Third Person On Mueller's Team Booted From Trump Investigation After Discovering What
They Secretly Paid Hillary For The swamp creatures rise again!
The Democrat hack so-called investigator Robert Mueller has chosen a staff to investigate
President Donald Trump and the fake narrative of Russia Collusion which was conjured up
by the Clinton Machine as an excuse for getting her rear end handed to her in 2016 presidential
election.
But as most everyone knows by now, in typical Democrat form, most of the people Mueller
chose conveniently have a history of heavily supporting Democrats, and in particular, Hillary
Clinton.This week the blatant biased antics of a third member has come into light, Jeannie
Rhee, who has extremely close ties with the Clintons and the Democrat Party.
Rhee had worked under Eric Holder for two years during President Obama's two terms.
She has also given over $16,000 to Democrats since 2008.
Additionally, maxed out donations to Hillary Clinton in 2015 and 2016.
But it doesn't stop there.
Rhee also represented Hillary Clinton during her infamous email lawsuit in 2015, as she
worked to block access to Clinton's private emails and her bathroom servers.Rhee also
represented the Clinton Foundation in the racketeering lawsuit in 2015.Let's not kid
ourselves here, Rhee was chosen for a reason.
When you want to set up a witch hunt she fits the criteria perfectly.
She has donated the full amount an individual can legally donate to Hillary Clinton, she
represented Crooked Hillary, and represented the Crooked Clinton Foundation.
Via CBS News:
These are the lawyers aiding Mueller in the Russia probe:
Aaron Zebley
Joining the prosecution team in June, Zebley had served as Mueller's chief of staff while
he was FBI director.
Before joining the special counsel's office, he was a partner at law firm WilmerHale, where
he focused on cybersecurity issues.
He also been senior counselor in the Justice Department's national security division,
a special agent in the FBI's counterterrorism division and assistant U.S. attorney in the
national security and terrorism unit in Alexandria, Virginia, according to a press release from
WilmerHale in 2014.
Zebley, a former FBI agent himself, also played a role in the 2006 case involving al Qaeda
terrorist Zacarias Moussaoui, testifying in the death penalty case against him.
Zebley said that investigators may have been able to track own the 9/11 hijackers, and
discover the plot, if Moussaoui had been more forthcoming with information prior to the
attacks.
Zebley had linked Moussaoui to the hijackers through Ramzi bin al-Shibh, who wired money
for the operation, and money he sent from Germany, according to a New York Times report
from 2006.
Jeannie Rhee
Rhee joined Mueller's team in June, according to The Washington Post, and also worked as
a partner at WilmerHale.
She had previously served as deputy assistant attorney general in the Justice Department's
Office of Legal Counsel, where she advised White House officials and the attorney general
on issues including criminal procedure and national security, according to a WilmerHale
press release from 2011.
She also served as Assistant U.S. attorney in the U.S. Attorney's office for the District
of Columbia.
James Quarles
Quarles served as an assistant special prosecutor as part of the Watergate Special Prosecution
from 1973 until 1975.
More recently, he also was a partner at WilmerHale.
He also served as a law clerk in a U.S. District Court of Maryland in the early 1970s, according
to Bloomberg.
Andrew Weissmann
Weissmann was the FBI's general counsel while Mueller was FBI director.
In early 2015, he was selected to serve as chief of the fraud section in the Justice
Department's criminal division.
He has also worked as a partner at Jenner & Block and was the director of the Enron
Task Force from 2002 until 2005.
He has spent most of his career at the Department of Justice.
During the 1990s, Weissmann worked on a case related to the mafia and Russian organized
crime that involved Felix Sater, a Trump business partner who is now a focus of Mueller's
probe.
Andrew Goldstein
Goldstein joins the Mueller team from the U.S. attorney's office in Manhattan, where
he was overseeing a separate investigation into former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort's
business and real estate dealings.
Mueller has since taken over that investigation as well.
Michael Dreeben
Dreeben currently serves as the deputy solicitor general in charge of overseeing the Justice
Department's criminal appellate docket.
According to the American Law Institute, Dreeben, who has argued more than 100 court cases before
the U.S. Supreme Court, joins the team on a "part-time basis."
Greg Andres
A former DOJ official, Andres is one of the most recent hires to the team joining in early
August, according to Reuters news agency.
Andres comes to the team from the Davis Polk & Wardwell law firm in New York where he is
a partner, focusing on white collar criminal defense cases.
