5:27 AM 1/23/2019 - Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks℠ The Jewish Mafia & Their USA Bankers Two years of Donald Trump as president – in pictures | Art and design Where the Novichok that almost killed a former Russian intelligence officer in the UK was produced Russian spy chief met Saudi counterpart and Crown Prince - Ifax Bijan Rafiekian, Michael Flynn associate, pleads not guilty to working as unregistered foreign agent – Stock Standard BuzzFeed comes out swinging with mountain of evidence about Trump Tower Moscow



Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks℠ 
The Jewish Mafia & Their USA Bankers
Two years of Donald Trump as president – in pictures | Art and design
Where the Novichok that almost killed a former Russian intelligence officer in the UK was produced
Russian spy chief met Saudi counterpart and Crown Prince - Ifax
Bijan Rafiekian, Michael Flynn associate, pleads not guilty to working as unregistered foreign agent – Stock Standard
BuzzFeed comes out swinging with mountain of evidence about Trump Tower Moscow
Supreme Court releases censored appeal by foreign government in mystery Mueller case
Shutdown has ‘hindered’ FBI’s ability to conduct operations, union says | US news
Yes, There Was Collusion. Look at the Manafort Case - Mother Jones
How did we get to a place where the FBI wondered if an American president was a Russian asset? - Bangor Daily News
Compromise: Before Trump Won His First Primary, Putin Collected His First Receipt
The three intersecting threads linking Trump’s campaign to Russian intelligence - The Washington Post
How did we get to a place where the FBI wondered if an American president was a Russian asset? — Contributors — Bangor Daily News — BDN Maine
How did we get to a place where the FBI wondered if an American president was a Russian asset? - Bangor Daily News
Is the mysterious foreign-government-owned company Russian Sberbank? - Google Search
Is the mysterious foreign-government-owned company Russian Sberbank? - Google Search
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Is the mysterious foreign-government-owned company Russian Sberbank? - Google Search
Is the mysterious foreign-government-owned company Russian Sberbank? - Google Search
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11:41 AM 1/22/2019 - Trump News Review – Saved Stories: How social media platforms enable politicians to undermine democracy - Vox | Could A Slew Of New Congressional Investigations Erode Trump’s Approval Rating? - FiveThirtyEight | Blumenthal On Giuliani
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Michael Novakhov - SharedNewsLinks℠ 
The Jewish Mafia & Their USA Bankers
Wed, 23 Jan 2019 04:08:15 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from Real Jew News.


THE JEWISH MAFIA AND THEIR USA BANKERS
By Brother Nathanael Kapner - Copyright 2008-2011
All Articles May Be Reproduced Only With Authorship of Br Nathanael Kapner
& Link To Real Jew News
Articles May Be Reproduced Only With Authorship of Br Nathanael Kapner
& Link To Real Jew News®
Support Brother Nathanael! HERE

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Or Send Your Contribution To:
Brother Nathanael Kapner; PO Box 547; Priest River ID 83856
E-mail: <a href="mailto:bronathanael@yahoo.com">bronathanael@yahoo.com</a>
Sources: The Jewish Laundry of Drug Money, Israel Shahak; Red Mafiya: How the Russian Mob Has Invaded America, Robert I. Friedman.

“FREE SOVIET JEWRY!” was a slogan plastered all over America by the Jews from 1970 to the year 2000.
What the slogan really meant was, “Let Jewish criminals from Soviet Russia flood American shores.”
The late Senator Henry Jackson, who was bought by the Jews, spearheaded in his 1974 Jackson-Vanik Amendment, the Jewish agenda to tie trade agreements between the US and the Soviet Union to “freeing” Jews Soviet persecution.
What the Jewish Media did not tell Americans was that the Jews were the originators of the Soviet system, its prime beneficiaries, and its prime persecutors of Russian Christians.
Word soon got around that there was a “Russian Mob” in America. But no one dared say that the “Russian Mob” was in fact a bunch of “Russian Jewish Criminals.”
UNCOVERING THE RUSSIAN JEWISH MAFIA WILL GET YOU KILLED
The major figure in uncovering theRussian Jewish Mafia in America was a journalist named Robert I. Friedman who died in 2002 at the age of 51 from a so-called “tropical disease.”
In his book, Red Mafiya: How the Russian Mob Has Invaded America, Friedman interviewed major underground Russian Jewish figures and uncovered their criminal activities in the USA.
After Friedman’s book was published, Russian Jewish Mafia leaders put a bounty on his head for $100,000. The Russian Jewish Mafia knows that it can murder with impunity given their working relationship with European and American intelligence agencies. Even the FBI in America keeps no files on the activities of the Russian Jewish Mafia.
In fact, the FBI, according to Friedman, is loathe to go after Russian Jewish mafia figures because of intense pressure, (and $$$ to key officials), from the Anti Defamation League (ADL). The ADL persuaded the FBI to call off investigations saying that it would “foster anti-Semitism” and bias Americans against genuine “Soviet-refugees.”
MAJOR RUSSIAN JEWISH MAFIA FIGURES
Marat Balagula: Born in 1943 in Odessa Ukraine. Amassing a large fortune in the Soviet black market, Balagula at the age of 37 moved from Odessa to NYC under the Jackson-Vanik Amendment.
Balagula opened up a restaurant in the Brighton Beach Brooklyn area and named it “The Odessa.” Soon Marat Balagula had hundreds of Russian Jewish “employees” who had nothing to do with his restaurant business.
~ The restaurant became the headquarters for jewelry fencing, Medicare Fraud, prostitution, heroin imports from poppy fields in Chernobyl, and illegal gasoline distributorships which evaded NY taxes for which Balagula was later indicted but avoided long term incarceration.
Semion Mogilevich: Born in 1946 in Kiev Ukraine. In the early 1970s he became part of the Lyubertskaya crime group in Moscow. Just prior to this, Mogilevich had built a lucrative prostitution ring in Israel and in Eastern Europe.
Semion Mogilevich’s Moscow criminal organization began in trading art and antiques stolen from churches and museums in Eastern Europe. Mogilevich’s criminal organization soon became one of the largest and most feared in the world, employing a private army of brutal killers.
Mogilevitch began trading in military equipment manufactured in Hungary. Soon Mogilevitch began trading in uranium and nuclear arsenals. NATO has said that he is a threat to the stability of Europe.
Mogelevitch also masterminded the largest money laundering scheme in US history, washing 7 billion dollars through the Bank of New York, one of the owners of the Federal Reserve System. Mogelevitch’s money laundering scheme prompted an investigation by US Congress that led to a dead end. Why a dead end? Jewish $$$ perhaps?
CONGRESS INVESTIGATES THE RUSSIAN JEWISH MAFIA
ON SEPTEMBER 21 1999, Congressman James A. Leach, Chairman, Committee on Banking and Financial Services, led a full scale investigation of Russian Jewish Mafia money launderingthat led to a dead end:
— “Hearing on Russian Money Laundering
The Committee meets for its hearing on the depth of crime and corruption in Russia; Russian use of off-shore financial institutions; and the intertwining of those financial institutions with US banks.
We invited several witnesses but they have declined to appear before the Committee, including: Natasha Kagalovsky, (Jew), former head of the Eastern European Division, Bank of New York; Bruce Rappaport, (Jew), Chairman and CEO of Bank of New York Inter-Maritime; Mikhail Khodorkovsky, (Jew), Russian oil industry executive.
We will begin with an examination of recent allegations that corrupt Russian groups and individuals have infiltrated Western financial institutions. The banks must co-operate with our efforts and be our first line of defense against criminal enterprises seeking to launder their illicit proceeds by entering them into the legitimate financial system.
The US must ensure that our financial institutions do not contribute to or facilitate corruption abroad.” —
For The Full Text See: Click Here
THE RUSSIAN JEWISH MAFIA WORKS WITHIN
THE JEWISH COMMUNITY
The Russian Jewish Mafia operates within the Jewish community. Gentiles must understand that Jews have a common interest between themselves for their self-survival. And it is upon $$$ that the Jews depend.
Thus the Russian Jewish Mafia operates with the support of hundreds of Jewish Lobby Groups that receive millions of $$$ from the Russian Jewish Mafia.
And what can American Christians do about the Russian Jewish Mafia and their Bankers? It begins with the knowledge that not only are the Jews pulling their propagandizing-fleece over American eyes, but fleecing American pocket-books as well!
___________________________________

For More See: “Jewish Bankers & Their Agenda” Click Here

CLICK: Brother Nathanael…Street Evangelist!
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Brother Nathanael @ January 16, 2008
Two years of Donald Trump as president – in pictures | Art and design
Wed, 23 Jan 2019 04:04:28 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from The Guardian.

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Where the Novichok that almost killed a former Russian intelligence officer in the UK was produced
Wed, 23 Jan 2019 03:55:23 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from JAMnews.

Soviet chemical weapons were produced in the Russian village of Shikhany
Shihany settlement. Photo by the Svobodnye Novosti information agency
Since the New Year, the village of Shikhany in Saratov Oblast has lost its status as a Closed Administrative-Territorial Unit; according to statements from representatives of the British intelligence services, it was here they produced Novichok [the agent that, according to the British governmet, was used in the attempted poisoning of former Russian intelligence officer Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia – JAMnews].
Anyone who wants can now visit the hometown of Saratov’s most famous brand. The residents of Shikhany are concerned that now their financing will be significantly reduced, layoffs will begin, and their specialized clinic will be closed.

Poverty is more frightening than chemicals

“The institute was about ten kilometers from here. I try not to go there. The less you know, the better you sleep”, says Sergei Izvekov, a resident of Shikany. The State Institute of Organic Synthesis Technology, which developed chemical weapons during the Soviet era, went bankrupt and officially ceased to exist ten years ago.
We didn’t put too much thought into what, precisely the chemists were doing, even though we lived next door to them. It was dangerous to ask”, Sergei says with a shrug.
Shihany settlement. Photo by the Svobodnye Novosti information agency
When the village was closed, almost all the organizations were directly subordinate to the leadership in Moscow. “The committees from the capital were afraid of travelling here. They didn’t even want to wash their hands under the tap. They’d say, bring us water from [the neighboring town] Volska”, remembers Izvekov. He himself was for some reason not concerned about the ecological cleanliness of the territory.
“For us, it will be a tragedy if they close the medical center. They’ve made cuts to the gynecological and surgical units. During the New Year holidays I was taken to the regional hospital with a suspected case of appendicitis. They fed me porridge made with water. But in our medical center there was always a menu, like in a kindergarten!”
They’re also concerned about cuts to the defense and law-enforcement agencies: without the special status, there’s also no need for people in epaulets. There’s no other work for the men in the village.
The removal of the closed status means a significant reduction to finances – in two years’ time the village will have to live purely on its own income and the oblast subsidies; financing from Moscow will be cut.
Shihany settlement. Photo by the Svobodnye Novosti information agency

They haven’t thought up a replacement

Vladimir Fedosov first saw Shikhany in 1975.
“The local director came to us at the institute. He said, go to an urban-type settlement; your institute will be a little far off, in the woods, but there will be hazard pay”.
Brilliant graduates of the Moscow and Leningrad institutes of chemical engineering gathered at the secret institute. They quickly advanced in their scientific careers. The young families were allocated apartments in what were, by contemporary standards, comfortable five-story apartment buildings.
“We received great goods!”, says Vladimir Fedosov, listing off scarce goods: “Olive oil, tangerines, bananas. I first saw Italian jeans here. They shipped them in and sold them in the shop without any sort of allocation system! In my house I had a long wall dresser, an East-German bedroom, a Polish kitchen, soft, Yugoslavian furniture. In 1986 I received a Vosmyorka from the union, and it had only just come out in 1985! It’s absolutely correct that the Motherland valued our work.”
In the 1990s, after the signing of the Chemical Weapons Convention, it suddenly turned out that the institute’s primary form of work was banned. Residents of Shikhany were not included in the chemical weapons destruction program, for which billions were allocated from the budget. The scientists began to move away. Fedosov was forced to give up his beloved chemistry. Now he works at the vocational and technical school in neighboring Volska.
Thanks to Novichok, the name Shikhany is now known around the world. But this hasn’t brought any good to the village. Almost half the residents are retired. Fedosov’s daughter, like most of the young people born in Shikhany, works in Saratov, and his son works in Astrakhan. “They haven’t thought up a replacement for the institute”, sighs Vladimir.
Russian spy chief met Saudi counterpart and Crown Prince - Ifax
Wed, 23 Jan 2019 03:53:43 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story .

