Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 1:49 p.m. No.16376194   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6220 >>6529

>>16376171

 

not able

 

  • Smellit joofagnig Walks

  • Creeepornlawer Walks

  • Joovanka $2billion From sandnigs

 

https://news.yahoo.com/jussie-smollett-attempts-career-comeback-211856109.html

 

https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2022/05/jared-kushner-affinity-partners-saudi-arabia

 

Avenatti has delayed serving a 2 1/2-year prison sentence for his 2020 conviction in an extortion case while waiting for the book proceeds trial and the retrial of a fraud case in a California federal court. Sentencing was set for May 24. Prosecutors said it was likely that Daniels will speak at sentencing.Feb 4, 2022

https://www.npr.org/2022/02/04/1078363467/stormy-daniels-michael-avenatti-convicted#:~:text=Avenatti%20has%20delayed%20serving%20a,Daniels%20will%20speak%20at%20sentencing.

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 1:58 p.m. No.16376229   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6259 >>6630

VODKA PELOSI'S • multi-millionaire husband Paul, killed his 19-year-old brother David Pelosi, when Paul lost control and flipped his sports car in an early-morning 'joyride' when he was 16-years-old

65 years prior to this weekend's arrest of Paul Pelosi's drunk driving crash.

#DrunkLivesMatter

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 2:09 p.m. No.16376275   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6529 >>6835

>>16376259

>https://nypost.com/2022/05/31/nancy-pelosis-husband-killed-his-brother-in-1957-car-crash/

 

Nancy Pelosi’s husband killed his older brother in 1957 sports car crash: report

nypost.com/2022/05/31/nancy-pelosis-husband-killed-his-brother-in-1957-car-crash

By Emily CraneMay 31, 2022

Nancy Pelosi’s husband killed his older brother when he flipped his sports car in California — 65 years before he was arrested over the weekend and charged with drunk driving, newspaper clippings show.

 

Paul Pelosi was 16 when he crashed his car near San Mateo in the early hours of Feb. 22, 1957, the Daily Mail reported, citing a local news report from the time.

 

His brother, David Pelosi, 19, was likely strangled by a neck brace he had been wearing due to a previous neck fracture, according to the San Francisco Examiner report.

 

Paul, who suffered a broken collarbone in the wreck, called for help after breaking free from his car, the report said.

 

Highway Patrolman Thomas Ganley told the local outlet at the time that Paul said his older brother had urged him to slow down in the moments before the crash.

 

“This is a bad stretch — better slow down,” David is said to have told his brother.

 

Paul told authorities he tried to shift gears and slow down, but lost control of his vehicle.

 

“The car veered across the road, bounced back from a small embankment, climbed 20 feet up another, spun around and somersaulted simultaneously and ended upside down on the shoulder with both youths underneath,” the local report said.

 

Paul’s older brother was pronounced dead after he arrived at Mills Memorial Hospital in San Mateo.

 

The brothers had been out on a “joyride” at the time after Paul had picked up David from a girlfriend’s house, according to the report.

 

The patrolman said he planned to cite Paul for misdemeanor manslaughter, but the case never made it to court and the then-teen was exonerated by a coroner’s jury.

 

Details of the fatal wreck emerged in the wake of Paul’s arrest following his alleged drunken crash in Napa Valley on Saturday night.

 

Paul, now 82, was driving home alone from a dinner party when he crashed, his lawyer told Fox News.

 

His lawyer said Paul had stopped at an intersection before turning onto State Route 29 when his 2021 Porsche “was hit on the back fender by a Jeep.”

 

Pelosi — who has been married to the House speaker since 1963 — was charged with one count of driving under the influence and another for driving with a blood alcohol content level of 0.08 or higher. Both charges are misdemeanors.

 

He was released on $5,000 bail.

