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Wwcd
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Wwcd's Journal
June 20, 2018
National Enquirer Subpoenaed in Michael Cohen Probe
Prosecutors eye whether company coordinated with ex-Trump lawyer on payment to bury affair allegation
SNIP
Investigators are probing any potential efforts by Mr. Cohen to suppress damaging information about Mr. Trump during the presidential campaign, including whether he coordinated with American Media to pay Ms. McDougal and then not publish her account, other people familiar with the matter said.
Prosecutors are examining whether the payment violated campaign-finance or other laws, the people said.
American Media hasnt been accused of wrongdoing, and the company has denied paying Ms. McDougal to suppress her story.
American Media Inc., has, and will continue to, comply with any and all requests that do not jeopardize or violate its protected sources or materials pursuant to our first amendment rights, a company spokesman said in an emailed statement.
Karen McDougal has said she had an affair with Donald Trump.
Mr. Trump and his representatives have denied a sexual encounter.
Ms. McDougal has said publicly that she had a nearly yearlong affair with Mr. Trump beginning in 2006. The tactic of paying for a story but not publishing it is known in the tabloid world as catch and kill, The Wall Street Journal previously reported.
The companys chairman and chief executive, David Pecker, has said he is a longtime friend of Messrs. Trump and Cohen, and the Enquirer aggressively supported Mr. Trumps campaign. Ms. McDougal said in a March lawsuit against the publisher that she realized after the fact the payment was intended to muzzle her during the campaign.
Two months after American Medias payment to Ms. McDougal, Mr. Cohen wired $130,000 to former adult-film star Stephanie Clifford so she would keep silent about an alleged sexual encounter with Mr. Trump, also in 2006.
That payment occurred 12 days before the presidential election.
Mr. Trump and his representatives have denied he had sexual encounters with Ms. McDougal or Ms. Clifford, who is professionally known as Stormy Daniels. Mr. Trump has acknowledged repaying Mr. Cohen through monthly retainers.
The White House and Mr. Cohen didnt respond to requests for comment for this article.
MORE....
✔National Enquirer Subpoenaed in Michael Cohen Probe
https://twitter.com/TeaPainUSA/status/1009547506634633216National Enquirer Subpoenaed in Michael Cohen Probe
Prosecutors eye whether company coordinated with ex-Trump lawyer on payment to bury affair allegation
SNIP
Investigators are probing any potential efforts by Mr. Cohen to suppress damaging information about Mr. Trump during the presidential campaign, including whether he coordinated with American Media to pay Ms. McDougal and then not publish her account, other people familiar with the matter said.
Prosecutors are examining whether the payment violated campaign-finance or other laws, the people said.
American Media hasnt been accused of wrongdoing, and the company has denied paying Ms. McDougal to suppress her story.
American Media Inc., has, and will continue to, comply with any and all requests that do not jeopardize or violate its protected sources or materials pursuant to our first amendment rights, a company spokesman said in an emailed statement.
Karen McDougal has said she had an affair with Donald Trump.
Mr. Trump and his representatives have denied a sexual encounter.
Ms. McDougal has said publicly that she had a nearly yearlong affair with Mr. Trump beginning in 2006. The tactic of paying for a story but not publishing it is known in the tabloid world as catch and kill, The Wall Street Journal previously reported.
The companys chairman and chief executive, David Pecker, has said he is a longtime friend of Messrs. Trump and Cohen, and the Enquirer aggressively supported Mr. Trumps campaign. Ms. McDougal said in a March lawsuit against the publisher that she realized after the fact the payment was intended to muzzle her during the campaign.
Two months after American Medias payment to Ms. McDougal, Mr. Cohen wired $130,000 to former adult-film star Stephanie Clifford so she would keep silent about an alleged sexual encounter with Mr. Trump, also in 2006.
That payment occurred 12 days before the presidential election.
Mr. Trump and his representatives have denied he had sexual encounters with Ms. McDougal or Ms. Clifford, who is professionally known as Stormy Daniels. Mr. Trump has acknowledged repaying Mr. Cohen through monthly retainers.
The White House and Mr. Cohen didnt respond to requests for comment for this article.
MORE....
June 20, 2018
"That awkward moment when an extra bird shows up"
I'm Sooo doing this to my teenagers on Thanksgiving
https://www.facebook.com/ThatPetLifeYo/videos/2419079904984777/"That awkward moment when an extra bird shows up"
June 20, 2018
Doctors/nurses allowed into three infant and toddler facilities in Texas described HUNDREDS OF BABIE
https://twitter.com/susandagostino6/status/1009416451508396033
June 20, 2018
Tuesday, June 19, 2018
Thief-In-Law Razhden Shulaya Convicted Of Racketeering In Manhattan Federal Court
Avtandil Khurtsidze, Shulayas Enforcer and Former Middleweight World Boxing Champion, Also Found Guilty of Racketeering and Wire Fraud Charges
SNIP
RAZHDEN SHULAYA, a vor v zakone or thief-in-law, and AVTANDIL KHURTSIDZE, a boxing champion and SHULAYAs enforcer, were found guilty of racketeering and related charges in connection with a sprawling and violent criminal enterprise operating in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Nevada, and abroad.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman said: As a unanimous jury found, Razhden Shulaya and his chief enforcer, Avtandil Khurtsidze, engaged in an array of criminal schemes that included violence, extortion, theft, trafficking in stolen goods, and fraud. Shulaya, a Russian vor v zakone or thief-in-law, is now a convicted thief under U.S. law. Both defendants now await sentencing for their crimes.
As established by the evidence at trial:
The Shulaya Enterprise was an organized criminal group operating under the direction and protection of RAZHDEN SHULAYA, a/k/a Brother, a/k/a Roma, a vor v zakone or vor, which are Russian phrases translated roughly as Thief-in-Law or Thief, and which refer to an order of elite criminals from the former Soviet Union who receive tribute from other criminals, offer protection, and use their recognized status as vor to adjudicate disputes among lower-level criminals.
As a vor, SHULAYA had substantial influence in the criminal underworld and offered assistance to and protection of the members and associates of the Shulaya Enterprise.
SNIP
Most members and associates of the Shulaya Enterprise were born in the former Soviet Union and many maintained substantial ties to Georgia, Ukraine, and the Russian Federation, including regular travel to those countries, communication with associates in those countries, and the transfer of criminal proceeds to individuals in those countries.
AVTANDIL KHURTSIDZE, formerly a middleweight boxing champion, acted as SHULAYAs chief enforcer and, as such, engaged in multiple acts of extortion and violence.
KHURTSIDZE was captured on video twice assaulting others in service of the Shulaya Enterprise, participated in recorded acts of extortion of gambling debts, and planned additional acts of violence
MORE...
Twitter Link
https://mobile.twitter.com/SDNYnews/status/1009163016062078977
We found Trump's violent infestation! ✔Shulaya Convicted Of Racketeering In Manhattan Federal Court
https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/thief-law-razhden-shulaya-convicted-racketeering-manhattan-federal-courtTuesday, June 19, 2018
Thief-In-Law Razhden Shulaya Convicted Of Racketeering In Manhattan Federal Court
Avtandil Khurtsidze, Shulayas Enforcer and Former Middleweight World Boxing Champion, Also Found Guilty of Racketeering and Wire Fraud Charges
SNIP
RAZHDEN SHULAYA, a vor v zakone or thief-in-law, and AVTANDIL KHURTSIDZE, a boxing champion and SHULAYAs enforcer, were found guilty of racketeering and related charges in connection with a sprawling and violent criminal enterprise operating in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Nevada, and abroad.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman said: As a unanimous jury found, Razhden Shulaya and his chief enforcer, Avtandil Khurtsidze, engaged in an array of criminal schemes that included violence, extortion, theft, trafficking in stolen goods, and fraud. Shulaya, a Russian vor v zakone or thief-in-law, is now a convicted thief under U.S. law. Both defendants now await sentencing for their crimes.
As established by the evidence at trial:
The Shulaya Enterprise was an organized criminal group operating under the direction and protection of RAZHDEN SHULAYA, a/k/a Brother, a/k/a Roma, a vor v zakone or vor, which are Russian phrases translated roughly as Thief-in-Law or Thief, and which refer to an order of elite criminals from the former Soviet Union who receive tribute from other criminals, offer protection, and use their recognized status as vor to adjudicate disputes among lower-level criminals.
As a vor, SHULAYA had substantial influence in the criminal underworld and offered assistance to and protection of the members and associates of the Shulaya Enterprise.
SNIP
Most members and associates of the Shulaya Enterprise were born in the former Soviet Union and many maintained substantial ties to Georgia, Ukraine, and the Russian Federation, including regular travel to those countries, communication with associates in those countries, and the transfer of criminal proceeds to individuals in those countries.
AVTANDIL KHURTSIDZE, formerly a middleweight boxing champion, acted as SHULAYAs chief enforcer and, as such, engaged in multiple acts of extortion and violence.
KHURTSIDZE was captured on video twice assaulting others in service of the Shulaya Enterprise, participated in recorded acts of extortion of gambling debts, and planned additional acts of violence
MORE...
Twitter Link
https://mobile.twitter.com/SDNYnews/status/1009163016062078977
June 19, 2018
Jeff Sessions own church charges him with child abuse
By Eric Boehlert - June 19, 2018
SNIP
Citing Paragraph 2702.3 of the 2016 United Methodist Book of Discipline, the group formally charged Sessions with the chargeable offenses of child abuse, immorality, and racial discrimination.
As his denomination, we have an ethical obligation to speak boldly when one of our members is engaged in causing significant harm in matters contrary to the Discipline on the global stage, the letter states.
The stunning church censure follows Sessions ridiculous attempt to use a passage in the Bible to justify the administration willfully tearing families apart, a move that was nearly universally condemned by religious leaders.
More..nice read..fair & just.
Jeff Sessions' own church charges him with child abuse
https://shareblue.com/jeff-sessions-united-methodist-church-charges-child-abuse/Jeff Sessions own church charges him with child abuse
By Eric Boehlert - June 19, 2018
SNIP
Citing Paragraph 2702.3 of the 2016 United Methodist Book of Discipline, the group formally charged Sessions with the chargeable offenses of child abuse, immorality, and racial discrimination.
As his denomination, we have an ethical obligation to speak boldly when one of our members is engaged in causing significant harm in matters contrary to the Discipline on the global stage, the letter states.
The stunning church censure follows Sessions ridiculous attempt to use a passage in the Bible to justify the administration willfully tearing families apart, a move that was nearly universally condemned by religious leaders.
More..nice read..fair & just.
June 19, 2018
"It's Not an Economic Issue.."
"It's Not an Economic Issue, It's a Cultural Issue and It's a Bigotry Issue"
Bret Stevens OpEd columnist for NYTimes & MSNBC Analyst, on Immigration, with Stephanie Rhule
He nailed the problem with Immigration in America
The Economic argument is bull sh*t, the problem is Cultural & Bigotry.
June 18, 2018
✔*Trigger Warning:* Immigrant Children Cry Out in Audio Recorded at Detention Center
Here if you want to send this on to someone you know.
Congress people, etc
June 18, 2018
Oh No..Was that Feinstein & the Dems immigration bill that failed to get the Votes!!
Amy Klobachar talking about this now
June 18, 2018
https://twitter.com/coreypierceart/status/1008784903410999296
From Senator Tim Kaine
https://twitter.com/timkaine/status/1008778755291123712https://twitter.com/coreypierceart/status/1008784903410999296
June 18, 2018
They sleep on concrete floors. If not for donations from Good Samaritans who regularly visit the area, they would be without fresh food or water.
These are horrible stories, but I feel like their nightmare might just be starting, a Mexican official told Amelia McGowan, program director and immigration attorney at Migrants Support Center though Catholic Charities in Jackson. McGowan went to the border specifically Nogales, Mexico, about an hour south of Tucson, Arizona - to see the situation for herself.
SNIP
While in Nogales, McGowan spoke with dozens of people in line, many of whom had been waiting to speak with officials for days.
She talked with people in the first week of June, days before news stories went public of family separations.
The day she left Nogales, McGowan wrote in a Facebook post:
"While turning yourself in at a port of entry is a lawful and proper means of seeking asylum protection under U.S. law, these families and children now face days of languishing at the border, and traumatized children are likely to be torn from the arms of their only protectors in a policy aimed at 'deterring' people from seeking this lawful protection, which is enshrined in U.S. law.
"Demoralized and retraumatized, these families will then face the arduous and unforgiving asylum process alone and from detention, where their access to legal counsel and other forms of support will be severely limited."
Here is McGowan's first-hand account of her experience, as told to the Clarion Ledger.
SNIP
We parked in a McDonalds parking lot on the U.S. side of the border and took bags filled with supplies. We crossed over the land bridge, and going into Mexico was a very easy process. We went through the scanner and walked on through. On either side of the border there is a covered facility, open air, where people usually wait in the ques.
There were two lines; one really was for asylum seekers and one for everyone else entering the U.S. including permanent residents, tourists and business people. It was really kind of a catch all for everybody. That line, for non-asylum traffic, was moving fairly quickly.
There was a bar separating the two lines, and on the other side of the bar was a line of about 80 people who had been waiting for days to seek asylum in the U.S.
There was yellow tape, kind of like caution tape, mats and towels on the ground. The eeriest thing was there were childrens toys scattered. There were supplies lined up against the walls, these mats, and children playing on the floor. It was a very stark contrast between the two lines. It was kind of harrowing.
On one side, you have these tourists, carrying their souvenirs, their big sombreros coming back from Mexico.
These were tourists who had gone to Mexico for the day.
On the other side you had this police tape. There were families, some single men and single women, young mostly.