World
The head of Russia's SVR foreign intelligence agency Sergei Naryshkin on Monday met Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, as well as the head of the kingdom's intelligence services, the Interfax news agency said on Wednesday.
MOSCOW: The head of Russia's SVR foreign intelligence agency Sergei Naryshkin on Monday met Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, as well as the head of the kingdom's intelligence services, the Interfax news agency said on Wednesday.
Naryshkin discussed cooperation in the fight against international terrorism with his Saudi counterpart, Interfax cited Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service as saying.
(Reporting by Polina Ivanova; Writing by Polina Nikolskaya; Editing by Andrew Osborn)
Bijan Rafiekian, Michael Flynn associate, pleads not guilty to working as unregistered foreign agent – Stock Standard
Wed, 23 Jan 2019 03:50:11 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from Stock Standard.

By – The Washington Times – Tuesday, December 18, 2018
A former associate of ex-national security adviser pleaded not guilty in a Virginia federal court on Tuesday to charges of working as an unregistered foreign agent.
A trial is set for February 11.
Bijan Kian, also known as Bijan Rafiekian, is accused of illegally lobbying on behalf of the Turkish government to influence U.S. officials. Charges against Mr. Kian and another associate, Kamil Ekim Alpetkin, were unsealed Monday.
Mr. Kian’s not guilty plea came the same day a federal judge in Washington, D.C. delayed ’s sentencing for lying to the FBI. The delay came after the judge lambasted for his crimes.
has cooperated with federal investigators in the case against his two former associates and is expected to testify if there is a trial, his defense attorney said in a Washington, D.C. courtroom Tuesday.
Prosecutors in Virginia say Kian worked “covertly and illegally” to advance the Turkish government’s agenda. Specifically, they sought to influence U.S. government officials, urging them to extradite cleric Fethullah Gulen.
Mr. Gulen has been blamed by the Turkish government for a failed coup attempt in 2016. He has lived in exile in Pennsylvania since 1999.
Mr. Alpetkin is currently evading authorities in Istanbul and is unlikely to appear in court.
Prosecutors say Mr. Alptekin and Mr. Kian hid their connections to the Turkish government through ’s international lobbying group. As part of the effort to conceal Turkey’s involvement, they named Alpetkin’s company as the client rather than the Turkish government.
A prosecutor with special counsel Robert Mueller’s team said Tuesday Flynn could have been indicted in that case had he not agreed to cooperate with the government.
The charges against the two defendants appear to stem from Mueller’s Russia investigation. However, the charges were brought by prosecutors in the Eastern District of Virginia and not Mueller’s team.

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BuzzFeed comes out swinging with mountain of evidence about Trump Tower Moscow
Wed, 23 Jan 2019 03:29:40 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from Palmer Report.


BuzzFeed has had a strange past few days, after it published a report that Donald Trump instructed Michael Cohen to lie under oath about Trump Tower Moscow, only for Special Counsel Robert Mueller to then announce that unspecified details of the report were incorrect. But now the publication has come out swinging with hard evidence about Trump Tower Moscow.

Donald Trump’s attorney Rudy Giuliani tried to take things too far by insisting that Trump Tower Moscow was little more than a myth, and that no plans for the project even existed. As per usual, Rudy’s reckless remarks were quickly shot down. On Tuesday evening, BuzzFeed extensively catalogued the “business documents, emails, text messages, and architectural plans” it’s obtained about the Trump Tower Moscow project. This includes a rendering of what the building would specifically look like, Vladimir Putin’s involvement, and more. So why does this matter?

We still don’t know which specific details Robert Mueller was shooting down when he refuted the original BuzzFeed report. But by Rudy’s own recent admission, the Trump Organization and Russia were negotiating Trump Tower Moscow all the way up to election day, which means that Michael Cohen lied under oath about it. We also know that Donald Trump was directly involved in the project, and that Cohen was therefore lying specifically to protect him.

This leaves only the question of whether there is proof that Donald Trump instructed Michael Cohen to lie, and what that proof is. It’s worth keeping in mind that if Robert Mueller were looking to dispute the claim that Trump told Cohen to lie, he’d likely have said as much in exact words. In any case, it’s more clear than ever that the Trump Tower Moscow conspiracy was very much real, and that Team Trump went to great lengths to cover it up.
Bill Palmer is the publisher of the political news outlet Palmer Report
Supreme Court releases censored appeal by foreign government in mystery Mueller case
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 16:34:05 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story .

Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.
By Associated Press
WASHINGTON — An unidentified foreign government is asking the Supreme Court to get involved in a case that may be part of special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation.
The justices on Tuesday granted the government's request to file a censored version of an appeal to the high court in which the country is fighting a grand jury subpoena and a $50,000-a-day fine for not complying with the subpoena.
The appeal doesn't identify the country, a company it controls or even the lawyers who are representing it. But the appeal says the justices should make clear that a federal law that generally protects foreign governments from civil lawsuits in the U.S. also shields them in criminal cases.
The justices had previously refused to block the subpoena and fine on an emergency basis.
A three-judge panel of the federal appeals court in Washington had in December upheld the issuance of the subpoena and a contempt order issued by a district court judge when the company, identified only as wholly owned by a foreign country, failed to comply.
The country says that the appellate ruling would upset foreign relations in a big way if allowed to stand. It says the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia is "the first appellate court in American history to exercise criminal jurisdiction over a foreign state."
The country says it is immune from being subpoenaed under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act and that complying would require it to violate its own laws.
The U.S. government has until Feb. 21 to respond to the appeal. An uncensored, sealed version of the appeal also has been filed with the court.
Both Politico and The Washington Post have reported that the subpoena apparently relates to the Mueller investigation. Prosecutors have been trying to obtain information from the foreign-owned company since last summer, Judge Stephen Williams wrote in an opinion that was released by the appeals court earlier in January.
The case has been shrouded in secrecy as it has moved through the court system. Federal marshals closed an entire floor of the federal courthouse in Washington last month when the case was argued before the three-judge appellate panel. The move stymied the efforts of a group of about 15 reporters to see whether any Mueller team members or other participants had entered the hearing room.
Shutdown has ‘hindered’ FBI’s ability to conduct operations, union says | US news
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 16:07:17 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from The Guardian.

A union representing FBI agents warned on Tuesday that the partial federal government shutdown has “hindered” the bureau’s ability to conduct operations and pursue investigations. Thousands of union members are among hundreds of thousands of federal workers and contractors now without pay for a fifth week.
As the FBI Agents Association released a report containing firsthand accounts of how the 32-day shutdown has affected operations, its president, Tom O’Connor, demanded Congress and Donald Trump fully fund the FBI.
“The failure to fund the FBI undermines essential FBI operations, such as those designated to combat crimes against children, drug and gang crime and terrorism,” O’Connor told reporters.
He declined to say whether Americans were less safe as a result of the shutdown.
“I will leave that question up to you to answer,” he said.
The union’s plea came as the shutdown continued to affect government services across the country.
The Transportation Security Administration said the percentage of its airport screeners missing work hit 10% on Sunday, up from 3.1% on the comparable Sunday a year ago.
The screeners, who are without pay, have been citing financial hardship as the reason they cannot report to work. Even so, the agency said it screened 1.78 million passengers on Sunday with only 6.9% having to wait 15 minutes or longer to get through security.
In Washington, Senate Republicans released legislation designed to meet Trump’s offer to break the impasse and end the shutdown. The measure would include temporary relief from deportation for young undocumented immigrants known as Dreamers and other threatened groups, in exchange for meeting the president’s demand for $5.7bn to build a southern border wall.
But Democrats have vowed opposition to Trump’s wall, calling it an impractical, “medieval solution” to a “21st-century problem”.
Voting is not expected to unfold until later in the week. Even then it seems doubtful the 1,300-page Senate measure, the “End the Shutdown and Secure the Border Act”, has any chance of passing swiftly.
Senate Republicans hold a 53-47 majority but would need Democratic support to reach the 60-vote threshold for bills to advance. Not a single Democrat has publicly expressed support for Trump’s proposal. Party leadership rejected it before he spoke.
The office of the Senate Democratic leader, Chuck Schumer, reiterated on Monday that Democrats are unwilling to negotiate until Trump reopens the government.
“Nothing has changed with the latest Republican offer,” spokesman Justin Goodman said. “President Trump and Senate Republicans are still saying: ‘Support my plan or the government stays shut.’ That isn’t a compromise or a negotiation – it’s simply more hostage taking.”
McConnell’s spokesman, David Popp, said on Monday that the GOP leader “will move” to vote on consideration of the president’s proposal “this week”.
White House spokesman Hogan Gidley was asked by Fox News on Tuesday if Trump had given McConnell his word he would sign the legislation if it cleared both houses.
“Well, that’s a big if,” Gidley said. “We don’t know what the final bill would look like. But the president has been clear about what he wants.”
On Twitter, Trump wrote: “Never seen [McConnell] and Republicans so united on an issue as they are on the Humanitarian Crisis & Security on our Southern Border. If we create a Wall or Barrier which prevents Criminals and Drugs from flowing into our Country, Crime will go down by record numbers!”
The president has lashed out at the House speaker, Nancy Pelosi, accusing her of acting “irrationally”. House Democrats are pushing ahead with voting on their own legislation to reopen the government and add $1bn for border security – including 75 immigration judges and infrastructure improvements – but no funding for the wall.
The status of the annual state of the union address remains unclear, one week after Pelosi requested that Trump postpone it. On Tuesday, Fox News reported that the White House sent a letter to the House sergeant-at-arms to schedule a walk-through for the address, which is due to be held on 29 January.
Gidley said Trump could deliver the address from another venue if Pelosi blocks him from doing so in the House chamber.
“There are many ways he can deliver the state of the union address,” Gidley said. “I’m not going to get ahead of anything he would announce.”
In his offer to Democrats on Saturday, Trump offered to extend temporary protections for Dreamers and those fleeing disaster zones. On Tuesday, the supreme court said it would not pick up a case concerning Trump’s previous attempt to end protection for Dreamers, meaning they will remain in limbo for the next few months.
Yes, There Was Collusion. Look at the Manafort Case - Mother Jones
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 15:27:10 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from "Manafort" - Google News.

Yes, There Was Collusion. Look at the Manafort Case  Mother Jones
For years now, Donald Trump has been screeching “No collusion!” It's been a hollow cry, because throughout the 2016 campaign (and afterward as president), ...


How did we get to a place where the FBI wondered if an American president was a Russian asset? - Bangor Daily News
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 14:24:30 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from "former FBI agents power influence" - Google News.

How did we get to a place where the FBI wondered if an American president was a Russian asset?  Bangor Daily News
Forget the government shutdown. Forget the Washington power games. It's time to remember what we need from a president.. Maine news, sports, politics, ...
Compromise: Before Trump Won His First Primary, Putin Collected His First Receipt
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 14:19:29 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from emptywheel.

