Anonymous ID: 70ca1d July 7, 2021, 4:11 a.m. No.14072161   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/eye-of-fire-exxon-lobbyist-s-comments-fuel-renewed-attacks-on-oil-industry/ar-AALS5b6?ocid=msedgntp

 

A Dutch journalist exposed the mob and defied death threats. Now he’s been…

'Horrific' graffiti on Martin Luther King Jr. statue in Southern California is…

 

Environmentalists are ramping up their criticism of the oil and gas industry following revelations last week from an ExxonMobil lobbyist on climate change and a viral "eye of fire" video from the Gulf of Mexico caused by a pipeline leak.

 

this looks fake n gay

wtf

Anonymous ID: 70ca1d July 7, 2021, 4:15 a.m. No.14072167   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/fbi-infiltrates-group-whose-members-wanted-to-test-homemade-bombs-surveil-capitol-secede-from-us-court-records-show/ar-AALRscz?ocid=msedgntp

 

FBI infiltrates group whose members wanted to test homemade bombs, surveil Capitol, secede from US, court records show

 

Haitian President Jovenel Moïse assassinated, first lady injured in attack

Opinions | Joe Biden is sending an academic to Germany. Here’s why it…

 

The FBI has infiltrated a "Bible study" group in Virginia that after the January 6 riot had members discussing surveilling the US Capitol and their wish for secession from the US, and investigators closely followed one member's plans to build and test Molotov cocktails, according to recently unsealed court records.

 

The startling new case, landing six months after the pro-Trump insurrection, adds to the more than 500 Capitol riot federal criminal cases already in court and fleshes out what's known about the Justice Department's understanding of the continued interests of right-wing extremists to allegedly interfere with the US government and discuss with each other how to do so. The new case highlights one group member's apparent interest in a second American civil war.

 

The newly disclosed criminal case against Virginia man Fi Duong who also goes by "Monkey King" and "Jim," according to the court record arose after Duong interacted with undercover law enforcement officers several times on January 6 and into recent months, when the FBI ultimately gained access to his group in Virginia then accompanied him to an old jail as Duong allegedly pursued bomb-building.

 

Law enforcement's undercover interactions with Duong and his contacts since January are laid out in a 14-page statement from the FBI filed in court in recent days to support his arrest and initial charges.

 

January 6 charges

Duong was arrested last week, after the Justice Department charged him with four federal crimes, including entering the restricted grounds of the Capitol and obstruction of an official proceeding related to his alleged participation in the siege on January 6, according to his court record.

 

He has not yet entered a plea.

 

On January 6 in downtown Washington, Duong spoke with an undercover Metropolitan Police officer, according to his charging papers. Duong was dressed in black, in an alleged effort to disguise himself as the leftist group antifa, investigators say. During the conversation, Duong asked the undercover officer if they were a "patriot," and identified himself as an "operator," according to FBI records supporting his arrest.

 

As the riot progressed, the undercover officer saw him again, kneeling by a marble fence on a terrace of the Capitol – an area that was normally restricted, according to court records. Investigators say Duong also videotaped himself inside the Capitol and was captured on the building's cameras wearing a white mask shaped like a wide grin.

 

The charges Duong faces are minor compared with what other right-wing extremists have faced for their alleged roles in the insurrection. He has not yet been formally indicted, and his charges could be expanded or rewritten in the coming weeks.

 

He has not been charged with crimes related to any post-January 6 conduct, including the alleged bomb planning.

 

Duong's attorney declined to comment on Tuesday.

Anonymous ID: 70ca1d July 7, 2021, 4:27 a.m. No.14072186   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/judge-who-presided-over-michael-cohen-case-dies-at-age-68/ar-AALQski?ocid=msedgntp

 

Judge who presided over Michael Cohen case dies at age 68

 

NEW YORK (AP) — Judge William H. Pauley III, who presided over the criminal case against ex-President Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer during a tenure on the federal bench lasting more than two decades, died Tuesday after a long illness. He was 68.

