Ugly Hedgehog - Photography Forum
Home Active Topics Newest Pictures Search Login Register
The Attic
Mueller Is Telling Us: He’s Got Trump On Collusion
Page <prev 2 of 5 next> last>>
Dec 9, 2018 10:24:50   #
Shutterbug1697 Loc: Northeast
 
yhtomit wrote:
Your words accurately describe our last president and his party. Wake up to your own gullibility and hypocrisy.

You continue to live in a dreamland where your idol has done no wrong.

But the Mueller Sentencing Guidelines prove otherwise!

I'm going to enjoy my last laugh at your expense when Individual 1 is finally brought down by his own undoing!

The writing is on the wall, pun intended, that trump and his family will do some serious jail time.

Reply
Dec 9, 2018 10:28:09   #
Wrangler Loc: North Texas
 
Twardlow wrote:
THE END GAME

Mueller Is Telling Us: He's Got Trump on Collusion

The special counsel is connecting the dots and it doesn’t paint a pretty picture for Trump.

Max Bergmann,
Sam Berger
12.07.18 10:38 PM ET


For nearly two years, since the U.S. intelligence community released its report on the Russian campaign to assist Donald Trump in the 2016 election, the American people have been seeking an answer as to whether the Trump campaign colluded with its Russian counterpart. In the endless speculation about the direction of the investigation, a common view was that maybe the investigation would never implicate President Trump or find any collusion.

But a flurry of recent activity this past week all points in the same direction: Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation will likely implicate the president, his campaign, and his close associates in aiding and abetting a Russian conspiracy against the United States to undermine the 2016 election.

First, Mueller has clearly identified collusion in the efforts of Trump aides and associates to contact WikiLeaks. In a draft plea agreement provided to conservative operative Jerome Corsi, Mueller details how Roger Stone, who the special counsel notes was in frequent contact with Donald Trump and senior campaign officials, directed Corsi to connect with WikiLeaks about the trove of stolen materials it received from Russia. Corsi subsequently communicated WikiLeaks’ release plan back to Stone, and the Trump campaign built its final message around the email release. That is collusion. 

Second, we now know that Trump’s personal lawyer Michael Cohen and former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn have provided evidence to Mueller related to collusion. In Cohen’s sentencing memo, Mueller said that Cohen provided his office with “useful information” on “Russia-related matters core to its investigation.” One of those central elements, according to the Justice Department: “any links and/or coordination” between the Kremlin and Trump campaign figures. Collusion, in other words.

In Flynn’s sentencing memo Mueller said that Flynn’s false statements to the FBI about his calls with the Russian ambassador during the transition were “material” to the investigation into “links or coordination between Russia and individuals associated with the Trump campaign.”

Third, Mueller has found evidence that Trump was compromised by a hostile foreign power during the election. In his plea deal, Cohen revealed that Trump had repeatedly lied to voters about the then-candidate’s financial ties Russia. While Trump claimed during the campaign to have no business dealings with Russia, he was negotiating a wildly lucrative business deal not simply with Russian businessmen, but also involving with the Kremlin itself. Trump’s team even reportedly tried to bribe Russian President Vladimir Putin by offering him a $50 million penthouse.

Worse, Russia not only knew that Trump was lying, but when investigators first started looking into this deal, the Kremlin helped Trump cover up what really happened. That made Trump doubly compromised: first, because he was eager to get the financial payout and second because Russia had evidence he was lying to the American people—evidence they could have held over Trump by threatening to reveal at any time.

Since the president’s embarrassing performance at the Helsinki summit with Vladimir Putin—when he kowtowed to a foreign adversary rather than stand up for American interests—there has been open speculation about what leverage the Kremlin has over him. Now we know at least part of the picture, raising the specter of what other information Putin has, and how he is using it to influence Trump’s policy decisions.

Fourth, we know that Trump has engaged in an increasingly brazen attempt to cover up his actions: installing a political crony to head the Department of Justice by potentially illegal means in an effort to shut down the investigation; using his former campaign chairman and convicted criminal Paul Manafort to find out information about Mueller’s investigation; and even appearing to offer Manafort a pardon if he helps him obstruct the Russia probe. These may be components of an obstruction of justice case, but they also provide strongly circumstantial data points as to how serious Trump himself views the allegations of collusion being levelled against him.

