Yes, saw that too. He's honest to God out of his mind, and dangerous.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 4:06 pmSaw an episode of Frontline last night on this nutcase traitor to America.Seacoaster(1) wrote: ↑Thu Sep 29, 2022 8:49 am The Deep State is again making the criminal Michael Flynn say crazy things:
https://twitter.com/RonFilipkowski/stat ... 8669130753
"The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
-
- Posts: 5303
- Joined: Tue Mar 29, 2022 6:49 am
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
... the Deep State got to John Durham.
STAND AGAINST FASCISM
-
- Posts: 34209
- Joined: Mon Jul 30, 2018 12:10 pm
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
“I wish you would!”
-
- Posts: 1365
- Joined: Sat Oct 27, 2018 11:58 pm
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
This trial did expose how lame the predicate for the Carter Page FISA warrant was and that the FBI knew it was lame. Yet they continued to use it. Nefarious behavior by FBI and others.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:29 pmAnybody seent Old Soldier?
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/danchen ... -trump.amp
"I would never want to belong to a club that would have me as a member", Groucho Marx
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
You'll find the same dumb flimsiness in all FISA warrants.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:56 pmThis trial did expose how lame the predicate for the Carter Page FISA warrant was and that the FBI knew it was lame. Yet they continued to use it. Nefarious behavior by FBI and others.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:29 pmAnybody seent Old Soldier?
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/danchen ... -trump.amp
Solution? Get rid of the FISA courts....a secret court that by its very nature is "flimsy" with bullsh*t warrants.
-
- Posts: 34209
- Joined: Mon Jul 30, 2018 12:10 pm
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
What else was exposed? Move it through X.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:56 pmThis trial did expose how lame the predicate for the Carter Page FISA warrant was and that the FBI knew it was lame. Yet they continued to use it. Nefarious behavior by FBI and others.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:29 pmAnybody seent Old Soldier?
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/danchen ... -trump.amp
Last edited by Typical Lax Dad on Wed Oct 19, 2022 8:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
“I wish you would!”
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
Waiting to read Durham's report & watch the new (R) House hearings in '23.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:29 pmAnybody seent Old Soldier?
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/danchen ... -trump.amp
Is Danchenko back on the FBI payroll or working for Fiona Hill & Strobe Talbot again ?
-
- Posts: 34209
- Joined: Mon Jul 30, 2018 12:10 pm
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
Is he is or is he ain’t?old salt wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 8:30 pmWaiting to read Durham's report & watch the new (R) House hearings in '23.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:29 pmAnybody seent Old Soldier?
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/danchen ... -trump.amp
Is Danchenko back on the FBI payroll or working for Fiona Hill & Strobe Talbot again ?
“I wish you would!”
-
- Posts: 1365
- Joined: Sat Oct 27, 2018 11:58 pm
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
If it happened to Team Blue you would be outraged.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 8:21 pmWhat else was exposed? Move it through X.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:56 pmThis trial did expose how lame the predicate for the Carter Page FISA warrant was and that the FBI knew it was lame. Yet they continued to use it. Nefarious behavior by FBI and others.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:29 pmAnybody seent Old Soldier?
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/danchen ... -trump.amp
"I would never want to belong to a club that would have me as a member", Groucho Marx
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
I did. For years. Complained about the Dems and R's who voted for FISA and the "Patriot Act'. Complained again when it was renewed.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 9:01 pmIf it happened to Team Blue you would be outraged.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 8:21 pmWhat else was exposed? Move it through X.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:56 pmThis trial did expose how lame the predicate for the Carter Page FISA warrant was and that the FBI knew it was lame. Yet they continued to use it. Nefarious behavior by FBI and others.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:29 pmAnybody seent Old Soldier?
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/danchen ... -trump.amp
It's an anti-American slush court DESIGNED to hand out bad warrants and bad-faith investigations full stop.
Did YOU complain about it?
More to the point: now that we know, yet again, that FISA is designed to hand out flimsy, secret warrants-------why aren't any of you complaining, and demanding that it be dismantled here in 2022?
Same goes for Dems, obviously.
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
Why did Paul Manfort give a Russian agent campaign data again? Remind us Old Swabby…
..
..
