45РОССИЯ—ASSANGE CHRGD W/ SPYING—DJT IMPEACHED TWICE-US TREASURY SANCTS KILIMNIK AS RUSSIAN AGNT

Arithmetic

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Mueller really with the shyts. He’s handwriting on top of federal documents to make exceptions just for the special counsel. Trump is so done. By the time muellers done half his family will be indicted. We witnessingon of the greatest moments of us history. :wow: Mueller is going to go down as a gawd. Probably could win a presidency if he really tried. God bless that man :ohlawd:
:laff:
 

BigMoneyGrip

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Paul Manafort had THREE passports.





:mindblown:
Special counsel: Manafort’s stated wealth fluctuated wildly; he keeps 3 passports

Special counsel: Manafort’s stated wealth fluctuated wildly; he keeps 3 passports
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Onetime Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort keeps three U.S. passports with different identification numbers and submitted 10 passport applications in as many years, the office of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III disclosed in a new court filing Tuesday arguing that Manafort poses a significant flight risk.


The 17-page filing came one day after Manafort and longtime business partner Rick Gates pleaded not guilty to an unsealed 12-count indictment alleging conspiracy to launder money, making false statements and other charges in connection with their work advising a Russia-friendly political party in Ukraine.

In the first criminal allegations to come from probes into possible Russian influence in U.S. political affairs, prosecutors pressed their case against the two defendants, who face a hearing Thursday to set bail terms. A U.S. magistrate on Monday put the men on home confinement pending that hearing after Manafort, 68, pledged to pay a $10 million penalty and Gates a $5 million one if they failed to appear.

[Ukrainians cheered by news of Manafort’s indictment]

Prosecutors argued in the new filing that they “pose a risk of flight” based on a “history of deceptive and misleading conduct,” the evidence against them, and their wealth and foreign connections.

The incentive to flee is even stronger “for a defendant such as Manafort, who is in his late 60s,” the government observed, noting that he faces a recommended sentence of about 12 to 15 years in prison if convicted, and Gates 10 to 12 years, not counting “related frauds.”

In addition to noting Manafort’s unusual acquisition of numerous U.S. passports, “indicative of his travel schedule,” prosecutors Andrew Weissmann, Greg D. Andres and Kyle R. Freeny expanded on their argument Monday, citing the government’s difficulty in ascertaining Manafort’s wealth.

“Manafort’s financial holdings are substantial, if difficult to quantify precisely because of his varying representations. . . . The full extent of [his assets] is unclear,” they said. Manafort, for instance, reported $42 million in assets in March 2016; $136 million that May; and $28 million and $63 million that August, in two separate financial applications, the government said.:ohhh::gucci:

Gates listed his and his wife’s net worth as $30 million in a February 2016 application for a line of credit, but just $2.6 million in a March 2016 residential loan application.:dwillhuh::pachaha::whoo:

Prosecutors also said that Manafort registered a phone and an email account under an alias in May and traveled with it to Mexico in June, to China on May 23 and to
Ecuador on May 9.:rockwtfusay:

Manafort attorney Kevin Downing did not immediately respond to a request for comment Tuesday evening, but told the court Monday that his client “definitely disagree[d]” with prosecutors using the “ valuation of assets that fluctuate greatly in different countries” to argue against his release.

Separately, outside the courthouse, Downing said, “There is no evidence that Mr. Manafort and the Trump campaign colluded with the Russian government.” Downing called “ridiculous” the charges, which he characterized as interpreting Manafort’s maintaining of offshore accounts as a means to bring his funds into the United States as a scheme to conceal assets.

Local Crime & Safety Alerts

Breaking news about public safety in and around D.C.

Gates’s temporary attorney, Assistant Federal Defender David Bos, declined to comment, saying Gates is arranging for new private counsel.

The new court filing was disclosed after business hours after prosecutors asked — and the court ordered — that portions of the case be unsealed Tuesday.

U.S. Magistrate Deborah A. Robinson had granted prosecutors’ motion Friday to seal the entire case including the indictment and any warrants, and any other related matters, citing concern that disclosure could cause Manafort or Gates to flee or “to destroy (or tamper with) evidence.”

[Here is who is under investigation — and why]

Read more:

U.S. judge bars Pentagon from blocking citizenship applications by immigrant recruits

Thirteen days in the history of the accused leader of the Benghazi attacks

‘Peaches” was a mystery in a Supreme Court case over a D. C.house party but here is who she was.

When is a Facebook ‘like’ a crime?







