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Kristi Clemens Rogers looks to have rarely stayed more than a couple of years in once place before jumping to greener pastures. Is also classic 2nd wife– overglammed for her age, trying too hard, just kind of "too too". Mike has a more typical Midwestern background, but her dad was a Pentagon guy.
Employment history: https://www.opensecrets.org/revolving/rev_summary.php?id=77956
Am convinced that Mike Rogers is the name George Papadopoulos (and Rex) won't tweet because Papa is under a gag order. The Senate knows. Everything fits for Rogers to be the spy inside the Trump campaign.
How many times did Q and FBI Anon say "follow the wives"?
KRISTI ROGERS IS ONE OF THOSE WIVES
"Rogers’ early experience includes working with the departments of Transportation, Defense and U.S Customs and Border Protection.
Among her top career experiences is her work growing the D.C. office for London-based risk management and security company Aegis LLC, where she was president and CEO 2006 to 2011.
“I pitched the idea to establish a U.S. company to the British board of directors, which included Britain’s last five-star general,” Rogers said. “After serious deliberation and questioning, the board agreed. I responded, ‘Great! Now, we need to find someone to do it.’ The board laughed and responded, ‘Well, that would be you.’”
Within five years, the D.C.-based operation had expanded from two people to just under 1,000.
After her work with Aegis, Rogers co-founded and became managing director and CEO of Aspen Healthcare Services/Aspen Medical International. Under her leadership, Aspen successfully ran full-service medical clinics in Liberia and Sierra Leone, including nine Ebola treatment units.
Rogers has spent much of her career involved in startups.
“I enjoy challenges, and when I see a problem, I feel compelled to find a solution,” she said.
Another experience Rogers said profoundly impacted her were the nine months she spent in Iraq from 2003-2004 working with DOD.
“We did accomplish some amazing things in the early days traveling across the country, meeting with phenomenal people, and witnessing the ever-present challenges and struggles,” she said. “I would say that the experience was unequaled, helping to shape me as a person, both professionally and personally.”
During her time there, a group she was traveling with narrowly escaped a remotely detonated improvised explosive device someone had set up on the road.
“It exploded between our two vehicles (in a convoy leaving Baghdad) and thankfully was defective,” she said. “It exploded out instead of up and out. It badly damaged the back of our vehicle, blew out all of the windows and jettisoned us forward.”
The other vehicle was also badly damaged but still drivable, so the convoy sped away quickly.
“Unfortunately, we later learned that when the IED exploded out, it hit the Iraqi vehicle in the lane next to ours and killed all passengers,” she said. “Some in our group sustained only minor injuries.”