Comments by "" (@DavidJ222) on "Fox News"
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The 5 stages of Trumpism:
1. It's a total lie, never happened, fake news.
2. Ok, so it happened, but it's not a big deal.
3. Ok, so it might be a big deal, but it isn't illegal.
4. Ok, so it's illegal, but but but Hillary and Obama, something unintelligible, so it's okay.
5. WHATEVER LIBBY!! YOU'RE JUST A SORE LOSER. MAGA!!!!
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Rudy was right about one thing, This has nothing to do with collusion, but it has everything to do with a criminal conspiracy. And remember, Manafort was in that Trump Tower meeting along with Don Jr, Kushner, and Russian agents. This trial is simply about putting pressure on Manafort. Once he's faced with the full weight of the amount of years he's facing, he'll cut a deal and reveal everything he knows about the treasonous Trump traitor family. And make no mistake, Mueller has Manafort dead to rights. Because the case against Manafort is all on paper and in black and white. It's called a paper trail of evidence.
It's all financial crimes that aren't much different than the evidence used against Bernie Madoff. Money laundering, mail fraud, bank fraud, wire fraud, fake LLCs,, tax evasion, bank deposits, bank withdrawals.....and it all leaves a paper trail leading right back to Manafort. He's skrewed.
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Trump: "You've got Guatemalans, Mexicans, ISIS, the Menendez Brothers, the 1990 Detroit Pistons, decepticons, those flyingMonkeys from the Wizard of Oz, Hannibal Lecter, Thanos, and severalBabadooks, all crossing the border illegally. Its scary stuff."đđ
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Several wealthy Russians were âgranted unusual accessâ to Trump inauguration parties back in January 2017 â and Mueller is seeking to find out why. The tycoons were given âunprecedented access to Trumpâs inner circleââand investigators in special council Robert Muellerâs probe are interested in their attendance at the parties.
Rick Gates was heavily involved in planning the inauguration, with a Yahoo News report in 2016calling him the âshadow chairâ of the event. There have long been serious questions about the money behind Trumpâs inauguration â and where, exactly, it all went. Trumpâs inaugural committee raised an astonishing $106.7 million, double the previous record set by Obamaâs 2009 inaugural. But what they did with it isnât so clear. The chair of GW Bushâs 2nd inauguration, Greg Jenkins, said he was baffled. âTrump had a third of the staff and a quarter of the events that we had, and yet they raise at least twice as much as we did,â he said. âSo thereâs the obvious question: Where did it go? I donât know.â
The inauguration caught law enforcementâs attention back while it was happening. Counterintelligence officials at the FBI were concerned by an unusual presence of politically connected Russians in DC during the event â including some of the exact people who âhad surfaced in the agencyâs investigation of the Trump campaignâs ties to Russia.â
Back in June ABC News reported that Muellerâs investigators wanted to know why several billionaires with âdeep ties to Russiaâ got access to âexclusive, invitation-only receptionsâ during the inauguration. These Russians had invites to events that were so exclusive, that even members of Congress had a hard time getting into.
It is against the law for foreign nationals to donate to a presidential inaugural committee. Mueller is exploring whether wealthy Russians used âstraw donorsâ with American citizenship to steer money into the inauguration. Sometime around March of this year, Russian oligarch Viktor Vekselberg flew in to a NY on a private plane â and was met there by Muellerâs investigators, who questioned him and searched his electronic devices.
Vekselberg is the owner of the Renova Group, a Russian conglomerate with aluminum and oil interests, and is one of the richest people in Russia. His cousin, Andrew Intrater, an American citizen who runs a US company tied to Vekselbergâs company, donated $250,000. Intrater had also kicked in $35,000 to the Trump Victory Committee.
Vekselberg and Intrater attended Trumpâs inauguration together, and at the January 19 candlelight dinner, they were seated with Trumpâs lawyer, Cohen.. Later that year, that company run by Intrater paid Cohenâs shell company, Essential Consultants LLC, $500,000 â for, they claimed, real estate advice. A 1million inaugural donation came from Leonard Blavatnik, who runs a company called Access Industries. Blavatnik was on the guest list for the January 19 candlelight dinner too.
Blavatnik is a Soviet-born, UK-based billionaire who is a US citizen. He is also partnered with Vekselberg, in Russiaâs aluminum industry. Together, they built the largest aluminum company in Russia by merging with Oleg Deripaskaâs Rusal. Deripaska is also a player in Mueller's investigation â he employed Manafort, and Manafort tried to get in touch with him during 2016.
Alexander Mashkevitch, a Kazakh mining billionaire, was on the guest list for the âcandlelight dinner,â and happens to have been in the Seychelles around the same time as Erik Prince, a Trump adviser.
And Natalia Veselnitskaya and Rinat Akhmetshin, who attended Don Jrâs infamous Trump Tower meeting, were in town too â they attended an inauguration night party thrown by Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), whoâs widely viewed as the biggest supporter of Putinâs regime in Congress.
Several people involved in previous inaugurations were quoted expressing puzzlement over how Trumpâs team could have possibly spent over $100 million for what they got. But if there is anyone who might know where much of the money went, it is Rick Gates, who is now working with Mueller's investigation. So whatever Rick Gates knows, Robert Mueller now knows too.
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