Tuesday, October 31, 2017

One of Trump's first major solutions to the opioid crisis could actually make the problem worse

donald trump opioid crisis

  • President Donald Trump's opioid commission plans to recommend that drug courts be established in every federal judicial district.
  • Drug courts are meant to divert some defendants with substance abuse disorders into treatment programs rather than prison.
  • But public health experts say drug courts are a harmful way of incorporating the criminal justice system into addiction treatment.


The White House Opioid Commission will recommend on Wednesday that drug courts be established in every federal judicial district in an effort to combat the opioid crisis, according to a draft report obtained by STAT News.

Thousands of drug courts have sprung up across the country since the first was created in 1989, with the goal of diverting certain defendants with drug abuse and addiction issues to treatment, rather than prison. The White House commission's report, however, found that fewer than one-third of federal judicial districts and just 44% of US counties had drug courts as of 2015.

Drug courts are geared toward criminal defendants arrested on low-level possession charges, or other drug-driven crimes that could carry criminal penalties, Chris Deutsch, communications director for the National Association of Drug Court Professionals, told Business Insider earlier this year. 

The push towards drug courts, Deutsch said, is part of a larger movement toward tailored, evidence-based criminal justice programs that serve different populations and needs.

"Rather than entangling someone in the system for a low-level possession, they can be diverted," Deutsch said. "We need systems in place that — no matter where you are in the system — you are being diverted based on an assessment. There should be an evidence-based program for you."

Deutsch declined on Tuesday to comment on the White House commission's draft report before its formal release.

Drug courts have come under scrutiny by public health experts who say that incorporating the criminal justice system into treatment for a disease such as opioid-use disorder is harmful and can often result in punishing participants by sending them to prison if they relapse, as most people addicted to opioids do.

Many of the cases that come before drug courts shouldn't touch the criminal justice system at all, according to Mae Quinn, director of the MacArthur Justice Center in St. Louis, a public interest law firm that uses litigation as a tool to provoke criminal justice reform.

"When we try to put a criminal justice overlay over what should be a public health issue, it's not a good match," Quinn told Business Insider earlier this year. "We need community-based voluntary options. You shouldn't have to be arrested to get access to a program."

Mixing healthcare and criminal justice

opioid addiction heroin crisisDrug courts are also notorious for providing neglectful care to their participants, according to David Patterson, a public health expert at Washington University in St. Louis.

Patterson, who has worked on drug courts in Kentucky and has worked in treatment for more than 15 years, said he has seen drug courts that push participants into signing contracts that bind them to questionable treatment methods such as writing papers, attending boot camps, and various forms of therapy that, in some cases amount, to "pseudoscience."

Another pitfall is that in the drug court system, judges essentially take on the roles of "clinical treatment directors," Patterson said, allowing them vast discretion to determine treatment options or jail or prison time, based on participants' adherence to the court's rules.

"There is such political branding of drug courts that they are able to treat people however they want to," Patterson told Business Insider earlier this year.

Andi Peterson, a 26-year-old Utah resident, was one such participant. Peterson told Business Insider last year that she was in and out of drug court for nearly two years after a felony arrest for narcotics possession, where she repeatedly relapsed, was put in jail for months at a time, and eventually faced up to 15 years in state prison. 

Peterson said she was unable to stay off opioids in drug court, despite the treatment provided. She eventually was successful while serving a year in prison, after which she was released. She has stayed in recovery since.

Stories like Peterson's, said Patterson, are what make him wary of drug courts.

"[The court takes] custody of people with a medical illness and they treat them like it's a criminal issue. That's malpractice," Patterson added. "This would never happen to people with cancer, but because they are an addict they get away with it."

Vivitrol and drug courts

vivitrol opioids

One issue in particular that has sprung up over the last five years has been the proliferation of drug courts that mandate participants use Vivitrol, a monthly injection that blocks opioid receptors in the brain. Though a recent study suggests some success for Vivitrol, most addiction experts recommend maintenance treatments like Suboxone or methadone despite those treatments having some potential for diversion or abuse. 

