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Thursday, November 3, 2016

FBI Clinton Foundation probe finds 'avalanche' of corruption




Video 294


The FBI has been investigating a possible pay-to-play interaction between the Clinton Foundation and the State Department during Hillary Clinton’s time as secretary of state for over a year, Fox News host Bret Baier reported Wednesday night.

“There’s an avalanche of new information coming in every day, some of it from WikiLeaks, some from emails,” Baier said. “The agents are actively and aggressively pursuing this case.”

Baier said that the investigation is being led by the white collar crime division, the public corruption branch of the criminal investigative division of the FBI.

Sources told Fox News that the investigation is a “high priority” and was based off interviews with people related to the case. The FBI amassed a “great deal of evidence,” even before the ongoing WikiLeaks releases of hacked emails from Clinton campaign chair John Podesta’s account.

The investigation into emails found on disgraced former Congressman Anthony Weiner’s computer is being run by the national security division of the FBI. The FBI believes that some of the emails on the laptop came from Clinton’s private server. Weiner is the estranged husband of top Clinton aide Huma Abedin.

The emails that were found on Weiner’s laptop appear to be new and not duplicates. It is not yet known if the emails contain classified information.






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Breaking News














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Wednesday, November 2, 2016

President Obama criticizes FBI Director James Comey




Comey ought to turn the tables on the turd. 



Wouldn't take much to prove "Mr. Pseudonym" is an out-and-out liar!

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/fbi-docs-obama-used-a-pseudonym-in-emails-to-clinton/article/2602762

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WASHINGTON — U.S. President Barack Obama defended Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton on Wednesday and said investigations should not allow suggestions or innuendo to influence public opinion.

In his first comment since the FBI reported a new cache of emails possibly related to Clinton, Obama said in a radio interview he did not want to meddle in the process. 

But he was clear on how he believed the investigative process should be carried out.

"I do think that there is a norm that when there are investigations we don't operate on innuendo and we don't operate on incomplete information and we don't operate on leaks. We operate based on concrete decisions that are made," he told NowThisNews in the interview, which was taped on Tuesday and aired on Wednesday.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation on Friday announced it had found new emails that might pertain to Clinton's use of a private server for government business while she was Obama's first secretary of state from 2009-13.

FBI Director James Comey said he did not know whether the emails were significant and released no information other than that they existed. His announcement 11 days before the Nov. 8 election drew outrage from Democrats and others who believed it would unfairly influence the vote.

Little is known yet about the emails, which were found during an unrelated probe into former U.S. Representative Anthony Weiner, the estranged husband of top Clinton aide Huma Abedin.

Obama noted that the FBI already has determined that Clinton had not intentionally transmitted classified information over her private email server but had been "extremely careless.""When this was investigated thoroughly the last time, the conclusion of the FBI the conclusion of the Justice Department, the conclusion of repeated congressional investigations was that she had made some mistakes but that there wasn't anything there that was prosecutable," Obama said.

Obama defended Clinton, whose increasingly confident campaign was blindsided by the FBI announcement, as someone who has always put the American people first.

"When she makes a mistake, an honest mistake, it ends up being blown up as if it's some crazy thing," he said. "I wouldn't be supporting her if I didn't have absolute confidence in her integrity and her interest in making sure that young people have a better future."






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Tuesday, November 1, 2016

The hits just keep on coming




'Kept me out of jail': Top DOJ official involved in Clinton probe represented her campaign chairman


John Podesta’s Best Friend At The DOJ Will Be In Charge Of The DOJ’s Probe Into Huma Abedin Emails. 

(Certainly no conflict of interest here)


This means in about 24 hours she will be found toatally innocent.

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The Justice Department official in charge of informing Congress about the newly reactivated Hillary Clinton email probe is a political appointee and former private-practice lawyer who kept Clinton Campaign Chairman John Podesta “out of jail,” lobbied for a tax cheat later pardoned by President Bill Clinton and led the effort to confirm Attorney General Loretta Lynch.

Peter Kadzik, who was confirmed as assistant attorney general for legislative affairs in June 2014, represented Podesta in 1998 when independent counsel Kenneth Starr was investigating Podesta for his possible role in helping ex-Bill Clinton intern and mistress Monica Lewinsky land a job at the United Nations.

