Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 9:21 p.m. No.23202694   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908 >>2963

USAID Gave Known Con Man $800M Contract To Do Kamala’s Work On ‘Root Causes Of Migration’

 

Biden admin gave $800M contract to a home-based company despite knowing its manager received past contracts through bribery.

 

President Joe Biden’s USAID awarded an $800 million contract to a business operating out of a Virginia home even after it formally ruled that its key manager lacked “honesty or integrity” — a reference to the fact that, according to a May 12 guilty plea, he had secured USAID contracts through bribery for a decade.

 

The contract was for addressing “issues affecting the root causes of irregular migration from Central America to the United States” — the work that Biden assigned to Vice President Kamala Harris, but which she never appeared to address, a Daily Wire investigation found.

 

The Department of Justice announced Friday that Walter Barnes III, the founder of government contractor Vistant (previously known as PM Consulting Group, or PMCG) and Roderick Watson, a USAID contracting official, pleaded guilty to a bribery scheme in which Barnes and two others conspired to pay Watson $1 million in exchange for $544 million in contracts.

 

What has not been reported is that the Biden administration continued to steer contracts to Vistant/PMCG even after it knew of the massive corruption: the migration contract, even larger than the $544 million in the indictment, and others that are still active.

 

The $800 million contract went to a joint venture between Barnes’ company and CollaborateUp, a tiny consultancy run out of a suburban home in Falls Church, Virginia, where its CEO, Richard Crespin — who runs the company while also working at a think tank — lives. The Virginia home was the address listed on the $800 million contract.

 

In announcing its $800 million contract, CollaborateUp said it would address the “irregular migration from Central America to the United States” by addressing “climate change.” Its website also touts its work “advancing DEIA” and combating “misinformation.”

 

This year, it added Mark A. Green, a former Republican congressman who served as Donald Trump’s appointee to lead USAID during his first term, to its payroll as a “senior advisor,” according to its website.

 

Vistant’s criminal scheme relied on joint ventures to exploit a DEI policy called 8(a) contracting, which lets the government award contracts with no or limited competition when the recipient is a racial minority or a small business. It formed a joint venture with a larger company —which was bribing Watson and would actually do the work — so Watson could use Barnes’ status as a black man to steer the contracts to him, rather than being obligated to go through an open competitive process.

 

Barnes’ company ultimately received hundreds of millions of dollars, stripping his “disadvantaged” status, and the CollaborateUp joint venture reversed the maneuver, relying on CollaborateUp’s status as a small business to win a contract with limited competition, while relying on Barnes and other larger firms to actually do the work.

 

CollaborateUp says it “co-developed” USAID’s “procurement reform” policies “alongside former Administrator Mark Green.” That means the company that USAID put in charge of contracting reform got a massive contract for itself after partnering with someone who criminally corrupted the USAID contracting process, then put a former USAID official on its payroll.

 

The bribes by Barnes and his co-conspirators laid out in charging papers — which included cash, fake payroll payments, a country club wedding, a trip to Martha’s Vineyard, a down payment on a house, and basketball tickets — took place between 2013 and 2022. By 2023, USAID inspector general investigators knew of the corruption. On November 9, 2023, the government barred Vistant and Barnes from contracting based on “evidence of conduct indicating a lack of business honesty or integrity.”

 

That same day, it notified the Vistant-CollaborateUp joint venture, called PMCG CollaborateUp JV LLC, that it had been chosen for the “root causes of migration” contract.

 

A USAID contracting official believed the contract was “legally questionable” and told the contractors later that month that he was yanking it. He said that even though CollaborateUp owned 51% of the joint venture, according to the proposal, almost all the work would be done by Vistant or subcontractors. That meant CollaborateUp brought little to the table except being a middleman, while the contract’s “driving force” was banned for lack of integrity, according to civil court papers.

 

Yet the contractors appeared to feel so entitled to nearly $1 billion in government money that they took the government to court demanding it. It asked a judge for a permanent injunction “prohibiting USAID from rescinding its award.”