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 2:21 p.m. No.16376330   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6338 >>6345 >>6432

>>16376299

>Durham was never a MAGA Patriot and the shit is still going to hit the fan Big League.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitey_Bulger

 

After learning of Whitey Bulger LSD tests, juror has regrets

 

https://apnews.com/article/us-news-ap-top-news-whitey-bulger-crime-weekend-reads-8dff185e1324cb7079b8a86c48c2ec56

 

https://www.npr.org/2019/09/09/758989641/the-cias-secret-quest-for-mind-control-torture-lsd-and-a-poisoner-in-chief

 

''FBI Asset Whitey Bulger was a Mind Kontrol subject''

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 2:23 p.m. No.16376338   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16376330

 

One of America's most notorious mobsters was apparently part of the CIA's secret drug program

mic.com/impact/notorious-mobster-whitey-bulger-was-apparently-part-of-the-cias-mind-control-drug-program-21816301

David Goldman/AP/Shutterstock

Impact

 

ByEzra Marcus

2.19.2020

 

One of the most bizarre and disturbing government programs in American history is in the news again. On Tuesday, the Associated Press reported that a member of the jury in the trial of James “Whitey” Bulger, the infamous Boston mobster convicted in 2013 of killing eleven people between the 1970s and 1990s, has expressed regret over voting to convict the mobster of murder. Her reason? She ended up corresponding with Bulger while he was in prison, and he told her that he’d been subjected to the CIA’s infamous MK-ULTRA program, in which prisoners and other people were dosed with LSD dozens of times in order to study the drug’s potential for mind control.

 

Yes, you read that right — mind control. In light of the revelation, trial witness Janet Uhlar spoke to AP about her feelings of regret over convicting Bulger of murder.

 

“Had I known [about Bulger’s involvement in MK-ULTRA], I would have absolutely held off on the murder charges,” Uhlar told AP. “He didn’t murder prior to the LSD. His brain may have been altered, so how could you say he was really guilty?”

 

Bulger was known as one of the most vicious mobsters in Boston for much of his life. He was notoriously aided by corrupt officials within the FBI, who gave him leeway to commit crimes in return for his assistance with informing on his rivals. After he was tipped off to plans for his arrest, Bulger went on the run and spent 16 years living in hiding in Southern California.

 

After his conviction, Uhlar began exchanging letters with Bulger in prison. There, he told her that he’d been subjected to the secret CIA program during his first stretch in federal prison, in the late 1950s. That’s when, he told her, the CIA dosed him with acid more than 50 times.

 

Bulger was apparently offered reduced time in prison in exchange for his participation in MK-ULTRA. Subjects were told the program was being used to try and find a cure for schizophrenia. Agents “appealed to our sense of doing something worthwhile for society,” Bulger said in one of his letters to Uhlar.

 

“Sleep was full of violent nightmares and wake up every hour or so — still that way — since ’57.”

MK-ULTRA has a dark and sordid history. The top-secret program was in effect between 1953 and 1973 before being revealed to the public in congressional hearings in 1975. Fearing that Cold War enemies like Russia and China were using mind control on American prisoners captured during the Korean War, the U.S. government authorized the CIA to use practically any means at its disposal to develop mind control techniques of its own. The experiments ranged from doses of hallucinogens to electroshock therapy and paralytics. A doctor named Sidney Gottlieb oversaw the hallucinogenic experiments, which took place both at Stanford University labs and in the field, in prisons, and at other sites. In one operation known as Midnight Climax, CIA agents used prostitutes to lure men to a house where they were secretly dosed with LSD and then observed.

 

The CIA destroyed many records pertaining to MK-ULTRA after the program was ended in 1973. To date, there is still no full accounting of how many people were subject to the experimental drug treatments.

 

Bulger wasn’t the only notable person to take part in MK-ULTRA, either: Ted Kacyznski (better known as the Unabomber), One Flew Over The Cuckoos Nest author and LSD evangelist Ken Kesey, and Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter were also given doses as part of the program.

 

Uhlar first learned that Bulger was part of the program after noticing that the mobster would often write to her late at night. “He always seemed to be writing at 1, 2, or 3 in the morning and when I asked him why, he said it was because of the hallucinations,” Uhlar said. Bulger then explained that he’d been unable to sleep soundly due to the horrific nightmares and hallucinations he’d experienced regularly since receiving LSD from the government in prison.