In this post, I noted that, while important, the Buzzfeed story on Trump’s role in Michael Cohen’s lies to Congress did not advance our understanding of  how the Trump Tower deal fits into the larger Trump conspiracy with Russia.
It doesn’t include a number of details that would be more important for understanding how the Trump Tower deal relates to other parts of Trump’s conspiracy with Russians: who (if not Trump himself or Don Jr) was the senior campaign official who knew of Cohen’s negotiations, precisely what Don Jr knew of the negotiations on June 3 when he took a meeting described to be “part of  Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump,” and whether the timing of Cohen’s plans for a trip to St. Petersburg — which started on June 9 and ended on June 14 — related somehow to the June 9 Trump Tower meeting and the June 14 revelation that Russians had hacked the DNC. It’d also be useful to know whether Cohen had any 2016 dealings with Ike Kaveladze, who knew of Cohen from the 2013 business dealings between Trump and the Agalarovs, and who had a curious reaction to a video of him in the wake of the June 9 meeting story breaking. Those are the details that would advance the story of how the Trump Tower deal relates to Russia’s efforts to hack the election.
But there is a piece of the Cohen statement of the offense the significance of which hasn’t gotten sufficient attention. That’s the detail that Dmitry Peskov’s personal assistant took detailed notes from a 20-minute January 20, 2016 phone call with Cohen, which led to Putin’s office contacting Felix Sater the next day.
On or about January 16, 2016, COHEN emailed [Peskov]’s office again, said he was trying to reach another high-level Russian official, and asked for someone who spoke English to contact him.
On or about January 20, 2016 , COHEN received an email from the personal assistant to [Peskov] (“Assistant 1 “), stating that she had been trying to reach COHEN and requesting that he call her using a Moscow-based phone number she provided.
Shortly after receiving the email, COHEN called Assistant 1 and spoke to her for approximately 20 minutes. On that call, COHEN described his position at the Company and outlined the proposed Moscow Project, including the Russian development company with which the Company had partnered. COHEN requested assistance in moving the project forward, both in securing land to build the proposed tower and financing the construction. Assistant 1 asked detailed questions and took notes, stating that she would follow up with others in Russia.
The day after COHEN’s call with Assistant 1, [Sater] contacted him, asking for a call. Individual 2 wrote to COHEN, “It’s about [the President of Russia] they called today.”
Cohen had lied about this, claiming that he had emailed Peskov’s public comment line just once, but gotten no response.
This language is important not just because it shows that Cohen lied.  It’s important because of what Cohen would have said to Peskov’s assistant. And it’s important because a written record of what Cohen said got handed on to Putin’s office, if not Putin himself.
BuzzFeed’s piece from May reveals that Cohen would have been in discussions with one of two banks in January 2016: VTB or GenBank.
Their surrogates in Moscow would be meeting with Putin and a “top deputy” just two days later, and they had financing: VTB Bank President and Chairman Andrey Kostin was on board to fund the project, Sater said in an email.
The bank was a dicey choice. VTB was under US sanctions at the time, with American citizens and companies forbidden to do business with it. Asked by congressional investigators if he knew the bank was blacklisted, Sater responded: “Of course. I wasn’t seeking funding, the local development partner would have. Trump Organization never gets financing from local partners.”
[snip]
New Year’s Eve 2015, he sent Cohen an image of a letter from GenBank — not VTB Bank, as they had earlier discussed — inviting the men to Moscow for a visit.
Just nine days earlier, the US Treasury Department had sanctioned GenBank for operating in Crimea after the disputed Russian takeover. GenBank became the first Russian financial institution to move into the Crimean peninsula.
Both were sanctioned. While Sater (who seems to have knowingly set this trap) dismissed the import of the sanctions, Cohen clearly knew — and left record that he knew in communications with Sater — that they were the intended funders.
A former GRU officer contact of Sater’s was key to obtaining funding from VTB.
This friend is a former member of the GRU, Russia’s military intelligence unit that the US intelligence community believes interfered during the 2016 election.
[snip]
[On December 19], Sater told Cohen that their invitations and visas were being arranged by VTB Bank, and that Kostin, the bank’s powerful president and chairman, would meet Cohen in Moscow. Key to getting VTB on board was the former GRU spy; Sater told congressional and special counsel investigators that the former spy said he had a source at VTB Bank who would support the deal.
Obtaining funding from GenBank would have relied on Putin and Peskov.
Sater told Cohen that GenBank operates “through Putin’s administration and nothing gets done there without approval from the top. The meetings in Moscow will be with ministers — in US, that’s cabinet-level and with Putin’s top administration people. This likely will include Dmitry Peskov, Putin’s press secretary. To discuss goals, meeting agenda and meeting time between Putin and Trump.”
The BuzzFeed article makes it clear that Sater’s GRU contact got back involved after Cohen’s conversation with Peskov’s assistant.
All of which is to say that when Cohen called Peskov’s assistant, he would have told her that he was speaking on behalf of Donald Trump, that Trump remained interested in a Trump Tower in Moscow (as he had been in 2013, the last time Putin had dangled a personal meeting with Trump), and that on Trump’s behalf Cohen was willing to discuss making a deal involving both a sanctioned bank (whichever one it was) and a former GRU officer.
So it’s not just that Trump was pursuing a real estate deal while running for President. He was pursuing a real estate deal involving a sanctioned  bank — possibly one sanctioned for its involvement in Crimea — and involving someone with ties to the intelligence agency that was preparing to hack Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager.
Cohen told Peskov’s assistant Trump was willing to negotiate that deal while running for President. The assistant wrote all that down (how Mueller knows this is an interesting question on its own right). And then she or Peskov passed on at least the content of the notes to get Putin’s office to contact Sater.
And all that happened before Trump performed unexpectedly well in the Iowa caucuses on February 1.
Last year, I argued that — pee tape or no — the kompromat Putin has on Trump consists of a series of receipts of Trump formally communicating his willingness to enter into a conspiracy with Russia, receipts that would be devastating if Putin released them.
Trump and the Russians were engaged in a call-and-response, a call-and-response that appears in the Papadopoulos plea and (as Lawfare notes) the GRU indictment, one that ultimately did deal dirt and got at least efforts to undermine US sanctions (to say nothing of the Syria effort that Trump was implementing less than 14 hours after polls closed, an effort that has been a key part of both Jared Kushner and Mike Flynn’s claims about the Russian interactions).
At each stage of this romance with Russia, Russia got a Trump flunkie (first, Papadopoulos) or Trump himself to publicly engage in the call-and-response. All of that led up to the point where, on July 16, 2018, after Rod Rosenstein loaded Trump up with a carefully crafted indictment showing Putin that Mueller knew certain things that Trump wouldn’t fully understand, Trump came out of a meeting with Putin looking like he had been thoroughly owned and stood before the entire world and spoke from Putin’s script in defiance of what the US intelligence community has said.
People are looking in the entirely wrong place for the kompromat that Putin has on Trump, and missing all the evidence of it right in front of their faces.
Vladimir Putin obtained receipts at each stage of this romance of Trump’s willing engagement in a conspiracy with Russians for help getting elected. Putin knows what each of those receipts mean.
What Cohen’s plea deal makes clear is that Putin pocketed the first of those receipts — a receipt showing Trump’s willingness to work with both sanctioned banks and the GRU — even before the first vote was cast. Even before GRU hacked its first Democratic target (though APT 29 had been spying on the Democrats since the previous summer).
Discussing a real estate deal is not, as Trump has repeated, illegal. If that’s all this were about, Trump and Cohen might not have lied about it.
But it’s not. Even before the GRU hacked John Podesta, even before Don Jr told his June 9 visitors that his dad would consider lifting sanctions if he got elected, Michael Cohen let a key Putin deputy know that Trump would be happy to discuss real estate deals that involved both partnering with the GRU and with sanctioned banks.
And Putin has been sitting on that receipt ever since.
Update: 22-paragraphs into a 1400-word story on the latest developments in the Trump Tower Moscow story yesterday, the NYT revealed the name of the officer, without explaining why the connection is important to the larger story of a GRU-led operation targeting the US election.
One of the people Mr. Sater contacted was Evgeny Shmykov, a former general in Russian military intelligence who once worked with anti-Taliban fighters in Afghanistan. Mr. Sater appears to have seen Mr. Shmykov as a conduit to get Russian government approval for the Trump project.
According to emails reviewed by The Times, Mr. Sater sent an urgent message to Mr. Cohen in late 2015 saying that Mr. Shmykov was on the phone and he needed passport information for Mr. Cohen and Mr. Trump so they could receive visas.
As I disclosed in July, I provided information to the FBI on issues related to the Mueller investigation, so I’m going to include disclosure statements on Mueller investigation posts from here on out. I will include the disclosure whether or not the stuff I shared with the FBI pertains to the subject of the post. 
The three intersecting threads linking Trump’s campaign to Russian intelligence - The Washington Post
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 14:15:31 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story .


Michael Cohen walks through the lobby at Trump Tower, Jan. 12, 2017, in New York City. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)
January 22 at 12:47 PM
Many questions remain about President Trump’s familiarity during the 2016 campaign with a proposed development project in Moscow. Those questions were stoked in recent days thanks to BuzzFeed News’s claim last week that Trump told his longtime personal attorney Michael Cohen to lie about the extent of those conversations — a claim denied by special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s office. The questions were amplified when one of Trump’s current attorneys, former New York mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, claimed over the weekend that discussions about the project may have continued until Election Day. (Giuliani later walked back this assertion.)
Obscured in this discussion is an aspect of that discussion that’s flown under the radar: The involvement of yet another figure with links to Russia’s Main Intelligence Directorate, better known as GRU. This link was highlighted in the wake of recent reporting by journalist Marcy Wheeler, but deserves to be considered in light of the broad range of contacts between the Trump campaign and active or former members of that intelligence group.
We’ve isolated three threads in which people linked to Russian intelligence overlapped with the Trump campaign and Trump advisers over the course of the election. There’s the Moscow development, as above (🏢), the hacking of Democratic targets believed to have been conducted by the GRU (💻) and Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort’s interactions with his longtime business partner Konstantin Kilimnik, who Mueller’s team believes is linked to intelligence as well (🕵️).
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Timeline

June 16, 2015. Trump announces his candidacy.
🏢 September 2015. An intermittent business partner of the Trump Organization, Felix Sater, contacts Cohen to discuss a possible development project in Moscow. Eventually, that conversation includes a proposed trip to Moscow. Sater is a felon who has, at times, cooperated with federal officials in criminal investigations.
🏢 Dec. 13, 2015. Sater emails Cohen to say that he was in contact with Evgeny Shmykov, who would help arrange the trip. Shmykov was at one point a general in the GRU.
🏢 Dec. 19, 2015. Sater again emails to tell Cohen that Shmykov had helped line up a bank with U.S. sanctions against it, VTB, to move the project forward and requested passport information for an upcoming Moscow trip by Cohen and Trump. (The idea? Get a visa through the bank to avoid political complications.) Cohen sends his passport information and pledges Trump’s at a later point.
🏢 Jan. 20, 2016. Cohen speaks with an assistant to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, about the Moscow project after becoming frustrated by Sater’s progress.
🏢 Jan. 21, 2016. Sater emails Cohen to tell him that Putin’s office “called today.” It’s unclear what happened after that.
🏢 Jan. 26, 2016. Sater emails Cohen to ask him to speak with Shmykov by phone. Cohen agrees. At some point afterward, Sater emails Cohen to tell him the trip is “set.” As it turns out, it isn’t.
At some point early in 2016, Cohen and Sater begin communicating using an encrypted messaging platform.
Feb. 1, 2016. The Iowa caucuses take place. Trump comes in second.
💻 March 15, 2016. Hackers associated with the GRU allegedly begin probing the Democratic National Committee network for vulnerabilities.
💻 March 19, 2016. Various members of Hillary Clinton’s campaign are targeted with emails intended to access their network log-in credentials.
💻 March 21, 2016. Hackers gain access to Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta’s email account.
🕵️ March 28, 2016. Manafort joins the Trump campaign to manage the delegate process before the convention.
🕵️ Spring 2016. At some point, both Manafort and his longtime business partner Rick Gates transfer both public and proprietary campaign polling data to Kilimnik, their business associate.
💻 April 6, 2016. An employee of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee accidentally provides her network credentials to the hackers.
🕵️ April 11, 2016. Manafort emails Kilimnik to ensure that a Russian oligarch with whom the two had a long-standing business relationship, Oleg Deripaska, is aware of Manafort’s new position with the campaign.
💻 April 12, 2016. Hackers gain access to the DCCC network.
💻 April 18, 2016. Using credentials stolen from a DCCC employee, the hackers gain access to the DNC network.
💻 April 22, 2016. The hackers steal several gigabytes of material from the DNC network.
April 26, 2016. Campaign adviser George Papadopoulos is informed by a professor linked to the Kremlin that Russia has dirt on Clinton in the form of emails.
💻 May 2016. The DNC and DCCC learn that their networks were compromised.
🕵️ Early May 2016. Kilimnik and Manafort meet in the United States about two weeks before the latter is named campaign chairman for Trump.
🏢 May 4, 2016. Sater tells Cohen he “had a chat with Moscow” and clarifies when Cohen and Trump plan to visit to move the building project forward. Cohen says he’ll visit before the Republican convention in late July and that Trump will visit after. It’s not clear if Shmykov is still involved.
🏢 May 5, 2016. Sater extends an invitation from Peskov for Cohen to attend an event in St. Petersburg in late June. Cohen agrees to attend.
🕵️ May 19, 2016. Manafort is named Trump’s campaign chairman.
💻 May 25, 2016. Hackers access the DNC’s email server.

