Trumpublicons: Foreign Influence/Grifting in '16 US Election

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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Sep 29, 2017 7:26 am

One of the people named in the dossier is “providing important information” to Special Counsel Robert Mueller


Trump-Russia investigators close in on sources named in explosive dossier

Efforts to get ex-MI6 officer Christopher Steele to testify in US have fallen short, but Mueller's probe appears to be making steady progress

Kim Sengupta Diplomatic Editor Thursday 28 September 2017 15:10 BST287 comments

Some Republicans view the controversial dossier as a politically motivated document AP
Christopher Steele, the former MI6 officer who was at the centre of a storm over his explosive and contentious dossier on Donald Trump, is keeping a determinedly low profile.

But his account of the US President’s Russian connections is very much a part of the investigations closing in around a beleaguered White House.

The man who hired Mr Steele to compile the report has given ten hours of testimony behind closed doors to the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Glenn Simpson, the co-founder of the political research firm Fusion GPS, stressed afterwards that he stood by the allegations which were made and committee officials privately say that the material was being treated extremely seriously.

Trump-Russia dossier sources revealed to the FBI by Christopher Steele

Meanwhile, the team of special counsel Robert Mueller, leading a separate investigation into the Kremlins’ activities, have contacted and taken evidence from a number of figures named in the dossier, including one, The Independent has learned, who has been providing important information.

Concerted attempts were made to dismiss Mr Steele’s report as fantasy when news of its existence broke at the beginning of the year by Mr Trump, his supporters and right wing media outlets in the US and UK.

Since then, however, many of his claims have proved to be true. There is now rivalry between three ongoing inquiries into Mr Trump – by former FBI director Mr Mueller, the Senate Intelligence Committee, the House Intelligence Committee and the Senate Intelligence Committee – to get Mr Steele to testify.

Mr Steele, however, has decided not to travel to the US and is also disinclined, for the time being, to be interviewed by Trump investigators elsewhere.

His company Orbis Business Intelligence, where he is a co-director along with Christopher Burrows, formerly of the Foreign Office, has been recovering from the deluge of publicity over the Trump dossier and Mr Steele is said to feel that he wants to get back “in the shadows” for both personal and professional reasons.

Last month two staffers from the House Intelligence Committee arrived unannounced in Britain to try and persuade Mr Steele to speak. They visited the offices of Mr Steele’s company in London as well as the office of his lawyer.

The trip provoked a furious row in Washington. The two men had been sent by Republican members of the House Intelligence Committee without informing Democrats on that Committee, the Senate Committee or the Special Counsel.

The biggest names involved in the Trump-Russia investigation

Mr Mueller’s team were particularly worried that the heavy handed approach may hinder chances of Mr Steele testifying. Some Democrats believe, however, that was the precise aim of the Republicans, to sabotage any appearance by the former MI6 officer. The first Republican chairman of the House Committee, Devin Nunes, was forced to recuse himself and was replaced after revelations about his close liaison with the White House.

Some Republicans in the House Committee are keen, however, to speak to Mr Steele and Glenn Wilson about the fact that the report was commissioned by opponents of Mr Trump, first Republican and then Democrats, thus making it, in their eyes, a politically motivated document. They also want to question Mr Steele about his relationship with the FBI while he was carrying out his inquiries into Mr Trump.

The Republicans have sent a series of subpoenas to the Bureau which they believe will show that the relations between it and Mr Steele was closer than hitherto known and will provide ammunition against James Comey, the then Director, who was sacked by the President and has come to be viewed by the Trump camp as one of its many enemies.

Mr Steele handed out the results of some of his research to an agent he had from of the FBI’s Eurasian Joint Organised Crime Squad based in Rome in August 2016. The full report was handed to Mr Comey by Senator John McCain, who had sent a former State Department official, David Kramer, across the Atlantic to collect it, in December that year.

Mr Mueller’s team, meanwhile, appears to be making steady progress. The home of Paul Manafort, Mr Trump’s former campaign manager, was raided with computers and documents seized. The inquiry has been expanded to look at work Mr Manafort carried out as campaign manager for Viktor Yanukovych, The pro-Moscow former president of Ukraine and £12m he is alleged to have received from Mr Yanukovych’s Party of Regions. Mr Manafort denies getting the money.



Ex-MI6 agent behind Trump Russia dossier breaks silence
Mr Manafort, who was secretly wiretapped by the FBI, has been told by prosecutors that he may face indictment over alleged violations of tax laws, money laundering and lobbying for a foreign power. Roger Stone, a long-time advisor to Mr Trump, said this week that Mr Manafort had confirmed to him that he expects to be indicted.

A full 15 months ago Mr Steele’s report referred repeatedly to Mr Manafort’s alleged “off the books” payment from Mr Yanukovych’s party and Russian concern that revelations of this may damage the Kremlin operation to support Mr Trump.

The Manafort affair is just one example of claims made by Mr Steele which have subsequently proved to be true. According to memos sent to Mr Simpson among Mr Steele’s informants were Source A, “a senior Russian foreign ministry figure”; Source B, “a former top intelligence officer still active in the Kremlin”; Source D “is a close associate of Mr Trump who had organised and managed his recent trips to Moscow”; and Source E "an ethnic Russian” and “close associate of … Donald Trump”.

It has been reported that “Source D” and “Source E” may be the same person, a Belarusan businessman called Sergei Millain, who was born Siarhei Kukuts. Mr Millain has denied being Mr Steele’s informant, declaring that allegations against him are part of a “witch hunt” and that Mr Trump’s election is “God’s will”.

But some with inside knowledge of the Steele report say that one of the “sources” could be Felix Sater, a Russian whose family emigrated to New York when he was six years old. Mr Sater was jailed for stabbing a man in the face with a cocktail glass. He was also convicted of investment fraud involving the Russian mafia targeting the elderly including Holocaust survivors, but avoided a potential 20 years sentence by becoming an informer.

Mr Sater is a former business associate of Mr Trump and had accompanied him on trips to Russia. At Mr Trump’s behest he had chaperoned Donald junior and Ivanka on a Moscow visit during which he was influential enough to engineer that Ivanka got to sit on President Putin’s chair in the Kremlin.

Mr Sater (aka Felix Sheferovsky) was a childhood friend of Michael Cohen, Mr Trump’s personal lawyer. Mr Cohen was named in the Steele dossier as a key conduit between the Trump camp and the Russians and that Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov was tasked with carrying out a covert campaign to undermine Hilary Clinton’s presidential campaign (which Mr Peskov denies).

Mr Cohen had denied having “any dealings” whatsoever with the Russians in his work for Mr Trump. But newly leaked emails show that Mr Cohen asked for Mr Peskov’s help with a Trump real estate project, Trump Tower, in Moscow in 2016. This was when Mr Trump was already campaigning to secure the Republican nomination for the Presidency.

The leaks also revealed emails from Mr Sater to Mr Cohen. One said excitedly: “Can you believe two guys from Brooklyn are going to elect a President.” Another said: “Our boy can become President of the USA and we can engineer it … I will get Putin on this programme and we will get Trump elected.”

Andrew Weissmann, the federal prosecutor who “turned” Mr Sater during the fraud investigation, is now on Mr Mueller’s team. Mr Sater is helping federal authorities in a Kazakh money laundering scheme in which some of the money was supposedly laundered through a Trump property. The claims of Mr Trump being the Muscovian Candidate for the US Presidency, raised by Mr Steele, continue to grow and reverberate.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world ... 70821.html
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby liminalOyster » Fri Sep 29, 2017 10:36 am

... moved to other thread ...
Last edited by liminalOyster on Fri Sep 29, 2017 11:23 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Sep 29, 2017 11:15 am

I do wish I could change the title of this OP

it's not about Russia making a difference in the election by hacking .....it's about trump's laundering Russian mob money and obstruction of justice...I think I have said this before around page 30?

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Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Oct 03, 2017 9:29 am

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Documents Reveal Previously Unknown Contacts Between Russia and Trump’s Campaign
The Trump Organization gave emails to Robert Mueller that show Russians trying to strike business deals with Trump.
HANNAH LEVINTOVAOCT. 2, 2017 5:32 PM

Two previously unknown contacts between Russian officials and the Trump campaign have been revealed in documents that the Trump Organization turned over to congressional investigators and Robert Mueller’s team, the Washington Post reported on Monday.

The documents show that Michael Cohen—Trump’s longtime attorney—fielded requests in October 2015 and June 2016 to collaborate on a Trump-branded real estate deal in Moscow and to attend a St. Petersburg economic conference with top Russian businessmen and politicians. Cohen declined both proposals, but they are still significant, notes the Post:

The new disclosures add to an emerging picture in which Trump’s business and campaign were repeatedly contacted by Russians with interests in business and politics. Trump’s son, his son-in-law, his campaign chairman, low-level foreign policy advisers and, now, Cohen, one of his closest business confidants, all fielded such inquiries in the weeks before or after Trump accepted the nomination.

Anonymous sources familiar with the documents told the Post that in October 2015, Cohen received an inquiry on behalf of Russian billionaire Sergei Gordeev proposing a Trump-branded real estate development in Moscow. The request came through Giorgi Rtskhiladze, a Georgian financier that has worked with the Trump Organization in the past. Cohen reportedly informed Rtskhiladze that the Trump Organization would not pursue the deal with Gordeev because it already had a commitment to a different Russian developer. This seems to be a reference to a deal that was in the works at around the same time to build a Trump Tower in Moscow.

Then in June 2016, former Trump business partner Felix Sater emailed Cohen with a different proposal: He encouraged him to attend an upcoming economic forum in St. Petersburg, where he would participate in discussions with Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev, top Russian businessmen, and maybe even Putin himself—all arranged by Putin’s spokesman Dmitri Peskov. Sater’s correspondence included a formal invitation and documentation that Cohen would need in obtaining a visa to travel to Russia for the event. Cohen declined the invitation.

http://www.motherjones.com/politics/201 ... -campaign/




Trump associates had 2 previously unreported contacts with Russia, according to documents turned over to investigators
Michael Cohen
Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump's personal attorney, center, walks with his attorney Stephen M. Ryan, second from right, as they leave Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2017. (Susan Walsh / AP)
Tom Hamburger, , Rosalind S. Helderman and Adam Entous
Washington Post

Associates of President Donald Trump and his company have turned over documents to federal investigators that reveal two previously unreported contacts from Russia during the 2016 campaign, according to people familiar with the matter.

In one case, Trump's personal attorney and a business associate exchanged emails weeks before the Republican National Convention about traveling to an economic conference in Russia that would be attended by top Russian financial and government leaders, including President Vladimir Putin, according to people familiar with the correspondence.

In the other case, the same Trump attorney, Michael Cohen, received a proposal in late 2015 for a Moscow residential project from a company founded by a billionaire who once served in the Russian Senate, these people said. The previously unreported inquiry marks the second proposal for a Trump-branded Moscow project that was delivered to the company during the presidential campaign and has since come to light.

Cohen declined the invitation to the economic conference, citing the difficulty of attending so close to the GOP convention, according to people familiar with the matter. And Cohen rejected the Moscow building plan.

Nonetheless, the information about the interactions has been provided to congressional committees as well as special counsel Robert Mueller as they investigate whether Trump associates coordinated with Russian efforts to interfere in the U.S. election, according to people familiar with the inquiries who, like others cited in this story, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the inquiry.

Details of the communications were turned over by the Trump Organization in recent days to the White House, defense lawyers and government investigators and described to The Washington Post.

Trump family and associates to be in Russia probe crosshairs
Though there is no evidence that these Russia-related entreaties resulted in further action, the email communications about them show that Trump's inner circle continued receiving requests from Russians deep into the presidential campaign.

After WikiLeaks began to publish emails from the Democratic National Committee that were widely believed to have been hacked at the direction of Moscow, Trump said on several occasions that he had no financial ties to Russia. In July 2016, he tweeted: "for the record, I have ZERO investments in Russia."

But the new disclosures add to an emerging picture in which Trump's business and campaign were repeatedly contacted by Russians with interests in business and politics. Trump's son, son-in-law, campaign chairman, low-level foreign policy advisers and, now, Cohen, one of his closest business confidants, all fielded such inquiries in the weeks before or after Trump accepted the nomination.

The documents also underscore the Trump company's long-standing interest in doing business in Moscow.

Kremlin says it got the Trump Tower email but didn't respond
In a statement Monday, Cohen stressed that he did not attend the economic forum. "I did not accept this invitation," he said. "I have never been to Russia."

Cohen has said he will cooperate with authorities.

Alan Garten, general counsel for the Trump Organization, said the newly disclosed Moscow proposal needed to be understood "in context."

"Like any other international real estate brand, it is not uncommon for third party developers to submit proposals for potential real estate projects all over the world," he said, adding that, only a "very small percentage of these proposals are ever pursued."

White House lawyer Ty Cobb declined to comment, saying he was not familiar with the documents.

The June 2016 email to Cohen about the economic conference came from Felix Sater, a Russian-born real estate developer and former Trump business associate. Sater encouraged Cohen to attend the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum, with Sater telling Cohen that he could be introduced to Dmitry Medvedev, the Russian prime minister, top financial leaders and perhaps to Putin, according to people familiar with the correspondence. At one point, Sater told Cohen that Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, could help arrange the discussions, according to a person familiar with the exchange.

Robert Wolf, an attorney for Sater, declined to comment.

The correspondence included a formal invitation to the conference from the Russian leader of the event, according to people familiar with the Trump Organization documents. The invitation included a letter signed by a conference official designed to help Cohen get a visa from the Russian government.

Cohen and Sater had earlier that year been working on a deal to build a Trump Tower in Moscow. The email exchange did not directly address the Moscow Trump Tower plan that Cohen, Sater and Trump had been working on earlier in 2016, according to people familiar with the correspondence.

But Sater was eager to rekindle interest in the project, which had been canceled five months earlier, according to a person familiar with his thinking.

The project had begun in the fall of 2015, when Trump was competing for the GOP nomination. He signed a letter of intent in October 2015 to license his name to the Moscow developer working with Sater to construct what they hoped would be one of the tallest buildings in the world.

In January 2016, Cohen emailed Peskov, Putin's spokesman, saying the project had stalled and asking for assistance in pushing it forward. Cohen has said he received no response from Peskov and canceled the deal shortly thereafter.

Peskov has said he received the email but did not reply. He said Sunday that he did not remember any discussions about Cohen attending the St. Petersburg economic forum. But he said the conference, an annual event, is designed to allow attendees to meet with government and business leaders.

"My job [is] to assist in that!" he wrote in a text message.

Cohen rebuffed the invitation, and the project was not restarted.

Sater, who emigrated from Russia to the U.S. as a youngster, served time in jail as a young man following a bar fight and then was convicted in 1998 for his role in a Mafia-linked stock fraud. He has also been hailed for cooperating in the past with U.S. Justice Department probes in undisclosed national security matters.

Sater has had a long relationship with Cohen, whom he knew in high school, and with Trump. A firm in which he played a principal role, Bayrock, partnered in building the Trump Soho tower in New York City. And Sater and Cohen met with a Ukrainian legislator in 2017 to discuss how to promote a Ukrainian peace plan to the new Trump White House team.

The newly disclosed documents show publicly for the first time that, in addition to Sater's efforts, the Trump Organization fielded another inquiry for a Moscow project during the presidential campaign.

That proposal originated with Russian billionaire Sergei Gordeev, a Moscow real estate mogul who served through 2010 as a member of the Russian Senate.

The discussions about working with Gordeev took place via email between Cohen and an international financier he had worked with in the past, Giorgi Rtskhiladze, according to people familiar with the correspondence.

A spokesman for Rtskhiladze, Melanie A. Bonvicino, confirmed the proposal for a Trump-branded residential development, saying a 13-page document with pictures was delivered in October 2015.

But, Bonvicino said, Cohen informed Rtskhiladze in 2015 that the Trump company could not pursue the project because it was already committed to another developer in Russia - a reference to the proposal being guided by Sater.

No letter of intent was ever signed, according to people familiar with the interaction. Cohen and Rtskhiladze "did not speak of the project again," Bonvicino said.

A spokeswoman for Gordeev's company said he had no comment.