Lastly, federal prosecutors have told us Trump broke the law to influence the 2016 election by hiding evidence of his affairs. Trump clearly had no qualms about breaking the law to win an election.

In the face of what Mueller has revealed, there is little question where this is going. Mueller may still be only showing us part of his hand, but it’s a damn good hand. He has signalled to us he’s found collusion. He has shown us that the president is compromised. He has told us that he has gathered information important to his investigation about contacts with people in the Trump Organization, the campaign, the transition, and even the White House. That’s everyone Trump has been connected with since he started running. And given all the redacted information in his filings and all that he’s been told by cooperating witnesses, we can be confident that Mueller will show us even more.

Mueller is coming. And he is clearly coming for Trump. Not simply for obstructing justice but for conspiring with a hostile foreign power to win an election. This is a scandal unlike any America has ever seen.



Max Bergmann is a Senior Fellow and Director of the Moscow Project at the Center for American Progress. He served in the State Department from 2011-2017.  Sam Berger is the Senior Advisor at the Center for American Progress. He served in the White House from 2010-2017.

https://www.thedailybeast.com/mueller-is-telling-us-hes-got-trump-on-collusion
THE END GAME br br b Mueller Is Telling Us: He's... (show quote)



If Mueller has got President Trump, call Mueller and tell him to get him. Mueller must play his hand. It has been under investigation for two years. It surely must be time to put up or shut up.

Reply
Dec 9, 2018 10:37:51   #
yhtomit Loc: Port Land. Oregon
 
mjmoore17 wrote:
Again, a failed attempt to deflect from Trump by using Obama. Obama has nothing to do with Trumps illegal acts. The topic is Trump, please have your Russian bot programmer give you a new line to use.


Your right, the obama had his own circus of illegal acts. My point is you are okay with DNC criminal activity.
Thanks comrade.

Reply
 
 
Dec 9, 2018 11:17:27   #
dennis2146 Loc: Eastern Idaho
 
If this was all true don't you think it should be reported by every single news agency in the world. I haven't heard anything but the cries of happiness from the Liberals on UHH.

Dennis

Reply
Dec 9, 2018 13:30:11   #
Cykdelic Loc: Now outside of Chiraq & Santa Fe, NM
 
Twardlow wrote:
THE END GAME

Mueller Is Telling Us: He's Got Trump on Collusion

The special counsel is connecting the dots and it doesn’t paint a pretty picture for Trump.

Max Bergmann,
Sam Berger
12.07.18 10:38 PM ET


For nearly two years, since the U.S. intelligence community released its report on the Russian campaign to assist Donald Trump in the 2016 election, the American people have been seeking an answer as to whether the Trump campaign colluded with its Russian counterpart. In the endless speculation about the direction of the investigation, a common view was that maybe the investigation would never implicate President Trump or find any collusion.

But a flurry of recent activity this past week all points in the same direction: Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation will likely implicate the president, his campaign, and his close associates in aiding and abetting a Russian conspiracy against the United States to undermine the 2016 election.

First, Mueller has clearly identified collusion in the efforts of Trump aides and associates to contact WikiLeaks. In a draft plea agreement provided to conservative operative Jerome Corsi, Mueller details how Roger Stone, who the special counsel notes was in frequent contact with Donald Trump and senior campaign officials, directed Corsi to connect with WikiLeaks about the trove of stolen materials it received from Russia. Corsi subsequently communicated WikiLeaks’ release plan back to Stone, and the Trump campaign built its final message around the email release. That is collusion. 

Second, we now know that Trump’s personal lawyer Michael Cohen and former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn have provided evidence to Mueller related to collusion. In Cohen’s sentencing memo, Mueller said that Cohen provided his office with “useful information” on “Russia-related matters core to its investigation.” One of those central elements, according to the Justice Department: “any links and/or coordination” between the Kremlin and Trump campaign figures. Collusion, in other words.

In Flynn’s sentencing memo Mueller said that Flynn’s false statements to the FBI about his calls with the Russian ambassador during the transition were “material” to the investigation into “links or coordination between Russia and individuals associated with the Trump campaign.”

