How generous. They want to extend Flynn's deadline to January 21, 2019. Does anyone proofread this stuff?
Trump cut the DOJ budget, so we can't afford proofreaders....Ellis Wyatt said:
How generous. They want to extend Flynn's deadline to January 21, 2019. Does anyone proofread this stuff?
I know you're being sarcastic, but coming from the party that stated Hunter Biden was qualified for Amtrak Board membership because he'd ridden on Amtrak, it's literally something I'd expect from the Dems.SeMgCo87 said:Trump cut the DOJ budget, so we can't afford proofreaders....Ellis Wyatt said:
How generous. They want to extend Flynn's deadline to January 21, 2019. Does anyone proofread this stuff?
It's all Trump's fault.
Quote:
Whichever explanation seems more likely, the end result should be infuriating to every American. Either your nations premiere law enforcement agency was breathtakingly incompetent when the stakes were the highest, or select officials in that organization made deliberate decisions to break the law, undermine the Constitution, and illegally spy on a fellow American. Either possibility has deeply damaged the reputation of the FBI and DOJ in addition to the reputations of thousands of honest FBI Agents and DOJ attorneys. Despite the legitimate concerns of civil libertarians, the FISA process has indisputably proved an invaluable resource in safeguarding the country from terrorism. If the heinous abuses documented in the I.G.s report result in a weakening or loss of FISA, we will all be the worse for it. If those responsible are not held to account, this will happen again. There is no happy face to put on this episode.
I saw that disgusting Politico article on Twitter when it was posted...& I am proud of my comment at the time:jagvocate said:
https://theconservativetreehouse.com/2019/12/27/dirty-spooks-concerned-about-barr-and-durham/
Barr and Durham have the goods on Misfud and will use it to indict Clapper, Brennan, and others
It's been nagging at me that there is a "real" reason for pushing impeachment through asap and I keep thinking it has to do with attkinson and schiff and ciaramella and ciaramella's close NSC buddy that was hired by schiff right after the call. Durham really needs to be on this part of the investigation asap (though he probably already is).Quote:
Gee Natasha, I guess it would never dawn on you that the IC IG might have been part of the SpyGate hoax/plot. After all, he currently has his fingers in the Schiff whistleblower scheme.
You're exactly right, which is why I wrote it.Quote:
I know you're being sarcastic, but coming from the party that stated Hunter Biden was qualified for Amtrak Board membership because he'd ridden on Amtrak, it's literally something I'd expect from the Dems.
It's also the similar to many of the Lefty responses we get on TA
Chance Chase Johnson told me that was just a conspiracy theory. There was no "Do not investigate" listaggiehawg said:
AntAc, the Anti-corruption Action Center is the joint State Department/Soros organization. They exist to watch over the Ukrainian government arm, NABU. Of course NABU is pressured by State Department not to investigate corruption in AntAc.
No actual list. But Marie Yovanovitch confirmed she did interfere on behalf of AntAc on a few occasions. Then she suddenly developed amnesia.captkirk said:Chance Chase Johnson told me that was just a conspiracy theory. There was no "Do not investigate" listaggiehawg said:
AntAc, the Anti-corruption Action Center is the joint State Department/Soros organization. They exist to watch over the Ukrainian government arm, NABU. Of course NABU is pressured by State Department not to investigate corruption in AntAc.
So they are admitting Mifsud is a CIA asset? WTF?drcrinum said:
Exchange with Natasha Bertrand, national security correspondent for Politico & a political analyst for NBC and MSNBC. Listen closely to the initial question: "....allowed to grill say a CIA analyst like Joseph Mifsud.....?" The question didn't phase Natasha one bit. She knows, like everyone else suspects, that Mifsud is (or possibly 'was') a CIA operative.
Still boggles my mind that backdoor 702 search/query abuse has faded to a faint voice in the distant past.fasthorse05 said:
DiGenova's latest from 12/26
Quote:
C. The FBI Identifies and Interviews the Primary Sub-Source in Early 2017
The FBI conducted interviews of the Primary Sub-source in January, March, and May 2017 that raised significant questions about the reliability of the Steele election reporting....
During the FBI's January interview, at which Case Agent 1, the Supervisory Intel Analyst, and representatives of NSD were present, the Primary Sub-source told the FBI that he/she had not seen Steele's reports until they became public that month, and that he/she made statements indicating that Steele misstated or exaggerated the Primary Sub-source's statements in multiple sections of the reporting. 336
Footnote 336: David Laufman, then Chief of NSD's Counterintelligence and Export Control Section (CES), covered the first portion of the January interview and his Deputy Section Chief covered the remaining portions of the January interview. Laufman told us that he negotiated with the Primary Sub-source's counsel to facilitate the FBI's interview and
The Primary Sub-source told the FBI that one of his/her subsources furnished information for that part of Report 134 through a text message, but said that the sub-source never stated that Sechin had offered a brokerage interest to Page. 339 We reviewed the texts and did not find any discussion of a bribe, whether as an interest in Rosneft itself or a "brokerage."340...
The Primary Sub-source was questioned again by the FBI beginning in March 2017 about the election reporting and his/her communications with Steele. The Washington Field Office agent (WFO Agent 1) who conducted that interview and others after it told the OIG that the Primary Sub-source felt that the tenor of Steele's reports was far more "conclusive" than was justified.... WFO Agent 1 said that the Primary Sub-source explained that his/her information came from "word of mouth and hearsay;" "conversation that [he/she] had with friends over beers;" and that some of the information, such as allegations about Trump's sexual activities, were statements he/she heard made in "jest."341...
Footnote 341: According to WFO Agent 1, the Primary Sub-source told him that he/she spoke with at least one staff member at the Ritz Carlton hotel in Moscow who said that there were stories concerning Trump's alleged sexual activities, not that the activities themselves had been confirmed by the staff member as stated in Report 80.
As discussed in Chapter Eight, Carter Page FISA Renewal Application Nos. 2 and 3 advised the court that following the January interview with the Primary Subsource, "the FBI found the Russian-based sub-source to be truthful and cooperative."...
Observation:Quote:
D. The FBI Obtains Additional Information about the Reliability of Steele's Reporting after FISA Renewal Application No. 3
However, we were told by WFO Agent 1 that the Primary Sub-source stated that he/she never met this sub-source and that other sub-sources were responsible for the Ritz Carlton reporting. The Primary Sub-source also told the FBI interviewers as well as WFO Agent 1 that he/she received a telephone call from an individual he/she believed was this sub-source but was not certain of the person's identity and that the person never identified him/herself during the call. 345 The FBI's written summary of the Primary Sub-source's interview describes this call as follows:
[The Primary Sub-source] recalls that this 10-15 minute conversation included a general discussion about Trump and the Kremlin, that there was "communication" between the parties, and that it was an ongoing relationship. [The Primary Sub-source] recalls that the individual believed to be [Source E in Report 95] said that there was "exchange of information" between Trump and the Kremlin, and that there was "nothing bad about it . ." [Source E] said that some of this information exchange could be good for Russia, and some could be damaging to Trump, but deniable. The individual said that the Kremlin might be of help to get Trump elected, but [the Primary Sub-source] did not recall any discussion or mention of Wiki[L]eaks.
Footnote 345: The Primary Sub-source told WFO Agent 1 that he/she found a YouTube video of the subsource speaking and that it sounded like the person on the telephone call.
(Methinks Steele was covering his tracks regarding outing his Primary Sub-source in the above exchange as noted in Horowitz's Report, Steele wasn't always truthful.)Quote:
Handling Agent 1 told the OIG that Steele facilitated meetings in a European city that included Handling Agent 1, Ohr, an attorney of Russian Oligarch 1, and a representative of another Russian oligarch. 209
Footnote 209: Handling Agent 1 told us that he was aware that Steele had a relationship with Russian Oligarch 1's attorney and assumed it may have been a business relationship....
We asked Steele about whether he had a relationship with Russian Oligarch 1. Steele stated that he did not have a relationship and indicated that he had met Russian Oligarch 1 one time. He explained that he worked for Russian Oligarch l's attorney on litigation matters that involved Russian Oligarch 1 but that he could not provide "specifics" about them for confidentiality reasons. Steele stated that Russian Oligarch 1 had no influence on the substance of his election reporting and no contact with any of his sources. He also stated that he was not aware of any information indicating that Russian Oligarch 1 knew of his investigation relating to the 2016 U.S. Elections. 211...
Holy cow, that's some serious sleuthing. Outstanding.drcrinum said:
So, was Steele's Primary Sub-source Adam Waldman? I've tried to piece together a reasoned circumstantial argument. Although I can't prove this hypothesis, Waldman surely must be a prime candidate. I noted arguments posted on Twitter for both Konstantin Kilimnik & Stefan Halper as being Steele's Primary Sub-source, but in 2017 Kilimnik was based in Ukraine + had no reported association with Steele, & of course Halper was not based in Russia. Do you see any holes in my analysis?/END
policywonk98 said:will25u said:
TTT
Obviously Lisa and Pete getting the same legal advice. Still confused how any public employee can claim free speech rights on government issued devices.
If we want to keep FISA for terrorism purposes, then everyone who broke the law must be put in jail. Otherwise the author is correct - it will happen again.drcrinum said:
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2019/12/two_possibilities_in_trump_wiretapping_and_neither_is_good.html
conclusion:Quote:
Whichever explanation seems more likely, the end result should be infuriating to every American. Either your nations premiere law enforcement agency was breathtakingly incompetent when the stakes were the highest, or select officials in that organization made deliberate decisions to break the law, undermine the Constitution, and illegally spy on a fellow American. Either possibility has deeply damaged the reputation of the FBI and DOJ in addition to the reputations of thousands of honest FBI Agents and DOJ attorneys. Despite the legitimate concerns of civil libertarians, the FISA process has indisputably proved an invaluable resource in safeguarding the country from terrorism. If the heinous abuses documented in the I.G.s report result in a weakening or loss of FISA, we will all be the worse for it. If those responsible are not held to account, this will happen again. There is no happy face to put on this episode.
This is the most damning article I have read concerning FisaGate. Well worth a read. It becomes readily understandable why they sought a FISA warrant against Carter Page rather than a Title III wiretap.
"The author is a 1983 graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy. He served for over 22 years as an FBI special agent, supervisory special agent, and FBI SWAT team leader."
Quote:
Banging a co-worker alone is grounds for termination