you're boring. nothing but chirp
Look up Whitey Bulger and get back to me. (you won't)
Read Gohmert's article on hatchet man Mueller (you won't)
you're boring. nothing but chirp
I read both.
Both were complete bull .
lol Chris
Are all MAGAts on this board dip s? Or are all dip s on this board MAGAts?
Hmmm
Hey buddy, I don't really think you should be posting tweets about law stuffs. Didn't really work out so well for you last time.
Reading about the dude behind "complaints" 2 and 4 is pretty good for teh lulz tho.
You can tell he's a hero to Chris.
https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/20...yoL/story.html
What involvement did Mueller have with Bulger?
None. Mueller served in the US attorney’s office in Boston from 1982 to 1988, as chief of the criminal division, first assistant US attorney, and as acting US attorney for more than a year. During that time, Bulger ran a sprawling criminal enterprise and got away with murders because he was a longtime FBI informant who corrupted his handlers. The FBI and the New England Organized Crime Strike Force, a prosecutorial unit that worked independently of the US attorney’s office and reported directly to the Justice Department, used Bulger to build cases against the Mafia and gave him a pass on his own crimes. The FBI’s corrupt relationship with Bulger was exposed after he was indicted on federal racketeering charges in 1995 and became a fugitive. He was captured 16 years later .
Were four men framed by an FBI informant and wrongfully imprisoned for years, while two died in prison?
Yes, but that informant was not Bulger. Mob hitman-turned-government witness Joseph “The Animal” Barboza testified in a 1968 trial that led to the wrongful convictions of Joseph Salvati, Peter J. Limone, Louis Greco, and Henry Tameleo for the 1965 slaying of a small-time hoodlum named Edward “Teddy” Deegan. Tameleo and Greco died in prison. The men proclaimed their innocence, but members of the FBI, the US attorney’s office, and the Suffolk district attorney’s office vigorously lobbied against clemency for them throughout the 1980s and 1990s.
Their case drew scrutiny after details of the FBI’s corrupt relationship with Bulger and his sidekick, Stephen Flemmi, began to emerge in 1998, triggering an investigation into the agency’s mishandling of informants dating to the 1960s. In 2000, a Justice Department task force uncovered secret FBI do ents indicating Barboza framed the four men, while protecting one of the real killers — Flemmi’s brother. Limone was freed in 2001, and Salvati had been pardoned in 1997.
Did Mueller know the four men had been wrongly convicted and look the other way?
There’s nothing linking Mueller to that case, according to several attorneys for the men, voluminous court records, and a former federal judge who presided over their wrongful imprisonment trial. In 2007, then US District Judge Nancy Gertner found that the FBI deliberately withheld evidence that the four men were innocent and that the bureau helped cover up the injustice for decades. She ordered the government to pay the men and their families $101.7 million.
“Absolutely nothing in the record that I saw suggested Mueller’s involvement in any way in either the initial acts that led to the four men’s imprisonment, or the acts that ended in their continued imprisonment and denying them parole or the coverup,” Gertner said Friday.
Was Mueller among the prosecutors who wrote letters to the Massachusetts parole board opposing the release of the four before evidence emerged that they had been framed?
No, according to Gertner and Limone’s attorney, Juliane Balliro, who scoured copies of the parole board records for the four men. There were no letters from Mueller in the files and his signature “never appeared on anything I ever saw or can recall,’’ Balliro said.
Former Massachusetts Parole Board member Michael Albano, who complained of intimidation and retaliation by the FBI after he voted in favor of commutation for Limone in 1983, said Thursday that he’s convinced that at one time he saw a letter from Mueller, written in the 1980s, opposing the release of one of the four men.
A 2011 column by the Globe’s Kevin Cullen has been cited in recent media reports that attempt to link Mueller to the wrongfully imprisoned men. At the time, Cullen said Mueller wrote letters to the parole and pardons board throughout the 1980s opposing clemency for the men. But, in a column Friday, Cullen said he heard that from Albano but did not see any letters from Mueller.
After the FBI was found responsible in 2007 for framing the men, Mueller, then the FBI director, characterized the case as a debacle.
The best part is that you didn't even come up with this on your own; it's a Hannity theory.
