states government in exchange for millions of dollars for themselves. change for crim a crime. itas aware of it when it happened and joe bidenit profited from it direcedt. ge it was a strong charge to make.y bertoni bob alinsky ha bdd th the document, the emailsmessaget and the text messages to prove that it happened. wehappen. we considered it a hue story and we spent an hour on it in october. oof twenty . cons still consider it a huge storylo in all of that time.ime no other no other major news organization in this countryllow has bothered to follow up.th the new york times neveriewed interviewed tonyto belinski as part of aen investigation into the biden family business deal thes, which is strange bece he was a partner with the bidenb family. but theniden neither has the washington post . neither have the other television networks. they v. e ignored it. se the fbi, whose job it is to enforce federat l law, did take a lengthy statement from tonyfrn during and during that c
a troubled child. they re not aware of the tens m of millions of dollarsof,nds of the thousands of pages of p documentation and the factis clm the doj is claiming they re going to they had to couchey had this.h this and they cann they can t do anything near antt election. i don t want to be sitting herei in december and theyr actually indict hunter biden and then the american peopleand like, why weren t we made aware of those facts? this is crazy.this i woul is d change my vote for r congressman or that senator ortt that governor or that attorney general. so that s why i m coming i now. and as i referenced earlier, i came back from summer travel to find out that the personin that was running point o on the trove of documents p and text messages that were provided. fbi just suddenly retire thed and walked out of the building. does it i mean, you ve gotst the most powerful agencies inien the world, the fbi and the cia t working against you. that s not an overstatement. yoatt happen
together to facilityate a classification of review of relevant materials. then she goes on to say, odni will lead an intelligence community assessment of the potential risk to national security that would result from the disclosure of these relevant documents p. so that s the damage assessment. they re in charge of all of our secrets. they re going to try to figure out how much damage was done here from the apparent mishandling of the materials. tell us more about what this affidavit revealed about the classified documents at mar-a-lago. it s pretty specific. it was. they had to be specific because they were asking a judge to do something extraordinary. to grant them permission to send fbi agents to go search the home of the former president. never happened in history before. so they basically gave a breakdown to the judge of what had already been recovered from mar-a-lago when donald trump voluntarily handed over 15 boxes back in january.
she was suddenly asked for legal documentation. she says when she told her manager she didn t have it he got his cause tony take her to a house in new jersey to get documents p and that her manager himself paid the $175 fee for her fake documents. there was another client i have in westchester who presented fake documents. and he was told that they weren t they didn t look good enough. so they had him return three times to get fake documents that looked better. did donald trump know where you were from and did he think he knew you were undocumented? [ speaking foreign language ]. victorina told me trump once asked her where she was from and she told him guatemala. she says the majority of housekeepers were undocumented and that trump must have known. margarita cruz worked at a housekeeper in trump s golf club in westchester, new york for nine years. what do you think when you hear donald trump talk about undocumented workers and how you shouldn t be allowed in this
well and they just disappeared their data, wiped stuff, shut them down. once you ve got that kind of capability you have options for what to do with it. if you can get inside supposedly corporate and financial systems around the world, yes, they proved you can do damage, you can terrorize people. you can brick computers. you can spy on people. you can steal their documents p and post them online. you can hold stuff for ransom. but if you ve got those kind of skills, you can do a lot of different things once you ve penetrated other people s computer networks. and once you ve got the ability to do that, it s not that big of a leap to just start going straight for money. this is the swift system. society for worldwide interbank financial telecommunications. which sounds fake, but it s a real thing. it s an international system that thousands of banks and banking systems and businesses use to make financial transactions happen internationally. well, in early 2016 hackers linked to north ko