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Absent thread from the right
Manafort plea deal: Trump ex-campaign chief to help Mueller inquiry
pleaded guilty to one charge of conspiracy against the US and one charge of conspiracy to obstruct justice. sure it was before he was with Trump Trump sees it like thats like this.. Sure he was a Russian hitman before I hired him to be my hitman .. I had nothing to do with his past crimes .. Whats the problem ?? |
It’s just a witch hunt... and it’s all fake news... nothing to see here...
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Huge deal for Manafort. Still no direct evidence of Trump collusion, if there is, and it's an impeachable offence, let's impeach him. I'd much rather have Pence in there.
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Lmao !!!!!
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I have little regard for either party, currently based on the individual politicians and there are few worth regarding.
Wayne, we need clear and concise proof Trump did something that was actually wrong, illegal . An unwitting agent of Putin for example, not that he wanted dirt on HC. Did he say we'll trade sanctions for RUS hacking and exposing HRC for the witch she is and made an agreement with RUS? That would be for legal experts to determine. If he asked RUS to physically alter the elec results (if they even can) that would be different. Right now the water is murky with a lot of crap from both sides and the continued silo of crap ain't helping. |
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Manafort pleads for things done in 2012 and looks like an Obama lawyer(also Clinton lawyer) will also face charges, does this mean Obama was colluding...should we investigate? |
interesting from Craig's wiki..." April 2018, Craig resigned from the firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, following the indictment of Alex van der Zwaan, a lawyer at the firm's London office. Craig was the lead attorney supervising the firm's work for former Ukrainian president Yanukovich, in which Zwann participated. Zwaan was later charged by Mueller investigation and pleaded guilty to making false statements.[42][44] Later in 2018, NBC and CNN reported that following a referral from Mueller's office, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York was investigating Craig and others, including ex-lobbyist Tony Podesta and former Republican U.S. Representative Vin Weber, as part of a broader investigation into the activities of Paul Manafort."
London?....Podesta? Does Craig have a show on MSNBC yet? |
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Hilary. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Andy McCarthy
"Anti-Trumpers have visions of the walls closing in on the president. I would counter with what I said after the Virginia convictions: At this point, it does not appear that Mueller has a collusion case against Trump associates. His indictments involving Russian hacking and troll farms do not suggest complicity by the Trump campaign. I also find it hard to believe Mueller sees Manafort as the key to making a case on Trump when Mueller has had [Richard] Gates — Manafort’s partner — as a cooperator for six months. You have to figure Gates knows whatever Manafort knows about collusion. Yet, since Gates began cooperating with the special counsel, Mueller has filed the charges against Russians that do not implicate Trump, and has transferred those cases to other Justice Department components. I elaborated that, when it comes to Manafort, Mueller’s focus is not President Trump. It is Russia, “specifically, Manafort’s longtime connections to Kremlin-connected operatives.” This seems consistent with what Manafort’s camp is telling the press. Politico quotes a source close to Trump’s former campaign chairman: “The cooperation agreement does not involve the Trump campaign. . . .There was no collusion with Russia.” The guilty plea serves Mueller’s purposes. He already had Manafort looking at a potential 80 years of prison exposure from the first case. He did not need another trial and additional jail time to ratchet up pressure. So prosecutors dropped the money-laundering charges as well as allegations that Manafort made false statements and failed to register as a foreign agent of a Kremlin-connected Ukranian party; but Mueller still got Manafort to admit to the underlying conduct in those charges by having the defendant plead guilty to the special counsel’s favorite device, the amorphous, elastic charge of “conspiracy against the United States.” In addition, Manafort pled guilty to obstructing justice — the witness-tampering allegation based on which he has been detained without bail. The defendant, moreover, admitted guilt to the bank-fraud charges on which the Virginia jury hung. If Manafort cooperates to Mueller’s satisfaction, these unresolved counts will be dismissed; but the admissions would make it difficult for Manafort to fight the charges if they were ever retried. The resolution of Manafort’s cases in a manner that spares both parties a second trial and months of appeals closes an important chapter in the special counsel’s investigation. It potentially brings the end into sight. That prospect, of course, intensifies speculation about the president’s status. To borrow, again, from what I said three weeks ago, Mueller’s focus on Trump seems to involve possible obstruction of the investigation, not so-called collusion. If we assume, for argument’s sake, that the special counsel has wanted to make a criminal case on the president (I’ve never been fully convinced of this), the challenge Mueller has had from the start is that there was no underlying crime to predicate his investigation. He was rashly appointed by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein in the uproar over the president’s ham-fisted firing of FBI director James Comey. But terminating executive-branch officers is not obstruction; it is a prerogative of the presidency. If it is done abusively or for unsavory motives, that could be grounds for impeachment, but not for criminal prosecution. Ditto harassing the attorney general, contemplating the removal of the special counsel himself, and allegedly weighing in on whether Michael Flynn, the former national-security adviser, should be investigated. We can all agree — or, at least, many of us do agree — that it would be better if the president did not do such things. It should be indisputable, though, that the Constitution endows him with the authority to do them. If you don’t like it, vote him out of office . . . but it is not the business of prosecutors. As for “collusion,” it is not a crime unless it rises to the level of conspiracy to violate a federal criminal law. At least publicly, despite all the intelligence leaks, there has never been credible evidence that the president conspired with the Russian regime to commit cyberespionage or any other crime" |
Who funded Trump thru Deutsche Bank?
Where did the cash come from that bought golf courses? This is a long con that started with Sater years ago Kompromat doesn’t have to be about sex, dirty money works Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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This is where our concerns overlap. IF and big IF, evidence of RUS influence over DJT and money laundering can be proven, as well as the resulting influence that kompromat it would have - Mueller MUST prosecute it. But he has to prove it. We will be in a Constitutional crisis if we are not in one now. But it must be proven and both sides of the aisle need to do what they are currently inescapable of doing, an honest approach to gov. |
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has Carter Page been charged with anything yet?..that's where the con started |
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I don’t actually want this. DJT is much less effective than Pence as a pol., particularly if you are concerned about social issues from the left. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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2 more years of DJT and I think he will sink himself for 2020. I worry bout a sympathy vote for pence if trump is ousted before 2020. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Do you think Deutsche Bank is only in Germany? Somehow after a number of failed deals when banks want nothing to do with you, you appear with cash to buy golf courses. Jr bragged that they didn’t need American banks, they had all the money they needed from Russia Felix Sater is a Russian mobster, convicted felon and partnered with Trump in projects But you should believe Trump because he wouldn’t lie Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Ha
Not the first time Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Witch hunt? Do you think Mueller would give up 6 convictions of manefort with many more comments ng if he didn’t have something significant to offer? Why are you against the application of the law? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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