Discussion:
Repuglican Trump Lover activist and former presidential campaign chairman Jeffrey Claude Bartleson was arrested on charges of sexually molesting a 5-year old boy.
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End of Trump
2020-05-10 22:05:42 UTC
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Republican Trump Lover activist and former presidential campaign chairman
Jeffrey Claude Bartleson was arrested on charges of sexually molesting a 5-
year old boy.
Democrat worm food
2022-08-11 08:50:18 UTC
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Democrat Bruce Reinhart is a child molester and the FBI knows it.
The Florida federal magistrate judge who signed off on a search
warrant authorizing the FBI raid of former President Donald
Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort left the local US Attorney’s office
more than a decade ago to rep employees of convicted pedophile
Jeffrey Epstein who had received immunity in the long-running
sex-trafficking investigation of the financier.

Sources tell The Post that Judge Bruce Reinhart approved the
warrant that enabled federal agents to converge on the palatial
South Florida estate on Monday in what Trump called an
“unannounced raid on my home.”

Reinhart was elevated to magistrate judge in March 2018 after 10
years in private practice. That November, the Miami Herald
reported that he had represented several of Epstein’s employees
— including, by Reinhart’s own admission to the outlet,
Epstein’s pilots; his scheduler, Sarah Kellen; and Nadia
Marcinkova, who Epstein once reportedly described as his
“Yugoslavian sex slave.”

Kellen and Marcinkova were among Epstein’s lieutenants who were
granted immunity as part of a controversial 2007 deal with
federal prosecutors that allowed the pervert to plead guilty to
state charges rather than federal crimes. Epstein wound up
serving just 13 months in county jail and was granted work
release.

According to the outlet, Reinhart resigned from the South
Florida US Attorney’s Office effective on New Year’s Day 2008
and went to work for Epstein’s cohorts the following day.
Epstein, who was found dead in August 2019 of an apparent
suicide in the Manhattan Correctional Center while awaiting
trial on federal sex-trafficking charges, had hired a stable of
high-powered lawyers, including former independent counsel
Kenneth Starr.

Reinhart was later named in a civil lawsuit that accused him of
violating Justice Department policies by switching sides in the
middle of the Epstein investigation, suggesting he had used
inside information about the probe to build favor with the
notorious defendant, the Herald reported in 2018.

In a 2011 affidavit, Reinhart denied he had done anything
improper and insisted that since he was not involved in the
federal investigation of Epstein, he was not privy to inside
information about the case.

However, in a 2013 court filing, Reinhart’s former colleagues
contradicted him, saying that he had “learned confidential, non-
public information about the Epstein matter.” Reinhart noted to
the Herald in response that a complaint filed against him by a
lawyer for Epstein’s victims had been dismissed by the Justice
Department.

In his 12 years as a federal prosecutor, according to his
official biography, Reinhart “managed a docket that covered the
full spectrum of federal crimes, including narcotics, violent
crimes, public corruption, financial frauds, child pornography
and immigration.”

Reinhart is one of three federal magistrate judges in the West
Palm Beach offices of the US District Court for the Southern
District Court of Florida, along with William Matthewman and
Ryon McCabe.

Two recent warrant applications were assigned to Reinhart and
entered into the court system on Monday, the Miami Herald
reported, but those warrants and information about who they
targeted remain sealed. Records show another warrant was issued
by Reinhart on Friday, but its contents were also sealed.

Trump confirmed media reports of a raid at his Florida resort on
Monday evening, saying Mar-a-Lago was “under siege, raided, and
occupied by a large group of FBI agents.”

The agents were reportedly searching the seaside property for
boxes of classified documents Trump allegedly brought to the
ritzy resort after he left the White House in January 2021,
which would be a violation of federal record-keeping laws.

The National Archives and Records Administration said in
February that it found classified documents in 15 boxes at Mar-a-
Lago and alerted the FBI.

The removal of classified documents to unauthorized locations is
banned under federal law, although Trump had wide powers when he
was president to declassify documents.

The raid on Mar-a-Lago comes amid the House select committee’s
continuing investigation into Trump’s role in the Jan. 6, 2021,
attack on the US Capitol as Congress met to certify the 2020
presidential election results.

