LEAVE MY ELEVATOR ALONE Topic

i hope someone will link it.
when it comes to computers i am the missing link.
3/17/2018 5:30 PM
I'm not sure about Stein, I don't know enough about her and haven't really looked into it.
3/17/2018 6:59 PM
3/17/2018 7:01 PM
  • Felix Sater, a Russian-born businessman and associate of President Donald Trump, confirmed Friday that the Trump Organization was pursuing a deal with a sanctioned Russian bank at the height of the 2016 election.
  • The company was trying to secure financing for a Trump Tower in Moscow from Russia's VTB Bank through a local developer.
  • The US imposed sanctions on VTB in 2014 and 2015, which froze its assets in the country and blocked US entities from doing business with the bank.
  • The revelation will be of interest to special counsel Robert Mueller, who recently subpoenaed the Trump Organization for documents related to the Trump Tower Moscow deal.

Felix Sater, a Russian-born businessman with financial ties to the Trump Organization, confirmed Friday that President Donald Trump's business was privately negotiating a deal with a sanctioned Russian bank during the 2016 US election.

The detail first emerged in a status report that democrats on the House Intelligence Committee released earlier this week in response to Republicans' decision to shut down the committee's Russia investigation. The report outlined dozens of leads — including witness testimony, document requests, and subpoenas — the minority said it was not able to pursue.

On Friday, Sater told MSNBC host Chris Hayes that a local developer in Russia worked on behalf of the Trump Organization to secure financing for a Trump Tower in Moscow from VTB Bank, Russia's second-largest bank and a US-sanctioned entity.

"I had a local developer there [in Russia], and I had the Trump Organization here [in the US], and I was in the middle," Sater said. "And the local developer there would have gotten financing from VTB and/or another Russian bank, but VTB at that point was the go-to bank for real-estate development."

3/17/2018 7:11 PM

Special counsel Robert Mueller's team interviewed former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe and asked about the firing of FBI Director James Comey, a source briefed on the matter confirmed to CNN.


The source would not say when the interview, first reported by Axios, occurred.
Mueller also has memos written by McCabe documenting his conversations with President Donald Trump, a person familiar with the matter told CNN.
The memos also detail what Comey told McCabe about his own interactions with Trump while he was FBI director, the source said, and are seen as a way to corroborate Comey's account in Mueller's probe on Russian interference in the 2016 election.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions fired McCabe on Friday, about a day before his 50th birthday and the date he was set to retire and begin receiving his anticipated pension, over accusations that McCabe directed FBI officials to speak to the media about an investigation tied to the Clinton Foundation and misled investigators about his actions. Following his firing Friday, McCabe told CNN in an interview that he had four interactions with the President last May, while he was acting FBI director.


McCabe revealed that he had three in-person interactions and one phone call with Trump, in which the President berated him each time about his wife's failed Virginia Senate campaign.
It is unclear exactly what is in McCabe's memos and if he memorialized every interaction he had with the President. McCabe did not keep a copy of his memos after turning them over to Mueller, the source confirmed. A spokesman for the special counsel's office declined comment.
"In May, when Director Comey was fired and I had my own interactions with the President, he brought up my wife every time I ever spoke to him," McCabe told CNN. "Of course, I disagreed with him."

McCabe also confirmed that the President asked him who he voted for in the 2016 election, which was reported back in January and which Trump denied.
The former No. 2 official at the FBI told CNN that Trump did not bring up the agency's investigation into Russia meddling in the 2016 election.

Comey's memos


Comey revealed last year that he had kept memos while he was still FBI director about meetings and conversations he had with the President. Comey said his memos detailed conversations in which Trump asked Comey to pledge loyalty to him, state publicly that the FBI was not investigating Trump himself, and urged Comey to "let this go," referring to the then-investigation involving Trump's former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

Trump has denied several of Comey's claims.
During his testimony on Capitol Hill last June, Comey acknowledged orchestrating the leak of his memos to the media a few days after he was fired in hopes that the Justice Department would appoint a special counsel.
The former FBI director's memos have also been handed over to the special counsel.
3/17/2018 7:14 PM

Cambridge Analytica employed non-American citizens to work on US election campaigns in apparent violation of federal law, despite receiving a legal warning about the risks.

The company’s responsibilities under US law were laid out in a lawyer’s memo to the company’s vice-president, Steve Bannon, British CEO Alexander Nix and Rebekah Mercer, daughter of billionaire owner Robert Mercer, in July 2014. It made it clear that most senior and mid-level positions involving strategy, planning, fundraising or campaigning needed to be filled by US citizens.

“Any decision maker must be a US citizen or green card holder,” the memo, seen by the Observer, warned. It also provided a brief legal history of cases involving foreign involvement in election campaigns, drawn up by a lawyer at the firm founded by former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani.

“To the extent you are aware of foreign nationals providing services, including polling and marketing, it would appear that unless it is being done through US citizens, or foreign nationals with green cards, the activity would violate the law.”

It was clear that as a company largely run and staffed by Britons and Canadians, apart from Bannon and Mercer at the top, Cambridge Analytica – which was to go on to work on Donald’s Trump presidential election campaign – had a looming problem.