 

Pauley died at his New York home, according to Edward Friedland, the district executive for the Southern District of New York.

 

In 2018, Pauley sentenced attorney Michael Cohen to three years in prison after Cohen pleaded guilty to charges including campaign finance fraud and lying to Congress. Cohen was freed to home confinement last year during a wider prisoner release program amid the coronavirus outbreak in prisons.

 

“Somewhere along the way Mr. Cohen appears to have lost his moral compass,” the judge said at sentencing.

 

In 2003, Pauley sentenced drug-company entrepreneur Sam Waksal to over seven years in prison. Waksal, the founder of ImClone Systems, was at the center of an insider trading scandal that ensnared Martha Stewart.

 

The prosecutions were among numerous civil and criminal cases of public interest presided over by Pauley, a judge known for firm control of his courtroom and friendliness to everyone he encountered around the courthouse.

 

In 2013, he ordered a new trial for three of four people convicted in what was then the largest tax fraud in U.S. history, saying a “pathological liar” who served as a juror had corrupted the trial.

 

The same year, he upheld the legality of the National Security Agency's collection of millions of Americans' telephone records, calling it a necessary extension of steps taken after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Two years later, Congress limited the program with the passage of the USA Freedom Act.

 

Two years ago, he rejected a $2 billion deal as insufficient to settle lawsuits over unhealthy conditions for 400,000 residents of the nation's largest public housing system. He ruled after hearing dozens of residents complain about rats, roaches and mold in their buildings.

 

“Bill Pauley was a great judge — wise, engaged, excited about his role in making sure that justice was served in every case — and a great friend and colleague," Chief Judge Laura Taylor Swain said. "Our court was better for his presence and he will be sorely missed.”

 

Judge Colleen McMahon said Pauley was nominated by then-President Bill Clinton and confirmed to the bench in 1998 along with three other judges, including herself. She said they dubbed themselves the “Class of '98.”

 

“Our annual dinners were scenes of much merriment and not a little fine scotch,” she said.

 

“His judicial record speaks for itself, but fewer are aware of his significant presence behind the scenes,” McMahon said of the work Pauley did as chair of the court's security committee, where he for many years worked with law enforcement partners to keep the courthouses safe for judges, litigants and the public.

 

“He was a critically important member of the court’s COVID response team from its earliest days,” she said. "He was a wise counselor to anyone who asked him for advice. And that advice was invariably sound. … I will miss him every day.”

 

Judge Richard M. Berman, another member of the “Class of '98," recalled him as "a terrific judge, a wise counsellor to me, and a very good and decent friend.”

Anonymous ID: 70ca1d July 7, 2021, 4:48 a.m. No.14072251   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2258 >>2265

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/journalist-ayesha-k-faines-dies-unexpectedly/ar-AALQyvz?ocid=msedgntp

 

Ayesha K. Faines, a veteran journalist who worked for news stations in New York City and Florida, died last Friday, according to a former employer.

 

A cause of death has not been released for Faines, who died “unexpectedly,” announced the Jacksonville, Fla., TV outlet News4Jax.

 

In addition to a role as a traffic anchor for News4Jax in 2008, Faines’ career included a stint as a TV reporter for New York’s My9TV/FOX.

 

fox reporter ded

Anonymous ID: 70ca1d July 7, 2021, 4:52 a.m. No.14072267   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/new-book-alleges-donald-trump-worried-ghislaine-maxwell-would-tie-him-to-jeffrey-epstein-case/ar-AALQjO5?ocid=msedgntp

 

New Book Alleges Donald Trump Worried Ghislaine Maxwell Would Tie Him to Jeffrey Epstein Case

 

A Dutch journalist exposed the mob and defied death threats. Now he’s been…

Reach of 'big lie' grows 6 months after Jan. 6: The Note

 

Author Michael Wolff's latest book Landslide: The Final Days of the Trump Presidency alleges that former President Donald Trump, fearing that Ghislaine Maxwell would link him to Jeffrey Epstein's "sex-abuse scandal," mulled pardoning the financier's companion in the final weeks of his presidency.