 

“Sleep was full of violent nightmares and wake up every hour or so — still that way — since ’57,” he wrote in one letter to Uhlar. In another, he wrote: “Auditory and visual hallucinations and violent nightmares — still have them — always slept with lights on helps when I wake up about every hour from nightmares.”

 

Uhlar told AP that she developed regrets after reading about the history of the MK-ULTRA program. “It was encouraging to know I wasn’t losing my mind, thinking this was important,” she said. “It told me, this is huge. I mean, how many lives were affected by this? We have no idea.”

 

MKU

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 2:54 p.m. No.16376480   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6483 >>6488 >>6529

Trump

Promises

I WILL DECLAS!!! - DIDN'T HAPPEN

I WILL BUILD THE WALL!!! - DIDN'T HAPPEN

I WILL LOCK HER UP!!! - DIDN'T HAPPEN

I WILL DECLARE ANTIFA A TERRORIST ORGANIZATION – DIDN'T HAPPEN

I WILL NEVER AGAIN SIGN AN OMNIBUS SPENDING BILL!!! - JUST SIGNED ANOTHER OMNIBUS SPENDING BILL

I WILL REPEAL OBAMACARE!!! - DIDN'T HAPPEN

I WILL ROLL OUT A BEAUTIFUL HEALTH CARE PLAN - DIDN'T HAPPEN

I WILL SPEND TRILLIONS ON INFRASTRUCTURE - DIDN'T HAPPEN

DID ALLOW ANTIFA TO BURN AMERICA TO THE GROUND FOR OVER 100 DAYS WITH ZERO CONSEQUENCES

DID ALLOW BLM TO RACE RIOT FOR OVER 100 DAYS WITH ZERO CONSEQUENCES

DID ALLOW AMERICA TO SHUT DOWN OVER A FAKE PANDEMIC

DID ALLOW MANDATORY HOUSE ARREST OVER A FAKE PANDEMIC

DID ALLOW ILLEGAL CHURCH OVER A FAKE PANDEMIC

DID BRAG UNCEASINGLY ABOUT A DEATH VACCINE FOR A FAKE VIRUS

DID RUIN OVER HALF OF ALL SMALL BUSINESSES FOREVER

DID INCREASE THE DEFICIT BY TRILLIONS

DID PROMISE $500 BILLION OF YOUR TAX MONEY TO BLACKS ONLY – THEY STILL HATE HIM AND WANT HIM DEAD

DID FIRE FLYNN BUT REFUSES TO FIRE HASPEL OR WRAY

DID HIRE ONLY PEOPLE WHO HATE HIM AND WANT HIM DEAD

DID WHINE ENDLESSLY ON TWITTER ABOUT ALL OF THE ASSHOLES HE PERSONALLY HIRED

DID PUT THREE ASSHOLES ONTO THE SUPREME COURT WHO IMMEDIATELY TURNED AROUND AND FUCKED HIM IN THE ASS

TRUMP DELIVERED NOTHING HE PROMISED AND LEFT AMERICA A WEAKENED, BROKE, AND DIVIDED NATION ON THE VERGE OF CIVIL WAR

B-B-BUT LOWEST BLACK UNEMPLOYMENT

B-B-BUT FIRST GAY AMBASSADOR

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 3:01 p.m. No.16376525   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6530

>>16376432

 

U.S. Attorney Durham tells mob tales during rare lecture

theday.com/article/20180310/NWS12/180319936

Connecticut U.S. Attorney John Durham details his role as a special prosecutor in the Whitey Bulger case at the University of St. Joseph in West Hartford on Monday, March 5, 2018. (Bob Thiesfeld/courtesy of The Cool Justice Report)

 

United States Attorney John H. Durham has kept such a low profile while handling some of the country's most infamous criminal investigations that he once made New Republic magazine's list of Washington's "most powerful, least famous people."