About half the people there were children, under the age of 18. There were a few infants to 2 years old.
There were a lot of toddlers and even more young children, I would say 5 to 10 years old.
I met a couple teenagers, a girl and a boy, from Guatemala. Both were unaccompanied minors. The boy was 14. He told me his father had been recently murdered in front of him. I dont know how old the girl was, I would say about 12, she looked a lot younger.
SNIP
Leaving was an emotional experience. Obviously youve connected with these families.
You think about this poor little boy that you just met, and they ask for protection.
Not only are they not going to get it but I think that police officer was right.
This might just be the beginning, unfortunately.
All we had to do, this sounds so cliché, but all we had to do was take out our passports and come back home.
We had safety.
To leave people and know what they were going to have to face this uncertainty and this terror, it was really something to jump in this line and come back home.
It was kind of surreal.
We had not yet heard of family separation and then to know what happened days later, undoubtedly, Im sure it happened to at least some of those families.
To know that that happened, you wonder what their fate was after we so easily left them.
We hope and pray for the best, but we know the reality.
Must Read..
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.clarionledger.com/amp/690945002
Immigration attorney describes families being separated, torn apart
Seeking asylum in the United States often from violence men, women and children, mostly from Central America, wait in line for days in the sweltering heat.They sleep on concrete floors. If not for donations from Good Samaritans who regularly visit the area, they would be without fresh food or water.
These are horrible stories, but I feel like their nightmare might just be starting, a Mexican official told Amelia McGowan, program director and immigration attorney at Migrants Support Center though Catholic Charities in Jackson. McGowan went to the border specifically Nogales, Mexico, about an hour south of Tucson, Arizona - to see the situation for herself.
SNIP
While in Nogales, McGowan spoke with dozens of people in line, many of whom had been waiting to speak with officials for days.
She talked with people in the first week of June, days before news stories went public of family separations.
The day she left Nogales, McGowan wrote in a Facebook post:
"While turning yourself in at a port of entry is a lawful and proper means of seeking asylum protection under U.S. law, these families and children now face days of languishing at the border, and traumatized children are likely to be torn from the arms of their only protectors in a policy aimed at 'deterring' people from seeking this lawful protection, which is enshrined in U.S. law.
"Demoralized and retraumatized, these families will then face the arduous and unforgiving asylum process alone and from detention, where their access to legal counsel and other forms of support will be severely limited."
Here is McGowan's first-hand account of her experience, as told to the Clarion Ledger.
SNIP
We parked in a McDonalds parking lot on the U.S. side of the border and took bags filled with supplies. We crossed over the land bridge, and going into Mexico was a very easy process. We went through the scanner and walked on through. On either side of the border there is a covered facility, open air, where people usually wait in the ques.
There were two lines; one really was for asylum seekers and one for everyone else entering the U.S. including permanent residents, tourists and business people. It was really kind of a catch all for everybody. That line, for non-asylum traffic, was moving fairly quickly.
There was a bar separating the two lines, and on the other side of the bar was a line of about 80 people who had been waiting for days to seek asylum in the U.S.
There was yellow tape, kind of like caution tape, mats and towels on the ground. The eeriest thing was there were childrens toys scattered. There were supplies lined up against the walls, these mats, and children playing on the floor. It was a very stark contrast between the two lines. It was kind of harrowing.
On one side, you have these tourists, carrying their souvenirs, their big sombreros coming back from Mexico.
These were tourists who had gone to Mexico for the day.
On the other side you had this police tape. There were families, some single men and single women, young mostly.
About half the people there were children, under the age of 18. There were a few infants to 2 years old.
There were a lot of toddlers and even more young children, I would say 5 to 10 years old.
I met a couple teenagers, a girl and a boy, from Guatemala. Both were unaccompanied minors. The boy was 14. He told me his father had been recently murdered in front of him. I dont know how old the girl was, I would say about 12, she looked a lot younger.
SNIP
Leaving was an emotional experience. Obviously youve connected with these families.
You think about this poor little boy that you just met, and they ask for protection.
Not only are they not going to get it but I think that police officer was right.
This might just be the beginning, unfortunately.
All we had to do, this sounds so cliché, but all we had to do was take out our passports and come back home.
We had safety.
To leave people and know what they were going to have to face this uncertainty and this terror, it was really something to jump in this line and come back home.
It was kind of surreal.
We had not yet heard of family separation and then to know what happened days later, undoubtedly, Im sure it happened to at least some of those families.
To know that that happened, you wonder what their fate was after we so easily left them.
We hope and pray for the best, but we know the reality.
Must Read..
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.clarionledger.com/amp/690945002
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Member since: Tue Oct 17, 2017, 11:56 AM
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