The lawyer Trump Jr. met with has ties to Fusion GPS, the company responsible for funding the Steele dossier. Natalia Veselnitskaya is the family lawyer for Denis Katsyv, owner of Prevezon Holdings, who hired Fusion GPS to assist them in an ongoing campaign to get the Magnitsky Act repealed and to attempt to rewrite the history of the Magnitsky story.
Assuming the Goldberg fellow isn't lying, did Trump Jr. end up meeting up with someone who lied about having Clinton dirt just so she could push her boss's campaign in getting the Magnitsky Act repealed?
>Magnitsky Act The Magnitsky Act, formally known as the Russia and Moldova Jackson-Vanik Repeal and Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act of 2012, is a bipartisan bill passed by the U.S. Congress and signed by President Obama in November–December 2012, intending to punish Russian officials responsible for the death of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky in a Moscow prison in 2009.
Camden Ramirez
Yeah this Russian cooz stinks to high heaven. Classic Clinton tactic, accuse the opponent of doing what you're doing. In this case they actually went so far as to try to set Trump Jr. Up, but you can't stump any trump and he sniffed it out.
Grayson Wilson
>133303420 Does this sleepy shill tactic actually work or is it more to anger people and make them leave?
Jason Russell
That is exactly what happened OP. Good comprehension amidst shit storm of lies.
Last piece of the puzzle is proving that Goldstone and his singer client Emin Agalarov were in on the entrapment
>punishing russians for acting like russians in russia this is why globalism was a mistake. if you want to kill people in your own country then you should have every right to do so.
Robert Bailey
At least right now, it makes sense as this single meeting killed two birds with one stone.
1. Veselnitskaya was able to get in the room to push her boss's campaign.
2. Fusion GPS was able to get dirt on Trump.
Austin Rogers
Something to keep in mind, in the Trump Dossier, why is it that the Magnitsky Act is never mentioned at all? After all, this is something the Russian government clearly wants gone. They're funding lobbyists to get rid of the act, yet no where in the dossier does it mention a quid-pro-quo deal regarding it. Isn't that odd? I may have missed it, but I think the Dossier needs to be reread not as something that states fact, but rather what it does not write about.
Why would Fusion GPS make it easier for others to find a connection between them and the Russians? I'm thinking thats the reason why this was never mentioned. But to be fair, the dossier was never meant to be released, so I don't know.
Anthony Harris
Oddly enough, 60 Minutes just re-aired their story on the Magnitsky Act the other week.
Adam Howard
(((Goldberg)))
Blake Allen
Bump
Jack Wright
Dude, read this >IMR claims that its "investigators uncovered evidence that Mr. Akhmetshin, on behalf of ECVK, its parent company EuroChem, and/or those companies' New York law firm Salisbury & Ryan, hacked into the computer systems of IMR and its officers and associates, stole confidential, personal and otherwise sensitive information, and then disseminated that information in an unlawful attempt to gain an unfair advantage in the Dutch Action." Applicant's Mot. at 4. IMR relies on a number of sources to support its allegations.
I bet those fuckers have all eaten at a macdonalds before too!
In fact, I'll bet at least two of them have eaten at the SAME macdonalds on different days!
THE EVIDENCE IS CONCLUSIVE!
Nolan Lopez
MI6 SHELL BTFO
Eli Hernandez
>Assuming the Goldberg fellow isn't lying, did Trump Jr. end up meeting up with someone who lied about having Clinton dirt just so she could push her boss's campaign in getting the Magnitsky Act repealed?
Unless the conversation went totally different than what any party said, that's pretty much exactly what happened. She wanted to lobby the Trump campaign (not uncommon, but is only a big deal because MUH RUSSIA) but got a bit more attention than she realized because the potential for Clinton dirt was very interesting to Trump Jr. Ironically, while this is embarrassing to Trump, it sort of proves that there was no collusion. If the Russians were colluding with Trump, they wouldn't be fishing this hard to talk about Magnitsky act sanctions, they would go through Manafort.
Going through Trump Jr was a hail mary pass, and it worked better than the lawyer was prepared for, clearly.
Lucas Lee
>Contract: >I need somebody to do some dirty shit. >Applicants: >Scumbags
>The media’s focus on Trump’s Russian connections ignores the much more extensive and lucrative business relationships of top Democrats with Kremlin-associated oligarchs and companies. Thanks to the Panama Papers, we know that the Podesta Group (founded by John Podesta’s brother, Tony) lobbied for Russia’s largest bank, Sberbank. “Sberbank is the Kremlin, they don’t do anything major without Putin’s go-ahead, and they don’t tell him ‘no’ either,” explained a retired senior U.S. intelligence official. According to a Reuters report, Tony Podesta was “among the high-profile lobbyists registered to represent organizations backing Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich.” Among these was the European Center, which paid Podesta $900,000 for his lobbying.
"Allegedly, the Defendants then used the information obtained by Akhmetsin’s hacking to assist ECVK in their Dutch litigation and inflict damage on IMR. In addition, the Defendants initiated a smear campaign against IMR by disseminating this stolen information as well as other negative information to journalists and third parties. This was allegedly done with the goal of harming IMR’s business reputation. The Defendants then used the negative articles written by the individuals to whom they had disseminated the negative IMR’s stolen electronic information in the applications made in the early mentioned lawsuit against IMR."
Grayson Bailey
"According to the Complaint, the “ugly tactics” used by the Defendants were not a surprise. It was revealed that that the owner and primary beneficiary of ECVK was Andrei Melnichenko, a man internationally associated with past illegal activities. Since his reputation and past was important to the case, the Plaintiffs provided it in a great detail. For example, MDM Bank, which Melnichenko founded, was approached by the U.S. authorities after employees of Bank of New York had been accused of helping Russian oligarchs launder billions of dollars through a Moscow-based bank that MDM controlled.
Melnichenko was also the co-founder of coal producer, Siberian Coal Energy Company (SUEK) which was reportedly the subject of the criminal investigation by the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs for tax evasion allegedly totaling over 1 billion rubles in connection with the purchase of shares in three surface coal mines from its subsidiary, Krasnoyarsk Coal Company (KCC). Officers of SUEK and one of its subsidiaries were reportedly under criminal investigation for unlicensed coal mining in the Chita region of Russia. "
They do have the right to do so. Just like the America has every right to bar anyone they want from using American banking systems for any reason they choose