 

Durham "made his bones," as he would say, prosecuting mobsters, corrupt federal agents and former Connecticut Gov. John G. Rowland. He's been tapped by United States attorneys general to investigate topics as touchy as alleged torture and coverups during CIA investigations.

 

The 67-year-old Groton resident, nominated as Connecticut's top federal prosecutor by President Donald Trump and endorsed by Republicans and Democrats alike, has confined most of his public speaking to within the four walls of federal courtrooms.

 

As the state's U.S. attorney, Durham takes on administration duties over the state's 68 federal prosecutors and 50-odd staff members who work in courthouses in Bridgeport, New Haven and Hartford. He plans to continue trying cases and has a murder trial coming up later this year.

 

A week after being sworn in, Durham, perhaps realizing that his new role calls for higher visibility, delivered a lecture at the University of St. Joseph in West Hartford, a formerly all-female school that is going all co-ed this year and ratcheting up its criminal justice program.

 

For about an hour this past Monday, he regaled an audience with an insider's view of the widely publicized investigations that brought down mobsters James "Whitey" Bulger, Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi and their corrupted FBI handler, Special Agent John Connolly Jr. It was a case that extended into Connecticut, where gambling venues for the sport jai alai were infiltrated by Bulger's Winter Hill Gang.

 

Bodies had been piling up in Boston throughout the 1970s and 1980s, and by 1999, after it became clear that members of Boston's FBI bureau had been compromised by the Irish and Italian mafia, Attorney General Janet Reno and FBI Director Louis Freeh called on Durham and others from Connecticut to help.

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 3:02 p.m. No.16376530   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6536

>>16376525

 

"It was quite the scandal that was going up there in Boston," Durham told the audience at St. Joseph's. "We were asked to go up there because we had some familiarity with the New England LCN (La Cosa Nostra) and knew some of the judges and the investigators and so forth. So the Justice Task Force was formed to investigate corruption involving the FBI and others."

 

Durham's longtime partner in crime-fighting, Deputy Chief State's Attorney Leonard C. Boyle, introduced the U.S. attorney to the university gathering as the person members of the Connecticut bar call when stumped by a legal question. Boyle said Durham has "an extreme work ethic" and is working all the time, whether in the office or at home.

 

Boyle said Durham has an uncanny ability to identify the smallest of facts in a case "and weave it together into a tapestry of detail," but joked that Durham's skill does not extend to his attire. Durham has a tendency to mismatch his suit jackets and trousers, Boyle said, and it's only when he's standing in a courtroom, addressing a jury, "when he realizes that particular day he wore the gray striped jacket with the Navy-blue pants."

 

Boyle seemed as amazed as anyone that his friend had agreed to the speaking engagement, since Durham is "notoriously shy about speaking about himself or what he does."

 

The University of St. Joseph's affiliation with the Catholic church may have helped.

 

"Other than an overwhelming commitment to the cause of justice, the two great devotions of John's life are his Catholic faith and his family," Boyle said. The Courant has reported several times that Durham also is an avid Red Sox fan.

 

Durham and his wife, Susan, have four sons — two of them prosecutors — and eight grandchildren.

 

Durham's lecture, delivered along with a PowerPoint presentation entitled "The Use of Informants: A Cautionary Tale," contained hints of his own restrained approach to investigations. Using criminals to gather information about other criminals is a necessity in cases where the average citizen is justifiably scared but, at best, is a "double-edged sword," Durham said.

 

In the Boston case, Bulger and Flemmi, both working as "Top Echelon" informants for the FBI, corrupted their handlers, and during the course of his trial, Flemmi asserted he had been told by FBI supervisor John Morris, "You can commit any crime as long as you don't 'clip' anybody," Durham said.

 

"The reality was that both Bulger and Flemmi were notorious, really bad actors in Boston when they were recruited by the FBI as informants in Boston," he said.

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 3:03 p.m. No.16376536   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16376530

 

"The reality was that both Bulger and Flemmi were notorious, really bad actors in Boston when they were recruited by the FBI as informants in Boston," he said.

