VAN GRACK’S NEW GIG: Brandon Van Grack, the first-ever head of the Justice Department’s FARA office and a lead prosecutor for special counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation, has left DOJ after more than a decade to politico.com/newsletters/po…
become a partner at the law and lobbying firm Morrison & Foerster, where he will co-chair the national security practice and handle investigations and white collar defense. — The FARA unit did suffer a handful of prominent defeats in recent years, however. Former President Barack
Obama’s White House counsel, Gregory Craig, was charged with lying to the Justice Department about his work for the Ukrainian government, but was acquitted in 2019. After the department secured a conviction against one of Flynn’s associates, Bijan Rafiekian, a federal judge later
overturned the guilty verdicts. Under Van Grack, the department saw foreign agent registrations soar as it began issuing more advisory opinions to provide lawyers with guidance on when registering was necessary. Most recently, he was Chief of DOJ’s Foreign Agents Registration
Act (FARA) Unit, after serving as a lead prosecutor for Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation of the Russian government’s efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election.
As Counsel to the Assistant Attorney General, Brandon oversaw every criminal investigation involving export control and sanctions and led the DOJ’s response to the Obama Administration’s rollback of sanctions targeting Iran – the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). As a
Trial Attorney, he prosecuted more than 30 export control and sanctions cases, including first-ever cases involving North Korea, weapons of mass destruction, and the Atomic Energy Act. Brandon has also handled the review of transactions before CFIUS and Team Telecom across
multiple administrations. During the Obama Administration, he managed the DOJ’s review of transactions before CFIUS, to include advising on mitigation proposals, and over the last year he led DOJ’s review of transactions involving foreign influence before CFIUS and Team Telecom.
As Chief of the FARA Unit, and the first official to supervise all foreign influence matters across the DOJ, Brandon revitalized and transformed the enforcement of FARA. Following the DOJ’s announcement making FARA an enforcement priority, he supervised a team of 40 attorneys and
staff that opened a record number of investigations, pursued a record number of enforcement actions, secured a record number of registrations, and obtained the first civil injunction involving FARA in nearly three decades. Brandon also directed the review of Lobbying Disclosure
Act (LDA) filings for criminal violations and regulated the exemption under FARA for LDA registrants. As a long-time prosecutor, including as a Special Assistant U.S. Attorney for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia, Brandon directed complex cyber
investigations, including multiple matters involving state-sponsored cyber attacks. He prosecuted the first person convicted as a cyberterrorist and led the investigation of an international hacking group for identity theft, extortion, and dozens of spearphishing attacks against
public and private entities. He also collaborated with other government agencies, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Department of Homeland Security, to facilitate cooperation from corporate victims and disseminate threat
information. Brandon earned his J.D. from Harvard Law School and his B.A. from Duke University. He began his legal career as an associate in the Washington, D.C. office of a global law firm, where he represented clients accused of fraud and violating securities law and
regulations. He later served as a law clerk for the Hon. Thomas F. Hogan, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. Brandon has been widely recognized for his expertise in handling national security matters, and he regularly keynotes and speaks at industry conferences
involving political activities, export control and sanctions, and FARA. He has received numerous awards for his work, including the Attorney General’s Award for Distinguished Service (2018), the FBI Director’s Award for Outstanding Cyber Investigation (2017), the Homeland
Security Investigations Executive Associate Director’s Award for Outstanding Counterproliferation Investigation (2014), and five awards from the Assistant Attorney General for National Security. He was also recognized by DCA Live as a Rising Star of Law, 40 Under 40 (2018).
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Richard Poe is an author who co-authored the book "The Shadow Party: How George Soros, Hillary Clinton, and Sixties Radicals Seized Control of the Democratic Party" with David Horowitz.
In January 1968, Horowitz returned to the United States, where he became co-editor of the
New Left magazine Ramparts.
Its April 1966 cover article concerned the Michigan State University Group, a technical assistance program in South Vietnam that Ramparts claimed was a front for CIA covert operations.
While doing research into America's involvement in
KKR & Co. Inc., also known as Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co was founded in 1976 by Jerome Kohlberg Jr., and cousins Henry Kravis and George R. Roberts, all of whom had previously worked together at Bear Stearns.
Jeff Epstein joined Bear Stearns in 1976 and advised the bank's
wealthiest clients, such as Seagram President Edgar Bronfman, on tax mitigation strategies.
In 1983, Bronfman suggested that "American Jews should abandon their strongest weapon, the Jackson–Vanik amendment, as a sign of goodwill that challenges the Soviets to respond in kind."
While serving on a Senate committee, Rogers examined documentation from the House Un-American Activities Committee's investigation of Alger Hiss at the request of Representative Richard M. Nixon.
Rogers advised Nixon in the slush fundscandal, which led to Nixon's Checkers
A squad operating in a densely populated urban area might need to use a wedge formation to navigate a crowd while simultaneously monitoring for potential threats and using information warfare tactics to counter enemy propaganda.
Tlaib was born to working-class Palestinian
immigrants in Detroit in 1976. She graduated from Southwestern High School in Detroit in 1994, from Wayne State University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science in 1998, and from Thomas M. Cooley Law School with a Juris Doctor in 2004.
Tlaib and
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez are the first female members of Democratic Socialists of America (DSOC) like D-suck to serve in Congress. Tlaib is a member of The Squad, an informal group of U.S. representatives on the left wing of the Democratic Party.
Pentagon Official Removed From Joint Chiefs Of Staff For Anti-Israel Posts
“Along with the World Health Organization and United Nations, we (Department of Defense, Department of State and the U.S. Intelligence Community) consider the dailywire.com/news/pentagon-…
Gaza Health Ministry figures to be generally reliable (though not precise),” he wrote, “but probably less so now than they were originally due to the general destruction and chaos in Gaza.”
The Daily Caller was founded by Tucker Carlson and Neil Patel. After raising $3 million
in funding from businessman Foster Friess.
Friess trained to be an infantry platoon leader and served as the intelligence officer for the 1st Guided Missile Brigade at Fort Bliss, Texas.
Although these men were initially "pretty much kept on ice", resulting in the
Qassem Soleimani airstrike: Ring from corpse identified Iran's top general
The vehicle was struck by at least two missiles fired from a US MQ9 Reaper drone. nypost.com/2020/01/03/qas…
U.S. National Security Advisor Robert O'Brieninsisted that Soleimani "was plotting to kill, to attack American facilities, and diplomats, soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines were located at those facilities".
O'Brien was the California managing partner of the law firm
Arent Fox LLP for seven years.
O'Brien took office as the twenty-seventh United States national security advisor on September 18, 2019. President Trump appointed O'Brien to succeed John Bolton, who resigned earlier that month.