 

On June 10, 2024, Paul Young, a go-between who paid Watson to obscure the paper trail to Barnes, was indicted for his role in bringing Watson to influence “the award of USAID contracts valued at hundreds of millions of dollars.” The indictment refers to Vistant and Barnes as Company 3 and CC-3 and says, “Young began making payments from CC-3 to CC-1 [Watson].” It describes how, for example, in October 2022, CC-3 sent a down payment for Watson’s home to him through Young.

 

Two days later, on June 12, 2024, Judge Charles F. Lettow issued “a limited injunction,” punting the decision about the $800 million contract back to USAID to reevaluate. By that time, Vistant had been removed from the list of banned contractors, though the ban on its founder, Barnes, remained.

 

On August 22, 2024, USAID awarded the “indefinite quantity” contract of up to $800 million for “USAID Central America Regional Support Services” to PMCG CollaborateUp JV LLC. It made an initial payment of $10,000 that day.

 

Further demonstrating that the government knew at the time that Vistant/PMCG had gotten its previous USAID contracts through bribery, one week later, prosecutors offered a plea deal to a co-conspirator of Barnes, Darryl F. Britt, that laid out the findings of a long-running investigation from USAID’s inspector general. The plea deal referred to Vistant as Company 2, and Barnes as CC-2.

 

“Indefinite delivery” contracts are open-ended contracts that allow the government to send repeated work to a company over a period of time up to a maximum amount, meaning the government could pay PMCG CollaborateUp as much as $800 million, but could also pay less.

 

The migration contract was terminated in February 2025 — not because Barnes was corrupt, but because the Trump administration was shuttering USAID over suspicion that graft and insider deals were common, which liberals decried as a conspiracy theory.

 

Yet the Biden administration’s General Services Administration, which oversees government-wide contracting, also gave PMCG CollaborateUp JV LLC two contracts lasting five years each, despite the government’s knowledge that Barnes had gotten contracts through bribery.

 

On November 6, 2024 — the day after the presidential election — GSA awarded the joint venture an indefinite delivery contract through 2029, whose cap was listed as $999,999,999,999.00. It paid $2,500 as the opening salvo.

 

On December 19, shortly before the Biden administration left office, GSA gave it another indefinite delivery contract with similar terms. According to its GSA Price List, the company rents administrative assistants to the government for $93.68 an hour. CollaborateUp did not return a request for comment.

 

The half-billion dollar bribery scheme is just one instance of fraud at USAID that was known about during the Biden administration, but not prosecuted until the Trump administration.

 

Stephen Paul Edmund Sutton, a British citizen who worked for a USAID contractor, pleaded guilty on May 19 to taking kickbacks related to an electric program in Pakistan. Sutton and a co-conspirator who worked for him were in charge of giving out subcontractors to Pakistani vendors to perform work.

 

In 2015, the pair created two companies and had the contractor pay them for forklift and crane services. Then, those companies hired Pakistanis for half the amount. Prosecutors said the agency was defrauded of $100,000. Sutton was ordered to be handed over to immigration authorities instead of jail.

 

The Daily Wire previously revealed that USAID’s inspector general told a federal court in November that another foreign aid contracting official, Matthieu Zahui of the African Development Foundation, had steered contracts to a friend who secretly paid him personally. USAID had credible tips about Zahui for years, but didn’t take his phone until February 2024. The phone, it said, contained evidence that he was receiving wire transfers to his personal bank account from the owner of a contractor he had steered government funds to.

 

But USAID did not ask a judge for a search warrant to conduct further investigation until November 4, the day before the election. Zahiu has not been criminally charged as of now.

