Anonymous ID: 7c7331 June 5, 2019, 4:19 a.m. No.6676365   🗄️.is 🔗kun

CHOAD Beck….

 

Beck, once a prominent Never Trumper, saw his popularity among conservatives plummet after he endorsed Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) in the 2016 presidential election and contributed to National Review’s “Against Trump” special issue. Since President Trump’s election, Beck’s media company, TheBlaze — which recently merged with CRTV — has suffered from dwindling ad revenue, declining web traffic, and several rounds of layoffs. In recent months, the radio personality has warmed to the president, going as far as telling Fox News Channel that “we are officially at the end of the country as we know it” if the Republican Party fails to win in 2020.

 

https://www.breitbart.com/the-media/2019/06/03/glenn-beck-praises-justin-amash-encourages-2024-white-house-run/

Anonymous ID: 7c7331 June 5, 2019, 4:29 a.m. No.6676389   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6397

David L Boren…

-Illumanti 300 member

-former head of the Senate Intelligence Committee

-CFR member

-Board of Texas Instruments

-Board of American Airlines

-Mentored George Tenet (former head of the C_A)

 

https://oklahoman.com/article/5630593/investigations-of-former-university-of-oklahoma-president-david-boren-inaccurate-financial-data-costly

 

NORMAN — The University of Oklahoma has paid $561,493 to the law firm that investigated both former OU President David Boren and the misreporting of information to U.S. News & World Report.

 

The latest payment to Jones Day — for $166,814 — was made April 24, two weeks after regents were briefed at a six-hour closed meeting on the findings of the Boren investigation, records show.

 

OU first hired Jones Day last year to investigate the misreporting of information to U.S. News & World Report for its annual ranking of universities. OU later hired the firm to investigate allegations of sexual misconduct that were made against Boren.

 

Boren, 78, a former Oklahoma governor and U.S. senator, retired last year after nearly 24 years in charge at OU. He has denied wrongdoing.

 

OU paid $193,681 to Jones Day in early December and $200,998 in March, records show.

 

"The University’s engagement of a nationally respected firm with extensive experience in these types of inquiries helps ensure the highest levels of objectivity and expertise," OU said in an emailed response Sunday to questions from The Oklahoman.

 

"It also helps ensure the privacy of potentially affected parties," OU said. "From the start, the University desired an investigation conducted professionally, independently and impartially."

 

OU has declined to make public the Jones Day invoices even in redacted form.