"The purpose of writing is to inflate weak ideas, obscure poor reasoning, and inhibit clarity. With a little practice, writing can be an intimidating and impenetrable fog." - Calvin, to Hobbes
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
National Review Editorial :
https://www.nationalreview.com/2022/10/ ... isconduct/
John Durham Exposed the FBI’s Misconduct
By THE EDITORS, October 20, 2022
The acquittal of Igor Danchenko for making false statements to investigators about his part in providing bogus anti-Trump information for the discredited Steele dossier is, in the end, a footnote. As Russiagate special counsel John Durham argued in summing up the prosecution’s case to the jury, “the elephant in the room” was the FBI. It was the bureau’s malfeasance that was really on trial, and the verdict on that, emphatically, is guilty.
In the short trial, Durham established that the bureau knowingly submitted to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) sworn applications that claimed the information supplied by former British spy Christopher Steele had been verified. In reality, not only had the bureau failed to verify Steele’s claims of a “conspiracy of cooperation” between Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign and the Kremlin; it had offered Steele $1 million if he could provide corroborating proof. The FBI never had to pay because neither Steele nor his primary source for anti-Trump “intelligence,” Danchenko, could deliver.
That is not the half of it. The bureau knew Steele was compiling the dossier as opposition research for the Clinton campaign — he’d been contracted by the information firm Fusion GPS, which had been retained by Clinton’s lawyer, Marc Elias. At Danchenko’s trial, Durham elicited testimony from a senior FBI intelligence analyst, Brian Auten, that in a meeting in Rome in October 2016 (the same month that the FBI started using Steele’s fabricated reporting in its FISA application), an agent improperly briefed Steele on “Crossfire Hurricane,” the bureau’s codename for the Trump/Russia probe. That is, even as Steele was providing the FBI with nonsense that he could not back up, the FBI was providing Steele with classified intelligence related to Trump that Steele was then positioned to share with his Clinton campaign sponsors.
During these same weeks in the run-up to the 2016 election, the Clinton campaign was portraying Trump as a mole for Moscow. Simultaneously, Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann, a former Justice Department attorney, exploited his friendship with the FBI’s general counsel, James Baker, to convey directly to the bureau’s top hierarchy skewed data that he wrongly insisted showed that Trump had established a communications back channel with the Kremlin. Sussmann was the subject of Durham’s last prosecution — for lying to the FBI when he claimed, in conveying the shoddy information, that he was not representing any client in doing so.
As with the Danchenko case, Sussmann’s acquittal — which could be explained by the fact that his misconduct wasn’t as blameworthy as that of the FBI — was secondary in importance to Durham’s unrefuted evidence that the FBI knew Sussmann represented the DNC; that it falsely recorded that the information from Sussmann had come from the Justice Department; and that its headquarters concealed from the bureau’s own investigators the fact that Sussmann was the source, realizing that this would cause the agents to doubt the data (though, as it happened, the data was so half-baked that investigators concluded it was nonsense without being told that the source was biased).
As for the Steele dossier, evidence in Danchenko’s trial showed that the FBI swore that it was duly verified twice, in October 2016 and mid-January 2017, before it finally got around to interviewing the main source, Danchenko. He told interviewing agents that Steele’s reports were spurious. He said he was unaware that Steele had taken the rumor and innuendo he had passed along, embellished them with exaggeration and fabrication, and then wrote them up to appear as professional intelligence reporting — indeed, he claimed not to have seen or known about the so-called dossier until BuzzFeed published it in January 2017 (shortly before the FBI finally interviewed Danchenko).
Under the rules of the FISC, information is supposed to be verified before it is presented to a FISC judge; and, if the FBI or Justice Department learns that significant information previously presented to the FISC is inaccurate, the government must promptly correct the record. Here, far from alerting the court that Steele’s information was unreliable and could not be verified, the FBI continued to rely on it in obtaining additional surveillance warrants in April and June 2017. That is, for more than half a year into Trump’s presidency, a federal court was still being told that the FBI suspected him of being a clandestine agent of Russia.
Even worse, the bureau told the FISA court in April 2017 that it had interviewed Danchenko in an effort to “further” corroborate Steele (whose information had not been corroborated) and that agents found Danchenko to be “truthful and cooperative.” Omitted was the inconvenient fact that what Danchenko had been truthful and cooperative about was the fraudulence of the dossier.
It is fair to question Durham’s judgment in bringing the cases against Danchenko and Sussmann. The charges were weak, largely but not exclusively because the defendants’ alleged misconduct paled in comparison to the FBI’s. Durham’s only conviction was a guilty plea by FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith for lying to an agent by altering a key document in the preparation of a surveillance warrant. But even there, the judge imposed a minimal, no-jail sentence after prosecutors put up minimal resistance to Clinesmith’s implausible claim that he hadn’t meant to mislead the court. The unimpressive results will give Democrats and pundits who championed the Trump-Russia smear fodder to argue that Durham’s ultimate report should be ignored. We will wait to review the findings and supporting evidence. In the interim, Durham has done a public service in exposing how imperative it is that the FBI be subjected to searching congressional investigation and reform.
- MDlaxfan76
- Posts: 27123
- Joined: Wed Aug 01, 2018 5:40 pm
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
Durham failed to prove anything at all that he charged, and he failed to charge anything else...why?
Not because he didn't want to do so, he simply didn't have anything close to a makable case.
How many years? How much money spent for zip, nada?
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
+1 The difference is all the right wingers on the board were in love with this sh*t at the time. When I raised the issue, all I got back was "if you got nothing to hide, you got nothing to worry about" bullsh*t.a fan wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 9:10 pmI did. For years. Complained about the Dems and R's who voted for FISA and the "Patriot Act'. Complained again when it was renewed.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 9:01 pmIf it happened to Team Blue you would be outraged.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 8:21 pmWhat else was exposed? Move it through X.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:56 pmThis trial did expose how lame the predicate for the Carter Page FISA warrant was and that the FBI knew it was lame. Yet they continued to use it. Nefarious behavior by FBI and others.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:29 pmAnybody seent Old Soldier?
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/danchen ... -trump.amp
It's an anti-American slush court DESIGNED to hand out bad warrants and bad-faith investigations full stop.
Did YOU complain about it?
More to the point: now that we know, yet again, that FISA is designed to hand out flimsy, secret warrants-------why aren't any of you complaining, and demanding that it be dismantled here in 2022?
Same goes for Dems, obviously.
STAND AGAINST FASCISM
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
The National Review article is especially weak sauce. It completely avoids the central issue: that Trump colluded, conspired, cooperated, or coordinated (choose your favorite “C” word) with Russia. Mueller found abundant evidence of that, just not enough to charge a federal crime in his (very conservative) view.
The article puts heavy focus on the entirely unremarkable proposition that some of the leads the FBI pursued didn’t entirely pan out, as probably happens in every criminal investigation. Many did, however. Just look at the Mueller report.
The article puts heavy focus on the entirely unremarkable proposition that some of the leads the FBI pursued didn’t entirely pan out, as probably happens in every criminal investigation. Many did, however. Just look at the Mueller report.
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
... Durham's problem was he didn't have Bill Barr to interpret his final report.MDlaxfan76 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 20, 2022 12:24 pm
Durham failed to prove anything at all that he charged, and he failed to charge anything else...why?
Not because he didn't want to do so, he simply didn't have anything close to a makable case.
How many years? How much money spent for zip, nada?
STAND AGAINST FASCISM
-
- Posts: 5330
- Joined: Tue Mar 05, 2019 8:36 pm
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
"In the short trial, Durham established that the bureau knowingly submitted to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) sworn applications that claimed the information supplied by former British spy Christopher Steele had been verified. In reality, not only had the bureau failed to verify Steele’s claims of a “conspiracy of cooperation” between Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign and the Kremlin; it had offered Steele $1 million if he could provide corroborating proof. The FBI never had to pay because neither Steele nor his primary source for anti-Trump “intelligence,” Danchenko, could deliver."old salt wrote: ↑Thu Oct 20, 2022 12:22 pm National Review Editorial :https://www.nationalreview.com/2022/10/ ... isconduct/
John Durham Exposed the FBI’s Misconduct
By THE EDITORS, October 20, 2022
The acquittal of Igor Danchenko for making false statements to investigators about his part in providing bogus anti-Trump information for the discredited Steele dossier is, in the end, a footnote. As Russiagate special counsel John Durham argued in summing up the prosecution’s case to the jury, “the elephant in the room” was the FBI. It was the bureau’s malfeasance that was really on trial, and the verdict on that, emphatically, is guilty.
In the short trial, Durham established that the bureau knowingly submitted to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) sworn applications that claimed the information supplied by former British spy Christopher Steele had been verified. In reality, not only had the bureau failed to verify Steele’s claims of a “conspiracy of cooperation” between Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign and the Kremlin; it had offered Steele $1 million if he could provide corroborating proof. The FBI never had to pay because neither Steele nor his primary source for anti-Trump “intelligence,” Danchenko, could deliver.
