The News And Times Review - NewsAndTimes.org | Links | Blog | Tweets  | Selected Articles 

Categories
The FBI News Review

David Fincher Knows Exactly Why We’re All So Obsessed With True Crime – TIME

David Fincher Knows Exactly Why We’re All So Obsessed With True Crime  TIME
Categories
FBI News Review

12:59 AM 10/9/2017 – BOB BARR: Chris Wray at the FBI: A breath of fresh air | Opinion

BOB BARR: Chris Wray at the FBI: A breath of fresh air | Opinion

1 Share
In spite of this week’s horrific news from Las Vegas, I remain convinced that Americans, on the whole, are the most kind, moral and resilient people on the planet. This is why crimes and tragedies such as mass shootings shake us to the core; they challenge what we know about ourselves, along with the sense of justice that binds together a free and peaceful society. Without faith in justice — our collective sense of knowing right from wrong — society falls apart at the seams.
Therefore, amongst all the news of tragedy this week, it behooves us to focus at least some of our emotional energy on the good news coming from a major facet of justice in American society — the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and its newly sworn-in director, Christopher Wray.
I had the honor of attending Wray’s swearing-in ceremony in Washington last week; and the praise directed to him during the event, along with what I know of Wray from his time spent in Atlanta as an Assistant United States Attorney, as a top official at Main Justice during the second Bush Administration, and as an attorney in private practice, demonstrate there is much to be optimistic about regarding his tenure at an agency suffering through a period of waning public confidence.
Wray’s speech at his investiture was rife with heartfelt and genuine respect for the FBI as an institution, acknowledging the agency’s proud history of sacrifice and integrity in pursuit of its mission. His remarks also offered a glimpse at his refreshingly professional approach to directing the FBI. This is a welcome change of pace.
To be sure, over the decades as a watchdog of government abuse of power, I have been hard on the FBI and other federal law enforcement agencies when they fail to truly uphold the law and the Constitution. For example, the conduct of federal agencies during the Waco (1993) and Ruby Ridge (1992) sieges warranted intense scrutiny and scorn for failing to stay within both operational and legal boundaries during the incidents; and I was among those who demanded that they be held accountable.
In the short term, accountability ensures the guilty and corrupt are punished for their crimes. For the longer term, accountability is the first step in helping to ensure such mistakes are not repeated. Pleasantly, this was a theme in Wray’s remarks. The FBI’s history “hasn’t come without missteps … without errors in judgment,” said the new Director. But the former prosecutor did not leave it at that, as others might have; he continued: “But we take those mistakes, and we learn from them. We get better at doing what we need to do, and closer to being the very best we can be.”
Wray may have been referring to the historical “missteps” and “errors in judgement” like those I mentioned above, but it is not hard to infer he may also have been referring to those of his predecessor, James Comey, who took center stage in a political drama in which neither he nor the agency should ever find themselves. Fortunately, Wray carries no such baggage. “A director must know it is not about him, but about security, justice and law,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said of Wray at the ceremony; concluding that, “Director Wray meets that test in full. … He has no hidden agendas.”
This is precisely what the FBI needs at this moment in time. It needs a restart that puts its mission — “to protect the American people and uphold the Constitution,” as Wray put it — at the forefront of the agency, rather than be driven — even in part — by any political or other hidden agenda. It needs a leader who “always pursue(s) justice,” as Wray eloquently put it, echoing James Madison in the Federalist Papers that justice is indeed the ultimate goal and purpose of government; and always with a “drive and passion for excellence.” Finally, it needs a director who does not see himself as bigger than the agency he leads. Wray is that leader.
It is certainly a high bar set for him and the Bureau, but listening to Wray speak, and hearing others like Sessions speak of him, it is clear that Wray is the right man for the job, at exactly the right time. His plate is full already; but by every measure, he is well-poised to take on the challenges.
Bob Barr is a former federal prosecutor and a former Congressman. He represented Georgia’s 7th congressional district as a Republican from 1995 to 2003.
Read the whole story
· · ·

Stephen Paddock barricaded door at Mandalay Bay Resort

1 Share
LAS Vegas sniper Stephen Paddock left no stone unturned before orchestrating the deadliest mass shooting in US history.

More details have emerged on the extraordinary planning the 64-year-old went to before he opened fire on a 22,000-strong crowd from the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino. At least 58 people were killed during the rampage.
Authorities said Paddock “extensively” planned the attack after discovering he set up cameras around the hotel to spy on police, even hiding one in a food service cart.
But now, a Wall Street Journal report reveals Paddock may have also had “target practice” in the desert near his home two days before the massacre.
Investigators have reportedly uncovered video footage from a home-surveillance system that shows Stephen Paddock driving alone to an area on the outskirts of Mesquite, Nevada, where locals go for target practice.
MORE: What happens to hotel room 32135 now?
VEGAS SHOOTING: Millionaire gunman’s plans

Members of the media gather in front of the home of mass murderer Stephen Paddock in Mesquite, Nevada. Picture: AFPSource:AFP
Stephen Paddock opened fire on the Route 91 Harvest Festival killing at least 58 people. Picture: Courtesy of Eric Paddock via APSource:AP

The footage shows Paddock heading to the area on the Friday before the Sunday attack, the official told the Journal. It was one spot where he reportedly practised shooting.
The video footage shows Paddock driving along a road that leads to a spot in the desert where everyone goes to shoot, the law-enforcement official added.
However, a range manager told the Journal Paddock had no military service record and never used his arsenal at the only shooting range within 32km of his home.
A spokeswoman for the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Inside Stephen Paddock’s room at the Mandalay Bay hotel. Picture: SuppliedSource:Supplied
Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.

End of dialog window.

Police have released the first body cam footage from the Las Vegas shooting that left 60 people dead

COPS DESCRIBE 12 MINUTES OF HELL
Las Vegas police officers described in harrowing detail the tense 12 minutes they spent trying to breach the mass murderer’s lair — and the paranoia that gripped them once they were inside, the New York Post reports.
Smoke hung thick inside the room — tinged with the scent of spent gunpowder and sporadically illuminated by a blinking fire-alarm light — when officers first stepped into Mandalay Bay’s Room 32-135, where Paddock, now dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, spent the previous three days building his sniper’s nest, according to the police in an interview with CBS TV’s 60 Minutes.
The sight — and the seeming impossibility that a lone man in his 60s could have caused such carnage — only intensified the officers’ paranoia as they worked to clear the hazy hotel room, they said.

Officer Dave Newton responded to the Vegas shooting. Picture: CBS NewsSource:Supplied

“It was still very much in my brain there’s 50 other dudes in here somewhere,” Detective Matthew Donaldson recalled. “You know, we were still clearing that room, the curtains, moving the curtains. I wanted to make sure somebody wasn’t hiding between the windows and the curtains.”
They had reason to fear Paddock had help, though investigators later determined he acted alone: The first person to reach the room, Mandalay Bay security guard Jesus Campos, was met with a hail of gunfire when he had approached the door just minutes before.
By the time Paddock was done shooting at Campos, who escaped with a leg injury, the door to his room looked like “Swiss cheese,” Officer David Newton told 60 Minutes.

Police found a note containing crucial details about the shooting inside Paddock’s room at the Mandalay Bay hotel. Picture: SuppliedSource:Supplied
Various weapons and a hammer were also found inside the room. Picture: Fox25 Boston/TwitterSource:Supplied

Newton and other officers coming from the floor below struggled to open a stairwell door that Paddock had jammed shut with metal shims and screws.
Then they saw his splintered door room and a nearby room-service cart with wires hanging off it, prompting fears it was booby-trapped. It was later revealed that Paddock had installed a camera on the cart to watch for anyone coming to stop him.
As officers prepared to blast open what was left of Paddock’s door, they worried that the slightest noise could give away their positions — and lead to another volley of gunfire from the room.
They eventually blasted open the door, revealing “an armory” inside, according to Sgt. Joshua Bitsko.
Along with hundreds of spent casings, officers found Paddock’s lifeless body on the floor. As cops stepped over the corpse and peered through smoke, the totality of Paddock’s sick project came into focus.
“Days of planning,” Bitsko said. “He had toolboxes, power tools to run wires for his surveillance systems. For everything that he had, it took him days to finish.”
Seeing the level of preparation only innervated police as they scoured the suite and adjoining room for any sign of accomplices.
When they found no one else, they left as quickly as they came.
“And then — once that scene was static it was — it was essentially a crime scene. It was, like, ‘Stop what you’re doing. Get out,’ ” Donaldson said.

Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo speaks about the Las Vegas Strip Shooting at the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department headquarters. Picture: AFP/GettySource:AFP

PADDOCK: ‘I WAS BORN BAD’
The Sun reports Paddock boasted in text messages about his father Benjamin being a bank robber who escaped jail in 1969.
He wrote: “I didn’t have anything really to do with him but the bad streak is in my blood. I was born bad.”
The escort described him as “obsessive” and “paranoid” and said he would rant about conspiracy theories, including claiming 9/11 was an inside job by the US government.
The woman, 27, saw Paddock around nine times from November 2015 to June 2016 when he would visit Las Vegas without his girlfriend Marilou Danley, 62.
MORE: Sex worker reveals how gunman acted out violent rape fantasies

Stephen Paddock reportedly acted out violent sexual fantasies and bragged he was “born bad”. Picture: AFPSource:AFP

Paddock — who made $5.8 million in 2015, mostly from gambling — would pay her up to $10,000 a time.
They even stayed in the Mandalay Bay, from where he was to open fire on a music festival, slaughtering 58 before killing himself.
The escort, who does not want to be named, said: “When I first met Stephen I had left an abusive relationship and was starting all over again with nothing but the clothes I was wearing.
“He seemed like he wanted to help. We would go to the casinos together and he would spend hours drinking and gambling.

Paddock’s former girlfriend Marilou Danley. Picture: FacebookSource:Facebook

“But when he would have a winning streak, we would go back and have really aggressive and violent sex.”
The Sun was reportedly shown text messages which appeared to show Paddock discussing tying her up “as you scream for help”.
The escort broke off contact when she started a new relationship.
She said: “He had a dark and twisted side. But even so, I could never have imagined he would do something like this.”

Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.

End of dialog window.

In this 3D motion graphic see how a gunman opens fire on a crown attending an open-air music festival from a room high up at the Mandalay Bay casino.

GUNMAN HAD ‘VANILLA PROFILE’
The owner of a casino where Stephen Paddock gambled says the Las Vegas gunman didn’t drink alcohol or show any signs of trouble when he was a customer there. Steve Wynn said in an interview on “Fox News Sunday” that Paddock had “the most vanilla profile one could possibly imagine.”

Vehicles drive past a billboard featuring a Federal Bureau of Investigation tip line phone number on Interstate 515, in Las Vegas, Nevada. Picture: GettySource:AFP

He says Paddock didn’t run up debts or have a gambling problem. Wynn said butlers, waiters and massage employees knew Paddock and his girlfriend.
Wynn also described some of the security measures his casino put in place in recent years that include magnetometers and training of housekeeping staff to report suspicious actions like a do-not-disturb sign remaining on a door for an extended period of time.
FBI RETURNS LOST BELONGINGS
Officials say they’re beginning to return personal belongings to concertgoers who were in one corner of the festival grounds.
Deputy Clark County Fire Chief John Steinbeck announced that items are being returned to people at a Family Assistance Center in the South Hall of the Las Vegas Convention Center.

Members of the FBI walk among piles of personal items at the scene. Picture: APSource:AP

For now, items are being returned to people who were in the area in and around the VIP tent and bleacher seating east of the stage at the Route 91 Harvest festival.
Federal agents have spent almost a week collecting evidence amid thousands of personal items like cellphones, baby strollers, lawn chairs, backpacks, shoes and purses left behind when people scattered late October 1.

Read the whole story
· · · · · · · ·

Vegas prostitute says Stephen Paddock enjoyed violent sex

1 Share
Las Vegas prostitute who was hired by murderer Stephen Paddock has spoken out about their ‘violent’ sex sessions and how he bragged about having ‘bad blood’.
The woman, who spoke anonymously, said she would spent hours drinking and gambling in Sin City with Paddock, who she described as ‘paranoid’ and ‘obsessive’.
If he hit a winning streak, he would take her back to his room for ‘really aggressive and violent sex’ including living out rape fantasies, she said.

A prostitute who was hired by Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock has told how he harbored rape fantasies and got her to take part in 'violent' sex session
  • Copy link to paste in your message

A prostitute who was hired by Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock has told how he harbored rape fantasies and got her to take part in ‘violent’ sex session

The 27-year-old, who was not named, described Paddock as 'paranoid', 'obsessive', and said he ranted about conspiracy theories including 9/11 being 'an inside job' (pictured, the hotel from which Paddock carried out his killings)
  • Copy link to paste in your message

The 27-year-old, who was not named, described Paddock as ‘paranoid’, ‘obsessive’, and said he ranted about conspiracy theories including 9/11 being ‘an inside job’ (pictured, the hotel from which Paddock carried out his killings)

Police are questioning Las Vegas prostitutes as they try to ascertain a motive for the worst mass shooting in American history. A note with a number of phone numbers on it was found in Paddock's hotel room which police are using to make inquiries 
  • Copy link to paste in your message

Police are questioning Las Vegas prostitutes as they try to ascertain a motive for the worst mass shooting in American history. A note with a number of phone numbers on it was found in Paddock’s hotel room which police are using to make inquiries

Las Vegas police share new updates on shooter Stephen Paddock
Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00

LIVE

MinimizeExpandClose

Paddock also boasted about his bank-robber father, saying that ‘the bad streak is in my blood’ and ‘I was born bad’, according to texts seen by the Sun on Sunday.
The 27-year-old woman said Paddock, 64, would often rant about conspiracy theories including how 9/11 was orchestrated by the US government.
The escort, who said Paddock paid her $6,000-a-time for their meetings, also had texts in which he described tying her up ‘while you scream for help’.

She spoke out after family members revealed that Paddock often consorted with prostitutes who were laid on by hotels while he paid regular visits to the city.
Officials close to the investigation into the shooting revealed that Paddock may have hired an escort in the days before the massacre.
A receipt from Paddock’s hotel room showed two people ordered room service in the days before the attack.

Family members revealed that Paddock often sought the company of prostitutes while in Vegas as they said his relationship with girlfriend Marilou Danley was 'not warm'
  • Copy link to paste in your message

Family members revealed that Paddock often sought the company of prostitutes while in Vegas as they said his relationship with girlfriend Marilou Danley was ‘not warm’

Paddock shot 58 people dead and wounded more than 500 when he opened fire on the Las Vegas Strip using an arsenal of 23 weapons
  • Copy link to paste in your message

Paddock shot 58 people dead and wounded more than 500 when he opened fire on the Las Vegas Strip using an arsenal of 23 weapons

Temporary graves have sprung up along The Strip honoring some of the victims of the tragedy, which took place a week ago
  • Copy link to paste in your message

Temporary graves have sprung up along The Strip honoring some of the victims of the tragedy, which took place a week ago

Meanwhile investigators said they are interviewing other call girls in the hope of ascertaining a motive for the worst mass shooting in American history.
In Paddock’s room, officials found a piece of paper containing a number of phone numbers but they reiterated no suicide note was found.
Law enforcement have said they are ‘confident’ Paddock carried out the Mandalay Bay massacre from his hotel room alone.
Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department Undersheriff Kevin McMahill said on Friday that investigators are sure no one else was in the room before he shot dead 58 and injured almost 500 on Sunday.
Earlier, NBC News had reported a mysterious charger that did not match any of Paddock’s cellphones – raising the possibility that another person had been with Paddock beforehand.
However, later police said that they have now matched all the cell phones and all the chargers and that they belong to Paddock.

Paddock boasted about having 'bad blood' because of his father Benjamin, who was once wanted by the FBI for bank robbery
  • Copy link to paste in your message

Paddock boasted about having ‘bad blood’ because of his father Benjamin, who was once wanted by the FBI for bank robbery

Benjamin was nicknamed 'Big Daddy', 'Chromedome' and 'Old Baldy' and described by FBI agents hunting him as 'psychopathic, armed and dangerous'
  • Copy link to paste in your message

Benjamin was nicknamed ‘Big Daddy’, ‘Chromedome’ and ‘Old Baldy’ and described by FBI agents hunting him as ‘psychopathic, armed and dangerous’

It was earlier revealed that Benjamin Paddock, Stephen’s father, was an FBI most-wanted bank robber and confidence man known as ‘Big Daddy’.
Nenjamin was captured in Las Vegas in 1960 – then escaped and lived on the run for a decade.
He was described as psychopathic, armed and dangerous and suicidal – and the public were told not to approach the man known as ‘Chromedome’ and ‘Old Baldy’.
Stephen was just seven years old and living in Arizona when his father Benjamin Paddock was nabbed by the FBI for a series of bank robberies.
At the time, Stephen’s mother tried desperately to shield her young son and his three siblings from the devastating news that their father was living a double life as a bank robber and con-man.
‘We’re trying to keep Steve from knowing his father is held as a bank robber,’ a neighbour told the Tucson Daily Citizen on July 29, 1960. ‘I hardly know the family, but Steve is a nice boy. It’s a terrible thing.’

#VegasStrong: Las Vegas tourism video praises city’s resilience
Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00

LIVE

MinimizeExpandClose

Read the whole story
· · · · · ·

Mueller’s next move, the Steele dossier, and an NSA hack — the latest in a wild week of Trump-Russia developments – Business Insider

1 Share

Business Insider
Mueller’s next move, the Steele dossier, and an NSA hack — the latest in a wild week of Trump-Russiadevelopments
Business Insider
Investigators take cues from the explosive TrumpRussia dossier: Burr and Warner said the Senate Intelligence Committee has been working “backwards” to verify the dossier, compiled by ex-British spy Christopher Steele, which alleges several ties 
Russia dossier author offered to talk to Senate committee: reportThe Hill
Russian Bankers Say Dossier on Trump Defamed ThemGears Of Biz
Mueller’s Russia investigation: What to knowFox News
all 73 news articles »

Moscow warns it may restrict US media in Russia – Reuters

1 Share

Reuters
Moscow warns it may restrict US media in Russia
Reuters
U.S. intelligence officials, in a report in January this year into allegations of Russian interference in the U.S. presidential election, said RT was part of a state-run propaganda machine that supported a Kremlin campaign to influence U.S. politics 
Red Scare redux? US imposes World War II-era ‘foreign agents’ designation on Russia mediaRT
‘Up to broadcast ban’: Russian officials discuss tit-for-tat steps over pressure on RT in USGears Of Biz
all 19 news articles »

Meet the Russian activists taking aim at ‘troll farm’ accused of influencing US election – PennLive.com

1 Share

PennLive.com
Meet the Russian activists taking aim at ‘troll farm’ accused of influencing US election
PennLive.com
How much the trolls affected the outcome of the U.S. election is unclear. But their omnipresence is evident on Twitter, where one recent study suggested that trolling by pro-Putin bots trolling dominates political talk about Russia, and in the comments 
Rallies in 80 Russian cities protest President Vladimir Putin on his 65th birthdayUSA TODAY
US Lawmakers Eye More Support for US Int’l Broadcasters as Russia Probe ContinuesVoice of America
On Putin’s birthday, opposition activists protest, call for him to quitReuters
New York Times –CBC.ca
all 1,312 news articles »
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 2

Russia Investigations: Congressional Cliffhanger, Trump Jr. May Revisit The Hill – WNYC

1 Share

WNYC
Russia Investigations: Congressional Cliffhanger, Trump Jr. May Revisit The Hill
WNYC
This week in the Russia investigations: A progress report — sort of — from the Senate Intelligence Committee; Mueller’s meets the author of the dossier; And Donald Trump Jr. may have a date on Capitol Hill.
AP source: Mueller team questions ex-spy on Trump dossierWISH-TV
Donald Trump ‘Pee Tape’ Dossier: Robert Mueller Now Investigating Explosive Charges In File, New Report SaysGears Of Biz
Mueller’s Russia investigation: What to knowFox News
all 79 news articles »

10 books about the politics of now: from the left-behinds to reborn radicals – The Guardian

1 Share

The Guardian
10 books about the politics of now: from the left-behinds to reborn radicals
The Guardian
Many will surely have voted for Trump. But though Vance’s … “Somewheres” generally live in smaller towns and communities, have an attachment to place and traditions, and dislike the upheavals associated with globalisation, including increased 

12:22 PM 10/8/2017 – Recent Posts 

1 Share
1. My News Blogs from mikenova (3 sites) Public RSS-Feed of Mike Nova. Created with the PIXELMECHANICS ‘GPlusRSS-Webtool’ at http://gplusrss.com: 08.10.2017 15:44 mikenov on Twitter: Grassley wants FBI to explain use of Russia dossier fbinewsreview.org/2017/10/08/942 Public RSS-Feed of Mike Nova. Created with the PIXELMECHANICS ‘GPlusRSS-Webtool’ at http://gplusrss.com: 08.10.2017 15:09 mikenov on Twitter: 9:05 AM 10/8/2017 … Continue reading “12:22 PM 10/8/2017 – Recent Posts”

12:37 PM 10/8/2017 – A touch of complexity: Trump and The Curtain | H.R. McMaster installs new head of NSC 

1 Share
Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks Trump Ominously Tweets ‘Only One Thing Will Work’ With North Korea Our Opinion: Burr’s investigation annoys the president – Greensboro News & Record PD Editorial: More focus needed on blocking Russia meddling – Santa Rosa Press Democrat Russians Still Have An Open Path to U.S. Election Subversion Muslim Brotherhood Political Infiltration … Continue reading “12:37 PM 10/8/2017 – A touch of complexity: Trump and The Curtain | H.R. McMaster installs new head of NSC”

GOP Response to Trump Russia ‘Golden Shower Dossier’: Report Passed on to FBI as ‘Foreign Intelligence’ – Newsweek

1 Share

Newsweek
GOP Response to Trump Russia ‘Golden Shower Dossier’: Report Passed on to FBI as ‘Foreign Intelligence’
Newsweek
Republican Senator Chuck Grassley, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, asked whether the intelligence community assessments of Russian influence are based on rumors from the dossier. In a letter to FBI director Christopher, dated Oct. 4, …
PD Editorial: More focus needed on blocking Russia meddlingSanta Rosa Press Democrat
Week 20: Revenge of the Nosy SenatorsPOLITICO Magazine
Infamous Trump ‘pee-tape’ dossier now part of DOJ Russia probeThe Daily Dot
The Guardian
all 79 news articles »

Boris Kogan Trump – Google Search

1 Share

Running Guns from Ukraine to Syria Is Getting Complicated

Defense OneMay 23, 2014
… Ukrainian government deputy minister from 2006 to 2009, and Boris Kogan, whose business connections tie him to Russia’s defense industry …
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 3

The WorldWide Times: Facebook ’embeds’ helped Trump win, campaign digital director tells ’60 Minutes’ – U.S. – Stripes

1 Share
Source: Facebook ’embeds’ helped Trump win, campaign digital director tells ’60 Minutes’ – U.S. – Stripes
 The WorldWide Times

mueller – Google News: The Senate warns Trump: Leave Mueller be – Washington Post

1 Share

Washington Post
The Senate warns Trump: Leave Mueller be
Washington Post
AFTER PRESIDENT TRUMP publicly toyed with the idea of firing special prosecutor Robert S.Mueller III this summer, a bipartisan group of senators introduced two bills that would shield Mr.Mueller from being dismissed. Mr. Trump has been quiet on the …
Trump is hoping Mueller will do the one thing Comey didn’tBusiness Insider
Hoping to Have Trump Cleared, Legal Team Eases Resistance to InquiryNew York Times
Mueller’s Russia investigation: What to knowFox News
Newsweek –New York Magazine –Hot Air –CNN
all 69 news articles »

 mueller – Google News

fbi – Google News: Teen Admits Hacking FBI’s ‘Queen of Domestic Surveillance’ – Daily Beast

1 Share

Daily Beast
Teen Admits Hacking FBI’s ‘Queen of Domestic Surveillance’
Daily Beast
Gamble’s admitted charges also include an overlooked and somewhat ironic target: FBI official Amy Hess. At the time of the hacking campaign in 2015, Hess oversaw the Bureau’s Operational Technology Division (OTD), a unit tasked with deploying the FBI’s …
and more »

 fbi – Google News

The WorldWide Times: 8:33 AM 10/8/2017 – News Review: Grim Redux and other shared stories 

1 Share
Michael Grimm (politician) – Wikipedia Sunday October 8th, 2017 at 8:28 AM 1 Share Michael Gerard Grimm (born February 7, 1970)[2] is an American businessman, and politician who represented New York in the United States Congress from 2011 to 2015. Grimm represented New York’s 13th congressional district during his first term, after which he represented New York’s 11th congressional district. Both districts consisted of Staten … Continue reading “8:33 AM 10/8/2017 – News Review: Grim Redux and other shared stories”
 The WorldWide Times

Michael Grimm (politician) – Wikipedia

1 Share
Michael Gerard Grimm (born February 7, 1970)[2] is an American businessman, and politician who represented New York in the United States Congress from 2011 to 2015. Grimm represented New York’s 13th congressional district during his first term, after which he represented New York’s 11th congressional district. Both districts consisted of Staten Island and parts of Brooklyn. Grimm is a member of the Republican Party, and during his time in office was the only Republican to represent a significant portion of New York City. He is a convicted felon, former FBI agent, businessman, attorney, and U.S. Marine, having served in the Persian Gulf War.

Michael Grimm, a Former Congressman and Felon, Wants His Job Back

1 Share
“This is Middle America,” Mr. Grimm declared moments after taking the stage. Before the national anthem, he not so subtly invoked Mr. Trump to cheers: “I know no one here is going to be taking a knee.”
With his law enforcement credentials, tart tongue and square jaw, Mr. Grimm, the rare elected Republican in New York City, was once seen as a future star. Troubles with the law cut short his career.
There was no doubt that Mr. Grimm made an impression in his two terms, after winning in the Tea Party wave of 2010. In 2014, he beat back a Democratic challenger while under federal indictment, only to give up his seat when he pleaded guilty to tax fraud for underreporting wages at a restaurant he owned and filing false tax documents.
“I know what he did was wrong. He did his time,” said Cathy Reid, a Staten Island Republican who arrived to support Mr. Grimm’s comeback in a three-wheeled motorcycle, wearing a black helmet with an “If I’d shot you when I wanted, I’d be out by now” sticker on it.
“Every business does that,” she said. “He was made an example of.”
While Mr. Grimm said he was “truly sorry” for his transgressions, saying he wished he was “perfect but I am not,” he also made light of them. He said he first began working for his father at age 11. “Yeah, it was off the books,” he joked.
Some in Staten Island said they welcomed Mr. Grimm’s blunt manner, especially after seeing his outspoken advocacy after Hurricane Sandy.
“He got down and dirty,” said Thea Friscia.
On the way to the rally, her friend Cathy Bannon stopped at a dollar store to pick up a “Welcome Home” balloon, like for those returning from hospital stays, in a show of support. “Michael was the only one who stood with us,” she said.
Another woman, Maria Romagnuolo, added that Mr. Grimm had gotten her disabled son a “mobility scooter” after the storm. “He’s one of us,” she said.
Mr. Donovan, a former Staten Island district attorney, is expected to have the support of much of the Republican political apparatus both in New York and nationally. He has $300,000 cash on hand.
Mr. Grimm ended June with $420,000 in unpaid campaign legal bills. He entered into a “confidential settlement” with the law firm he owed, according to spokesman Michael Caputo. He also owed nearly $150,000 in tax restitution payments. Mr. Grimm borrowed money from family and “a friend” to pay off that debt, Mr. Caputo said, adding that the lenders would be disclosed on a future financial disclosure form.
At his rally, the signs had the required Federal Election Commission disclosures either added with stickers or taped onto them.
Jessica Proud, a spokeswoman for Mr. Donovan, dismissed Mr. Grimm’s candidacy: “We’re not really concerned about a challenge from a convicted felon who was rated one of the most liberal Republicans in Congress.”
The bigger fear among national Republicans is that Mr. Grimm would lose the primary to Mr. Donovan and then seek to stay on the ballot as a third-party candidate, dividing the vote and opening a pathway for Democrats.
“He’s keeping all of his options open,” Mr. Caputo said.
A former campaign adviser to Mr. Trump, Mr. Caputo is helping Mr. Grimm make the case he would be a stronger ally to the president. “It’s time to make anti-Trump Republicans pay a price at the polls,” Mr. Caputo said.
Mr. Grimm once famously threatened to throw a reporter who asked about the federal investigation off a balcony during a television interview. “I’ll break you in half,” Mr. Grimm said then. “Like a boy.”
He initially blamed the reporter for his question but later apologized.
When Mr. Grimm was sentenced to prison, the judge in his case told him, “Your moral compass, Mr. Grimm, needs some reorientation.”
Mr. Grimm said on Sunday that he had matured. Still, he remained ever combative.
“I took my lumps like a man,” Mr. Grimm said. “We took more than we should have.”
Continue reading the main story
Read the whole story
· · ·
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 4

Michael Grimm – Google Search

1 Share
Story image for Michael Grimm from New York Post

Michael Grimm says his prison stint got Loretta Lynch her job

New York Post13 hours ago
Michael Grimm, Staten Island’s ex-con ex-congressman, says that his stint in jail got Loretta Lynch her job as U. S. Attorney General.
Story image for Michael Grimm from New York Times

Bannon Backs Grimm, Ex-Congressman and Felon, in GOP Challenge

New York TimesOct 5, 2017
Michael Grimm after announcing on Sunday he was running for his old House seat. He is challenging Representative Dan Donovan of Staten …
Story image for Michael Grimm from Newsweek

Ex-Convict Michael Grimm: Steve Bannon Is ‘Very Excited’ to Get Me …

NewsweekOct 5, 2017
Michael Grimm is dead certain of these things: He didn’t deserve that prison time. He can recapture his old seat representing New York in …
Read the whole story
· ·

Ex-Convict Michael Grimm: Steve Bannon Is ‘Very Excited’ to Get Me Re-Elected to Congress – Gears Of Biz

1 Share

Gears Of Biz
Ex-Convict Michael Grimm: Steve Bannon Is ‘Very Excited’ to Get Me Re-Elected to Congress
Gears Of Biz
A tireless retail campaigner with high-beam blue eyes, Grimm wooed and wowed his district’s voters with the confident air of a decorated Gulf War veteran, lawyer and former FBI agent who took down bad guys while undercover as a shady, sharp-dressed …

How Facebook ads helped elect Trump

1 Share
President Donald Trump talked on Twitter, but Facebook was the crucial tool that helped elect him, says the man who directed the digital aspects of the Trump campaign. Brad Parscale tells Lesley Stahl how he fine-tuned political ads posted on Facebook to directly reach voters with the exact messages they cared most about – infrastructure key among them — and had handpicked Republican Facebook employees to guide him. Stahl’s report will be broadcast on 60 Minutes Sunday, Oct. 8 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.
CBS News
“Twitter is how [Trump] talked to the people, Facebook was going to be how he won,” Parscale tells Stahl.  Parscale says he used the majority of his digital ad budget on Facebook ads and explained how efficient they could be, particularly in reaching the rural vote.  “So now Facebook lets you get to…15 people in the Florida Panhandle that I would never buy a TV commercial for,” says Parscale.  And people anywhere could be targeted with the messages they cared about. “Infrastructure…so I started making ads that showed the bridge crumbling…that’s micro targeting…I can find the 1,500 people in one town that care about infrastructure. Now, that might be a voter that normally votes Democrat,” he says. Parscale says the campaign would average 50-60,000 different ad versions every day, some days peaking at 100,000 separate iterations – changing design, colors, backgrounds and words – all in an effort to refine ads and engage users.
Parscale received help utilizing Facebook’s technology from Facebook employees provided by the company who showed up for work to his office multiple days a week. He says they had to be partisan and he questioned them to make sure.  “I wanted people who supported Donald Trump.”  Parscale calls these Facebook employees “embeds” who could teach him every aspect of the technology. “I want to know everything you would tell Hillary’s campaign plus some,” he says he told them.
Both campaigns used Facebook’s advertising technology extensively to reach voters, but Parscale says the Clinton campaign didn’t go as far as using “embeds.” “I had heard that they did not accept any of [Facebook’s] offers.”
The conservative Parscale sees an irony in all this. “These social platforms are all invented by very liberal people on the West and East Coast.  And we figure out how to use it to push conservative values. I don’t think they thought that would ever happen,” says Parscale.

© 2017 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Read the whole story
· ·

Brad Parscale – Google Search

1 Share
Story image for Brad Parscale from CBS News

How Facebook ads helped elect Trump

CBS NewsOct 6, 2017
Brad Parscale tells Lesley Stahl how he fine-tuned political ads posted on … Parscale says he used the majority of his digital ad budget on …
Story image for Brad Parscale from Firstpost

Firstpost

Campaign digital director: Facebook employees key to Trump win

The Keene Sentinel1 hour ago
“Twitter is how (Trump) talked to the people; Facebook was going to be how he won,” Brad Parscaletold “60 Minutes,” according to an excerpt …
Story image for Brad Parscale from Wichita Eagle

Kansas natives, Trump campaign alumni talk up former boss

Wichita EagleSep 19, 2017
Topeka native Brad Parscale recounted how he helped drive the campaign’s Facebook strategy to electoral success while leading its digital …
Read the whole story
· ·

Campaign digital director: Facebook employees key to Trump win | Mcclatchy

1 Share
Facebook Inc.’s platform was a crucial messaging tool for President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign, according to the campaign’s digital director — who told CBS’s “60 Minutes” that he hand-picked pro-Trump “embeds” from the company to help him use the platform in targeted ways.
“Twitter is how (Trump) talked to the people; Facebook was going to be how he won,” Brad Parscale told “60 Minutes,” according to an excerpt of an interview that the program intends to air tonight. The social media platform was particularly valuable because it allows for targeted messaging, Parscale said, according to the excerpt.
Facebook’s employees showed up for work at his office multiple days a week to provide guidance on how to best use the company’s services, Parscale said in the interview excerpt. “I wanted people who supported Donald Trump,” he said — and he questioned the workers about their political views.