Oh I'm going to pull up the dockets later, I'm sure some of the filings are going to provide some top notch material.
PEOPLE WROTE LETTERS TO LAW ENFORCEMENT
Corsi, who wrote the anti-President Obama book "The Obama Nation" and is connected with political operative Roger Stone, has claimed for the past week that he was being improperly pressured by Mueller’s team to strike a plea deal which he now says he won’t sign.
why won't Trump declassify the email chain?
He might be waiting on the latest IG report or Comey's testimony on Friday.
last time Trump declassified something he made Nunes look like a liar. are you sure he's competent to do this?
Your opinions on Nunes and Trump are your own and of no concern to me.
lol he asked you for your opinion, Chrisbot.
Trump is competent, yes. Happy?
Chris asks plenty of questions, but is too chicken to answer nearly 100% of the time.
Whose foreign funds did the Obama Administration use to pay Stefan Halper to spy on General Flynn and the Trump campaign?
That’s a question that you won’t find in the mainstream media today, and we’d like to know why? Everyone is well aware of Halper’s spying activities with Carter Page and George Papadopoulos as reported in the Daily Caller.
But the real question isn’t was he an FBI informant, we already know that answer is a resounding yes. The real question that needs to be asked is who funded it? Where did the money come from to pay this FBI Informant to spy on a political campaign of an opposing party?
A Russian academic who worked at Cambridge with the informant, Stefan Halper, said he made “false allegations” about her interactions with former national security adviser Michael Flynn at an event the Cambridge Intelligence Seminar (CIS) hosted in February 2014.
Halper’s claim in December 2016 that Russians infiltrated CIS has also been called “absurd” by Christopher Andrew, the official historian for MI5 and head of CIS, the Financial Times reported.
Meanwhile, Halper made contact with Trump campaign advisers Carter Page, George Papadopoulos and Sam Clovis during the campaign to gather intelligence about their involvement with Russia. (RELATED: EXCLUSIVE: A London Meeting Before The Campaign Aroused Papadopoulos’s Su ions)
It was revealed that Halper, a veteran of three Republican administrations, was a longtime CIA and FBI source who provided information that has been used in the FBI and special counsel’s investigation of possible collusion between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin. (RELATED: EXCLUSIVE: Cambridge Prof With CIA, MI6 Ties Met With Trump Adviser During Campaign, Beyond)
Halper had a variety of contracts with the Department of Defense Office of NET Assessment. One of our Investigators working on this, had this to add below via Twitter.
From Sept ‘2016 to May of ‘2018 Halper was under contract with foreign funding. How does that tie in with his actions during and after the campaign? Furthermore he continued to contact and communicate with Carter Page, those communications went all the way into the Fall of 2017.
Are we having foreign funding being filtered through our Department of Defense from other countries to fund Stephan Halper’s ‘Research Projects’ for him to spy and ‘inform’ on US citizens?
Is there anything worse than filtering and funding spies through foreign funds through our Department of Defense, to spy and defame Patriots who’ve given their entire lives to serving America.
We’re hardly the only ones who have noticed.
As you can see Halper’s contracts not only have foreign funding, but they also went through extremely late updates in the contracting system.
There is a direct correlation between contracts that have foreign funding, and those that underwent extremely late updates within the contracting system. The ones marked in red show periods which underwent an update over 1,000 days after it was delivered. In other words the contract was paid for and in place, somebody backtracked and made changes.
Halper is not himself under a Justice Department investigation. Instead, the agency ordered the Office of the Inspector General to investigate the FBI’s use of Halper as a confidential informant to make contact with Trump campaign advisers.
The question needs to be asked. Whose foreign funds did the Obama Administration use to pay FBI Informants to spy on Trump Campaign officials and ruin the life of an American hero in General Michael Flynn?
https://af-mg.com/2018/12/05/breakin...general-flynn/
Thanks for being Trump's dutiful lickspittle, it becomes you.
in Chris's mind it's not possible that Flynn ruined his own life by accepting emoluments from Turkey and lying.
he wasn't even asking you about Trump.
Who was he asking about Pavlov?last time Trump declassified something he made Nunes look like a liar. are you sure he's competent to do this?
There are currently 2 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 2 guests)