Third, Mueller has found evidence that Trump was compromised by a hostile foreign power during the election. In his plea deal, Cohen revealed that Trump had repeatedly lied to voters about the then-candidate’s financial ties Russia. While Trump claimed during the campaign to have no business dealings with Russia, he was negotiating a wildly lucrative business deal not simply with Russian businessmen, but also involving with the Kremlin itself. Trump’s team even reportedly tried to bribe Russian President Vladimir Putin by offering him a $50 million penthouse.

Worse, Russia not only knew that Trump was lying, but when investigators first started looking into this deal, the Kremlin helped Trump cover up what really happened. That made Trump doubly compromised: first, because he was eager to get the financial payout and second because Russia had evidence he was lying to the American people—evidence they could have held over Trump by threatening to reveal at any time.

Since the president’s embarrassing performance at the Helsinki summit with Vladimir Putin—when he kowtowed to a foreign adversary rather than stand up for American interests—there has been open speculation about what leverage the Kremlin has over him. Now we know at least part of the picture, raising the specter of what other information Putin has, and how he is using it to influence Trump’s policy decisions.

Fourth, we know that Trump has engaged in an increasingly brazen attempt to cover up his actions: installing a political crony to head the Department of Justice by potentially illegal means in an effort to shut down the investigation; using his former campaign chairman and convicted criminal Paul Manafort to find out information about Mueller’s investigation; and even appearing to offer Manafort a pardon if he helps him obstruct the Russia probe. These may be components of an obstruction of justice case, but they also provide strongly circumstantial data points as to how serious Trump himself views the allegations of collusion being levelled against him.

Lastly, federal prosecutors have told us Trump broke the law to influence the 2016 election by hiding evidence of his affairs. Trump clearly had no qualms about breaking the law to win an election.

In the face of what Mueller has revealed, there is little question where this is going. Mueller may still be only showing us part of his hand, but it’s a damn good hand. He has signalled to us he’s found collusion. He has shown us that the president is compromised. He has told us that he has gathered information important to his investigation about contacts with people in the Trump Organization, the campaign, the transition, and even the White House. That’s everyone Trump has been connected with since he started running. And given all the redacted information in his filings and all that he’s been told by cooperating witnesses, we can be confident that Mueller will show us even more.

Mueller is coming. And he is clearly coming for Trump. Not simply for obstructing justice but for conspiring with a hostile foreign power to win an election. This is a scandal unlike any America has ever seen.



Max Bergmann is a Senior Fellow and Director of the Moscow Project at the Center for American Progress. He served in the State Department from 2011-2017.  Sam Berger is the Senior Advisor at the Center for American Progress. He served in the White House from 2010-2017.

https://www.thedailybeast.com/mueller-is-telling-us-hes-got-trump-on-collusion
THE END GAME br br b Mueller Is Telling Us: He's... (show quote)


Who cares??? It isnt even a crime.

Mueller has spent a couple hundred million, and outside of the scary Russians indicted (good luck with that!) and a few idiots who stumbled and MAYBE lied to investigators resulting in a few weeks in jail and what we really have is a special counsel who bootstrapped a fake investigation to nail some jag offs for crimes committed years before the election.

Reply
Dec 9, 2018 13:36:37   #
idaholover Loc: Nampa ID
 
Kmgw9v wrote:
Trump's situation is not conspiracy or imagined. His mind-set that skirting laws is acceptable, because he has done it all his life; will be his undoing.



Reply
Dec 9, 2018 14:54:33   #
dirtpusher Loc: tulsa oklahoma
 
Cykdelic wrote:
Who cares??? It isnt even a crime.

Mueller has spent a couple hundred million, and outside of the scary Russians indicted (good luck with that!) and a few idiots who stumbled and MAYBE lied to investigators resulting in a few weeks in jail and what we really have is a special counsel who bootstrapped a fake investigation to nail some jag offs for crimes committed years before the election.


It is a crime to conspiring to fraud the country an people.

