BREAKING: Jack Smith just dropped the report Trump didn’t want you to read.
From scheming to overturn the 2020 election to stashing classified documents at Mar-a-Lago like a wannabe Bond villain, this investigation pulls no punches.
Smith dismantles Trump’s “witch hunt” cries with cold, hard facts and serves up a reality check: justice doesn’t bend to power, politics, or the cult of personality.
Dive into the report that proves no one—not even Trump—is above the law. 🧵
Jack Smith’s report is a masterclass in cutting through the noise and laying down the facts. It tackles two critical investigations involving Donald Trump:
1.Election Interference: Smith delves into whether Trump tried to hijack democracy itself, bending federal laws to cling to power after losing in 2020.
Spoiler: the law doesn’t take kindly to coup attempts.
2.Classified Documents: The second chapter in this saga is all about Trump allegedly hoarding classified documents like souvenirs at Mar-a-Lago, with zero regard for legal boundaries or national security.
Now, let’s cut to the heart of it: Smith doesn’t mince words. Claims of political bias? Laughable.
The guy straight-up says his decisions were driven by justice, not Biden or any other political puppet master.
He’s clear: his team stuck to the rule of law like glue, no matter how messy it got.
The report lays out why charges were pursued or dropped—no politics, no games, just federal guidelines.
Volume One deals with election interference, and Volume Two dives into the classified docs drama.
Some parts stay sealed for now, thanks to ongoing cases involving Trump’s alleged co-conspirators.
Smith also takes a swipe at the circus of public scrutiny, saying his team held firm under relentless attacks, proving what it means to serve justice with integrity.
He doesn’t shy away from reminding us that prosecutors don’t control trial outcomes—they just do what’s right.
Keep up with the latest updates by following my account. Stay informed by enabling notifications – simply click the bell icon beside the follow button. For in-depth analyses, follow @allenanalysis.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Wait, what?! A 20-year-old soldier just got arrested for hacking Trump and Kamala Harris’s phones, selling their records online? And he pulled this off while stationed at Fort Cavazos, with a history in network comms in South Korea?
This isn’t just a ‘tech-savvy’ kid gone rogue—this is next-level infiltration. If someone in the military can breach data this sensitive, what does that say about the security of anyone’s information?
And ‘Kiberphant0m’? Let’s not gloss over the fact that this wasn’t a one-off—he hacked 15 companies, including giants like AT&T and Verizon, selling stolen records on the black market.
Who else is involved, and what’s the larger play here?
🧵
Cameron John Wagenius, a 20-year-old U.S. Army soldier stationed at Fort Cavazos in Texas, has been arrested and charged with unlawfully transferring confidential phone records, including those allegedly belonging to President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.
Operating under the alias “Kiberphant0m,” Wagenius is accused of hacking multiple telecommunications firms, including AT&T and Verizon, and selling stolen phone records on online forums.
Matthew Livelsberger, aka Matt Berg, changed his Signal safety number before the explosion—and then his photo and safety number changed again after the explosion.
Think about that: one change could be coincidence, but two? That’s coordination.
This isn’t just a loose thread; it’s a flashing neon sign that someone else could be pulling the strings.
Time to stop looking at this as an isolated incident and start asking the hard questions.
Who was he working with, and why?
This is a huge red flag and requires immediate scrutiny.
The fact that Matt Berg’s Signal safety number changed twice—once before the explosion and again after—points to something beyond a mere coincidence.
Signal safety number changes usually happen when a device is replaced or reinstalled, meaning this suggests coordination or external interference.
Here’s what we need to focus on:
Timing: The changes around such a significant event imply intent. Was this planned, and who else might be involved?
Network: If his account shows signs of activity or modification after the explosion, who has access to his devices or accounts?
Motive: Why were these changes made, and what does this suggest about external influence or partnerships?
Boeing, once the golden standard of aviation, now finds itself grounded—not just by faulty planes but by a culture of greed and negligence.
In its quest to slash costs, the company outsourced the development of critical software for the 737 Max to engineers paid a disgraceful $9 an hour.
These weren’t seasoned experts; they were the cheapest labor money could buy, and it showed.
🧵
At the heart of this disaster was the MCAS system, a ticking time bomb masquerading as innovation.
Poorly designed and inadequately tested, it wrestled control from pilots, sending planes into fatal nosedives.
Instead of owning the problem, Boeing doubled down on secrecy, keeping pilots and regulators in the dark.
Internally, Boeing gutted its engineering core, trading expertise for bottom-dollar contractors.
The ripple effects were devastating: delays, defects, and deadly mistakes became the norm.
The company’s obsession with appeasing shareholders wasn’t just a 737 Max problem—it spilled into every corner, from the Starliner space capsule to the Dreamliner jet.
Only in Vivek Ramaswamy’s America can a $5 million Alzheimer’s drug get a shiny rebrand, a hype-fueled $2.2 billion valuation, and then crash in clinical trials—leaving investors holding the bag.
Forget innovation; this was a calculated grift, and $2 billion in lost value is his real legacy.
🧵
Vivek Ramaswamy, founder of Axovant Sciences, acquired an experimental Alzheimer’s drug, intepirdine, from GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) in December 2014 for $5 million.
GSK had previously discontinued the drug after it failed four clinical trials.
Under Ramaswamy’s leadership, Axovant rebranded intepirdine and, in June 2015, launched an initial public offering (IPO) that raised $315 million, valuing the company at approximately $2 billion.
BREAKING: The House Ethics Committee’s report on Matt Gaetz is OUT! It is a damning exposé of unchecked privilege and power run amok.
Tens of thousands of dollars paid for sex, drugs, and indulgence—not just a gross betrayal of public trust, but a direct slap in the face to every hardworking American struggling under the weight of a system rigged for the elite.
Gaetz’s obstruction and refusal to cooperate only underline the rot.
And let’s not forget the Department of Justice, dragging its feet at every turn, shielding a man who weaponized his office for personal gratification.
This isn’t just about Gaetz—it’s about a system that protects the powerful at the expense of accountability.
If we don’t demand better, we’re complicit in the decay. 🧵
1. Paying for Sex and Drugs
Matt Gaetz didn’t just abuse his position—he turned it into his personal playground of exploitation.
Over 20 payments, tens of thousands of dollars, funneled through Venmo, PayPal, and CashApp, paid for sex and drugs.
Among his “recipients”? A 17-year-old girl, handed $400 after two sexual encounters at a 2017 party.
Witnesses detailed a 2018 Bahamas trip where group sex served as payment for his gifted flights and accommodations—all while Gaetz indulged in ecstasy and cocaine.
This isn’t just depravity—it’s power wielded without consequence.
2. Connection to Joel Greenberg
Matt Gaetz’s enabler-in-chief, Joel Greenberg—a convicted sex trafficker—acted as the gateway to Gaetz’s predatory escapades.
Using the sugar dating site SeekingArrangement.com, Greenberg lined up women for Gaetz, turning exploitation into a coordinated operation.
Text messages and financial records reveal Greenberg even worked with Gaetz’s then-girlfriend to orchestrate these so-called “dates.”
This wasn’t a series of isolated incidents—it was a carefully managed system of abuse, funded by Gaetz and facilitated by Greenberg.