ID: 837087 Aug. 30, 2022, 10:08 p.m. No.17468969   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>17468916

MAY HAVE BEEN

Affirms our reporting (circular logic)

 

Purely irresponsible speculation. Did they not find the specific items that incriminated THEM, now they run to their agent friends for that perfect circle of RUSSIA! RUSSIA! RUSSIA!

 

These people are sick. These people are tiresome.

These are the same people queueing up a war over Taiwan because RUSSIA is kicking the ever loving shit out of them.

ID: 837087 Aug. 30, 2022, 10:23 p.m. No.17469013   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9030 >>9064 >>9113 >>9388 >>9633

West Point should reconsider KKK plaque on science building: congressional panel

 

August 30, 2022

 

West Point, the revered military academy in upstate New York, should consider removing a plaque that pays homage to the Ku Klux Klan from its campus, a Congressional panel suggested in a new report.

The entrance of Bartlett Hall Science Center is adorned with a bronze plaque that shows a man in a hood and cape holding a rifle with the hate organization’s title underneath. according to a report by the so-called Naming Commission released on Monday.

The commission is tasked with making recommendations on the renaming of Confederate monuments on military property. The report said it could not outright call for a removal of the KKK decoration because it is not specifically linked to the rebel army.

However, it noted that “there are clearly ties in the KKK to the Confederacy,” and called on the Department of Defense to “create a standard disposition requirement for such assets.”

 

After the Civil War, the white supremacist group fought against the progress of Reconstruction in the South by terrorizing and killing black people and other minorities. By the 1920s it had four million members and meaningful political power, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.

The commission did call for West Point to rename a dozen buildings, roads and gates named after General Robert E. Lee and other Confederate leaders, and found that portraits of Lee and “individuals who voluntarily served” under him should be tossed.

A role call that included names of graduates that fought for secession at Cullum Hall at the Orange County military academy “may remain as structured” due to its non-commemorative posture, the group said.

The changes would cost taxpayers about $425,000, with $300,000 alone needed to move monuments and engravings at Reconciliation Plaza.

West Point did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Post.

The commission also told the military to rename several assets at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland.

 

Sauce: https://nypost.com/2022/08/30/west-point-science-building-features-kkk-plaque/

ID: 837087 Aug. 30, 2022, 10:31 p.m. No.17469036   🗄️.is đź”—kun

El Paso forced to bus immigrants out of town amid mass migration

 

August 30, 2022

 

The City of El Paso, Texas is getting flooded with 900 immigrants a day, according to officials, who said they’ve been forced to bus many of them out of town over an inability to handle the mass migration.

 

The crisis in El Paso came to a boiling point Tuesday night when city leaders were told by federal immigration officials that 500 asylum-seeking immigrants from Venezuela made up of women and children would be released into the streets unless the city could house them.

 

“This number was going to be above and beyond what our local [shelter] was prepared to take,” said Jorge Rodriguez of El Paso’s Office of Emergency Management.

 

To avoid having women and children sleeping on the streets, some of the families were put up in hotels or sent to El Paso’s homeless shelter, The Opportunity Center.

“I saw an infant as young as two or three months, and you should ask yourself, do you want that infant in the streets,” shelter director John Martin said.

 

About a third of those 500 immigrants were put on charter buses to New York City Thursday through Sunday where the non-profit Grannies Respond received them.

 

“These charters that we set up last week and that we helped facilitate to help a strained system, but in all actuality, these charters only accounted for 133 people,” said El Paso Deputy City Manager Mario D’Agostino.

 

Texas’s sixth largest city is seeing about 900 immigrants a day apprehended at the border, said D’Agostino. Last week alone, the city’s shelters took in 2,235 immigrants. This month, 8,400 immigrants moved through the border city on their way to their final destinations in the interior of the country.

 

While city leaders said there weren’t immediate plans for more immigrant buses out of El Paso, they didn’t rule out using buses to alleviate the load carried by El Paso shelters if the need arises again.

El Paso County Judge Ricardo Samaniego previously told The Post that local leaders would not allow immigrants to be released to the streets for the safety of the immigrants and to protect the city’s tourism.

 

Local leaders were also quick to point out that the buses leaving El Paso are being run by the City of El Paso, not the State of Texas. Gov. Greg Abbott started a controversial bussing program to transport asylum seekers from the Texas border to Washington, D.C. in April. Abbott added New York City as a destination in June.

 

“These migrants are in our country legally,” said D’Agostino. “They are allowed to be here. We are the Paso Del Norte; we are the pass. There’s thousands of people passing through our community on a daily basis. They have sponsors. They’re getting to cities across the country.This just happened to be a group that didn’t have the funding so we did the next best thing

 

Sauce: https://nypost.com/2022/08/31/el-paso-forced-to-bus-immigrants-out-of-town-amid-mass-migration/

ID: 837087 Aug. 30, 2022, 11:46 p.m. No.17469325   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9347 >>9388 >>9633

>>17468916

>4am

came early today! Hot off the press

 

PICTURED: Classified documents sprawled across Mar-a-Lago during FBI raid as DOJ claims it's uncovered a plot to 'conceal' papers in desk to hide them from probe: Officials shoot down request for a special master review

The Justice Department on Tuesday night detailed their reasoning behind the August 8 search of Mar-a-Lago

Classified documents were found not even in boxes, but kept in drawers in Donald Trump's desk

Trump's lawyers told the Justice Department in June that all the records that had come from the White House were stored in one location, which was not true

Tuesday's document was in response to Trump's lawyers' request that a 'special master' be appointed to oversee the review of the seized papers

 

August 31, 2022

 

The Justice Department believed that classified documents held unlawfully at Mar-a-Lago were being moved around and hidden, despite assurances from Donald Trump's lawyers that they were all kept together in a padlocked storage room.

 

In a bombshell 36-page court filing on Tuesday, the Justice Department said it had uncovered efforts to obstruct its investigation.

 

The filing said that 'government records were likely concealed and removed' from a storage room at the property.

 

The department says Trump's lawyers told them in June that all the records that had come from the White House were stored in one location - a Mar-a-Lago storage room.

 

Trump's lawyers said 'there were no other records stored in any private office space or other location at the Premises and that all available boxes were searched.'

 

The Justice Department said that was not true.

 

In their August 8 search, which enraged Trump and his supporters, agents found classified documents both in the storage room as well as in the former president's office - including three classified documents found not in boxes, but in office desks.

The court filing lays out the most detailed chronology to date of interactions between Justice Department officials and Trump representatives over the presence of the documents at Mar-a-Lago.

 

It also revealed that Trump lawyers 'explicitly prohibited government personnel from opening or looking inside any of the boxes' inside a storage room when FBI agents first traveled to his Palm Beach Mar-a-Lago resort in June to retrieve the records.

 

'The government also developed evidence that government records were likely concealed and removed from the Storage Room and that efforts were likely taken to obstruct the government's investigation,' the department said in a filing in U.S. District Court in the Southern District of Florida.

 

It revealed that the August 8 search uncovered - in addition to the three classified documents in desks located inside Trump's office - more than 100 documents in 13 boxes or containers with classification markings in the residence.

Some of the documents in the residence were labelled at the most restrictive levels.

 

Tuesday night's filing also included a photo showing the cover pages of classified documents - and some marked as 'TOP SECRET/SCI' with a bright yellow border - laying on a carpet at Mar-a-Lago alongside a box filled with framed pictures, including a Time Magazine cover.

 

The Justice Department was responding to a request from the Trump legal team for a 'special master' - an independent third party - to review the documents seized during the August 8 search of Mar-a-Lago.

 

The Justice Department on Tuesday said it opposed the appointment of a special master.

 

Trump, prosecutors argued, lacks standing in the case because the records 'do not belong to him.'

Trump's lawyers last week asked for the appointment of a special master who'd be tasked with reviewing the records taken and setting aside documents protected by claims of legal privilege.

 

Cannon on Saturday said it was her 'preliminary intent' to appoint such a person but also gave the Justice Department an opportunity to respond.

 

On Monday, the department said it had already completed its review of potentially privileged documents and identified a 'limited set of materials that potentially contain attorney-client privileged information.'

 

In a separate development, the Trump legal team has grown with the addition of another attorney.

 

Chris Kise, Florida's former solicitor general, has joined the team of lawyers representing Trump.

The August 8 search is the culmination of many months of wrangling.

In January, 15 boxes of documents were retrieved from Mar-a-Lago and returned to theNational Archive:their recovery was reported in the media in February.

On June 3, FBI agents visited Mar-a-Lago to discuss the return of the documents: Trump's team presented F.B.I. agents with 38 additional documents with classified markings, including -17 labeled top secret.

 

Sauce/more: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11161107/US-respond-request-special-master-Trump-docs.html

ID: 837087 Aug. 31, 2022, 12:48 a.m. No.17469587   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9633

>>17469432

Page 18 of this doc argues POTUS has to satisfy the Richey rule (he's plenty rich…kek)

It's a load of crap and indicates CLEAR intent to CRIMINALLY CHARGE POTUS.

 

These bastards, they're trying to sow the wind and reap the whirlwind.

 

Prediction: Hurricane hits 9/10 or 9/11 which will coincide with the indictment of POTUS. They WANT, they NEED major MAGA unrest. They've tried and tried and tried some more to no effect. No effect they didn't instigate.