 

Durham said the FBI had plenty of regulations in place when the two men were signed up as informants in the late 1960s, including that they could not commit crimes, but the mobsters acted as if "they had the keys to the kingdom," bribing their handlers and using leaked information to further their control of narcotics trafficking, loan sharking and extortion in the city. The men also were responsible for about 20 murders, according to news reports.

 

In the aftermath of the case, regulations were put into place that require prosecutors to sign off on the use of informants.

 

Informants should be used as an investigative starting point, Durham said, and the information they provide should be corroborated through other means or used to convince a judge to authorize wiretaps in which a defendant's own words (during secretly recorded telephone conversations) can be used to build a case against them.

 

Durham's Boston team, including Boyle and FBI agents from outside of the city, worked the case for about a year before indicting Flemmi and Connolly, who had retired by then from the FBI, for racketeering and obstruction of justice. Bulger, at the time, was a fugitive from justice.

 

Flemmi pleaded guilty to racketeering and 10 murders and is serving a life sentence.

 

Connolly, nicknamed, "Zip," went to trial in 2002, and Durham, who prosecuted, said it was a "unique" proceeding in which the defendant was allowed to sit with his wife in the courtroom gallery. The prosecution team had made "the very difficult decision," after consulting with the U.S. attorney general and victim's families, to use as a witness John Martarano, a mob hitman who had confessed to killing 20 people.

 

The media followed the case closely, and while Durham saved his comment for the courtroom, he collected some of the colorful headlines generated during the Connolly trial and used them in his PowerPoint presentation. One described the once-defiant FBI agent "cowering" in the courtroom, and the Boston Herald's headline, after Connolly was convicted, said simply, "Zip Zapped."

 

Connolly served 10 years in that case and later was charged with providing information to Flemmi and Bulger that led to the 1982 murder in Miami of jai alai executive John Callahan. Now 77, Connolly is serving a 40-year prison sentence in Florida.

 

Bulger, captured in 2011 after 16 years as a fugitive and tried two years later, is serving a life sentence.

 

Bulger's Winter Hill Gang was decimated as a result of the federal prosecutions, Durham said, and La Cosa Nostra is "nothing like it was."

 

There's still plenty of work for federal authorities, though. Durham said one of the consequences of breaking up organized crime operations is that the concentration of criminal activity becomes much more diffuse.

 

Back in Connecticut, Durham's office prosecutes some of the state's most violent crimes and high-level narcotics cases, financial fraud and public corruption, as well as cases involving national security.

 

k.florin@theday.com

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 3:04 p.m. No.16376546   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6548

CIA-Tapes Prosecutor Known for FBI-Mob Ties Case

 

npr.org/2008/01/10/17978049/cia-tapes-prosecutor-known-for-fbi-mob-ties-case

 

Law

January 10, 20081:02 AM ET

 

Heard on Morning Edition

Dina Temple-Raston

 

Attorney General Michael Mukasey asked longtime federal prosecutor John Durham to investigate the CIA interrogation tapes case last week. Known as a tough and tenacious prosecutor, Durham may be best known for the role he played in one of the most somber moments in FBI history: the arrest and conviction of a former agent for ties to the mob.

 

The agent was John Connolly, a highly regarded investigator in the bureau's Boston office, who was credited with helping lead the Boston FBI's battle against the Italian mafia. Connolly's responsibility was to manage high-ranking mob leaders like James "Whitey" Bulger and Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi. He persuaded them to become informants and to rat out leaders in Boston's Italian mob.

 

But Connolly got too close to them and was eventually convicted of racketeering; prosecutors said he had effectively become a member of Bulger's Winter Hill gang. He's now serving a 10-year prison sentence. Durham prosecuted him.

 

Durham had worked with the FBI for years, prosecuting organized crime cases in Connecticut when former Attorney General Janet Reno asked him to look into the unusually close relationship between the mob and the FBI in Boston. Durham led a special federal investigative task force that brought a few convictions, including that of Connolly.

