Lin Wood Says He Definitely Doesn t Feel Betrayed at All By Trump After Losing SC GOP Chair
On 5/18/21 at 6:47 PM EDT
Lawyer Lin Wood, ardent supporter of former President Donald Trump and QAnon conspiracy theorist, insists that he does not feel betrayed after losing his bid to become South Carolina GOP chair following Trump s endorsement of his rival.
Wood, who has falsely claimed that Trump won the 2020 election in a landslide and is still president, lost the election to Trump-endorsed incumbent South Carolina Republican Party chair Drew McKissick on Saturday. He continued to praise Trump days later, maintaining that he made new friends and had a great time during his campaign despite a lack of support from the former president.
Pro-Trump Lawyer Lin Wood Swears Under Oath He Has Evidence Mike Pence Is Traitor
On 2/10/21 at 12:07 AM EST
Lawyer Lin Wood, a prominent booster of conspiracy theories involving former President Donald Trump, has claimed under oath that he has evidence proving that former Vice President Mike Pence is a traitor.
Wood stated that he had already handed evidence proving Pence s alleged treachery to the U.S. Secret Service in a court filing on Tuesday. The filing was made in response to an attempt to remove him as the lawyer for Roslyn La Liberte, the plaintiff in a defamation lawsuit against MSNBC anchor Joy Reid.
13 Must Reads for the CRE Industry Today (Jan. 13, 2021) Some REITs have been buying their own shares, according to Dow Jones Newswires. New York restaurant owners file a new lawsuit against Governor Cuomo over shifting regulations, reports Eater New York. These are among today’s must reads from around the commercial real estate industry.
Big Real Estate Firms Turn Buyers of Their Own Shares“Some publicly traded real-estate companies have found a buyer for their shares, despite empty offices, deserted hotels and reeling shopping malls the companies themselves. Real-estate owners, including SL Green Realty Corp. and Healthcare Trust of America Inc., say stock-market investors have significantly undervalued their property holdings compared with what they could fetch in the private market.” (Dow Jones Newswires)