“Fantastic lawyer. Kept me out of jail,” Podesta wrote on Sept. 8, 2008 to Obama aide Cassandra Butts, according to emails hacked from Podesta’s Gmail account and posted by WikiLeaks.

Kadzik’s name has surfaced multiple times in regard to the FBI’s investigation of Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton for using a private, homebrewed server. After FBI Director James Comey informed Congress on Thursday the FBI was reviving its inquiry when new evidence linked to a separate investigation was discovered, congressional leaders wrote to the Department of Justice seeking more information. Kadzik replied.

“We assure you that the Department will continue to work closely with the FBI and together, dedicate all necessary resources and take appropriate steps as expeditiously as possible,” Kadzik wrote on Oct. 31.

The DOJ is responsible for approving the bureau’s warrant applications and ultimately for convening a grand jury.

Fox News has previously confirmed the Justice Department was opposed to Comey making public the latest Clinton revelations.

Kadzik had been an attorney with Dickstein Shapiro LLP for 18 years before he represented Podesta in the Clinton/Lewinsky investigation. He was hired in 2000 as a lobbyist for tax cheat Marc Rich, who was controversially granted a pardon by President Bill Clinton during Clinton’s final days in office.



(He passed away in 2013 but still votes Democrat)



 Kadzik got the job “because he was ‘trusted by [White House Chief of Staff John] Podesta,’ and was considered to be a ‘useful person to convey [Marc Rich’s] arguments to Mr. Podesta,’” according to a 2002 House Oversight Committee report.

Podesta and Kadzik kept up their relationship after Kadzik was appointed to the DOJ. In a May 5, 2015 email, Kadzik’s son, PJ, wrote to Podesta seeking a job on Hillary Clinton’s newly launched presidential campaign.

“I have always aspired to work on a presidential campaign, and have been waiting for some time now for Hilary [sic] to announce so that I can finally make this aspiration a reality,” PJ Kadzik wrote.

Podesta said he would "check around," but it's unclear what came of the request.

Kadzik was also a dinner guest of Podesta and his wife, Mary, on Oct. 23, 2015 – the day after Hillary Clinton testified before the House Benghazi committee, another email shows.

In a separate exchange about another dinner meeting, on Jan. 12, 2016, Kadzik emailed Podesta: “We on?”

Podesta replied, “Yes sorry. 7:30 at our place.”

“Great. C u then,” Kadzik wrote back the next day.

Though he said he has had "many differences" with Kadzik, Rep. Trey Gowdy, R.-S.C., said on "Fox & Friends" Tuesday that he wasn't concerned about any potential conflicts of interest.

"Peter Kadzik is not a decision maker, he is a messenger," Gowdy said. 

Kadzik is still a key official in the department. He “led the successful effort to confirm Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch and Deputy Attorney General Sally Q. Yates,” according to his DOJ biography. Lynch has come under increased scrutiny since it emerged she met privately with Bill Clinton in the days before the FBI initially said it would not seek to prosecute Hillary Clinton.






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Ohio Gov. John Kasich, Disliking Trump and Clinton, Votes McCain for President


Nov 1 2016, 8:18 am ET


Not surprised... might as well have been Ralph Nader.




In effect he just voted for Clinton. 
Another guy I lost all respect for.

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Ohio Gov. John Kasich said he wouldn't vote for either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton, and he made that final Monday when he mailed in an absentee ballot writing in Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, for president, spokesman Chris Schrimpf confirmed. 

"You want to vote for someone you can support," Schrimpf told NBC News. "He's been clear he can't support Trump. He's been equally clear he can't support Clinton." 

Kasich was the last Republican to leave the presidential race, on May 4, before Trump became the presumptive nominee. While he hesitated for months to say anything negative about any of his opponents, he was very critical of Trump by the end of his run. He finally announced that he wouldn't vote for his party's nominee after the controversial "Access Hollywood" tape with Trump speaking about women emerged. 

McCain told NBC News in a statement Monday night: "I appreciate that my old friend and Ohio's outstanding governor John Kasich would pay me the compliment."





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