 

"Durham had a very strong case on John Connolly," said Samuel Buell, a former assistant U.S. attorney who worked with Durham on the Bulger cases. "He was clearly the most culpable individual involved in this."

 

Durham's task force had managed to convict a very powerful former senior FBI agent of racketeering and obstruction of justice.

 

"That is unprecedented," Buell said.

 

From the start, there was always the question of how deep and how far the corruption ran through the ranks of the city's law enforcement. Prosecutors said there were other agents and police officials involved, but just who else was involved never came to light. The task force eventually convicted just three people: Connolly, a cop on the Boston police force, and a state police officer — one person from each branch of law enforcement thought to be involved.

 

Questioning Prosecutorial Zeal

 

Durham's detractors, like former FBI agent Robert Fitzpatrick, who was in charge of the organized crime squad at the Boston Field Office at the time, say that Durham pulled his punches.

 

"We're left with the fact that Connolly did the whole thing. I find that ludicrous," Fitzpatrick said. "I can't live with that. I can't live with the fact that Connolly was the only guy involved. So we put Connolly in jail and the whole thing is over? I just don't believe that."

 

At the time, even U.S. Attorney Mike Sullivan seemed to suggest that Connolly would be only the beginning of something bigger.

 

"Connolly was not alone in mishandling of informants and assisting them in carrying out these crimes," he told reporters at a press conference after Connolly's 2002 conviction.

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 3:04 p.m. No.16376548   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16376546

 

But the other shoe never fell. Connolly was the only agent Durham ever convicted. Another agent died while awaiting trial and another, Connolly's boss, was given immunity in exchange for his testimony against Connolly.

 

Durham promised a report detailing what he found, but it was never released. In fact, the Justice Department won't even confirm that they received it. Durham's office in Connecticut declined to talk about the case, or the CIA investigation he has just started.

 

Reputation for Being Apolitical

 

Boston Police Detective Frank Deewan was in charge of the department's intelligence squad at the time. He says there could be lots of reasons why the report never surfaced.

 

"Perhaps there are things that could not be corroborated that would smear people," Deewan said. "Perhaps the statute of limitations had run out on people. You just don't know what is behind the scenes."

 

The unreleased report aside, Durham's reputation in Boston was that he wasn't political. He went where the facts led him. During the Bulger investigation, he discovered secret FBI documents that indicated four men had been framed for murder and wrongly imprisoned. He turned the documents over to their lawyers. A civil suit followed. The families of the men won a $101.7 million judgment against the government. Deewan says that bodes well for the CIA investigation.

 

"John is a fine investigator and a man full of integrity," Deewan said. "What he finds, he'll go after, and if it is not there, he won't go after it. I think he'll do things right down the line."

 

Where everyone agrees is that Durham has his work cut out for him. His latest case is about more than just the CIA possibly obstructing justice. Durham and a team of FBI investigators will end up putting the Bush administration's terrorism strategy under a microscope.

 

The FBI has been saying for months that harsh interrogation techniques, such as waterboarding, don't work. Now they are launching an investigation that may testify to that. Durham will be in the middle of a classic inside-the-Beltway political case.

 

"Nothing gets dirtier and uglier than Boston politics," Buell said. "The Bulger and Connolly matters were all tied up with Boston politics, both within law enforcement and state government. Durham was able to navigate his way through that, so I don't think there will be anything about Washington that will catch him unawares."

 

Both civil liberties groups and members of Congress cautiously welcomed Durham's appointment. But what they really wanted was an independent prosecutor. Durham won't be independent. He will be reporting his findings to the deputy attorney general at the Justice Department.

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 3:10 p.m. No.16376576   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6615 >>6631

Bulger

 

MK-ULTRA

 

Three days after his speech decrying Soviet tactics, Dulles approved the beginning of MK-Ultra, a top-secret CIA program for “covert use of biological and chemical materials.” “American values” made for good rhetoric, but Dulles had far grander plans for the agency’s Cold War agenda.

