I was getting the response I expected from him,” Daytona Beach Shores police Lt. Instead, Trump claims he was just showing them " building plans." Trump is still trying to claim he did not show classified documents to anyone at Bedminster, despite audio tape released by CNN suggesting he was showing people at Bedminster a highly-classified Iran attack strategy document. The 37-count Espionage Act indictment brought against Trump by special counsel Jack Smith doesn't reference fingerprints, Strzok continued - and it would be a complicated ordeal, because "God knows there were a parade of people going through Trump’s Bedminster office." Additionally, "Trump has a habit of show-and-tell, holding up docs for people to see without actually handing them to them," so it wouldn't necessarily reflect every person he showed the documents to. But were biometrics (fingerprints and DNA swab) taken?" (Btw, Trump didn’t have a booking photo taken at Miami. "If a person hasn’t been fingerprinted, they can be asked to voluntarily provide them, or they can be compelled to do so via warrant (a subpoena isn’t enough). "Beyond identification, prints can be investigatively helpful in a number of ways: showing the same print(s) across a variety of documents, the volume of prints, eg, was there one Trump print on a particular doc, or hundreds? The latter would imply heavy handling," Strzok continued. "All clearance holders are fingerprinted, meaning a couple of things: Investigators should be able to get an idea of: 1) who with a clearance handled the docs and 2) ID fingerprints not matching any clearance holder IDing who is associated with the latter can be hard because most people have never been fingerprinted." "Something not mentioned in news reporting: I really hope the FBI has sent all of the original classified docs from Mar-a-Lago to the lab for fingerprint analysis," wrote Strzok. Court records show that in the months before the sale, Debra Savoie-Glass, now 65, wasn't regularly living at the Florida home, but her daughter and grandchildren were." "In the case of 'Debra,' it was her daughter - not some unknown cybercriminal - who sold the home while acting on her mother's behalf with 'power of attorney,' according to court testimony. ' has not paid his mortgage in three years,'" said the report. 'This is not a complicated case,' the federal judge wrote in 2013. "Court documents show that Jeff McFatridge, now 55, lost his home in Hillsboro, Texas, after at least two judges - one federal, one state - rejected claims he made against banks and others when they tried to foreclose on the property. 6 riotįurthermore, the report says that court records reveal interesting facts about the "real victims" featured in the ads, known as "Jeff" and "Debra". IN OTHER NEWS: New details revealed about Capitol tour led by GOP lawmaker the day before the Jan. "In fact, while some local officials said title theft is quite prevalent in their areas, many other local authorities contacted by ABC News indicated that the crime is rare for them." "But the FBI told ABC News it can't find any evidence that the agency ever described home title theft as one of the fastest-growing crimes," said the report. Home Title Lock sells policies for $200 a year to allegedly monitor people's home titles, the deeds proving their ownership of their property, and alert them to any changes that occur. Some marketing materials also showcase people who've been identified as 'real victims' - a 'devastated' Texas cowboy and a Florida-raised grandmother whose 'heart-wrenching story of losing her rightfully-owned home is occurring all too often nationwide.'" "In several commercials, Giuliani, Gingrich and other pitchmen claim the FBI classifies home title theft as 'one of the fastest-growing' crimes in America. "The prolific ads urgently warn of a scam called 'home title theft,' when a con artist fraudulently claims ownership of someone else's home to swindle lenders or even sell the property," reported Mike Levine. On Tuesday, ABC News ran a story analyzing the dubious claims made by "Home Title Lock," a Rudy Giuliani-endorsed security company that has deluged the airwaves with ads featuring right-wing celebrities urging people to protect themselves against a supposed wave of fraudulent home title transfers.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |