Author Topic: Trumpy's Crime Cronies  (Read 12311 times)

LurkerNoMore

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Re: Trumpy's Crime Cronies
« Reply #200 on: June 13, 2024, 12:57:35 PM »
As they should.  The courts are open to hearing cases related to election fraud or interference.  Provided that evidence is presented that passes the sniff test.  But NO evidence was presented.  Yeah, we will hear the retard(s) claiming the courts refused to look at the evidence.  But you can't look at what wasn't there.   :D :D

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Trump’s lawyers in suits claiming he won in 2020 are getting punished for abusing courts

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=Trump%E2%80%99s+lawyers+in+suits+claiming+he+won+in+2020+are+getting+punished+for+abusing+courts


A New York disciplinary authority found that Trump campaign attorney Rudy Giuliani ‘communicated demonstrably false and misleading statements’ and ordered him suspended from practicing law. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)

Over the past four years, U.S. courts and state bar associations have taken action to protect the integrity of the U.S. judicial system by penalizing attorneys who filed meritless lawsuits claiming — without evidence — that the 2020 presidential election results were invalid.

Despite aggressive litigation by attorneys denying wrongdoing, over time the U.S. legal community has exercised the oversight needed to hold most of them accountable for misusing U.S. courts.

Most lawsuits challenging the 2020 presidential election results were filed in federal courts. Federal judges not only dismissed the claims for lack of evidence, but some also penalized the attorneys who filed them.

Judge Linda Parker of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan acted first, ruling in August 2021 that a lawsuit filed by nine lawyers was “a historic and profound abuse of the judicial process.” In a 110-page opinion, she wrote that the abuses included: “proffering claims not backed by law; proffering claims not backed by evidence (but instead, speculation, conjecture, and unwarranted suspicion); proffering factual allegations and claims without engaging in the required prefiling inquiry; and dragging out these proceedings.”

“Print, television, and social media” are where the attorneys could have made their “protestations” and “conjecture,” Parker wrote. But “such expressions are neither permitted nor welcomed in a court of law.”

The judge imposed three penalties on the attorneys: $175,000 in defendant legal costs; 12 hours of mandatory instruction on pleading standards and election law; and referrals to the Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission and their home state disciplinary authorities for possible suspension or disbarment.

Appeals to the 6th Circuit and Supreme Court to reverse the sanctions failed. After three years of litigation, the Michigan-ordered penalties still stand.

‘Fantastical’ claims

Courts in other states have taken similar action to hold accountable attorneys who filed abusive or frivolous lawsuits challenging presidential election results:

Colorado: A federal district court penalized two attorneys, Ernest Walker and Gary Fielder, for filing a complaint seeking $160 billion in damages from 19 defendants for alleged misconduct related to the 2020 presidential election. After finding its claims were “fantastical” and “filed in bad faith,” the court ordered Walker and Fielder to pay defendants’ attorney fees totaling $187,000. Appeals to the 10th Circuit and Supreme Court failed.

Arizona: A federal district court imposed similar sanctions on three attorneys — Andrew Parker, Kurt Olsen and Harvard professor Alan Dershowitz — who challenged the 2020 presidential election results in Arizona. The court found their complaint contained “false, misleading, and unsupported factual assertions” and “did not have an adequate factual or legal basis.” It ordered the attorneys to pay defendants’ attorney fees totaling $122,200. The attorneys have appealed.

Florida: One federal district court even confronted a 193-page lawsuit filed by Donald Trump in 2022, claiming 31 defendants disseminated false information about him to rig the 2016 presidential election. The court wrote: “This case should never have been brought. … No reasonable lawyer would have filed it.” The court ordered Trump and his lead counsel, Alina Habba, to pay defendants’ attorney fees totaling $938,000. Both are appealing.

These cases create a solid body of precedent for inflicting penalties on attorneys who file abusive pleadings challenging election results.