Parscale didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. A Facebook spokesman said the company provided the Trump campaign with the same guidance and services it offers any major advertiser.
Facebook has found itself at the center of multiple inquiries into Russia’s involvement in the 2016 election. The social-media giant said it has so far found $100,000 in advertising spending linked to a Russian troll farm that has ties to the Kremlin. The company turned over details on the ads to Congress and to special counsel Robert Mueller 3rd, who is leading the criminal investigation into Russia’s campaign meddling and possible links to Trump’s associates.
A person familiar with the company’s work for the Trump campaign took issue with Parscale’s use of the word “embeds” to describe its employees because it implies that the campaign work was their sole focus. The workers had tasks for other clients as well, said the person, who asked not to be identified because the matter is sensitive.

The company offered Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton the same opportunity, the person said.
Although federal election law generally bars corporations from aiding political campaigns, there’s nothing wrong with a company providing training and services to a campaign if it offers the same services to every client spending similar amounts, said Larry Noble, former general counsel of the Federal Election Commission.
“If you’d do it for any customer, it’s OK,” Noble said, adding that the services have to be offered to all customers. “It can’t be just for political campaigns.”
Facebook was especially useful in reaching rural voters, Parscale told “60 Minutes,” according to the published excerpt. “So now Facebook lets you get to … 15 people in the Florida Panhandle that I would never buy a TV commercial for,” he said.

Read the whole story
· · ·

US Ambassador To Russia Cites Ukraine As Key To Improving Ties – RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty

1 Share

RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
US Ambassador To Russia Cites Ukraine As Key To Improving Ties
RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
The severe tension in bilateral ties also stems from a January report by the U.S.intelligence community that determined Putin ordered an “influence campaign” targeting the 2016 presidential election in the United States. At a confirmation hearing
and more »
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 5

Uncovered Trump Organization Document Suggests Trump Really Was Putin’s Puppet – Independent Journal Review

1 Share
Trump’s Moscow Tower and Back-Channel Ukraine Dossier: Both … – Just Security Sunday September 17th, 2017 at 8:13 AM Felix Sater – Google News 1 Share Uncovered Trump Organization Document Suggests Trump Really Was Putin’s Puppet Sunday September 17th, 2017 at 9:08 AM IJR 1 Share Along with the roiling investigation around the Trump campaign’s high-level meeting with Russian cutouts to … Continue reading “Uncovered Trump Organization Document Suggests Trump Really Was Putin’s Puppet – Independent Journal Review”

Russia-Trump campaign collusion an ‘open’ issue: US Senate panel chiefs – Reuters.com

1 Share

Reuters.com
Russia-Trump campaign collusion an ‘open’ issue: US Senate panel chiefs
Reuters.com
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Leaders of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee said on Wednesday the issue of whether President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign colluded with Russia remains an open question as the panel intensifies its probe into …

The Trump-Russia dossier: why its findings grow more significant by … – The Guardian

1 Share

The Guardian
The Trump-Russia dossier: why its findings grow more significant by …
The Guardian
As US officials investigate potential collusion between Moscow and the Trump campaign, the series of reports by the former UK intelligence official Christopher …
Grassley concerned about FBI use of Trump ‘dossier’ in Russia investigationPolitico
Collusion and the Trump DossierNational Review
Trump dossier’ on Russia links now part of special counsel’s probe: sourcesReuters
NBCNews.com –Newsweek –Fox News –CNN
all 51 news articles »

Here’s What the ‘Golden Shower’ Dossier Now Being Investigated by Mueller Claims About Trump and Russia – Newsweek

1 Share

Business Insider
Here’s What the ‘Golden Shower’ Dossier Now Being Investigated by Mueller Claims About Trump and Russia
Newsweek
Nine months after the publication of an explosive and salacious dossier detailing allegations of collusion between President Donald Trump and Russia, its claims—though largely unverified and vehemently denied by those involved—are the subject of 
Trump is hoping Mueller will do the one thing Comey didn’tBusiness Insider
Hoping to Have Trump Cleared, Legal Team Eases Resistance to InquiryNew York Times
The TrumpRussia dossier: why its findings grow more significant by the dayThe Guardian
Politico –National Review –Mic –CNN
all 68 news articles »

Russian ads, email pranks, and tensions in the White House — here are the latest Trump-Russia developments – Business Insider

1 Share

Business Insider
Russian ads, email pranks, and tensions in the White House — here are the latest Trump-Russia developments
Business Insider
New developments in the Russia investigation involving social media, Jared Kushner, Roger Stone, and Michael Flynn capped off a dizzying month of revelations about special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe into Russia’s election interference — and how 
and more »

Paul Manafort – Google Search

1 Share
Story image for Paul Manafort from USA TODAY

Ex-Trump adviser Paul Manafort conspired to mislead bankruptcy …

USA TODAYOct 4, 2017
As federal authorities investigate former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort’s controversial ties to Russia, his estranged son-in-law is …
Story image for Paul Manafort from Washington Post

Russian intelligence would have seen Paul Manafort as the perfect …

Washington PostSep 29, 2017
For 30 years, my job as a CIA officer was to try to figure out how Russian operatives were trying to attack the United States. I oversaw …
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 6

Donald Trump desperately tries to spin distractions as Paul Manafort resurfaces in Washington DC 

1 Share
Over the past two days, Donald Trump has gone through a series of sharp turns in behavior that have been unusual even by his standards. On Friday he went completely quiet and tweeted nothing at all – which has almost never happened. Then on Saturday he desperately tried to spin up a series of distractions which suggested he knows a major Trump-Russia bombshell is coming. Now we may have the answer as to why: Paul Manafort has resurfaced in Washington DC while Trump is out of town.
It’s still unclear where Manafort has been for the past two weeks since his foreign agent work for the Kurdistan independence referendum came to a completion. On September 20th the New York Times said it thought Manafort may have been on his way to Iraq for the vote (link). That in turn set off a firestorm of questions about whether Manafort might have been attempting to flee the country before he could be indicted, and whether Special Counsel Robert Mueller would even allow him to leave the country. Rachel Maddow pointed out on-air on her MSNBC show how curious it was that no one among the media or the public seemed to know where Manafort was, at such a crucial time.
It was never confirmed whether or not Paul Manafort did leave the country – but in any case he’s stateside now. We know this because CNN reporter Jim Acosta says Manafort was spotted at a baseball game in Washington DC on Saturday night between the Chicago Cubs and the Washington Nationals (link). Manafort is a confirmed baseball fan and he’s been spotted a MLB games before. He has a home in Virginia that’s fairly close to DC, and it’s possible he simply decided to attend a baseball playoff game, without any additional reason for being in town. It’s also possible he’s in DC this weekend for another reason – and that fear may be what’s set Trump off.
We know that Robert Mueller is planning to indict Paul Manafort for serious crimes, in an attempt at pressuring Manafort into flipping on Trump and cooperating with the Trump-Russia investigation. Now suddenly Manafort has resurfaced in Washington DC in plain sight, while Trump is out of town on a golf trip, and Mueller is very much in town. Trump’s desperation to create a distraction on Saturday suggests he may be worried about what’s really going on here.
The post Donald Trump desperately tries to spin distractions as Paul Manafort resurfaces in Washington DC appeared first on Palmer Report.

Trump Ominously Tweets ‘Only One Thing Will Work’ With North Korea

1 Share
Trump did not make clear to what he was referring.

Our Opinion: Burr’s investigation annoys the president – Greensboro News & Record

1 Share

Greensboro News & Record
Our Opinion: Burr’s investigation annoys the president
Greensboro News & Record
A Thursday morning tweet from the White House illustrates the difficulty of Sen. Richard Burr’s job: “Why Isn’t the Senate Intel Committee looking into the Fake News Networks in OUR country to see why so much of our news is just made up-FAKE 
Senate Intelligence Committee Gives Update On Russian Interference InvestigationNPR
Russian election meddling probe will show media ran untrue stories – head of USinvestigationGears Of Biz
all 18 news articles »

PD Editorial: More focus needed on blocking Russia meddling – Santa Rosa Press Democrat

1 Share

Santa Rosa Press Democrat
PD Editorial: More focus needed on blocking Russia meddling
Santa Rosa Press Democrat
“What I will confirm is that the Russian intelligence service is determined (and) clever,” said committee Chairman Richard Burr, R-North Carolina, in announcing its preliminary findings last week. “And I recommend that every campaign and every election …
Our Opinion: Burr’s investigation annoys the presidentGreensboro News & Record
Russians Still Have An Open Path to US Election SubversionNewsweek
all 4 news articles »

Russians Still Have An Open Path to U.S. Election Subversion

1 Share
Exactly a year after U.S. intelligence issued a stern warning about Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, the Trump administration has failed to fill key homeland security posts responsible for preventing another Kremlin assault on the voting system.
Not only that, the White House hasn’t even nominated someone to replace now-White House chief of staff John Kelly as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), or someone to run its units responsible for protecting the nation’s strategic infrastructure, which includes federal, state and local voting systems. Both are in the hands of “acting” officials.
“The administration is having a hard time finding individuals that want to do the job, could do a good job, and could pass Senate confirmation,” a congressional expert tells Newsweek, speaking candidly only on the basis he not be quoted by name.
Keep up with this story and more by subscribing now
President Donald Trump delivers remarks at the Homeland Security Department’s headquarters in Washington on January 25. He announced two immigration-related executive orders, including one to build a wall on the U.S. border with Mexico. Jonathan Ernst/REUTERS
“The second thing is, the administration doesn’t seem to want to have anybody head up to the Hill and testify on issues that would be hot-button issues, namely anything to do with election security, cyber security, or the Russian acts from last year.”
Unless the administration puts its own political appointees in place at DHS, analysts say, the department will struggle to get protective systems up and running in time for the 2017 primaries and state and local races, let alone the 2018 elections. Acting department heads just don’t have the same powers of persuasion as people appointed by the president.
DHS‘s National Protection and Programs Directorate, or NPPD, responsible for thwarting foreign cyberattacks on the nation’s infrastructure, is currently being run by Acting Undersecretary Christopher C. Krebs, a former Microsoft lobbyist and cybersecurity policy chief.
“It being vacant hurts,” Erik Rasmussen, a former U.S. Secret Service prosecutor and special agent, tells Newsweek. “The head of that unit has deep cyber operational control and has a critical role to play in any critical infrastructure decision.”
Nor were several congressional officials responsible for homeland security oversight able to identify anyone in charge of the Election Infrastructure Cybersecurity Working Group, which, according to an NPPD announcement in July, was embarking on an ambitious program to integrate DHS with “not only state and local election officials, but also other federal agencies.”
DHS is also launching a Government Coordinating Council to liaise with the bipartisan U.S. Election Assistance Commission and 25 state and local officials, but “the membership and structure is still being finalized,” a department official tells Newsweek.
Three months later, the elections unit, “has not gone out and talked with state election officials to determine what exactly [they] need to increase their own cybersecurity defenses, and what kind of authorities the federal government might need to be able to help provide that assistance,” the congressional expert said. They are “just starting to look at it right now.”
At a press conference last week, Senator Richard Burr of North Carolina, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said that members of the panel shared a “general consensus” of agreement on the conclusions of last January’s intelligence community assessment that the Kremlin’s effort to interfere in the 2016 presidential campaign was directed by Russian President Vladimir Putin. “The overall theme of their involvement in the U.S. election was to create chaos at every level,” Burr said, declining to share another conclusion of the intelligence agencies that Putin’s aim was to tilt voters away from Hillary Clinton and toward Donald Trump.
The entrance to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Cyber Crimes Center is seen in this U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) building in Fairfax, Virginia, U.S. on July 21, 2015. Courtesy Josh Denmark/U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Immigration and Customs Enforcement/Handout via REUTERS Reuters
Burr also said he was, “pleased with the progress” the homeland security department was making to prevent further election interference. But Democrats on Capitol Hill unanimously disagreed with that statement.
In a statement to Newsweek, Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, ranking Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee, called Trump “irresponsible and reckless” for “leaving  leadership positions at our cybersecurity agencies unfilled…almost ten months into this administration.”
Likewise, New Hampshire Sen. Maggie Hassan, a member of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, told Newsweek, “what we urgently need is a genuine effort from congressional Republicans and the Trump administration to work with us…especially given the fast-approaching 2017 election…” On Thursday, the committee approved a bill introduced jointly by Hassan and Republican Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio that would enlist “‘white-hat’—that is, ethical—hackers to help identify unique and undiscovered vulnerabilities in the DHS networks and information technology.”
Three weeks ago, DHS surprised election officials in 21 states with the news that Russian hackers had tried to access their voter information. On September 28, according to The Huffington Post, election officials in Wisconsin and California said DHS had “provided them with additional information showing that Russian hackers actually scanned networks at other state agencies unconnected to voter data.”
At a September 27 hearing of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee, the panel’s top Democrat, Missouri Senator Claire McCaskill, said she was “worried about how long it’s taken us to notify the states about the potential efforts to scan voter registration files in their states…” And she asked Trump administration officials, including acting DHS secretary Elaine Duke, “what is our strategy going forward? How are we going to do what needs to be done to notify the American public if this is going on, and prevent it from actually happening in all of these various ways that Russia played around in our democracy?”
Duke responded that DHS had learned to “notify the right senior [state] official” about Russian election intrusions.
Christopher Wray, who Trump appointed to replace James Comey as FBI Director, told McCaskill that, “We are surging more resources specifically focused on the upcoming elections…”
When they issued their joint statement on Russian election meddling last October 7, DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper claimed that DHS was “providing several services to state and local election officials to assist in their cybersecurity,” including, “‘hygiene’ scans of Internet-facing systems, risk and vulnerability assessments, information sharing about cyber incidents, and best practices for securing voter registration databases and addressing potential cyber threats.”
Rasmussen, now a top cyber official with the global investigations firm Kroll, called the hygiene scan “a really good program,” but said, “I’m not sure how many entities actually use it.”  In any event, he said, ”there are still too many voting platforms—vote by mail, paper vote, online vote, machine vote at a polling station—that are really vulnerable to outside sabotage or manipulation.”
DHS did not respond to several questions about its cybersecurity measures related to the elections.
“Overall,” says the congressional homeland security expert, “our assessment is that DHS is just really getting serious about this right now.”
How serious remains to be seen. As Laura Rosenberger, a senior former Obama administration national security official, puts it: “The person at the very top continues to deny that this is even an issue.” Last week, Trump tweeted that the Senate Intelligence Committee should be investigating “fake news,” not Russia’s election meddling and alleged collusion with him and his associates.
“I don’t know where you go from there,” Rosenberger added. “We need a whole government strategy on this, and that requires White House leadership.”
It’s not likely to come, former Obama White House Counsel Bob Bauer wrote this week.
“A whole government approach would require an executive fully prepared to work with the Congress to meet this challenge,” Bauer said. “President Donald Trump has given no such indication: quite the opposite.”
Read the whole story
· · · · · ·

Muslim Brotherhood Political Infiltration on Steroids

1 Share
In 2008, during the largest terrorism funding trial in U.S. history, United States v. Holy Land Foundation, a document published in 1991 outlined Muslim plans to take over America.  An Explanatory Memorandum:  On the General Strategic Goal for the Group, seized in a 2004 FBI raid of the Virginia home of a Muslim Brotherhood operative, was presented during the trial as evidence of “a Civilization-Jihadist Process.” It outlined the Muslim Brotherhood goal to conduct a “grand jihad in eliminating and destroying Western civilization from within and ‘sabotaging’ its miserable house by their hands and the hands of the believers so that it is eliminated.”
For several decades, this well-organized and well-funded effort to subvert our constitutional republic and replace it with an Islamic government under Islamic law has focused on infiltrating all levels and branches of the U.S. government. More recently, the Muslim Brotherhood presence within the American political landscape has intensified, accelerated, and become more visible with the establishment of several nonprofit political action organizations. The Muslim Brotherhood stated goal of transforming American society from within in preparation for an eventual takeover is clearly moving forward fueled by the efforts of these groups and their burgeoning success within the umma or Muslim community.
As early as 1987, a declassified FBI confidential informant document described the Muslim Brotherhood as “political action front groups with no traceable ties to Muslim groups” that are organizing external political support to influence both public opinion in America and the U.S. government and its leadership. The informant who disclosed this information told authorities that the MB acknowledged the need to “peacefully get inside the United States Government” for the purpose of meeting “the ultimate goal of overthrowing all non-Islamic governments.”
In 2010, one such “peaceful” group, Project Mobilize, was created by M. Yasser Tabbara to empower and engage the political potential of the Muslim community.  Its mission statement called for the exploitation of the growing political capital of the umma, the promotion of issues important to Muslim Americans and the development of strategies for political advocacy on their behalf.  In 2011, Project Mobilize began fielding its first Muslim candidates for political office.
Project Mobilize’s founder, Tabbara, is a former executive director the Chicago chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Muslim Brotherhood affiliate and unindicted co-conspirator in the Holy Land Foundation Hamas funding trial. Other board members include Safaa Zarzour, the secretary general of another unindicted co-conspirator and Muslim Brotherhood front, the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), and Oussama Jammal, vice president of the Mosque Foundation, a known center for terrorism fundraising and haven for Hamas operatives.
In 2014, at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., representatives from eight Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated groups announced formation of the United States Council of Muslim Organizations (USCMO), a political party for Muslims and the first religion-based political party in U.S. history. At the meeting, the founders disclosed their plans to expand Muslim participation in the American political process by encouraging more Muslims to vote, work on political campaigns and run for office themselves.
Oussama Jammal, who was involved in fundraising for convicted terrorist Sami al-Arian and serves as director of the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliate, the Muslim American Society (MAS), headed the new organization. MAS, created in the early 1990s, was itself begun as the U.S. branch of the Muslim Brotherhood and was designated a terrorist group by the United Arab Emirates. Mazen Mokhtar, another USCMO founding member, also had MAS ties, having served as its executive director. An Egyptian-born imam, Mokhtar served as webmaster for a site that solicited funds for Taliban and Chechen jihadists. In 2007, he was indicted by then-New Jersey Attorney General Chris Christie for tax evasion and filing false tax returns.
In 2015, a new organization, Jetpac Inc. (Justice, Education and Technology Policy Advocacy Center) was begun by Nadeem Mazen, Massachusett’s first Muslim city council member. Jetpac was established as an “open call for American Muslims to immerse themselves in local politics.” The group trains American Muslim community leaders and educates them about the political process. According to their website, they have prepared more than 15 aspiring candidates for office in Maine, New York, Rhode Island, and California. The group’s activities include development of proprietary software for social media outreach, fundraising and canvassing techniques, media communication and campaign strategy skills as well as advice on combatting negative impressions of Muslims. In addition, Jetpac teaches a course on U.S. government and politics at a Massachusetts Islamic school that focuses on grassroots organizing and the history of the civil rights movement.
Following his stint as a Cambridge City Council member, Mazen, a founding member of CAIR Massachusetts and former president of MIT’s MSA, announced plans to run for Congress as the third elected Muslim after Keith Hakim Ellison (D-MN) and Andre Carson (D-IN). Just this week, Mazen launched his campaign for Massachusetts’ 3rd Congressional District seat. A telling indicator of his more radical views is the fact that Mazen opposed President Obama’s Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) program and criticized moderate Muslim groups as promoters of “imperialistic-style” initiatives to “foist secular attitudes on Muslims.”
Another political race worth watching involves a CAIR official running for the Des Moines, Iowa, city council. Somali Muslim refugee and president of CAIR Iowa, Abshir Omar, is running as a Democratic Socialist to represent downtown Des Moines and the city’s southwest side. City council members can wield significant power and influence over all aspects of community life. Typically, they make key appointments such as city managers, police and fire department heads, library board members, parks and recreation supervisors, transportation directors, as well as administrators for arts councils, housing authorities and planning commissions.
Meanwhile, the background of Tahirah Amatul-Wadud, another Islamist operative who intends to run for governor of Massachusetts in the future, should cause grave concern. Wadud, who served on the Massachusetts Commission on the Status of Women, has extensive radical Islamic ties. She served as an executive board member for CAIR Massachusetts and as the general counsel for Jamaat ul-Fuqra a.k.a. Muslims of America, a group alleged to have close ties to Al Qaeda.
Jamaat ul-Fuqra was founded in 1980 by Pakistani Sheikh Gilani, who was associated with shoe bomber Richard Reid and implicated in the murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Danny Pearl. According to the Clarion Project, Wadud posted an anti-Semitic article by Gilani on her Facebook that claimed Jewish complicity in the 9/11 and Pearl Harbor attacks.
Jamaat ul-Fuqra has done more than simply issue social media propaganda, however. The terrorist entity has approximately two dozen paramilitary training centers across the U.S. and its members participated in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. It is known to proselytize and recruit black prison inmates and reportedly seeks “to purify Islam through violence.” The Center for Policing Terrorism maintains that Jamaat ul-Fuqra “may be the best positioned group to launch an attack on the United States, or, more likely, help al-Qaeda to do so.”
Another Muslim with terrorist ties is a political candidate in Arizona. Southern Baptist convert to Islam, Deedra Abboud, a Phoenix attorney and community activist who served as the executive director of CAIR Arizona and is currently associated with the Muslim American Society, is seeking the Democratic nomination for U.S. senator in her state. Abboud opposes President Trump’s policy to temporarily ban refugees from designated Muslim countries rife with terrorist activity. She also opposed the U.S. cruise missile bombing that followed Bashar Assad’s use of chemical weapons on Syrian civilians. Identifying as a feminist, Abboud defends her husband’s right under Islam to have four wives although she admits that she wouldn’t be happy with it. She helped raise bail money for deceased Muslim terrorist, Elton Simpson, when he was convicted of lying to the FBI about his plans to engage in Islamic terrorist activities in Somalia. Simpson, in the first ISIS-claimed attack on U.S. soil, tried to kill participants at the Mohammed cartoon contest in Garland, Texas in 2015. In 2009, Abboud made a statement about the acceptability of police learning Arabic to better understand the Muslim community. However, she objected to the study of Arabic as a law enforcement tool for investigating potential Islamic terrorist activity deeming it targeting.
Self-described devout Muslim and son of Egyptian immigrant parents, Abdul El-Sayed, has substantial connections to the Muslim Brotherhood and is running for governor of Michigan. A medical doctor who served as the executive director of the Detroit Health Department at age 30, his background includes serving as vice president of his MSA chapter at the University of Michigan during his college years. His wife, Sarah Jukaku, who is described as “a mental health doctor,” wears a hijab. His father-in-law is a former president and current board member of CAIR Michigan.
Quite troubling is the fact that El-Sayed is endorsed by Linda Sarsour, an advocate for the Hamas initiative for the boycott, divestment, and sanctioning of Israel and an activist who played a major role in pressuring the NYPD to discontinue its surveillance of mosques and Muslim organizations post-9/11. That surveillance effort had yielded critical intelligence about terrorist activities. Sarsour is one of El-Sayed’s biggest supporters and is reportedly helping fundraise for El-Sayed’s gubernatorial campaign. She is also a close friend of the Muslim Brotherhood-connected Huma Abedin, has family members who have been arrested for aiding and abetting Hamas, openly supports shariah law and has been a featured speaker at Muslim Brotherhood groups that were designated as unindicted co-conspirators in the Holy Land Foundation trial.
All of the above demonstrate that the Muslim Brotherhood is increasing its political clout in America. As more of its candidates are elected to office, deeper penetration of American society comes within their grasp. Their stated goal to destroy our society from within and replace the Constitution with the tenets of shariah could become a reality. Their adeptness at appealing to the American public by using the coded language of multiculturalism and by professing a moderate Islam has proved to be an unfortunate asset. In the words of former FBI analyst and expert on the Muslim Brotherhood, John Guandolo, who has closely studied their deceptive language and appearance, Muslim Brotherhood operatives are “suit-wearing jihadis who pretend they’re friendly but they’re not.” America should be alert and aware.
In 2008, during the largest terrorism funding trial in U.S. history, United States v. Holy Land Foundation, a document published in 1991 outlined Muslim plans to take over America.  An Explanatory Memorandum:  On the General Strategic Goal for the Group, seized in a 2004 FBI raid of the Virginia home of a Muslim Brotherhood operative, was presented during the trial as evidence of “a Civilization-Jihadist Process.” It outlined the Muslim Brotherhood goal to conduct a “grand jihad in eliminating and destroying Western civilization from within and ‘sabotaging’ its miserable house by their hands and the hands of the believers so that it is eliminated.”
For several decades, this well-organized and well-funded effort to subvert our constitutional republic and replace it with an Islamic government under Islamic law has focused on infiltrating all levels and branches of the U.S. government. More recently, the Muslim Brotherhood presence within the American political landscape has intensified, accelerated, and become more visible with the establishment of several nonprofit political action organizations. The Muslim Brotherhood stated goal of transforming American society from within in preparation for an eventual takeover is clearly moving forward fueled by the efforts of these groups and their burgeoning success within the umma or Muslim community.
As early as 1987, a declassified FBI confidential informant document described the Muslim Brotherhood as “political action front groups with no traceable ties to Muslim groups” that are organizing external political support to influence both public opinion in America and the U.S. government and its leadership. The informant who disclosed this information told authorities that the MB acknowledged the need to “peacefully get inside the United States Government” for the purpose of meeting “the ultimate goal of overthrowing all non-Islamic governments.”
In 2010, one such “peaceful” group, Project Mobilize, was created by M. Yasser Tabbara to empower and engage the political potential of the Muslim community.  Its mission statement called for the exploitation of the growing political capital of the umma, the promotion of issues important to Muslim Americans and the development of strategies for political advocacy on their behalf.  In 2011, Project Mobilize began fielding its first Muslim candidates for political office.
Project Mobilize’s founder, Tabbara, is a former executive director the Chicago chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Muslim Brotherhood affiliate and unindicted co-conspirator in the Holy Land Foundation Hamas funding trial. Other board members include Safaa Zarzour, the secretary general of another unindicted co-conspirator and Muslim Brotherhood front, the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), and Oussama Jammal, vice president of the Mosque Foundation, a known center for terrorism fundraising and haven for Hamas operatives.
In 2014, at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., representatives from eight Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated groups announced formation of the United States Council of Muslim Organizations (USCMO), a political party for Muslims and the first religion-based political party in U.S. history. At the meeting, the founders disclosed their plans to expand Muslim participation in the American political process by encouraging more Muslims to vote, work on political campaigns and run for office themselves.
Oussama Jammal, who was involved in fundraising for convicted terrorist Sami al-Arian and serves as director of the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliate, the Muslim American Society (MAS), headed the new organization. MAS, created in the early 1990s, was itself begun as the U.S. branch of the Muslim Brotherhood and was designated a terrorist group by the United Arab Emirates. Mazen Mokhtar, another USCMO founding member, also had MAS ties, having served as its executive director. An Egyptian-born imam, Mokhtar served as webmaster for a site that solicited funds for Taliban and Chechen jihadists. In 2007, he was indicted by then-New Jersey Attorney General Chris Christie for tax evasion and filing false tax returns.
In 2015, a new organization, Jetpac Inc. (Justice, Education and Technology Policy Advocacy Center) was begun by Nadeem Mazen, Massachusett’s first Muslim city council member. Jetpac was established as an “open call for American Muslims to immerse themselves in local politics.” The group trains American Muslim community leaders and educates them about the political process. According to their website, they have prepared more than 15 aspiring candidates for office in Maine, New York, Rhode Island, and California. The group’s activities include development of proprietary software for social media outreach, fundraising and canvassing techniques, media communication and campaign strategy skills as well as advice on combatting negative impressions of Muslims. In addition, Jetpac teaches a course on U.S. government and politics at a Massachusetts Islamic school that focuses on grassroots organizing and the history of the civil rights movement.
Following his stint as a Cambridge City Council member, Mazen, a founding member of CAIR Massachusetts and former president of MIT’s MSA, announced plans to run for Congress as the third elected Muslim after Keith Hakim Ellison (D-MN) and Andre Carson (D-IN). Just this week, Mazen launched his campaign for Massachusetts’ 3rd Congressional District seat. A telling indicator of his more radical views is the fact that Mazen opposed President Obama’s Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) program and criticized moderate Muslim groups as promoters of “imperialistic-style” initiatives to “foist secular attitudes on Muslims.”
Another political race worth watching involves a CAIR official running for the Des Moines, Iowa, city council. Somali Muslim refugee and president of CAIR Iowa, Abshir Omar, is running as a Democratic Socialist to represent downtown Des Moines and the city’s southwest side. City council members can wield significant power and influence over all aspects of community life. Typically, they make key appointments such as city managers, police and fire department heads, library board members, parks and recreation supervisors, transportation directors, as well as administrators for arts councils, housing authorities and planning commissions.
Meanwhile, the background of Tahirah Amatul-Wadud, another Islamist operative who intends to run for governor of Massachusetts in the future, should cause grave concern. Wadud, who served on the Massachusetts Commission on the Status of Women, has extensive radical Islamic ties. She served as an executive board member for CAIR Massachusetts and as the general counsel for Jamaat ul-Fuqra a.k.a. Muslims of America, a group alleged to have close ties to Al Qaeda.
Jamaat ul-Fuqra was founded in 1980 by Pakistani Sheikh Gilani, who was associated with shoe bomber Richard Reid and implicated in the murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Danny Pearl. According to the Clarion Project, Wadud posted an anti-Semitic article by Gilani on her Facebook that claimed Jewish complicity in the 9/11 and Pearl Harbor attacks.
Jamaat ul-Fuqra has done more than simply issue social media propaganda, however. The terrorist entity has approximately two dozen paramilitary training centers across the U.S. and its members participated in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. It is known to proselytize and recruit black prison inmates and reportedly seeks “to purify Islam through violence.” The Center for Policing Terrorism maintains that Jamaat ul-Fuqra “may be the best positioned group to launch an attack on the United States, or, more likely, help al-Qaeda to do so.”
Another Muslim with terrorist ties is a political candidate in Arizona. Southern Baptist convert to Islam, Deedra Abboud, a Phoenix attorney and community activist who served as the executive director of CAIR Arizona and is currently associated with the Muslim American Society, is seeking the Democratic nomination for U.S. senator in her state. Abboud opposes President Trump’s policy to temporarily ban refugees from designated Muslim countries rife with terrorist activity. She also opposed the U.S. cruise missile bombing that followed Bashar Assad’s use of chemical weapons on Syrian civilians. Identifying as a feminist, Abboud defends her husband’s right under Islam to have four wives although she admits that she wouldn’t be happy with it. She helped raise bail money for deceased Muslim terrorist, Elton Simpson, when he was convicted of lying to the FBI about his plans to engage in Islamic terrorist activities in Somalia. Simpson, in the first ISIS-claimed attack on U.S. soil, tried to kill participants at the Mohammed cartoon contest in Garland, Texas in 2015. In 2009, Abboud made a statement about the acceptability of police learning Arabic to better understand the Muslim community. However, she objected to the study of Arabic as a law enforcement tool for investigating potential Islamic terrorist activity deeming it targeting.
Self-described devout Muslim and son of Egyptian immigrant parents, Abdul El-Sayed, has substantial connections to the Muslim Brotherhood and is running for governor of Michigan. A medical doctor who served as the executive director of the Detroit Health Department at age 30, his background includes serving as vice president of his MSA chapter at the University of Michigan during his college years. His wife, Sarah Jukaku, who is described as “a mental health doctor,” wears a hijab. His father-in-law is a former president and current board member of CAIR Michigan.
Quite troubling is the fact that El-Sayed is endorsed by Linda Sarsour, an advocate for the Hamas initiative for the boycott, divestment, and sanctioning of Israel and an activist who played a major role in pressuring the NYPD to discontinue its surveillance of mosques and Muslim organizations post-9/11. That surveillance effort had yielded critical intelligence about terrorist activities. Sarsour is one of El-Sayed’s biggest supporters and is reportedly helping fundraise for El-Sayed’s gubernatorial campaign. She is also a close friend of the Muslim Brotherhood-connected Huma Abedin, has family members who have been arrested for aiding and abetting Hamas, openly supports shariah law and has been a featured speaker at Muslim Brotherhood groups that were designated as unindicted co-conspirators in the Holy Land Foundation trial.
All of the above demonstrate that the Muslim Brotherhood is increasing its political clout in America. As more of its candidates are elected to office, deeper penetration of American society comes within their grasp. Their stated goal to destroy our society from within and replace the Constitution with the tenets of shariah could become a reality. Their adeptness at appealing to the American public by using the coded language of multiculturalism and by professing a moderate Islam has proved to be an unfortunate asset. In the words of former FBI analyst and expert on the Muslim Brotherhood, John Guandolo, who has closely studied their deceptive language and appearance, Muslim Brotherhood operatives are “suit-wearing jihadis who pretend they’re friendly but they’re not.” America should be alert and aware.
Read the whole story
· · · · · · · · · · · · ·
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 7

H.R. McMaster installs new head of NSC intelligence

1 Share
Lisa Bloom tweeted her resignation as Harvey Weinstein’s legal advisor after decades of sexual harassment allegations against the Hollywood mogul were exposed by the New York Times.
The backdrop: Bloom, a civil-rights lawyer, has defended women in high-profile harassment cases, including against Bill O’Reilly. She initially received criticism for choosing to defend Weinstein and for a statement saying, “As a women’s rights advocate, I have been blunt with Harvey and he has listened to me … He is an old dinosaur learning new ways.”

Leaker of Paddock Hotel Room Pics Could Be in Trouble

1 Share
(Newser) – Las Vegas police have confirmed the legitimacy of photos circulating the internet showing guns, ammunition, and the corpse of Stephen Paddock inside a Mandalay Bay hotel room, LawNewzreports. The next step is finding—and punishing—whoever leaked the gruesome crime scene photos. The New York Times has stitched together some of the non-graphic leaked photos to give a complete view of the inside of Paddock’s hotel room and its contents, which included more than 20 guns and hundreds of rounds of ammunition carried up to the room inside 10 suitcases. According to the Independent, some people online believe one of the photos shows a note left behind by Paddock, but that appears to not have been the case.
The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department undersheriff says the department has “opened up an internal investigation to determine the source of the leaks.” While whoever leaked the crime scene photos would face consequences, it’s unclear what those consequences would be. LawNewz notes a Los Angeles Police Department officer who leaked photos of Rihanna following a domestic violence incident in 2009 was fired from her job but didn’t face criminal charges. Crime scene photos leaked from the terrorist attack at an Ariana Grande concert last year in England resulted in British intelligence cutting US intelligence off from certain information.

So What’s on That Note Left by Vegas Shooter?