Rtskhiladze has had a long-standing interest in working with Trump in the region and pursued a project to build a Trump Tower in Batumi, Georgia, overlooking the Black Sea. Trump traveled to Georgia in 2012 to promote the Batumi deal and was paid nearly $1 million in upfront cash, but the project was never built and was formally canceled by the Trump Organization in December, as Trump prepared to take office.

In an interview in 2016, Rtskhiladze told The Post he was encouraging Trump to build a tower in Moscow.

"Everyone wants to build a magnificent tower. It's challenging, but I think achievable, with that name," Rtskhiladze said.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nati ... story.html




Kremlin tried to recruit Donald Trump’s attorney to Moscow just before Republican National Convention
Bill Palmer
Updated: 6:59 pm EDT Mon Oct 2, 2017
Home » Politics

Donald Trump’s longtime personal attorney Michael Cohen has gone from claiming he never had any contact with Russia, to admitting he tried to get the Kremlin to help build Trump Tower Moscow during the election, to now admitting multiple additional contacts with Russia. One of the new revelations involves the Kremlin having tried to recruit Cohen to come to Moscow, where he would have met Vladimir Putin, just before the Republican National Convention.

Cohen now admits that he was recruited to attend a conference in Moscow which was also being attended by Russian President Vladimir Putin, according to the Washington Post (link). Cohen says he turned down the invitation because it was too close on the calendar to the Republican National Convention. Putin has control of nearly everything that transpires in Russia. So if he was attending this conference, it means the Kremlin had control of the conference. Therefore it was the Kremlin that wanted Trump’s attorney Cohen in attendance. Here’s why that’s such a big deal.

We already know that in January of 2016, Michael Cohen emailed the Kremlin and asked for help in getting Trump Tower Moscow built (link). All sides have since claimed that the email went unanswered, thus implying that the Kremlin wasn’t interested. But now we know that roughly six months later, the Kremlin was trying to get Cohen to come to Moscow, where he would have met with Putin. The most likely explanation for this is that once it became clear Trump was going to be the nominee, the Kremlin decided it wanted to move forward with Trump Tower Moscow after all. But it gets deeper.

We’ve long known that the Kremlin sent multiple representatives including Sergey Kislyak to the Republican National Convention to meet with the Donald Trump campaign and thus ensure that the Republican Party platform was altered in Russia’s favor. Now we know that in that same timeframe, the Kremlin was attempting to recruit Trump’s personal attorney – the one who had asked for help with Trump Tower Moscow – to come to Moscow, where he would meet Putin.
http://www.palmerreport.com/politics/kr ... ohen/5277/


Senate Judiciary leaders denied access to CIA material on Russian meddling
By ELANA SCHOR 10/02/2017 07:11 PM EDT

The CIA has denied a request by the bipartisan leaders of the Senate Judiciary Committee to let them view some of the same information about Russian meddling that the intelligence committee has already seen, according to the panel’s top Democrat.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) and Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) had asked CIA Director Mike Pompeo last week for access to certain unspecified material related to their investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election — information that the Senate Intelligence Committee has already received, a sign that turf battles between the two panels may be heating up. Feinstein told reporters Monday evening, however, that she and Grassley were unsuccessful.

“We were turned down,” she said, adding that the CIA’s decision was a disappointment.

But Feinstein, who has described the material at issue as pertaining to obstruction-of-justice matters that lie in the Judiciary Committee’s jurisdiction, declined to comment further about longer-term access. “The issue isn’t finished,” she said.

As the Senate intelligence panel’s investigation of Moscow's electoral meddling homes in on Russian-linked ads purchased on Twitter and Facebook, Judiciary committee members are also signaling their interest in probing the role that social media companies may have played in amplifying the alleged foreign influence campaign.

“There should be a hearing on this issue, because it relates directly to our oversight of the Department of Justice and the FBI, and these ads raise profound and pressing questions that have to be explored so the public is aware of this threat,” Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), a Judiciary panel member, told reporters Monday.

http://www.politico.com/story/2017/10/0 ... ary-243384


Robert Mueller moves to quash Donald Trump’s federal pardon power
Bill Palmer
Updated: 12:51 pm EDT Tue Oct 3, 2017
Home » Politics

In a sign of how aggressively Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation is progressing, he’s already reached a point where he has to contend with the possibility that Donald Trump may begin trying to pardon his own co-conspirators so they won’t flip on him. Trump can theoretically try to preemptively pardon anyone at any time, but it’s likely he’ll wait until he feels he has no choice. Accordingly, Mueller’s team is moving to try to quash Trump’s pardon power.


It’s already well established that the president cannot pardon anyone for state level crimes, and Mueller is going that route when it comes to at least some of Trump’s underlings. But he also has a prosecutor named Michael Dreeben who’s working on figuring out how to prevent Trump from using federal pardons as well, according to a new Bloomberg report (link). It’s never been Constitutionally established whether the president can pardon his co-conspirators to motivate them not to testify against him, or pardon his family members, or pardon himself – because no president has ever tried to do these things, and thus it’s never been tested in court.


The Bloomberg article makes a point of spelling out Dreeben’s long history of arguing cases before the Supreme Court, and how Chief Justice John Roberts has been impressed with his arguments. The article doesn’t explicitly say it, but the reality is that Donald Trump’s attempted federal pardons will ultimately end up in front of the Supreme Court. In fact the entire article reads like an intentional hint to Trump’s co-conspirators that Trump probably can’t save them even if he tries.


The first pardon out of the gate will set the legal precedent one way or the other. If Mueller and Dreeben can win that first court battle, it’ll mean Trump can’t pardon himself out of this on any level – and it’ll signal to everyone involved that it’s time to flip on him. It’s why Dreeben is working his way through every inch of pardon case law to try to figure out how to quash Trump’s pardon power in this case altogether.
http://www.palmerreport.com/politics/pa ... ller/5290/


Renato Mariotti‏Verified account @renato_mariotti 49s49 seconds ago

12/ Can the President pardon someone for a crime, and then pardon them for criminal contempt if they refuse to testify? Any limits on it?

11/ Pardoning a witness takes away their 5th Amendment right not to testify. So another question Mueller might have:

10/ My answer was "no" but take that with a grain of salt. Another question I discussed in the piece was how pardons would impact witnesses.

9/ I discussed the first question in this piece in @thehill. Does the President have the power to pardon himself?

8/ We don't know for sure because courts haven't considered these very unusual circumstances. So what are those circumstances?

7/ So if anyone tells you the President can't pardon someone for a particular reason, take it with a grain of salt.

6/ That doesn't mean that there aren't other limits, perhaps coming from other parts of the Constitution, but any limits are untested.

5/ The only limits that are written in the Constitution are that it doesn't affect impeachment or apply to state offenses.

4/ Before I get into the questions, it's important to know that the President's pardon power is extremely broad as to federal offenses.

3/ Since then, many of you asked me what questions Mueller will be looking at. I don't know for certain, but I can make an educated guess.

2/ As I said in that thread, this suggests that Mueller is concerned that the pardon power could be used to hinder his investigation.

1/ Today I wrote this thread about today's news that Mueller is asking Dreeben to research preemptive
MINI-THREAD: What does it mean that Mueller is researching preemptive pardons?
https://twitter.com/renato_mariotti
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Oct 04, 2017 7:09 am

And There It Is

By JOSH MARSHALL Published OCTOBER 3, 2017 9:50 PM

Just out from CNN: Russia Facebook campaign specifically targeted Michigan and Wisconsin and key demographic groups within those states.

From CNN …

A number of Russian-linked Facebook ads specifically targeted Michigan and Wisconsin, two states crucial to Donald Trump’s victory last November, according to four sources with direct knowledge of the situation.


Some of the Russian ads appeared highly sophisticated in their targeting of key demographic groups in areas of the states that turned out to be pivotal, two of the sources said. The ads employed a series of divisive messages aimed at breaking through the clutter of campaign ads online, including promoting anti-Muslim messages, sources said.

It has been unclear until now exactly which regions of the country were targeted by the ads. And while one source said that a large number of ads appeared in areas of the country that were not heavily contested in the elections, some clearly were geared at swaying public opinion in the most heavily contested battlegrounds.

Here’s the whole story.
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/and ... re-1087249


Exclusive: Russian-linked Facebook ads targeted Michigan and Wisconsin
By Manu Raju, Dylan Byers and Dana Bash, CNN
Updated 6:57 AM ET, Wed October 4, 2017


Source: CNN
What $100,000 can buy you on Facebook 01:14

(CNN)A number of Russian-linked Facebook ads specifically targeted Michigan and Wisconsin, two states crucial to Donald Trump's victory last November, according to four sources with direct knowledge of the situation.

Some of the Russian ads appeared highly sophisticated in their targeting of key demographic groups in areas of the states that turned out to be pivotal, two of the sources said. The ads employed a series of divisive messages aimed at breaking through the clutter of campaign ads online, including promoting anti-Muslim messages, sources said.
It has been unclear until now exactly which regions of the country were targeted by the ads. And while one source said that a large number of ads appeared in areas of the country that were not heavily contested in the elections, some clearly were geared at swaying public opinion in the most heavily contested battlegrounds.
Michigan saw the closest presidential contest in the country -- Trump beat Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton by about 10,700 votes out of nearly 4.8 million ballots cast. Wisconsin was also one of the tightest states, and Trump won there by only about 22,700 votes. Both states, which Trump carried by less than 1%, were key to his victory in the Electoral College.
The sources did not specify when in 2016 the ads ran in Michigan and Wisconsin.
close dialog

As part of their investigations, both special counsel Robert Mueller and congressional committees are seeking to determine whether the Russians received any help from Trump associates in where to target the ads.
White House officials could not be reached for comment on this story. The President and senior White House officials have long insisted there was never any collusion with Russia, with Trump contending the matter is a "hoax."
The focus on Michigan and Wisconsin also adds more evidence that the Russian group tied to the effort was employing a wide range of tactics potentially aimed at interfering in the election.
Warner: 'Million-dollar question' how Russians knew who to target on Facebook
Warner: 'Million-dollar question' how Russians knew who to target on Facebook
Facebook previously has acknowledged that about one quarter of the 3,000 Russian-bought ads were targeted to specific geographic locations, without detailing the locations. The company said of the ads that were geographically targeted "more ran in 2015 than 2016." In all, Facebook estimates the entire Russian effort was seen by 10 million people.
Facebook could still be weaponized again for the 2018 midterms
Rep. Adam Schiff, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, told CNN the panel was still assessing the full geographical breakdown of the Russian ads and whether there was any assistance from individuals associated with the Trump campaign.
"Obviously, we're looking at any of the targeting of the ads, as well as any targeting of efforts to push out the fake or false news or negative accounts against Hillary Clinton, to see whether they demonstrate a sophistication that would be incompatible with not having access to data analytics from the campaign," Schiff said Tuesday evening. "At this point, we still don't know."
One person with direct knowledge of the matter said that some of the ads were aimed at reaching voters who may be susceptible to anti-Muslim messages, even suggesting that Muslims were a threat to the American way of life. Such messaging could presumably appeal to voters attracted to Trump's hard-line stance against immigration and calls to ban Muslims from entering the United States.
Schiff said that the committee was planning to investigate ads that suggested Muslims supported Clinton, and how those were geared to people who had been searching online for the Muslim Brotherhood and other items to suggest they were critical of Islam.

This is how easy it is to buy a Facebook ad like the Russian 'troll farms' did

The ads were part of roughly 3,000 that Facebook turned over to congressional investigators this week as part of the multiple Capitol Hill inquiries into Russia meddling in the 2016 elections.
CNN reported last week that at least one of the Facebook ads bought by Russians during the 2016 presidential campaign referenced Black Lives Matter and was specifically targeted to reach audiences in Ferguson, Missouri and Baltimore, according to sources with knowledge of the ads.
Lawmakers have only started to assess the scope of the data, and sources from both parties said the 3,000 ads touched on a range of polarizing topics, including the Second Amendment and civil rights issues. The ads were aimed at suppressing the votes and sowing discontent among the electorate, the sources said.
Members from both parties said that there was a clear sophistication in the Russian ad campaign, and they said they were only just beginning to learn the full extent of the social media efforts.
"It's consistent with everything else we've seen in terms of Russian active measures -- a combination of cyber, of propaganda and paid and social media," said Sen. John Cornyn, the No. 2 Republican who sits on both the Senate Intelligence and Judiciary panels, both of which received the Facebook ads. "So, we're just looking at the tip of the iceberg."
http://www.cnn.com/2017/10/03/politics/ ... index.html


GOP Congressman Met in Moscow With Kremlin-Linked Lawyer at Center of Russia Investigation

Rep. Dana Rohrabacher met in Moscow with Natalia Veselnitskaya two months before she met with Donald Trump Jr.
2 HOURS AGO


Rep. Dana Rohrabacher met with the Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya during a 2016 trip to Moscow, a previously undisclosed tête-à-tête that sheds additional light on the extent to which Moscow-based political operatives sought to influence American officials in the run-up to last year’s presidential election.

In an interview with a pro-Russian Crimean news service, Veselnitskaya said she met with Rohrabacher — a California Republican and arguably the most prominent advocate in Congress for closer relations between Washington and Moscow — in April 2016 to discuss issues surrounding the Magnitsky Act, the punitive American sanctions measure responding to Russian human rights abuses that she has lobbied against.

“We just asked to listen to us, just to listen to the alternative version,” Veselnitskaya said in the interview, seated in a futuristic-looking wingback chair set against a light purple background. She attacked the sanctions measure’s proponents and told Rohrabacher that American lawmakers had been duped.

“‘Do not let yourself be used by scammers,’” she recalled saying.

Kenneth Grubbs, a spokesman for Rohrabacher, said he believed Veselnitskaya was “among many people” Rohrabacher encountered during a congressional delegation he led to Moscow. He added that Rohrabacher “was not focused on her identity” and did not recall the meeting.

While Rohrabacher’s trip to Moscow has been widely reported, his meeting with Veselnitskaya has not.

In the aftermath of the 2016 election, during which U.S. intelligence agencies say Russian operatives ran a campaign to boost Donald Trump’s campaign, Rohrabacher has become a magnet for controversy over his desire for a rapprochement with Moscow.

In August, Rohrabacher met with Julian Assange, who during the campaign posted documents stolen from Democratic Party computer systems, and subsequently tried to broker the WikiLeaks founder’s departure from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he has been in hiding. In exchange for safe passage, Assange would reportedly have provided the White House with evidence that Russia was not responsible for providing WikiLeaks with a tranche of stolen documents.

Two months after her meeting with Rohrabacher, Veselnitskaya met in New York with Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., to discuss Magnitsky and to offer potentially incriminating information about his father’s opponent, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. FBI and congressional investigators are examining that meeting as part of their investigation into whether Trump campaign operatives accepted Kremlin help to attack Clinton.

One of the June meeting’s organizers, the British publicist Rob Goldstone, emailed Trump Jr. and told him Russian government officials had “offered to provide the Trump campaign with some official documents and information that would incriminate Hillary and her dealings with Russia.”

“If it’s what you say I love it,” Trump Jr. replied.

In the interview published Tuesday with News Front, Veselnitskaya said Trump Jr. asked whether she was in possession of any “financial documents” indicating whether Ziff Brothers Investments, an American firm, had transferred what she described as stolen funds to the Clinton campaign. She said she was not in possession of any such documents.



Members of the Ziff family had contributed to the Clinton Global Initiative along with Bill Browder, an American financier who had lobbied for the passage of Magnitsky. Russian authorities had opened a tax investigation against Ziff and Browder, who had invested together, and Veselnitskaya thought this information could be used against Clinton, according to Bloomberg.

For Veselnitskaya, the New York meeting represented but one prong of her long-running effort to undermine the Magnitsky Act. Together with the Russian-born, Washington-based lobbyist Rinat Akhmetshin, another participant in the June meeting, Veselnitskaya has organized a lobbying campaign to promote the law’s repeal.

Such a public campaign in line with Russian foreign-policy goals would be unlikely to occur without at least tacit approval from the Kremlin, former U.S. intelligence officials argue.

Veselnitskaya’s exact relationship with the Russian government remains unclear, but former intelligence officials describe her as a possible intermediary for the Kremlin’s security services.

In her meeting with Rohrabacher, Veselnitskaya said she provided the California Republican with a copy of a documentary produced by Andrei Nekrasov, which questions the credibility of Sergei Magnitsky and Browder, the American financier. Grubbs said Rohrabacher had no recollection of Veselnitskaya handing over the film.