 
Suspension and disbarment

In addition to courts penalizing attorneys for inappropriate filings, bar association disciplinary authorities in multiple states have initiated proceedings to suspend or disbar those attorneys from practicing law in their jurisdictions. Despite lengthy procedures involving multiple steps met by aggressive litigation in opposition, those disciplinary proceedings are nearing final action.

In New York, the key disciplinary authority found “uncontroverted evidence” that Rudy Giuliani, who served as legal counsel to President Trump and his campaign, “communicated demonstrably false and misleading statements to courts, lawmakers and the public.” It ordered his immediate suspension from the practice of law in New York pending further proceedings. The D.C. Bar Association, relying on the New York action and without conducting its own fact-finding, did the same in the District of Columbia.

While no further proceedings occurred in New York to permanently disbar Giuliani, the D.C. Bar’s disciplinary authority issued a 2024 report recommending his disbarment in that jurisdiction.

Focused on his actions in Pennsylvania, the 2024 report states that he violated the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Responsibility by filing a lawsuit seeking “to disenfranchise hundreds of thousands of Pennsylvania voters without the slightest factual basis for doing so.” It concludes “disbarment is the only sanction that will protect the public, the courts, and the integrity of the legal profession, and deter other lawyers from launching similarly baseless claims.” The disbarment recommendation is now under review by the D.C. Bar’s final disciplinary authority.

In similar proceedings against another attorney, the D.C. Bar’s disciplinary authority issued a preliminary finding that Jeffrey Clark, former acting head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division, also violated D.C. ethics rules and should be sanctioned. The move was in response to Clark’s alleged efforts to help Trump overturn the 2020 election results.

Comparable disciplinary actions have taken place in other states.

The California Bar’s disciplinary authority recommended disbarment of John Eastman, a law professor who filed abusive pleadings and engaged in other unethical conduct while representing President Trump and the Trump campaign.

When the Georgia State Bar’s Disciplinary Board asked Trump campaign attorney Lin Wood to undergo a mental health evaluation, he sued to prevent it. A federal district court dismissed his suit, and his appeal failed. In 2023, Wood announced his permanent retirement from the practice of law.

The Michigan Attorney Disciplinary Board denied multiple motions by the attorneys who filed abusive suits there to dismiss pending disbarment proceedings.

Not all state disciplinary authorities prevailed. Sidney Powell, who represented Trump and his campaign, won dismissal of ethics charges brought against her in Texas. However, she still faces possible disbarment in Michigan and pled guilty to criminal charges in Georgia relating to the 2020 presidential election there.

 
Judicial system integrity

Many attorneys who filed abusive pleadings challenging the 2020 presidential election have paid a price, incurring litigation costs, judicial condemnation and reputational damage. Some no longer practice law.

The legal community’s tough oversight should make attorneys think twice before misusing U.S. courts, but still unknown is whether past disciplinary efforts will deter any potential misconduct following the 2024 presidential election.

What is known is that the integrity of the U.S. judicial system is only as strong as its commitment to the facts.
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LurkerNoMore

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Re: Trumpy's Crime Cronies
« Reply #201 on: June 17, 2024, 06:42:40 AM »
Lying snake oil salesman having to pay the piper.  They will move on from personal assets next.   ;D

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Alex Jones Ordered to Liquidate Assets to Pay $1.5 Billion Sandy Hook Settlement
https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=Alex+Jones+Ordered+to+Liquidate+Assets+to+Pay+%241.5+Billion+Sandy+Hook+Settlement

Alex Jones was ordered Friday to pay the $1.5 billion settlement to the families of children slain in the Sandy Hook Elementary mass shooting by liquidating his personal assets.

Judge Christopher Lopez of the U.S. bankruptcy court for the southern district of Texas, Houston division, ruled on Jones’ bankruptcy claim Friday, determining how the InfoWars media founder and “Alex Jones Show” host will pay his 2022 Sandy Hook settlement after ceaseless false reports that the 2012 shooting was a hoax and a conspiracy.

