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Author Topic: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2  (Read 453766 times)

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6152 on: May 25, 2023, 10:20:57 PM »
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Trump lawyers warn him to prepare for federal indictment

Former President Donald Trump has already been indicted on felony charges in the state of New York, and now his lawyers are reportedly preparing him to get hit with federal charges as well.

Sources tell Rolling Stone that Trump's allies are telling him that he appears very likely to be indicted by special counsel Jack Smith's office in the Mar-a-Lago documents case where he stashed top-secret government documents at his private resort and refused to return them even after receiving a subpoena.

“Looks like they’re going for it,” one source tells the publication. “People close to the [former] president have discussed with him what we think is going to happen soon, and how he and everyone else needs to be ready for it… It would be crazy not to.”

Tom Fitton, a Trump ally and president of the right-wing Judicial Watch group, similarly told Rolling Stone that he "would just presume indictments in all the jurisdictions."

The publications sources also say that Trump has reacted bitterly to the looming potential indictment. As the report points out, Trump faces significant danger not for merely possessing the documents but for potentially obstructing the government's attempts to retrieve them from his possession.

AFP

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6152 on: May 25, 2023, 10:20:57 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6153 on: May 26, 2023, 09:25:48 AM »
Trump’s employees conducted ‘dress rehearsal’ for concealing sensitive documents

The day before FBI agents came to Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago property to retrieve classified documents, prosecutors believe two of the former president’s employees moved boxes containing papers in a development that’s being viewed as suspicious by investigators, The Washington Post reported Thursday.

Additionally, The Post reports that Trump’s aides conducted a “dress rehearsal” for moving sensitive documents before his office received the May 2022 subpoena.

Prosecutors have also obtained evidence suggesting Trump kept classified documents in his office in a place where they were visible and sometimes showed them to others.

"Taken together," The Post reports, "the new details of the classified-documents investigation suggest a greater breadth and specificity to the instances of possible obstruction found by the FBI and Justice Department than has been previously reported.

"It also broadens the timeline of possible obstruction episodes that investigators are examining — a period stretching from events at Mar-a-Lago before the subpoena to the period after the FBI raid there on Aug. 8."

Read the full article here: https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2023/05/25/trump-classified-documents-mar-a-lago/



Trump and his aides performed a 'dress rehearsal' for moving sensitive White House documents even before his team was subpoenaed last May, sources alleged: WaPo

- The DOJ is investigating Donald Trump's handling of classified White House documents.
- Sources told WaPo that there may be evidence of possible obstruction.
- Workers helped move boxes of documents the day before the FBI raided Mar-a-Lago, per WaPo.




Donald Trump and his team may have prepared to move sensitive White House documents months before the FBI raided the Mar-a-Lago resort last August, according to a report from The Washington Post.

Sources familiar with the Justice Department's investigation alleged to The Post that the former president's aides performed a "dress rehearsal" for moving the documents even before the DOJ shared a grand jury subpoena requesting all classified records back in May.

FBI agents seized thousands of government documents, some of them marked confidential, from Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort last August. The DOJ's probe entered a new phase in March after Special Counsel Jack Smith subpoenaed dozens of Mar-a-Lago staffers, but movement in the investigation has been quiet in recent weeks. ABC News reported that Smith may be wrapping up the investigation as he decides whether to charge the former president.

Some of the charges could include wrongful possession of government documents and obstructing the government's efforts to retrieve the material.

On top of the aides' alleged preparation for moving sensitive documents, two of Trump's employees moved boxes of documents a day before FBI agents and a prosecutor met with Trump's lawyer in Mar-a-Lago last June to retrieve any material, the sources told The Post.

One of the employees was a maintenance worker at the resort who offered to help a Trump aide, Walt Nauta, with moving the boxes, a source familiar with the matter told The New York Times. The maintenance worker did not know the content of the boxes, the source said.

Nauta was caught on security camera moving boxes out of a storage room in Mar-a-Lago before and after the Justice Department issued the May subpoena, The Times previously reported.

