Richard Seddon, an MI6 agent, was tasked by Prince with running an operation
The aim was to root out deep state opponents of Donald Trump from late 2017
Seddon recruited a series of women, who were flown to Wyoming for interview
The women were trained in maintaining a cover story and working on targets
Among the targets was Trump s own national security adviser, H.R. McMaster
A Texan woman, Tarah Price, was given $10,000 to approach McMaster
It was unclear if she ever met him: he was fired in March 2018
Another woman, Survivor contestant Anna Khait, targeted State Dept officials
Others were told to try and approach FBI agents, using dating apps
May 13, 2021
New York Times’s Adam Goldman and Mark Mazzetti relied upon “unclear” or unverified information to prop up its smears against Project Veritas, and it had to recycle a years-old story to do it, James O’Keefe said in an email rebutting a NY Times hit piece. [Read the story below]
They did contact James O’Keefe before publishing the story. O’Keefe sent the following email:
New York Times “journalist” Adam Goldman reached out to me yesterday asking for comment on a Nothing-Burger story.
Because The New York Times is losing to Project Veritas in a court of law, it is trying to smear Project Veritas in the court of public opinion. I think the court, like me, may well be appalled at The Times’ continued pattern of defamation of Project Veritas.
Campaign to discredit Trump s enemies
The story was first broken by The New York Times, who were able to talk to several people involved in the operation. Veritas was reportedly encouraged to conduct the operations after Trump s frequent attacks on the FBI, CIA, State Department and others who he was convinced were trying to undermine him. The unelected deep-state operatives who defy the voters to push their own secret agendas, he said in 2018, are truly a threat to democracy itself.
It is unclear if anyone in the White House had knowledge of the efforts, but according to the Times, at least one person with access to McMaster s calendar was roped in. That was confirmed by Barbara Ledeen, a staff member of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Ledeen was confirmed to have a role in the operations. Leeden told the Times, I am not part of a plot and insisted she was merely a messenger.
Project Veritas led wide-ranging campaign to tar “deep state” during Trump presidency: report Salon 2 hrs ago Former President Donald Trump BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images
In their long-running plot to discredit so-called deep state actors within the federal government, loyalists of then-President Donald Trump enlisted the help of a British spy and a network of conservative activists to root out public officials they believed were insufficiently loyal to Trump, according to a bombshell report in The New York Times published Thursday.
The group s wide-ranging operations allegedly targeted high-level officials, including Trump s national security adviser, H.R. McMaster, as well as FBI agents and other less prominent government employees.
Project Veritas, ex-spy tried to âdiscreditâ Trumpâs enemies: report
By FOX 5 Digital Team
PublishedÂ
WASHINGTON - A new report indicates that Project Veritas and a former British spy used a $10,000-a-month home in Georgetown as their home base in a campaign to the FBI and people they believed were the enemies of former President Donald Trump.
According to the New York Times, the conservative activist group plotted against H.R. McMaster – Trump’s national security advisor – and tried to expose anti-Trump sentiments in the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Project Veritas founder James O Keefe described the Times story as a smear piece.