Browder hired Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer, to investigate claims of vast government fraud at a collection of Browder’s firms seized by the Russian state. Magnitsky subsequently died in jail, allegedly beaten to death.

Browder argues that he was killed to cover up a scheme by Russian bureaucrats to embezzle some $230 million from Browder’s companies.

The American law that now bears Magnitsky’s name has become a powerful tool for Washington to target assets belonging to Russian officials implicated in human rights abuses. Its repeal has become a central focus of the Kremlin’s foreign policy.

Rohrabacher has pushed for removing Magnitsky’s name from the law and last year attempted to screen the Nekrasov documentary before the House Foreign Affairs Committee, of which he is a senior member. Rep. Ed Royce, a California Republican and the committee’s chairman, scotched the plan to show the film during a June 14, 2016, committee hearing.

While in Moscow, Rohrabacher and his staff met with a variety of Russian officials and received a collection of documents stamped “confidential” alleging that Browder had duped American lawmakers into passing the sanctions bill, according to the Daily Beast. The document was supplied by officials in the Russian prosecutor-general’s office and raised the possibility that repealing the sanctions law could lead to improved relations between Moscow and Washington.

Paul Behrends, a top Rohrabacher aide, was removed from his job as staff director of the foreign affairs subcommittee chaired by the California Republican after news of his involvement in the meeting was made public.

A vocal advocate of warmer relations between Russia and the United States, Rohrabacher has repeatedly gained the attention of Kremlin officials, who view him as one of their few reliable allies in Congress. In 2012, the FBI even warned Rohrabacher that Russian spies were attempting to recruit him, according to the New York Times.

News Front, based in Crimea, publishes a mix of aggregated and original news in six languages, including Russian and English. One former employee alleges that it is financed by Russian security services, a claim News Front denies.
http://foreignpolicy.com/2017/10/03/gop ... ation/amp/


THE FOURTH MAN
Did a Mole-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named Leak Plot to Elect Trump?
A brave lawyer defending people the Russian government accuses of treason says the case of cyber experts charged with working for the CIA is about the toughest he’s seen.

ANNA NEMTSOVA
08.20.17 12:00 AM ET
MOSCOW—For the first time in his two decades defending people accused of treason, Ivan Pavlov has come across a case he says he truly has trouble getting his head around. Everything about it is a guessing game for the defense lawyer, including the charges against his client, whose name he is not allowed to mention in public.
Speaking at his office in St. Petersburg, under a photograph of President Barack Obama shaking his hand, Pavlov, 46, explained to The Daily Beast that the arrest in Russia last December of accused cyber spies is heavy with high-profile politics.
“This is a dangerous case for everybody, including the FSB investigators, attorneys and journalists,” said Pavlov.
To get a sense of just how fraught it may be, let us go back to January. By then, allegations by the American intelligence community about Russian meddling in the American elections had been building for several months. President Obama had warned Putin, eyeball to eyeball, to stop. Two reports had been issued publicly by the U.S. intelligence services in October and in December, but in guarded and less than explicit language as America’s spooks tried to protect the methods and especially the sources that had led them to their conclusions.
As candidate and as president-elect, Donald Trump had received several classified briefings in August, November and afterward but, in public at least, Trump rejected the conclusion that Russia had interfered in the election he won, calling it fake news and the work of disgruntled losers.
Then on January 6, two weeks before Trump’s inauguration, the American intelligence community issued a much more explicit declassified report based on a much more detailed classified one pulled together from the coordinated reporting and analysis of the FBI, CIA, and NSA.
The key conclusions fingered Russian President Vladimir Putin directly, and because there’s been so much obfuscation by the White House, not to mention the Kremlin, they are worth repeating at some length:

“We assess Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered an influence campaign in 2016 aimed at the U.S. presidential election. Russia’s goals were to undermine public faith in the U.S. democratic process, denigrate Secretary [Hillary] Clinton, and harm her electability and potential presidency. We further assess Putin and the Russian Government developed a clear preference for President-elect Trump. We have high confidence in these judgments ...
“Moscow’s influence campaign followed a Russian messaging strategy that blends covert intelligence operations—such as cyber activity—with overt efforts by Russian Government agencies, state-funded media, third-party intermediaries, and paid social media users or ‘trolls.’...”
On the specific issues of hacking, as opposed to the broader effort to influence the elections, in late December 2016 the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation together with the Department of Homeland Security distributed a report (PDF) that described the core Russian operation known by various aliases including the fanciful names “Cozy Bear” and “Fancy Bear.” The report updated in February also noted that one technical tool, a malware program used in the attack, had been created originally by a Ukrainian programmer—potentially a very important point as the plot thickened.
The assessment overall was as damning as such documents can be, and in it the U.S. intelligence community had claimed to know the decision making at the very highest level of the Russian government: Putin himself.
The Russian government denied all the allegations and has never acknowledged officially or unofficially that it was involved in this alleged multifaceted campaign about which the FBI and CIA seem to have no doubt.

But in the meantime any intelligence officer reading a document liked the January 6 assessment would surmise that it implicated one or more moles inside the upper levels of the Russian government.
Then, at the end of January, the news broke: Russia’s most secret law enforcement agency had arrested one of its own top officers, and that had happened in the middle of an official meeting. Like a scene out of some Brian de Palma movie, FSB officers grabbed their colleague and put a bag over his head—and afterward they made no effort to keep what they had done a secret.
Two top Federal Security Service officials, Sergei Mikhailov (who’d had the bag over his head) and Dmitry Dokuchayev, both from the FSB cyber intelligence department, were accused officially of state treason for passing confidential information to the CIA, according to the Interfax news agency.
But what sort of information? There was certainly no mention in the Kremlin leaks that these two might have exposed Putin’s direct order to undermine the American elections. Far from it. The crimes described by the news reports in Moscow related to hacking operations with no apparent ties to Trump or U.S. politics.
Also arrested was Ruslan Stoyanov, the head of the cybercrime investigation team at Kaspersky Lab, Russia’s major cybersecurity and anti-virus provider.
And then there was Pavlov’s unnamed client: the Fourth Man.
Now, months have passed, and the office of the U.S. Director of National intelligence, responding to a query for this story, declined to comment in any fashion about the December arrests in Russia or the status of the those who were jailed. Obviously if any of those arrested were indeed working with U.S. intelligence, the American government would not want to confirm that.
After the initial burst of publicity the FSB continues to stay quiet about the details of Pavlov’s client’s charges, and the other three as well, creating a thick curtain of secrecy around the crime. Even for the agency that is the successor of the infamous KGB, that is an unusually long silence.
Pavlov had to sign a gag order before he was allowed to represent his client. Now he and his colleagues, an association of lawyers called Team 29, refer to the Fourth Man simply as “Him.” But Pavlov hints at a world of cyberespionage even murkier and more dangerous than that of spy and counterspy.
“I can tell you something about this case: I believe that the FSB keeps Russia’s top cybersecurity experts under arrest so nobody can interview them, use them—or harm them,” said Pavlov. “It looks like authorities plan to keep the investigation low key at least until after the [Russian] presidential elections next year.”
“If he were not locked in prison, my client could have been murdered by now,” Pavlov said, without elaboration.
The secrecy annoys Team 29, which Pavlov founded in 2015 as an informal association of lawyers and journalists fighting against the Russian government’s increasing reluctance to release information amid fears of traitors and spies.
The name “29” comes from the number of an article in Russia’s constitution that says: “Everyone shall have the right to freely look for, receive, transmit, produce and distribute information by any legal way.”
The lawyers teamed up soon after the FSB ordered the deportation of Pavlov’s ex-wife, American citizen Jennifer Gaspar, “as a threat to national security.”
The reason is a secret.
“My wife worked for the Hermitage museum; I am convinced that the FSB deported her to hurt me, their opponent,” Pavlov said.
He explained to The Daily Beast why his mission in Russia is so important: “If before Russia’s conflict with Ukraine there were a couple of treason cases a year, now we count up to 15 state treason cases a year,” Pavlov said. “Our job is to educate people about their rights, so not all talented and skillful Russians flee the country.”
For six months, Team 29 has been visiting the Fourth Man at Lefortovo prison, trying to guess from such materials as have been revealed to them how much material remains hidden.
Was their client accused of selling secrets to the CIA or to FBI? Was he a spy helping to hack emails of the Democratic National Committee? That’s a secret.
Meanwhile one of the arrested FSB officers, Dokuchayev, has been indicted in the United States for economic espionage and a massive hacking of Yahoo accounts.
In Russia, many wonder how it is possible that Russia’s leading officials responsible for cybersecurity could have been passing state secrets abroad. The Daily Beast asked Dmitry Artimovich, considered one of the “hacker elite” in Russia and an expert at ChronoPay, a Russian company specialized for online payments. There are not many experts as knowledgeable as Artimovich when it comes to spam, spearphishing, botnets, and other kinds of cyber attacks.
The Daily Beast asked what people like Pavlov’s secret client might have been up to?
Their motivation might have been career growth, the suspects must have shared too much information about Russian hackers with American special services under Obama’s administration, creating an impression that Russia’s hackers are the most dangerous in the world, Artimovich suggested.
Artimovich had his own reasons not to like the kontora, or “the office,” the nickname for the FSB. In 2013, the security service’s cyber department investigated Artimovich for executing a distributed denial of service attack meant to shut down the website of Aeroflot, Russia's major national airline. The programmer was sentenced to two years and six months in a corrective labor colony, and it was a harrowing experience.
“A guy in my cell tried to recruit me for the FSB,” says Artimovich. “He threatened me that otherwise I would not come out of prison, if I do not work with them.” But Artimovich says he turned down the offer.
Now, Artimovich offers alternative explanations regarding the arrests last December. He does not believe the order for the attack on the American democratic institutions was coming from the Kremlin and suggests that is a “myth created by the American special services.”
At a technical level, Artimovich says he is skeptical about the malware described in the U.S. reports. “The virus collecting passwords from only one system cannot be described as a cyber-weapon," he says.
After Trump won the elections, Russian hackers who used to travel freely around Europe before started to be grabbed by law enforcement. One example is Pyotr Levashov, who was arrested on a U.S. warrant four months ago in Spain. They were picked up one after another.
Artimovich suggests that Mikhailov and his associates provided data to the U.S. on Russian hackers at a time when there was cooperation with Washington, and that now looked “unpatriotic.”
“In 2010 our company ChronoPay informed the FSB leadership that Mikhailov was passing personal information about Russian citizens to the U.S. agencies, [so] the FSB leadership must have been aware of what Mikhailov’s department was doing, but they did nothing to stop them,” says Artimovich.
“Since the arrests, the entire FSB management has been distant from their case,” says Artimovich.
Sergei Markov, a member of the Russian Public Chamber thinks that Mikhailov and other suspects were responsible for cyber attacks in the cyber war with the U.S.
“One thing is clear: that the roots of their treason, of their espionage, stretch far beyond Russia’s border,” Markos told The Daily Beast. “This case has a high political price, I do not think we should share any details with Trump’s critics before the [U.S.] elections for Congress [in November 2018],” Markov explained.
Team 29’s strategy is to turn the most absurd cases into a joke, since “the only thing the state system cannot stand is when you laugh at them,” says Pavlov.
Last year the attorney started a campaign in support of his client Oksana Sevastidi, a 46-year-old mother of seven. In March 2016 Sevastidi had been sentenced for high treason by a secret court in Krasnodar for sending two text messages back in 2008 about Russian movements in the direction of Georgia’s breakaway region of Abkhazia.
“It is absurd for a nuclear power to sentence a market vendor for seven years for state treason,” Pavlov told The Daily Beast.
In March, President Putin pardoned Sevastidi.
But by then there was a long line of convicts charged with treason and extremism asking Team 29 to help them.
Recently Pavlov came to Moscow to meet two more women whose freedom he had won. Annik Kesyan and Marina Dzhadzhgava had served several years for treason for sending messages about Russian army movement in 2008. President Putin pardoned Kesyan and Dzhadzhgava, after Team 29 attracted public attention to their cases.
But Pavlov’s cybersecurity treason case is stuck.
The Kremlin has kept denying any intrusion in the U.S. elections and blamed the reports about Russian hackers on Russophobia. Trump in the immediate wake of the January 6 report conceded grudgingly that Russia had interfered in the U.S. elections, but has since gone back to his allegations of “fake news.”
The level of bitterness about this among veterans of counterintelligence like former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper is palpable. Speaking of Trump at the Aspen Security Forum last month, Clapper said, “I sometimes wonder whether … what he's about is making Russia great again.”
President Putin, for his part, has said he believes that U.S. president Donald Trump agreed with Russia’s denial, which would reinforce the idea that Trump is rejecting the conclusions made by U.S. intelligence agencies and choosing to believe Moscow instead.
Irina Borogan, a Russian independent expert on cybersecurity and cyber wars, told The Daily Beast that it is impossible at a technical level to have any exact attribution about the attacks being ordered by the Kremlin.
“The technical expertise identifies general pieces of coding, the methods of the attack, of botnet, hacker groups,” Borogan said. In this particular case, she said, it might be clear that “the attack was ordered by the Russian Federation, but they did not sign: ‘Moscow, the Kremlin.”
That’s another reason that the positive identification by the U.S. intelligence of Putin as the person who directed the interference in the U.S. elections would seem to be related to human intelligence gathering rather than technical means. But it is also possible that in this dark and dirty game, the four arrested in December were mere scapegoats.
Like many other people in Russia, Borogan, the author of The Red Web about Russia’s attack on internet freedoms, cannot wait to hear what sort of state secrets Pavlov’s client allegedly passed abroad. “We see a uniquely dumb secrecy, which gives us a sense that the suspects are actually not guilty of treason,” Borogan told The Daily Beast.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/did-a-mol ... lect-trump
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Oct 04, 2017 2:54 pm

Russia Worked the GOP Primaries Too

By JOSH MARSHALL Published OCTOBER 4, 2017 1:48 PM

Will there be more of this?

At a panel event at the Heritage Foundation, former Ted Cruz presidential campaign spokesman Ron Nehring said that during the primaries he got a very different response when he criticized Donald Trump than any other candidate. The pattern he noted was about what you’d expect: When he was critical of Donald Trump he was inundated with hostile responses on Twitter and from accounts which followed a particular pattern.

From Roll Call …

Nehring said when he looked closely at those accounts, they fit into similar parameters: no personally identifiable profile picture, no location listed, with certain buzzwords in the profile description.

We tend to focus on the general election for a number of reasons. First of all, that’s where the most extreme interference seems to have occurred. That’s where the theft and later publication of digital documents happened. It seems to be where the circulation of agitprop was most intense – the stuff on Sputnik and RT, and the seemingly ad campaigns on social networks. It was after all the most consequential. It helped make Trump President.

But there’s an additional reason which shouldn’t matter but obviously does. In the general election, there’s a clear and aggrieved wronged party: Hillary Clinton, the Democratic party, Democratic voters, etc. On the Republican side, every primary challenger is at least nominally a Trump supporter now. So there’s no obvious interest to press the point. At a minimum, it’s awkward.

But to an equal degree, the whole subject does not seem to have been looked at that closely. But some have looked at it. Here’s one write up by Ryan Goodman at the JustSecurity website. For now, I’ll just say, I suspect there’s substantially more here than people might expect. Why wouldn’t there be? Trump was clearly a much longer shot early in the primaries than he was in the general. But if you’re for Trump, you needed him to win the primaries to get to the general. Let’s have more eyes on this.
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/rus ... re-1087415
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Oct 05, 2017 6:22 pm

Exclusive: Mueller's team met with Russia dossier author
By Evan Perez, Shimon Prokupecz and Pamela Brown, CNN
Updated 6:03 PM ET, Thu October 5, 2017

Washington (CNN)Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigators met this past summer with the former British spy whose dossier on alleged Russian efforts to aid the Trump campaign spawned months of investigations that have hobbled the Trump administration, according to two people familiar with the matter.

Information from Christopher Steele, a former MI-6 officer, could help investigators determine whether contacts between people associated with the Trump campaign and suspected Russian operatives broke any laws.
CNN has learned that the FBI and the US intelligence community last year took the Steele dossier more seriously than the agencies have publicly acknowledged. James Clapper, then the director of national intelligence, said in a January 2017 statement that the intelligence community had "not made any judgment that the information in this document is reliable."