So yuh wrong again

Reply
 
 
Dec 9, 2018 14:56:24   #
dirtpusher Loc: tulsa oklahoma
 
Idaho you wingers are experts of beating that dead horse.

Are you going kiss his ass or hand on his way out

Reply
Dec 9, 2018 17:43:53   #
Shutterbug1697 Loc: Northeast
 
Wrangler wrote:
If Mueller has got President Trump, call Mueller and tell him to get him. Mueller must play his hand. It has been under investigation for two years. It surely must be time to put up or shut up.

I'm going to repeat myself.

Patience Grasshopper

Mueller is moving one layer at a time to build an ironclad case against each defendant as he moves forward toward Individual 1.

He still has a few more layers to peal back to get to trump senior, but at least one of his older children is likely to be among the next sets of indictments to be filed in court.

The Watergate break in occurred on June 17, 1972.

Nixon resigned on September 8, 1974.

That's close to 22 months, and was strictly a domestic investigation.

trump has only been in office for 22 months, the Mueller Investigation has only been underway for a little over 18 months, and involves foreign operatives.

Reply
Dec 10, 2018 08:10:17   #
WNC Ralf Loc: Candler NC, in the mountains!
 
Looks like the tRUMPster is going to prison after he loses the election in 2020!

Reply
Dec 10, 2018 08:16:15   #
Kraken Loc: Barry's Bay
 
I hope it's not the country club type of prison, golf coarse, swimming pool etc.

Reply
 
 
Dec 10, 2018 09:18:24   #
jcboy3
 
Shutterbug1697 wrote:
I'm going to repeat myself.

Patience Grasshopper

Mueller is moving one layer at a time to build an ironclad case against each defendant as he moves forward toward Individual 1.

He still has a few more layers to peal back to get to trump senior, but at least one of his older children is likely to be among the next sets of indictments to be filed in court.

The Watergate break in occurred on June 17, 1972.

Nixon resigned on September 8, 1974.

That's close to 22 months, and was strictly a domestic investigation.

trump has only been in office for 22 months, the Mueller Investigation has only been underway for a little over 18 months, and involves foreign operatives.
I'm going to repeat myself. br br b Patience Gra... (show quote)


Actually, almost 26 months.

Reply
Apr 14, 2019 02:51:13   #
WNYShooter Loc: WNY
 
Shutterbug1697 wrote:
I'm going to repeat myself.

Patience Grasshopper

Mueller is moving one layer at a time to build an ironclad case against each defendant as he moves forward toward Individual 1.

He still has a few more layers to peal back to get to trump senior, but at least one of his older children is likely to be among the next sets of indictments to be filed in court.

The Watergate break in occurred on June 17, 1972.

Nixon resigned on September 8, 1974.

That's close to 22 months, and was strictly a domestic investigation.

trump has only been in office for 22 months, the Mueller Investigation has only been underway for a little over 18 months, and involves foreign operatives.
I'm going to repeat myself. br br b Patience Gra... (show quote)


Guess he ran out of layers, huh?

Reply
Apr 14, 2019 03:10:33   #
EyeSawYou
 
Twardlow wrote:
It's all out there to be seen.


LOLOLOL ya, and the "it's all out there" didn't work out so much for ya did it? LOL

Reply
Apr 14, 2019 05:58:00   #
LWW Loc: Banana Republic of America
 
Twardlow wrote:
THE END GAME

Mueller Is Telling Us: He's Got Trump on Collusion

The special counsel is connecting the dots and it doesn’t paint a pretty picture for Trump.

Max Bergmann,
Sam Berger
12.07.18 10:38 PM ET


For nearly two years, since the U.S. intelligence community released its report on the Russian campaign to assist Donald Trump in the 2016 election, the American people have been seeking an answer as to whether the Trump campaign colluded with its Russian counterpart. In the endless speculation about the direction of the investigation, a common view was that maybe the investigation would never implicate President Trump or find any collusion.

But a flurry of recent activity this past week all points in the same direction: Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation will likely implicate the president, his campaign, and his close associates in aiding and abetting a Russian conspiracy against the United States to undermine the 2016 election.