That is not the half of it. The bureau knew Steele was compiling the dossier as opposition research for the Clinton campaign — he’d been contracted by the information firm Fusion GPS, which had been retained by Clinton’s lawyer, Marc Elias. At Danchenko’s trial, Durham elicited testimony from a senior FBI intelligence analyst, Brian Auten, that in a meeting in Rome in October 2016 (the same month that the FBI started using Steele’s fabricated reporting in its FISA application), an agent improperly briefed Steele on “Crossfire Hurricane,” the bureau’s codename for the Trump/Russia probe. That is, even as Steele was providing the FBI with nonsense that he could not back up, the FBI was providing Steele with classified intelligence related to Trump that Steele was then positioned to share with his Clinton campaign sponsors.
During these same weeks in the run-up to the 2016 election, the Clinton campaign was portraying Trump as a mole for Moscow. Simultaneously, Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussmann, a former Justice Department attorney, exploited his friendship with the FBI’s general counsel, James Baker, to convey directly to the bureau’s top hierarchy skewed data that he wrongly insisted showed that Trump had established a communications back channel with the Kremlin. Sussmann was the subject of Durham’s last prosecution — for lying to the FBI when he claimed, in conveying the shoddy information, that he was not representing any client in doing so.
As with the Danchenko case, Sussmann’s acquittal — which could be explained by the fact that his misconduct wasn’t as blameworthy as that of the FBI — was secondary in importance to Durham’s unrefuted evidence that the FBI knew Sussmann represented the DNC; that it falsely recorded that the information from Sussmann had come from the Justice Department; and that its headquarters concealed from the bureau’s own investigators the fact that Sussmann was the source, realizing that this would cause the agents to doubt the data (though, as it happened, the data was so half-baked that investigators concluded it was nonsense without being told that the source was biased).
As for the Steele dossier, evidence in Danchenko’s trial showed that the FBI swore that it was duly verified twice, in October 2016 and mid-January 2017, before it finally got around to interviewing the main source, Danchenko. He told interviewing agents that Steele’s reports were spurious. He said he was unaware that Steele had taken the rumor and innuendo he had passed along, embellished them with exaggeration and fabrication, and then wrote them up to appear as professional intelligence reporting — indeed, he claimed not to have seen or known about the so-called dossier until BuzzFeed published it in January 2017 (shortly before the FBI finally interviewed Danchenko).
Under the rules of the FISC, information is supposed to be verified before it is presented to a FISC judge; and, if the FBI or Justice Department learns that significant information previously presented to the FISC is inaccurate, the government must promptly correct the record. Here, far from alerting the court that Steele’s information was unreliable and could not be verified, the FBI continued to rely on it in obtaining additional surveillance warrants in April and June 2017. That is, for more than half a year into Trump’s presidency, a federal court was still being told that the FBI suspected him of being a clandestine agent of Russia.
Even worse, the bureau told the FISA court in April 2017 that it had interviewed Danchenko in an effort to “further” corroborate Steele (whose information had not been corroborated) and that agents found Danchenko to be “truthful and cooperative.” Omitted was the inconvenient fact that what Danchenko had been truthful and cooperative about was the fraudulence of the dossier.
It is fair to question Durham’s judgment in bringing the cases against Danchenko and Sussmann. The charges were weak, largely but not exclusively because the defendants’ alleged misconduct paled in comparison to the FBI’s. Durham’s only conviction was a guilty plea by FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith for lying to an agent by altering a key document in the preparation of a surveillance warrant. But even there, the judge imposed a minimal, no-jail sentence after prosecutors put up minimal resistance to Clinesmith’s implausible claim that he hadn’t meant to mislead the court. The unimpressive results will give Democrats and pundits who championed the Trump-Russia smear fodder to argue that Durham’s ultimate report should be ignored. We will wait to review the findings and supporting evidence. In the interim, Durham has done a public service in exposing how imperative it is that the FBI be subjected to searching congressional investigation and reform.
Really, Durham did? Last time I checked, judicial findings of fact in court proceedings are made by the judge or the jury. Please share any such findings re FBI from these proceedings. As an example of judicial findings let me offer you this:
'In March, U.S. District Court Judge David Carter agreed, concluding, “Based on the evidence, the Court finds it more likely than not that President Trump corruptly attempted to obstruct the joint session of Congress on January 6, 2021.”'
Followed by this:
"in yesterday’s instance, the judge concluded that Eastman, in one of the relevant email exchanges, said that Trump was aware that the number of voter fraud cases his team was alleging in a federal lawsuit challenging the election results in Georgia was “inaccurate.” But, the judge said, Trump signed off on the suit, “swearing under oath” that the numbers were correct anyway."
https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-sho ... -rcna53115
Now, those "findings", unlike the opinions in your article, have force of law.
