Anonymous ID: 2382d1 May 7, 2022, 8:41 a.m. No.16229177   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9185

https://mobile.twitter.com/SarahAshtonLV/status/1522919636873871360

https://mobile.twitter.com/SarahAshtonLV/status/1522649967332052994

Kraken

Anonymous ID: 2382d1 May 7, 2022, 8:43 a.m. No.16229185   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9647

>>16229177

>https://mobile.twitter.com/SarahAshtonLV/status/1522919636873871360

New vest.

New patches.

Same goals.

Slava Ukraini 🇺🇦

>https://mobile.twitter.com/SarahAshtonLV/status/1522649967332052994

Hey everyone!

Hope y'all are having a great start to your Friday. ☺️

Whether you are in #Ukraine or the USA it's time to get…

"Kraken"

🇺🇦🌻🇺🇦

Anonymous ID: 2382d1 May 7, 2022, 8:49 a.m. No.16229226   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Nobody cares about Ukraine: Friday in New York: Security Council meeting on Ukraine lasted 2 minutes

Chairperson: "There are no registered speakers on the list of speakers. The meeting is adjourned."

https://t.me/youlistenedmayak/21238

t.me/vicktop55/3744

Anonymous ID: 2382d1 May 7, 2022, 11:16 a.m. No.16229902   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9923 >>9928 >>9965

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/25/us/politics/andrew-goldstein-mueller-investigation.html

It’s Mueller’s Investigation. But Right Behind Him Is Andrew Goldstein.

By Noah Weiland and Michael S. Schmidt

Feb. 25, 2019

WASHINGTON — The routine was always the same. President Trump’s lawyers would drive to heavily secured offices near the National Mall, surrender their cellphones, head into a windowless conference room and resume tense negotiations over whether the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, would interview Mr. Trump.

But Mr. Mueller was not always there. Instead, the lawyers tangled with a team of prosecutors, including a little known but formidable adversary: Andrew D. Goldstein, 44, a former Time magazine reporter who is now a lead prosecutor for Mr. Mueller in the investigation into whether the president obstructed justice.

Mr. Mueller is often portrayed as the omnipotent fact-gatherer, but it is Mr. Goldstein who has a much more involved, day-to-day role in one of the central lines of investigation.

Mr. Goldstein, the lone prosecutor in Mr. Mueller’s office who came directly from a corruption unit at the Justice Department, has conducted every major interview of the president’s advisers. He questioned Donald F. McGahn II, Mr. Trump’s former White House counsel, and Michael D. Cohen, Mr. Trump’s former fixer and lawyer, for dozens of hours. He signed Mr. Cohen’s plea agreement. He conducted grand jury questioning of associates of Roger J. Stone Jr., the former adviser to Mr. Trump who was indicted last month.

And he was one of two prosecutors who relayed to the president’s lawyers dozens of questions about Mr. Trump’s behavior in office that Mr. Mueller wanted the president to answer under oath. The questions showed the Mueller team’s hand for the first time: extensive, detailed lines of inquiry that could imperil the presidency.

“He knew the facts like I knew the facts,” John Dowd, Mr. Trump’s former lawyer, said of Mr. Goldstein.

Over the past two years, Mr. Trump has waged a regular assault on prosecutors and other law enforcement officials investigating him, particularly on Mr. Mueller’s team. But mounting a high-level criminal case on obstruction is rare and complex, and even more difficult when the subject is a sitting president.

Now that Mr. Mueller is expected to deliver his report in the coming weeks, Mr. Goldstein’s past as a prosecutor offers a glimpse into how he might be helping the special counsel make a final determination.

Interviews with Mr. Goldstein’s colleagues and friends and an examination of his past work reveal someone profoundly at odds with the cowboylike image Mr. Trump has painted of Mr. Mueller’s team. He is one of the few in the group with a career outside the law — in addition to working for Time, Mr. Goldstein was a high school teacher — and is known for his nonconfrontational personality and cautious approach to prosecutions.

Before Mr. Mueller hired him, Mr. Goldstein, the son of a former Republican United States attorney, led the corruption unit in the United States attorney’s office in Manhattan as the office made a highly unusual call to announce that it had declined to charge Mayor Bill de Blasio with a variety of crimes. The decision revealed how restrained high-level prosecutors often are in major political investigations.

“Investigating and prosecuting public corruption offenses can only go so far,” Mr. Goldstein said in a rare speech around the time he joined the special counsel’s team in 2017. “We can only police the outer bounds of misconduct: the really bad stuff, or at least the stuff that we can prove.”