"The #1 recommended treatment across the world is indefinite maintainence treatment on Suboxone or methadone. It's not controversial except in the minds of people who don't like science," Mark Willenbring, a leading addiction psychiatrist who runs Alltyr, a treatment clinic in Minneapolis, told Business Insider last month.

The pharmaceutical company Alkermes, the company behind Vivitrol, drew headlines recently after investigations by ProPublica, The New York Times, and the Associated Press reported how the company grew its business from $30 million in 2015 to $209 million a year later, primarily by marketing Vivitrol directly to hundreds of drug courts, particularly to judges in areas hard-hit by opioids who are wary of maintainence treatment.

It is as yet unclear how or when the federal drug courts would be established or what kind of treatment modality they would use.

Establishing more drug courts was just one of 53 recommendations contained in the commission's report, according to STAT News. President Donald Trump on October 26 declared the opioid crisis a "national public health emergency" and announced several measures the federal government plans to take to address the issue.

SEE ALSO: Trump just declared the opioid crisis a 'public health emergency' — here's what that means

DON'T MISS: Recovering heroin addict explains why it's so hard to stay clean — even in rehab

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 'It was an act of pure evil': Watch Trump's statement about the Las Vegas shooting — the deadliest shooting in modern US history



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An arrest warrant has been issued for Rose McGowan on a drug charge: 'Are they trying to silence me?'

Rose McGowan Aaron Thornton Getty

  • An arrest warrant on a felony charge for actress Rose McGowan has been issued after her personal belongings tested positive for narcotics on a January 20 flight.
  • McGowan tweeted that the charge is "horse----." 

 

An arrest warrant has been issued for actress Rose McGowan for felony possession of a controlled substance, according to the Associated Press.

The warrant was obtained February 1, after a police investigation of personal belongings left behind on a January 20 United flight arriving at Washington Dulles International Airport tested positive for narcotics.

The warrant has been entered into the national law enforcement database, and McGowan has been contacted to appear in a Loudoun County, Virginia court, according to the AP.

McGowan responded to the warrant in a tweet on Monday:

McGowan has become one of the leading voices in speaking out about sexual harassment and assault in Hollywood after accusing Harvey Weinstein of rape. Her accusation followed the bombshell reports in The New York Times and The New Yorker that the movie executive had allegedly sexually harassed and assaulted women for over three decades.

SEE ALSO: 19 powerful men accused of sexual misconduct in the wake of Harvey Weinstein

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Unboxing the iPhone X: Here's everything inside and what you'll need to get



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MUELLER MONDAY: Here's everything we learned about the Paul Manafort, Rick Gates, George Papadopoulos indictments

paul manafort

  • President Donald Trump's campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, and Manafort's former business associate Rick Gates were indicted by a grand jury in special counsel Robert Mueller's probe of Russia's meddling in the 2016 US election.
  • The two pleaded not guilty on Monday to 12 counts, including conspiracy against the US and conspiracy to launder money.
  • Former Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos pleaded guilty to making false statements to the FBI about his contacts with Russian officials.


At the end of a wild Monday, three of President Donald Trump's associates were indicted on criminal charges. Two pleaded not guilty in federal court, and one pleaded guilty to making false statements to the FBI about his contacts with Russian officials.

They were the first indictments in special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 US elections, and whether members of the Trump campaign colluded with Moscow.

Here's a rundown of everything we learned on Monday:

Charges against Manafort

The indictments

The reactions

trump halloween

Papadopoulos pleads guilty

George Papadopoulos LinkedIn

Other developments

robert mueller

SEE ALSO: Mueller just threw a huge wrench in Trump's attempts to distance himself from Manafort

DON'T MISS: New details about an early Trump adviser completely change the timeline of Russia's election interference

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Watch Paul Manafort — Trump's former campaign chairman — surrender to the FBI



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Monday, October 30, 2017

Paul Manafort and Rick Gates, indicted in Mueller probe, plead not guilty

Paul Manafort Car Hide 2

  • President Donald Trump's former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, surrendered to the FBI on Monday, three days after reports surfaced that the special counsel Robert Mueller had obtained the first indictments in the Russia investigation.
  • Rick Gates, a longtime business associate and protégé of Manafort's, was also indicted and told to surrender.
  • The indictment was unsealed Monday morning, and it contains 12 counts. Manafort and Gates pleaded not guilty to the charges on Monday afternoon.