The intelligence agencies, particularly the CIA, and the FBI took Steele's research seriously enough that they kept it out of a publicly-released January report on Russian meddling in the election in order to not divulge which parts of the dossier they had corroborated and how.
This contrasts with attempts by President Donald Trump and some lawmakers to discredit Steele and the memos he produced.
Ever since the dossier came to light in January, Trump and his allies have repeatedly insisted that it is a complete work of fiction. He told The New York Times this summer that the dossier "was totally made-up stuff." In a series of tweets earlier this year, Trump said the memos were written by a "failed spy" who had relied on "totally made-up facts by sleazebag political operatives."
While the most salacious allegations in the dossier haven't been verified, its broad assertion that Russia waged a campaign to interfere in the election is now accepted as fact by the US intelligence community. CNN also reported earlier this year that US investigators have corroborated some aspects of the dossier, specifically that some of the communications among foreign nationals mentioned in the memos did actually take place.
Hill Russia investigators: Committee still searching for 'any hint of collusion'
Hill Russia investigators: Committee still searching for 'any hint of collusion'
At a news conference this week, Sen. Richard Burr, chairman of the Senate intelligence committee, expressed frustration that Steele has rebuffed efforts to meet with his committee.
"The committee cannot really decide the credibility of the dossier without understanding things like, who paid for it? Who are your sources and sub-sources?" the North Carolina Republican said. "We're investigating a very expansive Russian network of interference in US elections. And though we have been incredibly enlightened at our ability to rebuild backwards, the Steele dossier, up to a certain date, getting past that point has been somewhat impossible."
A representative for Steele did not respond to a request for comment. The special counsel's office declined to comment.
The dossier is a collection of memos that were initially intended as political opposition research, sources tell CNN. Steele was hired in the summer of 2016 by a Washington firm that was already collecting opposition research about Trump. The project was initially funded during the GOP primaries by anti-Trump Republicans, but Democrats started picking up the tab once Trump became the presumptive nominee in the spring.
Grassley: 'No way of avoiding' public hearing for Trump Jr
Grassley: 'No way of avoiding' public hearing for Trump Jr
In the weeks before the US intelligence community published a January report detailing Russian meddling efforts in the 2016 election, top officials at the FBI, CIA and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence discussed including parts of the Steele dossier in the official intelligence document, sources tell CNN.
The debate came in part because the FBI was concerned about being alone in shouldering the responsibility of briefing the incoming President about the allegations. FBI officials hopes that including the dossier allegations in the intelligence report would show the entire intelligence community speaking in one voice.
Then-FBI Director James Comey expressed concerns to his counterparts that if the FBI alone presented the dossier allegations, then the President-elect would view the information as an attempt by the FBI to hold leverage over him.
But the intelligence community had bigger concerns, sources tell CNN. The classified version of the report would be disseminated beyond then-President Barack Obama and the President-elect to other officials including members of Congress. And if that report included the dossier allegations, the intelligence community would have to say which parts it had corroborated and how. That would compromise sources and methods, including information shared by foreign intelligence services, intelligence officials believed.
In the end, the decision was made that the FBI and Comey personally would brief the incoming President on the allegations. That briefing occurred January 6 in a one-on-one conversation following a broader intelligence briefing on Russian meddling provided to then-President-elect Trump and his key staff.
Trump later told The New York Times in July that he took Comey's briefing on the dossier to be an attempt to hold it as leverage over the new President.
"In my opinion, he shared it so that I would think he had it out there," Trump said.
Exactly what Comey feared had come to pass.
http://www.cnn.com/2017/10/05/politics/ ... index.html


TRUMP-RUSSIA ‘GOLDEN SHOWER’ DOSSIER IS NOW BEING INVESTIGATED BY SPECIAL COUNSEL ROBERT MUELLER
BY JASON LE MIERE ON 10/5/17 AT 11:01 AM

Donald Trump Jr. Speaks To Senate Investigators About June 2016 Russia Meeting

DONALD TRUMP
RUSSIA DOSSIER
RUSSIA INVESTIGATION
An explosive—and thus far largely unsubstantiated—dossier containing various allegations about President Donald Trump’s links to Russia is now being investigated by special counsel Robert Mueller, according to a Reuters report on Wednesday. Compiled by former British intelligence agent Christopher Steele, the dossier has previously been the subject of inquiries from the FBI.

Related: Trump’s “pee tape” dossier ruined Russian reputations, new lawsuit claims

The news of Mueller’s team assuming control of the dossier came just hours after the Senate intelligence committee said it had “hit a wall” in its own probe into claims put forward in the dossier. Specifically, Chairman Richard Burr said the committee had been frustrated in its efforts to interview Steele and “cannot decide the credibility” of the dossier without discovering its sources and who paid for it. Steele has largely gone into hiding since the contents of the dossier were made public.

The dossier was prepared by Steele on behalf of research firm Fusion GPS, reportedly after being paid to do so first by Republicans and then Democrats during the 2016 election campaign. The founder of Fusion GPS, Glenn Simpson, was interviewed behind closed doors by the Senate Judiciary Committee—ostensibly over Republican allegations that Simpson worked on behalf of lobbyists for the Russian government.

Following the hearing, Simpson’s lawyer said his client told Congress that Fusion GPS is “proud of the work it has conducted and stands by it.”

The dossier contained allegations of collusion between Trump aides and Russian operatives during the 2016 election. It also alleges that the Russian government has incriminating information on the president that could make him susceptible to blackmail. Notably, it claims that Russia possesses a videotape featuring Trump getting prostitutes to urinate on a bed in a Moscow hotel room in which former President Barack Obama once stayed with first lady Michelle Obama. The allegation has earned the findings the nickname the “pee tape” dossier, or the “golden shower” dossier.

Those and other claims remain largely unverified and have been vehemently denied by Trump, who told The New York Times last month that it was “made-up stuff.” On Tuesday, three Russian investors filed a lawsuit in Washington claiming their reputations had been damaged by the dossier.

But its being taken up by the special counsel is just the latest sign that it is being taken at least somewhat seriously by investigators. After acquiring the dossier last year, both then President Obama and President-elect Trump were briefed about it by U.S. intelligence officials in December. It was published by Buzzfeed News in January.
http://www.newsweek.com/trump-russia-do ... ler-678695





Amid talk of resignation, Donald Trump throws John Kelly under the bus in hacking scandal
Bill Palmer
Updated: 7:10 pm EDT Thu Oct 5, 2017
Home » Opinion

Yesterday, Donald Trump allegedly booted General John Kelly from an Air Force One flight at the last minute. This became more suspicious when the White House offered a non-realistic explanation for the incident. Then came word that Kelly may resign by the end of the week. Now, in what is not a coincidence, Kelly is suddenly embroiled in a hacking scandal which appears to have been designed to make him look bad.


This evening it’s leaked out that General Kelly was using a personal cellphone for government business on an at least occasional basis, and that the phone in question had been hacked (source: Politico). This story makes Kelly look negligent, both because he was improperly using a private phone, and because the phone was exhibiting symptoms of strange behavior for months, which should have tipped him off that something was wrong. But Kelly gave up the hacked phone at least a month ago. The real story here is that this scandal is just now leaking out after yesterday’s events – because there’s only one place the leak could be coming from.


Consider the sequence of events here. On Wednesday morning, John Kelly is suspiciously booted from Air Force One (source: Bloomberg). On Wednesday afternoon, Sarah Huckabee Sanders is asked about the incident, and responds with the bizarre excuse that Kelly is always on the manifest and simply didn’t get on that particular flight. Then on Wednesday afternoon, three sources say they expect Kelly to be gone from his job by the end of the week (source: Democratic Coalition). Then today, a month-old Kelly scandal suddenly and conveniently leaks to the media.


This phone hacking incident could only have been leaked by Donald Trump or his people; no one else would have known all of these details. The timing of the leak, one day after the the Air Force One incident and the buzz of Kelly’s potential resignation, cannot be a coincidence. It’s not yet clear if Trump is trying to soften the ground for booting Kelly out of a job, or if he’s merely trying to punish Kelly by publicly making him look bad. But it is clear that something is afoot.
http://www.palmerreport.com/opinion/hac ... tion/5333/
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Oct 07, 2017 10:03 pm

But as every passing month brings more leaks, revelations in the press, and more progress in the investigations, the Steele dossier has generally gained in credibility, rather than lost it.


The Trump-Russia dossier: why its findings grow more significant by the day
As US officials investigate potential collusion between Trump and Moscow, the series of reports by the former UK intelligence official Christopher Steele are casting an ever darker shadow over the president
by Julian Borger in Washington

Saturday 7 October 2017 01.30 EDT Last modified on Saturday 7 October 2017 09.41 EDT
Nine months after its first appearance, the set of intelligence reports known as the Steele dossier, one of the most explosive documents in modern political history, is still hanging over Washington, casting a shadow over the Trump administration that has only grown darker as time has gone by.

It was reported this week that the document’s author, former British intelligence official, Christopher Steele, has been interviewed by investigators working for the special counsel on Russian interference in the 2016 election.

The Senate and House intelligence committees are, meanwhile, asking to see Steele to make up their own mind about his findings. The ranking Democrat on the House committee, Adam Schiff, said that the dossier was “a very important and useful guide to help us figure out what we need to look into”.

The fact that Steele’s reports are being taken seriously after lengthy scrutiny by federal and congressional investigators has far-reaching implications.

Originally commissioned by a private firm as opposition research by Donald Trump’s Republican and then Democratic opponents, they cite a range of unnamed sources, in Russia and the US, who describe the Kremlin’s cultivation over many years of the man who now occupies the Oval Office – and the systematic collusion of Trump’s associates with Moscow to help get him there.

The question of collusion is at the heart of the various investigations into links between Trump and Moscow. Even a senior Republican, Richard Burr, the chairman of the Senate intelligence committee, admitted this week it was an open question.

Burr said his committee needed to talk Steele himself to assess the dossier properly and urged him to speak to its members or staff. According to an NBC report on Friday, Steele had expressed willingness to meet the committee’s leaders.

In his remarks this week, Burr said his committee had come to a consensus in supporting the conclusions of a US intelligence community assessment in January this year that Russian had conducted a multi-pronged campaign to interfere in the 2016 election, in Trump’s favour.

It is a finding that echoes the reports that Steele was producing seven months earlier. Trump has called the assessment a “hoax”, but there is no sign the three agencies that came to that conclusion, the CIA, FBI and NSA, have had any second thoughts in the intervening months.

“Many of my former CIA colleagues have taken [the Steele] reports seriously since they were first published,” wrote John Sipher, a former senior officer in the CIA’s National Clandestine Service on the Just Security website.


Christopher Steele, the former MI6 officer who compiled the reports. Photograph: Victoria Jones/PA
“This is not because they are not fond of Trump (and many admittedly are not), but because they understand the potential plausibility of the reports’ overall narrative based on their experienced understanding of both Russian methods and the nature of raw intelligence reporting.”

Sipher emphasised the “raw” nature of the reports, aimed at conveying an accurate account of what sources are saying, rather than claiming to be a definitive summary of events. There are spelling mistakes and rough edges. Several of the episodes it described remain entirely unverified.

But as every passing month brings more leaks, revelations in the press, and more progress in the investigations, the Steele dossier has generally gained in credibility, rather than lost it.

Trump Tower meeting
One of the more striking recent developments was the disclosure of a meeting on 9 June 2016 in Trump Tower involving Trump’s son, Donald Jr, and son-in-law, Jared Kushner, with a Russian lawyer closely tied to the government, Natalia Veselnitskaya.

After the meeting was first reported on 8 July this year, the president’s son claimed (in a statement dictated, it turned out, by his father) that it had been about adoptions of Russian children by Americans.

The next day that was exposed as a lie, with the publication of emails that made it clear that Veselnitskaya was offering damaging material on Hillary Clinton, that an intermediary setting up the meeting said was “part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr Trump”.

“If it’s what you say, I love it, especially later in the summer,” Donald Trump Jr replied.

Just 11 days after that meeting – but more than a year before it became public – Steele quoted a source as saying that “the Kremlin had been feeding Trump and his team valuable intelligence on his opponents, including Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton”, for several years.

A later report, dated 19 July 2016, said: “Speaking in confidence to a compatriot in late July 2016, Source E, an ethnic Russian close associate of Republican US presidential candidate Donald Trump, admitted that there was a well-developed conspiracy of cooperation between them and the Russian leadership.”



The report said that such contacts were handled on Trump’s end by his then campaign manager, Paul Manafort, who participated in the 9 June Trump Tower meeting.

Manafort has denied taking part in any collusion with the Russian state, but registered himself as a foreign agent retroactively after it was revealed his firm received more than $17m working as a lobbyist for a pro-Russian Ukrainian party. He is a subject of special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation and in July the FBI raided his home in Virginia.

Other key protagonists in the Steele dossier have surfaced in subsequent disclosures and investigation. Two of them, an Azeri-Russian businessman Araz Agalarov and his son Emin, are described in emails released by Donald Trump Jr as offering to serve as intermediaries in passing on damaging material on Clinton and is reported to have help set up the Trump Tower meeting.

Carter Page
Another key figure in the Steele dossier is Carter Page, an energy consultant who Trump named as one of his foreign policy advisors. Steele’s sources describe him as an “intermediary” between Manafort and Moscow, who had met a Putin lieutenant and head of the Russian energy giant, Rosneft, and a senior Kremlin official, Igor Diveykin.

Donald Trump and his son, Donald Jr.
Donald Trump and his son, Donald Jr. Photograph: Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images
Page denied meeting either man on his trips to Moscow, which he has said were for business purposes and not connected to his role in the Trump campaign.

Nonetheless, he has become a focus of investigation: it was reported in April that that the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court issued an order last year for his communication to be monitored. To obtain the order, investigators would have to demonstrate “probable cause” to believe Page was acting as an agent of a foreign power. Page has said he welcomed the news of the order as it demonstrated he was being made a scapegoat of the investigation.

Elsewhere, a Steele memo in September 2016 mentions a “Mikhail Kulagin” who had been withdrawn from the Russian embassy in Washington because of his “heavy involvement in the US presidential election operation”.

There was no diplomat of that name at the mission, but there was a Mikhail Kalugin; five months later, it emerged that he had left the embassy in August 2016.

McClatchy reported he was under investigation for his role in Russia’s interference in the campaign. The BBC reported that the US had identified Kalugin as a spy.

Facebook
More recently, there has been a slew of revelations about the role of disinformation spread by Russians and other eastern Europeans posing as Americans on social media. The New York Times reported that hundreds and possibly thousands of Russian-linked fake accounts and bots on Facebook and Twitter were used to spread anti-Clinton stories and messages.

Facebook disclosed that it had shut down several hundred accounts that it believes were fabricated by a Kremlin-linked Russian company to buy $100,000 in ads that often promoted racial and other divisive issues during the campaign.

This week, Facebook handed over to Congress 3,000 ads bought by a Russian organisation during the campaign, and it was reported that many of those ads, some of them Islamophobic, were specifically targeted on swing states, Michigan and Wisconsin.

A Steele memo from August 2016 states that after Russia’s hand had been discovered in the hacking of Democratic party emails and passing them to WikiLeaks for publication, another avenue of influence would be explored.

The memo says “the tactics would be to spread rumours and misinformation about the content of what already had been leaked and make up new content”.

The Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya, who met Donald Trump Jr and other campaign figures.
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The Russian official alleged by Steele’s sources to be in charge of the operation, Sergei Ivanov – then Putin’s chief of staff – is quoted as saying: “The audience to be targeted by such operations was the educated youth in America as the PA [Russian Presidential Administration] assessed that there was still a chance they could be persuaded to vote for Republican candidate Donald Trump as a protest against the Washington establishment (in the form of Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton).”

The Steele dossier said one of the aims of the Russian influence campaign was to peel off voters who had supported Bernie Sanders in the Democratic primaries and nudge them towards Trump.

Evidence has since emerged that Russians and eastern Europeans posing as Americans targeted Sanders supporters with divisive and anti-Clinton messages in the summer of 2016, after the primaries were over.

Unsubstantiated claims
There are other details in the Steele dossier that have echoed in subsequent news reports, but there are also several claims and accounts for which no supporting evidence has emerged.