(Philip Bump/The Washington Post)
June 7, 2016. After Donald Trump Jr. and a Russian developer named Emin Agalarov speak by phone several times (according to Agalarov), a meeting is set at Trump Tower ostensibly to share incriminating information about Clinton.
🏢 June 9, 2016. Sater begins pressuring Cohen to finalize his travel to the St. Petersburg forum, including sending him forms to complete to facilitate his travel.
June 9, 2016. Trump Jr., Jared Kushner and Manafort meet with a Kremlin-linked attorney at Trump Tower. Another attendee is a man named Rinat Akhmetshin, who had worked with the intelligence arm of the Soviet military decades earlier.
🏢 June 14, 2016. After Sater repeatedly texts Cohen, the two meet in the lobby of Trump Tower that afternoon at which point Cohen finally says that he won’t attend the event.
💻 June 14, 2016. The Post first reports on the hacking of the Democratic National Committee.
💻 June 15, 2016. The first document stolen from the DNC is published, an opposition file obtained by Gawker from a hacker later linked to the GRU who referred to himself as “Guccifer 2.0.” Other files are released over the next several weeks.
💻 June 22, 2016. WikiLeaks contacts the hackers to offer to host future leaks.
🕵️ July 7, 2016. Manafort contacts Kilimnik to offer a private briefing on the campaign to Deripaska.
💻 July 22, 2016. WikiLeaks releases emails stolen from the DNC.
💻 July 27, 2016. At a news conference, Trump publicly calls on Russian hackers to release emails that may have been stolen from Clinton’s private email server. On the same day, the hackers first try to access that server.
🕵️ Early August 2016. Kilimnik and Manafort again meet in the United States, this time for dinner a few weeks before Manafort is fired from the campaign.
💻 Aug. 14, 2016. Guccifer 2.0, the hacker believed to be working for GRU, contacts longtime Trump ally Roger Stone over Twitter. The two have a brief discussion over a few weeks.
🕵️ Aug. 19, 2016. Manafort is fired from the Trump campaign after news reports draw attention to alleged illicit payments during his time working in Ukraine.
💻 Oct. 7, 2016. WikiLeaks begins releasing emails stolen from Podesta.
Nov. 8, 2016. Trump is elected president.
How did we get to a place where the FBI wondered if an American president was a Russian asset? — Contributors — Bangor Daily News — BDN Maine
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 14:01:07 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from Comments on: How did we get to a place where the FBI wondered if an American president was a Russian asset?.

It’s hard to know why our reaction has been so muted to news that should shake us to our core.
Blame the nanosecond news cycle, blame social media silos, or blame the sense that all of America is on a slow boil and we just can’t recognize just how hot the pot has gotten.
But let’s take a close look at a recent headline: “FBI Opened Inquiry Into Whether Trump Was Secretly Working on Behalf of Russia.”
Forget the government shutdown. Forget the Washington power games. It’s time to remember what we need from a president.
Federal counterintelligence agents believed there was credible enough information to open a formal investigation into whether the president of the United States was or is a Russian asset.
This is our national reality, not the stuff of an airport spy novel.
The story in The New York Times, published Jan. 11, details that in the days after Trump fired then-FBI director James Comey: “Counterintelligence investigators had to consider whether the president’s own actions constituted a possible threat to national security. Agents also sought to determine whether Mr. Trump was knowingly working for Russia or had unwittingly fallen under Moscow’s influence.”
Such an inquiry is unprecedented in American history. But given the set of facts and circumstances surrounding the president and Russia, it is — and we are astounded to find ourselves in a place in history saying this — unsurprising.
The president’s refusal to acknowledge Russia’s plain interference in the 2016 presidential election. His suggestion that the U.S. should withdraw from NATO. His decision to throw U.S. intelligence officers under the bus in favor of Russian President Vladimir Putin at Helsinki. His decision to pull U.S. troops from Syria.
A day after The Times reported that Trump was put under investigation as a possible Russian asset, The Washington Post added more grist: “President Trump has gone to extraordinary lengths to conceal details of his conversations with Russian President Vladimir Putin, including on at least one occasion taking possession of the notes of his own interpreter and instructing the linguist not to discuss what had transpired with other administration officials.”
This is not how presidents have historically behaved when dealing with the leader of the nation most hostile to our national interests and to the interest of democracy globally.
Putin is an enemy of freedom, an enemy of the alliances that have supported freedom and a man bent on diminishing the forces of freedom across the globe.
America is the beacon of that freedom, its historical defender and the force most responsible for its expansion around the world.
We must have clarity on who our president is, what side he is on, why has he done the things he has done. We have to accept, based on the facts in front of us, that we just don’t know.
And nothing, right now, could be more important.
Our worry is that our country is so divided in this time that we cannot stop and ask ourselves hard questions about the fearful possibility this news should raise.
Who is our leader? And whom is he working for?
Rudolph Bush is deputy editorials editor for The Dallas Morning News.
How did we get to a place where the FBI wondered if an American president was a Russian asset? - Bangor Daily News
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 13:54:11 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from "former FBI agents power influence" - Google News.

How did we get to a place where the FBI wondered if an American president was a Russian asset?  Bangor Daily News
Forget the government shutdown. Forget the Washington power games. It's time to remember what we need from a president.. Maine news, sports, politics, ...


Is the mysterious foreign-government-owned company Russian Sberbank? - Google Search
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 13:49:25 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story .

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Is the mysterious foreign-government-owned company Russian Sberbank? - Google Search
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 13:48:34 -0500
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Tue, 22 Jan 2019 13:47:53 -0500
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Tue, 22 Jan 2019 13:47:19 -0500
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Tue, 22 Jan 2019 13:46:50 -0500
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Supreme Court will let possible Mueller company file papers in secret
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 13:36:51 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story .

Key Points
  • The Supreme Court allowed redacted and sealed court documents to be filed by a mysterious foreign-government-owned company that wants to avoid being forced to turn over information in an investigation that is widely thought to be led by special counsel Robert Mueller.
  • The high court did not rule on the merits of the company’s argument that it should not have to comply with a subpoena issued by a federal grand jury in Washington earlier this year.
  • The grand jury is believed to be acting at Mueller’s request.
GS: Robert Mueller 080625
Robert Mueller
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The high court did not rule on the merits of the company’s argument that it should not have to comply with a subpoena issued by a federal grand jury in Washington earlier this year. That grand jury is believed to be acting at Mueller’s request.
Instead, the Supreme Court said it would allow the company’s application for a stay in the subpoena, as well as for any responses to be filed without the public seeing all or some of the documents.
Several areas of the filing are blacked out, including the names of the attorneys representing the company, and the “corporate disclosure statement.”
But in an unsealed portion, lawyers for the firm that that the Supreme Court “should reverse” a federal appeals court ruling upholding the subpoena “before it upsets foreign relations in a way that an American judicial decision never should.”
“The questions presented in this petition go to the very nature of sovereign dignity and power,” they said.
The lawyers said the appeals court ruling was the first “in American history to exercise criminal jurisdiction over a foreign state.”
“Since America’s founding, foreign states have been immune from American criminal jurisdiction, and yet the United States is not overrun with criminal syndicates backed by foreign states,” the lawyers argued.
The Supreme Court’s decision sets up the possibility that the company will seek to have the case heard by the court’s nine justices in a courtroom sealed to the public.
That would be a highly unusual — and possibly unprecedented — event if the Supreme Court granted the company’s request for a sealed hearing.
However, the high court could also end up rejecting the company’s request that it consider the appeal.
Walter Dellinger, a former acting solicitor general for the United States, told CNBC last week that he was unaware of any past case in which the Supreme Court had allowed a party in a case to file documents asking it to consider a case under seal, or one in which the justices heard oral arguments in a session closed to the public.
The company is currently subject to a $50,000 per day penalty for not complying with the subpoena.
The firm already is on the hook for more than $600,000 in fines after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in Washington denied its bid to quash the subpoena.
In its filing partially unsealed Tuesday, the company says federal law did not authorize contempt sanctions, like the one imposed on it in this case, “against a foreign state.
Grand Jury Subpoena Redacted
Much about the case is unknown, because it has been playing out in courtrooms closed to the public in Washington, and because most of the documents filed in the case have been sealed.
But it is known that the company is “wholly owned by a foreign state,” according to its lawyers, and that it has argued it should be immune from the subpoena for information because complying with it would violate its country’s laws.
The strong suspicion that the subpoena is being sought by Mueller stems from sightings of lawyers from the special counsel’s office being seen going into or coming out of hearings related to the case, and other circumstantial evidence.
A spokesman for Mueller declined to comment Tuesday.
Mueller is investigating Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election that sent Donald Trump to the White House. He also is investigating possible collusion by members of Trump’s campaign with Russian agents, and possible obstruction of justice by the president.
Trump has denied any wrongdoing.
Michael Cohen’s Family: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 13:28:35 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from Heavy.com.

Instagram/Samantha Cohen Michael Cohen, his wife, Laura, and his daughter, Samantha.
Michael Cohen, the former personal lawyer of President Donald Trump, is married with a daughter and son, who both attended his sentencing. He is also the son of a Holocaust survivor.
Cohen’s two children, Samantha Cohen and her brother, Jake, accompanied Michael Cohen to court in New York City on December 12, 2018, where he was sentenced to three years in prison for lying to Congress.
Cohen is alleged to have paid Stormy Daniels, who claims the money was to buy her silence over what she described as an affair with Trump.
Here’s what you need to know:

1. Cohen’s Wife Is From Ukraine & They’ve Been Married for Two Decades

Cohen’s wife, Laura Cohen,  is Ukrainian. In a statement he gave to the U.S. Senate, Cohen said, “My wife and I have been married for 23 years, and are now entering into the season of our lives when we get to watch our children become adults themselves. My daughter, who is at an Ivy League school, and my wife, who is of Ukrainian descent, have especially been subjected to harassment, insults and threats … some so severe I cannot share them in mixed company.”
Cohen also discussed his son, saying, “I was in Los Angeles with my son who dreams of playing division 1 baseball next year at a prestigious university like USC. We were visiting the campus, meeting with various coaches, and discussing his future. Media sources have been able to confirm these facts and I can provide you with proof.”
Cohen owns a series of taxi medallions that might may have played a role in the FBI’s search. They own “at least 34 medallions through 17 LLCs,” according to The Real Deal. According to Buzzfeed, “Cohen, his wife and his in-laws hold a stake in more than 15 colorfully named taxi companies such as Golden Child Cab Corp. and Smoochie Cab Corp.” Buzzfeed reported that Cohen’s father-in-law, Fima Shusterman, “has been in the taxi business for decades, and was charged in the early 1990s with knowingly conspiring to defraud the IRS as part of a money laundering and tax fraud scheme.”