1 Share
(Newser) – Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock did indeed leave a note of sorts in his hotel room, but authorities say it wasn’t a suicide note or anything that provides an obvious clue about a motive for his shooting spree. Police won’t reveal details about its contents, with Sheriff Joseph Lombardo saying only that the piece of paper contained numbers now being analyzed to see if they might shed some light, reports the New York Times. Speculation about the note has been percolating since one of the leaked photos from Paddock’s hotel room revealed its existence. (Business Insider zeroes in on that detail here.)
Barring some kind of unexpected clue from the note, investigators aren’t sure when they’ll be able to piece together a motive as they pore over details of Paddock’s personal and financial history. “I’ve been doing this a long time and I can’t remember another homicide—and then you multiply what I’m about to say by 58—where you don’t know why,” says Stephen Wolfson, the district attorney where the killings took place. Police, meanwhile, say an explosive compound discovered in Paddock’s car and home was Tannerite, the same one believed to have been used in a 2016 bombing in New York City, reports the Las Vegas Review-Journal. Paddock had more than 50 pounds of it (The night before the massacre, Paddock called hotel security to report a noisy neighbor.)

Las Vegas shooting: 60 Minutes reveal police found note Stephen Paddock left in hotel room

Categories
FBI News Review

4:13 PM 10/8/2017 – Moscow warns it may restrict US media in Russia – Reuters

Mueller’s next move, the Steele dossier, and an NSA hack — the latest in a wild week of Trump-Russia developments – Business Insider

1 Share

Business Insider
Mueller’s next move, the Steele dossier, and an NSA hack — the latest in a wild week of Trump-Russiadevelopments
Business Insider
Investigators take cues from the explosive TrumpRussia dossier: Burr and Warner said the Senate Intelligence Committee has been working “backwards” to verify the dossier, compiled by ex-British spy Christopher Steele, which alleges several ties 
Russia dossier author offered to talk to Senate committee: reportThe Hill
Russian Bankers Say Dossier on Trump Defamed ThemGears Of Biz
Mueller’s Russia investigation: What to knowFox News
all 73 news articles »

Moscow warns it may restrict US media in Russia – Reuters

1 Share

Reuters
Moscow warns it may restrict US media in Russia
Reuters
U.S. intelligence officials, in a report in January this year into allegations of Russian interference in the U.S. presidential election, said RT was part of a state-run propaganda machine that supported a Kremlin campaign to influence U.S. politics 
Red Scare redux? US imposes World War II-era ‘foreign agents’ designation on Russia mediaRT
‘Up to broadcast ban’: Russian officials discuss tit-for-tat steps over pressure on RT in USGears Of Biz
all 19 news articles »

Meet the Russian activists taking aim at ‘troll farm’ accused of influencing US election – PennLive.com

1 Share

PennLive.com
Meet the Russian activists taking aim at ‘troll farm’ accused of influencing US election
PennLive.com
How much the trolls affected the outcome of the U.S. election is unclear. But their omnipresence is evident on Twitter, where one recent study suggested that trolling by pro-Putin bots trolling dominates political talk about Russia, and in the comments 
Rallies in 80 Russian cities protest President Vladimir Putin on his 65th birthdayUSA TODAY
US Lawmakers Eye More Support for US Int’l Broadcasters as Russia Probe ContinuesVoice of America
On Putin’s birthday, opposition activists protest, call for him to quitReuters
New York Times –CBC.ca
all 1,312 news articles »

Russia Investigations: Congressional Cliffhanger, Trump Jr. May Revisit The Hill – WNYC

1 Share

WNYC
Russia Investigations: Congressional Cliffhanger, Trump Jr. May Revisit The Hill
WNYC
This week in the Russia investigations: A progress report — sort of — from the Senate Intelligence Committee; Mueller’s meets the author of the dossier; And Donald Trump Jr. may have a date on Capitol Hill.
AP source: Mueller team questions ex-spy on Trump dossierWISH-TV
Donald Trump ‘Pee Tape’ Dossier: Robert Mueller Now Investigating Explosive Charges In File, New Report SaysGears Of Biz
Mueller’s Russia investigation: What to knowFox News
all 79 news articles »

10 books about the politics of now: from the left-behinds to reborn radicals – The Guardian

1 Share

The Guardian
10 books about the politics of now: from the left-behinds to reborn radicals
The Guardian
Many will surely have voted for Trump. But though Vance’s … “Somewheres” generally live in smaller towns and communities, have an attachment to place and traditions, and dislike the upheavals associated with globalisation, including increased 

12:22 PM 10/8/2017 – Recent Posts 

1 Share
1. My News Blogs from mikenova (3 sites) Public RSS-Feed of Mike Nova. Created with the PIXELMECHANICS ‘GPlusRSS-Webtool’ at http://gplusrss.com: 08.10.2017 15:44 mikenov on Twitter: Grassley wants FBI to explain use of Russia dossier fbinewsreview.org/2017/10/08/942 Public RSS-Feed of Mike Nova. Created with the PIXELMECHANICS ‘GPlusRSS-Webtool’ at http://gplusrss.com: 08.10.2017 15:09 mikenov on Twitter: 9:05 AM 10/8/2017 … Continue reading “12:22 PM 10/8/2017 – Recent Posts”
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 2

12:37 PM 10/8/2017 – A touch of complexity: Trump and The Curtain | H.R. McMaster installs new head of NSC 

1 Share
Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks Trump Ominously Tweets ‘Only One Thing Will Work’ With North Korea Our Opinion: Burr’s investigation annoys the president – Greensboro News & Record PD Editorial: More focus needed on blocking Russia meddling – Santa Rosa Press Democrat Russians Still Have An Open Path to U.S. Election Subversion Muslim Brotherhood Political Infiltration … Continue reading “12:37 PM 10/8/2017 – A touch of complexity: Trump and The Curtain | H.R. McMaster installs new head of NSC”

GOP Response to Trump Russia ‘Golden Shower Dossier’: Report Passed on to FBI as ‘Foreign Intelligence’ – Newsweek

1 Share

Newsweek
GOP Response to Trump Russia ‘Golden Shower Dossier’: Report Passed on to FBI as ‘Foreign Intelligence’
Newsweek
Republican Senator Chuck Grassley, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, asked whether the intelligence community assessments of Russian influence are based on rumors from the dossier. In a letter to FBI director Christopher, dated Oct. 4, …
PD Editorial: More focus needed on blocking Russia meddlingSanta Rosa Press Democrat
Week 20: Revenge of the Nosy SenatorsPOLITICO Magazine
Infamous Trump ‘pee-tape’ dossier now part of DOJ Russia probeThe Daily Dot
The Guardian
all 79 news articles »

Boris Kogan Trump – Google Search

1 Share

Running Guns from Ukraine to Syria Is Getting Complicated

Defense OneMay 23, 2014
… Ukrainian government deputy minister from 2006 to 2009, and Boris Kogan, whose business connections tie him to Russia’s defense industry …

The WorldWide Times: Facebook ’embeds’ helped Trump win, campaign digital director tells ’60 Minutes’ – U.S. – Stripes

1 Share
Source: Facebook ’embeds’ helped Trump win, campaign digital director tells ’60 Minutes’ – U.S. – Stripes
 The WorldWide Times

mueller – Google News: The Senate warns Trump: Leave Mueller be – Washington Post

1 Share

Washington Post
The Senate warns Trump: Leave Mueller be
Washington Post
AFTER PRESIDENT TRUMP publicly toyed with the idea of firing special prosecutor Robert S.Mueller III this summer, a bipartisan group of senators introduced two bills that would shield Mr.Mueller from being dismissed. Mr. Trump has been quiet on the …
Trump is hoping Mueller will do the one thing Comey didn’tBusiness Insider
Hoping to Have Trump Cleared, Legal Team Eases Resistance to InquiryNew York Times
Mueller’s Russia investigation: What to knowFox News
Newsweek –New York Magazine –Hot Air –CNN
all 69 news articles »

 mueller – Google News

fbi – Google News: Teen Admits Hacking FBI’s ‘Queen of Domestic Surveillance’ – Daily Beast

1 Share

Daily Beast
Teen Admits Hacking FBI’s ‘Queen of Domestic Surveillance’
Daily Beast
Gamble’s admitted charges also include an overlooked and somewhat ironic target: FBI official Amy Hess. At the time of the hacking campaign in 2015, Hess oversaw the Bureau’s Operational Technology Division (OTD), a unit tasked with deploying the FBI’s …
and more »

 fbi – Google News

Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 3

The WorldWide Times: 8:33 AM 10/8/2017 – News Review: Grim Redux and other shared stories 

1 Share
Michael Grimm (politician) – Wikipedia Sunday October 8th, 2017 at 8:28 AM 1 Share Michael Gerard Grimm (born February 7, 1970)[2] is an American businessman, and politician who represented New York in the United States Congress from 2011 to 2015. Grimm represented New York’s 13th congressional district during his first term, after which he represented New York’s 11th congressional district. Both districts consisted of Staten … Continue reading “8:33 AM 10/8/2017 – News Review: Grim Redux and other shared stories”
 The WorldWide Times

Michael Grimm (politician) – Wikipedia

1 Share
Michael Gerard Grimm (born February 7, 1970)[2] is an American businessman, and politician who represented New York in the United States Congress from 2011 to 2015. Grimm represented New York’s 13th congressional district during his first term, after which he represented New York’s 11th congressional district. Both districts consisted of Staten Island and parts of Brooklyn. Grimm is a member of the Republican Party, and during his time in office was the only Republican to represent a significant portion of New York City. He is a convicted felon, former FBI agent, businessman, attorney, and U.S. Marine, having served in the Persian Gulf War.

Michael Grimm, a Former Congressman and Felon, Wants His Job Back

1 Share
“This is Middle America,” Mr. Grimm declared moments after taking the stage. Before the national anthem, he not so subtly invoked Mr. Trump to cheers: “I know no one here is going to be taking a knee.”
With his law enforcement credentials, tart tongue and square jaw, Mr. Grimm, the rare elected Republican in New York City, was once seen as a future star. Troubles with the law cut short his career.
There was no doubt that Mr. Grimm made an impression in his two terms, after winning in the Tea Party wave of 2010. In 2014, he beat back a Democratic challenger while under federal indictment, only to give up his seat when he pleaded guilty to tax fraud for underreporting wages at a restaurant he owned and filing false tax documents.
“I know what he did was wrong. He did his time,” said Cathy Reid, a Staten Island Republican who arrived to support Mr. Grimm’s comeback in a three-wheeled motorcycle, wearing a black helmet with an “If I’d shot you when I wanted, I’d be out by now” sticker on it.
“Every business does that,” she said. “He was made an example of.”
While Mr. Grimm said he was “truly sorry” for his transgressions, saying he wished he was “perfect but I am not,” he also made light of them. He said he first began working for his father at age 11. “Yeah, it was off the books,” he joked.
Some in Staten Island said they welcomed Mr. Grimm’s blunt manner, especially after seeing his outspoken advocacy after Hurricane Sandy.
“He got down and dirty,” said Thea Friscia.
On the way to the rally, her friend Cathy Bannon stopped at a dollar store to pick up a “Welcome Home” balloon, like for those returning from hospital stays, in a show of support. “Michael was the only one who stood with us,” she said.
Another woman, Maria Romagnuolo, added that Mr. Grimm had gotten her disabled son a “mobility scooter” after the storm. “He’s one of us,” she said.
Mr. Donovan, a former Staten Island district attorney, is expected to have the support of much of the Republican political apparatus both in New York and nationally. He has $300,000 cash on hand.
Mr. Grimm ended June with $420,000 in unpaid campaign legal bills. He entered into a “confidential settlement” with the law firm he owed, according to spokesman Michael Caputo. He also owed nearly $150,000 in tax restitution payments. Mr. Grimm borrowed money from family and “a friend” to pay off that debt, Mr. Caputo said, adding that the lenders would be disclosed on a future financial disclosure form.
At his rally, the signs had the required Federal Election Commission disclosures either added with stickers or taped onto them.
Jessica Proud, a spokeswoman for Mr. Donovan, dismissed Mr. Grimm’s candidacy: “We’re not really concerned about a challenge from a convicted felon who was rated one of the most liberal Republicans in Congress.”
The bigger fear among national Republicans is that Mr. Grimm would lose the primary to Mr. Donovan and then seek to stay on the ballot as a third-party candidate, dividing the vote and opening a pathway for Democrats.
“He’s keeping all of his options open,” Mr. Caputo said.
A former campaign adviser to Mr. Trump, Mr. Caputo is helping Mr. Grimm make the case he would be a stronger ally to the president. “It’s time to make anti-Trump Republicans pay a price at the polls,” Mr. Caputo said.
Mr. Grimm once famously threatened to throw a reporter who asked about the federal investigation off a balcony during a television interview. “I’ll break you in half,” Mr. Grimm said then. “Like a boy.”
He initially blamed the reporter for his question but later apologized.
When Mr. Grimm was sentenced to prison, the judge in his case told him, “Your moral compass, Mr. Grimm, needs some reorientation.”
Mr. Grimm said on Sunday that he had matured. Still, he remained ever combative.
“I took my lumps like a man,” Mr. Grimm said. “We took more than we should have.”
Continue reading the main story
Read the whole story
· · ·

Michael Grimm – Google Search

1 Share
Story image for Michael Grimm from New York Post

Michael Grimm says his prison stint got Loretta Lynch her job

New York Post13 hours ago
Michael Grimm, Staten Island’s ex-con ex-congressman, says that his stint in jail got Loretta Lynch her job as U. S. Attorney General.
Story image for Michael Grimm from New York Times

Bannon Backs Grimm, Ex-Congressman and Felon, in GOP Challenge

New York TimesOct 5, 2017
Michael Grimm after announcing on Sunday he was running for his old House seat. He is challenging Representative Dan Donovan of Staten …
Story image for Michael Grimm from Newsweek

Ex-Convict Michael Grimm: Steve Bannon Is ‘Very Excited’ to Get Me …

NewsweekOct 5, 2017
Michael Grimm is dead certain of these things: He didn’t deserve that prison time. He can recapture his old seat representing New York in …
Read the whole story
· ·

Ex-Convict Michael Grimm: Steve Bannon Is ‘Very Excited’ to Get Me Re-Elected to Congress – Gears Of Biz

1 Share

Gears Of Biz
Ex-Convict Michael Grimm: Steve Bannon Is ‘Very Excited’ to Get Me Re-Elected to Congress
Gears Of Biz
A tireless retail campaigner with high-beam blue eyes, Grimm wooed and wowed his district’s voters with the confident air of a decorated Gulf War veteran, lawyer and former FBI agent who took down bad guys while undercover as a shady, sharp-dressed …

How Facebook ads helped elect Trump

1 Share
President Donald Trump talked on Twitter, but Facebook was the crucial tool that helped elect him, says the man who directed the digital aspects of the Trump campaign. Brad Parscale tells Lesley Stahl how he fine-tuned political ads posted on Facebook to directly reach voters with the exact messages they cared most about – infrastructure key among them — and had handpicked Republican Facebook employees to guide him. Stahl’s report will be broadcast on 60 Minutes Sunday, Oct. 8 at 7 p.m. ET/PT.
CBS News
“Twitter is how [Trump] talked to the people, Facebook was going to be how he won,” Parscale tells Stahl.  Parscale says he used the majority of his digital ad budget on Facebook ads and explained how efficient they could be, particularly in reaching the rural vote.  “So now Facebook lets you get to…15 people in the Florida Panhandle that I would never buy a TV commercial for,” says Parscale.  And people anywhere could be targeted with the messages they cared about. “Infrastructure…so I started making ads that showed the bridge crumbling…that’s micro targeting…I can find the 1,500 people in one town that care about infrastructure. Now, that might be a voter that normally votes Democrat,” he says. Parscale says the campaign would average 50-60,000 different ad versions every day, some days peaking at 100,000 separate iterations – changing design, colors, backgrounds and words – all in an effort to refine ads and engage users.
Parscale received help utilizing Facebook’s technology from Facebook employees provided by the company who showed up for work to his office multiple days a week. He says they had to be partisan and he questioned them to make sure.  “I wanted people who supported Donald Trump.”  Parscale calls these Facebook employees “embeds” who could teach him every aspect of the technology. “I want to know everything you would tell Hillary’s campaign plus some,” he says he told them.
Both campaigns used Facebook’s advertising technology extensively to reach voters, but Parscale says the Clinton campaign didn’t go as far as using “embeds.” “I had heard that they did not accept any of [Facebook’s] offers.”
The conservative Parscale sees an irony in all this. “These social platforms are all invented by very liberal people on the West and East Coast.  And we figure out how to use it to push conservative values. I don’t think they thought that would ever happen,” says Parscale.

© 2017 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Read the whole story
· ·
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 4

Brad Parscale – Google Search

1 Share
Story image for Brad Parscale from CBS News

How Facebook ads helped elect Trump

CBS NewsOct 6, 2017
Brad Parscale tells Lesley Stahl how he fine-tuned political ads posted on … Parscale says he used the majority of his digital ad budget on …
Story image for Brad Parscale from Firstpost

Firstpost

Campaign digital director: Facebook employees key to Trump win

The Keene Sentinel1 hour ago
“Twitter is how (Trump) talked to the people; Facebook was going to be how he won,” Brad Parscaletold “60 Minutes,” according to an excerpt …
Story image for Brad Parscale from Wichita Eagle

Kansas natives, Trump campaign alumni talk up former boss

Wichita EagleSep 19, 2017
Topeka native Brad Parscale recounted how he helped drive the campaign’s Facebook strategy to electoral success while leading its digital …
Read the whole story
· ·

Campaign digital director: Facebook employees key to Trump win | Mcclatchy

1 Share
Facebook Inc.’s platform was a crucial messaging tool for President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign, according to the campaign’s digital director — who told CBS’s “60 Minutes” that he hand-picked pro-Trump “embeds” from the company to help him use the platform in targeted ways.
“Twitter is how (Trump) talked to the people; Facebook was going to be how he won,” Brad Parscale told “60 Minutes,” according to an excerpt of an interview that the program intends to air tonight. The social media platform was particularly valuable because it allows for targeted messaging, Parscale said, according to the excerpt.
Facebook’s employees showed up for work at his office multiple days a week to provide guidance on how to best use the company’s services, Parscale said in the interview excerpt. “I wanted people who supported Donald Trump,” he said — and he questioned the workers about their political views.

Parscale didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. A Facebook spokesman said the company provided the Trump campaign with the same guidance and services it offers any major advertiser.
Facebook has found itself at the center of multiple inquiries into Russia’s involvement in the 2016 election. The social-media giant said it has so far found $100,000 in advertising spending linked to a Russian troll farm that has ties to the Kremlin. The company turned over details on the ads to Congress and to special counsel Robert Mueller 3rd, who is leading the criminal investigation into Russia’s campaign meddling and possible links to Trump’s associates.
A person familiar with the company’s work for the Trump campaign took issue with Parscale’s use of the word “embeds” to describe its employees because it implies that the campaign work was their sole focus. The workers had tasks for other clients as well, said the person, who asked not to be identified because the matter is sensitive.

The company offered Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton the same opportunity, the person said.
Although federal election law generally bars corporations from aiding political campaigns, there’s nothing wrong with a company providing training and services to a campaign if it offers the same services to every client spending similar amounts, said Larry Noble, former general counsel of the Federal Election Commission.
“If you’d do it for any customer, it’s OK,” Noble said, adding that the services have to be offered to all customers. “It can’t be just for political campaigns.”
Facebook was especially useful in reaching rural voters, Parscale told “60 Minutes,” according to the published excerpt. “So now Facebook lets you get to … 15 people in the Florida Panhandle that I would never buy a TV commercial for,” he said.

Read the whole story
· · ·

US Ambassador To Russia Cites Ukraine As Key To Improving Ties – RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty

1 Share

RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
US Ambassador To Russia Cites Ukraine As Key To Improving Ties
RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
The severe tension in bilateral ties also stems from a January report by the U.S.intelligence community that determined Putin ordered an “influence campaign” targeting the 2016 presidential election in the United States. At a confirmation hearing
and more »

Uncovered Trump Organization Document Suggests Trump Really Was Putin’s Puppet – Independent Journal Review

1 Share
Trump’s Moscow Tower and Back-Channel Ukraine Dossier: Both … – Just Security Sunday September 17th, 2017 at 8:13 AM Felix Sater – Google News 1 Share Uncovered Trump Organization Document Suggests Trump Really Was Putin’s Puppet Sunday September 17th, 2017 at 9:08 AM IJR 1 Share Along with the roiling investigation around the Trump campaign’s high-level meeting with Russian cutouts to … Continue reading “Uncovered Trump Organization Document Suggests Trump Really Was Putin’s Puppet – Independent Journal Review”

Russia-Trump campaign collusion an ‘open’ issue: US Senate panel chiefs – Reuters.com

1 Share

Reuters.com
Russia-Trump campaign collusion an ‘open’ issue: US Senate panel chiefs
Reuters.com
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Leaders of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee said on Wednesday the issue of whether President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign colluded with Russia remains an open question as the panel intensifies its probe into …

The Trump-Russia dossier: why its findings grow more significant by … – The Guardian

1 Share

The Guardian
The Trump-Russia dossier: why its findings grow more significant by …
The Guardian
As US officials investigate potential collusion between Moscow and the Trump campaign, the series of reports by the former UK intelligence official Christopher …
Grassley concerned about FBI use of Trump ‘dossier’ in Russia investigationPolitico
Collusion and the Trump DossierNational Review
Trump dossier’ on Russia links now part of special counsel’s probe: sourcesReuters
NBCNews.com –Newsweek –Fox News –CNN
all 51 news articles »
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 5

Here’s What the ‘Golden Shower’ Dossier Now Being Investigated by Mueller Claims About Trump and Russia – Newsweek

1 Share

Business Insider
Here’s What the ‘Golden Shower’ Dossier Now Being Investigated by Mueller Claims About Trump and Russia
Newsweek
Nine months after the publication of an explosive and salacious dossier detailing allegations of collusion between President Donald Trump and Russia, its claims—though largely unverified and vehemently denied by those involved—are the subject of 
Trump is hoping Mueller will do the one thing Comey didn’tBusiness Insider
Hoping to Have Trump Cleared, Legal Team Eases Resistance to InquiryNew York Times
The TrumpRussia dossier: why its findings grow more significant by the dayThe Guardian
Politico –National Review –Mic –CNN
all 68 news articles »

Russian ads, email pranks, and tensions in the White House — here are the latest Trump-Russia developments – Business Insider

1 Share

Business Insider
Russian ads, email pranks, and tensions in the White House — here are the latest Trump-Russia developments
Business Insider
New developments in the Russia investigation involving social media, Jared Kushner, Roger Stone, and Michael Flynn capped off a dizzying month of revelations about special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe into Russia’s election interference — and how 
and more »

Paul Manafort – Google Search

1 Share
Story image for Paul Manafort from USA TODAY

Ex-Trump adviser Paul Manafort conspired to mislead bankruptcy …

USA TODAYOct 4, 2017
As federal authorities investigate former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort’s controversial ties to Russia, his estranged son-in-law is …
Story image for Paul Manafort from Washington Post

Russian intelligence would have seen Paul Manafort as the perfect …

Washington PostSep 29, 2017
For 30 years, my job as a CIA officer was to try to figure out how Russian operatives were trying to attack the United States. I oversaw …

Donald Trump desperately tries to spin distractions as Paul Manafort resurfaces in Washington DC 

1 Share
Over the past two days, Donald Trump has gone through a series of sharp turns in behavior that have been unusual even by his standards. On Friday he went completely quiet and tweeted nothing at all – which has almost never happened. Then on Saturday he desperately tried to spin up a series of distractions which suggested he knows a major Trump-Russia bombshell is coming. Now we may have the answer as to why: Paul Manafort has resurfaced in Washington DC while Trump is out of town.
It’s still unclear where Manafort has been for the past two weeks since his foreign agent work for the Kurdistan independence referendum came to a completion. On September 20th the New York Times said it thought Manafort may have been on his way to Iraq for the vote (link). That in turn set off a firestorm of questions about whether Manafort might have been attempting to flee the country before he could be indicted, and whether Special Counsel Robert Mueller would even allow him to leave the country. Rachel Maddow pointed out on-air on her MSNBC show how curious it was that no one among the media or the public seemed to know where Manafort was, at such a crucial time.
It was never confirmed whether or not Paul Manafort did leave the country – but in any case he’s stateside now. We know this because CNN reporter Jim Acosta says Manafort was spotted at a baseball game in Washington DC on Saturday night between the Chicago Cubs and the Washington Nationals (link). Manafort is a confirmed baseball fan and he’s been spotted a MLB games before. He has a home in Virginia that’s fairly close to DC, and it’s possible he simply decided to attend a baseball playoff game, without any additional reason for being in town. It’s also possible he’s in DC this weekend for another reason – and that fear may be what’s set Trump off.
We know that Robert Mueller is planning to indict Paul Manafort for serious crimes, in an attempt at pressuring Manafort into flipping on Trump and cooperating with the Trump-Russia investigation. Now suddenly Manafort has resurfaced in Washington DC in plain sight, while Trump is out of town on a golf trip, and Mueller is very much in town. Trump’s desperation to create a distraction on Saturday suggests he may be worried about what’s really going on here.
The post Donald Trump desperately tries to spin distractions as Paul Manafort resurfaces in Washington DC appeared first on Palmer Report.

Trump Ominously Tweets ‘Only One Thing Will Work’ With North Korea

1 Share
Trump did not make clear to what he was referring.

Our Opinion: Burr’s investigation annoys the president – Greensboro News & Record

1 Share

Greensboro News & Record
Our Opinion: Burr’s investigation annoys the president
Greensboro News & Record
A Thursday morning tweet from the White House illustrates the difficulty of Sen. Richard Burr’s job: “Why Isn’t the Senate Intel Committee looking into the Fake News Networks in OUR country to see why so much of our news is just made up-FAKE 
Senate Intelligence Committee Gives Update On Russian Interference InvestigationNPR
Russian election meddling probe will show media ran untrue stories – head of USinvestigationGears Of Biz
all 18 news articles »
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 6

PD Editorial: More focus needed on blocking Russia meddling – Santa Rosa Press Democrat

1 Share

Santa Rosa Press Democrat
PD Editorial: More focus needed on blocking Russia meddling
Santa Rosa Press Democrat
“What I will confirm is that the Russian intelligence service is determined (and) clever,” said committee Chairman Richard Burr, R-North Carolina, in announcing its preliminary findings last week. “And I recommend that every campaign and every election …
Our Opinion: Burr’s investigation annoys the presidentGreensboro News & Record
Russians Still Have An Open Path to US Election SubversionNewsweek
all 4 news articles »

Russians Still Have An Open Path to U.S. Election Subversion

1 Share
Exactly a year after U.S. intelligence issued a stern warning about Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, the Trump administration has failed to fill key homeland security posts responsible for preventing another Kremlin assault on the voting system.
Not only that, the White House hasn’t even nominated someone to replace now-White House chief of staff John Kelly as secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), or someone to run its units responsible for protecting the nation’s strategic infrastructure, which includes federal, state and local voting systems. Both are in the hands of “acting” officials.
“The administration is having a hard time finding individuals that want to do the job, could do a good job, and could pass Senate confirmation,” a congressional expert tells Newsweek, speaking candidly only on the basis he not be quoted by name.
Keep up with this story and more by subscribing now
President Donald Trump delivers remarks at the Homeland Security Department’s headquarters in Washington on January 25. He announced two immigration-related executive orders, including one to build a wall on the U.S. border with Mexico. Jonathan Ernst/REUTERS
“The second thing is, the administration doesn’t seem to want to have anybody head up to the Hill and testify on issues that would be hot-button issues, namely anything to do with election security, cyber security, or the Russian acts from last year.”
Unless the administration puts its own political appointees in place at DHS, analysts say, the department will struggle to get protective systems up and running in time for the 2017 primaries and state and local races, let alone the 2018 elections. Acting department heads just don’t have the same powers of persuasion as people appointed by the president.
DHS‘s National Protection and Programs Directorate, or NPPD, responsible for thwarting foreign cyberattacks on the nation’s infrastructure, is currently being run by Acting Undersecretary Christopher C. Krebs, a former Microsoft lobbyist and cybersecurity policy chief.
“It being vacant hurts,” Erik Rasmussen, a former U.S. Secret Service prosecutor and special agent, tells Newsweek. “The head of that unit has deep cyber operational control and has a critical role to play in any critical infrastructure decision.”
Nor were several congressional officials responsible for homeland security oversight able to identify anyone in charge of the Election Infrastructure Cybersecurity Working Group, which, according to an NPPD announcement in July, was embarking on an ambitious program to integrate DHS with “not only state and local election officials, but also other federal agencies.”
DHS is also launching a Government Coordinating Council to liaise with the bipartisan U.S. Election Assistance Commission and 25 state and local officials, but “the membership and structure is still being finalized,” a department official tells Newsweek.
Three months later, the elections unit, “has not gone out and talked with state election officials to determine what exactly [they] need to increase their own cybersecurity defenses, and what kind of authorities the federal government might need to be able to help provide that assistance,” the congressional expert said. They are “just starting to look at it right now.”
At a press conference last week, Senator Richard Burr of North Carolina, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said that members of the panel shared a “general consensus” of agreement on the conclusions of last January’s intelligence community assessment that the Kremlin’s effort to interfere in the 2016 presidential campaign was directed by Russian President Vladimir Putin. “The overall theme of their involvement in the U.S. election was to create chaos at every level,” Burr said, declining to share another conclusion of the intelligence agencies that Putin’s aim was to tilt voters away from Hillary Clinton and toward Donald Trump.
The entrance to the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Cyber Crimes Center is seen in this U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) building in Fairfax, Virginia, U.S. on July 21, 2015. Courtesy Josh Denmark/U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Immigration and Customs Enforcement/Handout via REUTERS Reuters
Burr also said he was, “pleased with the progress” the homeland security department was making to prevent further election interference. But Democrats on Capitol Hill unanimously disagreed with that statement.
In a statement to Newsweek, Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, ranking Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee, called Trump “irresponsible and reckless” for “leaving  leadership positions at our cybersecurity agencies unfilled…almost ten months into this administration.”
Likewise, New Hampshire Sen. Maggie Hassan, a member of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, told Newsweek, “what we urgently need is a genuine effort from congressional Republicans and the Trump administration to work with us…especially given the fast-approaching 2017 election…” On Thursday, the committee approved a bill introduced jointly by Hassan and Republican Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio that would enlist “‘white-hat’—that is, ethical—hackers to help identify unique and undiscovered vulnerabilities in the DHS networks and information technology.”
Three weeks ago, DHS surprised election officials in 21 states with the news that Russian hackers had tried to access their voter information. On September 28, according to The Huffington Post, election officials in Wisconsin and California said DHS had “provided them with additional information showing that Russian hackers actually scanned networks at other state agencies unconnected to voter data.”
At a September 27 hearing of the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee, the panel’s top Democrat, Missouri Senator Claire McCaskill, said she was “worried about how long it’s taken us to notify the states about the potential efforts to scan voter registration files in their states…” And she asked Trump administration officials, including acting DHS secretary Elaine Duke, “what is our strategy going forward? How are we going to do what needs to be done to notify the American public if this is going on, and prevent it from actually happening in all of these various ways that Russia played around in our democracy?”
Duke responded that DHS had learned to “notify the right senior [state] official” about Russian election intrusions.
Christopher Wray, who Trump appointed to replace James Comey as FBI Director, told McCaskill that, “We are surging more resources specifically focused on the upcoming elections…”
When they issued their joint statement on Russian election meddling last October 7, DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper claimed that DHS was “providing several services to state and local election officials to assist in their cybersecurity,” including, “‘hygiene’ scans of Internet-facing systems, risk and vulnerability assessments, information sharing about cyber incidents, and best practices for securing voter registration databases and addressing potential cyber threats.”
Rasmussen, now a top cyber official with the global investigations firm Kroll, called the hygiene scan “a really good program,” but said, “I’m not sure how many entities actually use it.”  In any event, he said, ”there are still too many voting platforms—vote by mail, paper vote, online vote, machine vote at a polling station—that are really vulnerable to outside sabotage or manipulation.”
DHS did not respond to several questions about its cybersecurity measures related to the elections.
“Overall,” says the congressional homeland security expert, “our assessment is that DHS is just really getting serious about this right now.”
How serious remains to be seen. As Laura Rosenberger, a senior former Obama administration national security official, puts it: “The person at the very top continues to deny that this is even an issue.” Last week, Trump tweeted that the Senate Intelligence Committee should be investigating “fake news,” not Russia’s election meddling and alleged collusion with him and his associates.
“I don’t know where you go from there,” Rosenberger added. “We need a whole government strategy on this, and that requires White House leadership.”
It’s not likely to come, former Obama White House Counsel Bob Bauer wrote this week.
“A whole government approach would require an executive fully prepared to work with the Congress to meet this challenge,” Bauer said. “President Donald Trump has given no such indication: quite the opposite.”
Read the whole story
· · · · · ·