The startling claim that Trump was filmed with prostitutes while staying at a Moscow hotel in November 2013, when he was staging the Miss Universe contest there, has not been substantiated in any way.

Nor has the allegation that Trump’s lawyer and vice-president of the Trump Organisation, Michael Cohen, travelled to Prague in August 2013 to conspire with a senior Russian official. In a letter to the House intelligence committee, Cohen said he never went to Prague and took issue with a string of other claims in the dossier.

It has however emerged that Cohen was involved in exploring a real estate deal in Moscow for the Trump Organisation while the campaign was in full swing. He has been summoned to appear in open hearing before the Senate intelligence committee later this month.

The Steele dossier, its author and the firm who hired him, Fusion GPS, have become favoured targets for Trump’s loyalists on Capitol Hill. They point to the fact that the genesis of the documents was a paid commission to find damaging facts about Trump.

But the dossier has not faded from view. Instead, it appears to be growing in significance as the investigations have gathered pace.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/201 ... ier-moscow
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Thu Oct 12, 2017 11:16 pm

EXCLUSIVE: Website targeting black Americans appears to be elaborate Russian propaganda effort

The mystery of Black Matters US.
CASEY MICHEL
OCT 12, 2017, 3:37 PM

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The "Black Matters US" site claims to be for African-Americans, but who actually runs it?
THE "BLACK MATTERS US" SITE CLAIMS TO BE FOR AFRICAN-AMERICANS, BUT WHO ACTUALLY RUNS IT?
In mid-September, shortly after Facebook and Twitter had removed hundreds of accounts attributed to Russian operatives, a statement appeared on the White House’s petition site. Created by “F.B.,” the petition called to “[p]rotect the rights of minorities in Social Media,” complaining that “Facebook, Twitter and Instagram suppress the rights of African American minority by systematically censoring the black free speech [sic].” As evidence, the petition pointed to a handful of “African American pages” recently taken down, including the “Blacktivist” and “WilliamsandKalvin” accounts outed by CNN and The Daily Beast, respectively, for their ties to Russia.

The petition, however, listed one other Facebook page taken down: “blackmattersus.mvmnt,” which the petition described as one “of the most popular public pages among the young African Americans.” An Internet archive search reveals that the page, which hasn’t been covered elsewhere, was known as “Black Matters US.”

Like the other accounts revealed thus far, the Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter accounts for “Black Matters US” have all been removed. Unlike other accounts unveiled as Russian, though, “Black Matters US” took its operations beyond social media and attempts to organize on-the-ground protests.

“Black Matters US” maintains its own news site, describing itself as a “nonprofit news outlet” that came into existence because “we are witnessing the changes in American society that equal to ‘Civil Rights Movement’ resulted in Long hot summer of 1967 [sic].”

Moreover, the “Black Matters US” site links to a podcast the site put together, known as “SKWAD 55.” The podcast – which, according to “Black Matters US,” provides “strong Black voices” and “[d]elightful music from the streets strait to your hearts! [sic]” – further maintained its own Facebook and Instagram accounts, which have also since been removed, as well as a Tumblr account that posted, among other things, descriptions of Hillary Clinton as “Satan’s daughter,” “The root of all evil,” and “Himmlery aka (‘Death for Dollars’) – ‘The Benghazi Bullshitter.’”
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“Black Matters US” also maintains a Google+ account – which included a post calling Bernie Sanders “the only [candidate] who really cares about people” – and a YouTube account that featured, among other things, a clip calling for viewers to join a #HillaryClintonForPrison2016 flashmob, with the video’s subject torching a piece of paper that says “Hillary Clinton fuck u!!!”


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gTajCXO7ae0

The images posted on the “Black Matters US” Facebook page maintained the same style as the other Russia-linked accounts discovered thus far, including stilted English and identifiable watermarks. And themes pushed by “Black Matters US” parallel other accounts revealed as run by Russian operatives.

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Facebook did not respond to repeated questions from ThinkProgress, and a Twitter spokesperson told ThinkProgress they are “unable to comment on individual accounts, for privacy and security reasons.” Given the evidence, though, it appears that “Black Matters US” may present the first instance of an attempt at growing beyond social media, or organizing on-the-ground protests, among foreign operatives running fake accounts in the U.S. – especially given that “Black Matters US” promoted, among other things, a Sept. 2016 rally in Cleveland organized by the Russia-linked “Blacktivist” account.
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Anonymous writers
None of the Russia-related accounts previously uncovered – including “Secured Borders,” “Heart of Texas,” and “LGBT United” – maintained stand-alone outlets pushing coverage of their respective topics. With its domain registered through a proxy in Nov. 2015, the “Black Matters US” site claimed that it had a roster of seven writers on its staff, including Tylissa Hide and Jake Dubois. A search didn’t turn up any writings at other publications from the authors listed. (That said, like other accounts – including one discovered by CNN – one of the “writers” working at “Black Matters US,” listed as “Yan Big Davis,” appeared to sell merchandise publicly. The website through which Davis sold his merchandise declined to pass along contact information, or information on how much merchandise was sold.)

Only one writer biography on the “Black Matters US” site contained any identifiable information. According to “Black Matters US,” a writer named Crystal Johnson interned “with the local NBC affiliate WEYI.” A spokesperson for WEYI told ThinkProgress they have no record of anyone by that name working there.

A Twitter feed for a “Crystal Johnson” registered in Dec. 2015, however, was recently suspended. According to Google Cache, the feed has posted material with #BlackLivesMatter hashtags, including at least one that generated thousands of retweets.



There were a handful of individuals identified on the “Black Matters US” YouTube page, helping promote material from the site. But only one individual, Nolan Hack, was identified outright on a video as an official member of “Black Matters US.” During the clip, Hack – who calls himself a “Black revolutionary activist” on Twitter – described the differences between “Black Matters US” and Black Lives Matter. “We’re a little more different because we’re a little more radical,” he said. “The name can get confusing. I think it’s safe to say we’re both fighting for the same thing, and we’re both fighting for a good thing.”


When contacted via email, Hack said he was “no longer with Black Matters,” and declined to provide contact information for “Black Matters US.” He didn’t respond to further questions. Another rapper who contributed a video to “Black Matters US” told ThinkProgress he only communicated with the site via email and Instagram, adding that he didn’t know why the page’s social media accounts had been removed.

Political leanings
The “Black Matters US” site, which stopped posting in September, broke its coverage into multiple sections, including “policy brutality,” “racism,” “entertainment,” and “your voices,” among others. Much of the material, including within the “meetups” section, appears user-generated, allowing the site to effectively act as something of a posting board for upcoming events. One of those events was a Cleveland rally organized by the Russia-linked “Blacktivist” account.


“BLACK MATTERS US” HELPED PROMOTED MATERIAL FROM THE “BLACKTIVIST” ACCOUNT – WHICH WAS RECENTLY REVEALED TO BE RUSSIAN.
Promoting such events “is an interesting way for them to start to connect and get possibly inroads with local, actual organizing groups,” Melissa Ryan, founder of the Factual Democracy Project, told ThinkProgress. “I think that’s one of the things that’s been missed about this online-to-offline stuff that you see with a lot of this presumed Russian propaganda, is part of it is they seem to be trying to build trust with local groups, not just fan outrage but also get themselves established within these communities.”

The site also pushed a notable stream of anti-Clinton material, including describing Clinton as a “Candidate For the Corporate Elite” and asking if “The Clintons [are] Playing Their Usual Election Tricks On Blacks[.]”

Another post from 2016 praised the far-right activist Dinesh D’Souza for a documentary on Clinton, describing D’Souza’s film as “indeed ‘a must watch’ documentary” that will “bring the hidden truth in the USA politics to light.” Concluded the post, “we recommend our readers to make copies of this movie, which will help them and their friends make the right decision on the Election Day, especially in view of the fact that Hillary Clinton is already not in the good books of the Black community to be voted as President of the United States of America.”

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Rather than pushing Donald Trump’s candidacy, however, the site highlighted and praised the campaigns of Sanders and Jill Stein. One post called Sanders “a man of true morals and values,” while another said Ajamu Baraka, Stein’s vice presidential candidate, was a “Black hero” who “has fought for Black freedom.” The post also described Baraka – who has claimed that the 2014 downing of flight MH17 over Ukraine was a “false flag” operation against Russia – as “an internationally recognized … geopolitical analyst.”

Branching out
While the “Black Matters US” Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter accounts have all been removed, its YouTube and Google+ accounts, both of which went live in February 2016, remain up. (As the Google+ header photo awkwardly reads, “I didn’t believe the media – so I became one.”) Like the other accounts, broken English runs through the text accompanying the posts. One video also illustrates the confusion about whether the site is pronounced “Black Matters us” or “Black Matters U.S.”

While many of the videos are repackaged clips of police brutality, one video shows the “Official BlackMattersUS Music Video.” The description illustrates the kind of language found through the various “Black Matters US” verticals: “Dear subscribers, we are glad to present you our new video with a great new song ‘Body Reace Mix’ which was recorded by @roughtheruler especially for @blackmattersus! Just listen to the words and watch the video, it really has sense! … Just let’s never give up!”



https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_cont ... 720T4-Q3cc


One original video also exhorts viewers to join in a flashmob to support a series of former activists currently jailed for the murder of a police officer. Notably, the narrator of this original video speaks in a clearly non-American accent – much like the actors behind the “Williams and Kalvin” account recently identified as backed by Russian operatives.

The host of the “SKWAD 55” podcast – whose posts, like those mentioned above, also contained a unique watermark and similar thematic elements – also spoke with a non-American accent, identifying himself only as “your boy, DJ Makunzie.” While the podcasts appeared to be mostly music, one episode exhorted listeners for a nationwide protest last October, while another episode called for African-Americans to form an “independent authority.”

There was one other aspect of “Black Matters US” that separated it from other accounts unearthed thus far. On the site, which didn’t feature any advertisements or offers of paid subscription, users could make donations via PayPal. Requests for comment sent to the email address associated with the account went unanswered.

While all signs point toward “Black Matters US” – including the stylistic and thematic overlap with the other sites already unveiled; the timing and the watermarks; and the fact that, like other accounts revealed, it aimed at inflaming racial tensions in the U.S. – being part of a broader operation of fraudulent accounts, the social media giants have thus far failed to confirm or deny whether “Black Matters US,” and “SKWAD 55” alongside, were part of the Russian operatives’ portfolio. “I think it’s maddening,” Ryan said about Facebook’s reticence to share its findings. “The public is owed some serious transparency.”

Thankfully, with the House Intelligence Committee saying it will reveal the Russian Facebook ads shortly, we may soon have answers. Until then, though, the petition remains on the White House site – and “Black Matters US” remains up as a website that is “working for you to know the reason and the effect of what is really going on.”
https://thinkprogress.org/black-matters ... 25b18f262/
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Oct 13, 2017 7:57 pm

The packet of information Fionda provided to the Justice Department focused on two Sputnik employees: Cassandra Fairbanks and Lee Stranahan


Feinberg, who worked at Sputnik from January until May, turned over the flash drive filled with emails during an interview by an FBI agent and Justice Department national security lawyer for over two hours on Sept. 1. In August, another ex-Sputnik staffer, Joe Fionda, also gave the Justice Department a packet of information with hundreds of documents. Yahoo News obtained copies of the documents Feinberg and Fionda provided to law enforcement.

Hunt, the Sputnik spokeswoman, noted that the ex-staffers had “copied corporate emails and internal documents.”


“copied corporate emails and internal documents.”.......boooo fuckin' hoooo


FBI document cache sheds light on inner workings of Russia’s U.S. news (and propaganda) network

Hunter Walker and Michael IsikoffOctober 13, 2017

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Quote from the Rossiya Segodnya [Sputnik] Style Guide. (Photo illustration: Yahoo News; photos: AP[2], Getty Images [3]).

WASHINGTON — On Jan. 23, 2017, the day he started as a Washington correspondent for Sputnik, Andrew Feinberg was emailed a copy of a “style guide” that laid out the organization’s mission.

The 103-page handbook for publications of Sputnik’s Kremlin-owned parent company, Rossiya Segodnya, made it clear that traditional journalistic neutrality was not the company’s mandate. Instead, Sputnik reporters were told they should provide readers “with a Russian viewpoint” on issues and “maintain allegiance” to the country.

“Our main goal is to inform the international audience about Russia’s political, economic and ideological stance on both local and global issues,” the guide reads. “To this end, we must always strive to be objective but we must also stay true to the national interest of the Russian Federation.”

The guide, which was written in English, is included among more than 10,000 internal Sputnik messages on a thumb drive that Feinberg provided to the FBI, which is investigating the agency for possible violations of the law that requires agents of foreign nations to register with the Justice Department. The guide appears to contradict repeated claims by Sputnik executives that they follow traditional journalistic standards and operate independently of the Kremlin. are dedicated to objective reporting. For example, in August, when Sputnik opened a headquarters in Scotland, Sputnik editor and director Nikolai Gorshkov told a local news agency, “No one has ever called me from Moscow.”

“I can assure you there is no hidden agenda,” Gorshkov said.

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Contacted by Yahoo News, Sputnik spokeswoman Beverly Hunt denied that the style guide applied to the work of the company’s American reporters.

“To our knowledge, Feinberg has never been employed by Rossiya Segodnya, which is a Russian news agency and does not provide services on US territory,” Hunt said in a written statement.

In fact, Feinberg’s email shows the style guide was sent to him by his editor at Sputnik, Peter Martinichev.

Feinberg, who worked at Sputnik from January until May, turned over the flash drive filled with emails during an interview by an FBI agent and Justice Department national security lawyer for over two hours on Sept. 1. In August, another ex-Sputnik staffer, Joe Fionda, also gave the Justice Department a packet of information with hundreds of documents. Yahoo News obtained copies of the documents Feinberg and Fionda provided to law enforcement.

Hunt, the Sputnik spokeswoman, noted that the ex-staffers had “copied corporate emails and internal documents.”

Feinberg’s interview was part of an apparently widening investigation by the bureau into the role played by Sputnik and the Kremlin-owned television network, RT (formerly Russia Today), in seeking to shape the views of American audiences. In a report last January, the U.S. intelligence community identified both news organizations as part of “Russia’s state run propaganda machine” that serve “as a platform for Kremlin messaging” and played key roles in Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “influence campaign” during the 2016 presidential election. Yahoo News has also learned that the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence is investigating RT and Sputnik as part of the broader probe into Russia’s election meddling. RT recently disclosed that a U.S. shell company that handles much of its production and operations in Washington was instructed by the Justice Department to register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act. The move led RT to take down a series of ads it put up in Washington and New York mocking the intelligence community’s assertion Russian media outlets interfered in the election.

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Yahoo News has independently verified the authenticity of some of the Sputnik emails Feinberg gave to the Justice Department. The messages depict a company that stuck closely to the Kremlin’s party line.

The documents also suggest Sputnik journalists had relationships with hackers linked to Russian intelligence and key American allies of Donald Trump. The information Fionda sent to the Justice Department highlighted a tweet in which one of Sputnik’s radio hosts boasted about his role in connecting Guccifer 2.0, the hacker behind the Democratic National Committee leaks, to Roger Stone, an early architect of Trump’s campaign. On April 30, Feinberg emailed Martinichev about a party he attended that was sponsored by the conservative blog Gateway Pundit. Feinberg said he stepped out for a cigarette and encountered Michael Flynn Jr., the son of Trump’s former national security adviser, Michael Flynn.
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“I introduced myself, told him I was Sputnik’s WH reporter and that I’d love a chance to give him and his dad to tell their story without the Russia conspiracy mongering. He said he and his dad are BIG fans of Sputnik and gave me his contact information,” Feinberg wrote.

Feinberg told Yahoo he and Flynn Jr. communicated via text messages after that initial conversation. Feinberg said he did not land an on-the-record interview or write about their conversations. The younger Flynn—who did not respond to a request for comment — worked with his father and was a member of Trump’s transition team. The elder Flynn was fired from his position as White House national security adviser in February after it was revealed he misled officials about his conversations with the Russian ambassador, Sergey Kislyak.