“The prohibition against foreign nationals managing campaigns, including making direct or indirect decisions regarding the expenditure of campaign dollars, will have a significant impact on how Cambridge hires staff and operates in the short term,” the memo stated.

It specifically called for Nix to step down from work on US elections. “In order for Cambridge to engage in such activities, Mr Nix would first have to be recused from substantive management of any such clients involved in US elections,” it said.

Employees working for Cambridge Analytica in the US at the time claimed that rather than tackling the problem, management appeared to ignore it.

“Mercer’s lawyer told a fairly stunned group meeting that it wasn’t allowed,” said one non-American employee who was based in the US at the time. “I’m not sure what, if anything, CA did to act on that knowledge.”

Two employees confirmed that they were still answering ultimately to Nix throughout the mid-term election campaigns that ended in November 2014. In total, more than a dozen foreigners, including Britons and Canadians, filled strategic roles in campaigns across the US.

“We were really speaking directly to the voters in a number of states,” said one former employee, who served on a team with several people who were not US citizens or green card holders.

It is understood that some were working on tourist visas. Another ex-employee claimed that they had been provided with letters to give to US border control officials where needed, stating that they would not be working there.

“One colleague kept raising these issues, so they gave us a piece of paper to give to immigration to say we weren’t actually working,” the second former employee said. They added that the company appeared to have taken advantage of its mostly young workforce. “It was getting a chance to travel, and to work on campaigns. Having a lot of autonomy, an adventure. When you are young and get that sort of opportunity, you take it rather than thinking about the details or consequences.”

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There were no briefings on the kind of work that non-US citizens should avoid, or warnings about the legal risks. “CA was sloppy and didn’t care about its staff,” said the first employee.

Cambridge Analytica said that the company “adheres to FEC [Federal Election Commission] regulations” and that Nix had never been in charge of work on any US election campaigns.

“He has never had a strategic or operational role on any election campaigns undertaken in the US,” a spokesman said, adding that “all CA personnel in strategic roles were US nationals or green card holders and these strategic roles provided all direction to non-strategic personnel”.

The legal memo also warned Cambridge Analytica that it needed to carefully hide behind a firewall any work it did in a single state or election for a particular candidate and for any of the so-called super-PACs (political action committees) supporting the campaign.

These committees can spend unlimited funds but cannot coordinate with individual candidates.

Levy warned that the company would need “to separate working teams that are engaged in substantive work for two or more entities that are not permitted to coordinate their activities”.

The nonpartisan Campaign Legal Center, which represents the public interest, has accused Cambridge Analytica over allegations of illegal coordination of this nature.

It has filed evidence with the FEC alleging that the super-PAC Make America Number 1 made illegal contributions to Trump’s campaign, “engaging in unlawful coordinated spending by using the common vendor Cambridge Analytica”.

Cambridge Analytica denied there had been any illegal coordination, saying it had a firewall policy in place, signed by all staff and strictly enforced.

“Where firewalls exist staff are physically separated; use separate databases and servers; and are prevented from communicating with each other,” a spokesman said.

“The accusations of the Campaign Legal Center are based on conjecture, tabloid stories, and hearsay that attempted to mischaracterise FEC filings where Cambridge Analytica publicly declared our non-coordinated work for different entities.”

Bannon, Mercer and Nix did not respond to requests for comment on the legal memo or their operating structure during the 2016 presidential election.

3/17/2018 7:21 PM
3/17/2018 7:50 PM
They're tears of laughter, believe me. I love watching the death of the Republican party.
3/17/2018 7:54 PM
I'd be careful. The dems have plenty of scandals to be worried about themselves. They did plenty of crooked crap while in power. We could see both parties self-implode. I'm okay with that. They're all power hungry pieces of crap. It's time for political reform on both sides.
3/17/2018 8:58 PM
We've never seen anything done on the scale of Nixon, Regan and Trump, at least in modern politics.
3/17/2018 9:00 PM
Reagan? Please explain. Don't forget that I was born during the Reagan administration, so if he was corrupt and I am unaware. and we most certainly saw pretty close with Obama. I think we're soon to see plenty of evidence of it come out.
3/17/2018 9:03 PM
Iran Contra? Reaching an agreement with Iran not to release the hostages until after the election?

Obama scandal? that compares with Watergate, Iran-contra, and what is coming down on Trump?
3/17/2018 9:35 PM
Most certainly.

1. Lois Lerner targeting republicans
2. VA fake waiting list
3. GSA spending spree
4. Benghazi
5. Clinton e-mails
6. Fast and Furious
7. Solyndra
8. DOJ and the new black panther party
9. Hezbollah
10. Droning American citizens without due process

Would you like me to continue? As I said, both parties are corrupt.
3/17/2018 9:53 PM
hahahahaha

I'll give you droning without process. I'l refute and debunk every other one as a made up scandal or a whole lot of nothing.

Nothing is close to the three I talked about though.
3/17/2018 10:20 PM
How can you in clear conscience say that? Americans died in 3 of the scandals on the list. How many have died from Trump's scandal?
3/17/2018 10:22 PM
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