A federal grand jury is also investigating the riot and Trump’s
efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

Comments:

Sigmund Latarski
4 hours ago

No longer a swamp. It's quicksand. Look at all the dubious
connections between Judges, FBI administrators, Foreign
entities, elected officials, etc.. We do indeed have a very
corrupt government that is slowly eroding the foundations of
America and they are on the brink of winning. Trump is a man
they have feared since he ran for President and continue to fear
thus seeking to completely destroy him. The American people
better wake up and take control of their government and rid it
of the criminals currently in the majority.

https://nypost.com/2022/08/09/judge-who-approved-fbi-raid-on-mar-
a-lago-once-linked-to-jeffrey-epstein/
Jan 6 Marxist Inquisition
2023-09-05 23:21:39 UTC
Permalink
In article <ud86e9$24nkn$***@dont-email.me>
forging asshole <***@gmail.com> wrote:
More people are likely to be charged with voter fraud in Alachua
County following an investigation by election officials.

In a letter to the state attorney for the Eighth Judicial
Circuit, Brian Kramer, Alachua County Supervisor of Elections
Kim Barton says that nine people who are convicted sexual
offenders voted illegally in the 2020 general election.

“This documentation clearly shows that these voters were not
eligible to cast a ballot in the 2020 General Election under
Florida Statute 98.0751 and should not have been registered to
vote under the laws of the state of Florida and Amendment 4 due
to their convictions of felony sexual offenses,” Barton wrote.

Earlier charges stemmed from voter registration in jail
Barton’s letter, dated July 19, 2022, is the latest in a string
of events that have led to multiple people being charged and
convicted for voter crimes following a voter registration drive
held at the Alachua County jail in 2020. That prompted a ?series
of complaints lodged by Gainesville database researcher Mark
Glaeser who identified potentially hundreds of illegal ballots
cast by inmates around the state.

Unlike others previously charged, however, the latest group that
may be charged cannot cite Amendment 4 as a defense because they
are registered sex offenders.

Earlier arrest: 2nd person arrested in voter fraud investigation
at Alachua County jail; bail set at $75K

The passage of Amendment 4, which in 2018 was approved by nearly
two-thirds of Florida voters, was supposed to restore voting
rights to people with felony convictions, except those convicted
of murder or sexual offenses, who had completed their sentences.
Subsequent changes about paying all fines, court cases and
sentencing requirements confused many leading into 2020.

Florida law charges local election officials with determining
voter eligibility, but Alachua County election officials failed
to do so in cases stemming from Glaeser’s research.

Those investigated by Barton's office have all been convicted of
sexual offenses involving either sexual battery/lewd molestation
on a minor, possession of child pornography or traveling to a
minor to commit an unlawful sexual offense.

“I submit my findings to your office with supporting
documentation that indicates there is probable cause to believe
a crime has been committed,” Barton wrote to Kramer.

In an email to Glaeser, Kramer acknowledged receipt of the most
recent cases forwarded by Barton and says that his office is now
evaluating whether charges will be filed.

“We have opened these cases in our case management system for
further investigation, and filing of criminal charges if
appropriate,” Kramer wrote.

This article originally appeared on The Gainesville Sun: Alachua
County elections official finds 9 who may have voted illegally

https://news.yahoo.com/9-may-face-voter-fraud-172803054.html
But Trump!
2023-09-06 00:01:53 UTC
Permalink
Gov. Gavin Newsom, D-Calif., misrepresented his wildfire preparedness and even disinvested in prevention.
TIERRA MONTE, N.M. (Reuters) - After the U.S. government started
the largest wildfire in New Mexico's recorded history in April,
it is asking victims to share recovery costs on private land,
jeopardizing relief efforts, according to residents and state
officials.

The blaze was sparked by U.S. Forest Service (USFS) prescribed
fires to reduce wildfire risk. The burns went out of control
after a series of missteps, torching 432 residences and over 530
square miles (1373 square km) of mostly privately owned forests
and meadows, much of it held by members of centuries-old Indo-
Hispano ranching communities.

"Today I'm announcing the federal government's covering 100% of
the cost," President Joe Biden said during a visit to New Mexico
in June. Biden was announcing a disaster declaration that
covered debris removal and emergency protective measures.

But federal cost-sharing statutes on other federal relief
programs are limiting Biden's authority and exposing holes in
the government safety net meant to help survivors and restore
landscapes.

It is a system more Americans will turn to as extreme fires and
flooding become the climate change norm.

"I DIDN'T CAUSE THIS DAMN FIRE"

Biden's measure was meant to bridge FEMA relief and a
congressional bill that may pass in the fall to provide 100%
federal compensation for losses from the so-called Hermit's Peak
Calf Canyon fire.

Daniel Encinias was among survivors who met Biden and was told
by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) officials he would get
timely support at little or no cost.