Federal prosecutors also have evidence that Trump kept classified documents out in the open in his office at Mar-a-Lago and sometimes showed them to other people, sources told The Post.

Trump's spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment. He has previously denied any wrongdoing regarding his handling of classified documents.

https://www.businessinsider.com/trumps-team-performed-dress-rehearsal-for-moving-white-house-docs-2023-5



Legal expert expects 'Espionage Act charges' after Trump reportedly told staff to move documents



The Washington Post revealed Thursday that the day prior to the execution of a search warrant at Mar-a-Lago, former President Donald Trump told his staff to move the documents the FBI were seeking.

The report has prompted legal experts to anticipate Espionage charges will be filed against the Republican.

National security analyst Marcy Wheeler pointed out the three classified documents in Trump's desk drawer included "one 'compiled' with docs that post-date Trump's White House departure."

"One of the most important details is that the grand jury hasn't sat since May 5; three Fridays ago," Wheeler explained. "That means two of the last live bodies the grand jury have seen are Matthews Calamari Sr. and Jr. They were asked why Walt Nauta called after DOJ sent a subpoena for surveillance footage. Want your additional instance of obstruction? There ya go!

It was also reported this week that the National Archives released information showing they talked to the White House about handling classified documents and packing them up.

Wheeler cited 18 USC 793(e), which says that showing people not cleared to see such documents is a more serious violation.

The Department of Justice has "evidence that even before Trump’s office received the subpoena in May, he had what some officials have dubbed a 'dress rehearsal' for moving government documents that he did not want to relinquish," the Post report said.

Ryan Goodman, former Department of Defense special counsel and NYU Law professor, agreed with Wheeler and cited 18 USC 793(e), which is about "willful retention," and 18 USC1519, which is obstruction.

He pointed out the Post report it was told "evidence showing that boxes of documents were moved into a storage area on June 2, just before senior Justice Department lawyer Jay Bratt arrived at Mar-a-Lago with agents."

"A second employee who helped Walt Nauta move boxes into (the) storage room a day before the FBI visit on June 3. The next day... 'the employee helped Nauta pack an SUV 'when former president Trump left for Bedminster,'" Goodman explained.

It's more than enough for obstruction, Goodman said. "Willfully disseminating to third parties is also easily distinguishable from [Mike] Pence, [Joe] Biden, other instances in which DOJ has declined to prosecute (e.g. Alberto Gonzales)."

He tweeted: "I expect this will result in Espionage Act charges. Dissemination is key."

Former US Attorney Harry Litman agreed with the others highlighting 793(e) saying it "makes disclosure of classified info a crime but evidence in WaPo story is far from well-developed and raises the issue of prosecutorial judgment whether Smith wants to now take on a whole separate charge. If so, he could really use an eyewitness to whom Trump disclosed."

Read More Here: https://twitter.com/emptywheel/status/1661806650875936777

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6154 on: May 26, 2023, 09:31:16 AM »
Mar-a-Lago maintenance worker aided prosecutors in Trump probe



A Mar-a-Lago maintenance worker provided prosecutors key evidence in Justice Department’s investigation of Donald Trump over the former president’s handling of classified documents, The New York Times reports.

The maintenance worker told authorities that they witnessed an aide moving boxes into a storage room the day before a Trump lawyer met with FBI agents and a prosecutor who visited the former president’s Florida home to retrieve classified documents.

The worker had offered to help the aide move the boxes, according to the report, but the worker was not aware of what was in the boxes.

The aide is identified as Walt Nauta, who served as Trump’s valet in the White House.

The revelation follows reporting from The Washington Post earlier in the day that two of the former president’s employees moved boxes containing papers in a development that’s being viewed as suspicious by investigators.

Additionally, The Post reported that Trump’s aides conducted a “dress rehearsal” for moving sensitive documents before his office received the May 2022 subpoena.

The Times’ Alan Feuer and Maggie Haberman write that “The worker’s account is potentially significant to prosecutors as they piece together details of how Mr. Trump handled sensitive documents he took with him from the White House upon leaving office and whether he obstructed efforts by the Justice Department and the National Archives to retrieve them.”

