12 year old athlete has stroke, ‘Cause least of their concerns”: Links 2, August 10th, 2022

1. Judge who signed the search warrant for Mar-a-Lago was an Epstein associate.

(I’m sure nearly all of us who followed the whole Epstein Island drama, had figured it was a plan to put powerful people in a position to be blackmailed. I’m also pretty sure none of us think Epstein killed himself. So the rest stands to reason. Remember, Trump was the only powerful guy at the top who did NOT go to the Island, and more so, actually banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago for hitting on children, or at least illegally young girls.)

If there were any question as to whether or not the FBI raid on Donald Trump’s Mar-A-Lago residence was rife with corruption, details from the search warrant authorizing it should clear any doubt. Although information is sparse given that the warrant remains under seal, one piece of information that couldn’t be kept confidential sheds new light on the motives behind the raid.

The judge who signed off on the search warrant was Bruce E. Reinhart, United States Magistrate Judge for the Southern District of Florida. Before assuming his office as a federal judge, Reinhart was an attorney who represented associates of Jeffrey Epstein implicated in his human trafficking conspiracy, namely; Sarah Kellen and Nadia Marcinkova. 

Kellen worked for Epstein as his scheduler for years and was referenced in deposition testimony given during the defamation case between Virginia Guiffre and Ghislaine Maxwell. Marcinkova was a more prominent member of Epstein’s entourage as she served as one of the pilots of his infamous aircraft dubbed “The Lolita Express.”

Reinhart assumed his role as Kellen and Marcinkova’s attorney once he set up a criminal defense firm after resigning from his post as a senior prosecutor in the Southern District of Florida as it was negotiating a non-prosecution agreement for Epstein. Reinhart would officially begin his legal representation of Epstein’s accomplices within days of leaving his position as a senior prosecutor within the district.

(Read the rest at Zero Hedge please)

Oh wait there is more. He recused himself June 22, 2022 in Trump V. Hillary case.

The document

2. Biontech in 2021 explains that it is very clear that it should be a three dose vaccine

3. EXCLUSIVE: ‘I did nothing wrong’: Trump says he will plead the FIFTH under oath this morning as he tears into New York AG Letitia James for her ‘political attack and vendetta’ while real criminals ‘run rampant’

Donald Trump has criticized New York Attorney General Letitia James’ ‘political attack on me, my family, and my great company’ and confirmed he would not answer questions when grilled under oath in the investigation into his business practices.

In a statement exclusively obtained by DailyMail.com, the former President says James campaigned on the policy of ‘Get and Destroy Trump’ and her probe is nothing more than a witch hunt.

He also confirmed that on the advice of counsel he will plead the fifth when questioned in Manhattan and insists: ‘I did nothing wrong’. 

‘She even assured her supporters in an Election promise that, “we’re going to definitely sue him. We’re going to be a real pain in the ass. He’s going to know my name personally”, and she claimed I was an “illegitimate President”, he said in the statement.

4. Two US Attorneys General Defy President Trump’s Order — It’s Now Been 19 Months and the Lawless DOJ Will Not Release the Crossfire Hurricane Documents

President Trump declassified a binder on January 19th, 2021 that contains hundreds of pages about the Crossfire Hurricane scandal. It contains damaging information about the corrupt actors involved with our government. Two different DOJ Attorney General’s have defied President Trump’s direct lawful order to publish the binder in the Federal Register. It’s been 19 months as the DOJ defies the order, and every FOIA request to make it public. Can we now raid the homes of acting AG Monty Wilkinson, and Merrick Garland?

5. Tom Fitton: When it came to Bill Clinton, it was determined that the president has an ABSOLUTE AUTHORITY to designate White House records as personal.

Thank you all for braving this new world, which is clearly going to treat those who stick with reality in the harshest terms it can unless we fight back and win.

And as a public service, please check your 12 year old kids for signs of heart attacks and strokes. Cause we all know that at 12, you suffer a real risk of heart attacks and strokes and probably Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s. So have your kids checked.

N.S. baseball player who suffered stroke sees support from across Canada

There’s been an outpouring of support from across Canada for a 12-year-old baseball player from Hammonds Plains, N.S., who suffered a stroke during one of his games.

Satchel Tate, who plays for the Hammonds Plains A’s in under-13 AA, suffered the medical emergency during a tournament in Bridgewater, N.S., on July 30. His recovery is expected to be lengthy and difficult.

“It’s been scary,” said Nathan Mouton, one of Satchel’s teammates, “but I think we’re getting better and just trying to go have fun on the field and do it for Satchel.”