He, his wife Lori, three teenage children, four dogs and eight
cats are living in a camping trailer next to the ashes of their
home in Tierra Monte, 35 miles northeast of Santa Fe.

Encinias submitted an application to the USDA's Natural
Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)
https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/n
rcs/detail/nm/newsroom/releases/?cid=NRCSEPRD1923027 to fix his
well, but was told to share 25% of costs based on a federal
statute that could not be waived as it did not fall under
Biden's declaration.

Encinias said he was told by NRCS officials his application
would be considered in September and recovery work would begin
six to 12 months thereafter if he was accepted

So like many fire survivors in this low-income area who have no
insurance, the rancher and retired electrician did the work
himself.

"Why the hell am I going to pay anything when I didn't cause
this damn fire?" said Encinias, 55, as he fed his cattle hay he
was forced to buy after his baler was torched.

An official for the NRCS' local office in Las Vegas, New Mexico,
where Encinias applied for support directed questions to the
national office. Officials there did not respond to requests for
comment.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

UNCERTAIN TIMELINE FOR RECOVERY RELIEF

Many fire-hit families cannot afford sharing at least 25% of
costs on the USDA's Emergency Forest Restoration Program (EFRP)
https://www.fsa.usda.gov/Assets/USDA-FSA-
Public/usdafiles/FactSheets/emergency_forest_restoration_program-
fact_sheet.pdfwhich offers relief such as stabilization of burn
areas prone to flash flooding, according to New Mexico State
Forester Laura McCarthy. Residents sometimes own large areas of
land passed down from 1800s Spanish-Mexican land grants while
working blue-collar jobs.

"They're really struggling," said McCarthy.

That has left locals, state officials and federal agencies
counting on cost shares to be dropped and passage of the
congressional bill.

Democratic Representative Teresa Leger Fernandez sponsored the
legislation which passed the House and will probably need help
from Republicans in the Senate. The office of Senate minority
leader Mitch McConnell did not immediately respond to a request
for comment

Leger Fernandez is in talks with the USDA and White House on
dropping cost shares and helped negotiate a waiver with the NRCS
for flood mitigation work on private lands.

"The federal government burns your house down so they are
responsible in my mind to pay 100% of the cost of rebuilding,"
said Leger Fernandez

Support cannot get to the 45-mile-long disaster
https://www.yahoo.com/video/mountains-gone-grief-sacred-mexico-
004919599.html area fast enough.

The blaze burned around 170 acres (68.8 hectares) of rancher
Kenny Zamora's forest. His pastures in El Turquillo are covered
with up to 2 feet of sludge after monsoon rains triggered debris
flows on hillsides that no longer absorb water. The torrents
have twice knocked down fences.

A retired employee of the USDA's Rural Development agency,
Zamora applied for support from the USDA's Farms Service Agency
(FSA) to feed his livestock.

The FSA office in Las Vegas told him he was not eligible. USDA
officials told him the EFRP for the area has yet to be funded.
He is paying for recovery work himself.

"If you don't have insurance you're pretty much on your own,"
said Zamora, 59, who like Encinias is considering joining a
massive civil case that may be filed against the USFS.

The FSA Las Vegas office directed questions to State Executive
Director Jonas Moya, who did not respond to a request for
comment. The FSA's national office did not respond to requests
for comment.

Climate change is worsening wildfires as ecosystems no longer
have natural protections such as cooler nights to slow their
spread. The destroyed landscapes are also less able to handle
other disasters, such as floods
https://www.fema.gov/sites/default/files/documents/fema_flood-
after-fire_factsheet_nov20.pdf.

Two women and a man died https://www.reuters.com/article/new-
mexico-wildfire-idAFL1N2Z400C after a flash flood swept through
the burn scar northeast of Las Vegas on July 21.

In Tierra Monte, ash flows sent boulders tumbling below
Encinias' trailer and drowned livestock.

FEMA has so far granted $4.2 million to 1,164 fire survivors,
marking an average payout of $3,600. New Mexico Governor
Michelle Lujan Grisham on Thursday said FEMA granted her request
to extend Biden's declaration to residents who have suffered
damage from flooding and debris flows in wildfire burn scars.

For now, Encinias' family is getting by on a $37,000 maximum
payout from FEMA for the loss of their 5-bedroom home. They also
lost eight acres of forest, farm machinery and cars.

"I'm hoping that finally something works out where it helps the
people," said Encinias.

(Reporting By Andrew Hay in Tierra Monte, New Mexico; additional
reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in Washington; Editing by Donna
Bryson and Josie Kao)

https://news.yahoo.com/starting-mexico-fire-u-asks-091019217.html
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