==Assange >U.K. Authorities >> U.S. Authorities >> Sessions DOJ >> Russiagate Depositions==
Assange in Washington in time for Russiagate interviews with members of Congress?
The Russiagate interviews/depositions will begin in Washington in August
Assange will likely leave the Ecuadorean embassy in London in August
Interesting timing.
What's the bet that Assange is on his way to Washington to attend the Russiagate depositions?
Like clockwork.
Check it out.
Q 1748
>Listen VERY carefully
>VERY
Devin Nunes on Fox News:
"Interviews/depositions will begin over August.
"So we will have members of Congress that will be flying back to Washington during August to conduct interviews with very important witnesses that need to be interviewed as it relates to getting to the bottom of this Russiagate scandal."
https://mobile.twitter.com/FoxNews/status/1023586696196247552/video/1
>interviews with very important witnesses
>very
Assange Timeline
February: Assange loses his legal bid for British authorities to revoke his arrest warrant for breaching bail. This leaves Assange in a legal and diplomatic impasse, with no way out of the Ecuadorean embassy without facing arrest by British police
March: Ecuador suspends Assange's contact with the outside world
May: Ecuadorean President Lenin Moreno orders the withdrawal of additional security from Ecuador's diplomatic headquarters in London
June: Australian High Commission officials visit Julian Assange in the Ecuadorian embassy in London for the first time in his six-year stay
July: Reports say senior officials from Ecuador and Britain are discussing how to remove Assange from the embassy after revocation of his asylum
July: Ecuadorean President Lenin Moreno visits London. He later confirms that Ecuador and Britain are in talks to try to end Assange's stay at the embassy
July: Wikileaks tweets: Editor-in-chief of RT: "My sources tell me that @JulianAssange will be handed over to the #UK in the next weeks or days."
https://twitter.com/wikileaks/status/1020134927701020673
Reuters reports that a US law official close to the US Department of Justice investigation into WikiLeaks said there was no sealed indictment against Julian Assange.
It also reports that a Justice Department official confirmed that an investigation into WikiLeaks is still open in Virginia
(A Grand Jury was convened in Alexandria, Virginia, in 2010 and has sat since that time, its purpose apparently to indict Assange, according to his lawyer: https://www.ag.gov.au/RightsAndProtections/FOI/Documents/Documents%20relating%20to%20Julian%20Assange%20and%20the%20Sealed%20US%20Indictment%20-%20Part%202%20of%202.pdf)
Trump in 2016 said "WikiLeaks, I love WikiLeaks" and "Boy, I love reading those WikiLeaks."
Attorney General Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III in 2017 said Assange's arrest was a "priority."
Is this how it will play out?
Assange gets tossed from the Ecuadorean embassy
The U.K. arrests him for skipping bail, then extradites him to the U.S.
Assange is handed over to the Sessions DOJ, which reportedly has no sealed indictment against him
All in time for August, when members of Congress fly to Washington to interview very important witnesses to get to the bottom of this Russiagate scandal.