@HansMahncke Another Russiagate acolyte slithered out of the woodwork the day after the warrant was signed and two days before it became public. Peter Strzok posted four times on 8/6 “Russiagate was not a hoax.” Then he tweeted this:
@HansMahncke “The plain truth of the matter is the Trump presidency was the biggest counterintelligence disaster in the nation's history. It began during the campaign and didn’t end when he left office.
It included Russia but also the UAE, PRC, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Ukraine, and more.”
@HansMahncke All on 8/6, the day after the warrant was signed. Was this the [Trump/Russia Collusion] Empire Strikes Back?
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Everyone should read this latest article by @ProfMJCleveland concerning the raid on Mar-a-Lago. She makes a compelling case that this was all about an effort to “get Trump.” thefederalist.com/2022/08/15/fro…
Yet to be determined is whether there were any motives in addition to getting Trump. Many pundits, including Andy McCarthy, maintain that the overly broad, probably illegal warrant was a pretext for a fishing expedition to find evidence to support charges against Trump for J6.
That would be a component of the effort to get Trump, but it goes beyond documents and a trumped up obstruction claim.
I would add that if Spygate documents that Trump declassified were among those sought in the warrant, the DOJ could have a problem with the warrant. Full disclosure to the court would require that the judge be told about Trump’s claim, supported by documents,of declassification.
In the face of such disclosures, I can’t imagine on any judge signing off on a warrant to seize the documents Trump believed he had declassified. The response would be “DOJ, if you believe Trump is legally wrong about the classification status, a subpoena should be used.”
The Fauci-Birx legacy: “It would have been impossible for an enemy agent armed with anything less than nuclear weapons to have inflicted so much damage on America’s economy, social fabric, and historical freedoms in such a short period of time.”
AG Garland announces federal charges against cops who swore out a warrant to search Breonna Taylor’s apartment, a search that ended in her death:
The federal charges against detective Joshua Jaynes, former Louisville detective Kelly Goodlett and sergeant Kyle Meany allege they violated Taylor's Fourth Amendment rights when they sought a warrant to search Taylor's home while knowing they lacked probable cause,…
… and that they knew their affidavit supporting the warrant contained false and misleading information and omitted other material information, resulting in her death.”
What the holy hell? In 2014 there was an Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone. The country ordered a full “Ebola lockdown,” essentially adopting the failed Chinese model to stop a pandemic by shutting down everything. It didn’t work, which most epidemiologists at the time would predict
Now here’s the weird thing: There appeared on Twitter literally millions of posts by bots touting and promoting the great and beneficial “Ebola lockdown” in a country that had never had a lockdown before. And where less than 5% of the residents even had access to the internet.
@SergeiMillian and @HansMahncke have been tweeting about the FBI trying to smear Million with an anonymously sourced news article on January 24, 2017, which came out shortly before Igor Danchenko was to be interviewed by the FBI.
The article falsely reports that Millian was Source E in the Steele dossier, responsible for the phony claims of a conspiracy between Trump and Russia, with Carter Page as an intermediary. There’s another interesting piece to this story that took place at Danchenko’s interview.
According to the indictment charging Danchenko with lying to the FBI, Danchenko lied to the FBI about Millian being a source. But the indictment is silent on the fact that the FBI was leaking that false narrative to the press, even before Danchenko showed up and told them.