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:whoo: Mueller bout to get in someone’s ass at the state department and who approved those 2 passports for Manafort :ufdup:
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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House of Cards ain't got nothing on what's going on in real life. Not gonna mean shyt in the end unless Pence was also involved in the collusion.
honestly, I didn't finish the last season of House of Cards for months because reality was TOO wild.
 

acri1

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Republicans will not impeach Trump. Don't wait on it. Those charges on Manafort should have been enough. They will drag and drag, then try to protect Trump. Can't wait until Lindsey Graham and Mitch get that wakeup call. I want Trump to go but those fukkboys Ryan, Mitch and Lindsey need to be exposed. They all dirty millions.

Watch how these guys act when there are open hearings. This fukktard Lindsey talking about other countries when Sillicon Valley was there to talk about Russia.

Now, back to the current events. GP is pivotal now. Trust me he didn't go home lol. He's gonna be the piece that got Assange fukked all kinda ways. You guys keep talking about Trump. What about our racist boy Sessions ? The audacity of that muthafukka to tell prosecutors to give the max for drug offenses. Now, we're about to see how he reacts when he gets the max for treason. ALso, if he's meeting with Trump to discuss Mueller firing, ooooooohhh BABY!!! Lorrrdy!!!

Real talk, GP has been Comey and Obama errand boy for the longest. That arrest must have been fake. If he has all the tapes, :mjgrin::mjgrin::mjgrin:


Now, we're in dangerous times. We're gonna get to see a defensive and paranoid Trump that's gonna be lacking sleep, judgement, intelligence, and self control. Those are dangerous times

Low key I'm really hoping Trump is dumb enough to try to fire Mueller, just to watch the world White House burn
full
 

Dorian Breh

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Yall ain't like that Tad Devine piece, huh? :mjgrin:

Just don't really give a shyt if it's not the administration :yeshrug:

I'm a real lefty, not a neolib, so I'm happy with anyone biting the dust on this but these political consultants been on some shyt forever and still will be even if you clean out Devine, Podesta, Manaforts. In fact it might be more dangerous cuz you figure whoever were the silver medal firms compared to these dudes were just as grimey but even dumber.

On the other hand having dudes in the WH cooperating with foreign adversaries is the shyt that concerns me the most. Those are the articles I'm reading.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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Manafort’s Spending Fails to Impress in Wealthy Enclaves

Manafort’s Spending Fails to Impress in Wealthy Enclaves
By KATIE ROGERS, JACOB BERNSTEIN and ADAM NAGOURNEYOCT. 31, 2017

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The indictment of Paul Manafort, President Trump’s former campaign chairman, included a detailed list of lavish purchases including everything from suits to rugs. Alex Brandon/Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Look closely enough, and the document charging Paul Manafortwith money laundering, tax evasion and foreign lobbying reads less like a 12-count federal indictment and more like the ultimate spendthrift whodunit. It is the kind of tab that could raise the Botoxed eyebrows of Beverly Hills, New York and Washington, all places where dizzying displays of wealth are not abnormal but instead usually the price of admission.

Mr. Manafort, the Trump campaign’s former chairman and — at least for now — its most infamous shopper, spent millions on Range Rovers, landscaping, audiovisual equipment, home improvement and clothing, dispensing money thought to be paid through shell companies to a veritable alphabet soup of dozens of unnamed vendors, including Vendor C, an antique rug store — rugs? — in Alexandria, Va., that accrued $934,350, and Vendor H, a Beverly Hills clothing store that amassed $520,440.

It did not take long for reported names of the vendors to emerge.

On Tuesday at House of Bijan, a Beverly Hills clothing store Mr. Manafort reportedly frequented, Nicolas Bijan said that President Trump had not made it in yet. Photos of the other presidents and powerful men who shopped there lined the walls: George W. Bush and his father, George Bush; Barack Obama; Bill Clinton, who was just there a few weeks ago; Bill Gates and Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Was there a photograph of Mr. Manafort?

“No, unfortunately, not one of Mr. Manafort,” said Mr. Bijan, 26, the son of Bijan Pakzad, the store’s founder. With a sly smile, he would not say whether Mr. Manafort had been a client.

“There is nothing I can comment regarding that, but I would love to show you why we are so expensive and what it is what we do,” he said opening a closet to reveal a display of brightly colored suits, ties, sports jackets, vases of fresh flowers and a few green apples to mark the season. For the establishment’s bargain shoppers, he recommended the tie-and-handkerchief sets, priced at about $950.