Muslim Brotherhood Political Infiltration on Steroids

1 Share
In 2008, during the largest terrorism funding trial in U.S. history, United States v. Holy Land Foundation, a document published in 1991 outlined Muslim plans to take over America.  An Explanatory Memorandum:  On the General Strategic Goal for the Group, seized in a 2004 FBI raid of the Virginia home of a Muslim Brotherhood operative, was presented during the trial as evidence of “a Civilization-Jihadist Process.” It outlined the Muslim Brotherhood goal to conduct a “grand jihad in eliminating and destroying Western civilization from within and ‘sabotaging’ its miserable house by their hands and the hands of the believers so that it is eliminated.”
For several decades, this well-organized and well-funded effort to subvert our constitutional republic and replace it with an Islamic government under Islamic law has focused on infiltrating all levels and branches of the U.S. government. More recently, the Muslim Brotherhood presence within the American political landscape has intensified, accelerated, and become more visible with the establishment of several nonprofit political action organizations. The Muslim Brotherhood stated goal of transforming American society from within in preparation for an eventual takeover is clearly moving forward fueled by the efforts of these groups and their burgeoning success within the umma or Muslim community.
As early as 1987, a declassified FBI confidential informant document described the Muslim Brotherhood as “political action front groups with no traceable ties to Muslim groups” that are organizing external political support to influence both public opinion in America and the U.S. government and its leadership. The informant who disclosed this information told authorities that the MB acknowledged the need to “peacefully get inside the United States Government” for the purpose of meeting “the ultimate goal of overthrowing all non-Islamic governments.”
In 2010, one such “peaceful” group, Project Mobilize, was created by M. Yasser Tabbara to empower and engage the political potential of the Muslim community.  Its mission statement called for the exploitation of the growing political capital of the umma, the promotion of issues important to Muslim Americans and the development of strategies for political advocacy on their behalf.  In 2011, Project Mobilize began fielding its first Muslim candidates for political office.
Project Mobilize’s founder, Tabbara, is a former executive director the Chicago chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Muslim Brotherhood affiliate and unindicted co-conspirator in the Holy Land Foundation Hamas funding trial. Other board members include Safaa Zarzour, the secretary general of another unindicted co-conspirator and Muslim Brotherhood front, the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), and Oussama Jammal, vice president of the Mosque Foundation, a known center for terrorism fundraising and haven for Hamas operatives.
In 2014, at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., representatives from eight Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated groups announced formation of the United States Council of Muslim Organizations (USCMO), a political party for Muslims and the first religion-based political party in U.S. history. At the meeting, the founders disclosed their plans to expand Muslim participation in the American political process by encouraging more Muslims to vote, work on political campaigns and run for office themselves.
Oussama Jammal, who was involved in fundraising for convicted terrorist Sami al-Arian and serves as director of the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliate, the Muslim American Society (MAS), headed the new organization. MAS, created in the early 1990s, was itself begun as the U.S. branch of the Muslim Brotherhood and was designated a terrorist group by the United Arab Emirates. Mazen Mokhtar, another USCMO founding member, also had MAS ties, having served as its executive director. An Egyptian-born imam, Mokhtar served as webmaster for a site that solicited funds for Taliban and Chechen jihadists. In 2007, he was indicted by then-New Jersey Attorney General Chris Christie for tax evasion and filing false tax returns.
In 2015, a new organization, Jetpac Inc. (Justice, Education and Technology Policy Advocacy Center) was begun by Nadeem Mazen, Massachusett’s first Muslim city council member. Jetpac was established as an “open call for American Muslims to immerse themselves in local politics.” The group trains American Muslim community leaders and educates them about the political process. According to their website, they have prepared more than 15 aspiring candidates for office in Maine, New York, Rhode Island, and California. The group’s activities include development of proprietary software for social media outreach, fundraising and canvassing techniques, media communication and campaign strategy skills as well as advice on combatting negative impressions of Muslims. In addition, Jetpac teaches a course on U.S. government and politics at a Massachusetts Islamic school that focuses on grassroots organizing and the history of the civil rights movement.
Following his stint as a Cambridge City Council member, Mazen, a founding member of CAIR Massachusetts and former president of MIT’s MSA, announced plans to run for Congress as the third elected Muslim after Keith Hakim Ellison (D-MN) and Andre Carson (D-IN). Just this week, Mazen launched his campaign for Massachusetts’ 3rd Congressional District seat. A telling indicator of his more radical views is the fact that Mazen opposed President Obama’s Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) program and criticized moderate Muslim groups as promoters of “imperialistic-style” initiatives to “foist secular attitudes on Muslims.”
Another political race worth watching involves a CAIR official running for the Des Moines, Iowa, city council. Somali Muslim refugee and president of CAIR Iowa, Abshir Omar, is running as a Democratic Socialist to represent downtown Des Moines and the city’s southwest side. City council members can wield significant power and influence over all aspects of community life. Typically, they make key appointments such as city managers, police and fire department heads, library board members, parks and recreation supervisors, transportation directors, as well as administrators for arts councils, housing authorities and planning commissions.
Meanwhile, the background of Tahirah Amatul-Wadud, another Islamist operative who intends to run for governor of Massachusetts in the future, should cause grave concern. Wadud, who served on the Massachusetts Commission on the Status of Women, has extensive radical Islamic ties. She served as an executive board member for CAIR Massachusetts and as the general counsel for Jamaat ul-Fuqra a.k.a. Muslims of America, a group alleged to have close ties to Al Qaeda.
Jamaat ul-Fuqra was founded in 1980 by Pakistani Sheikh Gilani, who was associated with shoe bomber Richard Reid and implicated in the murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Danny Pearl. According to the Clarion Project, Wadud posted an anti-Semitic article by Gilani on her Facebook that claimed Jewish complicity in the 9/11 and Pearl Harbor attacks.
Jamaat ul-Fuqra has done more than simply issue social media propaganda, however. The terrorist entity has approximately two dozen paramilitary training centers across the U.S. and its members participated in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. It is known to proselytize and recruit black prison inmates and reportedly seeks “to purify Islam through violence.” The Center for Policing Terrorism maintains that Jamaat ul-Fuqra “may be the best positioned group to launch an attack on the United States, or, more likely, help al-Qaeda to do so.”
Another Muslim with terrorist ties is a political candidate in Arizona. Southern Baptist convert to Islam, Deedra Abboud, a Phoenix attorney and community activist who served as the executive director of CAIR Arizona and is currently associated with the Muslim American Society, is seeking the Democratic nomination for U.S. senator in her state. Abboud opposes President Trump’s policy to temporarily ban refugees from designated Muslim countries rife with terrorist activity. She also opposed the U.S. cruise missile bombing that followed Bashar Assad’s use of chemical weapons on Syrian civilians. Identifying as a feminist, Abboud defends her husband’s right under Islam to have four wives although she admits that she wouldn’t be happy with it. She helped raise bail money for deceased Muslim terrorist, Elton Simpson, when he was convicted of lying to the FBI about his plans to engage in Islamic terrorist activities in Somalia. Simpson, in the first ISIS-claimed attack on U.S. soil, tried to kill participants at the Mohammed cartoon contest in Garland, Texas in 2015. In 2009, Abboud made a statement about the acceptability of police learning Arabic to better understand the Muslim community. However, she objected to the study of Arabic as a law enforcement tool for investigating potential Islamic terrorist activity deeming it targeting.
Self-described devout Muslim and son of Egyptian immigrant parents, Abdul El-Sayed, has substantial connections to the Muslim Brotherhood and is running for governor of Michigan. A medical doctor who served as the executive director of the Detroit Health Department at age 30, his background includes serving as vice president of his MSA chapter at the University of Michigan during his college years. His wife, Sarah Jukaku, who is described as “a mental health doctor,” wears a hijab. His father-in-law is a former president and current board member of CAIR Michigan.
Quite troubling is the fact that El-Sayed is endorsed by Linda Sarsour, an advocate for the Hamas initiative for the boycott, divestment, and sanctioning of Israel and an activist who played a major role in pressuring the NYPD to discontinue its surveillance of mosques and Muslim organizations post-9/11. That surveillance effort had yielded critical intelligence about terrorist activities. Sarsour is one of El-Sayed’s biggest supporters and is reportedly helping fundraise for El-Sayed’s gubernatorial campaign. She is also a close friend of the Muslim Brotherhood-connected Huma Abedin, has family members who have been arrested for aiding and abetting Hamas, openly supports shariah law and has been a featured speaker at Muslim Brotherhood groups that were designated as unindicted co-conspirators in the Holy Land Foundation trial.
All of the above demonstrate that the Muslim Brotherhood is increasing its political clout in America. As more of its candidates are elected to office, deeper penetration of American society comes within their grasp. Their stated goal to destroy our society from within and replace the Constitution with the tenets of shariah could become a reality. Their adeptness at appealing to the American public by using the coded language of multiculturalism and by professing a moderate Islam has proved to be an unfortunate asset. In the words of former FBI analyst and expert on the Muslim Brotherhood, John Guandolo, who has closely studied their deceptive language and appearance, Muslim Brotherhood operatives are “suit-wearing jihadis who pretend they’re friendly but they’re not.” America should be alert and aware.
In 2008, during the largest terrorism funding trial in U.S. history, United States v. Holy Land Foundation, a document published in 1991 outlined Muslim plans to take over America.  An Explanatory Memorandum:  On the General Strategic Goal for the Group, seized in a 2004 FBI raid of the Virginia home of a Muslim Brotherhood operative, was presented during the trial as evidence of “a Civilization-Jihadist Process.” It outlined the Muslim Brotherhood goal to conduct a “grand jihad in eliminating and destroying Western civilization from within and ‘sabotaging’ its miserable house by their hands and the hands of the believers so that it is eliminated.”
For several decades, this well-organized and well-funded effort to subvert our constitutional republic and replace it with an Islamic government under Islamic law has focused on infiltrating all levels and branches of the U.S. government. More recently, the Muslim Brotherhood presence within the American political landscape has intensified, accelerated, and become more visible with the establishment of several nonprofit political action organizations. The Muslim Brotherhood stated goal of transforming American society from within in preparation for an eventual takeover is clearly moving forward fueled by the efforts of these groups and their burgeoning success within the umma or Muslim community.
As early as 1987, a declassified FBI confidential informant document described the Muslim Brotherhood as “political action front groups with no traceable ties to Muslim groups” that are organizing external political support to influence both public opinion in America and the U.S. government and its leadership. The informant who disclosed this information told authorities that the MB acknowledged the need to “peacefully get inside the United States Government” for the purpose of meeting “the ultimate goal of overthrowing all non-Islamic governments.”
In 2010, one such “peaceful” group, Project Mobilize, was created by M. Yasser Tabbara to empower and engage the political potential of the Muslim community.  Its mission statement called for the exploitation of the growing political capital of the umma, the promotion of issues important to Muslim Americans and the development of strategies for political advocacy on their behalf.  In 2011, Project Mobilize began fielding its first Muslim candidates for political office.
Project Mobilize’s founder, Tabbara, is a former executive director the Chicago chapter of the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), a Muslim Brotherhood affiliate and unindicted co-conspirator in the Holy Land Foundation Hamas funding trial. Other board members include Safaa Zarzour, the secretary general of another unindicted co-conspirator and Muslim Brotherhood front, the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA), and Oussama Jammal, vice president of the Mosque Foundation, a known center for terrorism fundraising and haven for Hamas operatives.
In 2014, at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., representatives from eight Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated groups announced formation of the United States Council of Muslim Organizations (USCMO), a political party for Muslims and the first religion-based political party in U.S. history. At the meeting, the founders disclosed their plans to expand Muslim participation in the American political process by encouraging more Muslims to vote, work on political campaigns and run for office themselves.
Oussama Jammal, who was involved in fundraising for convicted terrorist Sami al-Arian and serves as director of the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliate, the Muslim American Society (MAS), headed the new organization. MAS, created in the early 1990s, was itself begun as the U.S. branch of the Muslim Brotherhood and was designated a terrorist group by the United Arab Emirates. Mazen Mokhtar, another USCMO founding member, also had MAS ties, having served as its executive director. An Egyptian-born imam, Mokhtar served as webmaster for a site that solicited funds for Taliban and Chechen jihadists. In 2007, he was indicted by then-New Jersey Attorney General Chris Christie for tax evasion and filing false tax returns.
In 2015, a new organization, Jetpac Inc. (Justice, Education and Technology Policy Advocacy Center) was begun by Nadeem Mazen, Massachusett’s first Muslim city council member. Jetpac was established as an “open call for American Muslims to immerse themselves in local politics.” The group trains American Muslim community leaders and educates them about the political process. According to their website, they have prepared more than 15 aspiring candidates for office in Maine, New York, Rhode Island, and California. The group’s activities include development of proprietary software for social media outreach, fundraising and canvassing techniques, media communication and campaign strategy skills as well as advice on combatting negative impressions of Muslims. In addition, Jetpac teaches a course on U.S. government and politics at a Massachusetts Islamic school that focuses on grassroots organizing and the history of the civil rights movement.
Following his stint as a Cambridge City Council member, Mazen, a founding member of CAIR Massachusetts and former president of MIT’s MSA, announced plans to run for Congress as the third elected Muslim after Keith Hakim Ellison (D-MN) and Andre Carson (D-IN). Just this week, Mazen launched his campaign for Massachusetts’ 3rd Congressional District seat. A telling indicator of his more radical views is the fact that Mazen opposed President Obama’s Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) program and criticized moderate Muslim groups as promoters of “imperialistic-style” initiatives to “foist secular attitudes on Muslims.”
Another political race worth watching involves a CAIR official running for the Des Moines, Iowa, city council. Somali Muslim refugee and president of CAIR Iowa, Abshir Omar, is running as a Democratic Socialist to represent downtown Des Moines and the city’s southwest side. City council members can wield significant power and influence over all aspects of community life. Typically, they make key appointments such as city managers, police and fire department heads, library board members, parks and recreation supervisors, transportation directors, as well as administrators for arts councils, housing authorities and planning commissions.
Meanwhile, the background of Tahirah Amatul-Wadud, another Islamist operative who intends to run for governor of Massachusetts in the future, should cause grave concern. Wadud, who served on the Massachusetts Commission on the Status of Women, has extensive radical Islamic ties. She served as an executive board member for CAIR Massachusetts and as the general counsel for Jamaat ul-Fuqra a.k.a. Muslims of America, a group alleged to have close ties to Al Qaeda.
Jamaat ul-Fuqra was founded in 1980 by Pakistani Sheikh Gilani, who was associated with shoe bomber Richard Reid and implicated in the murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Danny Pearl. According to the Clarion Project, Wadud posted an anti-Semitic article by Gilani on her Facebook that claimed Jewish complicity in the 9/11 and Pearl Harbor attacks.
Jamaat ul-Fuqra has done more than simply issue social media propaganda, however. The terrorist entity has approximately two dozen paramilitary training centers across the U.S. and its members participated in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. It is known to proselytize and recruit black prison inmates and reportedly seeks “to purify Islam through violence.” The Center for Policing Terrorism maintains that Jamaat ul-Fuqra “may be the best positioned group to launch an attack on the United States, or, more likely, help al-Qaeda to do so.”
Another Muslim with terrorist ties is a political candidate in Arizona. Southern Baptist convert to Islam, Deedra Abboud, a Phoenix attorney and community activist who served as the executive director of CAIR Arizona and is currently associated with the Muslim American Society, is seeking the Democratic nomination for U.S. senator in her state. Abboud opposes President Trump’s policy to temporarily ban refugees from designated Muslim countries rife with terrorist activity. She also opposed the U.S. cruise missile bombing that followed Bashar Assad’s use of chemical weapons on Syrian civilians. Identifying as a feminist, Abboud defends her husband’s right under Islam to have four wives although she admits that she wouldn’t be happy with it. She helped raise bail money for deceased Muslim terrorist, Elton Simpson, when he was convicted of lying to the FBI about his plans to engage in Islamic terrorist activities in Somalia. Simpson, in the first ISIS-claimed attack on U.S. soil, tried to kill participants at the Mohammed cartoon contest in Garland, Texas in 2015. In 2009, Abboud made a statement about the acceptability of police learning Arabic to better understand the Muslim community. However, she objected to the study of Arabic as a law enforcement tool for investigating potential Islamic terrorist activity deeming it targeting.
Self-described devout Muslim and son of Egyptian immigrant parents, Abdul El-Sayed, has substantial connections to the Muslim Brotherhood and is running for governor of Michigan. A medical doctor who served as the executive director of the Detroit Health Department at age 30, his background includes serving as vice president of his MSA chapter at the University of Michigan during his college years. His wife, Sarah Jukaku, who is described as “a mental health doctor,” wears a hijab. His father-in-law is a former president and current board member of CAIR Michigan.
Quite troubling is the fact that El-Sayed is endorsed by Linda Sarsour, an advocate for the Hamas initiative for the boycott, divestment, and sanctioning of Israel and an activist who played a major role in pressuring the NYPD to discontinue its surveillance of mosques and Muslim organizations post-9/11. That surveillance effort had yielded critical intelligence about terrorist activities. Sarsour is one of El-Sayed’s biggest supporters and is reportedly helping fundraise for El-Sayed’s gubernatorial campaign. She is also a close friend of the Muslim Brotherhood-connected Huma Abedin, has family members who have been arrested for aiding and abetting Hamas, openly supports shariah law and has been a featured speaker at Muslim Brotherhood groups that were designated as unindicted co-conspirators in the Holy Land Foundation trial.
All of the above demonstrate that the Muslim Brotherhood is increasing its political clout in America. As more of its candidates are elected to office, deeper penetration of American society comes within their grasp. Their stated goal to destroy our society from within and replace the Constitution with the tenets of shariah could become a reality. Their adeptness at appealing to the American public by using the coded language of multiculturalism and by professing a moderate Islam has proved to be an unfortunate asset. In the words of former FBI analyst and expert on the Muslim Brotherhood, John Guandolo, who has closely studied their deceptive language and appearance, Muslim Brotherhood operatives are “suit-wearing jihadis who pretend they’re friendly but they’re not.” America should be alert and aware.
Read the whole story
· · · · · · · · · · · · ·

H.R. McMaster installs new head of NSC intelligence

1 Share
Lisa Bloom tweeted her resignation as Harvey Weinstein’s legal advisor after decades of sexual harassment allegations against the Hollywood mogul were exposed by the New York Times.
The backdrop: Bloom, a civil-rights lawyer, has defended women in high-profile harassment cases, including against Bill O’Reilly. She initially received criticism for choosing to defend Weinstein and for a statement saying, “As a women’s rights advocate, I have been blunt with Harvey and he has listened to me … He is an old dinosaur learning new ways.”

Leaker of Paddock Hotel Room Pics Could Be in Trouble

1 Share
(Newser) – Las Vegas police have confirmed the legitimacy of photos circulating the internet showing guns, ammunition, and the corpse of Stephen Paddock inside a Mandalay Bay hotel room, LawNewzreports. The next step is finding—and punishing—whoever leaked the gruesome crime scene photos. The New York Times has stitched together some of the non-graphic leaked photos to give a complete view of the inside of Paddock’s hotel room and its contents, which included more than 20 guns and hundreds of rounds of ammunition carried up to the room inside 10 suitcases. According to the Independent, some people online believe one of the photos shows a note left behind by Paddock, but that appears to not have been the case.
The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department undersheriff says the department has “opened up an internal investigation to determine the source of the leaks.” While whoever leaked the crime scene photos would face consequences, it’s unclear what those consequences would be. LawNewz notes a Los Angeles Police Department officer who leaked photos of Rihanna following a domestic violence incident in 2009 was fired from her job but didn’t face criminal charges. Crime scene photos leaked from the terrorist attack at an Ariana Grande concert last year in England resulted in British intelligence cutting US intelligence off from certain information.

So What’s on That Note Left by Vegas Shooter?

1 Share
(Newser) – Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock did indeed leave a note of sorts in his hotel room, but authorities say it wasn’t a suicide note or anything that provides an obvious clue about a motive for his shooting spree. Police won’t reveal details about its contents, with Sheriff Joseph Lombardo saying only that the piece of paper contained numbers now being analyzed to see if they might shed some light, reports the New York Times. Speculation about the note has been percolating since one of the leaked photos from Paddock’s hotel room revealed its existence. (Business Insider zeroes in on that detail here.)
Barring some kind of unexpected clue from the note, investigators aren’t sure when they’ll be able to piece together a motive as they pore over details of Paddock’s personal and financial history. “I’ve been doing this a long time and I can’t remember another homicide—and then you multiply what I’m about to say by 58—where you don’t know why,” says Stephen Wolfson, the district attorney where the killings took place. Police, meanwhile, say an explosive compound discovered in Paddock’s car and home was Tannerite, the same one believed to have been used in a 2016 bombing in New York City, reports the Las Vegas Review-Journal. Paddock had more than 50 pounds of it (The night before the massacre, Paddock called hotel security to report a noisy neighbor.)
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 7

Las Vegas shooting: 60 Minutes reveal police found note Stephen Paddock left in hotel room

1 Share

The note Stephen Paddock left in his hotel room in Las Vegas

THE cops who first saw the hotel room where Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock opened fire have revealed what they found.

Staff writers
News Corp Australia NetworkOctober 8, 201712:19pm

THE police officers who first stormed the hotel room where Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock carried out America’s biggest massacre in history have broken their silence.

In an interview airing on 60 Minutes in the US, three police officers who were in the Mandalay Bay hotel room will reveal new details about what they discovered.
REVEALED: Uarmed guard stopped Stephen Paddock
MORE: Vegas killer’s secret trip to the Middle East

Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock whose motive has not been determined yet. Picture: AP

Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock whose motive has not been determined yet. Picture: APSource:AP

CBS reports that they found a note in the hotel room that included handwritten calculations about where he needed to aim to maximise his accuracy and kill as many people as possible.
The officers being interviewed were the first to see Paddock’s body and his massive arsenal of weapons and ammunition he had stockpiled for days before his mass shooting.

The view from inside Stephen Paddock’s hotel room. Picture: Supplied

The view from inside Stephen Paddock’s hotel room. Picture: SuppliedSource:Supplied

He requested an upper-floor room overlooking the festival, stockpiled 23 guns, a dozen of them modified to fire continuously like an automatic weapon, with a bump stock device.
He had also set up cameras inside and outside his room to watch for approaching officers.

Inside shooter Stephen Paddock's room at the Mandalay Bay hotel, Las Vegas. Picture: Supplied

Inside shooter Stephen Paddock’s room at the Mandalay Bay hotel, Las Vegas. Picture: SuppliedSource:Supplied

Officer Dave Newton from the Las Vegas Police Department’s K-9 unit said he noticed a note on the shooter’s nightstand.
He said the note was located near one of the windows that Paddock had smashed with a hammer to fire onto the crowd at the Route 91 Harvest Music Festival.
“I could see on it he had written the distance, the elevation he was on, the drop of what his bullet was gonna be for the crowd,” Newton said.

Stephen Paddock's room and the note he left. Picture: MikeTokes/Twitter

Stephen Paddock’s room and the note he left. Picture: MikeTokes/TwitterSource:Twitter

“So he had that written down and figured out so he would know where to shoot to hit his targets from there.”
Paddock’s hotel suite was on the 32nd floor of the hotel.
Newton told reporter Bill Whitaker recalled how they entered the room amid the flashing lights of a fire alarm set off by an explosive used to blow through the door.
“Very eerie. Yeah, the dust from the explosive breach. And then you have the flashing lights,” Newton said. “And that looked straight, like, out of a movie, you know?”
Paddock’s hotel suite gave him an ideal perch from which to carry out his attack on a crowd of more than 20,000 people attending the festival concert across the street, some 365 metres away.
The note has not shed any light on the gunman’s motives, which authorities are yet to uncover nearly a week after the deadliest mass shooting in recent US history.

undefined

Current Time 0:00
/
Duration Time 0:41
Loaded: 0%
0:00

Progress: 0%

Stream TypeLIVE
Remaining Time -0:41
1
  • Chapters
  • descriptions off, selected
  • captions settings, opens captions settings dialog
  • captions off, selected
  • default, selected

This is a modal window.

Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window.

End of dialog window.

Current Time 0:00
/
Duration Time 0:00
Loaded: 0%

Progress: 0%

Stream TypeLIVE
Remaining Time -0:00
1
Autoplay

Police release body cam vision of Las Vegas shooting0:41

Police have released the first body cam footage from the Las Vegas shooting that left 60 people dead

GUNMAN WENT TO MIDDLE EAST
Stephen Paddock visited the Middle East on a cruise within the last year, a police source has said.
The anonymous official confirmed the gunman had travelled on a dozen voyages over the past few years — one of which was to the region.
Police had earlier dismissed three claims by Middle Eastern terror group ISIS that Paddock carried out the attack on its behalf after converting to Islam six months ago.

Las Vegas shooter Stephen Paddock (right, black shirt) sharing a meal with Marilou Danley's family in Manilla in 2013. Picture: Supplied

Las Vegas shooter Stephen Paddock (right, black shirt) sharing a meal with Marilou Danley’s family in Manilla in 2013. Picture: SuppliedSource:No Source

But an anonymous police source last night told Associated Press that investigators are closely analysing the cruises he took in the years leading up to the massacre.
Among popular cruise destinations in the Middle East are Dubai and Abu Dhabi, Oman, the Jordanian port of Aqaba, Bahrain, Qatar and a number of Egyptian ports.
ISIS ‘RARELY CLAIM’ ATTACKS THEY AREN’T INVOLVED IN
The Sun reports how on ISIS expert believes it is plausible that Paddock was in contact with ISIS.
Rukmini Callimachi, a reporter with The New York Times who covers the fanatics for the influential newspaper, said IS’s claim carried weight.
She said: “ISIS has rarely claimed attacks that were not by either their members or sympathisers.
“I don’t buy the argument that they are now opportunistically claiming attacks to deflect from battlefield losses.”

undefined

Fifty-eight people were killed and more than 500 injured when Paddock pumped thousands of bullets into a musical festival crowd from the nearby Mandalay Bay Hotel.
He fired into the crowd using his arsenal of more than 20 assault rifles and killed himself shortly before police burst into his room.
Publicly, investigators have said they are struggling to establish a motive for the massacre.
FBI REMOVE PERSONAL BELONGINGS
Nearly a week after the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history, federal agents on Saturday started hauling away the piles of backpacks, purses, baby strollers and lawn chairs left behind when frantic concert-goers scrambled to escape raining bullets from a gunman who was shooting from his high-rise hotel suite.
FBI agents fanned out across the crime scene near the Las Vegas Strip throughout the week stacking the belongings left from last Sunday’s shooting into more than a dozen large piles.
On Saturday morning, the agents were seen loading the items onto dollies and into the back of a white truck. Authorities have said they plan to return the belongings to people in the next week.

Personal belongings are gathered on the ground at the venue of the Route 91 Harvest Festival venue. Picture: AFP

Personal belongings are gathered on the ground at the venue of the Route 91 Harvest Festival venue. Picture: AFPSource:AFP

Members of the FBI walk among piles of personal items at the scene. Picture: AP

Members of the FBI walk among piles of personal items at the scene. Picture: APSource:AP

A member of the FBI walks among piles of personal items at the scene. Picture: AP

A member of the FBI walks among piles of personal items at the scene. Picture: APSource:AP

MIKE PENCE PAYS RESPECTS
As Las Vegas police are appealing to the public for help in uncovering a wealthy retiree’s motive for massacring 58 people at an outdoor concert this week, US Vice President Mike Pence has visited Las Vegas offering solace. “We are united in our grief, in our support for those who have suffered and united in our resolve to end such evil in our time,” Pence said, joining Las Vegas Mayor Carolyn Goodman and other local leaders at a City Hall commemoration for victims of the shooting that followed a prayer walk through the city.

Karen and Mike Pence with American Red Cross of Southern Nevada public information officer Cynthia DeLaTorre and CEO of the American Red Cross of Greater New York Josh Lockwood in Las Vegas. Picture: Getty

Karen and Mike Pence with American Red Cross of Southern Nevada public information officer Cynthia DeLaTorre and CEO of the American Red Cross of Greater New York Josh Lockwood in Las Vegas. Picture: GettySource:AFP

Participants trod 11km along four separate paths to City Hall for an event where security was high. President Donald Trump paid a visit to Las Vegas earlier in the week.
The commemoration came as Clark County Undersheriff Kevin McMahill said investigators remain largely in the dark about what drove retired real estate investor and high-stakes gambler.
POLICE SAY THEY HAVE NO MOTIVE FOR MASSACRE
Police in Las Vegas said yesterday they have looked at “everything” in Stephen Paddock’s life and can find no motive for what drove him to commit America’s deadliest mass shooting.
Saying they could find “no known nexus” to suggest Paddock was acting on behalf of Islamic State, Las Vegas police confirmed he was alone in room 32135 of the Mandalay Bay casino when he opened fire last Sunday night.
A lawyer for Paddock’s Australian partner, Marilou Danley said she “continues to co-operate fully with the investigation”.

Marilou Danley is helping police with their questions. Picture: AP

Marilou Danley is helping police with their questions. Picture: APSource:AP

“She does not anticipate making any public statements today or in the immediate future,” he said.
Clark County Undersheriff Kevin McMahill yesterday expressed the frustration of police and FBI officers who have “run down well more than 1000 leads in this investigation”.
“Some of it has helped create a better profile into the madness of this suspect but we do not still have a clear motive or reason why,” said Sheriff McMahill.

undefined

“In the past, terror attacks or mass murder cases, motive was made very clear by a note that was left by a social media post, by a telephone call that was made.
“Today, in our investigation, we don’t have any of that uncovered. I wish we did.”

Las Vegas police Undersheriff Kevin McMahill has appealed to the public for clues. Picture: AP

Las Vegas police Undersheriff Kevin McMahill has appealed to the public for clues. Picture: APSource:AP

He issued an appeal for anyone with any clues to come forward.
“We do not clearly have a motive or a reason why,” he said.
“I can assure we are aware of all aspects of this case to include the rumour, innuendo and suppositions by many in the public.
“And I get it. We all want answers.”

Read the whole story
· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

Paddock note – Google Search

1 Share
Story image for Paddock note from CBS News

Note in Las Vegas gunman’s hotel room included details of bullet …

CBS News4 hours ago
Members of the law enforcement team who were the first to enter Stephen Paddock’s hotel room after he opened fire on a crowd in Las Vegas.
Las Vegas police confident Paddock was only shooter, but still no …
Local SourceLas Vegas Review-Journal11 hours ago
Police ‘Confident’ No One Else in Shooter’s Room Before Las Vegas …
Featured<a href=”http://NBCNews.com” rel=”nofollow”>NBCNews.com</a>Oct 6, 2017

Paddock note – Google Search

1 Share
Image result for Paddock note

Las Vegas shooter left behind calculations for targeting crowd, source says

1 Share
CNN has previously reported that a note containing only numbers was found in the room. Those numbers were characterized as being significant to the gunman.
CBS News’ “60 Minutes” first reported that Paddock’s note contained handwritten calculations.
The note was found in the hotel suite at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino among 23 firearms, ammunition and the gunman’s dead body. Paddock took his own life, authorities have said, after killing 58 people and wounding nearly 500.
Investigators have been combing through evidence left behind and Paddock’s background for any hint as to what led the retired accountant to amass an arsenal of high-powered assault rifles, meticulously map out an attack and open fire on the crowd at last weekend’s Route 91 Harvest Festival.

close dialog

No sign of motive in sea of tips

Authorities have no credible information about Paddock’s motive despite more than 1,000 leads and tips, Undersheriff Kevin C. McMahill said at a news conference Friday.
In the news briefing and an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, McMahill released more details about the shooting and investigation Friday, including:
• A Mandalay Bay security guard who authorities believe drew Paddock’s attention toward the hallway outside his hotel suite went to that floor to respond to an alarm due to an open door near Paddock’s room. The guard, Jesus Campos, was shot in the leg while checking on the alarm. According to a police-reported timeline, Paddock never fired on the crowd below again after that.

Vegas police investigating if gunman had help
las vegas shooting undersheriff update blitzer intv tsr _00023704

JUST WATCHED

Vegas police investigating if gunman had help

MUST WATCH

Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00
Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00

03:06

• The alarm from a room “a number of doors down” from Paddock’s likely was a coincidence. The door was not forced open, had been open for a while and Paddock didn’t have the keys to that room. McMahill said that door either had been left open or didn’t shut completely.
• Investigators looking into Sunday’s massacre have found no known nexus to terrorism or connections to ISIS.
• Authorities are confident there was not another shooter in Paddock’s room but are still trying to determine whether anyone else knew of his plans.

Las Vegas gunman's gambling under scrutiny
Las Vegas gunman's gambling under scrutiny

JUST WATCHED

Las Vegas gunman’s gambling under scrutiny

MUST WATCH

Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00
Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00

03:05

• Authorities do not believe another person used Paddock’s room key at the Mandalay Bay hotel.
• Investigators have reviewed “voluminous amounts of video” from different locations, including Mandalay Bay, and have not seen any other person they think at this point is another suspect.
• Asked about video on which Paddock might have discussed motive, McMahill said: “I am not aware that we have recovered any such video.”
• Police don’t know what the killer was going to do with 50 pounds of explosives found in his car.
• Paddock brought the 23 guns and ammunition he had in his hotel suite over the course of several days, the undersheriff told CNN.
• Paddock’s girlfriend, Marilou Danley, continues to cooperate with investigators, her lawyer and McMahill each said Friday. Attorney Matthew Lombard said Danley wouldn’t be making any more public statements in the near future.

Pence honors massacre victims

Vice President Mike Pence offered prayers and words of comfort for Las Vegas on Saturday, as he and his wife participated in a citywide “unity prayer walk” in honor of the shooting victims.
“We are with you today. Today we are all Vegas strong,” Pence told participants gathered at City Hall. “President Trump personally asked us to be here to stand with you, to pray with you, for strength, comfort and healing.”
The President visited Las Vegas on Wednesday. Like Trump, Pence praised first responders, saying, “Their actions undoubtedly saved lives that night.”
“We find hope in the heroic actions in the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, the fire department and all the first responders on that night who, without regard for their personal safety, rushed into harm’s way,” Pence said.
The vice president called the shooting “a tragedy of unimaginable proportions” and said, “Las Vegas came face to face with pure evil” that night.

Request to seize shooter’s assets

The family of one of the concertgoers killed last weekend is asking a Nevada court to appoint a special administrator to take control of the shooter’s assets.

John Phippen

, 56, of Santa Clarita, California, was at the festival with his son Travis when the shooting started. When the son, a medic, stopped to help someone, Phippen stayed with him and was shielding a woman when he was shot dead, said a neighbor, Leah Nagiyvanyi.

Las Vegas victims

Attorneys for Phippen’s family filed the petition Friday in District Court in Clark County. The petition asks a judge to appoint the county’s public administrator to account for and control Paddock’s estate — in part to make it available for any future lawsuits filed by the shooting victims.

Paddock, a gambler and retired accountant, owned a home in Mesquite, Nevada, and

his brother has said

 he was a successful real estate investor who owned apartments and houses. Sales agents told CNN that Paddock

paid $369,022 in cash

 for his Mesquite home in 2014.

The court “will notify (Paddock’s) family members, and we’ll see where this goes,” said Richard A. Patterson, a California attorney representing Phippen’s son Travis.
“We want (Paddock’s estate) administered by the court. I don’t think we’re at the bottom of (Paddock’s assets),” Patterson said.
“We want someone to oversee the assets so it stays the way it is,” said Nevada-based probate attorney Richard Chatwin, who is working with Patterson on the petition.

Source: Shooter tried to buy tracer rounds

Paddock tried to buy tracer ammunition at a gun show in the Phoenix area in recent weeks, a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation told CNN.

