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Uriah Heep
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Comments by "Uriah Heep" (@uriahheep5665) on "Trump will 'find a way to get his message out there': WH Communications Director" video.
Trump prefers heroes who weren't captured. We prefer presidents who aren't severely neurotic, and don't give themselves COV2 because of their reckless negligence.
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Michael Cohen, Trump’s longtime personal lawyer currently incarcerated for fraud and campaign finance crimes relating to Trump’s presidential campaign, also said that VTB Bank (then under sanction) was the proposed funding source for Trump Tower Moscow, the lucrative real estate deal Trump pursued while running for president according to the Mueller Report. Cohen testified to Congress that the Trump Tower Moscow deal was scrapped by June 2016. It is unknown whether another type of business relationship continued between Trump and VTB Bank after that. However, Deutsche Bank notably raced to sever its own relationship with VTB Bank in December 2016, taking a loss on a $1 billion loan it made to the Russian Bank by selling it to Alfa Bank (another Russian bank with ties to Trump).
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Oh, fox isn't THAT bad.
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Forensic News reported in January that the son of a deceased Deutsche Bank executive who worked for this division told the FBI that bank insiders had revealed to him many of Trump’s loans were co-signed or underwritten by Russian state banks or oligarchs. Val Broeksmit, the son, also provided the FBI and Forensic News with a cache of documents that belonged to his father, Bill. Some of the documents indicated the division of Deutsche Bank that Trump worked with (which is called DBTCA) had reportedly received disproportionately large deposits from Russian financial institutions, including a $500 million deposit from Kremlin-owned Gazprombank. Deutsche Bank and Gazprombank declined to comment.
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If Trump’s loans were co-signed by Russian oligarchs or banks owned by Russian oligarchs, Trump has a whirlwind of problems headed his way. Take, for example, the financial ties between Trump and Russian oligarch Dmitry Rybolovlev. The relationship between the two men made headlines in the first half of the Trump Administration when it surfaced Trump had purchased a Florida property for $41 million in 2004 and, in 2006, sold it to Rybolovlev for $95 million. Despite the $54 million net increase, Trump had made no improvements to the property. If Congress discovered documents from Deutsche Bank indicating that the true purpose of the sale involved giving Trump cash to pay off loans from DBTCA, Trump’s favorable treatment of Russian oligarchs from the White House looks more like a quid pro quo than a mere policy preference.
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