In a Jan. 26 letter — seeking credentials from the Washington Foreign Press Center — that was on Feinberg’s thumb drive, Sputnik’s U.S. editor in chief, Mindia Gavasheli, described RIA Global LLC as “a United States entity that has a contract to act as the United States bureau of Sputnik News, the multi-media news initiative of the Federal State Unitary Enterprise Rossiya Segodnya International Information Agency.” In another email — seeking credentials from the House of Representatives press gallery — Gavasheli acknowledged that “most of” their financing came from the Russian government, though he had claimed “roughly 10 to 20 percent of it comes from ads, paid subscriptions and other commercial activities.” In May, Sputnik was denied Capitol Hill press credentials because of its state funding.

It’s unclear exactly how many people Sputnik is reaching. In an April email, Feinberg asked Vasily Minakov, the company’s head of global public relations and communications, for information about the size of Sputnik’s audience. Minakov would not divulge those figures, but he noted Sputnik’s large social media footprint.

“We are not disclosing these figures openly. What we may say that Sputnik has around 14 M subscribers in total on social media,” Minakov said.

The emails Feinberg provided to the Justice Department show how Sputnik echoed the Kremlin’s message. In one instance, Feinberg’s bosses urged him to come up with stories deflecting blame for the chemical-weapons attack on Syrian civilians last spring away from Russia’s Syrian ally, President Bashar Assad. Feinberg told Yahoo News that he quit earlier this year over pressure to advance a conspiracy theory, heavily promoted by Fox News commentator Sean Hannity, about the death of a young staffer at the Democratic National Committee.

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At Sputnik’s newswire, Feinberg’s work was edited by a group of four editors that included D.C. journalist Michael Hughes and Zlatko Kovach. The team was led by Martinichev and his deputy, Anastasia Sheveleva, both Russians. Multiple emails Feinberg provided to the Justice Department indicate he had to get approval and instructions from his superiors on “angles” for everything he wrote. A Feb. 23 message from Hughes was one of many times this rule was communicated to Feinberg.

“Always pitch story angle BEFORE you do anything, get approval before writing and submitting a story. You should never submit an unapproved story. We might kill it if angle does not fit,” Hughes wrote.

The word “before” was bolded, underlined and highlighted in yellow. All of the emails cited in this story are being presented as they were written, including any spelling and grammar mistakes.

According to the emails on Feinberg’s thumb drive, he also had to get approval for every question he asked White House officials including the press secretary at the daily briefing.

“We do it in this way to ensure we are on the same page regarding the question we ask on the record. It should never be a surprise,” Martinichev wrote in a March 13 missive.

In her email to Yahoo News, Hunt, the Sputnik spokeswoman, defended this pre-approval process as a standard procedure.

“Most editors in any news agency need to know questions for a briefing. It’s a regular practice,” Hunt said.

At Yahoo News and most U.S. media companies, editors may suggest and discuss questions with their White House correspondents, but there is no formal approval process. The emails suggest an extraordinary level of micro­management.

While Feinberg’s immediate supervisors worked in Washington, the emails show Sputnik staff in Moscow were regularly involved in the publication of stories. Sputnik stories followed rigid style guidelines. In a Feb. 21 message to Feinberg, Hughes described how the American editors learned the ropes.

“When I first started they sent a couple ‘enforcers’ from Moscow that reviewed ALL of our stories in the beginning,” Hughes wrote, adding, “It beat the main guidelines into our brains – a little tough love, so to speak. I called it style indoctrination.”

Hunt provided Yahoo News with a statement from Hughes where he said this comment was “obviously a joke.”

“We ‘indoctrinate’ the very same way all news agencies ‘indoctrinate’ their newswire writers,” said Hughes.

On Feb. 9, Feinberg complained to Hughes that Sputnik staff in Moscow added an entire paragraph to a story he wrote without informing him.

“I didn’t write it, it’s slanted at best, and my name is on it,” Feinberg wrote.

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The story in question covered comments Florida Sen. Marco Rubio made about U.S. sanctions imposed against Russia for allegedly interfering in last year’s presidential election and for taking control of the Ukrainian territory of Crimea in 2014. Moscow has vehemently denied meddling in America’s presidential race, and insisted its presence in Crimea was supported by a democratic referendum. The paragraph added to Feinberg’s story reflected Russia’s positions on both issues.

“US-Russian relations soured following disagreements over the crisis in Ukraine. The United States imposed sanctions against Russia after Crimea held a referendum in 2014 in which a vast majority of its residents decided to reunify with Russia. Russian officials have denied meddling in Ukraine’s internal affairs and have called allegations of interfering in US elections absurd and an attempt to distract from domestic issues,” it said.

Hughes informed Feinberg that the disclaimers about Ukraine and alleged election intervention were required at Sputnik.

“We must write that paragraph- that’s the Russian position not to mention the truth,” Hughes wrote, adding, “Editors get in trouble for leaving it out. So, the option would be to take your name off the article if you have a problem with the last paragraph.”

“I suppose I’ll just have to get used to it and wrap my head around it. My name can stay on for now,” Feinberg replied.

“I had same experience!” said Hughes.

Hunt, Sputnik’s spokeswoman, defended the mandatory paragraph that was added to Feinberg’s story.

“Background with the second side position is required in stories for balance and a usual practice in many newswire services,” she said.

Hughes further argued the paragraph contained “simple facts.”

“Russian government officials have repeatedly denied involvement in U.S. elections. And we restated the Russian government’s position on the Ukraine crisis. No slant involved,” Hughes said.

The documents provided by Fionda and Feinberg could fuel growing demands by members of Congress that Sputnik and RT register with the Justice Department under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA), which was passed by Congress in 1938 to combat Nazi propaganda. The law requires foreign agencies engaged in lobbying or efforts influence American public opinion to file detailed reports on their funding and operations. There is an exemption in the law for state-funded media organizations engaged in legitimate news gathering.

Fionda’s information packet included a letter to the Justice Department urging the government to investigate whether Sputnik is violating FARA. Fionda said he worked at the company from Sept. 5 to Oct. 19, 2015, and felt Sputnik engaged in “possible FARA violations” and was acting as a direct agent of the Russian government.

Sputnik has said both Fionda and Feinberg were fired due to performance-related issues. Indeed, the emails Feinberg provided to the Justice Department show multiple instances where his editors expressed unhappiness with his work, including his trouble mastering the company’s rigid story format and falling behind Sputnik’s fast-paced schedule. Sputnik’s spokeswoman, Hunt, reiterated these complaints about Feinberg’s work, and said he “continually failed to meet the most fundamental newswire language and requirements.”

In interviews with Yahoo News and others, Feinberg has said his last straw at Sputnik came when his editors pushed him to advance a conspiracy theory about the fatal shooting of DNC staffer Seth Rich. During a meeting on his last day at the company, May 26, Feinberg said his editors told him to ask whether Rich could have been involved in last year’s leak of DNC emails that law enforcement has attributed to the hacker Guccifer 2.0 and Russian intelligence. Rich was shot in Washington, D.C., last July, shortly after the emails were published by WikiLeaks. Though the case remains unsolved, police have said they believe Rich was killed in a botched robbery.

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The thousands of documents Feinberg provided to the Justice Department do not show any discussion of Rich. They do include multiple instances of Feinberg being told to ask officials about the possibility Assad might not have been responsible for the chemical attacks in Syria.

On April 19, Martinichev wrote to Feinberg and pressed him to ask the White House “if they are reviewing all these recent controversial data” indicating other militants may have used chemical weapons in Syria “after their statement that only Assad had this capability.” Feinberg followed up by emailing multiple senior officials and asking an assistant to former press secretary Sean Spicer if he could ask a question about “chemical weapons capability” in Syria during that day’s televised White House briefing.

“It would make my editors’ day if Sean could be so kind as to call on me by name, if he can remember and its not a problem,” Feinberg wrote.

Sputnik has an office in the heart of downtown Washington about three blocks from the White House. The company was launched in 2014 after Putin dissolved the country’s main state news agency and replaced it with Rossiya Segodnya. Putin decreed that this new company should be focused on promoting Moscow’s agenda beyond its borders, and he tapped Dmitry Kiselyov — a conservative television host and staunch supporter of the Russian government — to head the new company.

Sputnik’s Washington bureau includes staffers who work for a wire service, a radio station and a website. The radio station began broadcasting in July after Sputnik took over a local Washington station that featured bluegrass music. The company’s newswire is less overtly political than its other offerings. Based on the messages on Feinberg’s thumb drive, the wire service largely published short briefs with rapid-fire quotes and updates. Sputnik’s radio station and web page offer a unique brand of political commentary. The homepage features a blog mockingly called “The Russians Did It” that satirizes claims that the Kremlin interfered in last year’s presidential race. The introduction to the blog dismisses these allegations from American intelligence agencies as the “ludicrous” product of a “fantasy realm.”

“Welcome to the treasury of all things Russia did… not do,” the blog’s introduction begins. “Take a considered view of all the allegations usually accepted as incontrovertible fact by the mainstream media.”

Sputnik’s expansion in Washington and the larger changes to Russia’s state media apparatus came after Moscow’s military leadership began emphasizing propaganda as a weapon in the country’s arsenal. In February 2013, Gen. Valery Gerasimov, the operational head of the Russian armed forces, published a treatise advocating for expanding the country’s strategy to include “informational … and other non-military measures.” Gerasimov called for using “informational actions” along with “special-operations forces and internal opposition to create a permanently operating front through the entire territory of the enemy state.”

“Long-distance, contactless actions against the enemy are becoming the main means of achieving combat and operational goals,” Gerasimov wrote.

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Experts in the U.S. and Europe have dubbed this “Gerasimov doctrine” of using media and technology to destabilize rivals “hybrid warfare.” Earlier this year, a group of nine countries including the United States teamed up to establish the European Centre of Excellence for Countering Hybrid Threats. According to a press release from NATO, the center, which is based in Finland, will be dedicated to research and training to combat these new methods of warfare, and “actively counter propaganda with facts.”

“Countering hybrid threats is a priority for NATO, as they blur the line between war and peace — combining military aggression with political, diplomatic, economic, cyber and disinformation measures,” the press release said.

Here in America, some see Russia’s actions in last year’s election as a textbook example of this hybrid warfare. The U.S. intelligence community report that called Sputnik and the RT television network key parts of this “influence campaign” described “Kremlin loyal political figures, state media, and pro-Kremlin social media actors” working in concert during the U.S. campaign. Recently, Russia has been linked to a $100,000 Facebook ad campaign and an army of Twitter accounts with content designed to ramp up political tensions amid the American election. This month, Facebook said it estimated the ads tied to a Russian Internet agency were seen by about 10 million people before and after last year’s election.

The intelligence report noted the Russian state media outlets cast President Trump as “as the target of unfair coverage from traditional US media outlets that they claimed were subservient to a corrupt political establishment” and hailed his “victory as a vindication of Putin’s advocacy of global populist movements.” According to the report, the Kremlin-owned media organizations also attacked Trump’s opponent, Hillary Clinton, with allegations of corruption, rumors of health problems and damaging emails hacked from her campaign and published by WikiLeaks.

The packet of information Fionda provided to the Justice Department focused on two Sputnik employees: Cassandra Fairbanks and Lee Stranahan.

Stranahan came to Sputnik in April. He previously had worked at the conservative website Breitbart, under Trump’s former campaign guru and adviser Steve Bannon. The month before he joined Sputnik, Stranahan sent out a tweet boasting that he was the one who “introduced” former Trump campaign adviser Roger Stone to Guccifer 2.0, the hacker who obtained emails from the Democratic National Committee that were published by WikiLeaks. American officials have said Guccifer 2.0 was working with Russia’s military intelligence agency GRU as part of the coordinated effort to help Trump in the election.
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Fionda flagged the tweet in the packet of information he sent to the FBI.

Stone told Yahoo News that Stranahan was indeed the person who first told him about Guccifer 2.0.

“Introduce doesn’t mean introduce in the classic sense. He told me who he was. He believed he had hacked the DNC — that he was a hacker,” explained Stone.

Stone is a key figure in the congressional investigation into possible links between Trump’s campaign and the Kremlin, in part because he seemed to know in advance that WiklLeaks would be publishing emails hacked from Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta’s account. Last month, he testified before the House Intelligence Committee about his communications with Guccifer 2.0 and WikiLeaks, saying that he never communicated directly with WikiLeaks’ mastermind Julian Assange but learned about the site’s plans to publish emails damaging to Clinton from an intermediary. He described the intermediary as a journalist, but has refused to identify him on the grounds that their conversations were off the record. Committee leaders said this week they may subpoena Stone to require him to identify the intermediary.

Stranahan said it’s not him. “I don’t know anything about that,” he said. “I have no relationship with anyone at all at WikiLeaks.”

However, Stranahan did confirm he connected Stone to the hacker. He also said Guccifer 2.0 offered him documents that his editors at Breitbart were wary of publishing.

“Breitbart didn’t want to run with them for whatever reason, and they were like, ‘Have Guccifer post them first,’” Stranahan said.

Stranahan noted he has discussed his interactions with Guccifer publicly on Twitter and in video broadcasts. He doesn’t believe the Justice Department has any reason to be concerned about his communications with the hacker.

“I didn’t do anything wrong,” Stranahan said.

Fionda also alerted law enforcement about another colleague who claimed to be in communication with Guccifer 2.0. In the information Fionda gave to the Justice Department, he included copies of Twitter messages in which Cassandra Fairbanks discussed exchanging messages with the hacker. Fairbanks is an activist who wrote for Sputnik from late 2015 until this year, when she joined the pro-Trump website Big League Politics.

Fairbanks told Yahoo News that Fionda was making too much of what she describes as a journalistic endeavor.

“I did communicate with Guccifer. I tried to interview him because … I was covering the leaks,” Fairbanks explained. “I published like all of my conversations with him so they’re public.”
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Fairbanks said the hacker offered her documents, but she was unable to write about them on Sputnik. Hunt, the Sputnik spokeswoman, said Fairbanks asked the company’s U.S. editor in chief for permission to publish the emails and was denied.

“The answer was: ‘Absolutely not! We don’t have a legal department on the spot to clear them and we have no idea whether these emails are authentic.’ That was the end of the story for Sputnik,” Hunt said.

In a text message exchange with Yahoo News, Fionda said he alerted investigators about Stranahan and Fairbanks because they “bragged” about being in touch with the hacker, while having connections to the Trump campaign and the Russian government through their work at Sputnik. In his letter, Fionda described Stranahan, Stone and Fairbanks as some of the hacker’s highest profile associates.

“Fairbanks, along with Roger J. Stone Jr., and Lee Stranahan of Breitbart News, are the three most prominent public figures to have disclosed contact with the purported Russian GRU persona Guccifer 2,” Fionda wrote.

The documents provided by Feinberg and Fionda also shed light on their fears the company was operating as an unconventional spy agency — a worry that was apparently shared by some inside the Trump White House.

In his conversations with investigators, Feinberg, whose previous jobs included writing for telecommunications industry trade publications and the Washington-insider website The Hill, detailed his concern that Sputnik’s reporting efforts may have served another purpose.

“In some ways, Sputnik was functioning as open source intelligence gathering,” Feinberg said in an interview with Yahoo News.

According to the emails, Sputnik reporters regularly covered the White House, Capitol Hill, the Pentagon and the State Department, where they gathered information that would be of interest to the Russian intelligence services. Messages on the thumb drive Feinberg gave to the Justice Department show Sputnik’s team constantly peppering government officials about policy matters with a focus on those relevant to Russia, including American aid to its rivals, U.S. diplomatic engagement with Moscow and ongoing negotiations and military operations in Syria. And this questioning of officials didn’t always result in news reports. While the emails show that Sputnik editors generally had a voracious appetite for quotes to publish on their news wire, in multiple messages, Feinberg expressed confusion that stories were not being published after he did work he was assigned to do.

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“I’m guessing nothing came of my quote from McCain?” feinberg asked in one email to an editor dated Feb. 2.

The messages show that Martinichev, one of Feinberg’s editors, repeatedly pressed him to get business cards from White House aides, including Spicer, to share with the Sputnik office.

“Did you have a chance to get Spicer’s business card? Is it possible in this crowd?” Martinichev asked Feinberg in a Feb. 2 message.

“Do you have any business cards from the deputies? Any contacts?” Martinichev pressed him in another email six days later.