33 gun purchases, no red flags
33 gun purchases, no red flags

JUST WATCHED

33 gun purchases, no red flags

MUST WATCH

Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00
Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00

02:51

Paddock bought other ammunition at the show, but he couldn’t obtain the tracer ammunition — bullets with a pyrotechnic charge that, when the round is fired, leaves an illuminated trace of its path — because the vendor didn’t have any to sell, the official said.
Paddock did not use tracer bullets when he fired into the festival crowd hundreds of yards away.
The official explained that if Paddock had tracer ammunition, he could have had a more precise idea of where his shots were going in the darkness, and could have been more accurate.
Shooters wanting greater accuracy often mix tracer rounds with non-tracers — perhaps having one tracer every fifth round in a magazine, said Art Roderick, a CNN law enforcement analyst.
“It allows you to keep your weapon on not necessarily a specific target, but a specific area. … There would have been a lot higher casualty rate if he had tracer rounds,” said Roderick, a former assistant director of the US Marshals Service.

New video shows concertgoers fleeing scene
New video shows concertgoers fleeing scene

JUST WATCHED

New video shows concertgoers fleeing scene

MUST WATCH

Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00
Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00

02:57

But tracer rounds also could have allowed police to see Paddock’s location more quickly, CNN law enforcement analyst James Gagliano said.
Without the tracer ammunition, Paddock’s location was difficult to determine from the outside, said Gagliano, a retired FBI supervisory special agent.
“The barrel of the rifle — we could not see muzzle flashes, from the angles I’ve seen on videos, which meant that he was … pulled back inside,” Gagliano said.
A source close to the investigation told CNN on Friday that authorities think Paddock might have fired at massive jet fuel tanks at McCarran International Airport near his hotel before shooting at the concert crowd.

Did Paddock want to escape?

Six days after the mass shooting, authorities are trying to determine the motivation of the retired accountant, who had no criminal record and did not raise any flags while accumulating his arsenal of weapons.

What we know about the Las Vegas gunman
cnnee pkg ana maria luengo quién era stephen paddock el psicopata de las vegas_00002015

JUST WATCHED

What we know about the Las Vegas gunman

MUST WATCH

Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00
Loaded: 0%
Progress: 0%
0:00

01:41

In addition to the weapons in his hotel suite, Paddock had more than 50 pounds of exploding targets and 1,600 rounds of ammunition in his car in the hotel parking lot, police said, fueling suspicion he intended to survive the massacre.
McMahill said Friday there was no evidence that Paddock intended to use the target material for a homemade bomb.
Escape, in this case, might have meant using the equipment in the car for further assaults until he got caught, said John Sheahan, a former Las Vegas SWAT team member.
“There’s one of three ways it’s going to end for an active shooter, and they pretty much all know this. You’re either going to commit suicide; you’re going to … shoot it out with (police) and you’re going to be killed, or you’re going to continue on a preplanned rampage at locations B, C, D and E until the police finally stop you,” Sheahan said.

Jiverly Wong shot and killed 13 people at the American Civic Association in Binghamton, New York, before turning the gun on himself in April 2009, police said. Four other people were injured at the <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/04/08/ny.shooting/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">immigration center shooting.</a> Wong had been taking English classes at the center.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Jiverly Wong shot and killed 13 people at the American Civic Association in Binghamton, New York, before turning the gun on himself in April 2009, police said. Four other people were injured at the immigration center shooting. Wong had been taking English classes at the center.
Pallbearers carry a casket of one of <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/03/11/alabama.shooting.timeline/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">Michael McLendon's</a> 10 victims. McLendon shot and killed his mother in her Kingston, Alabama, home, before shooting his aunt, uncle, grandparents and five more people. He shot and killed himself in Samson, Alabama, in March 2009.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Pallbearers carry a casket of one of Michael McLendon’s 10 victims. McLendon shot and killed his mother in her Kingston, Alabama, home, before shooting his aunt, uncle, grandparents and five more people. He shot and killed himself in Samson, Alabama, in March 2009.
<a href="http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2007/virginiatech.shootings/" target="_blank">Virginia Tech</a> student Seung-Hui Cho went on a shooting spree on the school's campus in April 2007. Cho killed two people at the West Ambler Johnston dormitory and, after chaining the doors closed, killed another 30 at Norris Hall, home to the Engineering Science and Mechanics Department. He wounded an additional 17 people before killing himself.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Virginia Tech student Seung-Hui Cho went on a shooting spree on the school’s campus in April 2007. Cho killed two people at the West Ambler Johnston dormitory and, after chaining the doors closed, killed another 30 at Norris Hall, home to the Engineering Science and Mechanics Department. He wounded an additional 17 people before killing himself.
<a href="http://www.cnn.com/US/9907/29/atlanta.shooting.01/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">Mark Barton</a> walked into two Atlanta trading firms and fired shots in July 1999, leaving nine dead and 13 wounded, police said. Hours later, police found Barton at a gas station in Acworth, Georgia, where he pulled a gun and killed himself. The day before, Barton had bludgeoned his wife and his two children in their Stockbridge, Georgia, apartment, police said.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Mark Barton walked into two Atlanta trading firms and fired shots in July 1999, leaving nine dead and 13 wounded, police said. Hours later, police found Barton at a gas station in Acworth, Georgia, where he pulled a gun and killed himself. The day before, Barton had bludgeoned his wife and his two children in their Stockbridge, Georgia, apartment, police said.
Eric Harris, left, and Dylan Klebold brought guns and bombs to <a href="http://www.cnn.com/US/9904/20/school.shooting.03/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">Columbine High School</a> in Littleton, Colorado, in April 1999. The students gunned down 13 and wounded 23 before killing themselves.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Eric Harris, left, and Dylan Klebold brought guns and bombs to Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado, in April 1999. The students gunned down 13 and wounded 23 before killing themselves.
In October 1991, <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/03/11/killeen.mass.shooting/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">George Hennard</a> crashed his pickup through the plate-glass window of Luby's Cafeteria in Killeen, Texas, before shooting 23 people and committing suicide.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
In October 1991, George Hennard crashed his pickup through the plate-glass window of Luby’s Cafeteria in Killeen, Texas, before shooting 23 people and committing suicide.
<a href="http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/07/23/california.mcdonalds.massacre/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">James Huberty</a> shot and killed 21 people, including children, at a McDonald's in San Ysidro, California, in July 1984. A police sharpshooter killed Huberty an hour after the rampage began.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
James Huberty shot and killed 21 people, including children, at a McDonald’s in San Ysidro, California, in July 1984. A police sharpshooter killed Huberty an hour after the rampage began.
Prison guard George Banks is led through the Luzerne County courthouse in 1985. Banks killed 13 people, including five of his children, in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, in September 1982. He was sentenced to death in 1993 and received a stay of execution in 2004. His death sentence was overturned in 2010.
Worst mass shootings in the United States

Prison guard George Banks is led through the Luzerne County courthouse in 1985. Banks killed 13 people, including five of his children, in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, in September 1982. He was sentenced to death in 1993 and received a stay of execution in 2004. His death sentence was overturned in 2010.

Officers in Austin, Texas, carry victims across the University of Texas campus after Charles Joseph Whitman opened fire from the school's tower, killing 16 people and wounding 30 in 1966. Police officers shot and killed Whitman, who had killed his mother and wife earlier in the day.
Worst mass shootings in the United States

Officers in Austin, Texas, carry victims across the University of Texas campus after Charles Joseph Whitman opened fire from the school’s tower, killing 16 people and wounding 30 in 1966. Police officers shot and killed Whitman, who had killed his mother and wife earlier in the day.

Howard Unruh, a World War II veteran, shot and killed 13 of his neighbors in Camden, New Jersey, in 1949. Unruh barricaded himself in his house after the shooting. Police overpowered him the next day. He was ruled criminally insane and committed to a state mental institution.
Worst mass shootings in the United States

Howard Unruh, a World War II veteran, shot and killed 13 of his neighbors in Camden, New Jersey, in 1949. Unruh barricaded himself in his house after the shooting. Police overpowered him the next day. He was ruled criminally insane and committed to a state mental institution.

A couple huddles after shots rang out at a country music festival on the Las Vegas Strip on Sunday, October 1. At least 58 people were killed and almost 500 were injured when <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2017/10/02/us/las-vegas-shooter/index.html" target="_blank">a gunman opened fire</a> on the crowd. Police said the gunman, 64-year-old Stephen Paddock, fired from the Mandalay Bay hotel, several hundred feet southwest of the concert grounds. He was found dead in his hotel room, and authorities believe he killed himself and that he acted alone. It is the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
A couple huddles after shots rang out at a country music festival on the Las Vegas Strip on Sunday, October 1. At least 58 people were killed and almost 500 were injured when a gunman opened fire on the crowd. Police said the gunman, 64-year-old Stephen Paddock, fired from the Mandalay Bay hotel, several hundred feet southwest of the concert grounds. He was found dead in his hotel room, and authorities believe he killed himself and that he acted alone. It is the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history.
Police direct family members away from the scene of a shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando in June 2016. Omar Mateen, 29, <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2016/06/12/us/orlando-nightclub-shooting/index.html" target="_blank">opened fire inside the club,</a> killing at least 49 people and injuring more than 50. Police fatally shot Mateen during an operation to free hostages that officials say he was holding at the club.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Police direct family members away from the scene of a shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando in June 2016. Omar Mateen, 29, opened fire inside the club, killing at least 49 people and injuring more than 50. Police fatally shot Mateen during an operation to free hostages that officials say he was holding at the club.
In December 2015, <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/12/06/us/san-bernardino-shooting-what-we-know/">two shooters killed 14 people and injured 21</a> at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino, California, where employees with the county health department were attending a holiday event. The shooters, Syed Rizwan Farook and his wife Tashfeen Malik, were later killed in a shootout with authorities. The pair were found to be radicalized extremists who planned the shootings as a terror attack, investigators said.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
In December 2015, two shooters killed 14 people and injured 21 at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino, California, where employees with the county health department were attending a holiday event. The shooters, Syed Rizwan Farook and his wife Tashfeen Malik, were later killed in a shootout with authorities. The pair were found to be radicalized extremists who planned the shootings as a terror attack, investigators said.
Police search students outside Umpqua Community College after <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/10/01/us/gallery/oregon-shooting-umpqua-community-college/index.html" target="_blank">a deadly shooting</a> at the school in Roseburg, Oregon, in October 2015. Nine people were killed and at least nine were injured, police said. The gunman, Chris Harper-Mercer, committed suicide after exchanging gunfire with officers, a sheriff said.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Police search students outside Umpqua Community College after a deadly shooting at the school in Roseburg, Oregon, in October 2015. Nine people were killed and at least nine were injured, police said. The gunman, Chris Harper-Mercer, committed suicide after exchanging gunfire with officers, a sheriff said.
A man kneels across the street from the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/us/gallery/charleston-south-carolina-church-shooting/index.html" target="_blank">following a shooting</a> in June 2015. Police say the suspect, Dylann Roof, opened fire inside the church, killing nine people. According to police, Roof confessed and told investigators he wanted to start a race war. <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2017/01/10/us/dylann-roof-trial/index.html" target="_blank">He was eventually convicted</a> of murder and hate crimes, and a jury recommended the death penalty.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
A man kneels across the street from the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, following a shooting in June 2015. Police say the suspect, Dylann Roof, opened fire inside the church, killing nine people. According to police, Roof confessed and told investigators he wanted to start a race war. He was eventually convicted of murder and hate crimes, and a jury recommended the death penalty.
Police officers walk on a rooftop at the Washington Navy Yard after a <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2013/09/16/us/dc-navy-yard-gunshots/index.html">shooting rampage</a> in the nation's capital in September 2013. At least 12 people and suspect Aaron Alexis were killed, according to authorities.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Police officers walk on a rooftop at the Washington Navy Yard after a shooting rampage in the nation’s capital in September 2013. At least 12 people and suspect Aaron Alexis were killed, according to authorities.
Connecticut State Police evacuate <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/14/us/connecticut-school-shooting/index.html" target="_blank">Sandy Hook Elementary School</a> in Newtown, Connecticut, in December 2012. Adam Lanza opened fire in the school, killing 20 children and six adults before killing himself. Police said he also shot and killed his mother in her Newtown home.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Connecticut State Police evacuate Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, in December 2012. Adam Lanza opened fire in the school, killing 20 children and six adults before killing himself. Police said he also shot and killed his mother in her Newtown home.
<a href="http://www.cnn.com/2012/07/20/us/colorado-theater-shooting/index.html" target="_blank">James Holmes</a> pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to a July 2012 shooting at a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado. Twelve people were killed and dozens were wounded when Holmes opened fire during the midnight premiere of "The Dark Knight Rises." He was sentenced to 12 life terms plus thousands of years in prison.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
James Holmes pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to a July 2012 shooting at a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado. Twelve people were killed and dozens were wounded when Holmes opened fire during the midnight premiere of “The Dark Knight Rises.” He was sentenced to 12 life terms plus thousands of years in prison.
A military jury convicted Army Maj. <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2013/08/28/us/nidal-hasan-sentencing/index.html" target="_blank">Nidal Hasan</a> of 13 counts of premeditated murder for a November 2009 shooting rampage at Fort Hood, Texas. Thirteen people died and 32 were injured.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
A military jury convicted Army Maj. Nidal Hasan of 13 counts of premeditated murder for a November 2009 shooting rampage at Fort Hood, Texas. Thirteen people died and 32 were injured.
Jiverly Wong shot and killed 13 people at the American Civic Association in Binghamton, New York, before turning the gun on himself in April 2009, police said. Four other people were injured at the <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/04/08/ny.shooting/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">immigration center shooting.</a> Wong had been taking English classes at the center.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Jiverly Wong shot and killed 13 people at the American Civic Association in Binghamton, New York, before turning the gun on himself in April 2009, police said. Four other people were injured at the immigration center shooting. Wong had been taking English classes at the center.
Pallbearers carry a casket of one of <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/03/11/alabama.shooting.timeline/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">Michael McLendon's</a> 10 victims. McLendon shot and killed his mother in her Kingston, Alabama, home, before shooting his aunt, uncle, grandparents and five more people. He shot and killed himself in Samson, Alabama, in March 2009.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Pallbearers carry a casket of one of Michael McLendon’s 10 victims. McLendon shot and killed his mother in her Kingston, Alabama, home, before shooting his aunt, uncle, grandparents and five more people. He shot and killed himself in Samson, Alabama, in March 2009.
<a href="http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2007/virginiatech.shootings/" target="_blank">Virginia Tech</a> student Seung-Hui Cho went on a shooting spree on the school's campus in April 2007. Cho killed two people at the West Ambler Johnston dormitory and, after chaining the doors closed, killed another 30 at Norris Hall, home to the Engineering Science and Mechanics Department. He wounded an additional 17 people before killing himself.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Virginia Tech student Seung-Hui Cho went on a shooting spree on the school’s campus in April 2007. Cho killed two people at the West Ambler Johnston dormitory and, after chaining the doors closed, killed another 30 at Norris Hall, home to the Engineering Science and Mechanics Department. He wounded an additional 17 people before killing himself.
<a href="http://www.cnn.com/US/9907/29/atlanta.shooting.01/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">Mark Barton</a> walked into two Atlanta trading firms and fired shots in July 1999, leaving nine dead and 13 wounded, police said. Hours later, police found Barton at a gas station in Acworth, Georgia, where he pulled a gun and killed himself. The day before, Barton had bludgeoned his wife and his two children in their Stockbridge, Georgia, apartment, police said.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Mark Barton walked into two Atlanta trading firms and fired shots in July 1999, leaving nine dead and 13 wounded, police said. Hours later, police found Barton at a gas station in Acworth, Georgia, where he pulled a gun and killed himself. The day before, Barton had bludgeoned his wife and his two children in their Stockbridge, Georgia, apartment, police said.
Eric Harris, left, and Dylan Klebold brought guns and bombs to <a href="http://www.cnn.com/US/9904/20/school.shooting.03/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">Columbine High School</a> in Littleton, Colorado, in April 1999. The students gunned down 13 and wounded 23 before killing themselves.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Eric Harris, left, and Dylan Klebold brought guns and bombs to Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado, in April 1999. The students gunned down 13 and wounded 23 before killing themselves.
In October 1991, <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/03/11/killeen.mass.shooting/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">George Hennard</a> crashed his pickup through the plate-glass window of Luby's Cafeteria in Killeen, Texas, before shooting 23 people and committing suicide.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
In October 1991, George Hennard crashed his pickup through the plate-glass window of Luby’s Cafeteria in Killeen, Texas, before shooting 23 people and committing suicide.
<a href="http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/07/23/california.mcdonalds.massacre/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">James Huberty</a> shot and killed 21 people, including children, at a McDonald's in San Ysidro, California, in July 1984. A police sharpshooter killed Huberty an hour after the rampage began.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
James Huberty shot and killed 21 people, including children, at a McDonald’s in San Ysidro, California, in July 1984. A police sharpshooter killed Huberty an hour after the rampage began.
Prison guard George Banks is led through the Luzerne County courthouse in 1985. Banks killed 13 people, including five of his children, in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, in September 1982. He was sentenced to death in 1993 and received a stay of execution in 2004. His death sentence was overturned in 2010.
Worst mass shootings in the United States

Prison guard George Banks is led through the Luzerne County courthouse in 1985. Banks killed 13 people, including five of his children, in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, in September 1982. He was sentenced to death in 1993 and received a stay of execution in 2004. His death sentence was overturned in 2010.

Officers in Austin, Texas, carry victims across the University of Texas campus after Charles Joseph Whitman opened fire from the school's tower, killing 16 people and wounding 30 in 1966. Police officers shot and killed Whitman, who had killed his mother and wife earlier in the day.
Worst mass shootings in the United States

Officers in Austin, Texas, carry victims across the University of Texas campus after Charles Joseph Whitman opened fire from the school’s tower, killing 16 people and wounding 30 in 1966. Police officers shot and killed Whitman, who had killed his mother and wife earlier in the day.

Howard Unruh, a World War II veteran, shot and killed 13 of his neighbors in Camden, New Jersey, in 1949. Unruh barricaded himself in his house after the shooting. Police overpowered him the next day. He was ruled criminally insane and committed to a state mental institution.
Worst mass shootings in the United States

Howard Unruh, a World War II veteran, shot and killed 13 of his neighbors in Camden, New Jersey, in 1949. Unruh barricaded himself in his house after the shooting. Police overpowered him the next day. He was ruled criminally insane and committed to a state mental institution.

A couple huddles after shots rang out at a country music festival on the Las Vegas Strip on Sunday, October 1. At least 58 people were killed and almost 500 were injured when <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2017/10/02/us/las-vegas-shooter/index.html" target="_blank">a gunman opened fire</a> on the crowd. Police said the gunman, 64-year-old Stephen Paddock, fired from the Mandalay Bay hotel, several hundred feet southwest of the concert grounds. He was found dead in his hotel room, and authorities believe he killed himself and that he acted alone. It is the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
A couple huddles after shots rang out at a country music festival on the Las Vegas Strip on Sunday, October 1. At least 58 people were killed and almost 500 were injured when a gunman opened fire on the crowd. Police said the gunman, 64-year-old Stephen Paddock, fired from the Mandalay Bay hotel, several hundred feet southwest of the concert grounds. He was found dead in his hotel room, and authorities believe he killed himself and that he acted alone. It is the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history.
Police direct family members away from the scene of a shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando in June 2016. Omar Mateen, 29, <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2016/06/12/us/orlando-nightclub-shooting/index.html" target="_blank">opened fire inside the club,</a> killing at least 49 people and injuring more than 50. Police fatally shot Mateen during an operation to free hostages that officials say he was holding at the club.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Police direct family members away from the scene of a shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando in June 2016. Omar Mateen, 29, opened fire inside the club, killing at least 49 people and injuring more than 50. Police fatally shot Mateen during an operation to free hostages that officials say he was holding at the club.
In December 2015, <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/12/06/us/san-bernardino-shooting-what-we-know/">two shooters killed 14 people and injured 21</a> at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino, California, where employees with the county health department were attending a holiday event. The shooters, Syed Rizwan Farook and his wife Tashfeen Malik, were later killed in a shootout with authorities. The pair were found to be radicalized extremists who planned the shootings as a terror attack, investigators said.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
In December 2015, two shooters killed 14 people and injured 21 at the Inland Regional Center in San Bernardino, California, where employees with the county health department were attending a holiday event. The shooters, Syed Rizwan Farook and his wife Tashfeen Malik, were later killed in a shootout with authorities. The pair were found to be radicalized extremists who planned the shootings as a terror attack, investigators said.
Police search students outside Umpqua Community College after <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/10/01/us/gallery/oregon-shooting-umpqua-community-college/index.html" target="_blank">a deadly shooting</a> at the school in Roseburg, Oregon, in October 2015. Nine people were killed and at least nine were injured, police said. The gunman, Chris Harper-Mercer, committed suicide after exchanging gunfire with officers, a sheriff said.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Police search students outside Umpqua Community College after a deadly shooting at the school in Roseburg, Oregon, in October 2015. Nine people were killed and at least nine were injured, police said. The gunman, Chris Harper-Mercer, committed suicide after exchanging gunfire with officers, a sheriff said.
A man kneels across the street from the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/18/us/gallery/charleston-south-carolina-church-shooting/index.html" target="_blank">following a shooting</a> in June 2015. Police say the suspect, Dylann Roof, opened fire inside the church, killing nine people. According to police, Roof confessed and told investigators he wanted to start a race war. <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2017/01/10/us/dylann-roof-trial/index.html" target="_blank">He was eventually convicted</a> of murder and hate crimes, and a jury recommended the death penalty.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
A man kneels across the street from the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, following a shooting in June 2015. Police say the suspect, Dylann Roof, opened fire inside the church, killing nine people. According to police, Roof confessed and told investigators he wanted to start a race war. He was eventually convicted of murder and hate crimes, and a jury recommended the death penalty.
Police officers walk on a rooftop at the Washington Navy Yard after a <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2013/09/16/us/dc-navy-yard-gunshots/index.html">shooting rampage</a> in the nation's capital in September 2013. At least 12 people and suspect Aaron Alexis were killed, according to authorities.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Police officers walk on a rooftop at the Washington Navy Yard after a shooting rampage in the nation’s capital in September 2013. At least 12 people and suspect Aaron Alexis were killed, according to authorities.
Connecticut State Police evacuate <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2012/12/14/us/connecticut-school-shooting/index.html" target="_blank">Sandy Hook Elementary School</a> in Newtown, Connecticut, in December 2012. Adam Lanza opened fire in the school, killing 20 children and six adults before killing himself. Police said he also shot and killed his mother in her Newtown home.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Connecticut State Police evacuate Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, in December 2012. Adam Lanza opened fire in the school, killing 20 children and six adults before killing himself. Police said he also shot and killed his mother in her Newtown home.
<a href="http://www.cnn.com/2012/07/20/us/colorado-theater-shooting/index.html" target="_blank">James Holmes</a> pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to a July 2012 shooting at a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado. Twelve people were killed and dozens were wounded when Holmes opened fire during the midnight premiere of "The Dark Knight Rises." He was sentenced to 12 life terms plus thousands of years in prison.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
James Holmes pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to a July 2012 shooting at a movie theater in Aurora, Colorado. Twelve people were killed and dozens were wounded when Holmes opened fire during the midnight premiere of “The Dark Knight Rises.” He was sentenced to 12 life terms plus thousands of years in prison.
A military jury convicted Army Maj. <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2013/08/28/us/nidal-hasan-sentencing/index.html" target="_blank">Nidal Hasan</a> of 13 counts of premeditated murder for a November 2009 shooting rampage at Fort Hood, Texas. Thirteen people died and 32 were injured.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
A military jury convicted Army Maj. Nidal Hasan of 13 counts of premeditated murder for a November 2009 shooting rampage at Fort Hood, Texas. Thirteen people died and 32 were injured.
Jiverly Wong shot and killed 13 people at the American Civic Association in Binghamton, New York, before turning the gun on himself in April 2009, police said. Four other people were injured at the <a href="http://www.cnn.com/2009/CRIME/04/08/ny.shooting/index.html?iref=allsearch" target="_blank">immigration center shooting.</a> Wong had been taking English classes at the center.
Worst mass shootings in the United States
Jiverly Wong shot and killed 13 people at the American Civic Association in Binghamton, New York, before turning the gun on himself in April 2009, police said. Four other people were injured at the immigration center shooting. Wong had been taking English classes at the center.

“He rented the room in his own name. He’s already on video coming in and out. We know who he is. He’s going to be the most wanted man in the world if he does try to leave here,” he added.

CNN’s Dave Alsup, Chris Boyette, Brian Todd, Kyung Lah, Evan Perez, Scott McLean, Sara Weisfeldt and Sheena Jones contributed to this report.

Read the whole story
· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

Cops reveal contents of Vegas madman’s cryptic note

1 Share
October 7, 2017 | 7:36pm | Updated October 7, 2017 | 7:54pm

Las Vegas mass murderer Stephen Paddock coldly calculated where he needed to aim to bolster his accuracy — and kill as many people as possible, according to a new report.
Officer Dave Newton of the Las Vegas Police Department’s K-9 unit said he noticed a pink slip of paper Paddock left on his nightstand in the 32nd floor Vista suite at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino.
“I could see on it he had written the distance, the elevation he was on, the drop of what his bullet was gonna be for the crowd,” Newton told “60 Minutes” in an interview that will air Sunday. “So he had that written down and figured out so he would know where to shoot to hit his targets from there.”
Paddock murdered 58 people and wounded hundreds more attending the Route 91 Harvest Music Festival, across Las Vegas Boulevard from his suite at the hotel .
Sometime after his 10-minute shooting spree, Paddock killed himself.

Trending Now

on <a href=”http://NYPost.com” rel=”nofollow”>NYPost.com</a>

Las Vegas shooter note in hotel room Stephen Paddock

1 Share

Get real time stock quotes, the latest commodities, currencies, funds, rates, ETFs data and more from over 100 global exchanges.

You have successfully emailed the post.
  • Oct. 5, 2017, 8:14 PM
  • 61,689
Vegas hotel annotationA leaked photo of Stephen Paddock’s hotel suite. Daily Mail/Business Insider
Investigators probing the deadly shooting rampage that unfolded on the Las Vegas Strip on Sunday night say that a piece of paper found in the gunman’s hotel suite is not a suicide note.
Still, there has been much speculation about what may have been on that paper. Police so far have not commented on that detail.
Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo said during a news conference on Wednesday night that there was evidence to suggest that the gunman, Stephen Paddock, had planned to get out of the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino alive, but Lombardo did not elaborate further.
Lombardo, however, did say that Paddock had planned extensively for the shooting — those plans included keeping a vehicle at the hotel filled with explosive material and 1,600 rounds of ammunition, Lombardo said. He also suggested the cameras Paddock set up inside and outside his hotel room were an indication that he wanted to keep eyes on the hallway, perhaps to fend off approaching officers.
Paddock fired multiple rounds through his room door and into the hallway as a security guard identified as Jesus Campos approached, wounding Campos in the leg. The gunman killed himself as more police descended on his room.
Investigators have not publicly said what motivated Paddock to carry out the rampage, which is the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history. Fifty-eight people were killed, and hundreds more were injured.

Recommended For You Powered by Sailthru

Military & Defense Emails & Alerts

Get the best of Business Insider delivered to your inbox every day.
Sign-Up

Get the Slide Deck from Henry Blodget’s IGNITION Presentation on the Future of Digital

EXCLUSIVE FREE REPORT: 30 Big Tech Predictions for 2017

Read Business Insider On The Go

Available on iOS or Android

Career Builder

Find A Job

Signed in as mikenova
Share this story on NewsBlur

Shared stories are on their way…
Read the whole story
· · · · · ·
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 8

Las Vegas victim’s family wants shooter’s assets seized – CNN

1 Share

CNN
Las Vegas victim’s family wants shooter’s assets seized
CNN
John Phippen of Santa Clarita, California, was at the festival with his son Travis when theshooting started. When the son, a medic, stopped to help someone, Phippen stayed with him and was shielding a woman when he was shot dead, said a neighbor, Leah …
and more »

Who Was Stephen Paddock? The Mystery of a Nondescript ‘Numbers Guy’ – New York Times

1 Share

New York Times
Who Was Stephen Paddock? The Mystery of a Nondescript ‘Numbers Guy’
New York Times
Stephen Paddock began buying and refurbishing properties in economically depressed areas around Los Angeles, teaching himself how to put in plumbing and install air-conditioning. By the late 1980s, “we had cash flow,” said Eric Paddock, who added that …
The unknowable Stephen Paddock and the ultimate mystery: Why?CNN
Las Vegas gunman Stephen Paddock calculated where to shoot to kill maximum number of peopleWashington Examiner
Stephen Paddock: Las Vegas shooter was ‘the king of microaggression’, brother saysThe Independent
CBS News –The Sun
all 4,453 news articles »

The FBI Wants the Public’s Help in Figuring Out Las Vegas Shooter’s Motive – TIME

1 Share

TIME
The FBI Wants the Public’s Help in Figuring Out Las Vegas Shooter’s Motive
TIME
In their effort to find any hint of his motive, investigators were looking into whether he was with a prostitute days before the shooting, were scrutinizing cruises he took and were trying to make sense of a cryptic note with numbers jotted on it found 
FBI begins removing belongings left after Las Vegas shootingCBS News
The Las Vegas shooting could completely change how hotels think about securityBusiness Insider
Las Vegas Shooting: At a Loss on Motive, FBI Turns to Billboards for LeadsNew York Times
NBCNews.com –NOLA.com –Reuters
all 6,800 news articles »

FBI Wants Public’s Help as Las Vegas Shooter Motive Unknown

1 Share
(LAS VEGAS) — Tourists coming to gamble and party on the Strip will soon find something other than bright lights welcoming them to “Fabulous Las Vegas.”
Billboards will serve as a stark reminder that investigators remain stumped about what drove a gunman to mow down concertgoers from a perch in a high-rise casino hotel last Sunday.
“We still do not have a clear motive or reason why,” a frustrated Clark County Undersheriff Kevin McMahill said Friday. “We have looked at literally everything.”
Investigators have chased 1,000 leads and examined Stephen Paddock’s politics, his finances, any possible radicalization and his social behavior — typical investigative avenues that have helped uncover the motive in past shootings.
“We have been down each and every one of these paths,” McMahill said. “We all want answers.”
The FBI announced that billboards would go up around the city asking anyone with information to dial 800-CALL-FBI.
“If you know something, say something,” said Aaron Rouse, agent in charge of the Las Vegas FBI office. “We will not stop until we have the truth.”
Paddock, a reclusive 64-year-old high-stakes gambler, rained bullets on the crowd at a country music festival from his 32nd-floor hotel suite, killing 58 and wounding hundreds before taking his own life.
McMahill said investigators had reviewed voluminous video from the casino and don’t think Paddock had an accomplice in the shooting, but they want to know if anyone knew about his plot beforehand.
In their effort to find any hint of his motive, investigators were looking into whether he was with a prostitute days before the shooting, were scrutinizing cruises he took and were trying to make sense of a cryptic note with numbers jotted on it found in his hotel room, a federal official said.
The U.S. official briefed by federal law enforcement officers wasn’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.
The official said investigators were interviewing other call girls for information and looking into at least a dozen cruises Paddock took in the last few years, including one to the Middle East.
It is unusual to have so few clues five days after a mass shooting. McMahill noted that in past mass killings or terrorist attacks, killers left notes, social media postings and information on a computer, or even phoned police.
“The lack of a social media footprint is likely intentional,” said Erroll Southers, director of homegrown violent extremism studies at the University of Southern California. “We’re so used to, in the first 24 to 48 hours, being able to review social media posts. If they don’t leave us a note behind or a manifesto behind, and we’re not seeing that, that’s what’s making this longer.”
What officers have found is that Paddock planned his attack meticulously.
He requested an upper-floor room overlooking the festival, stockpiled 23 guns, a dozen of them modified to fire continuously like an automatic weapon, and set up cameras inside and outside his room to watch for approaching officers.
In a possible sign he was contemplating massacres at other sites, he also booked rooms overlooking the Lollapalooza festival in Chicago in August and the Life Is Beautiful show near the Vegas Strip in late September, according to authorities reconstructing his movements leading up to the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history.
His arsenal also included tracer rounds that can improve a shooter’s firing accuracy in the dark, a law enforcement official told the AP. It wasn’t clear whether Paddock fired any of the illuminated bullets during the massacre.
Paddock bought 1,000 rounds of the .308-caliber and .223-caliber tracer ammunition from a private buyer he met at a Phoenix gun show, a law enforcement official not authorized to comment on the investigation said on condition of anonymity.
Tracer rounds illuminate their path so a gunman can home in on targets at night. But they can also give away the shooter’s position.
Video shot of the pandemonium that erupted when Paddock started strafing the festival showed a muzzle flash from his room at the Mandalay Bay resort, but bullets weren’t visible in the night sky.
McMahill said investigators are looking into Paddock’s mental health and any medications he was on.
His girlfriend, Marilou Danley, told FBI agents Wednesday that she had not noticed any changes in his mental state or seen indications he could become violent, according to a federal official who wasn’t authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity.
Danley said she was unaware of any plans Paddock had when he sent her overseas to see family in her native Philippines. She was out of the country at the time of the attacks and has been labeled a “person of interest,” though she’s not in custody and is cooperating with authorities.
Because so few people knew Paddock well, investigators will have a harder time probing his background for clues or hints he may have dropped about his plans, Southers said.
There’s “no one to say who’s he mad at, what his motive is,” Southers said. “The key to this case right now is the girlfriend.”
Read the whole story
· · · ·

Who Was Stephen Paddock? The Mystery of a Nondescript ‘Numbers Guy’

1 Share
When it came to guns, Mr. Michel said, “he was not a novice.”
The son of a bank robber and a secretary, Mr. Paddock grew up lower middle class in Southern California in the 1960s. From an early age, he focused on gaining complete control over his life and not having to rely on anyone. He cycled through a series of jobs he thought would make him rich, Eric Paddock said.
“He went to work for the I.R.S. because he thought that’s where the money was, but it turned out the money wasn’t there,” the younger Mr. Paddock said. “He went to the aerospace industry but the money wasn’t there either. He went to real estate and that’s where the money was.”
Stephen Paddock began buying and refurbishing properties in economically depressed areas around Los Angeles, teaching himself how to put in plumbing and install air-conditioning. By the late 1980s, “we had cash flow,” said Eric Paddock, who added that he had given his life savings to his older brother to invest and eventually became a partner in his company, because “that’s the kind of guy he was. I knew he would succeed.”
“He helped make my mother and I affluent enough to be retired in comfort,” he said.
With success came a rigidity and uncompromising attitude, along with two failed marriages, both short and childless. Stephen Paddock started gambling. Some who met him described him as arrogant, with a strong sense of superiority. People in his life bent to his will, even his mother and brother. He went out of his way for no one.
“He acted like everybody worked for him and that he was above others,” said John Weinreich, 48, a former executive casino host at the Atlantis Casino Resort Spa in Reno, where he saw Mr. Paddock frequently from 2012 to 2014. When Mr. Paddock wanted food while he was gambling, he wanted it immediately and would order with more than one server if the meal did not arrive quickly enough.
Mr. Weinreich said he would get irritated and “uppity about it.”
Mr. Paddock was uncompromising but he was also smart.
“I would liken him to a chess player: very analytical and a numbers guy,” Mr. Weinreich said. “He seemed to be working at a higher level mentally than most people I run into in gambling.”
Mr. Paddock cherished his solitude, his brother said. In 2003, he got his pilot’s license after training in the Los Angeles area, eventually taking the extra step to get an instrument rating so that he could legally fly in cloudy conditions with limited visibility. He bought cookie-cutter houses in Texas and Nevada towns with small airports so that he could park his planes. He was utterly unremarkable.
“This guy paid on time every time and did not cause any problems at any time,” said Lt. Brian Parrish, the spokesman for the Police Department in Mesquite, Tex., where he rented a hangar for $285 a month from 2007 through 2009. He also stored planes at the small airport in Henderson, Nev., from 2002 to 2010, an airport spokesman said, though it is not clear he ever lived at the local addresses to which they had been registered.
Even in death, Mr. Paddock seemed to stay true to his ways. He remained in control, answerable to no one but himself. He was ensconced in a carpeted hotel suite. He was wearing gloves, as he often did to protect his sensitive skin. He shot himself before the police broke into his room. A piece of paper with numbers written on it lay on a table near his body.
“If Steve decided it was time for Steve to go, Steve got up and left,” Eric Paddock said. “He did what he wanted to do when he wanted to do it.”

