And his liabilities statements for 2014-2017 (each is filed in May the following year; value code J = $15,000 or less, and value code K = $15,000-$50,000):
2014: Kavanaugh has 1 credit card with a balance; it’s less than $15k.
2015: 2 cards with balances, each less than $15k.
2016: 3 cards with balances, each between $15k and $50k.
2017: The trend of escalating short term borrowing evaporates. all his credit card debt is gone.
Let’s look at the previous four years.
2010: 3 card balances, each <$15k
2011: 3 card balances, each <$15k
2012: 3 card balances, 2 of them <$15k and 1 between $15k - $50k
2013: 1 card balance between $15k - $50k
Think we need four more years? Let’s do four more years.
2006: 3 card balances, between $15k - $50k
2007: 3 card balances, between $15k - $50k
2008: 4 card balances, two <$15k and two between $15k - $50k
2009: 4 card balances, each <$15k
Kavanaugh had been spreading out what appears to have been a roller coaster balance of revolving debt across up to four credit cards from 2006 until 2016, presumably paying a ton of interest along the way. Then last year it all disappeared. Does that sound like a baseball story?
Another question: If Kavanaugh was in fact reimbursed for a large baseball-related expense (between $45k and $150k?) in 2017, shouldn’t that be reported in the 2017 report’s reimbursements section?
Here are some supplemental entries to the reimbursements section for the 2017 report, again showing nothing Nationals related.
Also notable, Kavanaugh says the $15k-50k TSP (Thrift Savings Plan) loan “has now been paid in full.” He has had that loan outstanding since 2006.
According to guidance on the judiciary’s website, credit card debt isn’t required to be disclosed unless it exceeds $10k on a per account basis. So each of those “<$15k” credit card entries from Kavanaugh above likely represents at least a $10k liability. uscourts.gov/sites/default/…
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A NY state court hearing is kicking off on the NYAG's motion to compel testimony from former president Trump, Don Jr., and Ivanka, who've all moved to quash their subpoenas.
Trump Sr. is represented at the hearing by Alina Habba, a litigator with offices in Bedminster, NJ. Alan Futerfas is representing the adult Trump children; he previously repped Don Jr. before the Mueller investigation, as well as (a long time ago) a number of NY mafia figures.
Futerfas is monopolizing the beginning of the hearing to push the idea that the NYAG's investigation should be treated as a criminal matter, even though the AG's office has no criminal jurisdiction, because (he says) they're openly working hand-in-glove with the Manhattan DA.
News - Mazars has effectively fired the Trump Organization, citing a non-waivable conflict, and determined that Trump's financial statements from 2011-20 should not be relied on, per a letter to Alan Garten filed in court today.
The rest of the letter
I apologize for not including in my initial tweet the cryptic reference to missing information about "the Matt Calimari Jr. apartment" which Donald Bender apparently cannot get for love or money. It's amazing stuff, obv.
BuzzFeed has obtained through FOIA newly unredacted sections of the Mueller report that show the Special Counsel considered and rejected the idea of charging Donald Trump Jr. and Roger Stone with computer crimes. buzzfeednews.com/article/jasonl…
The SCO also looked at charging J.D. Gordon for changing the Republican platform to weaken the language on supporting Ukraine—a live issue back in 2016 as much as today because that war has been going on so long—but the prosecutors decided they couldn’t prove Russian influence.
Reporting has long been that J.D. Gordon told people the direction to change the language came directly from Trump. npr.org/2017/12/04/568…
“Two individuals were arrested this morning in Manhattan for an alleged conspiracy to launder cryptocurrency that was stolen during the 2016 hack of Bitfinex, … valued at approximately $4.5 billion. Thus far, law enforcement has seized over $3.6 billion.” justice.gov/opa/pr/two-arr…
That’s just …. a lot of money for one law enforcement action.
Like, how many surveillance vans will they buy?
DAG Lisa Monaco says it’s “the department’s largest financial seizure ever.”
I feel so strangely disconnected from pretty much the entirety of Covid discourse I see. I thought I’d offer my own testimony in a thread, mostly to see if it’s familiar to anyone else.
In my little slice of the world, when Omicron came in mid-December and testing lines started stretching down the blocks, govt officials were pretty adamant that they would not be reimposing mitigation measures like indoor dining restrictions. But some restaurants closed anyway.
I was planning to fly to California to see my family over the holidays, so I voluntarily cut out a lot of activities—indoor dining, movie theaters, etc.—but no one ordered me to. And obv I could still travel from a place with lots of Omicron to a place with less.