“Mr. Trump was found to have been keeping some of the documents in the storage room where Mr. Nauta and the maintenance worker were moving boxes on the day before the Justice Department’s top counterintelligence official, Jay Bratt, traveled to Mar-a-Lago last June to seek the return of any government materials being held by the former president.”

Weeks earlier the Justice Department issued a subpoena demanding the return of the documents.

Prosecutors are investigating whether the documents were moved in an effort to conceal them.

“Part of their interest is in trying to determine whether documents were moved before Mr. Corcoran went through the boxes himself ahead of a meeting with Justice Department officials looking to retrieve them,” Feuer and Haberman write.

“Prosecutors have been asking witnesses about the roles of Mr. Nauta and the maintenance worker, whose name has not been publicly disclosed, in moving documents around that time.”

Read the full article here: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/25/us/politics/mar-a-lago-trump-classified-documents.html



Increasingly solid every day': Ex-Trump White House lawyer hails Jack Smith's case against Trump



Former President Donald Trump's one-time White House attorney Ty Cobb warned that the former president is facing down serious legal jeopardy in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case on Wednesday's edition of CNN's "OutFront."

This comes amid a bombshell report in The Washington Post that not only were classified documents on display for many to see at Trump's country club, but that employees conducted a "dress rehearsal" at his demand to help him figure out which documents he wanted to conceal from authorities.

The evidence that Trump committed a crime here, said Cobb, is "increasingly solid every day."

"I think we had an exchange where I was commenting on it sounded like there was a lot of i-dotting and t-crossing, which suggests they're near the end," Cobb told anchor Erin Burnett. "I do believe that is the case. They have some compelling evidence. I think the evidence with regard to the moving of the boxes, the evidence that they're relying on primarily with regard to the movement of the boxes they received the day after those boxes were moved. There were tapes of this, you know, the access and to the storage room. They have known about that for a long time. The reporting is out on that for a long time. But as they zero in on that issue, you know, there are two witnesses. One of them is represented by John Irving. That is the source for the, you know, the Post quote. The statement they got about not not knowing what was going on."

Another aspect made more relevant by the new report, Cobb argued, "is the testimony of Evan Corcoran and Tim Parlatore. Two lawyers [whom] ... the court denied Trump's claim of attorney-client privilege and found that the crime-fraud doctrine overcame Trump's claim and forced them to testify."

"Keep in mind that, you know, Corcoran testified that he warned Trump that he could not retain any classified documents beyond the subpoena," said Cobb. "And Parlatore, you know, he subsequently resigned, you know, expressed great concerns about directions that were given by [Trump adviser] Boris Epshteyn, and the extent that Epshteyn was translating their advice faithfully."

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6154 on: May 26, 2023, 09:31:16 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6155 on: May 26, 2023, 09:46:38 AM »
'I don't think he fully understands': Former CIA chief doubts Trump knows seriousness of document scandal



Former CIA director John Brennan addressed the national security implications of Donald Trump's documents scandal Thursday – particularly after the Washington Post's reporting that the former president had his staff move the files the day before the FBI searched his Mar-a-Lago home.

Sue Gordon, the former deputy director of National Intelligence, told MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace in Aug. 2022, that Trump has an agenda, in her experience with him.

"And he will use whatever is at his disposal to advance that," she said. "The problem we have here is that, depending on what agenda issues forth, he has had at his disposal, for a long period of time, information that if he used that information to advance an agenda item, it could have devastating consequences to national security.

"But I can't think of a simpler way to say why I think that this moment is so difficult. That's because there is no justification and knowing who he is, and that he doesn't fully understand, but he may not decide to protect if he wanted to do something different."

Brennan agreed, saying that the stakes are extremely high in this case. The concern that the panel discussed is the "why" factor in the Trump document scandal. One panelist said that at the same time, Trump's lawyer, Boris Epshteyn, tried to stop Tim Parlatore from checking for documents at Trump's Bedminster golf course – months before Trump was set to hold the first LIV golf tournament there.