2. His Brother Bryan Helped Run a Financial Company in Ukraine

GettyMichael Cohen, a personal attorney for President Trump, departs from a House Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill
Cohen has links to the Ukraine. His younger brother, Bryan, is also married to a Ukrainian woman. The brothers “were directors of International Ethanol of Ukraine, according to 2006 filings,” Newsweek reported.
According to Buzzfeed, before he became Trump’s lawyer, Michael Cohen “worked on behalf of a company controlled by …Viktor Topolov, a politician whose associates are members of the Russian and Ukrainian underworld.” Buzzfeed reported that Topolov “has also been investigated twice for money laundering and embezzlement,” and owned an ethanol company “with his longtime business partner, Alex Oronov.”
Bryan Cohen is married to Oronov’s daughter, according to Buzzfeed, which added that Cohen insisted he had only played a “small role” in the company. Here is the document that lists Michael Cohen’s ties to the company.

3. Cohen Shared a Controversial Photo of His Daughter Wearing Lingerie

Michael Cohen shared what some considered a cringe-worthy photo of his adult daughter wearing black lingerie. “So proud of my Ivy League daughter… brains and beauty channeling her Edie Sedgwick,” he wrote on Twitter with the photo of his daughter Samantha, then 21.
The tweet caused a firestorm on social media with some people accusing Cohen of being creepy. According to BBC, when a Twitter user wrote Cohen, “Most fathers don’t post lingerie shots of their daughters. I guess #Trump must be rubbing off on you,” Cohen retorted, “Beauty and brains you a-hole! It’s a modeling shot remake from an old Edie Sedgwick photo. #hater.”
On Instagram, Samantha Blake Cohen listed herself as “UPenn ‘18.” With one Instagram photo, she wrote, “My dad made me stand here because I match the wall 🙈.” Her posts showcase a glamorous life. “Another day another Cabernet,” she wrote with one Instagram photo.

4. Cohen’s Daughter Called Him ‘the Best Dad in the Whole World’

On Instagram, Samantha Cohen wrote, “Happy birthday to the best dad in the whole world !!! 🤗💕😘” She captioned another photo, “fam, fam.”
In 2016, she posted another photo with her dad and wrote, “Happy Birthday to the best dad in the whole wide world !!!!!!!!!!!!! 50 never looked so good 😏

5. Cohen’s Father Survived the Holocaust

GettyDonald Trump has called the raid on Michael Cohen’s offices a “disgraceful situation.”
A 2011 profile by ABC News reported that Cohen was raised on Long Island. “His mother was a nurse and his father was a surgeon who escaped a Nazi concentration camp with his family during World War II,” the story reported.
He was first introduced to politics as a child when his parents’ neighbor “invited him to walk precincts with New York Mayor John Lindsay in Atlantic Beach, Queens and Brooklyn,” according to ABC News.
michael cohen father in law - Google Search
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 13:27:59 -0500
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Tue, 22 Jan 2019 12:30:32 -0500
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Trump’s Empire: A Maze of Debts and Opaque Ties
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 12:28:38 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story .

On the campaign trail, Donald J. Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, has sold himself as a businessman who has made billions of dollars and is beholden to no one.
But an investigation by The New York Times into the financial maze of Mr. Trump’s real estate holdings in the United States reveals that companies he owns have at least $650 million in debt — twice the amount than can be gleaned from public filings he has made as part of his bid for the White House. The Times’s inquiry also found that Mr. Trump’s fortunes depend deeply on a wide array of financial backers, including one he has cited in attacks during his campaign.
For example, an office building on Avenue of the Americas in Manhattan, of which Mr. Trump is part owner, carries a $950 million loan. Among the lenders: the Bank of China, one of the largest banks in a country that Mr. Trump has railed against as an economic foe of the United States, and Goldman Sachs, a financial institution he has said controls Hillary Clinton, the Democratic nominee, after it paid her $675,000 in speaking fees.
Real estate projects often involve complex ownership and mortgage structures. And given Mr. Trump’s long real estate career in the United States and abroad, as well as his claim that his personal wealth exceeds $10 billion, it is safe to say that no previous major party presidential nominee has had finances nearly as complicated.
As president, Mr. Trump would have substantial sway over monetary and tax policy, as well as the power to make appointments that would directly affect his own financial empire. He would also wield influence over legislative issues that could have a significant impact on his net worth, and would have official dealings with countries in which he has business interests.
Yet The Times’s examination underscored how much of Mr. Trump’s business remains shrouded in mystery. He has declined to disclose his tax returns or allow an independent valuation of his assets.
Earlier in the campaign, Mr. Trump submitted a 104-page federal financial disclosure form. It said his businesses owed at least $315 million to a relatively small group of lenders and listed ties to more than 500 limited liability companies. Though he answered the questions, the form appears to have been designed for candidates with simpler finances than his, and did not require disclosure of portions of his business activities.
Beyond finding that companies owned by Mr. Trump had debts of at least $650 million, The Times discovered that a substantial portion of his wealth is tied up in three passive partnerships that owe an additional $2 billion to a string of lenders, including those that hold the loan on the Avenue of the Americas building. If those loans were to go into default, Mr. Trump would not be held liable, the Trump Organization said. The value of his investments, however, would certainly sink.
Mr. Trump has said that if he were elected president, his children would be likely to run his company. Many presidents, to avoid any appearance of a conflict, have placed their holdings in blind trusts, which typically involves selling the original asset, and replacing it with different assets unknown to the seller.
Mr. Trump’s children seem unlikely to pursue that option.
Richard W. Painter, a professor of law at the University of Minnesota and, from 2005 to 2007, the chief White House ethics lawyer under President George W. Bush, compared Mr. Trump to Henry M. Paulson Jr., a former chief executive of Goldman Sachs whom Mr. Bush appointed as Treasury secretary.
Professor Painter advised Mr. Paulson on his decision to sell his Goldman Sachs shares, saying it was clear that Mr. Paulson could not simply have placed that stock in trust and pretended it did not exist.
If Mr. Trump were to use a blind trust, the professor said, it would be “like putting a gold watch in a box and pretending you don’t know it is in there.”

‘We Overdisclosed’

“I am the king of debt,” Mr. Trump once said on CNN. “I love debt.” But in his career, debt has sometimes gotten the better of him, leading to at least four business bankruptcies.
He is, however, quick to stress that these days his companies have very little debt.
Mr. Trump indicated in the financial disclosure form he filed in connection with this campaign that he was worth at least $1.5 billion, and has said publicly that the figure is actually greater than $10 billion. Recent estimates by Forbes and Fortune magazines and Bloomberg have put his worth at less than $5 billion.
To gain a better understanding of Mr. Trump’s holdings and debt, The Times engaged RedVision Systems, a national property information firm, to search publicly available data on more than 30 properties in the United States. The Times identified these assets through Federal Election Commission filings, information provided by the Trump Organization and records, such as filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
The search covered thousands of pages of public information, including loan documents, land leases and property deeds. It concentrated on Mr. Trump’s commercial holdings, including office towers, golf courses, a vineyard in Virginia and even an industrial building in South Carolina that he ended up with after a troubled business venture involving Donald Trump Jr. The inquiry also examined some of Mr. Trump’s residential properties, including his penthouse apartment on Fifth Avenue and a house he owns in Beverly Hills, Calif. The examination did not include Mr. Trump’s dealings outside the United States.
That Mr. Trump seems to have so much less debt on his disclosure form than what The Times found is not his fault, but rather a function of what the form asks candidates to list and how.
The form, released by the Federal Election Commission, asks that candidates list assets and debts not in precise numbers, but in ranges that top out at $50 million — appropriate for most candidates, but not for Mr. Trump. Through its examination, The Times was able to discern the amount of debt taken out on each property, and its ownership structure.
At 40 Wall Street in Manhattan, a limited liability company, or L.L.C., controlled by Mr. Trump holds the ground lease — the lease for the land on which the building stands. In 2015, Mr. Trump borrowed $160 million from Ladder Capital, a small New York firm, using that long-term lease as collateral. On his financial disclosure form that debt is listed as valued at more than $50 million.
Allen Weisselberg, chief financial officer of the Trump Organization, said that Mr. Trump could have left the liability section on the form blank, because federal law requires that presidential candidates disclose personal liabilities, not corporate debt. Mr. Trump, he said, has no personal debt.
“We overdisclosed,” Mr. Weisselberg said, explaining that it was decided that when a Trump company owned 100 percent of a property, all of the associated debt would be disclosed, something that he said went beyond what the law required.

Filing Taken at ‘Face Value’

For properties where a Trump company owned less than 100 percent of a building, Mr. Weisselberg said, those debts were not disclosed.
Mr. Trump, for example, has a 50 percent stake in the Trump International Hotel Las Vegas. In 2010, the company that owns the hotel refinanced a $190 million loan, according to Real Capital Analytics, a commercial real estate data and analytics firm.
Mr. Weisselberg said that a Trump entity was responsible for half the debt, and that all but $6.4 million of the loan had been paid off.
The Times found three other instances in which Mr. Trump had an ownership interest in a building but did not disclose the debt associated with it. In all three cases, Mr. Trump had passive investments in limited liability companies that had borrowed significant amounts of money.
One of these investments involves an office tower at 1290 Avenue of Americas, near Rockefeller Center. In a typically complex deal, loan documents show that four lenders — German American Capital, a subsidiary of Deutsche Bank; UBS Real Estate Securities; Goldman Sachs Mortgage Company; and Bank of China — agreed in November 2012 to lend $950 million to the three companies that own the building. Those companies, obscurely named HWA 1290 III LLC, HWA 1290 IV LLC and HWA 1290 V LLC, are owned by three other companies in which Mr. Trump has stakes.
Ultimately, through his investments, Mr. Trump is a 30 percent owner of the building, records show. Vornado Realty Trust owns the other 70 percent and is the controlling partner.
A similar ownership structure is in place at 555 California Street in San Francisco, formerly the Bank of America Center. There, Pacific Life Insurance Company and Metropolitan Life Insurance Company lent $600 million in 2011 to a limited liability company of which Vornado owns 70 percent and Mr. Trump owns 30 percent.
Green Street Advisors, a real estate research firm, estimates the combined value of the two buildings to be about $3.7 billion.
On a smaller scale, Mr. Trump also has a 4 percent partnership interest in a company that has an interest in a large Brooklyn housing complex, and owes roughly $410 million to Wells Fargo, according to Bloomberg data.
The full terms of Mr. Trump’s limited partnerships are not known. The current value of the loans connected to them is roughly $1.95 billion, according to various public documents.
Mr. Weisselberg, the Trump Organization’s chief financial officer, said that neither Mr. Trump nor the company were responsible for the debt associated with the limited partnerships.
Still, as with all of the properties in which Mr. Trump holds an interest, the value of the buildings as well as the terms and magnitude of their debt could have a major impact on his personal fortune.
Mr. Trump, Mr. Weisselberg added, was liable for a “small percentage of the corporate debt” listed on the federal filing but would not elaborate.
Other instances in which Mr. Trump could be personally responsible can be found in public filings. He guaranteed as much as $26 million for the loan taken out against his land lease at 40 Wall Street, money the lender could take if certain things went wrong.
The United States Office of Government Ethics, which reviewed Mr. Trump’s financial filing before the F.E.C. released it, said it does not comment on submissions by individual candidates.
The agency’s procedures for staff members reviewing presidential submissions, a copy of which was obtained by The Times through a Freedom of Information Act request, say the Office of Government Ethics does not audit reports for accuracy.
“Disclosures are to be taken at ‘face value’ as correct, unless there is a patent omission or ambiguity or the official has independent knowledge of matters outside the report,” the procedures say.