The ‘Most Boring’ Son

Mr. Paddock was the oldest, and least angry, of four boys growing up in the 1950s, said another brother, Patrick Benjamin Paddock II, 60, an engineer in Tucson. Stephen Paddock was born in Iowa, the home state of their mother, Irene Hudson.
“My brother was the most boring one in the family,” Patrick Paddock said. “He was the least violent one in the family, over a 30-year history, so it’s like, who?”
Their father, Patrick Benjamin Paddock, also known as Benjamin Hoskins Paddock, was mostly absent, living a life of crime even before the boys were born. A 1969 newspaper story described him as a “glib, smooth talking ‘confidence man,’ who is egotistic and arrogant.”
His rap sheet was long and included writing bad checks, stealing cars and robbing banks. He was on the F.B.I.’s most wanted list. The agency described him as an avid bridge player, standing 6-foot-4 and weighing 245 pounds, who “has been diagnosed as being psychopathic, with possible suicidal tendencies.”
Stephen Paddock learned resourcefulness and self-reliance from an early age. In 1960, when he was 7, his father went to prison for a series of bank robberies and the family moved to Southern California.
The boys’ mother raised them alone on a secretary’s salary, the younger Patrick Paddock said. The brothers would fight over who would get the whole milk. Powdered milk, less tasty but cheaper, was the norm. Their mother never explained where their father was.
“She kept that secret from the family,” Patrick Paddock said.
Stephen Paddock graduated from John H. Francis Polytechnic Senior High School in the Sun Valley neighborhood of Los Angeles in 1971, according to a Los Angeles Unified School District official. Richard Alarcon, a former Los Angeles city councilman, who lived near the Paddocks, said their neighborhood was working class, with a Japanese community center and tidy ranch houses bought with money from the G.I. Bill.
Mr. Alarcon took a science class with Mr. Paddock and remembered him as smart but with “a kind of irreverence. He didn’t always stay between the lines.”
He recalled a competition to build a bridge of balsa wood, without staples or glue. Mr. Paddock cheated, he said, using glue and extra wood.
“Everybody could see that he had cheated, but he just sort of laughed it off,” Mr. Alarcon said. “He had that funny quirky smile on his face like he didn’t care. He wanted to have the strongest bridge and he didn’t care what it took.”

A Knack for Making Money

Mr. Paddock spent his 20s and 30s trying to escape the unpredictability of poverty. He worked nights at an airport while going to the California State University, Northridge, his brother Eric said, and then at jobs with the Internal Revenue Service and as an auditor of defense contracts. But it was real estate that ultimately lifted Mr. Paddock to financial freedom.
In 1987, he bought a 30-unit building at 1256 W. 29th Street in Los Angeles, near the University of Southern California, according to property records. His brother Eric Paddock said the buildings they bought were not “Taj Mahals, but they were nice safe places.”
Crucially, they were excellent investments: Stephen Paddock more than doubled his money on his California holdings, which included at least six multifamily residences, according to property records. He made money in Texas, too. In 2012, he sold a 110-unit building in Mesquite, outside Dallas, for $8.3 million.
He was a good landlord. He kept the rents low, responded promptly to his tenants’ complaints, learned all their names and made sure they were happy. When one reliable tenant complained about a rent increase, he took half off the difference. He designed the ownership structure so his family would profit and installed his mother in a tidy house just behind the apartment complex in Mesquite, Tex.
Mr. Paddock had an apartment in the complex, but he mostly lived elsewhere. He had been married twice, but the apartment looked like a bachelor pad, said Todd Franks, a real estate broker with SVN Investment Sales Group in Dallas. “What you would expect from a 25-year-old single guy.”
To Mr. Franks, Mr. Paddock stood out because it was unusual for the landlord of a property that size to pay such close attention to the day-to-day running of his complex.
“He was frustrated by people who did stupid things,” Mr. Franks said.
He was also willing to fight to defend what was his. During the riots in Los Angeles in the 1990s, he went to the roof of an apartment complex he owned in a flak jacket and armed with a gun, waiting for the rioters, Mr. Franks said.
Though Mr. Paddock might have adopted an accommodating attitude toward his tenants and dressed casually — Mr. Franks remembered him regularly wearing sandals and a sweatsuit — Mr. Paddock was focused and astute when he made deals.
“He was a tough negotiator,” Mr. Franks said. “He wanted his price. His terms. He was a very savvy businessman.”

The House Advantage

By the 2000s, with both of his marriages long over, casinos became Mr. Paddock’s habitat. He liked being waited on, seeing shows and eating good food.
“He likes it when people go, ‘Oh, Mr. Paddock, can I get you a big bowl of the best shrimp anybody had ever eaten on the planet and a big glass of our best port?” Eric Paddock said.
Gambling made him feel important, if not social.
“You could tell that being in that high-limit gambling environment would lift him up,’’ said Mr. Weinreich, the Atlantis casino host in Reno. “He liked everyone doting on him.”
He sometimes called for company, inviting his brother Eric and his children for a free weekend in a luxury suite. But mostly he stayed alone.
A couple of years ago, Mr. Paddock stayed in one Las Vegas hotel gambling for four months straight, said a gaming industry analyst here who was briefed on Mr. Paddock’s gambling history.
The analyst described him as a midlevel high roller, capable of losing $100,000 in one session, which could extend over several days. He said Mr. Paddock may have lost that amount at the Red Rock Casino in Las Vegas within the last few months.
Playing a slot machine can be mindless and is usually a guaranteed win for the casino. That is not what Mr. Paddock played. His game, video poker, requires some skill. Players have to know the history of a particular machine. They can do that by reading a pay table, which tells them what each possible winning hand pays out.
One of the ways that video poker players get an advantage is to play casino promotions, which essentially pay out bonuses to winners, said Richard Munchkin, author of “Gambling Wizards: Conversations With the World’s Greatest Gamblers.” A gambler like Mr. Paddock will often “lock” a machine, meaning he or she monopolizes it and makes sure no one else uses it during a gambling session.
For one casino promotion, Mr. Paddock showed up two hours early, locked two machines and played them for 14 hours straight, Mr. Munchkin said, based on information he had compiled from other gamblers who were there at the time. The promotion lasted 12 hours, he said, “but he wanted to play for two hours before anybody got those machines. He knew they were the best machines based on pay tables.”
Mr. Paddock “knew the house advantage down to a tenth of a percent,” he said.
As for the mystery of why Mr. Paddock would go on a shooting rampage at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino and then kill himself, most in the gambling industry do not believe it had anything to do with money.
He was in good standing with MGM Properties, the owner of the Mandalay and the Bellagio, according to a person familiar with his gambling history. He had a $100,000 credit limit, the person said, but never used the full amount.

The Absent Neighbor

Mr. Paddock spent so much time in casinos that he was mostly a ghost in the neighborhoods where he had homes.
Colleen Maas, a neighbor of Mr. Paddock’s in Reno, said she had not seen him once in a year and a half, despite walking her dog three times a day and going to line dancing events with his girlfriend, Ms. Danley, at the community center.
He did travel. On his 60th birthday, April 9, 2013, he flew to the Philippines on Japan Airlines and stayed for five days, according to a spokeswoman for the Philippine Bureau of Immigration. The family of Ms. Danley, his girlfriend, lived there and she was visiting the country at the time. The couple went again for his birthday the following year.
When he did appear at his Reno home, he could be curt. Another neighbor, John McKay, recalled a day when he was hanging Christmas lights on a railing in his front yard when Mr. Paddock walked by. Mr. McKay said hello and yelled out, “Merry Christmas!” Mr. Paddock kept walking. “He said nothing,” Mr. McKay said. “Not a word. No eye contact.”
Even more baffling, when Mr. McKay tried to strike up a conversation with Mr. Paddock about Donald Trump during the election campaign, he got no response.
“Almost everyone has a reaction to Trump,” said Mr. McKay’s wife, Darlene.
Ms. McKay said that she would usually get up early each morning to watch the sunrise and, when Mr. Paddock was at his home, she would see him dressed in his gym clothes walking to the community center for a workout. Ms. McKay recalled something peculiar: “He always walked across the street and would never pass in front of our house.”
Mr. McKay said that he rarely saw a window or a door open at the house. One day he saw Mr. Paddock’s garage door open, and noticed a large safe inside.
It is not clear what set Mr. Paddock on his path to destruction. As early as 2010, he could no longer fly his planes. His medical certificate expired, according to Federal Aviation Administration records, and there are no indications that he renewed it.
Mr. Paddock bought his last house in Mesquite, Nev., a retirement community of 18,000 people about 90 minutes from Las Vegas that attracts golfers and gamblers from around the country. He seems to have paid in cash, according to property records, and, as he did with other houses, spent very little time there.
His neighbors added personal touches to their yards — decorative pots, plants of all colors and sizes. Mr. Paddock’s house was unadorned. One of the few things neighbors remembered about him was the solid-panel fence he erected. The message was clear: Mr. Paddock was a man who did not want to be seen. On Thursday, investigators had left. A tiny paint-splattered easel, its brush drawer open and empty, stood in the back yard.
Ms. Danley worked in Mesquite. She took a job booking sports bets at a local casino called the Virgin River, where gamblers sat together in rows watching horse races and waitresses circled in tight black skirts.
Several days a week, she attended morning mass at a local Catholic church, said Leo McGinty, 80, a fellow parishioner who knew her from the casino.
Ms. Danley dressed smartly and modestly, he said. She usually sat alone.
Continue reading the main story

Read the whole story
· · · · · · · · · ·

Trump’s ‘Band of Brothers’ stirs interest

1 Share
By Ellen Mitchell – 10/07/17 05:45 PM EDT
TheHill.com

The Hill 1625 K Street, NW Suite 900 Washington DC 20006 | 202-628-8500 tel | 202-628-8503 fax
The contents of this site are ©2017 Capitol Hill Publishing Corp., a subsidiary of News Communications, Inc.

Signed in as mikenova
Share this story on NewsBlur

Shared stories are on their way…
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 9

Trump’s lawyers plan to ask Mueller to confirm publicly Trump is not under investigation

1 Share
Robert MuellerRobert Mueller. Alex Wong/Getty Images
President Donald Trump’s lawyers have adopted a new legal strategy of cooperating with special counsel Robert Mueller in the hopes that he will do the one thing former FBI director James Comey did not: confirm publicly that Trump is not being investigated as part of the FBI’s Russia probe, according to The New York Times.
Mueller was appointed special counsel after Trump fired Comey in May. Initially, the White House saidTrump’s dismissal of Comey was based entirely on Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s recommendation and because of his handling of the Hillary Clinton email investigation.
Shortly after, however, Trump told NBC’s Lester Holt that “this Russia thing” had been a factor in his decision, and that he was going to fire Comey regardless of Rosenstein’s recommendation.
Comey also told the Senate Intelligence Committee in June that before firing him, Trump had asked him to shut down the FBI’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election, which included examining whether the Trump campaign had colluded with Moscow to tilt the election in his favor.
Though Comey privately told Trump that he was not under investigation, he did not do so publicly in case he had to amend or retract his statement down the road, and it’s likely Mueller will make the same call because of that reason.
Mueller is reportedly investigating Trump for obstruction of justice based on his decision to fire Comey. The special counsel is also examining Trump’s role in crafting a misleading statement his son, Donald Trump Jr., issued in response to reports that he met with a Russian lawyer offering damaging information on Hillary Clinton last June.
Trump’s advisers reportedly urged more transparency in the initial statement, but he overruled them and the statement had to be amended several times as new details about the meeting emerged.
Trump’s legal team at first contemplated undertaking an aggressive strategy meant to discredit Mueller and the Russia investigation, but they reportedly switched gears after white-collar criminal defense attorney Ty Cobb took over the White House’s response to the probe.
Cobb has reportedly advocated being as cooperative and responsive as possible to the special counsel’s requests in an effort to speed up the investigation and prove Trump’s innocence.
White House counsel Don McGahn, on the other hand, has resisted being too forthcoming because he thinks Trump will be able to assert executive privilege over many of their interactions.
But it appears that the White House is leaning towards Cobb’s strategy — The Times reported that officials are “strongly considering” allowing McGahn to speak to Mueller’s team about his private conversations with Trump.
McGahn is one of several West Wing staffers the special counsel wants to interview, presumably because he was witness to certain critical events that are of importance in the investigation, including the circumstances surrounding Comey’s firing, as well as those surrounding the resignation of former national security adviser Michael Flynn, who is also a key subject in the investigation.

NOW WATCH: Why you won’t find a garbage can near the 9/11 memorial

Share Video

A neuroscientist explains the radical theory that our free will is just an illusion
Read the whole story
· · · ·

Palmer Report: Controversial Russian, a tenant in Donald Trump’s home of Trump Tower, mysteriously drops dead

1 Share
During the course of Donald Trump’s Russia scandal, several prominent Russians and Russia-connected individuals have died in mysterious fashion, most or all of whom had direct or indirect connections to the scandal and its attempted coverup. It’s believed, but not proven, that Russian President Vladimir Putin has been strategically taking them out to protect himself and/or Trump. Now another prominent Russian has dropped dead, and this time it’s hitting closer to home for Trump – literally.
Boris Kogan is best known for two reasons – well, three reasons as of today. He owned a condo in Trump Tower in New York, which he had in Julia Kogan’s name, until May of this year when he sold it. This means he was a tenant in the same building where Trump lived during the election. He’s also rather famously a Russian arms dealer, having exported Russian weaponry around the world (link). And as of today, he’s mysteriously dropped dead.
The news publication ukr.media has posted a Ukrainian-language article announcing that Boris Kogan has died (link). The article was first brought to our attention by political researcher Olga Lautman on Twitter. When run through Google Translate, the article says “An unpopular, but influential Odessa businessman Boris Kogan, died of a heart attack in one of the clinics of the Black Sea city.” This is notable because nearly every time a prominent Russian has dropped dead during the Trump-Russia scandal, Russian officials have blamed it on a heart attack, no matter the physical injuries sustained by any of them. Two of them had severe head wounds, yet Russia still insisted they died of heart attacks.
It’s not immediately clear what specific motive Vladimir Putin would have for eliminating Boris Kogan, unless he played a role in the Trump-Russia scandal that hasn’t yet been exposed. While it’s entirely possible that Kogan did indeed die of a heart attack, when placed in the larger context of the trail of dead Russians, his death stands out as suspicious – particularly considering that he was tenant in the building where Trump was living during the election.
The post Controversial Russian, a tenant in Donald Trump’s home of Trump Tower, mysteriously drops dead appeared first on Palmer Report.
 Palmer Report

Борис Коган умер – все подробности трагедии

1 Share
В Одессе внезапно умер крупный бизнесмен Борис Коган. По данным источников в окружении предпринимателя, коммерсант умер у себя дома из-за проблем с серцем, пишет «Думская».
Коган начинал трудовую деятельность простым таксистом, а разбогател на международной торговле оружием. Он был миноритарным акционером и членом правления компании «РТ-Логистика», 51% акций которой принадлежит России. Компания входит в состав консорциума «Ростех», занимающегося разработкой, производством и экспортом промышленной продукции гражданского и военного назначения. Консорциум возглавляет друг Путина Сергей Чемезов. «РТ-Логистика» отвечает в группе за транспортное направление.
Кроме того, Когану принадлежали два «Морских бизнес-центра» на Польском спуске в Одессе и океанская яхта Lady K, которую он купил у наследников российского олигарха Бориса Березовского. Она часто появляется на Одесском морвокзале (последний раз ее видели там 3 октября).
При этом бизнесмен ранее владел апартаментами в нью-йоркском небоскребе Trump Tower, которые продал за $2 млн сразу после инаугурации Дональда Трампа.

Boris Kogan Trump – Google Search

1 Share
Story image for Boris Kogan Trump from New York Post

Trump Tower sells first condo since Trump’s inauguration

New York PostMar 9, 2017
Trump Tower sells first condo since Trump’s inauguration … full cost, not from a traditional bank, but directly from Boris Kogan, the co-founder of …
Story image for Boris Kogan Trump from InfoResist

В Одессе умер бизнесмен Борис Коган

InfoResistOct 6, 2017
При этом бизнесмен ранее владел апартаментами в нью-йоркском небоскребе Trump Tower, которые продал за $2 млн сразу после …

At Least 11 Injured After Driver Crashes Car Into Pedestrians Near London History Museum

1 Share
<a href=”http://NYTimes.com” rel=”nofollow”>NYTimes.com</a> no longer supports Internet Explorer 9 or earlier. Please upgrade your browser. LEARN MORE »

Signed in as mikenova
Share this story on NewsBlur

Shared stories are on their way…

At Least 11 Injured After Driver Crashes Car Into Pedestrians Near London History Museum – New York Times

1 Share

New York Times
At Least 11 Injured After Driver Crashes Car Into Pedestrians Near London History Museum
New York Times
The museum was sealed off with crime-scene tape and police cars as officers tried to clear hundreds of tourists and families from the scene. A woman with a blood-soaked bandage on one foot was pushed in a wheelchair to an intersection. Large crowds of …
Panic outside London’s Natural History Museum as car hits pedestrians leaving nine people in hospitalMirror.co.uk
all 333 news articles »
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 10

Путин принял поздравления от членов Совбеза и обсудил с ними Сирию – Россия 24

1 Share

Signed in as mikenova
Share this story on NewsBlur

Shared stories are on their way…

12:42 PM 10/7/2017 – Trump News Review: Donald Trump | The Guardian: Ivana Trump: I talk to Donald regularly despite ‘insane’ divorce – Trump Investigations Report

1 Share

Donald Trump is on track to win again in 2020 – Chicago Tribune

1 Share

Chicago Tribune
Donald Trump is on track to win again in 2020
Chicago Tribune
More than half of Americans don’t think Donald Trump is fit to serve as president, yet he has a clear path to winning re-election. If Trump isn’t removed from office and doesn’t lead the country into some form of global catastrophe, he could secure a 
and more »

Axios AM – Axios

1 Share

Axios
Axios AM
Axios
Good Saturday morning. One year ago today — Oct. 7, 2016 — brought one of the tectonic news collisions in the history of elections … 3 p.m.: White House releases intelligence community statement saying Russians are behind election hacking … 4:02 
and more »

Axios AM – Axios

1 Share
Good Saturday morning. One year ago today — Oct. 7, 2016 — brought one of the tectonic news collisions in the history of elections … 3 p.m.: White House releases intelligence community statementsaying Russians are behind election hacking … 4:02 p.m.: WashPost reveals “Access Hollywood” tape … 4:30 p.m.: John Podesta emails posted by Wikileaks. Relive it if you dare.

1 big thing: Being John Kelly

Kelly reacts as Trump calls North Korea a “band of criminals” during his address to the U.N. on Sept. 19. (AP’s Mary Altaffer)
You are White House Chief of Staff John Kelly:

  • You are a true America hero — enlisting in the Marines and rising to become a highly decorated four-star general who once ran the entire U.S. Southern Command.
  • You gave your life to service. Your son, Marine Lt. Robert Kelly, 29, gave his in service, killed after stepping on a landmine while leading a platoon in Afghanistan.
  • Now, you spend your days cleaning up messes all around your Commander, the actual Commander-in-Chief — a guy who dodged the draft, and taunts or tramples on many of things you feel and believe deep in your bones. Everyone knows you don’t share his views, values or politics.
  • Most of your days, like those of your friend Rex Tillerson, blow.
  • You spend most of your time killing bad things: bad ideas, bad information flow, bad habits. You inherited an Island of Misfit Toys, and tossed out the most obnoxious ones.
  • You run a tight ship during workdays — but lose total control of the wheel when your boss goes rogue, which is most nights, most mornings, most weekends.
  • Now scattered, Trump originals ask what exactly it means for you to do your duty as chief of staff. You feel your duty is to protect the nation from POTUS.
  • But some Trump loyalists won’t concede that you’re always right and DJT is always wrong. They think that sometimes it’s their duty to subordinate their opinions to his. They ask: What’s patriotic about thwarting the duly elected POTUS?
  • You cringe and sometime rage when you see the nasty tweets, the childish taunts, the wild improvisation.
  • You start watching Fox just to see what he sees, and read Breitbart for a glimpse of the world through the President’s eyes.
  • You plot with Tillerson and SecDef Mattis and National Security Adviser McMaster, and find comfort and camaraderie in your pact to save the world from an impulsive president.

It’s a worthy war — but often one you fear you are losing. No wonder you’ve been caught on camera with an exasperated face pressed firmly against your hand. It’s a civilian salute to your new reality. 

2. Being Rex Tillerson

Tillerson attends National Space Council in Chantilly, Va., Thursday. (AP’s Andrew Harnik)The New Yorker’s great Dexter Filkins files a well-timed (and relatively sympathetic) profile, “Rex Tillerson at the Breaking Point … Will Donald Trump let the Secretary of State do his job?”:

  • “When I met Tillerson recently, in his seventh-floor office at the State Department, he was wearing a dark-blue suit and a bright-red tie, but he carried himself like a hard-charging Texas oilman.”
  • “He was named for two Hollywood actors famous for playing cowboys: Rex Allen and John Wayne (his middle name is Wayne).'”
  • The 1 sentence to read: “Unlike his predecessors, he has not given a major foreign-policy address in which he has outlined a world view.”
  • Why it matters: “A senior European diplomat … told me that the overwhelming perception of American foreign policy among European governments was chaos.”
  • “The uncertainty was compounded by the fact that there were few people in the White House or the State Department whom they could talk to.”
  • What everyone’s saying: “Tillerson has centralized decision-making so aggressively that he is unable to keep up. A senior Trump Administration official told me, ‘Where things fall in the cracks is in the area of management and leadership of the organization, and in leveraging the immense amount of expertise in that building.'”
  • “Why isn’t Tillerson making better use of his people? ‘I can’t explain it,’ the official told me. ‘I cannot frickin’ explain it.'”
  • Better hurry.

3. Trump’s phone-a-friend

Trump and Schumer meet with other congressional leaders in the Oval Office on Sept. 6, when the original “Chuck and Nancy” deal was struck. (AP’s Evan Vucci)
A Trump tweet this morning confirms last night’s Axios scoop: “I called Chuck Schumer yesterday to see if the Dems want to do a great HealthCare Bill. ObamaCare is badly broken, big premiums. Who knows!”

The initial reaction among some Republicans was consternation, Jonathan Swan and I reported:

  • A well-wired Republican told us: “It codifies the Rs’ failure on repeal/replace and shows the President can move without hesitation or ideological impediment to make a deal with the Dems. It depresses R base turnout in the midterms, as Trump voters are further disconnected from the Congressional wing.”

Be smart: Trump wants to be the deal guy, and he’s going to keep playing the “Chuck and Nancy” card. To him, Republicans consternation is a feature, not a bug. 

Between the lines … Axios health care editor Sam Baker emails me:

  • “All of the things Trump and his administration have done on health care — not just pushing for repeal-replace, but independently cutting off enrollment outreach, keeping insurers in limbo about their payments, reportedly putting the kibosh even on Republican governors’ efforts to stabilize their markets, all of it — cuts in the exact opposite direction of anything Schumer would want or could abide.”
  • “If there’s any hope for something bipartisan, I would have thought the most likely vehicle for that would have been [Sens.] Lamar Alexander [R-Tenn.] and Patty Murray [D-Wash.], since they’re both already working and not nearly as far apart as Trump and Schumer would have to be. Yet that effort is far from a lock.”

Bonus 1: Pic du jour

AP’s Alex Brandon
Eight days after his triumphant return to the Capitol, House Majority Whip Steve Scalise (R-La.) threw out the ceremonial first pitch before Game 1 of the National League Division Series between the Washington Nationals and the Chicago Cubs, at Nats Park last night. Nats fell to Cubs, 3-0.
New tick-tock of the shooting from the Alexandria (Va.) prosecutor’s report, via CNN:

  • “James Hodgkinson, the 66-year-old shooter, had taken cellphone video of the field where the Republican team practiced as far back as April, and had been spotted by neighbors ‘casing’ the area in the months preceding the attack.”
  • Hodgkinson [fired] at least 70 rounds, most of them from an assault rifle.”
  • “Capitol Police officers on Scalise’s detail fired 25 rounds back at Hodgkinson.”

Bonus 2: Reader pic gets results

From an Axios AM reader
Yesterday we brought you a pic that a reader titled “Absence of Leadership,” showing the lobby of Building 32 on the Food and Drug Administration campus in Silver Spring, Md.: A portrait of FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb hung next to missing spots for the President, Vice President and HHS Secretary.
Within hours, mismatched photos of Trump and Pence had been tacked up.

4. Huge change for Facebook political advertisers

Facebook will require ads that are targeted to people based on “politics, religion, ethnicity or social issues” to be manually reviewed before they go live, according to an email sent to advertisers and obtained by Axios’ Sara Fischer and David McCabe.

  • Why it matters: The steps Facebook is taking to combat questions of Russian election interference strike at the core of the company’s business. The ad buyers who spent $450 million on Facebook ads love the platform’s speed and efficiency — something they fear will be diminished by inserting more human oversig

5. “My wonderful small donors”

He’s talking about the Post’s lead print story, “To drain ‘swamp,’ Trump’s base has filled GOP coffers: SMALL DOLLAR DONATIONS SOAR — Party opens wide cash advantage over Democrats,” by Matea Gold:

  • Why it matters: “The RNC’s success with small donors illustrates how the Republican Party, long a center of the political establishment, has managed to turn Trump’s anti-Washington message to its advantage.”
  • “And it shows how Trump’s base, angered by the sense that the president is being treated unfairly, is helping to redefine a party that has long cultivated rich contributors.”

6. “One Day”

Artist David Plunkert’s “October 1, 2017: One Day in a Nation of Guns,” memorializing the victims of the mass shooting in Las Vegas: “The names on the cover reflect the official list of victims released by the Clark County, Nevada, Office of the Coroner and Medical Examiner.”
P.S. Cover of tomorrow’s WashPost Outlook section, “How the erosion of trust leads to murders and mass shootings: Faith in government is closely linked to the homicide rate, says historian Randolph Roth”:

  • “The murder rate since World War II has tracked almost perfectly, as criminologist Gary LaFree has observed, with the proportion of Americans who say they ‘trust the government in Washington to do what is right’ most of the time and who believe that most public officials are honest.”

7. Wrong track

Just 24 percent of Americans believe the country is heading in the right direction after a tumultuous stretch for … Trump that included the threat of war with North Korea, stormy complaints about hurricane relief and Trump’s equivocating about white supremacists,” per AP’s Julie Pace and Emily Swanson:

  • “That’s a 10-point drop since June, according to a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.”
  • Why it matters: “The decline in optimism about the nation’s trajectory is particularly pronounced among Republicans. In June, 60 percent of Republicans said the country was headed in the right direction; now it’s just 44 percent.”

P.S. Banner of yesterday’s USA Today, “Poll portrays an unhappy America,” by Susan Page and Julia Fair: “Americans overwhelmingly disagree with President Trump … But a USA TODAY/Suffolk University poll also finds an unusual disconnect: Americans are increasingly optimistic about the nation’s economy.”

8. 2 plot twists

“Harvey Weinstein’s brother may have been mastermind behind sex allegation exposé,” by Ian Mohr of N.Y. Post “Page Six”:

  • “It’s Cain and Abel — Hollywood style.”
  • “Bob Weinstein, the disgruntled co-founder of The Weinstein Company, … ‘wanted Harvey out for years,” said a former staffer, who added that the two brothers are becoming increasingly suspicious of each other. … ‘Bob may have even fed this story’ to the Times.”
  • Bob Weinstein: “These assertions are untrue.”
  • “The duo founded Miramax — the entertainment company that revolutionizing the indie film business — in 1979 in Buffalo.They sold the company to Disney in 1993 and exited in 2005 to found The Weinstein Company.
  • “While Harvey got credit for Miramax’s string of high-end Oscar wins, Bob was behind the brand’s Dimension Films, which made hits like the ‘Scream,’ ‘Scary Movie’ and ‘Spy Kids’ ­series.”

N.Y. Times spokeswoman Danielle Rhoades Ha, via Variety: “Mr. Weinstein should publicly waive the NDAs in the women’s agreements so they can tell their stories. As a supporter of women, he must support their right to speak openly about these issues of gender and power.”
Go deeper … “The Democrats giving away donations from Harvey Weinstein,” by Axios’ Alayna Treene.

9. Collison of tech, business

Hollywood Glory Eludes Amazon,” the Wall Street Journal’s Ben Fritz and Joe Flint write on the front page:

  • What’s new: “Amazon Studios has been stumbling when it comes to producing content that attracts audiences and buzz. The Hollywood arm of the online giant is pivoting away from dramas for adults but is struggling to define a new strategy.”
  • What happened: “It has alienated high-profile content creators, who say executives have proven incapable—or unwilling—to smooth out conflicts that inevitably crop up during the shooting of a television show.”
  • What’s next: “Amazon Studios is taking steps to get back on track, such as developing shows intended to be more globally popular, cutting back children’s programming and considering new leadership in its film unit.”

P.S. “Wal-Mart Gets Back on the Growth Track: E-commerce is helping the retailing giant jump-start stalled revenue and profit growth,” by Barron’s Jack Hough:

  • “[T]here have been a string of … acquisitions, experiments, and musings that are out of character for Wal-Mart … Some seem out there, like having store employees deliver packages on their way home.”
  • “Groceries are more than half of U.S. revenue, making Wal-Mart the country’s largest grocer. … The company … has stores within 10 minutes of 90% of the U.S. population.”
  • Why it matters: “None of this would matter if business at Wal-Mart’s stores was deteriorating. But same-store sales have increased for 12 straight quarters.”
  • Free link for Axios readers. Thank you, Barron’s!

10. 1 fun thing

Office architecture … “First there were individual offices. Then cubicles and open floor plans. Now, there is a ‘palette of places,'” the N.Y. Times’ Steve Lohr writes on the cover of N.Y. Times Sunday Business:

  • “The new model is largely open, but not entirely. Under the revised thinking, breaking down walls to bring people together is good, but so are ‘team spaces’ and standing tables, comfortable couches and movable walls.”
  • “It’s partly a backlash against the one-size-fits-all mind-set, not to mention the corporate penny-pinching, embodied in the move toward pure open floor plans … [M]any experts agree it often went too far, with row upon row of desks and workbench-style seating more likely to generate ennui than efficiency.”
  • “The new designs often include ‘isolation rooms,’ soundproof phone booths, and even lounges where technology is forbidden.”
  • Wait for it … “[T]he new designs … are … meant to appeal to millennial recruits, many of whom are more comfortable working in a Starbucks than in a traditional office.”

Thank you for reading. If you’re lucky enough to be off today, maybe call someone who’ll be pleasantly surprised to hear from you.

Read the whole story
· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

9:58 AM 10/7/2017 – General: Military’s Presence in PR Open-Ended | Global Security News

1 Share

General: Military’s Presence in PR Open-Ended

PUERTO RICO NEWS REVIEW

PUERTO RICO NEWS REVIEW
Continuously Updated
Read the whole story
· · ·
Categories
FBI News Review

10:10 AM 10/8/2017 – FBI News Review: The FBI is fighting hard to avoid divulging any information about the Trump dossier. Why? – Fox News | Senate Judiciary chairman questions FBI use of salacious dossier – Stars and Stripes

Saved Stories – FBI
The WorldWide Times: 12:42 PM 10/7/2017 Trump News Review: Donald Trump | The Guardian: Ivana Trump: I talk to Donald regularly despite insane divorce Trump Investigations Report
fbi – Google News: FBI Says ‘Black Identity Extremists’ Are A Violent Threat Because of Their Views on Police Brutality – Newsweek
The WorldWide Times: Natural History Museum: I saw people on the pavement BBC News YouTube
fbi – Google News: The FBI Is Trying to Make Up a New Kind of Black Terrorist – GQ Magazine
The WorldWide Times: Facebook embeds helped Trump win, campaign digital director tells 60 Minutes U.S. Stripes
Christopher Wray – Google News: Senate Judiciary chairman questions FBI use of salacious dossier – Stars and Stripes
james b. comey – Google News: Hoping to Have Trump cleared, legal team eases resistance to Russia inquiry – The Boston Globe
fbi – Google News: Teen Admits Hacking FBI’s ‘Queen of Domestic Surveillance’ – Daily Beast
mueller – Google News: The Senate warns Trump: Leave Mueller be – Washington Post
mueller – Google News: Trump is hoping Mueller will do the one thing Comey didn’t – Business Insider
fbi – Google News: FBI begins removing belongings left after Las Vegas assault – The Columbus Dispatch
james b. comey – Google News: Dana Milbank: Breitbart knows that the deep state is everywhere – Salt Lake Tribune
james b. comey – Google News: Dana Milbank: Breitbart knows the deep state is everywhere – Mail Tribune
The WorldWide Times: 8:33 AM 10/8/2017 News Review: Grim Redux and other shared stories
Public officials risk national security by using cellphones – Asia Times
Russia-Trump campaign collusion an ‘open’ issue: US Senate panel chiefs – Reuters.com
“Toxic on a day-to-day level: how Trump is mismanaging the White House – Vox
As Senate Russia probe expands, Trump wants focus on US media – Axios
Senate found ‘zero’ evidence of Trump-Russia collusion, time to do ‘other things’ White House – RT
Byron York: 10 reasons to stay calm about those Russia Facebook ads – Washington Examiner
Mueller’s Team Met With the Former Spy Who Wrote the Trump-Russia Dossier, Report Says – TIME
Here’s How the Russian State Media Has Been Covering Trump’s Russia Scandal – Mother Jones
Robert Mueller’s Team Interview Trump Dossier’s Christopher Steele – Newsweek
Why Does Trump Keep Denying Russian Election Interference? – Newsweek
Feed Integration by RSS Dog.