The amount Mr. Manafort is said to have spent on clothing at a store in New York — $849,000 between 2008 and 2014 — earned a fair amount of mockery and disbelief online. But at least one luxury retailer on Madison Avenue said that amount spread over six years — an average of $141,500 per year — amounts to a large but not unprecedented annual outlay for a shopper of the 1 percent interested in luxury tailoring and clothes.

“The fact of the matter is, we have many brand enthusiasts who love the made-to-measure process and regularly spend over $100,000 a year with us,” said Sarrah Candee, the senior director of global marketing and public relations for Isaia, the Neapolitan luxury brand, whose suits, most of which sell for $4,000 to $5,000, are a mark of pride among the sartorially conscious. (With their slim-shouldered silhouettes, they are more rakish than the power suits Mr. Manafort prefers.)

Ms. Candee said that Mr. Manafort had not, to her knowledge, been a client, but others who worked with him did not assess his style as discerning. Alan Flusser, the New York-based men’s wear designer and author, said that Mr. Manafort had first been brought to him through Roger J. Stone Jr., an ally of Mr. Trump’s, in the 1980s.

Mr. Flusser said Mr. Manafort “was more into the Michael Douglas-Gordon Gekko imagery than the Brooks Brothers, inside-the-Beltway, button-down look.”

“He was a little flashier,” Mr. Flusser said, “trying to project an aura of power and success.”

Jay Fielden, the editor of Esquire, said Mr. Manafort’s fondness for House of Bijan reminded him of somewhat edgier pop culture figures. “It’s like he watched ‘Goodfellas’ and then found a tailor who could update that particular kind of sartorial razzle-dazzle,” Mr. Fielden said. “You see a guy like that coming at you and you know he’s either going to shoot you or sell you something.”

Document
Read the Charges Against Paul Manafort and Rick Gates
Paul Manafort, President Trump's former campaign chairman, was indicted on charges including conspiracy, money laundering and other charges. Mr. Manafort's business associate, Rick Gates, was also charged.


OPEN Document

Reports of Mr. Manafort’s spending made their way to Alexandria, where shopkeepers on Tuesday flitted from store to store to share gossip. Nabi Nasseri, who owns Art Underfoot, an antique rug gallery, said he had never worked with Mr. Manafort. He was not, he said, Vendor C.

Mr. Nasseri said that his shop, which is filled floor to ceiling with about 1,000 silk and woolen rugs, some with prices up to $8,900, could not come close to clearing the price listed in the indictment.

“I’d have a lot more money if he had been” a customer, Mr. Nasseri said.

Across the street, at J&J Oriental Rugs, Joseph Nabatkhorian, the shop’s co-owner, was less welcoming: “I can’t talk about that,” Mr. Nabatkhorian said when asked whether Mr. Manafort had been a client.

Madeleine Mitchell, the gallery director for Doris Leslie Blau Antique Rugs, buys and designs high-end rugs for embassies and hotels. She was skeptical that the rugs were bought purely for show and not to hide money in an expensive item that would grow in value.

“None of my clients would spend $900,000 on rugs,” Ms. Mitchell added, “and they have all the money in the world.”

In the Hamptons, Mr. Manafort’s spending sent mixed signals to real estate observers. Since the early 1990s, a two-plus-acre plot at 174 Jobs Lane in Bridgehampton has belonged to the Manafort family, with a full-size tennis court, half a basketball court, a 720-square-foot outdoor pool, a hot tub and an outdoor pool house.

Diane Saatchi, a broker at Saunders & Associates, one of the bigger real estate firms in the Hamptons, said that a pool house renovation in 2015 and 2016, priced at $420,000, was “a lot of money for a pool house.”:mjgrin:

Of the $800,000 landscaping tab, Ms. Saatchi said that the house did not seem “like a manicured property.”:mjgrin:

“He could’ve spent that,” Ms. Saatchi said, “but close to $200,000 a year seems expensive given the size and style. I’m going to take a wild guess that if he paid that much just to maintain the landscape, he was overcharged.”

Other expenditures seemed in line with what people pay in the area. Perry Guillot, a prominent landscape architect in Southampton, said he was not surprised to hear that the complaint described the Manaforts’ $112,000 in audio and video installation costs.

“That doesn’t get you a home theater with lean-back leather seats, a great projector and a popcorn machine,” Mr. Guillot said. “If we’re trying to put him up with the hedge fund guys, those numbers don’t match that story.”

In November 2016, ownership of the Manafort property in the Hamptons was transferred to Sun Breeze L.L.C. Scott Segal, a real estate lawyer based in Manhattan, said there were a few reasons someone might choose to take that step.

One reason, Mr. Segal said, is that “it’s a way of limiting his liability to the asset.”:mjgrin:






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