Anonymous ID: 206ea1 March 13, 2022, 11:24 a.m. No.15855850   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5886

Tried to organize that dig lb a bit.

 

>>15854760, >>15854815, >>15854824, >>15854892 Ukraine's Nazis. Azov Battalion, Aidar Battallion, Donbas Battalions.

>>15854952 ISIS Style War crimes. “They Cut off the Ears of a Child” - Aidar

>>15854915, >>15855045 Ukrainian Nazis bankrolled by Ukrainian Oligarchs

>>15854934 Kolomoisky US Dems Connections

>>15855031, >>15855146, >>15855151, >>15855169 Kolomoyskiy's U.S. Companies Were Approved For COVID Relief Loans

Anonymous ID: 206ea1 March 13, 2022, 11:30 a.m. No.15855886   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15855850

>Tried to organize that diglba bit.

 

So I can add this random act of journalism. Seems interdastsing. Article is long so will just add a little bit and may go through for a breakdown.

 

Accused money launderers secretly moved millions into America to buy steel mills— while elected leaders helped them fend off U.S. regulators and foreign competitors. Left in the wake: hazardous waste and injured workers.

 

By Michael Sallah and Emma Loop | Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

 

November 19, 2021

 

Just after dawn, the fumes rose from the top of the Felman Production metals factory where the arc furnace belched out smoke and dust that cascaded over the neighborhood, covering the homes in a layer of filth.

 

Inside, Terry Henry, a 42-year-old welder, started to shake and later began to stumble and come down with excruciating headaches.

 

What he didn't know at the time was he was slowly filling up with toxins so dangerous from the furnace fumes pouring into the factory that doctors later found traces of manganese in the base of his brain.

 

When the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency stepped in years later to push tough restrictions on the factory — after workers were found to have been exposed to emissions — the operators of the West Virginia facility turned to some of the most powerful members of Congress to fend off regulators and keep the doors open.

 

Sens. Joe Manchin and Shelley Moore Capitojoined other lawmakers in firing off a letter to the agency in 2015, saying the plant in their home state and another in Ohio could shut down if they were forced to install expensive equipment and submit to testing under a strict deadline.

 

The factory was the centerpiece of a U.S. steel fortune acquired by oligarch Ihor Kolomoisky, who is accused by prosecutors of stealing hundreds of millions from Ukraine's largest bank between 2008 and 2016 and then plowing the money into steel mills from New York to Texas.

 

The 58-year-old billionaire, a powerful figure in Ukraine who was banned earlier this year from entering the United States by the State Department, is the focus of a federal investigation that tracked millions of dollars coming into the United States in a flow of money that nearly crippled the bank in Ukraine.

 

"It would be extremely disappointing if the companies were forced to stop operating," the letter read.

 

>https://newsinteractive.post-gazette.com/dirty-dollars-2/

Anonymous ID: 206ea1 March 13, 2022, 12:01 p.m. No.15856038   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6062

>>15855978

<You were banned for spamming and then came back and cried about it.

nope

No sauce and not what happened.

that's fake news.

You can see it in the screen cap.

"You were banned for the following post"

Filtered

sorta like you now.