 

Saved Stories – FBI
fbi – Google News: Kimberley Strassel: The FBI is fighting hard to avoid divulging any information about the Trump dossier. Why? – Fox News


Fox News
Kimberley Strassel: The FBI is fighting hard to avoid divulging any information about the Trump dossier. Why?
Fox News
FILE — President Donald Trump speaks after meeting with police at the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department in the wake of the mass shooting in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., October 4, 2017. (REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque). More non-news on the …

 fbi – Google News

The WorldWide Times: 12:42 PM 10/7/2017 Trump News Review: Donald Trump | The Guardian: Ivana Trump: I talk to Donald regularly despite insane divorce Trump Investigations Report

Trump Investigations Report | Latest Posts Source: 12:42 PM 10/7/2017 Trump News Review: Donald Trump | The Guardian: Ivana Trump: I talk to Donald regularly despite insane divorce Trump Investigations Report
 The WorldWide Times
fbi – Google News: FBI Says ‘Black Identity Extremists’ Are A Violent Threat Because of Their Views on Police Brutality – Newsweek


Newsweek
FBI Says ‘Black Identity Extremists’ Are A Violent Threat Because of Their Views on Police Brutality
Newsweek
The FBI has declared internally that “black identity extremists” are a violent threat because of their views about police brutality toward African-Americans, according to a leaked document. The August report, obtained by Foreign Policy Magazine, is 
FBI warns ‘black identity extremists’ pose growing threat to law enforcementNew York Daily News
The FBI’s New U.S. Terrorist Threat: ‘Black Identity Extremists …Foreign Policy (blog)
As Nazis Make a Comeback, FBI Sees a Different Threat: ‘Black Identity Extremists’Jezebel
RT –The Guardian –TheBlaze.com –DocumentCloud
all 23 news articles »

 fbi – Google News

The WorldWide Times: Natural History Museum: I saw people on the pavement BBC News YouTube

 The WorldWide Times
fbi – Google News: The FBI Is Trying to Make Up a New Kind of Black Terrorist – GQ Magazine


GQ Magazine
The FBI Is Trying to Make Up a New Kind of Black Terrorist
GQ Magazine
The FBI assesses it is very likely Black Identity Extremist (BIE) perceptions of police brutality against African Americans spurred an increase in premeditated, retaliatory lethal violence against law enforcement and will very likely serve as 
The FBI’s New U.S. Terrorist Threat: ‘Black Identity Extremists …Foreign Policy (blog)
FBI warns ‘black identity extremists’ pose growing threat to law enforcementNew York Daily News
FBI report says ‘black-identity extremists’ seeking retaliation for police shootingsRT
The Guardian –The Grio –Jezebel –DocumentCloud
all 27 news articles »

 fbi – Google News

The WorldWide Times: Facebook embeds helped Trump win, campaign digital director tells 60 Minutes U.S. Stripes

Source: Facebook ’embeds’ helped Trump win, campaign digital director tells ’60 Minutes’ – U.S. – Stripes
 The WorldWide Times
Christopher Wray – Google News: Senate Judiciary chairman questions FBI use of salacious dossier – Stars and Stripes


Stars and Stripes
Senate Judiciary chairman questions FBI use of salacious dossier
Stars and Stripes
WASHINGTON (Tribune News Service) The chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee sent a stern letter to FBI DirectorChristopher Wray asking whether a salacious dossier on President Donald Trump was the basis of the bureau’s Russia investigation.
Grassley wants FBI to explain use of Russia dossierThe Hill
Grassley concerned about FBI use of Trump ‘dossier’ in Russia investigationPolitico
Collusion and the Trump DossierNational Review
CNN
all 57 news articles »

 Christopher Wray – Google News

james b. comey – Google News: Hoping to Have Trump cleared, legal team eases resistance to Russia inquiry – The Boston Globe

Hoping to Have Trump cleared, legal team eases resistance to Russia inquiry
The Boston Globe
He fired his FBI director, James BComey, in May after Comey refused to say openly that Trump was not under investigation. The president’s legal team is working swiftly to respond to requests from Mueller for e-mails, documents, and memos, and will
and more »

 james b. comey – Google News

fbi – Google News: Teen Admits Hacking FBI’s ‘Queen of Domestic Surveillance’ – Daily Beast


Daily Beast
Teen Admits Hacking FBI’s ‘Queen of Domestic Surveillance’
Daily Beast
Gamble’s admitted charges also include an overlooked and somewhat ironic target: FBI official Amy Hess. At the time of the hacking campaign in 2015, Hess oversaw the Bureau’s Operational Technology Division (OTD), a unit tasked with deploying the FBI’s …
and more »

 fbi – Google News

mueller – Google News: The Senate warns Trump: Leave Mueller be – Washington Post


Washington Post
The Senate warns Trump: Leave Mueller be
Washington Post
AFTER PRESIDENT TRUMP publicly toyed with the idea of firing special prosecutor Robert S. Mueller III this summer, a bipartisan group of senators introduced two bills that would shield Mr. Mueller from being dismissed. Mr. Trump has been quiet on the … 
Trump is hoping Mueller will do the one thing Comey didn’tBusiness Insider

Hoping to Have Trump Cleared, Legal Team Eases Resistance to InquiryNew York Times 
Mueller’s Russia investigation: What to knowFox News
NewsweekNew York MagazineHot AirCNN
all 69 
It looks like Trump wants Mueller to do the one thing Comey didn’tBusiness Insider
This week in Trump-Russia news: Trump again seeks assurance he is not personally under investigationMic
all 5
 news articles »

 mueller – Google News

mueller – Google News: Trump is hoping Mueller will do the one thing Comey didn’t – Business Insider


Business Insider
Trump is hoping Mueller will It looks like Trump wants Mueller to do the one thing Comey didn’t
Business Insider
President Donald Trump’s lawyers have adopted a new legal strategy of cooperating with special counsel Robert Mueller in the hopes that he will do the one thing former FBI director James Comey did not: confirm publicly that Trump is not being 
The Senate warns Trump: Leave Mueller beWashington Post
Hoping to Have Trump Cleared, Legal Team Eases Resistance to InquiryNew York Times 
Here’s What the ‘Golden Shower’ Dossier Now Being Investigated by Mueller Claims About Trump and RussiaNewsweek
New York MagazineHot AirThe Daily DotCNN
all 69 
This week in Trump-Russia news: Trump again seeks assurance he is not personally under investigationMic
all 5
 news articles »

 mueller – Google News

fbi – Google News: FBI begins removing belongings left after Las Vegas assault – The Columbus Dispatch


The Columbus Dispatch
FBI begins removing belongings left after Las Vegas assault
The Columbus Dispatch
FBI agents fanned out across the crime scene near the Las Vegas Strip throughout the week stacking the belongings left from last Sunday’s shooting into more than a dozen large piles. On Saturday morning, the agents were seen loading the items onto
The FBI Wants the Public’s Help in Figuring Out Las Vegas Shooter’s MotiveTIME
Police, FBI seek public’s help in finding motive behind Las Vegas massacreReuters
‘Say something’: FBI mounts billboard campaign in wake of Vegas shootingUSA TODAY
NOLA.com –Breitbart News –KOLO
all 4,889 news articles »

 fbi – Google News

james b. comey – Google News: Dana Milbank: Breitbart knows that the deep state is everywhere – Salt Lake Tribune


Salt Lake Tribune
Dana Milbank: Breitbart knows that the deep state is everywhere
Salt Lake Tribune
It knows James BComey is one of us. It knows the deep state forced Trump not to move the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem. It knows we push transgender ideology onto schools. And it reported about the firing of a National Security Council
and more »

 james b. comey – Google News

james b. comey – Google News: Dana Milbank: Breitbart knows the deep state is everywhere – Mail Tribune

Dana Milbank: Breitbart knows the deep state is everywhere
Mail Tribune
It knows James BComey is one of us. It knows the deep state forced Trump not to move the U.S. Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem. It knows we push transgender ideology onto schools. And it reported about the firing of a National Security Council
and more »

 james b. comey – Google News

The WorldWide Times: 8:33 AM 10/8/2017 News Review: Grim Redux and other shared stories

Michael Grimm (politician) – Wikipedia Sunday October 8th, 2017 at 8:28 AM 1 Share Michael Gerard Grimm (born February 7, 1970)[2] is an American businessman, and politician who represented New York in the United States Congress from 2011 to 2015. Grimm represented New York’s 13th congressional district during his first term, after which he represented New York’s 11th congressional district. Both districts consisted of Staten … Continue reading“8:33 AM 10/8/2017 – News Review: Grim Redux and other shared stories”
 The WorldWide Times
Public officials risk national security by using cellphones – Asia Times


Asia Times
Public officials risk national security by using cellphones
Asia Times
Even President Trump flirts with danger when he uses an old Samsung III for tweeting. Is this phone in his office or his bedroom? Even so-called secure cellphones may have been hacked. Chancellor Merkel’s phones (she has gone through at least five of …
and more »
Russia-Trump campaign collusion an ‘open’ issue: US Senate panel chiefs – Reuters.com


Reuters.com
Russia-Trump campaign collusion an ‘open’ issue: US Senate panel chiefs
Reuters.com
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Leaders of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee said on Wednesday the issue of whether President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign colluded with Russia remains an open question as the panel intensifies its probe into …
“Toxic on a day-to-day level: how Trump is mismanaging the White House – Vox


Vox
Toxic on a day-to-day level: how Trump is mismanaging the White House
Vox
It was Sessions, for example, who signed off on Trump’s highly unusual decision to fire FBI Director James Comey after the director refused to back off from the investigation into the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia. Yet Trump repeatedly humiliated
and more »
As Senate Russia probe expands, Trump wants focus on US media – Axios


Axios
As Senate Russia probe expands, Trump wants focus on US media
Axios
Trump tweet on Thursday morning: “Why Isn’t the Senate Intel Committee looking into the Fake News Networks in OUR country to see why so much of our news is just made up-FAKE!” Senate Intel Committee chairman on Wednesday: “It’s safe to say that the …
Senate found ‘zero’ evidence of Trump-Russia collusion, time to do ‘other things’ White House – RT


RT
Senate found ‘zero’ evidence of Trump-Russia collusion, time to do ‘other things’ White House
RT
The Senate Intelligence Committee has not found any evidence of collusion between President Donald Trump and theRussian government, the White House said, adding that Americans want Congress and the media to finally focus on more important things.
and more »
Byron York: 10 reasons to stay calm about those Russia Facebook ads – Washington Examiner


Washington Examiner
Byron York: 10 reasons to stay calm about those Russia Facebook ads
Washington Examiner
The latest excitement in the TrumpRussia investigation is a set of Facebook ads linked to Russia, about 3,000 in all, that some of the president’s adversaries hope will prove the Trump campaign colluded with Russia in the 2016 election. “A number of …
and more »
Mueller’s Team Met With the Former Spy Who Wrote the Trump-Russia Dossier, Report Says – TIME


TIME
Mueller’s Team Met With the Former Spy Who Wrote the Trump-Russia Dossier, Report Says
TIME
(WASHINGTON) Special counsel Robert Mueller’s team of investigators has recently spoken with a former British spy who compiled a dossier of allegations about President Donald Trump’s ties to Russia, according to a person familiar with the investigation.
‘These are things we’ve never seen before’: The Russia investigation is moving into uncharted territoryBusiness Insider
Robert Mueller’s Team Interview Trump Dossier’s Christopher SteeleNewsweek
Mueller’s team met with Russia dossier author – CNNPoliticsCNN
Reuters.com –The Independent –TPM
all 275 news articles »
Here’s How the Russian State Media Has Been Covering Trump’s Russia Scandal – Mother Jones


Mother Jones
Here’s How the Russian State Media Has Been Covering Trump’s Russia Scandal
Mother Jones
On Wednesday September 20, the Washington Post published yet another evening bombshell about the TrumpRussiainvestigation. The Post found that while serving as Donald Trump’s campaign chairman, Paul Manafort offered to provide regular private … 
The Russia Collusion You Should Care AboutBloomberg
Donald Trump’s company had contact with Russia during 2016 presidential campaignUK Progressive Magazine
Watch the Saudi king get stuck in midair when his golden escalator breaks down in RussiaBusiness Insider
all 1,037 news articles »
 
and more »
Robert Mueller’s Team Interview Trump Dossier’s Christopher Steele – Newsweek


Newsweek
Robert Mueller’s Team Interview Trump Dossier’s Christopher Steele
Newsweek
Investigators examining the alleged ties between President Donald Trump and Russia have interviewed the former British spy who compiled a notorious dossier that contained a number of salacious claims about the President’s actions in the run-up to the …
‘These are things we’ve never seen before’: The Russia investigation is moving into uncharted territoryBusiness Insider
Mueller’s Team Met With the Former Spy Who Wrote the TrumpRussia Dossier, Report SaysTIME
Mueller’s team met with Russia dossier author – CNNPoliticsCNN
The Independent –Reuters –TPM
all 275 news articles »
Why Does Trump Keep Denying Russian Election Interference? – Newsweek


Newsweek
Why Does Trump Keep Denying Russian Election Interference?
Newsweek
Briefing reporters on the status of the Russia investigation, Senators Burr and Warner warned that the Russian government is not yet done meddling in U.S. elections. Their investigation into 2016 is not yet complete, and open issues include the 
Gregg Jarrett: The TrumpRussia ‘collusion’ and other great hoaxesFox News
Burr on Trump tweet: Panel will hold media ‘accountable’ on RussiaCNN
Congress to Trump, basically: Russia is not fake newsWashington Post
Daily Beast –NBCNews.com –Bloomberg
all 586 news articles »
Feed Integration by RSS Dog.

Categories
FBI News Review

9:42 AM 10/8/2017 – Grassley wants FBI to explain use of Russia dossier The Hill In an Oct. 4 letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray, Grassley, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, voiced concern over "material inconsistencies" in the FBI's answers to past questions about its use of the dossier

Grassley wants FBI to explain use of Russia dossier
The Hill
In an Oct. 4 letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray, Grassley, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, voiced concern over “material inconsistencies” in the FBI’s answers to past questions about its use of the dossier authored by former 
Senate Judiciary Chairman Questions FBI Use of Salacious DossierBloomberg
Grassley concerned about FBI use of Trump ‘dossier’ in Russia investigationPolitico
Chuck Grassley presses FBI for more details on ‘Russian dossier’Washington Examiner
American Thinker (blog) –CNN
all 71 news articles »

Categories
FBI News Review

9:34 AM 10/8/2017 – The FBI Wants the Public's Help in Figuring Out Las Vegas Shooter's Motive TIME (LAS VEGAS) Tourists coming to gamble and party on the Strip will soon find something other than bright lights welcoming them to "Fabulous Las Vegas." Billboards will serve as a stark reminder that investigators remain stumped

The FBI Wants the Public’s Help in Figuring Out Las Vegas Shooter’s Motive
TIME
(LAS VEGAS) Tourists coming to gamble and party on the Strip will soon find something other than bright lights welcoming them to “Fabulous Las Vegas.” Billboards will serve as a stark reminder that investigators remain stumped about what drove a …
FBI begins removing belongings left after Las Vegas assaultThe Columbus Dispatch
‘Say something’: FBI mounts billboard campaign in wake of Vegas shootingUSA TODAY
Las Vegas shooting: What was killer’s motive? FBI to appeal to public for answersNOLA.com
KOLO –ABC News –Breitbart News –Google News
all 704 news articles »

Categories
FBI News Review

9:31 AM 10/8/2017 – The FBI Is Trying to Make Up a New Kind of Black Terrorist – GQ Magazine:  The FBI assesses it is very likely Black Identity Extremist (BIE) perceptions of police brutality against African Americans spurred an increase in premeditated, retaliatory lethal violence against law enforcement

The FBI Is Trying to Make Up a New Kind of Black Terrorist – GQ Magazine
Sat, 07 Oct 2017 19:04:07 GMT


GQ Magazine
The FBI Is Trying to Make Up a New Kind of Black Terrorist – GQ Magazine: 
The FBI assesses it is very likely Black Identity Extremist (BIE) perceptions of police brutality against African Americans spurred an increase in premeditated, retaliatory lethal violence against law enforcement and will very likely serve as 
The FBI’s New U.S. Terrorist Threat: ‘Black Identity Extremists …Foreign Policy (blog)
FBI warns ‘black identity extremists’ pose growing threat to law enforcementNew York Daily News
FBI says ‘black identity extremists’ pose growing threat to policeThe Grio
RT –The Guardian –Jezebel –DocumentCloud
all 31 news articles »
Categories
FBI News Review News Review

9:05 AM 10/8/2017 – FBI – Current News and Selected Articles Review: The Grim Reality: Michael Grimm wants to run again, with Bannon's help! And with the Facebook ads?!

The Grim Reality: Michael Grimm wants to run again, with Bannon’s help!

And the Facebook Ads?

FBI – Current News and Selected Articles Review 

Investigate the Investigators! Save America! Reform the FBI!

Saved Stories – 1. FBI
Trump Will Skip FBI Director Ceremony, Amid Bureau’s Russia Investigation – Newsweek
Bills to Protect Mueller Are Bipartisan, but the Path Forward Is Uncertain – New York Times
Dismayed by Trump, Head of Drug Enforcement Administration to Leave – New York Times
fbi – Google News
The FBI Is Trying to Make Up a New Kind of Black Terrorist – GQ Magazine
Arizona Wildcats commit Jahvon Quinerly hires lawyer amid FBI … – ESPN
The FBI Wants the Public’s Help in Figuring Out Las Vegas Shooter’s Motive – TIME
Grassley wants FBI to explain use of Russia dossier – The Hill
FBI: Person of interest detained after explosive device found at airport – WJLA
Las Vegas Shooting: At a Loss on Motive, FBI Turns to Billboards for Leads – New York Times
Louisville basketball scandal: Who is the Coach 1 mentioned in the FBI investigation? – The Courier-Journal
Pence offers solace as Las Vegas police puzzle over shooter’s motive – Reuters
UCLA coach Steve Alford says basketball program has not been contacted by FBI – Los Angeles Times
Kimberley Strassel: The FBI is fighting hard to avoid divulging any information about the Trump dossier. Why? – Fox News

_________________________

Categories
FBI News Review

12:56 PM 10/1/2017 – Mesches: The FBI Files

“In 2000, his suspicions were confirmed. Using a Freedom of Information Act request, Mesches obtained a box filled with his own 760-page FBI file, discovering that from 1945 to 1972, he’d been carefully watched. Throughout his life as an acclaimed painter as well as an activist, the FBI had been keeping tabs on his personal life, places he lived and worked, book shops he visited, protests he attended and more.
Hundreds of informants had passed through his life. Some were friends, lovers, neighbors. Others posed as local artists. One was a student hiding a camera in his tie. Sometimes it was “a comrade in a meeting, an asshole buddy you trusted with your heart and being, a confidant whose life torments were deeply intertwined with your own, the trusted friend who sat next to you at a funeral,” Mesches wrote in 2001.”

Mesches The FBI Files – Google Search

1 Share
Read the whole story
· · ·

Mesches The FBI Files – Google Search

1 Share
Image result for Mesches The FBI Files

Mesches The FBI Files – Google Search

1 Share
Image result for Mesches The FBI Files

Mesches The FBI Files – Google Search

1 Share
Related image

Mesches The FBI Files – Google Search

1 Share
Related image

Mesches The FBI Files – Google Search

1 Share
Related image
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 2

Mesches The FBI Files – Google Search

1 Share
Related image

Mesches The FBI Files – Google Search

1 Share
Related image

Mesches The FBI Files – Google Search

1 Share
Image result for Mesches The FBI Files

Mesches The FBI Files – Google Search

1 Share
Story image for Mesches The FBI Files from The Intercept

How Arnold Mesches Turned His FBI Surveillance Files Into Eerily …

The InterceptSep 30, 2017
On August 6, 1956, Arnold Mesches had over 200 paintings stolen. When he returned to his Los Angeles art studio that day, the building’s glass …
Story image for Mesches The FBI Files from New York Times

Arnold Mesches, Artist Who Was Recorded by the FBI, Dies at 93

New York TimesNov 9, 2016
In the late 1990s, Mr. Mesches obtained his file under the Freedom of Information Act and reaped a bonanza of 760 pages, with classified …
Story image for Mesches The FBI Files from The Intercept

New Teflon Toxin Found in North Carolina Drinking Water

The InterceptJun 17, 2017
A persistent and toxic industrial chemical known as GenX has been detected in the drinking water in Wilmington, North Carolina, and in surface …
Story image for Mesches The FBI Files from The Intercept

Leaked Documents Reveal Counterterrorism Tactics Used at …

The InterceptMay 27, 2017
The FBI did not respond to a request for comment. …. TigerSwan’s internal files describe its utilization of aerial surveillance, including use of …
Read the whole story
· ·

How Arnold Mesches Turned His FBI Surveillance Files Into Eerily Prescient Works of Art

1 Share
On August 6, 1956, Arnold Mesches had over 200 paintings stolen. When he returned to his Los Angeles art studio that day, the building’s glass front door was shattered. Someone had broken in. The paintings were gone, including a thirty-painting set dedicated to Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, whose trial and execution he had protested. He suspected it was the FBI.
In 2000, his suspicions were confirmed. Using a Freedom of Information Act request, Mesches obtained a box filled with his own 760-page FBI file, discovering that from 1945 to 1972, he’d been carefully watched. Throughout his life as an acclaimed painter as well as an activist, the FBI had been keeping tabs on his personal life, places he lived and worked, book shops he visited, protests he attended and more.
Hundreds of informants had passed through his life. Some were friends, lovers, neighbors. Others posed as local artists. One was a student hiding a camera in his tie. Sometimes it was “a comrade in a meeting, an asshole buddy you trusted with your heart and being, a confidant whose life torments were deeply intertwined with your own, the trusted friend who sat next to you at a funeral,” Mesches wrote in 2001.
Even with his FBI file in hand, the artist still had no information about the 200 missing works, but could draw his own conclusions: the pages covering three months before and after the break-in were missing entirely from the file. Hundreds of other bits were redacted, as well, mostly in thick black marker. The visual power of those redactions resonated with Mesches. He thought they were beautiful, and decided to turn the files into artwork. Today, those works feel eerily prescient.
Fifteen years ago this month, in September of 2002, Mesches (who died last year) opened The FBI Filesan exhibit of forty collages and one painting, layering the pages of his own file with magazine clippings, illustrated texts, photographs and paintings. The result, at the MoMA P.S. 1 arts space, was not just a portrait of his own lived experience, but a series of unconventional illustrations of a moment in American cultural history, a collection of pieces brimming with personal philosophy and critical thought. Where the words are not hidden by government redactions, they are elsewhere covered up by, or juxtaposed with, movie posters, celebrities, slick advertisements, images of Malcolm X, the KKK and Playboy covers — all working together to tell multiple stories of violence, control and power.

Arnold-Mesches-fbi-files-theintercept-1506615867Arnold Mesches, The FBI Files 26, 2001. Acrylic on canvas and board/paper, 23 x 30 1/2 in.Painting: Arnold Mesches via Jill Ciment

On the 15th anniversary of the exhibit, it’s become clear that The FBI Files was ahead of its time. As life in America has become increasingly defined by post-9/11 surveillance, FBI files have emerged as a surprising yet legitimate medium for artistic expression. The pervasiveness of being watched by the state creates a vast anxiety, our world filled with concrete artifacts of declassified and leaked materials. As more artists have embraced these primary documents over the past decade-and-a-half, their artistic processes have filled in the gaps created by government redactions.
Earlier this year, Sadie Barnette’s exhibition Do Not Destroy featured her ex-Black Panther father’s extensive FBI files, which she decorated with glitter, rhinestones and pink paint, re-imagining them as a cross-generational family story. In 2004, Jenny Holzer began using declassified government files, projecting them onto the sides of buildings and referencing them in her Dust Paintings. In her 2016 Whitney Museum exhibition, Astro Noise, Intercept co-founding editor Laura Poitras included excerpts from her FBI file, too. Each of these works takes a different approach at creatively critiquing the pervasiveness of government surveillance, as each of these artists’ relationships with surveillance differ. But it is telling of the surveillance state we live in that these types of works are emerging as common and compelling, allowing artists to interpret and amplify the histories that the authorities don’t want you to hear.
Born in the Bronx, Mesches moved to Los Angeles as a teenager to study advertising design, but dropped out of college. He learned more from his personal practice of painting and protesting. He was working in Hollywood painting sets when studio workers famously went on strike in 1946. “I came out of that strike politically aware, determined, more than ever, to make socially relevant art,” he once said, according to an essay on his art by Howard Zinn, who explains that Hollywood had become “a glamorous target” for the House Committee on Un-American Activities.
Perhaps the most moving aspect of The FBI Files is the way his work as an expressionist painter seeps in from the edges of these collages; these are emotional works, with equally distributed moments of sadness, intimacy, horror, humor and emptiness. Many of the pieces are overwhelmingly beautiful. There are pink-hued pages, vivid colors and broad strokes, abstract shapes and lines echoing the blacked out redactions.
Over the years, Mesches’ paintings (featured in over 100 solo shows, and at many major art institutions) depicted social unrest, war and violence. “My paintings are about the frailty of existence, the social tensions of our day, erosion, silence, madness, values, distance, comedy, ridicule and anger,” he wrote in a 1997 text surrounding an exhibition in Florida, where he lived for many years. With The FBI Files, his own life experiences shed further light on the stories he’d spent his life interrogating through art.
It makes sense that in 2014, when Mesches was 91, selections from The FBI Files were exhibited once again at the Life On Mars Gallery in Brooklyn. When Mesches made these works, he called them “illuminated manuscripts,” using paint and ink and mixed media to depict the government tracking his every move. In doing so, his work illuminates even more: the surreal conditions of surveillance we continue to live under today.
Top image: Arnold Mesches, “Surviellence”, 2000. Acrylic on canvas, 84 x 126 in.

Read the whole story
· · · ·

Wray Installed as FBI Director, Replaces Fired Comey – NECN

1 Share

NECN
Wray Installed as FBI Director, Replaces Fired Comey
NECN
The ceremony in a courtyard at FBI headquarters was largely a formality since Wray has been on the job for nearly two months. But in a reflection of the unusual circumstances of the event, it took place without Trump. And Wray’s two direct predecessors  
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 3

3:02 PM 9/27/2017 – Department of Justice Says FBI Has ‘Systemic’ Misconduct Problems and Isn’t Reporting Serious Issues With Agents | FBI investigating 1000 white supremacist, domestic terrorism cases – Washington Post 

1 Share
FBI – Current News and Selected Articles Review  Investigate the Investigators! Save America! Reform the FBI! Saved Stories – 1. FBI FBI has 1000 open investigations into violent white supremacy, domestic terror: Agency chief – ABC News Trump Will Skip FBI Director Ceremony, Amid Bureau’s Russia Investigation – Newsweek FBI investigating 1000 white supremacist, domestic terrorism cases … Continue reading “3:02 PM 9/27/2017 – Department of Justice Says FBI Has ‘Systemic’ Misconduct Problems and Isn’t Reporting Serious Issues With Agents | FBI investigating 1000 white supremacist, domestic terrorism cases – Washington Post”

Download audio: https://www.fbi.gov/audio-repository/ftw-podcast-2016-cius-092517.mp3/@@download/file/ftw-podcast-2016-cius-092517.mp3

5:44 PM 9/30/2017 – Justice allows Senate panel to interview FBI officials – CNNPolitics – CNN – Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks 

1 Share
Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks Justice allows Senate panel to interview FBI officials – CNNPolitics – CNN Robert Mueller Subpoenas an Associate of the Man Who … – ProPublica Special counsel Robert Mueller has assembled a team of 16 seasoned prosecutors – ABC News Mueller Subpoenas Biz Associate Of Flynn’s Turkish Lobbying Client – TPM Senate … Continue reading “5:44 PM 9/30/2017 – Justice allows Senate panel to interview FBI officials – CNNPolitics – CNN – Mike Nova’s Shared NewsLinks”

Ahead of Sunday’s NFL games, Trump renews his call for players to stand during anthem – Washington Post

1 Share

Washington Post
Ahead of Sunday’s NFL games, Trump renews his call for players to stand during anthem
Washington Post
On the eve of another Sunday of professional football, President Trump once again stoked the controversy over players taking a knee during the national anthem to protest racial inequality, proclaiming on Twitter that he wants them to stand. “Very 
Trump tweets anew about NFL players, national anthem protestABC News
Trump tweets NFL players should stand for national anthem SundayFox News
Trump says ‘very important’ NFL players stand for national anthem SundayReuters
New York Post –CBSSports.com –Metro
all 2,580 news articles »

How healthcare went from the GOP’s biggest priority after Trump’s election to a total debacle – Markets Insider

1 Share

Markets Insider
How healthcare went from the GOP’s biggest priority after Trump’s election to a total debacle
Markets Insider
On January 10, just days before his inauguration, President Donald Trump told The New York Times that Republicans would have Obamacare repealed “probably sometime next week.” Now, as September comes to a close, Obamacare is still the law of the …and more »

Plenty of Blame to Go Around: The Long Collapse of American Foreign Policy – Modern Diplomacy

1 Share

Modern Diplomacy
Plenty of Blame to Go Around: The Long Collapse of American Foreign Policy
Modern Diplomacy
Indeed, although we may never know with certainty, it is quite possible that ham-handedAmerican and European meddling in Ukrainian politics was the catalyst that convinced Putin to intervene militarily in Ukraine to begin with. The illusion that the  

The Russia Investigations: Sens. Burr, Warner To Give Update; Spotlight On Twitter : NPR

1 Share

The Russia Investigations: Sens. Burr, Warner To Give Update; Spotlight On Twitter

Chairman Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C, (right) and Vice Chairman Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., listen during a hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee on June 21 on Capitol Hill. Alex Wong/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Chairman Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C, (right) and Vice Chairman Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., listen during a hearing before the Senate Intelligence Committee on June 21 on Capitol Hill.

Alex Wong/Getty Images

Last week in the Russia investigations: Washington gears up for the leaders of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Twitter gets its turn in the barrel and states learn at last about the extent of last year’s attack.

D.C. waits to hear from Burr and Warner

Before we take a look back at the past week in the Russia imbroglio, a look ahead: The chairman and vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee have scheduled a press conference for Wednesday.
Sens. Richard Burr, R-N.C., and Mark Warner, D-Va., haven’t convened a public hearing of their committee for months — and that was to confirm nominees for intelligence agency jobs — so this will be the first chance in awhile to hear at length from both leaders together. Warner makes a lot of appearances on TV and in the press; Burr much less so.
Look for the two leaders to give the latest about their conversations with Facebook and Twitter. The two lawmakers have been frustrated by the lack of disclosure from the social media platforms about the way they were used by Russian influence-mongers to interfere with last year’s presidential election. The Senate committee and its House counterpart both plan to convene hearings next month with the social platforms.


“Deeply disappointing”

Warner, the Intelligence Committee’s vice chairman, was not happy last week with what he heard from Twitter. Representatives for the microblogging service — which is much smaller than Facebook by every measure but still highly visible in key places — went to Capitol Hill to talk about what they’ve found so far. And, per Warner, it wasn’t good enough.
“[T]he presentation that the Twitter team made to the Senate Intel staff today was deeply disappointing,” Warner told reporters Thursday, per ReCode’s Tony Romm. “The notion that their work was basically derivative, based upon accounts that Facebook had identified, showed an enormous lack of understanding from the Twitter team of how serious this issue is, the threat it poses to democratic institutions, and again, begs many more questions than they [answer].”
The use of Twitter as a medium for influence operations hasn’t become a historical question. It continues in real-time even as members of Congress and Justice Department special counsel Robert Mueller try to piece together what happened in the election last year.

On Wednesday, Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., invoked the ongoing national debate over free speech and protesting in the NFL, where some players have been taking a knee during the national anthem to call attention to what they call police brutality against blacks. That protest has brought about a strong reaction of its own from President Trump and conservatives, who call it disrespectful. And as Lankford pointed out, influence-mongers are using Twitter to turn up the volume as much as they can.
“We watched, even this weekend, the Russians and their troll farms, their Internet folks, start hashtagging out ‘take a knee’ and also hashtagging out ‘boycott the NFL,’ ” Lankford said.

“They were taking both sides of the argument this past weekend and pushing them out from their troll farms as much as they could to just raise the noise level in America and make a big issue seem like an even bigger issue as they’re trying to push divisiveness in the country,” he said.

At the same time the use of fake accounts on Facebook to exacerbate division goes beyond the U.S. — there have been plenty of examples from the recent German election. More on that here from NPR.
Twitter says it gets all this. The company issued a long statement on Thursday that listed what it says it has been doing on these issues and said that in the coming weeks, “we’ll be rolling out several changes to the actions we take when we detect spammy or suspicious activity.”


Feds finally tell states more about election attacks

They only waited 10 months after Election Day, but federal authorities finally contacted state officials to tell them more about systems targeted last year by Russian cyberattackers, NPR’s Pam Fessler reports.