 

https://www.dailywire.com/news/usaid-paid-corrupt-contractor-800m-to-do-kamalas-work-on-root-causes-of-migration

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 9:22 p.m. No.23202698   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908 >>2963

Senate passes landmark crypto bill in historic bipartisan vote

 

18 Democrats sided with most Republicans to send the measure to the House.

 

The Senate passed landmark cryptocurrency legislation on Tuesday that is aimed at boosting the industry’s growth, delivering digital asset firms a historic lobbying victory in the upper chamber’s first-ever vote on adopting a crypto regulatory overhaul.

 

Senators voted 68-30 to pass the legislation, with 18 Democrats siding with most Republicans to send the measure to the House. The bill, led by Sen. Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), would create the first-ever U.S. regulatory framework for digital tokens known as stablecoins that are pegged to the value of the dollar.

 

The vote comes following months of chaotic negotiations between the bill’s GOP sponsors and a group of crypto-friendly Senate Democrats whom Republicans needed to win over in order to clear the 60-vote threshold required to pass the bill.

 

The legislation, known as the GENIUS Act, appeared earlier this year to be on a glide path to the floor after it cleared the Senate Banking Committee with bipartisan support in March. But bipartisan talks collapsed last month when pro-crypto Democrats objected to the revamped text that Republicans teed up for a vote and backlash grew over the Trump family’s business entanglements in the digital assets industry.

 

After Democrats voted down a procedural motion on the floor on May 8, bipartisan negotiators went back to the table and hammered out a deal that included an array of changes that unlocked the bipartisan support to move forward.

 

“It’s a long and winding journey,” said Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, one of four Democrats who helped lead negotiations on the bill. “It would have been much easier if the Trump family wasn’t so grossly involved in this emerging sector. But at the end of the day, I’d rather have, [for] this part of our financial system, the innovation come from America and based [on] American laws.”

 

Other Democrats have fought the bill. Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, the party’s leader on the Senate Banking panel, said this month that the bill “needs changes to protect national defense, consumer protection and put curbs in place to reduce the odds that stablecoins will ultimately blow up our economy.” She has also said the legislation will “accelerate” President Donald Trump’s “corruption” and called for the bill to include stronger conflict-of-interest language.

 

Stablecoin legislation has been a longtime lobbying goal for crypto firms, which have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into influence efforts in recent years. Industry representatives hope the stamp of legitimacy provided by a stablecoin regulatory framework will help make crypto mainstream and turbocharge adoption.

 

Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), a key crypto industry ally, said on the floor Tuesday that the legislation “will be a first step toward modernizing the American payment system and integrating digital assets into the U.S. economy in a responsible way.”

 

The stablecoin legislation is one of two major crypto bills that industry supporters hope to have signed into law this year. The second — a broader measure that would divvy up regulation of digital assets between market regulators — is a bigger priority for most crypto firms, but may be difficult to advance in the Senate due to its complexity.

 

The stablecoin bill the Senate passed Tuesday faces an uncertain future in the House. Republicans in the lower chamber are weighing how much to change the Senate legislation and whether to package it with a market structure bill.

 

https://www.politico.com/live-updates/2025/06/17/congress/senate-crypto-bill-vote-stablecoin-pass-00411005

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 9:24 p.m. No.23202706   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908 >>2963

How Chinese Intel Infiltrated LA Mayor Karen Bass’ Camp

 

go to sauce link, lots of pics:

https://dailycallernewsfoundation.org/2025/06/16/exclusive-how-chinese-intel-infiltrated-la-mayor-karen-bass-camp/

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 9:29 p.m. No.23202719   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908 >>2963

Harvard, MIT Use Law To Limit Legal Payouts While Sitting On Endowments Worth Billions

 

Harvard and MIT have been using a little-known Massachusetts law to limit their legal liability in lawsuits, despite sitting on massive endowments—$53.2 billion and $24.6 billion, respectively. The law caps tort damages against charitable organizations at just $20,000, which critics argue allows these elite universities to avoid meaningful financial accountability even in serious cases like sexual harassment or environmental violations2.