First, Mueller has clearly identified collusion in the efforts of Trump aides and associates to contact WikiLeaks. In a draft plea agreement provided to conservative operative Jerome Corsi, Mueller details how Roger Stone, who the special counsel notes was in frequent contact with Donald Trump and senior campaign officials, directed Corsi to connect with WikiLeaks about the trove of stolen materials it received from Russia. Corsi subsequently communicated WikiLeaks’ release plan back to Stone, and the Trump campaign built its final message around the email release. That is collusion. 

Second, we now know that Trump’s personal lawyer Michael Cohen and former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn have provided evidence to Mueller related to collusion. In Cohen’s sentencing memo, Mueller said that Cohen provided his office with “useful information” on “Russia-related matters core to its investigation.” One of those central elements, according to the Justice Department: “any links and/or coordination” between the Kremlin and Trump campaign figures. Collusion, in other words.

In Flynn’s sentencing memo Mueller said that Flynn’s false statements to the FBI about his calls with the Russian ambassador during the transition were “material” to the investigation into “links or coordination between Russia and individuals associated with the Trump campaign.”

Third, Mueller has found evidence that Trump was compromised by a hostile foreign power during the election. In his plea deal, Cohen revealed that Trump had repeatedly lied to voters about the then-candidate’s financial ties Russia. While Trump claimed during the campaign to have no business dealings with Russia, he was negotiating a wildly lucrative business deal not simply with Russian businessmen, but also involving with the Kremlin itself. Trump’s team even reportedly tried to bribe Russian President Vladimir Putin by offering him a $50 million penthouse.

Worse, Russia not only knew that Trump was lying, but when investigators first started looking into this deal, the Kremlin helped Trump cover up what really happened. That made Trump doubly compromised: first, because he was eager to get the financial payout and second because Russia had evidence he was lying to the American people—evidence they could have held over Trump by threatening to reveal at any time.

Since the president’s embarrassing performance at the Helsinki summit with Vladimir Putin—when he kowtowed to a foreign adversary rather than stand up for American interests—there has been open speculation about what leverage the Kremlin has over him. Now we know at least part of the picture, raising the specter of what other information Putin has, and how he is using it to influence Trump’s policy decisions.

Fourth, we know that Trump has engaged in an increasingly brazen attempt to cover up his actions: installing a political crony to head the Department of Justice by potentially illegal means in an effort to shut down the investigation; using his former campaign chairman and convicted criminal Paul Manafort to find out information about Mueller’s investigation; and even appearing to offer Manafort a pardon if he helps him obstruct the Russia probe. These may be components of an obstruction of justice case, but they also provide strongly circumstantial data points as to how serious Trump himself views the allegations of collusion being levelled against him.

Lastly, federal prosecutors have told us Trump broke the law to influence the 2016 election by hiding evidence of his affairs. Trump clearly had no qualms about breaking the law to win an election.

In the face of what Mueller has revealed, there is little question where this is going. Mueller may still be only showing us part of his hand, but it’s a damn good hand. He has signalled to us he’s found collusion. He has shown us that the president is compromised. He has told us that he has gathered information important to his investigation about contacts with people in the Trump Organization, the campaign, the transition, and even the White House. That’s everyone Trump has been connected with since he started running. And given all the redacted information in his filings and all that he’s been told by cooperating witnesses, we can be confident that Mueller will show us even more.

Mueller is coming. And he is clearly coming for Trump. Not simply for obstructing justice but for conspiring with a hostile foreign power to win an election. This is a scandal unlike any America has ever seen.



Max Bergmann is a Senior Fellow and Director of the Moscow Project at the Center for American Progress. He served in the State Department from 2011-2017.  Sam Berger is the Senior Advisor at the Center for American Progress. He served in the White House from 2010-2017.

https://www.thedailybeast.com/mueller-is-telling-us-hes-got-trump-on-collusion
THE END GAME br br b Mueller Is Telling Us: He's... (show quote)


So what happened?

Ready to admit that the lying liars in the fake news industry led you astray?

Reply
Page <prev 2 of 5 next> last>>
If you want to reply, then register here. Registration is free and your account is created instantly, so you can post right away.
The Attic
UglyHedgehog.com - Forum
Copyright 2011-2024 Ugly Hedgehog, Inc.