Jones filed for bankruptcy protection in 2022 alongside the InfoWars parent company Free Speech Systems, but Lopez moved to convert Jones’ personal bankruptcy proposal to liquidation. According to court filings obtained by TheWrap, the former host has $9 million in assets.

Jones has already made moves to sell his Texas ranch, which is reportedly worth around $2.8 million. He’s also looking to sell his gun collection and other assets to pay his debts, according to AP. Jones’ Austin area home and select other assets are exempt from the liquidation.

Judge Lopez has yet to make a decision on the liquidation of Free Speech Systems’ assets.

“This is probably the end of Infowars here very, very soon. If not today, in the next few weeks or months,” Jones said before Friday’s hearing. “But it’s just the beginning of my fight against tyranny.”
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LurkerNoMore

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Re: Trumpy's Crime Cronies
« Reply #202 on: June 25, 2024, 10:14:44 AM »
And here comes the fat lady to sing....  if the trustee has their way.

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Alex Jones' Bankruptcy Trustee Plans To Shutter Infowars And ‘Liquidate Its Inventory
https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=Alex+Jones%27+Bankruptcy+Trustee+Plans+To+Shutter+Infowars+And+%E2%80%98Liquidate+Its+Inventory

The court-appointed trustee overseeing the liquidation of Alex Jones’ estate plans to shut down his conspiracy site Infowars and sell off its assets, according to a new filing on Monday.

The trustee, Christopher Murray, filed an emergency motion with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court after the parents of a child killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook school massacre asked another court in Texas to turn over the assets of Infowars’ parent company, Free Speech Systems. The parents, Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis, won a $50 million verdict against Jones in 2022 over his lies that the mass shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, which killed 20 children and six adults, was a hoax.

That verdict is separate from the $1.5 billion Jones owes to other family members of victims after a lawsuit in Connecticut.

A Texas judge approved the handover on Friday, but the trustee asked a federal court to step in and stop it, as it would interfere with his plans to “conduct an orderly wind-down” of Free Speech Systems and his plans to “liquidate its inventory.”

It’s the first time the trustee has said publicly he plans to shutter Infowars.

“The specter of a pell-mell seizure of FSS’s assets, including its cash, threatens to throw the business into chaos, potentially stopping it in its tracks, to the detriment of the interests of the chapter 7 estate for which the trustee is responsible,” Murray wrote in the emergency motion.

“The Trustee seeks this Court’s intervention to prevent a value-destructive money grab and allow an orderly process to take its course.”
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illuminati

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Re: Trumpy's Crime Cronies
« Reply #203 on: June 25, 2024, 11:53:09 AM »

LurkerNoMore

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Re: Trumpy's Crime Cronies
« Reply #204 on: August 07, 2024, 12:36:24 PM »
They just can't stop committing crimes.  What a fantastic week of news it has been for the Trumpturds moving one step closer to getting their comeuppance for being such stupid criminals.  First the AZ fake electors, now this idiot.  And it's only Wednesday.  Plenty of time for someone else to make this weeks news cycle.

Obviously all these people attended Trump University to learn their campaign and finance skills.

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https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=FBI+Raids+Home+of+Rep+Trying+to+Impeach+Kamala+Harris

The FBI executed a search warrant against Rep. Andy Ogles (R-TN) last Friday, the congressman confirmed after a local news report highlighted the investigation.

Ogles, who has been facing scrutiny over his campaign finances for months, said in a post on X that the FBI “took possession of my cell phone.”

News Channel 5 Investigates, the same Nashville area local program that first reported the FBI search, began reporting last year about discrepancies in Ogles’ financial disclosure forms—including a $320,000 personal loan he allegedly gave his campaign.

Ogles finally admitted the loan was not real in May, amending his disclosure forms to confirm he only transferred $20,000 to his campaign. The $320,000 figure was included on his disclosure forms as a mistake.

According to the Tennessee representative, the FBI search last week was related to the alleged $320,000 personal loan.