"There is nothing more difficult and more dangerous to carry through than initiating changes. One makes enemies of those who prospered under the old order, and only lukewarm support from those who would prosper under the new."
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
That was their LITERAL response at the Water Cooler. My kingdom for real conservatives that would have NEVER voted for the Patriot Act...and would have mocked folks like Hillary who voted for that d*mn thing. Secret court? In America? F off with this stuff, comrades.jhu72 wrote: ↑Thu Oct 20, 2022 12:36 pm+1 The difference is all the right wingers on the board were in love with this sh*t at the time. When I raised the issue, all I got back was "if you got nothing to hide, you got nothing to worry about" bullsh*t.a fan wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 9:10 pmI did. For years. Complained about the Dems and R's who voted for FISA and the "Patriot Act'. Complained again when it was renewed.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 9:01 pmIf it happened to Team Blue you would be outraged.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 8:21 pmWhat else was exposed? Move it through X.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:56 pmThis trial did expose how lame the predicate for the Carter Page FISA warrant was and that the FBI knew it was lame. Yet they continued to use it. Nefarious behavior by FBI and others.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:29 pmAnybody seent Old Soldier?
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/danchen ... -trump.amp
It's an anti-American slush court DESIGNED to hand out bad warrants and bad-faith investigations full stop.
Did YOU complain about it?
More to the point: now that we know, yet again, that FISA is designed to hand out flimsy, secret warrants-------why aren't any of you complaining, and demanding that it be dismantled here in 2022?
Same goes for Dems, obviously.
-
- Posts: 1365
- Joined: Sat Oct 27, 2018 11:58 pm
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
I have been against the USA Patriot Act since it's inception. It was and still is an assault on our liberties. Against the Department of Homeland Security and the TSA. All of these spawn of 9/11 have made the security state unaccountable to the people. Part of liberty is being left alone by your government.a fan wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 9:10 pmI did. For years. Complained about the Dems and R's who voted for FISA and the "Patriot Act'. Complained again when it was renewed.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 9:01 pmIf it happened to Team Blue you would be outraged.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 8:21 pmWhat else was exposed? Move it through X.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:56 pmThis trial did expose how lame the predicate for the Carter Page FISA warrant was and that the FBI knew it was lame. Yet they continued to use it. Nefarious behavior by FBI and others.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:29 pmAnybody seent Old Soldier?
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/danchen ... -trump.amp
It's an anti-American slush court DESIGNED to hand out bad warrants and bad-faith investigations full stop.
Did YOU complain about it?
More to the point: now that we know, yet again, that FISA is designed to hand out flimsy, secret warrants-------why aren't any of you complaining, and demanding that it be dismantled here in 2022?
Same goes for Dems, obviously.
"I would never want to belong to a club that would have me as a member", Groucho Marx
-
- Posts: 5303
- Joined: Tue Mar 29, 2022 6:49 am
Re: "The Deep State" aka the American Intelligence Community
Agreed, unless, of course, you're a gay kid or a pregnant woman; then, government should be allowed to define, regulate and restrict a big part of your life.get it to x wrote: ↑Thu Oct 20, 2022 2:28 pmI have been against the USA Patriot Act since it's inception. It was and still is an assault on our liberties. Against the Department of Homeland Security and the TSA. All of these spawn of 9/11 have made the security state unaccountable to the people. Part of liberty is being left alone by your government.a fan wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 9:10 pmI did. For years. Complained about the Dems and R's who voted for FISA and the "Patriot Act'. Complained again when it was renewed.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 9:01 pmIf it happened to Team Blue you would be outraged.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 8:21 pmWhat else was exposed? Move it through X.get it to x wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:56 pmThis trial did expose how lame the predicate for the Carter Page FISA warrant was and that the FBI knew it was lame. Yet they continued to use it. Nefarious behavior by FBI and others.Typical Lax Dad wrote: ↑Wed Oct 19, 2022 7:29 pmAnybody seent Old Soldier?
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/danchen ... -trump.amp
It's an anti-American slush court DESIGNED to hand out bad warrants and bad-faith investigations full stop.
Did YOU complain about it?
More to the point: now that we know, yet again, that FISA is designed to hand out flimsy, secret warrants-------why aren't any of you complaining, and demanding that it be dismantled here in 2022?
Same goes for Dems, obviously.