 

MK-Ultra’s “mind control” experiments generally centered around behavior modification via electro-shock therapy, hypnosis, polygraphs, radiation, and a variety of drugs, toxins, and chemicals. These experiments relied on a range of test subjects: some who freely volunteered, some who volunteered under coercion, and some who had absolutely no idea they were involved in a sweeping defense research program. From mentally-impaired boys at a state school, to American soldiers, to “sexual psychopaths” at a state hospital, MK-Ultra’s programs often preyed on the most vulnerable members of society. The CIA considered prisoners especially good subjects, as they were willing to give consent in exchange for extra recreation time or commuted sentences.

 

Whitey Bulger, a former organized crime boss, wrote of his experience as an inmate test subject in MK-Ultra. “Eight convicts in a panic and paranoid state,” Bulger said of the 1957 tests at the Atlanta penitentiary where he was serving time. “Total loss of appetite. Hallucinating. The room would change shape. Hours of paranoia and feeling violent. We experienced horrible periods of living nightmares and even blood coming out of the walls. Guys turning to skeletons in front of me. I saw a camera change into the head of a dog. I felt like I was going insane.”…

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 3:11 p.m. No.16376586   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6736

James Joseph "Whitey" Bulger Jr. was an Irish-American former organized crime boss of the Winter Hill Gang in Boston, Massachusetts. Federal prosecutors indicted Bulger for nineteen murders based on grand jury testimony from Kevin Weeks and other former associates. Wikipedia

 

Born: September 3, 1929, Boston, MA

Died: October 30, 2018

Spouse: Lindsey Cyr (m. 1966–1978)

Siblings: William Bulger, Jean Holland, John P. Bulger

Children: Douglas Glenn Cyr

Nicknames: Whitey, Jimmy

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 3:39 p.m. No.16376768   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16376736

 

>James Comey was his F_I handler and Mueller was the corrupted Federal Prosecutor for that District!

 

>As a “team” all 3 destroyed many lives and profited greatly from the gangs global theft-ring.

 

and trump was a confidential informer

 

rosenberger was around also

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 3:49 p.m. No.16376836   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6842 >>6854 >>6859

https://technofog.substack.com/p/michael-sussmann-has-been-acquitted

 

Michael Sussmann has been acquitted

technofog.substack.com/p/michael-sussmann-has-been-acquitted

 

DC Jury and DC Verdicts

Techno Fog

6 hr ago

 

Michael Sussmann has been acquitted.

 

The acquittal is no surprise. This is a DC jury, after all. In the Roger Stone case, for example, we documented how a juror lied to get on the panel. (That judge didn’t care.) Making matters worse, the Sussmann judge wrongly allowed for a woman to remain on the jury, despite the fact that her daughter and Sussmann’s are on the same high school crew team. One can’t help but think that juror had her own daughter’s interests in mind – the cohesion of the crew team, sparing her of teenage drama, etc. – when she reached a decision.

 

After the verdict was announced, the jury’s forewoman held court before the media and expressed her displeasure that the Special Counsel prosecute a false statement case: “There are bigger things that affect the nation than a possible lie to the FBI.”

 

This juror was never impartial - despite her assurance to the judge.

 

On the facts, the evidence was more than sufficient to prove Sussmann’s guilt. Sussmann lied to then-FBI general counsel James Baker via text message in order to get a meeting to pass the Alfa Bank hoax materials to the FBI.

 

Sussmann lied again during the meeting – stating he was not there on behalf of a client – in order to get the FBI to open an investigation into the Trump Organization’s purported ties with Alfa Bank.

 

Later, during testimony to Congress, Sussmann admitted he met with Baker on behalf of a client.

 

Billing records proved he had been working on the Alfa Bank project on behalf of the Clinton Campaign. Evidence also demonstrated that Sussmann billed the Clinton Campaign for the thumb drives passed to Baker during the meeting. How was the Clinton Campaign billed? Sussmann referenced the “confidential project” - the Alfa Bank project.

 

I won’t say the verdict doesn’t matter. Of course it matters. It would have proven that a DC jury can convict one of their own. It would have resulted in accountability for lying to the FBI. Not the gravest of crimes, but it is still a crime.