“It is my understanding that they are investigating the same well-known facts surrounding these filings,” Ogles said in a statement on X. “I am confident that all involved will conclude that the reporting discrepancies were based on honest mistakes, and nothing more.”
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LurkerNoMore

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Re: Trumpy's Crime Cronies
« Reply #205 on: August 08, 2024, 05:34:03 AM »
Hahaha.. you know you got to be a world class tard if they are comparing you to George Santos.

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In May, Ogles filed amended campaign financial reports, admitting that when he first ran in 2022, he hadn’t loaned his campaign $320,000 as he had previously reported. He also filed more amendments retracting claims made in his financial reports of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions and expenditures.

At the time, Ogles was compared to disgraced ex-Congressman George Santos, who is facing criminal charges for inflating campaign fundraising numbers after also reporting loaning his campaign a lot of his own money.

NewsChannel5 reported last year that Ogles didn’t have the resources or assets to make such a loan to his campaign, raising the question of where the congressman got the money from, and if he made some illicit or extravagant purchases like Santos. Like Santos, Ogles was found to have lied about his background, making up details about his education. He also raised $25,000 on GoFundMe to build a garden in memory of his stillborn child, but the garden was never built.

It appears that the law might soon be catching up to Ogles, who has a history of sponsoring futile, symbolic bills. He has proposed sending protesting students to Gaza, tried to lift the gag order in Trump’s hush-money trial, and has tried to require the White House to inform Congress any time President Biden takes a drug “that could alter his alertness, judgment or mood.” It looks like he’ll finally have to spend his time doing something more serious: fighting possible federal charges.
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LurkerNoMore

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Re: Trumpy's Crime Cronies
« Reply #206 on: August 09, 2024, 11:26:44 AM »
What is it with Trumpy and his deplorable friends not paying what they owe?  And it is only going to get worse for each of them.   :D :D :D :D

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Judge orders MyPillow mogul Mike Lindell to pay attorney fees to winner of 'Prove Mike Wrong' contest
https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=Judge+orders+MyPillow+mogul+Mike+Lindell+to+pay+attorney+fees+to+winner+of+%27Prove+Mike+Wrong%27+contest

    A judge ordered Mike Lindell to pay the attorney fees of a man who won his "Prove Mike Wrong" contest.

    Lindell owes Robert Zeidman $4,508 in attorney fees, a Thursday court order says.

    A judge already ordered Lindell to pay Zeidman the $5 million prize money.

Mike Lindell must pay the attorney fees of a man who won his "Prove Mike Wrong" competition, a federal magistrate judge ordered this week.

Lindell owes Robert Zeidman $4,508 in attorney fees in connection to the competition, the judge wrote in the ruling Thursday.

When reached for comment by Business Insider on Thursday, Lindell initially said he had "no idea" what the court order was referring to.

After reviewing the ruling, Lindell responded: "More attacks !"

Attorneys for Zeidman and Lindell didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from BI.

The MyPillow CEO continues to rack up costs associated with the competition, which he launched in August 2021, promising $5 million to any person who could comb through and disprove his "cyber data and packet captures from the November 2020 election."

Since 2020, Lindell has repeatedly and erroneously claimed that the presidential election was rigged. The far-right conspiracy theorist offered the hefty sum of cash to any person who could prove his trove of data was "not valid" election information.

Enter Zeidman, a computer scientist who joined Lindell's competition and did just that.

Zeidman effectively demonstrated Lindell's "data" contained generic information about polling and was unrelated to the election entirely, an arbitration panel decided in April last year.

Lindell, however, refused to pay Zeidman, so the competition winner took Lindell to court for $5 million plus interest.

The two men and their lawyers went back and forth in court for months until a judge ruled on the matter in February of this year, ordering Lindell to pay Zeidman the $5 million prize money, plus 10 months' interest within a month of the decision.

Zeidman also requested reimbursement of the attorney fees he acquired while fighting Lindell in court. According to US Magistrate Judge Dulce J. Foster's Thursday order, he sought $12,800 for 16.1 billed hours at a rate of $800 an hour.