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When he had meetings with sources, Feinberg was asked to provide reports with details far beyond what a typical American publication would demand of its reporters. He was reprimanded when he asked questions that weren’t approved by his superiors and when he failed to provide extensive details about his contacts with sources.

After he left Sputnik, Feinberg began to wonder whether he was being used to gather information for the Kremlin, not the public.

“I have friends and colleagues who stopped talking to me because I took this job. It’s humiliating,” Feinberg wrote in one frustrated email to an editor, later adding, “Honestly if the stigma is something I won’t ever be able to overcome I’m not sure what I’ll do.”

Feinberg’s fear that Sputnik could be operating as an unconventional intelligence agency was apparently shared by at least some officials in President Trump’s press shop. One former White House staffer told Yahoo News they “always viewed that as a potential issue.”

“Sputnik is a well-known arm of the Kremlin,” the staffer said. “Department of Defense blocks White House access to their website because it is not secure.”

When Feinberg was in the West Wing, the staffer said the White House press shop did its “best not to engage with him, particularly on more sensitive matters.”

“I think it was definitely something those who had to interact with him daily considered albeit maybe not in a totally serious way. I never ever once responded to an inquiry and urged colleagues to do the same,” the staffer said.

Since Feinberg’s departure, Sputnik correspondent Cara Rinkoff has reported from inside the West Wing.

Sputnik’s spokeswoman, Hunt, dismissed the concerns the company is engaged in espionage.
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“Seven percent of Americans believe chocolate milk comes from brown cows … So it’s not a surprise that some people fear they could be abducted by aliens or that Sputnik could be a spy agency,” said Hunt, adding, “And probably even some former White House staffers share these views. If anyone has been playing spy it would be fired staffers who copied corporate emails and internal documents.”

Fionda, whose background includes stints as an actor and film producer — and under the pseudonym “subverzo” has ties to the activist and hacking communities including Occupy Wall Street and Anonymous — shared some of Feinberg’s concerns about being used for intelligence gathering.

In the letter Fionda sent the Justice Department asking it to look into whether Sputnik is violating the Foreign Agents Registration Act, he said that he was asked to write articles that contained “categorically untrue” information while working at the company. Fionda also said he was fired after Sputnik’s U.S. editor in chief Mindia Gavasheli asked him to obtain and publish emails that had been hacked from former CIA Director John Brennan, a request Fionda said he saw as “a solicitation to espionage.” Gavasheli previously denied this in an interview with Yahoo News where he said Fionda was fired for lying about an illness in his family to take time off work.

Along with all of the intrigue, the document cache also has details of daily life at Sputnik. Many of the emails paint a picture of a mundane workplace — albeit with a Russian twist. Email signatures and instructions from the IT department often came in Cyrillic, leaving American staffers asking for translators. On Feb. 23, reporter Delal Pektas sent a cheery email to the other Sputnik editors and reporters.

“Happy Defender of the Fatherland Day!” she wrote. “I brought some bagels — please help yourselves!“
https://www.yahoo.com/amphtml/news/fbi- ... 17008.html



Reince Priebus interviewed by Mueller's Special Counsel today

INT. FBI BUILDING - DAY

BOB MUELLER: Mr. Priebus can I get you anything? Coffee, water, a diet...

REINCE PRIEBUS: Trump did it! Trump called Russia and they did it!
:P

Image


ORBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE :P

Image
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Oct 15, 2017 11:05 pm

NEWS

An ex St. Petersburg ‘troll’ speaks out Russian independent TV network interviews former troll at the Internet Research Agency

Meduza 13:18, 15 октября 2017

Pixabay
One of the many remarkable things about 2017 is that American journalists no longer have the Irish Republican Army in mind when writing “IRA,” which is now used most often to mean the Internet Research Agency — the “troll factory” responsible for buying ads on social media and polluting American online news discussion in an apparent effort to destabilize U.S. democracy. On October 15, the Russian independent news network Dozhd published the latest development in this ongoing story: an interview with a man who allegedly worked for the IRA from 2014-2015. Meduza summarizes that interview here.
Dozhd calls him “Maxim,” but that’s not his real name. The TV network says Max’s employment records confirm that he spent 18 months at 55 Savushkina in St. Petersburg, working for the Internet Research Agency (IRA), Russia’s infamous “troll factory.” He quit in early 2015, before Donald Trump even announced his presidential candidacy, but not too soon to get a taste of the “factory’s” war on Hillary Clinton.

The foreign desk

According to Max, the IRA’s “foreign desk” had open orders to “influence opinions” and change the direction of online discussions. He says this department within the agency considered itself above the “Russian desk,” which he claims is generally “bots and trolls.” The foreign desk was supposedly more sophisticated. “It’s not just writing ‘Obama is a monkey’ and ‘Putin is great.’ They’ll even fine you for that kind of [primitive] stuff,” Max told Dozhd. People in his department, he says, were even trained and educated to know the nuances of American social polemics on tax issues, LGBT rights, the gun debate, and more.

Max says that IRA staff were tasked with monitoring tens of thousands of comments on major U.S. media outlets, in order to grasp the general trends of American Internet users. Once employees got a sense of what Americans naturally discussed in comment forums and on social media, their job was to incite them further and try to “rock the boat.”

According to Max, the Internet Research Agency’s foreign desk was prohibited from promoting anything about Russia or Putin. One thing the staff learned quickly was that Americans don’t normally talk about Russia: “They don’t really care about it,” Max told Dozhd. “Our goal wasn’t to turn the Americans toward Russia,” he claims. “Our task was to set Americans against their own government: to provoke unrest and discontent, and to lower Obama’s support ratings.”

Covering their tracks

The trolls at the IRA were also careful about covering their tracks. Max says anyone working in the foreign desk was required to post comments using a VPN, to disguise their Russian origins. He says an employee once shared a photograph taken at the IRA’s office, which was especially forbidden, because photos can contain revealing metadata. This incident also revealed that the IRA employed staff to spy on its own trolls, Max says.

Even two years before Americans actually voted on their next president, St. Petersburg trolls were told to attack Hillary Clinton, reminding Internet users about her wealth, her husband’s legacy, and her various corruption scandals. The IRA even encouraged employees to watch Netflix’s “House of Cards,” supposedly as an education in U.S. politics. Staff would also monitor each other’s use of English, nitpicking over grammar and punctuation, in order to weed out ESL formulations.

A separate “Facebook desk” supposedly battled endlessly with the website’s administrators, who regularly deleted their fake accounts just as IRA staff managed to “develop” them into supposedly powerhouse influencers (accounts with many friends and posts). IRA staff challenged these decisions, Max said. Facebook staff would write to them, saying, “You are trolls,” and the agency would respond, invoking the U.S. Constitution, and arguing that they believed in what they were doing, and were entitled to free speech. Sometimes they even won, according to Max.

Growing sophistication

As time went on, the IRA’s themes grew more complex, and staff were even subjected to lessons on U.S. tax policy, so they could expand their trolling to tax-related issues. A separate “Analytics desk” would supposedly supply his department with Excel files containing hyperlinks to news stories and short summaries of how to comment on these articles, in order to incite American Internet users and derail political discussions.

When the U.S. presidential race was just starting, the IRA supposedly conducted classes on which of the early candidates were best for Russian interests. Max says the IRA even maintained a “secret department” that sent staff to the United States for certain undisclosed tasks.

Max says the international desk had about 200 employees, each earning 50,000 rubles ($870) a month. Staff would work two days, then have two days off, before repeating the schedule. People worked 12-hour shifts, he says.

When the job stopped being fun

Before he left, Max says the IRA started demanding more from its staff, fining employees more often and focusing more on the quantity than the quality of their output. Then there was a change in management and all his co-workers were fired, he says.

The staff changes apparently followed an employee’s decision to grant an interview to local reporters, including leaked photos of the IRA’s St. Petersburg office. “They found the culprits quickly,” Max says. “They detained them in the basement, and interrogated them, asking, “What did you do? How did you do it? Whom did you tell?’”

In early 2015, something happened, Max says, and the IRA apparently started burning documents. He didn’t see it himself, but he says he could smell the fire in the office building. Staff were ordered to delete their records, people started being reassigned, “and everything got much worse,” Max claims.

After the leak and the interview, IRA administrators apparently started meeting specially with employees, telling them that they should be proud, not ashamed, of their work. “Because every country has their own kind of organization that defends their national interests and distributes civil unrest,” managers told staff. “This is information war, and it’s official.”

Read the full interview in Russian at Dozhd.
272
https://amp.meduza.io/en/feature/2017/1 ... speaks-out
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Tue Oct 17, 2017 11:11 am

No wonder Rybolovlev wants to emphasize that his association with Bank of Cyprus essentially ended four years ago; he’s trying to signal that he had nothing to do with this money laundering mess. The same benefit of the doubt can not be said of Wilbur Ross, who became Vice Chairman of Bank of Cyprus in 2014, and continued to hold that position until he resigned last month (link) – so he could become Donald Trump’s Secretary of Commerce. Ross isn’t going to be easily able to explain this away, and he’s not the only one still holding the Bank of Cyprus hot potato.
http://www.palmerreport.com/opinion/don ... ring/2159/



Who Among Us Hasn't Misplaced a Couple Billion Dollars?

Wilbur Ross joins the crew of spectacularly conflicted oligarchs.

Charles P. Pierce

The gang at Forbes—Motto: Even We Can't Believe What Grifters They Are—presented us on Monday with a mystery. Wilbur Ross, the Secretary of Commerce, seems to have pulled the old fast shuffle when he went into government work, hiding billions-with-a-B in his own assets in trusts set up for various family members.

What he left unsaid, however, was that between the November election and January inauguration, he had quietly moved a chunk of assets into trusts for his family members, leaving more than $2 billion off of his financial disclosure report—and therefore out of the public eye. Ross revealed the existence of those assets, and the timing of the transfer, when Forbes asked why his financial disclosure form listed fewer assets than he had previously told the magazine he owned. The hidden assets raise questions about whether the Secretary of Commerce violated federal rules and whether his family owns billions in holdings that could create the appearance of conflicts of interest. Federal law requires incoming cabinet members to disclose assets they currently own, as well as any that produced income during the current and previous calendar years, even if they no longer own the assets. Ross says he followed all rules. But how someone could apparently hold $2 billion in assets, without producing big income that would show up on a financial disclosure report, raises more questions than answers.
Yes, it does, and one of those questions is, "How brazen do these clucks have to be before we all kick back at the budding plutocracy that's right in front of our eyes?" Remember Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin who, somehow, forgot to mention $100 million in assets on his disclosure forms? (Who among us hasn't done that, I ask you.) And, of course, the granddaddy of them all, the president* and his phantom tax returns. I mean, we're not asking to see all of them at once, just the ones that are in Cyrillic.

But, as he told Forbes, Ross knows what the real problem here is.

Not including the undisclosed assets, Ross retains an estimated $700 million, still enough to make him one of the richest members of Donald Trump’s cabinet but not enough to qualify for The Forbes 400 list of America’s richest people. “I don’t care if I’m on the list or not,” he said. “That frankly doesn’t matter. But what I don’t want is for people to suddenly think that I’ve lost a lot of money when it’s not true.”
He doesn't care how much of a rule-bending oligarch he is. He doesn't care that he might be skating on the thin edge of the law in how he hid his money. He doesn't even care if he misses the Forbes 400! All Wilbur Ross cares about is that people don't start thinking he's not as rich as he was. This, of course, makes him a perfect cabinet member in this administration*, which is led by a guy who has, in every sense, an inflated sense of self-worth. Fitzgerald was right. The rich are different from you and me. Some of them are inexplicable.

http://www.esquire.com/news-politics/po ... ion-trust/
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Oct 18, 2017 11:00 am

Putin's Chef Financed St. Petersburg Troll Factory
NEWS | OCT 17, 2017

U.S. officials believe Russian oligarch and chef Yevgeny Prigozhi is the main financier behind the Internet Research Agency (IRA), a Kremlin-linked troll factory that spread fake news during the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign. Prigozhi has close ties to Vladimir Putin:

Prigozhin has a colorful past. He spent nine years in prison in the 1980s for fraud and robbery, according to Russian media reports. After his release, he went into the catering business -- renovating a boat and opening New Island, one of a half-dozen upscale restaurants he owns in St. Petersburg. Putin turned to him to cater his birthday parties as well as dinners with visiting leaders, including President Bush and Jacques Chirac of France. A headline in The Moscow Times referred to Prigozhin as Putin's "Personal Chef."

Prigozhin subsequently won lucrative catering contracts for schools and Russia's armed forces. He escorted Putin around his new food-processing factory in 2010. By then he was very much a Kremlin insider with a growing commercial empire.
CNN says internal IRA documents show the troll factory had a "Department of Provocations' dedicated to sowing fake news and social divisions in the West."

The United States Treasury Department sanctioned Prigozhin personally in December 2016 for providing financial support for Russia's military occupation of Ukraine. Treasury added two of his companies to the list of sanctioned operations in June 2017.

Read more: Exclusive: Putin's 'chef,' the man behind the troll factory (CNN)
https://investigaterussia.org/media/201 ... ll-factory




Putin's 'chef,' the man behind the troll factory

Exclusive: Putin's 'chef,' the man behind the troll factory
(CNN)Yevgeny Prigozhin is a Russian oligarch dubbed "chef" to President Vladimir Putin by the Russian press. In 2002, he served caviar and truffles to President George W. Bush during a summit in St. Petersburg. Before that, he renovated a boat that became the city's most exclusive restaurant.

But his business empire has expanded far beyond the kitchen. US investigators believe it was Prigozhin's company that financed a Russian "troll factory" that used social media to spread fake news during the 2016 US presidential campaign, according to multiple officials briefed on the investigation. One part of the factory had a particularly intriguing name and mission: a "Department of Provocations" dedicated to sowing fake news and social divisions in the West, according to internal company documents obtained by CNN.

Twitter gives profile names of Russian-linked accounts to Senate investigators
Prigozhin is one of the Kremlin's inner circle. His company is believed to be a main backer of the St. Petersburg-based "Internet Research Agency" (IRA), a secretive technology firm, according to US officials and the documents reviewed by CNN. Prigozhin was sanctioned by the US Treasury Department in December of 2016 for providing financial support for Russia's military occupation of Ukraine. Two of his companies, including his catering business, were also sanctioned by Treasury this year.

CNN has examined scores of documents leaked from Prigozhin's companies that show further evidence of his links to the troll factory.

One contract provided IRA with ways to monitor social media and a "system of automized promotion in search engines."

House intel committee to release Russia-linked Facebook ads
Other documents show that the monthly budget for IRA was around $1 million in 2013 -- split between departments that included Russian-language operations and the use of social media in English. The "Department of Provocations" offers this mission: "how do we create news items to achieve our goals."

Another document shows a 2013 contract drawn up by an employee at Concord Management and Consulting, Prigozhin's main business, based in St. Petersburg. The contract was for 20 million rubles (then $650,000) for construction work at the IRA and was signed by the director general of IRA.

Additionally, company records reviewed by CNN show that an employee at Concord Consulting subsequently joined IRA.

Several emails and calls from CNN to Concord Consulting went unanswered. The IRA no longer exists.

Exclusive: Russian-linked Facebook ads targeted Michigan and Wisconsin
Prigozhin is notoriously image-conscious. Last year, he filed 15 lawsuits against the Internet company Yandex, using a Russian law that obliges online search engines to remove "illegal, inaccurate, or irrelevant information." The case was subsequently dropped.

The Internet Research Agency has long been in the crosshairs of US investigations. A declassified assessment by the US intelligence community published in January concluded that the "likely financier of the so-called Internet Research Agency of professional trolls located in Saint Petersburg is a close Putin ally with ties to Russian intelligence," though it did not name Prigozhin.

Prigozhin has a colorful past. He spent nine years in prison in the 1980s for fraud and robbery, according to Russian media reports. After his release, he went into the catering business -- renovating a boat and opening New Island, one of a half-dozen upscale restaurants he owns in St. Petersburg. Putin turned to him to cater his birthday parties as well as dinners with visiting leaders, including President Bush and Jacques Chirac of France. A headline in The Moscow Times referred to Prigozhin as Putin's "Personal Chef."
Prigozhin subsequently won lucrative catering contracts for schools and Russia's armed forces. He escorted Putin around his new food-processing factory in 2010. By then he was very much a Kremlin insider with a growing commercial empire.

