investigation concludes — or at least until after the election. The president has agreed not to remove the attorney general before the election, but they could not guarantee he wouldn't change his mind and act sooner, sources have told ABC News. | |
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09-05-18 12:37am - 2258 days | #1047 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
White House hits back at bombshell Bob Woodward book, claims the book is full of stories from 'former disgruntled employees' Business Insider Bob Bryan Sep 4th 2018 9:45PM White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders responded to explosive new claims in veteran journalist Bob Woodward's new book, "Fear: Trump in the White House." The books describes a chaotic White House, with fights between Trump and aides as well as arguments among White House staffers. Sanders said Woodward's book is "nothing more than fabricated stories" with stories from "former disgruntled employees." White House chief of staff John Kelly also responded to Woodward's report that he called Trump an "idiot." "The idea I ever called the President an idiot is not true," Kelly said. The White House on Tuesday hit back at veteran journalist Bob Woodward's new book on President Donald Trump's administration. "This book is nothing more than fabricated stories, many by former disgruntled employees, told to make the President look bad," press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said in a statement. Portions of Woodward's book that detail a wild, chaotic White House with an often-belligerent Trump at its center were released by The Washington Post on Tuesday. Woodward is an editor at the Post. Many of the stories detailed vocal disagreement between members of the president's team or direct confrontations between Trump and his aides. "While it is not always pretty, and rare that the press actually covers it, President Trump has broken through the bureaucratic process to deliver unprecedented successes for the American people," Sanders said. "Sometimes it is unconventional, but he always gets results." Additionally, the White House issued a rebuttal from White House chief of staff John Kelly. In the book, entitled "Fear: Trump in the White House," Kelly is quoted calling Trump "unhinged," and an "idiot." "The idea I ever called the President an idiot is not true," Kelly said in the statement. "As I stated back in May and still firmly stand behind: 'I spend more time with the President than anyone else, and we have an incredibly candid and strong relationship. He always knows where I stand, and he and I both know this story is total BS'." Here's the full response from Sanders: "This book is nothing more than fabricated stories, many by former disgruntled employees, told to make the President look bad. While it is not always pretty, and rare that the press actually covers it, President Trump has broken through the bureaucratic process to deliver unprecedented successes for the American people. Sometimes it is unconventional, but he always gets results. Democrats and their allies in the media understand the President’s policies are working and with success like this, no one can beat him in 2020 – not even close." And Kelly: "The idea I ever called the President an idiot is not true. As I stated back in May and still firmly stand behind: 'I spend more time with the President than anyone else, and we have an incredibly candid and strong relationship. He always knows where I stand, and he and I both know this story is total BS. I'm committed to the President, his agenda, and our country. This is another pathetic attempt to smear people close to President Trump and distract from the administration’s many successes'." And the response from Defense Secretary Jim Mattis: "The contemptuous words about the President attributed to me in Woodward's book were never uttered by me or in my presence. While I generally enjoy reading fiction, this is a uniquely Washington brand of literature, and his anonymous sources do not lend credibility. "While responsible policy making in the real world is inherently messy, it is also essential that we challenge every assumption to find the best option. I embrace such debate and the open competition of ideas. In just over a year, these robust discussions and deliberations have yielded significant results, including the near annihilation of the ISIS caliphate, unprecedented burden sharing by our NATO allies, the repatriation of US service member remains from North Korea, and the improved readiness of our armed forces. Our defense policies have also enjoyed overwhelming bipartisan support in Congress. "In serving in this administration, the idea that I would show contempt for the elected Commander-in-Chief president Trump, or tolerate disrespect to the office of the President from within [our] Department of Defense, is