KEK. Feinstein target painted.
Yeah but think about this.
Q
!!Hs1Jq13jV6
6 May 2020 - 8:45:21 AM
https://www.fbi.gov/about/faqs📁
Q: Can I obtain detailed information about a current FBI investigation that I see in the news?
A: No. Such information is protected from public disclosure, in accordance with current law and Department of Justice and FBI policy. This policy preserves the integrity of the investigation and the privacy of individuals involved in the investigation prior to any public charging for violations of the law. It also serves to protect the rights of people not yet charged with a crime.
Q
This suggests to me that Feinstein is already done for. We are watching a movie.
The SLEEPERS must awaken.
The sleeper has awakened. Long live the fighters.
I teach my kid to be responsible and look both ways before crossing.
Possibly. If she is still running around then probably yeah.
I love the hog.
Feinstein, Husband Hold Strong China Connections
smallBy GLENN F. BUNTING
MARCH 28, 199712 AM
THIS STORY WAS REPORTED BY TIMES STAFF WRITERS GLENN F. BUNTING AND DAVID WILLMAN IN WASHINGTON, DAN MORAIN IN SACRAMENTO AND MAGGIE FARLEY IN HONG KONG AND WAS WRITTEN BY BUNTINGsmall
WASHINGTON — On Capitol Hill, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) has emerged as one of the staunchest proponents of closer U.S. relations with China, fighting for permanent most-favored-nation trading status for Beijing.
At the same time, far from the spotlight, Feinstein’s husband, Richard C. Blum, has expanded his private business interests in China–to the point that his firm is now a prominent investor inside the communist nation.
For years, Feinstein and Blum have insisted that they maintained a solid “firewall” between her role as an influential foreign policy player and his career as a private investor overseas.
But such closely coinciding interests are highly unusual for major figures in public life in Washington. And now, as controversy heats up over improper foreign influence in the U.S. political process, the effectiveness of the firewall between those interests could be called into question.
On Thursday, after he was interviewed by The Times about his China business, Blum announced that he will donate future profits from his personal investments there to his nonprofit foundation to help Tibetan refugees. “This should remove any perception that I, in any way, shape or form benefit from or influence my wife’s position on China as a U.S. senator,” Blum said.
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https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-03-28-mn-43046-story.html