(They go on to say that “the cause is the least of their concerns”. Yeah sure it is. I bet they all have new uniforms next year that say Pfizer though. Still, wouldn’t they want to know the cause in case its something the rest of the team was exposed to? Like hotdogs from a certain ball park, or well water near the field, or an experimental gene therapy known to cause blood clots in young people? That sort of thing? This report is from Global News. An enemy propaganda outlet equally pernicious as CBC and CTV but more dangerous as its more subtle.)

 

About Eeyore

Canadian artist and counter-jihad and freedom of speech activist as well as devout Schrödinger's catholic

6 Replies to “12 year old athlete has stroke, ‘Cause least of their concerns”: Links 2, August 10th, 2022”

  1. See Politicians in China’s Pay
    The first line of this article should be the title. Blacklocks Reporter is obviously afraid of repercussions….

    MPs, provincial legislators and city councilors are known to be in the pay of foreign agents, a former espionage officer yesterday told the Commons ethics committee. The foreign agents’ source country was not named though cabinet has accused China of clandestine activities.

    “We had to monitor parliamentarians,” testified Michel Juneau-Katsuya, former chief of the Asia-Pacific desk at the Canadian Security Intelligence Service. “There are elected officials at all levels whether it’s municipal, provincial or federal who are being paid by foreign governments and who are not necessarily acting in the interests of Canada.”

    “It is still happening,” said Juneau-Katsuya. “Foreign agents try to recruit elected officials. It’s fairly easy because elected officials don’t necessarily listen to security guidelines to protect themselves.”

    Juneau-Katsuya did not identify any foreign agents’ source country by name. However cabinet in a June 23, 2021 submission to a Commons foreign affairs subcommittee stated: “The government has warned Chinese authorities against interference activities.”

    “The Government of Canada is aware foreign states including the People’s Republic of China or its proxies may attempt to harass, threaten and intimidate Canadians, persons residing in Canada or their families in Canada or abroad, particularly Chinese diaspora or ethno-cultural communities,” said the committee submission.

    Members of the Commons ethics committee yesterday expressed astonishment over the testimony. “I’m kind of dumbfounded,” said Conservative MP James Bezan (Selkirk-Interlake, Man.). “Extraordinary,” said Conservative MP Pat Kelly (Calgary Rocky Ridge), chair of the ethics committee.

    “You said politicians at all levels have been monitored,” said Conservative MP Jasraj Singh Hallan (Calgary Forest Lawn). “You don’t need to name names”:

    MP Hallan: “How many in your experience have been monitored?”
    Juneau-Katsuya: “No I cannot give a definite number considering the fact – ”
    MP Hallan: “Is it in the 10s, in the 20s, is it in the hundreds? Can you give us something like that?”
    Juneau-Katsuya: “It’s difficult for me to mention the numbers because we work on the need-to-know basis.”
    “If for example I have colleagues working on the Russian desk, they will not know if I am working on the Chinese desk some of the targets I have,” said Juneau-Katsuya. “What we know for sure is we have various foreign countries that succeeded in recruiting elected officials – again, municipal, provincial or federal – and were capable of influencing this way.”

    “We see that also, when we see at the end of their mandate, cabinet ministers going to work for a foreign company that works directly against national security and the national interests of Canada,” said Juneau-Katsuya. “There’s a certain concern when some people leave public office for what they’ve done during the public office and what they do after.”

    “Very often the politician or elected official was not necessarily the initial target but they actually came to our attention when we were watching foreign intelligence officers or foreign criminals or Canadian criminals being in contact with them,” said Juneau-Katsuya. “It became a concern to either the Canadian Security Intelligence Service or the RCMP when these people demonstrate certain activities that were questionable in light of their responsible office.”

    There is currently no federal law mandating disclosure of foreign agents paid to lobby elected officials. A bill pending in the Senate S-237 An Act To Establish The Foreign Influence Registry would publicly name all federal lobbyists acting for “a foreign government, an individual or entity related to a foreign government” and require disclosure of payments and identities of clients under threat of $200,000 fines and two years’ jail.

    “The Act will force greater transparency by exposing those who seek to influence on behalf of foreign regimes,” Senator Leo Housakos (Que.), sponsor of the bill, told the Senate in March 29 debate. “Countries like China, countries like Iran, countries like Russia, we have evidence to show they are very active right now within our borders.”

    The United States in 1938 introduced a Foreign Agents Registration Act requiring disclosure of agents. The U.S. law was originally intended to track Nazi sympathizers. Australia in 2018 introduced its own Foreign Influence Transparency Scheme that includes mandatory registration of all former cabinet ministers acting on behalf of foreigners.