a product of someone's rich imagination." Check out some of the details from Woodward's book: John Kelly was reportedly enraged with Trump over his handling of Charlottesville, said he would have taken a resignation letter 'and shoved it up his ass 6 different times' Gary Cohn reportedly snatched documents off Trump's desk to prevent him from wrecking 2 massive trade deals Trump reportedly called his attorney general Jeff Sessions a 'dumb southerner' and a 'traitor' Trump has reportedly said that his speech after the deadly white supremacist rally in Charlottesville was the 'biggest f---ing mistake' he's made 'It's either that or an orange jumpsuit': Explosive Bob Woodward book reportedly recounts Trump's lawyer's effort to keep him from interviewing with Mueller Trump reportedly told Mattis that he wanted to assassinate Bashar al-Assad after his chemical weapons attack on Syrians last year | |
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09-05-18 02:09am - 2258 days | #1048 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
The White House comes out swinging after Bob Woodward book is published. President Trump orders the top secret Murder Squad to assassinate Bob Woodward, but the order is top top secret, and the President wants deniability for this order. Once Bob Woodward is dead, Trump plans to attend his funeral and give a speech praising the great job Trump is doing for the country, and that Trump forgives his enemies because he loves all men, and even more, he loves all women--grab them by the pussy is his secret password to the White House entry door. Woodward's book is full of lies, and the people working for Trump will deny all the stories in Woodward's book, or else they will be fired immediately, and given a poor reference for any future jobs. Trump will declare himself President for Life of the United States of Trumpland, as soon as he declares martial law and has the next national election of 2020 declared null and void. Seig Heil Trump, Father of the Most Glorious Nation on Earth!!!! | |
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09-05-18 03:02am - 2258 days | #1049 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Trump, master of the universe. But Trump's boasts he has more power than the Constitution gives him. Trump is greater than the Constitution. He is Dictator For Life of Trumpland, the Glorious Leader of the White Moral Majority. (No blacks or scumbag Democrats need apply.) ---------- ---------- Politics Trump Threatens NBC’s License Over ‘Highly Unethical Conduct’ on Spiked Harvey Weinstein Story The Wrap Tim Baysinger,The Wrap 18 hours ago President Donald Trump directed his ire once again at NBC News, this time calling them out for their handling of Ronan Farrow’s Harvey Weinstein reporting, and threatening their broadcast license. Trump tweeted on Tuesday: “NBC FAKE NEWS, which is under intense scrutiny over their killing the Harvey Weinstein story, is now fumbling around making excuses for their probably highly unethical conduct. I have long criticized NBC and their journalistic standards-worse than even CNN. Look at their license?” — Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) September 4, 2018 Also Read:Ronan Farrow Blasts NBC News' 'False or Misleading' Memo About Harvey Weinstein Story Questions regarding NBC’s decision not to air the Farrow’s story on Weinstein have resurfaced in recent days. Farrow’s widely praised exposé on Weinstein was published in The New Yorker last October after he was initially doing the reporting for NBC News. Last week, Rich McHugh, a former producer of the NBC News investigative unit, told the New York Times that people at “the very highest levels of NBC” worked to quash the story at the network. NBC denied the accusation, calling it an “outright lie.” NBC News chairman Andrew Lack sent a memo to staff on Monday, calling recent accusations that the news organization buried Farrow’s investigative piece baseless. “We spent eight months pursuing the story but at the end of that time, NBC News — like many others before us — still did not have a single victim or witness willing to go on the record. (Rose McGowan — the only woman Farrow interviewed who was willing to be identified — had refused to name Weinstein and then her lawyer sent a cease-and-desist letter.) So we had nothing yet fit to broadcast,” Lack wrote in the memo obtained by TheWrap. “But Farrow did not agree with that standard. That‘s where we parted ways — agreeing to his request to take his reporting to a print outlet that he said was ready to move forward immediately.” Farrow blasted back at NBC News chief Andy Lack on Monday for a memo that said Farrow’s bombshell reporting on Weinstein was not “fit for broadcast” when he was working at the network. In a tweet sent hours after Lack’s memo to staffers became public, Farrow said the network’s account “contains numerous false or misleading statements.” Farrow, who shared a Pulitzer Prize when his report on accusations of sexual misconduct against the Hollywood mogul was subsequently published by The New Yorker, disputed the network’s claim that after eight months of reporting Farrow “still did not have a single victim or witness willing to go on the record.” This is the not the first time Trump has threatened to pull NBC’s broadcast license, a reference to the Federal Communications Commission license that allows broadcasters like NBC to use public airwaves to transmit their programming. The government has no control over programming transmitted via cable. But Trump’s attempts to challenge network news licenses aren’t based in fact. For one thing, national television networks do not need government licenses, Georgetown University Law School professor Angela Campbell told TheWrap. Only individual stations have FCC licenses, she said. Also, the president isn’t in charge of the FCC. “The president has no authority to direct the FCC to revoke a broadcast license,” former Federal Communications Commission lawyer Robert Corn-Revere told the Wrap. ” The FCC is an independent regulatory agency.” But presidents can still exert influence — especially since they appoint all five FCC chairs. And the FCC may exert influence, too. But no one can say for sure how heavy its hand might be. Read original story Trump Threatens NBC’s License Over ‘Highly Unethical Conduct’ on Spiked Harvey Weinstein Story At TheWrap -------- -------- Variety NBC News Chief Lack: Farrow Story ‘Not Ready For Air’ at NBC Variety Brian Steinberg,Variety Mon, Sep 3 4:14 PM PDT NBC News Chairman Andrew Lack sent employees a detailed memo and an 11-page analysis Monday spelling out why the news organization felt it could not air journalist Ronan Farrow’s 2017 investigation into harassment allegations against movie-mogul Harvey Weinstein, the latest rebuke by the Comcast-owned unit against accusations it passed on one of the hottest stories in recent years without obvious reason. “We spent eight months pursuing the story but at the end of that time, NBC News – like many others before us – still did not have a single victim or witness willing to go on the record,” Lack said to staffers in the memo. Farrow disagreed with that standard, Lack said, and the two sides parted ways. Release of the executive analysis, which includes transcripts of on-camera interviews between Farrow and others as well as a timeline of phone calls Harvey Weinstein and his attorneys made to various NBC News executives, is a remarkable display of evidence from a sector of the media that often does not provide much information on how it reports our stories. CNN, Fox News Channel and others have also in recent months been called out on how they report sensitive matters, and while the news organizations may offer comment, they typically do not bring to public view an accounting of how their product gets made. But the Lack memo also hints at the public pressure recently brought to bear on NBC News, which in 2016 was scooped by The Washington Post on the existence of a tape from “Access Hollywood” — a show that is part of its parent, NBCUniversal – featuring a younger Donald Trump making lewd remarks about women and acknowledging he felt he had carte blanche to grab them by their genitals. NBC News’ handling of Farrow’s investigation of Weinstein’s behavior – which was published by The New Yorker was awarded a Pulitzer – has been under scrutiny for months. New attention to the matter was sparked by last week by a statement from Rich McHugh, a former NBC News investigative reporter with whom Farrow worked to break the Weinstein story. McHugh in a statement alleged NBC News killed their efforts. “Is there anyone in the journalistic community who actually believes NBC didn’t breach its journalistic duty to continue reporting this story? Something else must have been going on,” McHugh said. In October of last year, after the story had surfaced, Farrow appeared on MSNBC’s “The Rachel Maddow Show” and told its host, “I walked into the door at the New Yorker with an explosively reportable piece that should have been public.” He added: “Immediately the New Yorker recognized that, and it was not accurate to say that it was not reportable. In fact, there were multiple determinations at NBC that it was reportable.” According to Lack, NBC News, “convened an independent group of the most experienced investigative journalists in our organization to review his material with fresh eyes” after Farrow objected to NBC’s decision not to move forward with the story in its form at the time, ” We asked them — tell us what, if anything, we can broadcast. But their conclusion was unequivocal – this story is not ready for air.” Neither McHugh or Farrow could be reached immediately for comment. At the root of the schism between Farrow and NBC News was a disagreement over what the story needed to be put on the air. NBC News seemed determined that the story include an on-the-record on-air account from someone with direct knowledge of harassment by Weinstein. NBC News alleged Farrow had not been able to produce such a witness. “The only victim willing to be interviewed on camera and name Weinstein was a woman who spoke anonymously in shadow and alleged he subjected her to verbal sexual harassment. Therefore, following widely accepted journalistic standards, Farrow’s NBC News editors, including the head of the investigative unit, did not believe his work was ready for broadcast,” NBC News said in its analysis of the matter. | |