A Web of Investments

Tracing the ownership of many of Mr. Trump’s buildings can be a complicated task. Sometimes he owns a building and the land underneath it; sometimes, he holds a partial interest or just the commercial portion of a property.
And in some cases, the identities of his business partners are obscured behind limited liability companies — raising the prospect of a president with unknown business ties.
At 40 Wall Street, Mr. Trump does not own even a sliver of the actual land; his long-term ground lease gives him the right to improve and manage the building. The land is owned by two limited liability companies; Mr. Trump pays the two entities a total of $1.6 million a year for the ground lease, according to documents filed with the S.E.C.
The majority owner, 40 Wall Street Holdings Corporation, owns 80 percent of the land; New Scandic Wall Limited Partnership owns the rest, according to public documents. New Scandic Wall Limited Partnership’s chief executive is Joachim Ferdinand von Grumme-Douglas, a businessman based in Europe, according to these documents.
The people behind 40 Wall Street Holdings are harder to identify. For years, Germany’s Hinneberg family, which made its fortune in the shipping industry, controlled the property through a company called 40 Wall Limited Partnership. In late 2014, their interest in the land was transferred to a new company, 40 Wall Street Holdings. The Times was not able to identify the owner or owners of this company, and the Trump Organization declined to comment.
Mr. Trump has long-term ground leases on several other properties, including a golf course in New York’s Hudson Valley and retail space in Midtown Manhattan. Private owners are also behind these leases, their identities sometimes obscured by L.L.C.s.
Mr. Trump’s status in these situations is indicated by the word tenant, which is listed under his signature on many of the relevant documents.
Mr. Trump also holds a ground lease on the almost-completed Trump International Hotel in the Old Post Office building in Washington, a few blocks from the White House. The federal government, which owns the land, gave a 60-year lease to Trump Old Post Office, a limited liability company controlled by Mr. Trump and members of his family. In return, the government receives a minimum of $3 million a year from the company.
Mr. Weisselberg said that despite his holdings, Mr. Trump should not be held to the same standards that might apply to the heads of companies in highly regulated industries.
“If you take away all the fancy stuff and so on and so forth, and the five-star ratings, you are basically down to a closely held family-run business that is fundamentally different from IBM or Exxon,” Mr. Weisselberg said, quoting from an email he had received from Donald F. McGahn, a lawyer and former chairman of the F.E.C. who advised Mr. Trump on his federal filing. Mr. McGahn did not return calls for comment.
Others disagree. Mr. Trump’s opaque portfolio of business ties makes him potentially vulnerable to the demands of banks, and to business people in the United States and abroad, said Professor Painter, the former chief White House ethics lawyer.
“The success of his empire depends on an ability to get credit, to get loans extended to his business entities,” he said. “And we simply don’t know a lot about his financial dealings, here or around the world.”
Early 1990s: Trump Organization is $3.4 Billion in Debt
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 12:25:05 -0500
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Many of Trump’s businesses spent the 1990s on the verge of collapse. Abraham Wallach, who became the Trump Organization’s executive vice president for acquisitions in 1990, comparedjoining the company to “getting on the Titanic just before the women and children were moved to the lifeboats.” In 1990, the Trump Organization was reportedly $3.4 billion in debt, with Trump himself liable for over $800 million; the next year, as several of Trump’s hotels and casinos reportedly accumulated millions in debt, the New Jersey Casino Control Commission concluded, “Mr. Trump cannot be considered financially stable.” In 1992, Trump defaulted on the debt of his airline, Trump Shuttle, turning it over to U.S. Airways. Even as Trump broke ground on Trump World Tower in 1998, he was “renegotiating $1.8 billion in junk bonds for his Atlantic City resorts, and the tower was built on a mountain of debt owed to German banks.”
In Trump’s own telling, his fortunes turned around in 1995, when Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts, the company through which he owned and operated many of his properties in Atlantic City and elsewhere, held an initial public offering. In truth, Trump’s financial struggles continued. Contrary to Trump’s own lofty predictions—he mused to Vanity Fair’s Edward Klein that the IPO might raise $4 billion—he only managed to raise $140 million; meanwhile, according to his tax returns from that year (which remain the only of Trump’s tax returns available to the public), Trump declared a loss of nearly $916 million. His businesses continued to struggle, with his casinos posting $66 million in losses by the end of 1996 and another $42 million in 1997. The problems lasted well into the 2000s: Trump’s flagship companies declared bankruptcy in both 2004 and 2009, with Trump resigning from his position as head of the board of Trump Entertainment Resorts in 2009.
Compounding Trump’s financial problems was the Wall Street stigma his business failures attracted. The Guardian has reported that, in the 1990s, “Wall Street banks, which had previously extended him credit, turned off the tap;” according to The New York Times, bankers went so far as to coin the phrase “Donald risk” to describe the widespread aversion to lending to Trump. In 2013, one banker told The Atlantic, “If a major institution in New York—whether it was a Chase or a Goldman or a law firm or something—wanted to have a building built … I can give you almost 100 percent assurance that Donald would not be on the list.”
Amid these financial struggles, Trump turned to two notable sources of capital: Deutsche Bank and Bayrock Group. In 1998, Deutsche Bank provided Trump $125 million to renovate an office building at 40 Wall Street. More deals followed, with the bank providing or underwriting $1.3 billion to Trump entities over the next few years. Trump’s relationship with Deutsche Bank has not always been amicable; in November 2008, he had difficulty making payments on a $640 million Deutsch Bank loan – $40 million of which he guaranteed personally –  he took out to finance the construction of the Trump tower in Chicago. He sued the bank for $3 billion, alleging it was partially responsible for the global financial crisis and, by extension, Trump’s inability to repay the loan (the case was ultimately settled). Trump’s connection to Deutsche Bank is particularly notable because the institution  has been at the center of schemes to help Russians secretly funnel money offshore, for which it paid “about $630 million in penalties … over a $10 billion Russian money-laundering scheme that involved its Moscow, New York and London branches.”
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As the “king of debt,” Trump borrowed to build his empire. Then he began spending hundreds of millions in cash. – The Denver Post
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 11:34:11 -0500
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 By Jonathan O’Connell, David A. Fahrenthold, Jack GillumThe Washington Post
In the nine years before he ran for president, Donald Trump’s company spent more than $400 million in cash on new properties – including 14 transactions paid for in full, without borrowing from banks – during a buying binge that defied real estate industry practices and Trump’s own history as the self-described “King of Debt.”
Trump’s vast outlay of cash, tracked through public records and totaled publicly here for the first time, provides a new window into the president’s private company, which discloses few details about its finances.
It shows that Trump had access to far more cash than previously known, despite his string of commercial bankruptcies and the Great Recession’s hammering of the real estate industry.
Why did the “King of Debt,” as he has called himself in interviews, turn away from that strategy, defying the real estate wisdom that it’s unwise to risk so much of one’s own money in a few projects?
And how did Trump – who had money tied up in real estate and buildings – raise enough liquid assets to go on this cash buying spree?
From the outside, it is difficult to assess how much cash the Trump Organization has on hand.
Eric Trump, a son of the president who helps manage the company, told The Washington Post that none of the cash used to purchase the 14 properties came from outside investors or from selling off major Trump Organization assets.
Instead, Eric Trump said, the firm’s existing businesses – commercial buildings in New York, licensing deals for Trump-branded hotels and clothes – produced so much cash that the Trumps could tap that flow for spending money.
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“He had incredible cash flow and built incredible wealth,” Eric Trump said. “He didn’t need to think about borrowing for every transaction. We invested in ourselves.”
He added: “It’s a very nice luxury to have.”
The cash purchases began with a $12.6 million estate in Scotland in 2006. In the next two years, he snapped up two homes in Beverly Hills. Then five golf clubs along the East Coast. And a winery in Virginia.
The biggest cash binge came last, in the year before Trump announced his run for president. In 2014, he paid a combined $79.7 million for large golf courses in Scotland and Ireland. Since then, those clubs have lost money while Trump renovated them, requiring him to pump in $164 million in cash to keep them running.
Trump’s lavish spending came at a time when his business was leaning largely on just one major financial institution for its new loans – Deutsche Bank, which provided $295 million in financing for big projects in Miami and Washington.
Eric Trump said his father wasn’t forced to turn to an all-cash strategy. Trump could have borrowed more if he wanted, he said. But he had soured on borrowing in general, Eric Trump said, after contending with unpaid debts in the early 1990s.
“Those lessons undoubtedly shaped his business approach and the conservative nature of how we conduct business today,” Eric Trump said.
Real estate investors typically don’t buy big properties with their money alone. They find partners to invest and banks to lend alongside them. That allows the investors to amplify their buying power, and it increases the odds of earning higher returns.
“For privately held real estate firms, basically they like to use as much debt as they can. The only brakes are put on by the lending institutions, who don’t want to lend too much,” said David Geltner, a professor of real estate finance at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Industry experts said avoiding loans can alleviate risk for real estate companies and allow them to maneuver more quickly.
But they said that approach is typically undertaken by cash-rich investors that aren’t focused on maximizing the money they make off a property or by companies that aren’t trying to minimize their tax bills, because interest payments on mortgages are often tax-deductible. Companies that have trouble obtaining loans would also turn to cash, they noted.
Particularly when pursuing major projects, private real estate firms usually borrow. “I still think at the end of the day, you want some debt,” said Ed Walter, a Georgetown University real estate professor and former chief executive of Host Hotels, which owns more than 100 hotels under various brands.
Trump himself embraced that philosophy – extolling the virtues of borrowing big, even more enthusiastically than other real estate executives. Until, suddenly, he didn’t.
To total up Trump’s cash payments in real estate transactions, The Washington Post examined land records and corporate reports from six U.S. states, Ireland and the United Kingdom. These records show purchase prices for Trump’s properties, details about any mortgages and – in the United Kingdom and Ireland – the amount of cash Trump plowed into his clubs after he bought them. The Post provided the figures it used to the Trump Organization, which did not dispute them.
Documents tell the story – written in tiny type and in the lifeless prose of lawyers – of Trump’s flashy career in real estate.
It was a career built on chutzpah, debt . . . and more debt.
“He always used other people’s money. That’s for sure. Not cash,” said Barbara Res, who was a top executive for Trump throughout the 1980s and continued to work for him for most of the 1990s. “He always got somebody to put up funds for him. To put up the money. And he’d put up the brilliance.”
Debt helped make Trump in the first place, allowing the prince of an outer-borough apartment empire to play a king in Manhattan.
In 1988, when Trump bought New York’s famed Plaza Hotel, he paid $407.5 million. He got a $425 million loan.
“If the world goes to hell in a handbasket, I won’t lose a dollar,” Trump bragged to a reporter in 1988. He said he had offloaded the risk by investing and borrowing against other people’s money.
But then it was debt that nearly sank Trump, when a late-’80s recession undercut his risky investments in hotels, casinos and airplanes. Among the things he lost was the Plaza: The bank took it back and sold it for $325 million in 1995. He never personally went bankrupt, but his real estate holdings dwindled.
Then debt helped him come back.
After several low years in the 1990s, Trump began to rebuild his real estate business with borrowed money. He got mortgages to buy an office building on Wall Street. Golf courses in Florida and New York. A $700,000 home in Palm Beach, Florida.
George Ross, a senior counsel who advised Trump for 25 years, summed up the developer’s attitude toward debt in one sentence.
“Borrow as much as you can for as long as you can,” Ross wrote in his book “Trump Strategies for Real Estate.”
In the book, Ross explained that borrowing allowed Trump to seed his money into multiple projects at once, then fill out the rest with loans and partners’ investments, protecting his bank account and getting significant tax write-offs on the interest he had to pay.
“When Trump invests in a real estate project, he typically puts up less of his own money than you might think,” Ross wrote, explaining how Trump followed this rule. “Typically, his investors in the project will put up 85 percent while Trump puts up 15 percent.”
Then in 2006, the same year Ross’s book was published, Trump changed his approach.
Trump began buying up land near Aberdeen, on Scotland’s North Sea coast. Trump ultimately paid $12.6 million for the property. He’s spent at least $50 million more to build a golf course there, which was wrapped up in land-use fights and didn’t open until 2012.
“Even his closest senior advisers in NYC were surprised” that Trump paid cash, recounted Neil Hobday, a British developer who worked on the Aberdeen project with Trump.
Why did he do it?
Hobday believed it was a personal connection: Trump’s mother was born in Scotland.
“He was, I believe, ‘mystically’ connected and hooked to this project. All my conversations with him were almost on an emotional rather than hard business level,” Hobday wrote in an email to The Post.
But Trump soon began to buy other properties in cash, in places far from his mother’s homeland.
In 2008 and 2009, Trump paid $17.4 million in cash for two neighboring Beverly Hills homes.
In 2009, Trump spent at least another $6.7 million on two golf clubs, one outside New York City and another outside Philadelphia.
In Charlottesville, Virginia, he paid $16.2 million for a winery, buying up the first plots in 2011. “I own it 100 percent, no mortgage, no debt. You can all check,” Trump said of that winery during the 2016 campaign.
By 2011, Trump had spent at least $46 million on all-cash purchases.
Public records reveal some details about the Trump Organization’s finances during this time period.
The company was taking in tens of millions from the sale of residential properties, including a home in Palm Beach for $95 million in 2008. It made money off licensing deals: In 2015, Trump reported making at least $9.1 million from those deals over 16 months. The firm also collected rent from its commercial buildings, producing what Forbes recently estimated was another $175 million annually.
But that wasn’t all free cash. Those businesses also came with costs – salaries, renovations, taxes, payments on existing mortgages – that pulled money out of the business. Those costs haven’t been released.
In the same period, some of Trump’s companies also experienced financial problems. His publicly traded casino and hotel company declared bankruptcy in 2009. And in 2008, Trump sued Deutsche Bank to challenge the size of his payments on a loan related to his tower in Chicago. Trump’s logic in that case: The 2008 financial crisis had crushed the real estate business so completely that it should be considered like an act of God.
Eric Trump said that, in this time, the company had accumulated enough cash to have ready spending money, so it could bid on short notice.
When the Trumps felt an emotional connection to a property, Eric Trump said, they didn’t want to wait for banks and outside partners to sign off. So they paid cash.
“We want to be nimble. If we see an unbelievable opportunity or something that interests us, we want to jump on it,” he said.
“With lenders, every time you sneeze, you have to write a four-page report,” he added.
Despite that distaste for bankers’ paperwork, the Trump Organization still obtained loans in this period from Deutsche Bank. Starting in 2012, Trump borrowed $125 million from Deutsche Bank to purchase the Doral golf club in Florida and another $170 million from the same bank to renovate the Old Post Office into a hotel in Washington. The Trump Organization declined to comment about why they turned to borrowing in these cases.
He spent $65 million of his own on those two deals to cover the costs that Deutsche Bank did not.
Then the spending got bigger.
The year before he launched his campaign for president, Trump made the two most expensive all-cash purchases that The Post found in its review. In 2014, he shelled out $79.7 million for the huge golf resorts in Doonbeg, Ireland, and Turnberry, Scotland – both of which were losing money at the time.
The golf courses were his most recent cash deals and last acquisitions before becoming president.
The Trump Organization pursued pricey renovations of both courses, during which time the properties have continued to suffer losses. Under Trump, the two courses are at least $240 million in the hole so far, according to British and Irish corporate records.
Had Trump financed the property, the risks to the investment would be shared among lenders and other partners.
Geltner said it was unusual to see a company not bring in financial partners in either the purchase or construction of such large development projects.
Eric Trump said that when he, his brother Donald Trump Jr. and sister Ivanka Trump joined their father’s business over a decade ago, they agreed to grow the company around properties that would produce income long-term.
He said they would never sell any of their properties and that he expected the European clubs to lose money initially while they were being renovated. The Trumps plan to wait, work and eventually make their money back.
“You’re going to have some operational losses,” he said, “and then you get into the black and you make great money.”
During the 2016 campaign, Trump continued to brag about how he’d mastered the art of spending other people’s cash.
“I do that all the time in business: It’s called other people’s money. There’s nothing like doing things with other people’s money, because it takes the risk,” Trump told a campaign-trail audience in North Carolina in September 2016. “You get a good chunk of it, and it takes the risk.”