Attorneys for Lindell took issue with Zeidman's requested amount, arguing that the $800-an-hour rate exceeded a "reasonable hourly rate" for legal work in Minnesota, where the case was brought.

Foster ruled in partial favor of Zeidman this week, ordering Lindell to pay a portion of his requested attorney's fees and knocking down the hourly rate.

"Based on the information in the record and the Court's own knowledge and experience regarding prevailing market rates, and taking into account the uncomplicated nature of this discovery dispute, the Court concludes that an hourly rate of $400 per hour is most in line with those prevailing in the community for similar services," Foster wrote.

The judge also applied a 30% deduction to Zeidman's counsel hours, saying his discovery requests were overbroad.

In total, Lindell owes Zeidman $4,508 in attorney fees, the judge has ordered.

The "Prove Mike Wrong" competition is just one of several legal battles Lindell has been fighting in recent years.

The businessman and his pillow empire are defending defamation lawsuits brought by Dominion Voting Systems and Smartmatic. Lindell falsely alleged that the election-technology companies manipulated election results in 2020.

In recent months, Lindell's lawyers have quit, citing unpaid fees.
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LurkerNoMore

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Re: Trumpy's Crime Cronies
« Reply #207 on: August 14, 2024, 11:25:51 AM »
Stupid is as stupid does.  Felons gonna felon.

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Pro-Trump lawyer removed from Dominion case after leaking documents to cast doubt on 2020 election

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=Pro-Trump+lawyer+removed+from+Dominion+case+after+leaking+documents+to+cast+doubt+on+2020+election

Judge removes election-denying lawyer from Dominion defamation case for ‘egregious misconduct’

A pro-Trump lawyer who is facing felony charges in Michigan of improperly accessing voting equipment following the 2020 presidential election has been disqualified from representing a prominent funder of election conspiracy theorists who is being sued by Dominion Voting Systems.

Michigan lawyer Stefanie Lambert has been representing Patrick Byrne, the founder of Overstock.com, in a defamation lawsuit brought against him by Dominion, one of the main targets of conspiracy theories over former President Donald Trump’s 2020 election loss.

Lambert was disqualified from the case on Tuesday after admitting to releasing thousands of confidential discovery documents that she had agreed to keep private.

Due to Lambert’s actions, the documents that all parties “had agreed to keep confidential, have now been shared widely in the public domain,” U.S. District Court Judge Moxila A. Upadhyaya wrote in a 62-page opinion.

“Lambert’s repeated misconduct raises the serious concern that she became involved in this litigation for the sheer purpose of gaining access to and publicly sharing Dominion’s protected discovery,” wrote Upadhyaya.

Lambert's lawyer, Daniel Hartman, said by phone Wednesday that Lambert would be “appealing the decision.”

“We are appealing,” Byrne wrote in a text to The Associated Press. “They may think it was a tactical victory, but they will come to understand it was a strategic mistake.”

Lambert acknowledged earlier this year passing on records from Dominion Voting Systems to “law enforcement.” She then attached an affidavit that included some of the leaked emails and was signed by Dar Leaf — a county sheriff in southwestern Michigan who has investigated false claims of widespread election fraud from the 2020 election — to a filing in her own case in Michigan. The rest of the documents were posted to an account under Leaf’s name on the social platform X.

As a result, Dominion filed a motion demanding Lambert be removed from the Byrne case for violating a protective order that Upadhyaya had placed on documents in the case. It said Lambert’s disclosure had triggered a new round of threats toward the company, which has been at the center of elaborate conspiracy theories about Trump’s loss.

The request was described by Upadhyaya as “extraordinary” but necessary after Lambert has repeatedly shown she “has no regard for orders or her obligations as an attorney.”

In a separate case, Lambert has been charged in Michigan with four felonies for accessing voting machines in a search for evidence of a conspiracy theory against Trump. She was arrested by U.S. Marshals earlier this year after a Michigan judge issued a bench warrant for missing a hearing in her case.