According to Law 360, Andres has represented individuals and financial institutions in
organized crime, anti-corruption and financial fraud cases and have conducted more than a
dozen jury trials involving organized crime and terrorism.
Some the cases Andres oversaw include the prosecution of Robert Allen Stanford, who
was convicted of operated an $8 billion Ponzi scheme, and the prosecution of several members
of the Bonanno crime family, one of whom plotted to have him killed.
Elizabeth Prelogar
Elizabeth Prelogar left her post as an assistant in the U.S. solicitor general's office within
the Justice Department to join Muller's team.
The Harvard Law School graduate previously worked at Hogan Lovells, a private international
law firm, and was formerly a law clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg
and Elena Kagan.
Prelogar brings Russian language knowledge to the team, as she participated in a graduate
student Fulbright Scholar program in Russia from 2002 to 2003.
She was also crowned Miss Idaho in 2004.
Brandon Van Grack
Prosecutor Brandon Van Grack comes from the Counterintelligence and Export Control Section
of the Justice Department's National Security Division.
His name was on the subpoena issued to former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, and
he is leading the grand jury inquiry tasked with investigating Flynn's foreign lobbying,
according to the New York Times.
The grand jury has begun issuing subpoenas to businesses connected to Flynn and his colleagues.
Van Grack is a Harvard Law School graduate and has previously worked on prosecutions
relating to Iran and Syria.
Lisa Page
Lisa Page has been an attorney with the FBI's Office of the General Counsel.
Prior to her position with the FBI, she worked as a trial attorney in the Organized Crime
and Gang Section of the Justice Department's Criminal Division.
Page has prosecuted a number cases involving eastern European organized crime.
In one case, she partnered with an FBI task force in Budapest, which investigated a money-laundering
case against former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort's one-time business partner,
Dmitry Firtash, a Ukrainian oligarch.
Federal investigators have told Manafort he will likely be indicted in Mueller's probe,
the New York Times reported Tuesday.
Rush Atkinson
Rush Atkinson was a trial attorney for the Criminal Division Securities & Financial Fraud
Unit at the Justice Department, where he worked under his special counsel colleague Andrew
Weissman.
In his position with the DOJ, Atkinson has pursued a number cases involving financial
malfeasance, including one in which he helped indict a former Bankrate finance vice president,
according to a DOJ press release.
Atkinson has also worked in the DOJ's National Security Division, and has experience with
espionage cases in the Eastern District of Virginia.
Atkinson received his law degree from New York University School of Law in 2010.
Adam Jed
Adam Jed is an appellate lawyer who comes from the DOJ's Civil Division.
Jed, a 2008 Harvard Law School graduate, once clerked for Supreme Court Justice John Paul
Stevens.
He has worked at the DOJ since 2010.
In 2014, then-Attorney General Eric Holder awarded Jed the Attorney General's Award
for Exceptional Service, a top DOJ honor, according to a DOJ news release.
Aaron Zelinsky
For the last three years, Zelinsky has worked for Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein
as an assistant U.S. attorney in Maryland.
Before that, Zelinsky began his legal career under the Obama administration as a special
assistant to the State Department's legal adviser.
Last year, he was awarded the DOJ's Excellence in Prosecution of Organized Crime Award, according
to a DOJ news release.
Zelinsky, a 2010 Yale Law School graduate, has also clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justices
John Paul Stevens and Anthony Kennedy.
Zainab Ahmad
Ahmad, until recently an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, has
prosecuted more than a dozen international terrorist suspects, traveling all over the
world to find witnesses and gather evidence.
She has yet to lose a single case she has pursued against an international terrorist
suspect.
Ahmad earned her law degree from Columbia Law School, and received the Superior Performance
award for her criminal prosecution of an al-Qaeda operative in the Arabian Peninsula, according
to the DOJ.
Her work prosecuting international terrorists earned her lengthy profile in the New Yorker
in May, which in addition to describing her prosecutions, mentioned her love of karaoke.
Favorite song?
"Manic Monday."
Does anyone actually believe for one moment that this political hack attorney, or any
of the others ones on Mueller's team, including Mueller himself, will not bring their biased
views into this bogus investigation against Donald Trump, his administration, and his
family?
If there is anyone out there who does, I have a lightly used bridge I want to sell you in
California
No comments:
Post a Comment