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09-05-18 07:51pm - 2257 days | #1050 | |
lk2fireone (0)
Active User Posts: 3,618 Registered: Nov 14, '08 Location: CA |
Trump admits his administration is the greatest in US history. He says once he leaves office, in 6 years (after his re-election in 2020), the New York Times and CNN and other fake news outlets will declare bankruptcy and stop operations, because they will no longer have fake news to report. Trump, the greatest president the US has ever had. Trump, our fearless leader who will crush the Mueller investigation and all the scumbag Democrats that make up the Washington swamp. Trump, the leader of the Moral Majority to make America great and white and free of scumbag immigrants from shithole countries like Mexico and South America and Africa. ------ ------ Anonymous White House 'senior official' slams Trump in scathing NYT op-ed Yahoo News David Knowles Sep 5th 2018 5:34PM The New York Times published an essay Wednesday that the newspaper said was written by a “senior official” in the Trump administration, supporting a central claim in Bob Woodward’s forthcoming book: members of the president’s staff are actively working to subvert him. The unnamed official painted a portrait of a divided White House because of misgivings over the behavior of President Trump himself. “The dilemma — which he does not fully grasp — is that many of the senior officials in his own administration are working diligently from within to frustrate parts of his agenda and his worst inclinations,” the author of the piece wrote. A tweet by the newspaper gave a clue about the gender of the author: In an editorial note that accompanies the essay, the Times notes that it withheld the author’s identity to protect the person’s job. “We believe publishing this essay anonymously is the only way to deliver an important perspective to our readers,” the editors at the paper wrote. In “Fear: Trump in the White House,” Woodward’s forthcoming exposé on Trump’s presidency, the Watergate reporter describes a scene in which former chief economic advisor Gary Cohn “stole a letter off Trump’s desk” before the president could sign it to keep him from terminating a trade agreement with South Korea. The book is also filled with interviews from officials expressing grave concerns about Trump’s fitness for office. In the essay published by the Times, the author bolsters those claims. “The root of the problem is the president’s amorality. Anyone who works with him knows he is not moored to any discernible first principles that guide his decision making,” the author states. “Although he was elected as a Republican, the president shows little affinity for ideals long espoused by conservatives: free minds, free markets and free people. At best, he has invoked these ideals in scripted settings. At worst, he has attacked them outright.” Trump and members of his staff had already spent much of the day trying to discredit Woodward’s book when the Times op-ed, sending the administration into damage control once more. Moments later, Trump bashed the New York Times in off-the-cuff comments delivered at the White House in which he called the essay “anonymous, meaning gutless.” “When you tell me about some anonymous source in the administration, probably who is failing, and probably here for all the wrong reasons,” Trump said, adding, “Now, and the New York Times is failing. If I weren’t here I believe the New York Times probably wouldn’t even exist.” In her own statement, White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders also appeared to confirm that the author of the essay worked in the Trump administration. “The individual behind this piece has chosen to deceive, rather than support, the duly elected President of the United States,” Sanders said in a statement. “He is not putting country first, but putting himself and his ego ahead of the will of the American people. This coward should do the right thing and resign.” Trump then returned to Twitter, where he offered a more succinct criticism of the official who had written the essay. | |
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