  2. MPs demand spyware files

    The Commons ethics committee yesterday by a 6 to 5 vote ordered the RCMP to comply with its demand for data on any spyware surveillance of MPs. The Mounties earlier dismissed a similar request.

    “This is something we need to delve into in more detail,” said Conservative MP James Bezan (Selkirk-Interlake, Man.), sponsor of the motion to compel disclosure of records. MPs also need more information to determine whether other police agencies have used spyware and “the commercial application of this technology,” said Bezan.

    The committee on July 26 asked for “a list of warrants or any other information related to the wiretapping of Members of Parliament, parliamentary assistants or any other employees of the Parliament of Canada.” RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki in an August 4 response wrote: “This information will not be provided.”

    The ethics committee yesterday voted to enforce its order with a proposal to review documents behind closed doors. Only Liberal MPs opposed the order.

    RCMP admitted since 2012 investigators used spyware capable of activating smartphone cameras and microphones, downloading emails and accessing all electronic records held on devices. Daniel Therrien, just-retired Commissioner of Privacy, questioned “whether it’s ethical or not” regardless of the legality of spyware surveillance sanctioned by court warrant.

    “The on-device investigative tool for hacking into our cellphones predated your time as privacy commissioner and they never once consulted you?” asked MP Bezan. “It was a surprise,” replied Therrien.

    The use of spyware was only disclosed in a June 22 cabinet tabling of documents in the Commons requested by Conservative MP Tako Van Popta (Langley-Aldergrove, B.C.). MP Van Popta had asked for details of “government programs conducting surveillance or gathering information from Canadians through their phones or mobile devices.”

    “I was surprised by the tool itself and how intrusive it was and that it was used for so long,” testified ex-Commissioner Therrien. RCMP acknowledged they never disclosed the practice to the Commissioner’s office.

    “What is currently legal might not necessarily be ethical,” said New Democrat MP Matthew Green (Hamilton Centre, Ont.). There was no “positioning of the RCMP as being rogue or going outside the confines of the law,” said Green. “It’s the gaps.”

    Sharon Polsky, president of the Privacy and Access Council of Canada, testified that variations of the RCMP spyware are sold commercially. “Nobody is talking about preventing the spyware from being used in the first place and nobody is talking about how the spyware is able to take advantage of the shortcomings, the deficiencies, in so many software programs,” said Polsky.

    “People in my riding say, ‘Well, I don’t have anything to hide so why do we need to bother?’” asked Bloc Québécois MP René Villemure (Trois-Rivière, Que.). “Show me your bank statement,” replied Polsky.

    “For those who want to display the minutiae of their lives online, that’s their choice,” said Polsky. “But governments aren’t always benevolent.”

  3. ITEM 4: It is becoming more obvious the Biden admin was after the declassified docs and Trump expected it and is playing them like a violin.

    As the raid was ongoing, Trump released a 3.5-minute video and since yesterday, there are two more videos relating to the raid. One can only conclude he was expecting it because well-laid-out videos aren’t produced in a few hours.

    On Truth, he says that one month ago, FBI agents asked him to put a lock where there was none before. It’s a good thing the safe was empty.

    And most surely, Trump made photocopies of the declassified docs. The only reason he hasn’t released them is that the Durham investigation is still ongoing. My guess is they are forcing Durham to keep the investigation open to prevent Trump from releasing the info.

  4. – ANOTHER 12-Year old. This one died. –

    A 12-year-old member of Clayton Valley Little League died on Sunday due to a “severe medical emergency” following youth football practice at Clayton Valley Charter High School in California.

    Braden Fahey, a middle schooler and young football player, had to be rushed to Stanford hospital on Friday evening at 7:25 after experiencing a medical emergency during a football practice.

    https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2022/08/12-year-old-clayton-middle-schooler-dies-following-youth-football-practice-due-severe-medical-emergency/

  5. There is more to Reinheart than generally reported, but, it is difficult right now to confirm – hence, please understand that the following are allegations I have come across and not anything more than that.

    Reinheart was said to have been a prosecuting attorney, a part of the team of attorneys that represented Epstein’s victims while Epstein himself and/or his associates had first been prosecuted. However, Reinheart was said to have resigned from the prosecutor’s office during that trial and changed careers to become a defense attorney – one that was promptly hired to defend Epstein’s associates from the very prosecution he had just resigned from.

    Not sure if this is even legal, but, there are several sources reporting this. However, I was not able to verify if these sources were independent, so, please, take this information for what it is.

    There are other sources that report that Reinheart is currently a Magistrate, not a judge, and thus did not have the authority to approve the raid on Mar-a-Lago. Again – much confusion on this right now and someone more skilled than I needs to dig through to the truth on this.