The Washington Post’s Nash Riggins, in Stirling, Scotland; Hawes Spencer, in Charlottesville, Virginia; and Tom Hamburger, Julie Tate and Alice Crites in Washington contributed to this report.
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FBI’s probe into Trump’s Russia connections was out of bounds
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 08:58:52 -0500
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We’ve long known, haven’t we, that federal bureaucrats increasingly run the American show. But did we expect an FBI investigation that stepped out of bounds to see if our president was a Russian agent? Such a heinous crime, if true, could obviously spell his end, but such a probe is a slur on democracy.
As a matter of separation of powers, Congress can do it, yes, but the FBI needs actual hard evidence of a crime to proceed. Otherwise, what we have on our hands is an agency that can search out pretty much any soul it wants whenever it wants, the sort of thing you get in tyrannies. If you dislike a leader, someone whose politics you find threatening, for instance, then search here, there and everywhere for something foul.
According to the New York Times, which broke the story, the instigating factor was President Trump firing FBI Director James Comey. This was seen as just maybe obstruction of justice, a means of ending any further explorations of Russian interference with the 2016 presidential election. But, first, the president had the right to fire the guy. Second, the Department of Justice itself said he deserved as much for one haughty transgression after another. Third, the investigation continued. Nothing was obstructed.
What is more, the Times story tells us, there has been no revelation of Trump yapping in secret with Russian agents or of his scooting along in designated directions. If there is an implicating fact or dozens, how about letting them loose as a replacement for guesses and prejudice? Sadly, the Department of Justice is keeping them in a cage where they are unlikely to infect the rest of us with truth.

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So worry, please worry, worry a lot because, for one thing, Congress has allowed an ever more powerful administrative state in which prohibitions can often come in second to bureaucratic druthers. For something else, consider that some big-brother intelligence agents have likely committed felonies by leaking classified information never exactly making Trump look sane or decent or trustworthy. Consider that, even during the election campaign, you had intelligence agency bigwigs plotting how to handle this character they feared, checking out this, that and the other in suspect ways.
The Department of Justice has meanwhile played games with congressional oversight. Partisan, get-Trump advocates were part of what was supposed to be an unbiased special counsel probe. The FBI seemed to depend a lot on a fraudulent Russian document that may have been employed illegally. Then there were the blindfolds strapped on when looking at the Hillary Clinton campaign organization and the Clinton Foundation.
The FBI investigation was short-lived because then we got the investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller, who has spent 20 months and $25 million driving the all-powerful federal government bulldozer to smashes aplenty. The thing is, there are all sorts of questions about its validity, and so far the smashes have seemed mostly irrelevant to the probe’s central point. We’ll have reports soon. They will either be killers or nothing much, according to different leaks the Mueller team denies having made.
It also seems the case that the Democratic-controlled House is prepared to eschew a lot of time-wasting public policy questions to focus on probing Trump until the 2020 election is decided for good. Something real could be there, but chances are not bad that this will be the equivalent of another government shutdown showing Trump’s foes can be worse than he is.
Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service.
(c) 2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Former top FBI lawyer personally involved in FISA warrant for Trump aide, other Russia probe irregularities, transcript shows
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 08:58:00 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story .

A former top FBI lawyer acknowledged he was personally involved in the warrant application to surveil then-Trump campaign aide Carter Page and confirmed other "unusual" steps taken in the FBI’s Russia probe in 2016, during a closed-door congressional interview.
“I was aware of the [Russia] investigation,” James Baker told House investigators in October. Fox News has confirmed details of the transcript which is still under government review before its public release.
Baker said he was briefed on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrant “as time went by” and recalled how he got involved early in the process. The warrant relied heavily on the unverified anti-Trump dossier, which was financed by the Democratic National Committee and the Hillary Clinton campaign via the law firm Perkins Coie.
“I don't want to see it at the end, like when it is about to go to the director [for] certification, because then it is hard to make changes then," Baker told House investigators when Republicans controlled the chamber. "So I wanted to see it when it was gelled enough but before it went through the process and before it went to the director. I wanted to see it and I wanted to read it because I knew it was sensitive."
Fox News confirmed the Baker transcript also includes the following exchange with investigators regarding his involvement in the surveillance application:
Question: "So that is why you took the abnormal or unusual step in this particular situation because it was sensitive?"
Baker: "Yes."
Question: "So you actually got involved because you want to make sure that, what?"
Baker: "I wanted to make sure that we were filing something that would adhere to the law and stand up over time."
Baker also told lawmakers, as part of the joint investigations by the House Judiciary and Oversight Committees, that it was not routine for him to get involved personally in such matters.
"I did not ... at that point in time when I was at the FBI ... almost all of the FISA applications did not go through me," he said.
Fox News first reported last fall that Baker said his contact with a top lawyer working with the Democratic National Committee and Clinton campaign in late 2016 -- as federal investigators prepared the surveillance warrant -- also was unusual.
Baker said Perkins Coie lawyer Michael Sussmann initiated contact with him and provided documents, describing the contact with the private lawyer as unusual and the “only time it happened.”
Perkins Coie was a key player in the funding of the controversial anti-Trump dossier, which Republicans have long suspected helped fuel the FBI’s investigation. The DNC and Clinton campaign had hired opposition research firm Fusion GPS in April 2016, through Perkins Coie, to dig into Trump’s background. Fusion, in turn, paid British ex-spy Christopher Steele to compile the dossier, memos from which were shared with the FBI in the summer of 2016.
Asked about Baker’s statements in October, however, a Perkins Coie spokesperson said Sussmann’s contact was not connected to the firm’s representation of the DNC or Clinton campaign.
The spokesperson said in a statement: “Prior to joining Perkins Coie, Michael Sussmann served as a cybercrime prosecutor in the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice during both Republican and Democratic administrations. As a result, Sussmann is regularly retained by clients with complex cybersecurity matters.
“When Sussmann met with Mr. Baker on behalf of a client, the meeting was not connected to the firm’s representation of the Hillary Clinton Campaign, the DNC or any Political Law Group client.”
Since then, Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Ron Johnson, R-Wis., formally requested further information from the FBI about the contact. Further, conservative watchdog Judicial Watch launched a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit in December against "the Department of Justice seeking records of all meetings in 2016 between former FBI General Counsel James Baker and the Perkins Coie law firm."
Fox News reached out to representatives for Baker and Perkins Coie to provide additional comment or context. The Epoch Times earlier reported some details from the Baker transcript.
Mueller Investigation Turns Law Upside Down
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 08:57:02 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from National Review.

