Anonymous ID: 9b3d80 Aug. 22, 2025, 5:50 a.m. No.23494243   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4250 >>4254 >>4338 >>4345

>>23494140

We'll find out next Wednesday…

 

How an Israeli ‘child sex predator’ was able to bail out of Nevada jail without breaking the law

Local criminal justice advocates and lawyers say the Alexandrovich case shows a flaw in Nevada’s bail system, allowing people to skirt around the legal system

 

On Friday morning (15 August 2025), the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department announced in a press release that it had arrested eight “child sex predators” as part of a multiagency undercover operation over the last two weeks.

 

But the arrest of 38-year-old Tom Artiom Alexandrovich, a senior official for Israel's National Cyber Directorate, quickly overshadowed the news, especially after news outlets reported that he had returned to Israel last weekend.

 

Questions over how an alleged child sex predator could so quickly leave the country have swirled in the days since, leading to rampant online rumors, an official denial by the U.S. State Department of interfering in the case and a war of words between top government officials including acting U.S. Attorney for Nevada Sigal Chattah, who cast the blame on a “liberal district attorney and state court judge” in a post on X.

 

Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson, who is responsible for prosecuting the case against Alexandrovich, told The Nevada Independent that the “handling of this case was extremely typical.”

 

When it comes to allowing the release of a person charged with a crime before a trial, courts in Nevada are required to impose the least restrictive means necessary to protect the safety of the community and ensure a person appears in court.

 

Except under special circumstances, courts allow “standard” bail for people charged with a crime before they’re brought before a judge on criminal charges, meaning the amount of money required to leave detention is preset by the court and requires no additional release conditions.

 

Several other people caught in the sting along with Alexandrovich, including a local pastor, were also released on bail, while others remain in detention.

 

While legal experts echo Wolfson’s assessment that the case followed standard procedures, many contend that it highlights fundamental flaws in the state’s bail system.

 

Rob Langford, a longtime private defense attorney and civil rights lawyer based in Las Vegas, called the case the “perfect example” to highlight inequities in the state’s bail system.

 

“Anybody can do what this guy did, anybody who has enough money,” Langford, who previously ran for district attorney against Wolfson, told The Indy.

 

After posting bail the day after he was charged, Alexandrovich returned to Israel. Foreign nationals are often deemed a flight risk in criminal cases, but Wolfson said that law enforcement didn’t raise any red flags that would lead the office or police to believe that Alexandrovich was either a flight risk or danger to the community.

 

“This happens every day in America, where people that live within this country and outside the country post bail and get released, and in almost all of the cases, they return to face the charges,” Wolfson said.

 

Langford said that in an “ideal world,” Alexandrovich would have had to go in front of a judge before leaving the country to review if any additional conditions needed to be set.

 

Alexandrovich's next court date is set for Aug. 27. Alexandrovich’s attorney, David Chesnoff, confirmed via text message that his client “will attend all court dates he is required to be at.” In another statement to The Indy, he said the bail process used in this case was routine.

 

more…

 

https://thenevadaindependent.com/article/indy-explains-how-an-israeli-child-sex-predator-was-able-to-bail-out-of-nevada-jail-without-breaking-the-law

Anonymous ID: 9b3d80 Aug. 22, 2025, 6:11 a.m. No.23494307   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4313

>>23494252

Who is Hillary Clinton’s personal physician, Dr. Lisa Bardack? 5 things to know

Wednesday, August 31st, 2016

 

Earlier this month, fake medical records about Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton circulated around the internet, claiming that she suffered from memory loss and seizures.

In a statement to FactCheck.org, Clinton’s personal physician Lisa Bardack, MD, said: “I have recently been made aware of allegedly ‘leaked’ medical documents regarding Secretary Clinton with my name on them. These documents are false, were not written by me and are not based on any medical facts.”

 

This controversy is not Dr. Bardack’s first time publicly commenting on Ms. Clinton. In 2015, she released a two-page healthcare statement, in which she described Ms. Clinton’s current medications, recent physical examination and treatment history, concluding that “she is in excellent physical condition.”

 

Here are five things to know about Dr. Bardack:

 

  1. She is board-certified in internal medicine.

 

  1. She serves as the director of internal medicine for Mount Sinai Health System at CareMount Medical in New York state.

 

  1. She is a diplomate of the American Board of Internal Medicine.

 

  1. She has been Ms. Clinton’s personal physician since 2001.

 

  1. She earned her medical degree at New York University School of Medicine in New York City. She went on to complete her residency in internal medicine at New York Hospital-Weill Cornell Medical Center, also located in New York City.

 

https://www.beckersasc.com/asc-news/who-is-hillary-clinton-s-personal-physician-dr-lisa-bardack-5-things-to-know/

Anonymous ID: 9b3d80 Aug. 22, 2025, 7:27 a.m. No.23494577   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>23494570

>>23494568

Correction: at a museum exhibit at the White House

 

POTUS LIVE: President Trump Honors White House History at ‘The People’s House’ Exhibit [LIVE]

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9rJBar6rzs