 

This legal shield, known as “charitable immunity,” is unique to only three U.S. states and has been repeatedly invoked by both institutions over the past few decades3. Efforts to repeal or reform the cap have failed annually from 2019 to 2024, with Harvard reportedly lobbying against the changes each year.

 

Critics say the cap discourages victims from pursuing justice and allows wealthy nonprofits to sidestep consequences that for-profit entities would face. As one Massachusetts senator put it: if you’re hit by an Amazon truck, you might get millions—but if it’s a Harvard truck, “you’re not going to get squat”.

 

https://dailycallernewsfoundation.org/2025/06/11/harvard-mit-dodge-expensive-legal-payouts-while-sitting-on-billion-dollar-endowments/

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 9:30 p.m. No.23202724   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908 >>2963

Supreme Court upholds Tennessee ban on transgender youth medical care

 

The ruling is a major setback for transgender rights, with more than 20 states having enacted laws similar to Tennessee's.

 

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday upheld a Tennessee law restricting gender transition care for minors, delivering a major blow to transgender rights.

 

The 6-3 ruling is likely to have a broad impact as 24 other states have already enacted laws similar to the one in Tennessee, which bars gender transition surgery, puberty blockers and hormone therapy for youth.

 

Those laws now look set to survive similar legal challenges. The ruling does not affect states that do not have such bans, meaning care in those states will still be available.

 

The court was divided on ideological lines, with the six conservatives in the majority and the three liberals in dissent.

 

Writing for the majority, Chief Justice John Roberts concluded that the Tennessee law does not constitute a form of sex discrimination that would violate the Constitution's 14th Amendment.

 

"This case carries with it the weight of fierce scientific and policy debates about the safety, efficacy, and propriety of medical treatments in an evolving field," Roberts wrote. "The voices in these debates raise sincere concerns; the implications for all are profound."

 

"The Equal Protection Clause does not resolve these disagreements," he added.

 

Liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in a dissenting opinion that contrary to the majority's conclusion, the law does discriminate based on both sex and transgender status and should therefore be analyzed closely.

 

"By retreating from meaningful judicial review exactly where it matters most, the court abandons transgender children and their families to political whims," she wrote. "In sadness, I dissent."

 

Sotomayor also took the relatively unusual step of reading a summary of her decision from the bench in court, saying the impact of the decision is "incredibly dangerous."

 

Trans rights activists have warned that a ruling allowing bans on care for trans minors could pave the way for similar restrictions aimed at adults.

 

"Today's ruling is a devastating loss for transgender people, our families, and everyone who cares about the Constitution," Chase Strangio, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union who represents the challengers, said in a statement.

 

Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti welcomed the decision as a win for "common sense over judicial activism."

 

He added that legislators should give "careful scrutiny" before allowing such treatments, making judgments "based on science, not ideology."

 

The legal challenge was brought by the administration of former President Joe Biden, as well as transgender teens and their families.

 

The ruling does not resolve all legal issues relating to the state bans, as it did not address a separate argument under the 14th Amendment that the laws violate the right of parents to make health care decisions for their children.

 

The court also did not rule on the question of whether laws that discriminate against transgender people are subject to what is called "heightened scrutiny," meaning that judges should review them with a skeptical eye. But three of the conservative justices said transgender people are not a "suspect class," meaning laws targeting them should not receive heightened scrutiny.

 

Other issues involving transgender rights, such as laws blocking transgender girls from participating in sports, are likely to reach the court in due course.

 

Upon taking office in January, President Donald Trump has set about unwinding Biden policies that sought to bolster transgender rights. Among other things, he signed an executive order seeking to restrict gender-affirming care for teenagers nationwide. A judge quickly blocked it.

 

Trump has also imposed new restrictions on transgender people serving in the military.

 

"President Trump will continue to speak out and take action to protect innocent American children from these barbaric procedures that are based on junk science," White House spokeswoman Liz Huston said in a statement praising the ruling.