Round and round the investigation goes. Where it stops…
Special counsel Robert Mueller recently indicted yet another peripheral character in his Trump probe, Russian attorney Natalia V. Veselnitskaya, for alleged money laundering in a matter quite separate from Trump.
Like almost all of Mueller’s indictments of the past 20 months, the charges against Veselnitskaya had nothing to do with his original mandate of finding any possible Trump-Russia collusion. No matter; within minutes, Veselnitskaya’s name was injected into the media cycle as if the fact that she was Russian and connected to the name Mueller was de facto proof that Trump was guilty of something — if not collusion, something worse.
If Mueller was not a special counsel, and if he was not looking for anyone deemed useful to flip to find dirt on Donald Trump, then Veselnitskaya would have been just another daily Washington foreign influence peddler being courted with impunity by her American influence-peddling and often equally suspect counterparts.
To date, in almost every one of his indictments of Americans, Mueller has gone after Trump staffers, often quite minor, for alleged crimes that were either committed well before Mueller began his investigations, or that came as a result of plea bargaining in exchange for providing expected dirt on Trump, or that were the result of government surveillance or the use of government informants, or all of that and more. And all that sensationalism, through leaks and insinuations, was packaged by the media as “bombshells” and “watersheds” and “turning points” ad nauseam for 20 months.
When Mueller indicted and obtained a confession from Michael Flynn, Trump’s first national-security adviser, it followed from an elaborate perjury ambush set up by the now fired, ethically conflicted, disgraced, and perhaps soon to be indicted deputy FBI director Andrew McCabe. McCabe sent the now fired, ethically conflicted, and disgraced agent Peter Strzok to interview Flynn — a process overseen by the now fired, ethically conflicted, and disgraced James Comey. And even then, Mueller seemed to be the beneficiary of leaks from someone in the Department of Justice who sent to the media elements of surveillance transcripts of Flynn’s conversations.
We sometimes forget that Mueller would not now exist if Hillary had just done what she was supposed to have done — won the Electoral College vote. Nor would it exist if she had not paid Christopher Steele to author a hit piece, hide her handprints, and then salt it among officials at the Obama DOJ and FBI to spawn a media frenzy, first to ensure Trump’s defeat in 2016 and then, after his victory, to explain the supposedly inexplicable blown election.
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The Mueller team modus operandi starts with the assumption that president Donald J. Trump is responsible for Russian collusion. Or he must at least be found guilty of something or other from his past decades as a wheeler-dealer, high-profile Manhattan provocateur.
Given that starting point, the special counsel then tries to prove his particular charge by rounding up those who have worked for Trump, examining in detail their personal history, discovering that they were imperfect, and threatening to ruin them (or their family members) with long prison sentences or crippling legal bills unless they aid what are becoming his Captain Ahab–like obsessions.
Far worse, Mueller has overlooked dozens of likely tangential felonies related to his investigations — they are not deemed useful to his zealous pursuit of Donald Trump.
Deputy Director Andrew McCabe probably lied to federal investigators. He faces no charges.
James Comey, the former FBI director, probably misled a FISA court and likely lied under oath to a congressional committee by claiming 245 times that he did not know or did not remember various important facts. It’s also likely that Comey broke the law by deliberately leaking secret and confidential FBI memos to friends and the press for his own particular agendas. Comey’s FBI team knew as early as July 31, 2016, that the Steele dossier was an unverified, biased product of Hillary Clinton’s opposition research, and yet he helped to send it to the FISA court as the primary evidence used to justify surveillance of Carter Page — in order to look for something on Trump.
Comey earlier had warped the investigation of Hillary Clinton’s private server and emails by his own admission that he assumed she was going to be president and therefore deserved special treatment rather than a process that followed the letter of the law. He apparently faces no criminal liability on any of these issues.
Comey — and later, after his firing, his lieutenants — apparently conducted a counterintelligence investigation of President Trump. The likely illegal move was based on the ridiculous notion that Trump had colluded with Russia either as a dupe and fool, or that he was acting as a canny and treasonous Russian operative. These fantasies were the pretext for using Clinton opposition research to prompt their investigations.
Worse still, the FBI later was apparently terrified that a President Trump would eventually demand the release of documents disproving the FBI canard that it was generically investigating “collusion” rather than Trump himself. Recall that Comey, according to his sworn testimony, assured Trump three times that he was not the object of a FBI official investigation.
Yet just such an investigation of the president of the United States was under way. It occurred in a landscape in which Comey himself, later Mueller team members Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, and recently journalists as diverse as Michael Isikoff and Jonathan Karl have admitted either that there is likely to be no proof of collusion, or that the Mueller team will not find any evidence of collusion, or that the Steele dossier was mostly inaccurate and made up — or all that and more.
Andrew Weissmann, Mueller’s blue-chip prosecutor, was briefed in August 2016 by Bruce Ohr, the fourth-ranking official in the Obama Department of Justice, that the Steele dossier was unverified, that it was a campaign opposition hit piece paid for by Hillary Clinton, and that Ohr’s own wife worked with Steele on it.
Those facts about the prior role of Weissmann seemed of no interest to Mueller. Nor did Mueller seem bothered by the fact that the DOJ and the FBI went to a FISA court on four occasions to use that very dossier to obtain surveillance on Carter Page, who was to become a subject of Mueller’s own investigation.
One would have thought that at some point Mueller might have gone down the hall and asked, “Hey, Andy, did you guys at DOJ ever hear anything worrisome about that dossier before you used it to get wiretaps and intercepts on an American citizen?”
In sum, one result of the entire Mueller inquest is that we are now witnessing one of the greatest political scandals in U.S. history, given that
1) the FBI conducted a secret investigation of the sitting president of the United States and kept it from all oversight, based on nothing other than unfounded accusations from untrustworthy sources and on the FBI’s policy differences with candidate and later president Trump;
2) presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in the middle of the 2016 campaign hired a foreign national, British subject Christopher Steele, to conduct opposition research on her rival Donald Trump, and she hid her use of campaign funds to pay for the ensuing dossier by funneling the payments as “legal fees” through both a law firm and an opposition-research firm;
3) members Obama’s Department of Justice and FBI deliberately and repeatedly misled FISA courts by presenting a dossier as evidence without disclosing that it was unverifiable, paid for by Hillary Clinton, used circularly for “corroborating” news accounts, and authored by a fired FBI informant — all of which was previously known to the top echelon of the FBI and DOJ;
4) key members of the U.S. government in the FBI, DOJ, CIA, and State Department took great pains in the midst of a presidential campaign to spread knowledge of the unverified dossier among top government officials and to ensure leaks of the dossier to the media;
5) few involved in any of these felonious acts are currently under investigation and fewer are apt to be subject to criminal prosecution, given the hysteria over the supposed Trump collusion;
6) Mueller’s top lieutenant, Andrew Weissmann, by intent or default, probably had a role in the deception of a federal FISA court that was deliberately misled by fellow DOJ attorneys who withheld information that they knew would impugn their own evidence.
Again, the reason Mueller is not interested in such lawbreaking seems to be that it does not serve his interests. He shows little concern that both former FBI director John Brennan and former director of National Intelligence James Clapper — figures who have popped in and out of his investigation — have lied under oath to Congress and probably have also lied about their knowledge of the Fusion GPS dossier compiled by Steele and the leaking of its contents. These lies of the nation’s three top intelligence officials — Brennan, Clapper, and Comey — are of far more importance to the sanctity of the republic than whether George Papadopoulos got his stories straight.
Finally, Mueller’s own team has been at times as mendacious as those they have hounded.
When FBI agent Peter Strzok and lawyer Lisa Page were let go from the Mueller team for bias and unethical behavior, Mueller’s staff for weeks hid the real reason for their departures. Their firings were staggered to suggest that they were unconnected, again misleading the media and the public.
When these two fired FBI employees turned in their government phones, on which they had sent each other thousands of relevant personal texts, the Inspector General belatedly discovered that months of messages had “disappeared” — according to the Mueller team due to bureaucratic sloppiness, technical glitches, or determinations that the messages were irrelevant and thus destroyed.
Had any of Mueller’s own targets lost key communications on their phones or pads and then claimed such extenuating circumstances, they likely would have been indicted. Had they, under oath, pled poor memories or no knowledge on 245 occasions, they would have been indicted. Had they misled a federal court with inexact or fraudulent evidence, they would have been indicted. Had they destroyed evidence under subpoena, they would have been indicted. Had they leaked confidential information, they would have been indicted.
In sum, Robert Mueller’s investigation has turned American jurisprudence upside down . In this country, we investigate crimes to see who committed them. We do not start by assuming the guilt of a person and then search for his necessary wrongdoing, although the perverse notion of “guilty until proven innocent” has now permeated throughout a frenzied American culture.
The latest BuzzFeed scandal is a good example. The online news magazine alleged that it had documentary evidence from the Special Counsel’s office proving that Trump ordered his consiglière Michael Cohen to lie about the Trump organization’s business dealings with Russians.
For an entire news cycle, that yarn prompted journalists and Democratic congressional members to call for Trump’s immediate impeachment — until Mueller himself issued a denial of the BuzzFeed story. (One wonders why he had not done so immediately, whether he was worried that some of his own staffers were the sources for the BuzzFeed pseudo-news story, and why in the past he has not stepped up to discredit earlier false stories supposedly leaked from his team about his impending actions. Perhaps because other fake news did not so endanger the reputation of his investigation?)
But stranger still was the attitude of supposed journalists calling for impeachment: They believed that Trump was capable of ordering Cohen to lie; it was therefore excusable to assume that Trump had in fact done so, even in the absence of any evidence that he had.
In other words, we have abandoned the idea of innocent until proven guilty and instead appropriated a number of Bolshevik protocols: Find the person first, the crime second; if a suspect in theory could commit a crime, then he most likely did; waiting to pass judgement until all the facts are in is telling proof of pro-Trump bias.
In America, there is still an idea of equity under the law. But Mueller has taught us that whether you go to jail for perjury, illegal leaking, lying to federal investigators, destroying key evidence, obstructing a federal court, or trying, as a foreign citizen, to warp the outcome of a U.S. presidential election all depend entirely on the particular agendas of a particular prosecutor, not the law per se.
Mueller’s legacy will likely be that he has now institutionalized the idea of inequality under the law — seeking out bothersome outsider minnows while establishment sharks devoured the Constitution.
Emin Agalarov: Russian singer with Trump links cancels US tour
Tue, 22 Jan 2019 08:46:56 -0500
Michael_Novakhov shared this story from BBC News - Home.

The Russian pop star behind a now-infamous 2016 meeting at Trump Tower has cancelled his North America tour.
Emin Agalarov, a singer and the son of billionaire property developer Aras Agalarov, was due to perform in four cities in the US and Canada.
In an Instagram video, he tells his followers that he's been "put in this position against [his] will".
A special counsel led by Robert Mueller is investigating Russian links to President Trump's 2016 campaign.
Mr Agalarov's US lawyer Scott Balber told NBC News that the tour was "most definitely" cancelled because of the investigation.
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Dear Friends, I really hate to be recording this message, but I'm left without a choice, due to circumstances beyond my control, I am forced to postpone my scheduled US and Canadian tour, basically i have been put in this position against my will. We planned these shows a year ago and had the full intention to come and play for you all, I bring my apologies to everyone who was looking forward to seeing us during those shows, we will have more information for you soon, stay tuned, and thank you for your understanding! Emin ✊🏼✊🏼✊🏼. Дорогие друзья, мне очень не хочется записывать это сообщение, но я стал заложником обстоятельств и вынужден отложить запланированный тур по США и Канаде. К сожалению, эта ситуация происходит против моей воли. Мы запланировали этот тур год назад и очень хотели дать концерты для всех вас. Я приношу свои искренние извинения всем, кто купил билеты. Обо всех дальнейших изменениях мы сообщим в ближайшее время .
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"He could come and do the concert but we don't want him to be subpoenaed or held under a material witness warrant or anything else," he says.
President Trump's relationship with Mr Agalarov and his father has come under scrutiny.
Aras Agalarov was Mr Trump's business partner in taking Miss Universe to Moscow in 2013, and the two were in discussions about opening a Trump Tower in Russia - a project that never materialised.
The US president also made a cameo appearance in one of Emin Agalarov's 2013 music videos.
In 2016, the singer's then-publicist Rob Goldstone contacted Mr Trump's campaign team claiming to have "dirt" on his rival Hilary Clinton.
Following that email, in June, Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya met Mr Trump's son Donald Trump Jr., his son-in-law Jared Kushner, and his then-campaign manager Paul Manafort at Trump Tower.
But at that highly controversial meeting, Mr Goldstone later told BBC News, Ms Veselnitskaya presented "very generic dirt".
Mr Agalarov, meanwhile, has made his feelings about the Mueller investigation very clear.
Last year he released a music video making fun of the allegations, using Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton and Jared Kushner impersonators to act out various scandals - including the unsubstantiated claim that Trump was filmed at a hotel with sex workers in Moscow.

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