"It is quite clear that Donald Trump's retention of these documents was quite purposeful," Brennan said. "And with an aim that is still unknown. How he was going to leverage the information in those documents that contain some of the most sensitive secrets of the U.S. intelligence and government. What would he do? What has he done already?

"The potential compromise of sources and methods, if you look at the classification markings, the code words on those documents. Some of the most sensitive — extremely sensitive – that we have. There are the collections systems, other things."

One thing about Trump, he continued, is that he doesn't care about the implications and the consequences of his actions.

"I don't think he fully understands. He was never really a student of the intelligence profession itself," Brennan continued.

"So, therefore, who knows what he might have done. And I do hope, in addition to holding him accountable for the unlawful retention of these documents, that we really do get to the bottom of what he planned to do, what he might have already done, and go who might have had access to these documents that could have seriously compromised national security."

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'We better look': Counter-intel expert says Jack Smith may have new info on Trump



Frank Figliuzzi, former FBI assistant director for counter-intelligence, highlighted the recent report that special counsel Jack Smith is looking into financial information for Donald Trump's international businesses in seven countries, and said it's possible Smith has additional info about information sharing.

Speaking to MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace on Tuesday, Figliuzzi explained that the statements from Trump in the CNN town hall were more admissions, in a line of confessions, that he took the documents he should not have.

"But that crucial period after that sobering subpoena is slapped on you is that I have a choice," explained Figliuzzi. "I'll either comply with the law, or I'm not. And everything he's done after that has involved non-compliance with the law, and, in fact, thumbing his nose at the law. And as recently as the CNN town hall meeting, he actually said, 'I took those documents. I had every right to. And if I did show them to somebody, and I can't remember if I did or not, I had every right to.' This is defiance that goes towards criminal intention. It is there. And, by the way, if the reports are accurate, this case is all but done."

Figliuzzi's reference was to the Wall Street Journal reporting that Smith is finishing up his probe and all interviews have been done.

Wallace walked through the timeline of how much Trump handed over and when. She pointed to the New York Times reporting of the foreign Trump businesses and recalled that it was part of the documents case at the DOJ.

"Do we assume that people we maybe haven't heard about, going in to talk to Jack Smith and his investigators, are part of the fabric of this part of the probe — foreign business dealings and Trump classified documents?" she asked.

He explained the depth of the collection of intelligence that would surround the Trump documents case.

"We know Trump doesn't use email, but he is a prolific user of the phones, right?" explained Figliuzzi. "And so, guaranteed there have been subpoenas for phone carriers for his phone records throughout this period and watching his response to a visit from the head of the National Security Secretary, DOJ, then here come FBI agents, and there's a subpoena. And you're watching this, they call it 'tickling the wire.' See what responses — who is he calling? Who's calling each other?"

He said that it isn't about the protected privilege content of lawyers' conversations, but it outlines who else he's speaking with.

"So, you can develop sources," Figliuzzi continued. "So, when there is great confidence that they have the goods on him, it is because they are targeting people who know for a fact what is going on. Now, let's fast forward and tie that into this subpoena for whether or not the Trump Organization was doing any business with one or more, or seven nations. There is an interesting piece in the Washington Post that actually puts a post on it. And it is last month. If that is true, that is intriguing because it may imply that this is a pro forma routine thing. Let's make sure there's no surprises because the defense will say, 'Look, you have no evidence that committed espionage, right? That he actually disseminated national security information to a foreign country?' Well, we better look."

The alternative is that one could be reading the story and think that some intelligence may have recently "maybe from those phone calls, maybe from those from sources, where we think, no, we better look at Saudi, or China, or Turkey. I don't know. But it would go toward motive," he closed. "And it would be explosive if he would have actually shown documents, and what if those documents involved those very countries that are on the list? It's even more concerning. And now you're looking at maybe real-life espionage."

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Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6156 on: May 26, 2023, 10:02:09 AM »
Yes, Criminal Donald is going to be indicted again.


