Vol0725
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I don't want to quote Vol0275's post due to its length, but that was a lot of words that said next to nothing.
A very possible scenario here is that collusion is proven to high up campaign officials but they have a hard time getting proof together that Trump knew of it.
Personally I believe that this is the reason we've seen the strategy unfold as it has. Trying to turn someone to give up Trump. Question is, has it already happened?
It all focuses on the Steele dossier, just like the original Nunes memo. The Schiff memo seemed pretty clear to me that the dossier didn't initiate the investigation, even though it was used for the warrant. It also mentions that parts of the dossier corroborated facts already uncovered. The political motivation against the Trump campaign was laid out in the warrant application, despite the fact that the players weren't specifically identified. Only an idiot would think there wasn't a tie to the Clinton campaign at that point in the election year. The fact that Page wasn't even with the campaign at the time the warrant was executed makes it unlikely that the warrant was even used to spy on Trump. In sum, the Schiff memo basically cuts the legs out from under the Nunes memo.
It all focuses on the Steele dossier, just like the original Nunes memo. The Schiff memo seemed pretty clear to me that the dossier didn't initiate the investigation, even though it was used for the warrant. It also mentions that parts of the dossier corroborated facts already uncovered. The political motivation against the Trump campaign was laid out in the warrant application, despite the fact that the players weren't specifically identified. Only an idiot would think there wasn't a tie to the Clinton campaign at that point in the election year. The fact that Page wasn't even with the campaign at the time the warrant was executed makes it unlikely that the warrant was even used to spy on Trump. In sum, the Schiff memo basically cuts the legs out from under the Nunes memo.
FISA warrant requests are rubber stamped. Hardly any get rejected. This is a problem.
The U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Court (FISA) rejected only 12 of 38,169 requests for surveillance warrants between 1979 and 2015.
This means that about 99.7 percent of warrant requests have been approved in the 36 years since FISAs inception.
Surveillance Requests Almost Never Rejected | The Daily Caller
Plus, the judge was free to ask any questions regarding the backing of the dossier. If the answers would have been relevant, the judge would have asked. The fact that the questions were not asked is proof that the information would have had no bearing on the decision.
People who think otherwise should be focused on the judge and no one else.
That's because they are extremely well done and well researched. As were these.
Whats your opinion of this FACT, that the mainstream media doesnt cover...
A federal court last year already found egregious and lawless deliberate abuse of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) by the FBI specifically, and certainly implicating DOJ.
The courts decision reveals that the upper echelon of the FBI (such as James Comey, Andrew McCabe, Peter Strzok and others( deliberately gave unlimited and unsupervised access to the most private raw FISA data to a private contractor. (Can you say Fusion GPS?)
Heres the 99 page decision, and I continue below laying out the case...
https://www.dni.gov/files/documents/icotr/51117/2016_Cert_FISC_Memo_Opin_Order_Apr_2017.pdf
NOW FOLLOW ALONG HERE...
How do we know there was really a problem in the FBI and the DOJ? Read the unclassified decision of the special super-secret FISA Court especially beginning at page 83. The FISA Court oversees our spy agencies and the massive data collection operations of our federal government. It operates in utmost secrecy too much secrecy.
The unclassified FISA court decision reveals major violations by the FBI. The FBI gave private contractors illegal access to the all of the raw data collected by the NSA. The Court noted an institutional lack of candor on NSAs part and emphasized that this is a very serious Fourth Amendment issue.
Apparently, the saga for the court began on March 9, 2016, when DOJ oversight personnel conducting a minimization review of the FBIs *** [redacted] learned that the FBI had disclosed raw FISA information, including but not limited to Section 702-acquired information.
Reading between the redactions, that disclosure involved an entity largely staffed by private contractors.
On top of that, certain *** [redacted] contractors had access to raw FISA information on FBI storage systems. ***[redacted] the ***[redacted] contractors had access to raw FISA information that went well beyond what was necessary to respond to the FBIs requests.
According to the Court, the FBI discontinued the above-described access to raw FISA information as of April 18, 2016.
The court continued, noting Restrictions were not in place with regard to the *** [redacted] contractors; their access was not limited to raw information for which the FBI sought assistance and access continued even after they had completed their work in response to an FBI request.
The court catalogues a separate violation by the FBI, but most of it is redacted. Footnote 68 of the Courts decision includes the statement that the government acknowledges that those disclosures were improper for other reasons.
It gets worse. The court wrote in Footnote 69 that improper access granted to the * * *[redacted] contractors . . . * * *[redacted] . . . seems to have been the result of deliberate decision-making. * * *[redacted] access to FBI systems was the subject of an interagency memorandum of understanding (presumably prepared or reviewed by FBI lawyers), no notice of this practice was given to the FISC until 2016.
NSA Director Admiral Mike Rogers, whom James Clapper and others sought to have fired, deserves credit for reporting these problems to the FISA court and for stopping the use of the certain queries which facilitated the abuses of the intelligence systems.
#ReleasetheMemo is the least Congress owes to the American people. Personally I think all the warrants, affidavits and TRANSCRIPTs should be released.
And bureaucrats who overstep the law should be prosecuted just like anyone else.
What say you??
I say you can't read very well.
First, the Court granted continuing surveillance in that case.
Second, the issue specifically discussed is the "minimization" process whereby the agencies involved limit access to the info. There was a concern expressed - no more- that some private contractor could see it because they were assisting the agency.
They were well trained, did not disseminate it, and the Court found that the agencies had met the statutory requirements.
In other words, you are cherry picking things, taking them entirely out of context, and fabricating a complete falsehood.
As usual.
Does this prove that Trump polluted with the Russians?I say you can't read very well.
First, the Court granted continuing surveillance in that case.
Second, the issue specifically discussed is the "minimization" process whereby the agencies involved limit access to the info. There was a concern expressed - no more- that some private contractor could see it because they were assisting the agency.
They were well trained, did not disseminate it, and the Court found that the agencies had met the statutory requirements.
In other words, you are cherry picking things, taking them entirely out of context, and fabricating a complete falsehood.
As usual.
FISA warrant requests are rubber stamped. Hardly any get rejected. This is a problem.
The U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Court (FISA) rejected only 12 of 38,169 requests for surveillance warrants between 1979 and 2015.
This means that about 99.7 percent of warrant requests have been approved in the 36 years since FISAs inception.
Surveillance Requests Almost Never Rejected | The Daily Caller
Seriously? With the FBI and DOJ and their recent track record?I think you've posted this before. I'm not saying there definitely aren't abuses here, but thinking of it analogously, I can't help but wonder what the percentage should be. As a physician, I have to jump through paperwork hoops with insurance carriers to ensure I get paid for services. The information, ordering, supporting documentation, etc required varies quite a bit between carriers. If my office it's doing their job correctly, i should be reimbursed nearly 100% off the time. Is it not plausible that the FBI and DOJ, given their knowledge of requirements for successful FISA application, have a very high approval percentage? If not, why not?
Seriously? With the FBI and DOJ and their recent track record?
Getting a warrant to void a citizen's constitutional rights should never be an easy task and 99.7% success rate on 38,000 attempts is better than the purity of Ivory Soap. If that doesn't even pique your BS button, there is something wrong with you. This is our government we are talking about here, not exactly brain surgery and brain surgeons who I doubt have a 99.7% success rate.
Plus, the judge was free to ask any questions regarding the backing of the dossier. If the answers would have been relevant, the judge would have asked. The fact that the questions were not asked is proof that the information would have had no bearing on the decision.
People who think otherwise should be focused on the judge and no one else.