Origins of IRA


The Internet Research Agency was based at 55 Savushkina Street in St. Petersburg before it officially ceased operations on December 28, 2016. But investigative journalist Andrei Zakharov, who works for the business media group RBC, says its work continues.

"They have a lot of legal entities," Zakharov says, "and they still, I think, change it every year or every two years."

Company registrations retrieved by CNN appear to confirm that. Another company at 55 Savushkina Street is Glavset, whose director general has the same name as the boss of IRA. The name matches that of a former regional police chief in St. Petersburg.

CNN has also tried to reach Glavset's management without success.

Glavset lists the "creation and use of databases and information resources" as well as the "development of computer software, advertising services and information placement services" among its activities. It was listed as a company in the Russian legal entities registry in February 2015.

Yahoo: Russian trolls watched 'House of Cards' to learn about US politics
A short time later, it began advertising for staff on a headhunting site (hh.ru). One post looking for a copywriter says the job involves "writing diverse texts for the Internet and content for social networks." The posting offered a salary of 30,000 rubles a month (then a little over $500) and said experience was unnecessary. Recruits would work with a team of "young and enthusiastic colleagues" in "a comfortable and stylish office," according to the posting.

That's not how Ludmila Savchuk remembers IRA, where she worked for two months in 2015. She told CNN a card system restricted access to other floors and employees were always under camera surveillance.

"Employees are not really allowed to talk to each other," she said.

Savchuk says she estimates that now "there are about 1,000 people working at Savushkina Street. And this is just one building." She believes other employees work remotely.

Another former employee, interviewed anonymously by the independent Russian TV network RAIN this week, said: "There was a goal -- to influence opinions, to lead to a discussion. ... There was a strategy document. It was necessary to know all the main problems of the United States of America. Tax problems, the problem of gays, sexual minorities, weapons."

The former employee said the mission was to "get into the dispute yourself to fire it up, try to rock the boat." He gave an example: "It was necessary to write that sodomy is a sin. This would always get you a couple of dozen likes."

He said IRA made its employees watch the US TV series "House of Cards" to improve their English.

Not unlike the fictional White House of Frank Underwood, Savchuk says, "The atmosphere there reminded me of some anti-utopian Gulag."
http://www.cnn.com/2017/10/17/politics/ ... index.html
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Sat Oct 21, 2017 10:45 am

New memo suggests Russian lawyer at Trump Tower meeting was acting 'as an agent' of the Kremlin

Natasha Bertrand
Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya speaks during an interview in Moscow, Russia November 8, 2016. REUTERS/Kommersant Photo/Yury Martyanov
Russian lawyer Veselnitskaya speaks during an interview in MoscowThomson Reuters
The Russian lawyer who met with top Trump campaign officials at Trump Tower brought with her a memo that echoed Kremlin talking points.
The man whom the memo targeted said it suggests she was acting as an "agent" of the Kremlin rather than independently.
The memo sheds new light on the meeting, which included Donald Trump Jr. and Jared Kushner.
The Russian lawyer who met with President Donald Trump's son, son-in-law, and campaign chairman last June at Trump Tower brought a memo with her to that meeting that contained many of the same talking points as one written by the Russian prosecutor's office two months earlier.

The memo Natalia Veselnitskaya provided to the Trump campaign last year focused on banker-turned-human rights activist Bill Browder, whose reputation has become inextricably linked to the global human-rights campaign he launched in 2009 after tax lawyer Sergei Magnitsky died in a Russian prison.

Magnitsky was thrown in jail and beaten to death after he discovered a $230 million tax fraud scheme that implicated high-level Kremlin officials, Browder says. The US passed the Magnitsky Act in 2012 that sanctioned high-level Russian officials accused of human rights abuses and corruption.

In her memo, which was obtained in full by Foreign Policy, Veselnitskaya described Browder as "a fugitive criminal accused of tax fraud in Russia ... who in 1998 renounced US citizenship for tax reasons."

She called Browder's story about Magnitsky "never-existent" and said the Magnitsky Act was the product of "a massive three-year lobbying campaign" that began "a new round of the Cold War between" the US and Russia.

The memo further alleged that Browder's "largest investor was Ziff Brothers Investments," which helped him buy up Gazprom shares and bypass restrictions imposed by the Kremlin on foreign direct investment in the early 2000s.

"The scheme employed to buy shares not only allowed them to be purchased at prices 1.5 times lower than it should have been, through American depositary receipts, but also allowed the investors and their consultants to avoid state control and monitoring of sources of capital," Veselnitskaya's memo said.

The document's language closely mirrored the contents of a memo provided to Republican US Rep. Dana Rohrabacher by the office of Russia's chief federal prosecutor Yuri Chaika while Rohrabacher was in Moscow last April.

The document is marked “confidential” but made the rounds on Capitol Hill upon the lawmaker's return to the US and was obtained by Business Insider.

Donald Trump Donald Trump Jr.U.S. President-elect Donald Trump speaks with his son Donald Trump Jr. during a news conference in the lobby of Trump Tower in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., January 11, 2017.REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

According to that memo, "the adoption of this [Magnitsky] Act was preceded by a three-year lobbying campaign of its supporters, which began even before the events described in this Act."

Chaika's memo, like Veselnitskaya's, says Browder "renounced his US citizenship in 1998 for tax reasons" and implemented "an illegal scheme of buying up Gazprom shares by foreign companies to bypass the ban on foreign direct investments...without permission" from the Kremlin.

"The applied share purchase scheme not only allowed buying the shares at a price 1.5 times lower than through the American depository receipts, but also allowed investors and their advisers avoid government control and monitoring of capital sources," read the Chaika document.

Veselnitskaya's memo was two pages longer than the one the Russian prosecutor's office gave to the congressman. It contained more allegations against Browder as well as references to Rohrabacher — who the memo alleged was prevented from checking "the objectivity" of Browder's story by his colleagues on the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

But the memos' similarities shed light on music publicist Rob Goldstone's original email to Trump Jr. pitching the meeting.


"The Crown prosecutor of Russia ... offered to provide the Trump campaign with some official documents and information that would incriminate Hillary and her dealings with Russia and would be very useful to your father," Goldstone wrote.

The memo Veselnitskaya gave to Trump Jr. contained only one reference to Clinton, claiming that it could "not be ruled out" that the Ziff Brothers "financed" Clinton's campaign. Still, many speculated when Trump Jr. released the emails that Goldstone's remark about Russia's "crown prosecutor" was a reference to Chaika.

Chaika is close to Aras Agalarov, Trump's former business partner, whose son is represented by Goldstone, and Veselnitskaya "is very close to the Chaika family," the Atlantic's Julia Ioffe reported in July.

Browder told Business Insider on Monday that "the Veselnitskaya memo has exactly the same talking points as the Russian government's position on the Magnitsky case."

"That is the strongest indication to date that Veselnitskaya is an agent of the Russian government and not some independent operator as she claims," he said.

Read Veselnitskaya's memo at Foreign Policy and Chaika's memo below:
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/s ... ent=safari


trump's CIA guy makes FALSE statement ...now WHY would he do that?


CIA chief makes incorrect claim about Russian meddling
DEB RIECHMANN
Associated Press

CIA Director Mike Pompeo said Thursday that U.S. intelligence agencies had concluded that Russian interference in last year's election did not affect the outcome, but that's not correct.

At a national security forum sponsored by a Washington think tank, Pompeo said, "The intelligence community's assessment is that the Russian meddling that took place did not affect the outcome of the election."
http://www.chicagotribune.com/sns-bc-us ... story.html
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: NSA Chief Russia Hacked '16 Election Congress Must Inves

Postby seemslikeadream » Sun Oct 22, 2017 6:16 pm

TRUMP RUSSIA INVESTIGATION: DOES THE CASE OF GOP 'DIRTY TRICKS' OPERATIVE PETER W. SMITH HOLD THE KEY TO THE ELECTION HACKING ALLEGATIONS?
BY TOM PORTER ON 10/21/17 AT 11:10 AM

The case of GOP operative and financier Peter W. Smith—who was found non-responsive in a room in the Rochester Hotel, Minnesota, in mid-May—is now the focus of investigators probing Russia’s alleged bid to tip the 2016 presidential election in Trump's favor.

A source close to the investigation told CNN on Monday that the House Intelligence Committee interviewed Matt Tait, a British security analyst who was recruited by Smith in his search for the Hillary Clinton emails allegedly hacked by Russia, and Jonathan Safron, a law student who worked as Smith's assistant. The Senate committee probing Russian interference reached out to Eric York, another security expert Smith enlisted in his email hunt, according to the report.

Business Insider reported Tuesday that Tait was also interviewed by Robert Mueller, the special counsel appointed to investigate allegations of collusion between the Trump team and Russia.

Days before Smith's death, he was interviewed by The Wall Street Journal, describing to the publication his efforts to obtain the stolen Clinton emails. Documents obtained by the Journal showed that Smith considered General Michael Flynn, at that time a campaign adviser to Donald Trump, an ally.

3QK1EtTk
Peter W. Smith was found dead in a Minnesota hotel room in May.
TWITTER @PTRSIH

Smith had a long history of digging dirt on GOP opponents, focusing on the Clintons in particular.

The wealthy businessman was behind some of the most notorious Clinton conspiracy theories, including the ' Troopergate' allegations that Bill Clinton used Arkansas state troopers to arrange illicit trysts with women. He reportedly discussed funding a probe into a trip to the Soviet Union that Bill Clinton made in 1969 while a college student.

According to a 1995 article in Crain’s Chicago Business, he was one of the earliest and most enthusiastic backers of Newt Gingrich, the Republican congressman who was an adviser to the Trump campaign, acting as chief fundraiser for Gingrich's political action committees in the 1990s .

Smith told the Journal in May he had found five groups of hackers claiming to have hacked Clinton's emails, two of which he determined were Russian. Smith said he had been unable to verify the emails, and told the hackers to give them to WikiLeaks .

In a document he used to recruit others in his mission to obtain the Clinton emails, he listed Trump campaign officials Steve Bannon , Kellyanne Conway, and Michael Flynn. He said he was working with the officials “in coordination to the extent permitted as an independent expenditure.”


After Smith’s interview with the Journal was published, British Security expert Matt Tait, who was tapped by Smith to help verify stolen Clinton emails, spoke out in a June blog posting.

“Over the course of a long phone call, he mentioned that he had been contacted by someone on the “Dark Web” who claimed to have a copy of emails from Secretary Clinton’s private server, and this was why he had contacted me; he wanted me to help validate whether or not the emails were genuine,” wrote Tait.

He described Smith’s apparent connections to Trump’s inner circle.

“Although it wasn’t initially clear to me how independent Smith’s operation was from Flynn or the Trump campaign, it was immediately apparent that Smith was both well connected within the top echelons of the campaign and he seemed to know both Lt. Gen. Flynn and his son well. Smith routinely talked about the goings on at the top of the Trump team, offering deep insights into the bizarre world at the top of the Trump campaign,” he wrote.

According to the posting, Smith set up a company in Delaware, KLS Research, to “avoid campaign reporting” - i.e. to avoid laws requiring political campaigns to make public what they spend their money on. “This document was about establishing a company to conduct opposition research on behalf of the campaign, but operating at a distance so as to avoid campaign reporting. Indeed, the document says as much in black and white,” he writes.

Flynn’s attorney, Robert Kelner, has declined to comment on the claims, while Steve Bannon, the president’s former chief strategist, said he had never heard of Smith.

Conway acknowledged knowing about Smith from his work in Republican political circles, but told the Journal in July that she had no interactions with him during the campaign.

Flynn resigned as a National Security Adviser to Trump in February, after failing to disclose his contact with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak before November's election. That communication is now under scrutiny by Mueller.

At the time Smith was seeking to verify the alleged stolen Clinton emails, intelligence agencies had determined Russia was behind the hack of thousands of emails from the Democrat National Committee servers, which were subsequently released to WikiLeaks.

A sheaf of documents, including a statement police called a suicide note, in which Smith declared he was ill and his insurance policy was expiring, lay next to his body. Medical records list his cause of death as asphyxiation.

Investigators will be seeking to clarify whether Smith was acting as unofficial Trump campaign operative, or was a fantasist. For Tait, though, there was no doubt that Smith's search for the emails led him to reckless behavior.

"In my conversations with Smith and his colleague, I tried to stress this point: if this dark web contact is a front for the Russian government, you really don’t want to play this game. But they were not discouraged," he wrote.

"They appeared to be convinced of the need to obtain Clinton’s private emails and make them public, and they had a reckless lack of interest in whether the emails came from a Russian cut-out. Indeed, they made it quite clear to me that it made no difference to them who hacked the emails or why they did so, only that the emails be found and made public before the election."

Smith was not the only Flynn associate engaged in the desperate hunt for Clinton's emails. Last week The Guardian reported that conservative activist Barbara Ledeen turned to the dark web to obtain Clinton's emails in 2015.

On CNN, York declined to respond to claims that he had been contacted by the Russia probe.

Newsweek has reached out to Tait and Safron for comment.
http://www.newsweek.com/does-strange-ca ... obe-687614



Happy Monday, Everyone! Looking Forward To Another Week Of Infecting Every Aspect Of Your Daily Lives!

Donald Trump

Image
Donald Trump
Good morning, everyone! What a week we’ve got coming up. A tremendous week. The fall season is here, we’re working on huge tax cuts, and there’s a lot of optimism having to do with business in our economy. Also, we’re ending Obamacare. And I’m going to get the wall. But beyond all that, what I’m looking forward to the most is another seven days of infecting every little aspect of your daily lives.

Oh, you thought you might be able to block me out for even a moment? Good luck with that one. There will be no rest from having to think about me, or my administration, or the latest controversy I’ve thrown myself into. I am inescapable. My name, my face, my voice, my words, and those of my legions of surrogates—no matter how much you try to go about your normal life, I will find a way force myself in. MAGA!

I will poison every second of quiet reflection that you previously enjoyed.
I’m like a disease without a cure. There’s not a single thing I haven’t contaminated. News, entertainment, medicine, sports; if there’s a part of culture I haven’t ruined for you yet, just wait. This could be the week. I’ll either claw my way into your waking consciousness or just linger in the back of your mind, ready to pop out at any moment and remind you that I’m the president of the United States and will be for at least the next three years. You know that sickening feeling in the pit of your stomach—the one that’s been there since last November? Well, it’s not going away this week, I’ll tell you that.

I will poison every second of quiet reflection that you previously enjoyed. No more sitting calmly with a coffee on a park bench. No more carefree drives with the windows down and the radio up. No more tranquil moments reveling in the splendor of a sunset. Just me festering in your brain, befouling all you hold dear.

The mind is funny like that sometimes. The second you’ve freed yourself from the burden of having to ponder my ironclad stranglehold on absolutely every facet of American life, there I’ll be again, ready to resume the endless cycle of fear, regret, anger, and shame. Go ahead, try and tune me out right now.

Donald Trump. Donald Trump. Donald Trump.

They never cover it in the fake media, but I do really enjoy the creeping sadness that exists every day I’m around. It’s a fantastic feeling. I get true joy knowing that somewhere out there, someone is just looking through their refrigerator, or chatting with their family, or waiting in line to buy groceries, and I suddenly weasel my way into their brain and ratchet up their stress about not only the future of this country, but also the rest of the world. It’s a different joy than how I felt as a private citizen, when only a small percentage of people were constantly nauseated by the mere mention of my name.

It’s much, much, much better.

So enjoy the precious few minutes you have each morning before remembering that I exist. Because that is all you will have before I begin my daily task of tainting everything you love, a list that, this week, may include: the World Series, Halloween, rock concerts, shopping, birthday cake, swimming pools, Christmas trees, makeup, vacations, watching movies, time capsules, family reunions, rollercoasters, end-of-year bonuses, video games, Broadway musicals, relaxing with friends, religious solitude, fine dining, a good night’s sleep, and the new iPhone, just to name a few.

I even found an interesting way to ruin Twix bars. Can you believe that? Sometimes I even surprise myself with my ability to take something you hold dear and totally defile it, so that from then on you can’t ever think about it again without thinking about me too. Oh man, I have a doozy coming up on Thursday. It’s going to be tremendous.

Have a great week!
https://www.theonion.com/happy-monday-e ... 1819769158
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
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