 

Enacted in 2023, the Tennessee law is among a wave of similar measures taken by states imposing restrictions on gender transition treatments. In defending its ban, the state's lawyers pointed to similar measures taken in other countries, including in Europe.

 

Skrmetti emphasized in court papers the evolving debate over how best to treat minors diagnosed with gender dysphoria, the clinical term given to the distress people can experience when their gender identities are in conflict with the genders assigned to them at birth.

 

Major medical organizations say gender-affirming treatments are an effective way to treat gender dysphoria.

 

"Let us be clear — healthcare bans of any kind are rooted in stigma, misinformation, and fear and this one comes at the expense of the youth in need of this care," the World Professional Association for Transgender Health and its United States affiliate, said in a statement.

 

The challengers argued that the law is a form of sex discrimination that violates the 14th Amendment's equal protection clause because the treatments at issue in the case — puberty blockers and hormone therapy — can be used in other situations.

 

The case marks the most significant ruling on transgender rights since the court in 2020, to the surprise of many, ruled that federal employment protections extend to gender identity, as well as sexual orientation.

 

The dispute reached the Supreme Court after the Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2023 rejected challenges to the Tennessee law and a similar measure in Kentucky.

 

A district court judge had blocked parts of the law, while concluding that the plaintiffs did not have legal standing to challenge the surgery ban. That provision of the law was not at issue before the Supreme Court.

 

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/supreme-court/supreme-court-upholds-tennessee-ban-transgender-youth-medical-care-rcna190627

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 9:31 p.m. No.23202728   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908 >>2963

Rapid Response 47

@RapidResponse47

Q: "Mr. President, what do you say to the Supreme Leader of Iran who says that they will not surrender?"

 

@POTUS: "I say, 'Good luck.'"

 

https://x.com/RapidResponse47/status/1935341674055508457

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 9:32 p.m. No.23202733   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2749 >>2908 >>2963

Provo Utah named the best managed city in America

 

-Provo ranked by WalletHub as the best-run city in America.

-Mayor Michelle Kaufusi credits the city's team and residents for the achievement.

-Provo excels in safety, education, and infrastructure, with low crime and unemployment rates.

 

PROVO — WalletHub released a report Tuesday of the 20 best-run cities in America, with Provo in the top spot.

 

Provo's mayor, Michelle Kaufusi, said she found out about the ranking early Tuesday and was in her kitchen "jumping up and down" as she read the article.

 

"This recognition from WalletHub is truly an honor, but it's really just a testament, like I stated, to our incredible city team and the residents who make Provo such a special place to live," she said.

 

For this ranking, WalletHub compared 148 of the country's largest cities based on their operating efficiency to determine the effectiveness of local leadership.

 

WalletHub ranked each city based on 36 key performance indicators grouped into six service categories. Those indicators were also measured against the city's total per capita budget.

 

Provo ranked first overall out of all 148 cities.

 

"It means we must be doing something right, and that's exciting. We've always believed in getting the basics right first, which are, for us, quality schools, safe neighborhoods, well-maintained roads, and then, of course, the responsible budgeting," Kaufusi said.

 

"Provo, Utah, is the best-run city, and the reasons for that are that the city is experiencing business growth of around 5.2%, alongside a high school graduation rate of nearly 91%. Provo is also a city that is safe," said WalletHub analyst Chip Lupo.

 

Lupo added that Provo also has the fourth-lowest violent crime rate and the seventh-lowest property crime rate in the country.

 

"Safety is always a top concern for citizens," Kaufusi said. "We continue to focus on keeping our citizens safe and sound in Provo. I think it was a couple years ago, we literally were voted the safest city, large city in the nation, so that's a focus for us."

 

The city also has the eighth-lowest unemployment rate in the country at 2.8%.

 

According to WalletHub, Provo also keeps its infrastructure well maintained and has impressive economic momentum.

 

When broken down into rankings by individual categories, Provo's numbers are all across the board.

 

The city ranked third for safety, 23rd for infrastructure and pollution, 29th for education, and 31st for financial stability.

