On Manafort giving "polling data" to a Russian Operative
Posted: Wed Jan 09, 2019 3:55 pm




UJ's Hamster Died. We're All That's Left...
https://ujrefugees.net/
Campaign finance violations for accepting valuable help from Russian intelligence in the quid pro quo, possible fraud on the part of Manafort if he benefited personally, since he gave millions of dollars worth of proprietary information to Russian intelligence.
for biker the ends justify the means. Sad!analhamster wrote: ↑Wed Jan 09, 2019 5:43 pmCampaign finance violations for accepting valuable help from Russian intelligence in the quid pro quo, possible fraud on the part of Manafort if he benefited personally, since he gave millions of dollars worth of proprietary information to Russian intelligence.
Collusion, as you trump cucks fell back on a while ago, isn't in itself a crime though. This is just firm evidence of your president's campaign colluding with an influence campaign run by the GRU. Comfortable with that, traitorcuck?
You're so deep in trumps ass you couldn't recognise that no was not in fact the answer I gave.Biker wrote: ↑Wed Jan 09, 2019 6:42 pmThats a lot of words for a 'no'analhamster wrote: ↑Wed Jan 09, 2019 5:43 pmCampaign finance violations for accepting valuable help from Russian intelligence in the quid pro quo, possible fraud on the part of Manafort if he benefited personally, since he gave millions of dollars worth of proprietary information to Russian intelligence.
Collusion, as you trump cucks fell back on a while ago, isn't in itself a crime though. This is just firm evidence of your president's campaign colluding with an influence campaign run by the GRU. Comfortable with that, traitorcuck?
Nope, the intermediary was a Russian operative tied to Russian intelligence by US prosecutors in addition to the NYT. He was just supposed to get the data to 2 Ukranian oligarchs instead of 1 Russian oligarch.
A previous version of this article misidentified the people to whom Paul Manafort wanted a Russian associate to send polling data. Mr. Manafort wanted the data sent to two Ukrainian oligarchs, Serhiy Lyovochkin and Rinat Akhmetov, not to Oleg V. Deripaska, a Russian oligarch close to the Kremlin.