Along with a local clerk in Michigan, Lambert has also been charged with multiple felonies, including unauthorized access to a computer and using a computer to commit a crime, after transmitting data from a local township’s poll book related to the 2020 election.

Lambert has pleaded not guilty in both cases.

Lambert sued unsuccessfully to overturn Trump’s loss in Michigan.

Biden won Michigan by nearly 155,000 votes over then-President Trump, a result confirmed by a GOP-led state Senate investigation in 2021.

Dominion filed several defamation lawsuits against those who spread conspiracy theories blaming its election equipment for Trump’s loss. Fox News settled the most prominent of these cases for $787 million last year.

Dominion’s suit against Byrne is one of several the company has filed against prominent election deniers, including MyPillow founder Mike Lindell and attorney Sidney Powell.
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LurkerNoMore

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Re: Trumpy's Crime Cronies
« Reply #208 on: September 06, 2024, 08:36:37 AM »
Oh no...  Not Russia again.   :D :D :D

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Former Trump campaign adviser charged with working for sanctioned Russian media

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=Former+Trump+campaign+adviser+charged+with+working+for+sanctioned+Russian+media

Former Trump adviser Dimitri Simes was charged on Thursday for work conducted on behalf of sanctioned Russian state TV company Channel One, and for accepting and laundering more than $1 million in compensation, the Department of Justice said.

Other compensation included a personal car and driver, a stipend for an apartment in Moscow and a team of employees, a statement from the DOJ alleges.

“These defendants allegedly violated sanctions that were put in place in response to Russia’s illegal aggression in Ukraine,” U.S. Attorney Matthew M. Graves said in a statement, per the Associated Press. “Such violations harm our national security interests — a fact that Dimitri Simes, with the deep experience he gained in national affairs after fleeing the Soviet Union and becoming a U.S. citizen, should have uniquely appreciated.”

The company was sanctioned in 2022 following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and violations of those sanctions — with which Dimitri and his wife Anastasia Simes are charged with three each — carry a penalty of up to 20 years in prison per count.

Simes, who worked with the Trump campaign in 2016 to organize foreign policy speeches via his think tank, the Center for the National Interest, was also heavily featured as a person of interest in Robert Mueller’s report on Russian interference in the 2016 election.

Per Mueller’s report, Simes advised Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner on potential talking points on Russia for the then-candidate and passed information about Bill Clinton which was shared with other campaign officials, per the Associated Press.

According to the DOJ, Anastasia Simes was additionally charged for working with sanctioned oligarch Aleksandr Yevgenyevich Udodov, violating the sanctions by purchasing art on Udodov’s behalf. The DOJ added that the pair hadn't been arrested and were likely out of the country.

The charges came amid a slew of DOJ indictments this week against Americans working alongside Russians to promote the interests of the country illegally as it continues to wage its invasion against Ukraine, including an indictment involving an American conservative media group that took $10 million from Russia Today.
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LurkerNoMore

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Re: Trumpy's Crime Cronies
« Reply #209 on: September 06, 2024, 08:40:00 AM »
Of course... the excuse shouldn't surprise anyone.    :D :D :D

Funny how there are texts acknowledging they were getting paid by the Russians.  Whoops!

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MAGA Desperately Claims Russian Propagandists Were the Real “Victims”

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=MAGA+Desperately+Claims+Russian+Propagandists+Were+the+Real+%E2%80%9CVictims%E2%80%9D

MAGA Republicans are more than happy to excuse the right-wing influencers at the center of a Russian propaganda scheme.

Right-wing influencers like Tim Pool, Dave Rubin, Lauren Southern, and Benny Johnson all worked with Tenet Media, a Tennessee-based firm that the Justice Department revealed Wednesday was secretly funded by Russian state media employees in “a scheme to create and distribute content to U.S. audiences with hidden Russian government messaging.” The indictment charges two Russia Today employees with providing nearly $10 million to the media company that often spouted Kremlin talking points.
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