 

In large part, the prosecution of Sussmann was hamstrung by the FBI’s investigation into the Alfa Bank allegations. That goes to materiality. How can the lies be material if the FBI’s investigation was so sloppy?

 

That was always an unconvincing defense, as Sussmann’s lies helped trigger the FBI’s investigation into the Trump/Alfa hoax. How does Sussmann convince the skeptical New York Times to take another look at the Alfa Bank story? By showing them that the FBI is investigating the matter. How can Sussmann convince the FBI to start the Alfa Bank investigation as soon as possible? By orchestrating leaks of the information to the press.

Anonymous ID: d2e056 May 31, 2022, 3:50 p.m. No.16376842   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6854

>>16376836

Continuing on the issue of materiality, look to the testimony of FBI Special Agent Curtis Heide, whose repeated requests to interview the source of the Alfa Bank information were denied by headquarters. FBI Headquarters didn’t want this thing thoroughly vetted - even though they demanded the investigation be opened. As we stated during the trial:

 

Relatively early on in the investigation - on September 26, 2016 - Agent Heide sent a message to Pientka, requesting an interview of the source of the Alfa Bank white papers. By that time, Heide knew the white paper was bunk. He received no response from Pientka. He repeated this request on October 3, 2016. Agent Heide’s requests were rebuffed by his liaison at FBI headquarters

 

That’s not the say the public hasn’t benefited from the trial. The information disclosed during the trial was important to understand the broader Clinton/Fusion GPS/Perkins Coie effort to poison the public, the press, and the FBI with their Trump/Russia lies. This included:

 

Data from the Executive Office of the President of the United States, including data from the Trumansition period, was exploited by Sussmann and Rodney Joffe and then passed to the CIA.

 

Rodney Joffe was a longtime Confidential Human Source (CHS) – and generally a resource – for the FBI. Joffe worked with the FBI on cyber threats from countries like Russia. From former FBI Agent Grasso: “I’m sure the work that [Joffe] did touched on matters having to do with Russia.”

 

Joffe went to great lengths to make sure the Alfa Bank information he provided to the FBI did not go through his official FBI handler.

 

The decision to open the investigation came from FBI Leadership. According to one FBI Agent, “People on the 7th floor to include Director are fired up about this server.”

 

Perkins Coie partner Marc Elias provided updates on the Fusion GPS “research” to the Clinton Campaign.

 

After reviewing the evidence, the FBI leaned “towards this being a false server not attributed to the trump organization.”

 

An unbelievable confirmation of the shoddy FBI investigation into the Russian “hacking” of our election. As of October 13, 2016,the FBI did not have the Crowdstrike images relating to the purported DNC/DCCC hack. Message from FBI agent via their internal messaging system: “really, I just want images of what crowdstrike has.”

 

And - Hillary Clinton herself approved of the strategy to disseminate the Alfa Bank allegations to the media. Per Robby Mook:

 

Q: Mr. Mook, before the break you had testified that there was a conversation in which you told Ms. Clinton about the proposed plan to provide the Alfa-Bank allegations to the media; is that correct?

 

A: Correct.

 

Q: And what was her response?

 

A: All I remember is that she agreed with the decision.

 

Then there are the trial exhibits, which The Epoch Times has posted here. As Aaron Maté observed, Sussmann edited an FBI press release on the DNC hacking because the FBI’s proposed statement “undermines” the DNC hacking narrative:

 

Aaron Maté @aaronjmate

Sussmann trial exhibits have been released. (documentcloud.org/projects/sussm… ) Includes some Crowdstrike-FBI-DNC exchanges on the alleged DNC hack. Here Sussmann edits an FBI press release because the original wording "undermines" the DNC's hacking narrative: s3.documentcloud.org/documents/2204…

May 31st 2022

 

307 Retweets484 Likes

 

Where does Durham go from here? That’s the real question. We already know that the investigation into Rodney Joffe remains open and that Igor Danchenko faces trial this year. Whether there is more remains to be seen.