and sergei was a man of incredible integrity. and for him, the idea of perjuring himself and bearing false witness was more unpleasant than the physical pain they were subjecting him to. and he refused. and theyjust ratcheted up and up and up the torture and the pressure until his health started to fail. after a year of torture in a maximum security prison, his health went into a critical condition. again, medical treatment was denied. instead of putting him in an emergency room, they put him in an isolation cell. they chained him to a bed and eight riot guards with rubber batons beat sergei magnitsky to death. november 16, 2009, 12 years ago, he died at the age of 37, leaving a wife and two children.
one was running a side business which you can t do in the fbi. one was suspected of perjuring himself in another case. it was a calamity of errors. now you have got the perception based on what we know from trial transcripts and that type of thing that perhaps the bureau was a little bit zealous in using the undercover techniques to further the case. i think attitudes and perceptions in the fbi have changed the last few years mainly because of our leadership in the fbi involving the fbi in political investigations. people are worried. so these cases are getting higher level scrutiny. there were disturbing facts, that would give people pause and hopefully we ll learn from this. you have always been i read your work a lot.
one was running a side business which you can t do in the fbi. one was suspected of perjuring himself in another case. it was a calamity of errors. now you have got the perception based on what we know from trial transcripts and that type of thing that perhaps the bureau was a little bit zealous in using the undercover techniques to further the case. i think attitudes and perceptions in the fbi have changed the last few years mainly because of our leadership in the fbi involving the fbi in political investigations. people are worried. so these cases are getting higher level scrutiny. there were disturbing facts, that would give people pause and hopefully we ll learn from this. you have always been i read your work a lot. you have been a truth teller
one was running a side business which you can t do in the fbi. one was suspected of perjuring himself in another case. it was a calamity of errors. now you have got the perception based on what we know from trial transcripts and that type of thing that perhaps the bureau was a little bit zealous in using the undercover techniques to further the case. i think attitudes and perceptions in the fbi have changed the last few years mainly because of our leadership in the fbi involving the fbi in political investigations. people are worried. so these cases are getting higher level scrutiny. there were disturbing facts, that would give people pause and hopefully we ll learn from this. you have always been i read your work a lot.
schiff as a result of he and his staff s involvement in setting up and collaborating with michael cohen on testimony that virtually everyone who watched it agrees is perjuring including independent media like our friends even at cnn. maria: and yet, you know, adam schiff continues to ignore what we now know happened in the 201e members of the fbi and the doj tried to change an election and take down a duly-elected president. last week on this program we had devon nunes on the ranking member on intel and he said he s got a list of 30 names, 32 names which he shared with us on the show last week and they re all connected to clinton. he says he wants to question them he wants them down for testimony to further unveil what took place. why is this important? because it s still un investigated the full cooperation and collusion between the clinton campaign and the fbi and doj that looks to