The Department of Homeland Security had talked to those with “ownership” of targeted systems, as Pam writes — in some cases, private vendors or local election offices. But not the secretaries of state or other state-level officials whose jurisdiction included the cyberattacks.

Voters cast their ballots at Shadow Ridge High School last November in Las Vegas. Ethan Miller/Getty Images hide caption

toggle caption

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Voters cast their ballots at Shadow Ridge High School last November in Las Vegas.

Ethan Miller/Getty Images

More from Pam: “The Connecticut secretary of state’s office said that DHS confirmed Russian hackers tried to break into the state’s online voter registration system last year but did not succeed. A spokesman for the office said its information technology department detected and blocked the attempted intrusion but did not know who was probing the system. Officials in California, Oregon and Wisconsin also said they were targeted …

In addition, officials from Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, Minnesota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Virginia told The Associated Press that their states had been targeted … Election officials in Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, New Mexico and North Carolina said their states were not targeted by hackers.”


Briefly

Anxious about cyber mischief, Virginia goes back to paper
Virginia and New Jersey can’t wait until 2018 or 2020 to get serious about election security — they have elections this year, as NPR’s Pam Fessler reports. Writes Pam: “One of the most drastic steps was a decision by the Virginia Board of Elections earlier this month to order 22 counties and towns to adopt all new paper-backed voting machines before November. The board decided that the paperless electronic equipment they had been using was vulnerable to attack and should be replaced.”

Meaning what? Federal and state officials are concluding there may be no way for them to completely trust all-electronic voting systems, such as touchscreen machines that don’t leave a paper trail. Although officials say no votes were changed by cyberattacks in 2016, that doesn’t mean changing votes isn’t technically possible, which is what states and the Department of Homeland Security want to try to prevent.
Spicer retains attorney Mead
Former White House press secretary Sean Spicer has retained defense attorney Chris Mead in the Russia matter, Betsy Woodruff reports for the Daily Beast. Per Woodruff: “Mead specializes in white collar criminal defense and congressional investigations, as well as issues related to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act — a law that bars Americans from bribing foreign government officials. His law firm bio also boasts that he gained ‘extensive experience in money laundering’ prosecutions when he was a prosecutor for the U.S. attorney for the District of Maryland.”
Meaning what? Spicer got into a kerfuffle with Axios’ well-known correspondent Mike Allen, who’d asked him about all those notes he was (in)famous for taking while in the administration. Allen asked Spicer about all that paper he kept. Had he been pulled into the Mueller mix? Spicer, whom Allen has known for years, threatened to “contact the appropriate legal authorities to address your harassment.” So, yeah, Spicer and his notes might be in the mix here.
Stone also expects Manafort indictment

Longtime Trump ally Roger Stone told reporters this week that his attorneys have heard from attorneys for former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort that they’ve been warned Manafort will be indicted. But Stone said he hasn’t heard from special counsel Mueller.
Meaning what? Stone’s statement, if it’s accurate, confirms the blind-sourced reports in the press that Mueller’s prosecutors have cautioned — or threatened — Manafort. Stone also invited correspondents to admire his suit, which he said was an example of “fine English tailoring.”

Read the whole story
· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 4

The White House counsel reportedly almost resigned over concerns about Trump-Kushner meetings and the Russia probe

1 Share
(U.S. President Donald Trump gives a thumbs-up as he and White House Senior Advisor Jared Kushner depart the White House in Washington, U.S., March 15, 2017.REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque)

  • White House staffers were reportedly worried that White House counsel Don McGahn would resign this summer
  • McGahn was said to have been frustrated over President Trump’s frequent meetings with Jared Kushner
  • Trump and Kushner are subjects in Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation, and McGahn was reportedly worried their meetings could be seen as an effort to coordinate stories

West Wing staffers were concerned that White House counsel Don McGahn would quit earlier this summer because of his frustration over meetings between President Donald Trump and his senior and adviser and son-in-law, Jared Kushner, The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday.
Special counsel Robert Mueller’s ongoing investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election is focusing on both Trump and Kushner, and whether the Trump campaign colluded with Moscow to tilt the election in his favor.
Kushner invited scrutiny after he met with two Russian officials — Russia’s former ambassador to the US, Sergey Kislyak, and the head of a sanctioned Russian bank, Sergey Gorkov — during the transition period. Kushner was also present during a June 2016 meeting at Trump Tower between top members of the Trump campaign and several Russians, including a lawyer with ties to the Kremlin who had offered compromising information on Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
Mueller’s focus on Trump appears to center primarily around his decision to fire former FBI director James Comey in May and his motivations for doing so. The White House initially said Comey had been dismissed because of his handling of the Clinton email investigation, but Trump later told NBC’s Lester Holt that “this Russia thing” was a factor in his decision.
Given their proximity to the Russia probe, McGahn was reportedly concerned that the frequency with which Trump and Kushner met could be seen as an attempt to coordinate their stories, three officials familiar with the matter told The Journal.
(Don McGahn, general counsel for the Trump transition team, gets into an elevator in the lobby at Trump Tower, November 15, 2016 in New York City. President-elect Donald Trump is in the process of choosing his presidential cabinet as he transitions from a candidate to the president-elect.Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
The White House counsel was so frustrated that then chief of staff Reince Priebus and then chief strategist Steve Bannon had to urge McGahn not to resign. He ultimately decided to stay after learning that Trump had hired a legal team, headed by white-collar defense attorney Ty Cobb, tasked with handling the White House’s response to Mueller’s investigation, according to the report.
Former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti wrote on Friday that part of McGahn’s concern regarding meetings between Kushner and Trump could center around the fact that both men were witness to McGahn’s thought process surrounding Comey’s firing.
The weekend before he fired Comey on May 9, Trump put together a draft letter laying out his reasons for dismissing the FBI director at his Bedminster golf club in New Jersey. Kushner, who reportedly argued strongly for Comey’s firing, was also at the club that weekend, as was top policy adviser Stephen Miller and Trump’s daughter, Ivanka. Cobb confirmed to Business Insider earlier this month that the letter is in Mueller’s possession.
After the letter was drafted, McGahn reportedly advised Trump against sending it to Comey and gave Miller a marked-up copy of the letter, highlighting several sections that he believed could be problematic and needed to be struck. McGahn is one of the White House staffers Mueller is interested in interviewing, likely because of his involvement in the events leading up to Comey’s firing.
It’s unclear what, if any, role Kushner had in crafting the letter. But if both he and Trump were witness to McGahn’s thought process around Comey’s firing, their statements to one another could be “fair game” for Mueller to dig into as part of his investigation, Mariotti wrote. If the president met frequently enough with Kushner, Mueller could probe into their conversations and find inconsistencies in their stories, he added.
“McGahn is doing what any good defense attorney would do in these situations–create a protocol to ensure there is a ‘prover’ in the room for these conversations so that the third person could verify that issues relating to the investigation were never discussed,” Mariotti wrote.
NOW WATCH: The mysterious life of the wife of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un
More From Business Insider 

Read the whole story
· · ·

The White House counsel reportedly almost resigned over concerns about Trump-Kushner meetings and the Russia … – Yahoo News

1 Share

Yahoo News
The White House counsel reportedly almost resigned over concerns about Trump-Kushner meetings and the Russia …
Yahoo News
West Wing staffers were concerned that White House counsel Don McGahn would quit earlier this summer because of his frustration over meetings between President Donald Trump and his senior and adviser and son-in-law, Jared Kushner, The Wall Street …
Kelly trying to restrict Kushner’s access to TrumpNew York Post
Price the latest in a string of high-profile Trump departuresThe Hillall 115 news articles »

The Russia Investigations: Sens. Burr, Warner To Give Update; Spotlight On Twitter – NPR

1 Share

NPR
The Russia Investigations: Sens. Burr, Warner To Give Update; Spotlight On Twitter
NPR
That protest has brought about a strong reaction of its own from President Trump and conservatives, who call it disrespectful. And as Lankford pointed out, influence-mongers are using Twitter to turn up the volume as much as they can. “We watched, even and more »

8:33 AM 10/1/2017 – Kim Philby: Documents that Kim Philby passed to USSR on display for first time 

1 Share
Kim Philby – Google Search Sunday October 1st, 2017 at 8:13 AM 1 Share Even in Death, the Spy Kim Philby Serves the Kremlin’s Purposes New York Times–7 hours ago A new portrait of the British double agent Kim Philby, second from right, at a state art gallery in Moscow. Mr. Philby defected to the Soviet Union … Moscow reveals cables … Continue reading “8:33 AM 10/1/2017 – Kim Philby: Documents that Kim Philby passed to USSR on display for first time”

Hillary on Trump: ‘I Don’t Think He Really Values Democracy’ – Newsmax

1 Share
Hillary on Trump: ‘I Don’t Think He Really Values Democracy’
Newsmax
In a stunning rebuke of the U.S. president, former challenger Hillary Clinton said President Donald Trump “would like to be like” Russia’s Vladimir Putin, saying Trump has “tendencies toward authoritarianism” and “I don’t think he really values and more »

Trump Push to Cut US Aid Prompts EU Geopolitical-Risk Warning – Bloomberg

1 Share

Bloomberg
Trump Push to Cut US Aid Prompts EU Geopolitical-Risk Warning
Bloomberg
The admonition by Christos Stylianides, the European Union commissioner for crisis management, highlights the extent to which Europe is grappling with Trump’s “America First” policy. Trump has already shaken the trans-Atlantic security order and more »
Next Page of Stories
Loading…
Page 5

Tracing the connection between terrorism and offshore financing

1 Share
Editor’s note: Black money is a topic that has elicited much debate in recent times. In his new book — Black Money and Tax Havens — Prof R Vaidyanathan provides an overview of black money — its generation, estimates and how and why it is spirited away to tax havens. The following is an excerpt from the chapter titled ‘Blood Money’. Reproduced here with permission from Westland Books.
Terrorism and Offshore Financing
The life-blood of an effective terrorist network is financing and shell companies facilitate the easy distribution of money. The Islamic State, popularly referred to as ISIS makes $1 million to $2 million a day in oil production, it has obtained over $100 million in ransoms from kidnapping and collects ‘taxes’ from the 6 million people it has gained control over.
Al-Qaeda’s worldwide operations require $30-50 million per year. The September 11 attacks, for example, cost approximately $500,000. But not every terrorist attack requires large sums of money. The London transit bombings cost a mere $15,000 and the Paris bombings cost about $10,000 or less. Regardless of the size of the operation, funding a terrorism enterprise is easily done under the cover of shell companies. In contrast, the United States has spent (as of 2014) over $1.6 trillion since September 11, 2001 on its major military operations abroad and $9 million a day just on fighting ISIS.

Cover of Prof R Vaidyanathan's Black Money and Tax Havens, published by WestlandCover of Prof R Vaidyanathan’s Black Money and Tax Havens, published by Westland

If we want to fight terrorism effectively, we should also be cracking down on terrorism financing. Given the ease and persistence of terrorist financing — particularly using shell companies — a shift in attention on financial regulations that would stop terrorism financing would be a good start. Also the Panama Papers incident shows how easy it is to finance terror using US shell companies. With the ease of incorporation, some may decide to create companies to hide assets in for tax evasion or money laundering purposes. However, even more alarming is that terrorists can easily disguise their true identities from law enforcement through shell companies. A potential terrorist cannot take a flight to neighbouring states without a passport or driver’s licence, but they can form a shell company without any information in a matter of minutes. In a high-profile instance of this, for many years, Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout used shell corporations to anonymously supply terrorist groups around the globe with major weaponry like tanks and shoulder-file missiles.
Laws against money laundering and terror financing are used around the world. In the United States, the Patriot Act was passed after the September 11 attacks, giving the government anti-money laundering powers to monitor financial institutions. The Patriot Act has generated a great deal of controversy in the United States since its enactment. The United States has also collaborated with the United Nations and other countries to create the Terrorist Finance Tracking Program. RAND Corporation has brought out a large body of literature and analysis on terror financing and its implications.
Terrorism Financing in India
In January 2015, the inaugural US-India Anti-Money Laundering/ Counterterrorism Finance (AML/CFT) dialogue was held. India is a member of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and two FATF-style regional bodies, the Eurasian Group on Combating Money Laundering and Financing of Terrorism and the Asia-Pacific Group on Money Laundering. India’s Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU-IND) is also a member of the Egmont Group (an informal international gathering of financial intelligence units formed in 1995). Indian officials monitor and regulate money transfers, require the collection of data for wire transfers, oblige non-profit organizations to file suspicious transaction reports, and regulate and monitor these entities to prevent misuse and terrorism financing.
Although the Government of India has aligned its domestic AML/ CFT laws with international standards by enacting amendments to the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) in November 2012, the government has yet to implement the legislation effectively, especially with regard to criminal convictions. Law enforcement agencies typically open criminal investigations reactively and seldom initiate proactive analysis and long-term investigations. While the Indian government has taken action against certain hawala financing activities, prosecutions have generally focused on non-financial businesses that conduct hawala transactions as a secondary activity. Additionally, the government has not taken adequate steps to ensure that all relevant industries are complying with AML/CFT regulations though the reporting of Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs) relating specifically to terrorism financing has increased significantly.
From July 2014 to April 2015, the FIU-IND received 76,149 STRs and disseminated 52,485 STRs to various intelligence and law enforcement authorities. The degree of training and expertise in financial investigations involving transnational crime or terrorism-affiliated groups varies widely among the federal, state and local levels and depends on the financial resources and individual policies of various jurisdictions. More than 300 personnel from various zonal and sub-zonal offices of India’s Enforcement Directorate have participated in training programmes on financial investigation, money laundering, foreign exchange contraventions, effective prosecutions, and cyber crimes as part of an effort to build capacity.
US investigators have had limited success in coordinating the seizure of illicit proceeds with their Indian counterparts. While intelligence and investigative information supplied by US law enforcement authorities has led to numerous seizures of terrorism-related funds, a lack of follow-through on investigational leads has prevented a more comprehensive approach. The Government of India has also taken steps to increase financial inclusion through expanding access to the banking sector and issuing biometric-enabled universal identification numbers.
Any expert on Indian stock markets knows that our markets are increasingly being moved by global flows — both inflows and outflows of funds. Secondly, such flows may be the ill-gotten wealth of Indians kept abroad in tax havens, or domestic funds sent out and brought back to facilitate some activities. This has to be seen in the context of concerns expressed by our then National Security Advisor MK Narayanan regarding the possibility of terror funds coming in through financial markets a few years ago. India has also taken steps to implement United Nations Security Council Resolution (UNSCR 2178) related to foreign terrorist fighters and to advance efforts on Politically Exposed Persons (PEP). It recalls its decision in resolution 1373 (2001) that Member States shall afford one another the greatest measure of assistance in connection with criminal investigations or proceedings relating to the financing or support of terrorist acts.

Read the whole story
· · · · ·

Black Money and Tax Havens: Tracing the connection between terrorism and offshore financing – Firstpost

1 Share

Firstpost
Black Money and Tax Havens: Tracing the connection between terrorism and offshore financing
Firstpost
The degree of training and expertise in financial investigations involving transnational crime orterrorism-affiliated groups varies widely among the federal, state and local levels and depends on the financial resources and individual policies of  

Trump knows how to read the crowd but hasn’t learned to govern – New York Post

1 Share

New York Post
Trump knows how to read the crowd but hasn’t learned to govern
New York Post
As President Trump enters the stretch run of his first year in office, two big things are clear. He has not lost his remarkable instinct for reading the public mood, but neither has he found a way to harness that instinct into a successful governing and more »

How the Trump Team’s First Military Raid Went Wrong

1 Share
LAUDERDALE-BY-THE-SEA, FLORIDA — Surely the most memorable moment from President Trump’s first address to a joint session of Congress, and to the nation, came in his tribute to Ryan Owens, a fallen Navy SEAL.
“Ryan died as he lived, a warrior and a hero, battling against terrorism and securing our nation,” the President said on Feb. 28. The SEAL’s tearful widow, Carryn Owens, sat in the place of honor above the chamber.
Chief Petty Officer Owens, a 36-year-old father of three, was indeed a warrior, experienced and combat-proven, the most elite of the elite, and a long-time member of SEAL Team 6.
“Ryan’s legacy is etched into eternity,” President Trump continued, turning to look up at Ryan’s grieving widow.
Image: US-POLITICS-TRUMP-CONGRESS“Thank you.”
A gold star family member as guest of the White House. A presidential call out. The heartfelt applause and the raw emotions.
Watch Cynthia McFadden on Sunday Today for More
The scene was a time-honored ritual, a public tribute to the price paid by a warrior and his family. What made it unusual, however, was how Ryan Owens died. His death came just days into the new administration, in a country virtually unknown to the American public, on a troubled mission approved and ordered by a team that had never worked together before, for a purpose that Owens’ own father, a former special operator himself, questions.
“It was a screw-up from the start that ended badly,” Bill Owens told NBC News in an exclusive broadcast interview.
The retired police officer isn’t one to wear his emotions on his sleeve. He’s spent his entire life serving, in the Army as a green beret, in the Navy, and as a policeman in Florida, where he’s now retired.
But Bill Owens has severe doubts that his son or anyone else should have been in the line of fire that January night.
Image: William Owens holds a photo of his youngest son Navy SEAL William "Ryan" Owens in Lauderdale by the Sea, Florida.“Why did they do this mission at this time?” he asked.
The father is distressed that the Trump administration has insisted the mission was an unbridled success.
He is frustrated that the White House has asserted that anyone who questions the success of the mission is doing a disservice to the memory of his son. And he particularly resents the White House using his son’s death for political purposes.
Related: SEAL, American Girl Die in First Trump-Era U.S. Military Raid
In an extensive interview with NBC News, Bill Owens said as far as he is concerned there was no need for President Trump to burnish Ryan’s legacy. “I know how wonderful [Ryan] is, so I don’t need that reaffirmation from the president,” Owens said. But more importantly, he said, “I feel that somebody has to stick up for Ryan — and find out why this happened. And — I’m his father. And I’ll do it.”
So what did happen? Over the past eight months, NBC News has spoken to more than two dozen officials and special operations insiders to piece together the facts of this Top Secret mission.

The Raid on Yakla

Chief Petty Officer Owens was killed the night of Jan. 29 in a small village deep in the interior of southern Yemen, an ancient nation on the Arabian Peninsula, and one that has been in a state of civil war for two and a half years. Yemen is also home to al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), the terror group’s strongest affiliate, which has acquired arms and money as the country has descended into chaos.
Image: Ryan Owens, left, with his father Bill Owens.In early 2016, U.S. intelligence grew increasingly alarmed by the gathering strength of AQAP, and the Obama administration began deliberating a new counterterrorism “campaign” to weaken it. The campaign included accelerated drone strikes and even manned airstrikes, as well as ground raids.
SEAL Team 6 rotated elements into the region every six months, and was sequestered for the high-end kill-or-capture missions in places like Somalia and Uganda. The highly capable and in-demand “national mission force,” requiring Presidential approval to attack, had previously conducted a single stealthy raid inside Yemen, a failed hostage rescue mission in late 2014. In 2016, U.S. special operations forces also worked alongside forces of the United Arab Emirates and Yemen to retake control of coastal communities that had fallen under the control of AQAP.
In late 2016, as the Obama administration deliberated next steps in the country a new campaign plan was created. But it deferred a final decision, and as is customary in any handoff from one administration to another, President Trump was accorded the privilege of approving any new operations and commitments.
Image: Ryan OwensOne day after being sworn in, Secretary of Defense James Mattis was briefed on Yemen. While Washington was in transition, forces in the region continued planning. A Special Operations Task Force overseeing SEAL Team 6 prepared a series of raids on AQAP strongholds and leaders, even rehearsing operations in the nearby country of Djibouti, on the Horn of Africa.
A specific raid was proposed. A small and isolated village where AQAP had congregated had been identified. U.S. intelligence, working with the UAE, concluded that important activity was taking place there. According to two officials in the Trump White House, the Special Forces of the UAE and the United States had increasingly been working together, and a coordinated raid on the village of Yaklawas proposed.
Related: Inside the Yemen SEAL Raid
Officially, the mission was labeled a sensitive site exploitation (SSE), a raid to capture electronics and documents that would reveal AQAP membership and concentrations. The plan was to then exploit that material and stage rapid follow-on strikes, according to multiple military and special operations experts.
Unofficially, and highly secret, even from many inside the Pentagon, was the far more sensitive kill-or-capture mission to go after AQAP leaders. Under the Obama administration, no explicit capture mission had ever been approved, the sources say. And, according to multiple special operations sources, it was highly secret that the national mission force would work hand-in-hand with a foreign counterpart, even in support of UAE objectives as opposed to American unilateral “high value target” kill missions. In addition, Yemen was what the national security community called “outside of a declared theater of war,” where the legality and implications of operations were far more sensitive.
Secretary Mattis supported the mission as presented to him, and the new Trump national security team met for the first time on the night of Jan. 25 to consider it. Present were the president, Vice President Pence, Mattis, then-National Security Advisor Michael Flynn, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Joseph Dunford, CIA Director nominee Mike Pompeo, chief strategist to the President Steve Bannon, and presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner. Absent was any representative of the State Department, a departure from common practice in past administrations of both parties.
Over dinner, they discussed an upcoming raid to occur that very weekend.

Yemen Raid Latest: Still No Valuable Intel Produced, Ten Senior Officials Say 2:04
autoplay autoplay

“It’s certainly unusual,” said NBC News consultant Sean Naylor. “You don’t often hear about major combat actions being approved over a meal…”
Naylor is one of the country’s leading experts on the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), the national mission force made up of SEAL Team 6 and the Army’s Delta Force as well as other highly-prized counterterrorism elements.
Under the Obama administration, sources say, a mission of this sort would have been discussed and approved at multiple levels subordinate to the principals before being briefed inside the secure White House Situation Room.
Two White House sources tell NBC News that Mattis and Dunford walked the new president through the mission objectives in the dining room, offering unreserved endorsement. If AQAP leaders were present, there was a chance for a big win; if not, the presence of leadership in the past and the potential intelligence take on the ground promised at least a fruitful site exploitation that would lead off a series of follow-on raids.
According to the two sources, both Steve Bannon and Jared Kushner questioned acting on what they saw as a leftover Obama plan.
President Trump was disposed to approve the mission, but the next morning, he asked Flynn what he thought before he signed the so-called execute order or EXORD.
According to two White House officials, Flynn told the President that a tip from the UAE indicated that one of the most wanted terrorists in the world, Qasim al-Rimi, the leader of AQAP, might be at the Yemen target. He had been sighted there previously.
It wasn’t unusual for Mr. Trump to rely on Flynn for advice. The President had gotten to know his national security advisor over months of close quarters on the campaign trail. And he was uniquely qualified to offer judgment. Flynn had himself served as director of intelligence for the JSOC. He had reached out to his former colleagues at Ft. Bragg in North Carolina to gather his own intelligence on the upcoming mission both before and after Trump’s inauguration, sources say. And, according to multiple sources, he had himself spoken to his UAE counterparts.
Flynn said that capturing or killing al-Rimi would distinguish the president from Obama right out of the box, the sources said. Trump would be a risk taker where Obama was a hesitant and endless deliberator, Flynn said. And the president would be honor the Gulf allies who were operating in Yemen. Multiple sources say that Flynn labeled the first week raid a “game changer.”
On Jan. 26, the day after the mission was greenlighted at the dinner, Ryan Owens’ team of Navy SEALs, staged from Djibouti to the ships of the USS Makin Island amphibious readiness group operating off the coast. Onboard the ships were a 2,200 strong Marine Corps battalion task force as well as fighter aircraft and attack helicopters that would serve as a Quick Reaction Force should something go wrong. The SEALs and the Marines had been practicing together since December for a possible boots on-the-ground Yemen raid. Also present, according to multiple sources, were commandos and intelligence specialists of the UAE.
Just after midnight on Jan. 29, the force swooped into the village. SEAL Team 6 landed five miles downhill from the objective. The SEALs would hike to the village in silence, and surprise the AQAP element there.
But as the SEALs neared the outskirts, there was trouble. Overhead drones and spy planes detected unusual activity indicating the mission might have been compromised.
Related: Still No Actionable Intelligence From Yemen Raid
“Overhead surveillance of the target revealed individuals moving to fighting positions,” Naylor said.
The Special Operations Task Force headquarters in Djibouti and the command element still on board the Makin Island ships knew simultaneously that the element of surprise was lost. We may never know what the discussion was, nor who ultimately made the decision, but commanders discussed the risk versus the payoff and decided to proceed.
Entering the village, the SEALs met fierce and unexpected resistance. Land mines and defensive positions were prepared. Even women took up arms. Within the first five minutes of the firefight, Ryan Owens was mortally wounded, hit with a bullet just above his armored breast plate. A MEDEVAC element was immediately requested on the radio. In the next few minutes, at least two other SEALs were wounded.
Related: Trump Ducks Blame for Deadly Yemen Raid
Two Marine Corps CV-22 Osprey tilt rotor vertical take-off and landing aircraft were dispatched for the 15-minute flight from the Gulf of Aden. Additional Marine Corps AV-8B Harrier jump jets and attack helicopters followed to take on the AQAP force.
But then disaster struck again. One of the two Ospreys crashed on landing in Yemen. The Pentagon would later call it a “hard landing,” but the crash was serious enough that one of Harrier fighter jets bombed the crash site to destroy the plane to avoid any sensitive equipment falling into al Qaeda hands.
On the ground, the SEALs continued to battle. Though 14 AQAP fighters were killed, including what the U.S. claims were two leaders, al-Rimi was not at the target. In addition to Owens’ death and multiple American injuries, the unraveling of the mission also resulted in the death of at least 16 civilians, according to U.S. intelligence sources. Ten of those civilians were children under the age of 13, NBC News has determined from official documents verified by U.S. intelligence.
11th MEU conducts Sustainment TrainingWithin 50 minutes it was over. Ryan Owens was dead. At least five additional American servicemen were injured. The site exploitation was also compromised. Sources say because of the injuries, the destruction and the quick exit, the SEALs did not have enough time to collect documents and electronics.

‘There Was a Casualty’

NBC News went to Djibouti to further investigate the decisions made that night. Though we were not able to interview members of the SEAL Team or the Special Operations Task Force on camera, we did talk to Brig. Gen. David Furness, the commander of Joint Task Force Horn of Africa, a Marine Corps officer who oversees the region and includes Yemen in his “area of interest.”
Though he says he had no direct operational role, Furness says he closely monitored the mission that night.
He called what happened “complicated.”
“There was a casualty.”
“I can tell you … that they did everything in their power to prevent loss of life for innocent civilians,” said Furness. But, he said, “[Combat is] a dirty business, especially up close and personal on missions like were performed that night in Yemen.”
Related: No Significant Intelligence Gathered in Yemen Raid
Was the mission crucial? How was it compromised? What was the value of the intelligence gathered at the site?
Sources differ, and Gen. Furness demurred in talking about specifics. It’s clear though,that whatever happened in Yemen might have been chalked up to the tragedy and fog of war had it not been for what happened in Washington afterward..
Within hours of the Yemen mission, White House spokesman Sean Spicer was at the podium declaring the raid a great success.
Image: US-POLITICS-TRUMP-CONGRESS“This weekend we carried out a very successful raid against al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula,” Spicer said the morning of Jan. 30.
He doubled down the next day. “Obviously, we recovered a tremendous amount of information,” said Spicer on Jan. 31.
Criticism mounted.
And then Sen. John McCain, chairman of the Armed Services Committee, was briefed on the mission He went public to challenge the administration’s characterization.
“When you lose a $75 million airplane and, more importantly, an American … life is lost and [there are] wounded I don’t believe that you can call it a success,” the Arizona Republican told NBC News.
The White House shot back.
“I think anybody who, who undermines the success of that raid …owes an apology and a disservice to the life of Chief Owens,” Spicer offered.
Watching at home in Florida, Bill Owens grew disgusted.
“Don’t hide behind the death of my son to try and justify that this raid was a success,” he told NBC News. “Because it wasn’t.”
Little official information was forthcoming on the mission or Ryan’s death.
On Monday, Feb. 27, NBC Nightly News reported that the Yemen raid had “yielded no significant intelligence.”
The next morning, President Trump appeared on Fox and Friends, offering an odd description for a mission that he as commander-in-chief had approved.
“Well this was a mission that was started before I got here. This was something that was, you know, just, they wanted to do,” Trump said.

McCain Explains Why He Wouldn’t Label Yemen Raid A Success 0:26
autoplay autoplay

“They explained what they wanted to do, the generals, who are very respected. My generals are the most respected that we’ve had in many decades, I would, I believe,” he added.
“And they lost Ryan.”
“That’s it in a nutshell,” said Bill Owens, recalling the President’s statement that morning, the morning of his address to Congress and tribute to Ryan. “He evidently doesn’t feel responsibility, even though he’s the one that signed off on it and initiated the action. So it kind of speaks for itself. ”
Bill Owens said that he is not “a supporter” of the President. But he also said that “it’s much bigger than politics. … I want to know how [a similar disaster] can be prevented in the future.”
On March 9, a little over a week after the President spoke about the Yemen raid on Fox and Friends and before Congress , the U.S. military commander for the entire Middle East testified at a meeting of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Army Gen. Joseph Votel took responsibility for the Yemen raid, and spoke bluntly.

Pres. Trump Blames Yemen Mission on Obama Administration, Generals 1:37
autoplay autoplay

“I accept the responsibility for this. We lost a lot on this operation. We lost a valued operator, we had people wounded, we caused civilian casualties, we lost an expensive aircraft…”
But Votel also maintained, like the Pentagon and the administration, that valuable intelligence was gathered.
NBC News interviewed Republican Rep. Scott Taylor of Virginia, himself a former Navy SEAL, to put the raid and the controversy into perspective. “Any Gold Star family member,” Taylor said, that is, an American family that has lost a loved one in combat, has the right to speak up and ask questions. “They can say whatever they want … you know … I mean … They have earned that right.”
Taylor believes the Yemen raid provides the nation an opportunity to look at a critical issue.
“What the American people need to know and need to be engaged in is a debate on how we’re using [our] forces” in the war on terror.
Image: Bill Owens kneels at the gravestone of his son, Ryan Owens.“I believe that there’s been sort of an over-use of Special Forces in the past decade,” Taylor said.
Two of the most important questions that came from NBC News’ multi-month investigation are: Why was Ryan Owens’ mission launched nine days after President Trump took office, and what did the mission achieve in terms of weakening al Qaeda?
Bill Owens merely wants straight answers.
The assurances he’s gotten from Washington — that the SEALs gathered intelligence that will save American lives in the future — don’t put his mind at peace.
“That’s not credible,” he said. “Let’s look at it for what it was. Tell the truth.”

Read the whole story
· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·

How the Trump Team’s First Military Raid Went Wrong – NBCNews.com

1 Share

NBCNews.com
How the Trump Team’s First Military Raid Went Wrong
NBCNews.com
LAUDERDALE-BY-THE-SEA, FLORIDA — Surely the most memorable moment from PresidentTrump’s first address to a joint session of Congress, and to the nation, came in his tribute to Ryan Owens, a fallen Navy SEAL. “Ryan died as he lived, a warrior and … 

How a 2012 attack ushered in an era of terror for France – San Francisco Chronicle

1 Share

San Francisco Chronicle
How a 2012 attack ushered in an era of terror for France
San Francisco Chronicle
Beginning in 2012, we entered an age of terrorism, where before we believed ourselves protected. It was a turning point in French history,” Mathieu Guidere, a professor of Islamic studies in Paris and author of “Islamic Fundamentalism.” Merah, who had and more »
Categories
FBI News Review

12:23 PM 10/1/2017 – Judge: FBI can keep cost of iPhone hack secret – Politico (blog) | Wray Installed as FBI Director, Replaces Fired Comey – NECN – FBI – Current News and Selected Articles Review

FBI – Current News and Selected Articles Review
Investigate the Investigators! Save America! Reform the FBI!

Saved Stories – 1. FBI
Moscow reveals cables sent to USSR by British double agent, Europe News & Top Stories The Straits Times
The Trump White House is a really, really strange place CNNPolitics
Mueller Subpoenas Biz Associate Of Flynn’s Turkish Lobbying Client – TPM
Health Secretary Tom Price resigns under fire but other Cabinet members are still taking costly private flights – Los Angeles Times
1. FBI from mikenova (15 sites)
The World Web Times: Black Money and Tax Havens: Tracing the connection between terrorism and offshore financing
The World Web Times: How the Trump Teams First Military Raid Went Wrong NBC News
The World Web Times: Trumps nasty tweets on Puerto Rico highlight masochistic side of his narcissistic personality U.S. News Haaretz.com
The World Web Times: Moscow reveals cables sent to USSR by British double agent, Europe News & Top Stories The Straits Times
The World Web Times: Even in Death, the Spy Kim Philby Serves the Kremlins Purposes The New York Times
fbi – Google News: MSU president: FBI findings undercut ‘good people’ in college hoops – Detroit Free Press
Christopher Wray – Google News: PSA: Aviation regulators ban drone flights near major US landmarks – Ars Technica
james b. comey – Google News: Flip-Flopping on Free Speech – The New Yorker
Andrew McCabe – Google News: Grassroots champions sparkle at Mohawk – Harnesslink
Andrew McCabe – Google News: Mohawk: Bax, Steacy trotters sharp in Ontario Sires Stakes Grassroots finals – Daily Racing Form
fbi – Google News: Mac police joins with FBI team – The Garden City Telegram
fbi – Google News: ‘Different than the $100 handshake:’ FBI investigation into Book Richardson could lead to NCAA probe – Arizona Daily Star
fbi – Google News: FBI: Armored Vehicle Driver Shot Man in Sledgehammer Attack – TIME
mueller – Google News: LETTER Mueller should remain diligent – Observer-Reporter
fbi – Google News: The Week In Sports: The Evolution Of NFL Protests And The FBI’s NCAA Investigation – NPR
mueller – Google News: Robert Mueller Is Using The Foreign Agents Registration Act To Take Down Trump’s Russia Crew – PoliticusUSA
FBI News Review: 5:44 PM 9/30/2017 Justice allows Senate panel to interview FBI officials CNNPolitics CNN Mike Novas Shared NewsLinks
mueller – Google News: Hard work pays off for Oshkosh North alum Mueller – The Oshkosh Northwestern
fbi – Google News: Illinois coach Brad Underwood defends college basketball amid FBI scandal – Chicago Tribune