Report: Donald Trump’s Pals Think He’s About to Be Indicted...Again
https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2023/05/donald-trump-mar-a-lago-possible-indictment

Trump lawyers ignite speculation that former president could be indicted yet again
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-indictment-lawyers-attorney-general-meeting-b2344682.html

Trump’s Lawyers Warn Him: Get Ready to Be Indicted by the Feds
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/trump-lawyers-warn-federal-indictment-classified-docs-1234741855/

Washington Post: Trump employees moved boxes day before DOJ went to Mar-a-Lago
https://edition.cnn.com/2023/05/25/politics/trump-mar-a-lago-documents/index.html

Report: Trump aides moved documents at Mar-a-Lago day before FBI visit

The Washington Post reported two employees of Donald Trump moved boxes of papers at Mar-a-Lago a day before the Justice Department visited the former president’s residence to collect classified documents. Trump also allegedly conducted “a ‘dress rehearsal’ for moving sensitive papers” along with his team before they were subpoenaed in May 2022, according to the report.

Watch:





Lawrence: Trump faces new 'extremely damning' potential obstruction evidence

MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell analyzes the latest reporting from The Washington Post on newly revealed evidence in Special Prosecutor Jack Smith’s Mar-a-Lago documents investigation, including new details on employees of former President Donald Trump moving boxes of documents one day before the FBI came to Mar-a-Lago to retrieve them.

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6156 on: May 26, 2023, 10:02:09 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Donald Trump Indicted!
« Reply #6157 on: May 26, 2023, 09:33:54 PM »
Donnie could very well be indicted next week after Memorial Day!

Espionage Act Charges Very Much In Play For Trump
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/morning-memo/espionage-act-donald-trump-mar-a-lago

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6158 on: May 26, 2023, 10:00:05 PM »
Nerves are fraying at Mar-a-Lago': Legal expert says Jan. 6 sentences should worry Trump

A federal court may have fired a warning shot to Donald Trump by imposing lengthy sentences for some of the organizers of the Jan. 6 insurrection.

District Court judge Amit Mehta sentenced Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes to 18 years in prison for seditious conspiracy and ordered his top lieutenant, Kelly Meggs, to serve 12 years for the same crime, and legal expert Dennis Aftergut wrote a column for The Bulwark analyzing the message that sent to Trump and his supporters.

"As a general matter, judges typically reserve longer sentences for those higher up the ladder of culpability," wrote Aftergut, a former federal prosecutor. "Rhodes got six more years than Meggs; Rhodes was a leader of the Oath Keepers but not, as his lawyer and [Capitol police officer] Harry Dunn both emphasized, of the whole insurrection."

"We’re waiting for Special Counsel Jack Smith to indict the true leader," he added. "Nerves are fraying in Mar-a-Lago."

Greene should also be worried about the harsh sentences meted out to the militants, whom she has described as "political prisoners."

"The court’s response to Rhodes was a heavy-duty sentence, the language the law speaks to extract accountability for violence and the lies that motivate it," Aftergut wrote. "MTG has only hinted at violence in support of her lies, but the court, when it said to Rhodes that 'You . . . present an ongoing threat and a peril to this country,' may as well have been speaking to her."

Read More Here: https://plus.thebulwark.com/p/four-messages-stewart-rhodes-oath-keepers



Trump understands he's in serious trouble here' after new Mar-a-Lago bombshell: Morning Joe



Reacting to a bombshell report from the Washington Post that the Department of Justice has evidence that employees at Mar-a-Lago engaged in a "dress rehearsal" where they moved sensitive documents before his office receipt of a May 2022 subpoena, MSNBC host Joe Scarborough suggested that Donald Trump knows the DOJ has him cornered.

As the Post reported, "Taken together, the new details of the classified-documents investigation suggest a greater breadth and specificity to the instances of possible obstruction found by the FBI and Justice Department than have been previously reported. It also broadens the timeline of possible obstruction episodes that investigators are examining — a period stretching from events at Mar-a-Lago before the subpoena to the period after the FBI search there on Aug. 8."