 

"We're not just spending money here in Provo, we're spending it wisely. So every dollar we invest has to deliver real value for our residents, whether that's keeping your streets safe or maintaining our infrastructure or supporting our schools, all of those things matter," Kaufusi said.

 

Provo's weakest categories were health, for which it ranked 35th, and economy, earning the 84th spot.

 

"Now we have to keep raising the bar. We're not going to rest on our achievements. We've never been that way. We are go-getters, and we're going to use it as a springboard to continue improving," the Provo mayor said.

 

Idaho had two cities listed in the top five, with Nampa at No. 2 and Boise ranked fourth.

 

According to WalletHub, Nampa earned the second spot because of extremely low government debt, a low property crime rate and a strong economy.

 

The only other Utah city on the list was Salt Lake City which ranked 99th out of 148.

 

https://www.ksl.com/article/51331594/getting-the-basics-right-wallethub-ranks-provo-as-the-best-run-city-in-america-

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 9:35 p.m. No.23202742   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2753 >>2908 >>2963

Trump: We will no longer fund the California high speed train

 

Rapid Response 47

@RapidResponse47

 

@POTUS: "I love construction… I know it better than anybody. When I see a railroad going from San Francisco to L.A., I think it's a hundred times over budget — one of the most incompetent things… We're not going to fund that anymore, it's out of control."

 

https://x.com/RapidResponse47/status/1935352721315422670

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 9:36 p.m. No.23202744   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908 >>2963

Rapid Response 47

@RapidResponse47

@POTUS: "We're not looking for long-term war. I only want one thing — Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. That's it."

 

https://x.com/RapidResponse47/status/1935347025954095376

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 9:37 p.m. No.23202752   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908 >>2963

Ya'll missed the memo on this part of DNI Tulsi's statement re: Iran

Rapid Response 47

@RapidResponse47

@DNIGabbard in March: "Iran's enriched uranium stockpile is at its highest levels and is unprecedented for a state without nuclear weapons."

 

https://x.com/RapidResponse47/status/1935348928217584053

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 9:48 p.m. No.23202791   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2795

>>23202777

To liquidize Oxygen from Air, you gotta get it to below -183°C (–297°F).

 

Then to solidify the liquid oxygen, you gotta get it below –218.8°C (–361.8°F).

 

In terms of instantly zapping oxygen straight from air to solid, you can't skip liquidizing it first apparently.

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 10:19 p.m. No.23202885   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908 >>2963

Rapid Response 47

@RapidResponse47

@POTUS on negotiations with Iran: "Nothing is too late. The only thing too late is Powell."

 

https://x.com/RapidResponse47/status/1935338837695189018

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 10:22 p.m. No.23202891   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908 >>2963

Buss family to sell Lakers to Mark Walter for $10B valuation

 

The Buss family has agreed to sell majority ownership of the Los Angeles Lakers to Mark Walter, CEO of TWG Global and principal owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers, in a deal valuing the franchise at a record-breaking $10 billion. Despite the sale, Jeanie Buss will remain as the team’s governor1.

 

Walter has been a minority stakeholder in the Lakers since 2021 and held the right of first refusal on any majority sale. His sports empire already includes stakes in the Dodgers, Chelsea FC, the Los Angeles Sparks, and several motorsports teams1.

 

This marks the end of a 46-year era of Buss family control, which began in 1979 when Jerry Buss bought the team for $67.5 million. Under his leadership, the Lakers won 10 championships and became one of the most iconic franchises in sports history.

 

https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/45539931/buss-family-agrees-sell-lakers-mark-walter-sources-say

Anonymous ID: 09a3cf June 18, 2025, 10:26 p.m. No.23202896   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2908 >>2963

'''Trafalgar Poll: 74% of all voters support Trump's stance on Iran (more females than male akshually)

 

https://www.thetrafalgargroup.org/news/iran-opinion-0617/