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originally posted by: PokeyJoe
a reply to: CanadianMason
Its not supposed to be obvious. You have to think about it. Thats the entire point of the exercise.
BREAKING: Mueller Filing Confirms General Flynn Was Set Up – Agents DID NOT Believe Flynn Was Lying
The Special Counsel responded Friday by defending the circumstances behind the Flynn ambush interview, claiming Flynn tried to “minimize” what he did — this is a flat out lie.
Robert Mueller oversaw witch hunt against Sen. Ted Stevens
originally posted by: IAMTAT
a reply to: liveandlearn
Mueller & his team is loaded with discredited Sen.Ted Stevens' prosecutors.
Robert Mueller oversaw witch hunt against Sen. Ted Stevens
mustreadalaska.com...
FYI: To those not familiar with Sen. Stevens...you may remember the mysterious 2010 plane crash, which took his life in the wilds of Alaska.
The failure of Basis is a reminder of why some Silicon Valley investors shied away from the cryptocurrency industry in the first place. The cryptocurrency industry has had a wild, peak-to-valley year. Case in point: The news today that Basis — one of Silicon Valley’s buzziest attempts to create an alternative to traditional currency — is shutting down.
originally posted by: IAMTAT
a reply to: liveandlearn
Mueller & his team is loaded with discredited Sen.Ted Stevens' prosecutors.
Robert Mueller oversaw witch hunt against Sen. Ted Stevens
mustreadalaska.com...
FYI: To those not familiar with Sen. Stevens...you may remember the mysterious 2010 plane crash, which took his life in the wilds of Alaska.
Weissmann’s tactics sent four Merrill Lynch executives to prison, until a federal appellate court overturned their convictions and freed the men—but not before upending their lives.
Also, Weissmann’s prosecution of former accounting giant Arthur Andersen for its role in the Enron collapse shuttered the firm, leaving tens of thousands of people unemployed. Several years later the Supreme Court unanimously reversed the Arthur Andersen conviction, but it was too late by then to undo the harm Weissmann had caused.
Further research into Weissmann’s role in the prosecution of Enron executives Jeffrey Skilling, Kenneth Lay, and Richard Causey (the “Enron case”) reveal a more startling and concerning possibility: that Weissmann improperly threatened witnesses. In that case, co-defendants Skilling, Lay, and Causey filed a joint motion to dismiss the criminal charges brought against them, arguing the Enron Task Force, which Weissmann joined in 2002 and headed from 2004 until his abrupt departure in July 2005, engaged in multiple incidents of prosecutorial misconduct.