During the "Morning Joe" panel on the report, with the Post's Perry Stein filling in the details, the MSNBC host also noted that Trump reportedly left the documents sitting about where anyone could see them.

"Donald Trump understands he's in serious trouble here," the MSNBC host told the panel.

"And when you have a judge in this case that has already pierced the attorney/client privilege because -- well, the only time a judge can do that is when they believe a crime may have been committed through that attorney/client privilege. -- at that point, you get this information about the boxes being moved the day before the DOJ and FBI come down."

'Donald Trump does understand, has to understand, and everybody around him has to understand, this is not going to end well for him or people that are close to him," he added.

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Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6159 on: May 27, 2023, 09:06:43 AM »
They got Donnie on tape committing his crimes! ;D


Prosecutors have a recording of Trump and a witness in hush-money case: report

Prosecutors have obtained a recording of a phone conversation between Donald Trump and an undisclosed witness in the Stormy Daniels case, according to a document that was made public Friday, CBS News reports.

The document, which is called an automatic discovery form, describes the nature of the charges a defendant is facing along with evidence prosecutors expect to use at a preliminary trial.

Media organizations and Trump’s legal team had sought the public release of the document since Trump’s April 4 arrest in a 34-count indictment on allegations he falsified business documents in an effort to conceal hush money payments to an adult film star.

The former president has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office in the automatic discovery form reveals it has shared with Trump’s legal team a “recording of a conversation between defendant and a witness."

The document also indicates that prosecutors plan to release additional recordings between the witness and other people.

Not all the information was made available, according to the report, which notes that, "some information, labeled 'Limited Dissemination Materials' by prosecutors, will only be available to Trump in the presence of his attorneys."

Read More Here: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-criminal-case-prosecutors-recording-of-trump-and-a-witness/



Next stop for Jack Smith is Trump's financial ties to the Saudis: columnist

A report from the New York Times that investigators working for special counsel Jack Smith have issued a subpoena demanding information from the Trump Organization regarding its international business dealings led Salon columnist Heather Digby Parton to suggest Smith and his people should place their emphasis on financial ties to the ruling family in Saudi Arabia.

According to the Times report, "The subpoena — drafted by the office of the special counsel, Jack Smith — sought details on the Trump Organization’s real estate licensing and development dealings in seven countries: China, France, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Oman, according to the people familiar with the matter.

The subpoena sought the records for deals reached since 2017, when Mr. Trump was sworn in as president."

Parton wrote an investigation is definitely warranted into his boosting of the Saudi-backed LIV golf tour, which has converted the former president into a vocal cheerleader for the Saudis despite their execrable human rights record.

"At least someone is finally taking a look at what exactly was going on while Trump was running his business out of the Oval Office." Parton wrote, adding that Trump's golf courses have been hurting since the PGA abandoned them due to his many controversies, making the former president ripe for the plucking.

Although there is no direct appearance of deals during Trump's brief four years in office, there is likely much to look at since he lost his 2020 re-election, with an even greater concern about his third presidential bid.

"If Trump were just retiring to his golf resorts and taking advantage of all the contacts he made while president, it might be reasonable just to let it go in the interest of never having to think about him again," the Salon piece read.

"But he's the clear frontrunner for the 2024 Republican nomination and he's openly helping the Saudi regime 'sportswash' its human rights record while taking unknown millions from it," the Salon columnist wrote before adding, "Let's hope that unlike Robert Mueller, who refused to exceed his mandate and look at Trump's finances, Jack Smith sees this for the blatant corruption it is."

You can read the Salon article here: https://www.salon.com/2023/05/26/and-the-saudis-is-jack-smith-finally-looking-at-this-clear-cut-corruption/



Legal expert reacts to new report about Trump's Mar-a-Lago documents

The Washington Post is reporting that former president Donald Trump moved boxes of papers at Mar-a-Lago a day before the Justice Department visited the former president's residence to collect classified documents and witnesses claimed that Trump displayed classified information to visitors.

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #6159 on: May 27, 2023, 09:06:43 AM »