President Donald Trump's campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, and Manafort's former business associate, Rick Gates, pleaded not guilty on Monday after being indicted by a grand jury in special counsel Robert Mueller's probe.

Manafort walked into the FBI's field office with his lawyer Kevin Downing in Washington, DC, at about 8:15 a.m. on Monday. An FBI agent greeted him and his lawyer as they entered the building. Manafort and Gates appeared for their arraignment at around 1:30 p.m. and pleaded not guilty, according to CNN.

The indictment was unsealed Monday morning, and it contains 12 counts: conspiracy against the United States, conspiracy to launder money, unregistered agent of a foreign principal, false and misleading FARA statements, false statements, and seven counts of failure to file reports of foreign bank and financial accounts.

The government set bail for Manafort at $10 million, according to CNN.

Read the full indictment below:

Manafort has been at the center of the special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into whether Trump's presidential campaign colluded with Moscow before the 2016 election. The indictments against Manafort and Gates are the first since James Comey launched the investigation over a year ago. Mueller took over the investigation after Comey was fired as FBI director in May.

Manafort was forced to step down as Trump's campaign chairman in August 2016, but Gates stayed and worked on Trump's transition team. He was ousted from a pro-Trump lobbying group in April amid questions about Russia's election interference, but he continued to visit the White House as late as June, according to The Daily Beast.

Legal experts speculated over the weekend, after news of the sealed indictments broke Friday, that Mueller would arrest Manafort in an effort to get him to "flip" against Trump.

Trump tweeted on Monday that the allegations came "years ago, before Paul Manafort was part of the Trump campaign. But why aren't Crooked Hillary & the Dems the focus?????"

"Also, there is NO COLLUSION!" he added in a follow-up tweet.

The FBI conducted a predawn raid on Manafort's home in July. Manafort was told at the time that he would be indicted, according to his longtime friend Roger Stone. Investigators were looking for tax documents and foreign banking records that are typically sought when investigating violations of the Bank Secrecy Act.

Manafort has been associated with at least 15 bank accounts and 10 companies in Cyprus, dating back to 2007, NBC News reported in March, and the FBI has issued grand-jury subpoenas to several banks for Manafort's records. Gates' name appears on documents linked to many of those Cyprus companies, according to The New York Times.

BuzzFeed reported on Sunday that the FBI was looking at 13 suspicious wire transfers made by Manafort-linked offshore companies from 2012 to 2013.

Manafort's representatives have said he has been cooperating with investigators' requests for relevant documents. But the search warrant obtained by the FBI in July indicated that Mueller managed to convince a federal judge that Manafort would try to conceal or destroy documents subpoenaed by a grand jury.

The indictments issued Friday were sealed, and Manafort's attorneys did not receive a target letter, raising similar questions about whether Mueller thought Manafort would try to flee or destroy evidence if he were notified of his impending arrest three days beforehand.

Legal experts saw the July raid as a sign that something very serious was coming.

A former Department of Justice spokesman, Matthew Miller, said a raid coming months into an investigation in which the subject's attorneys had been speaking with, and presumably cooperating with, the DOJ "suggests something serious."

"Manafort's representatives have been insisting for months that he is cooperating with these investigations, and if you are really cooperating, DOJ typically doesn't need to raid your house — they'll trust you to respond fully to a subpoena," Miller said at the time.

Manafort's ties to Russia came under scrutiny in August of last year, when The New York Times discovered that a pro-Russian political party in Ukraine designated him $12.7 million in undisclosed cash payments. Manafort, a longtime Republican operative, had advised the party and its former leader Viktor Yanukovych for nearly a decade.

On March 22, the Associated Press reported that Manafort was paid $10 million from 2006 to 2009 to lobby on behalf of the Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, using a strategic "model" that the AP said Manafort wrote would "greatly benefit the Putin Government if employed at the correct levels with the appropriate commitment to success."

Manafort has insisted that he has never received any illicit cash payments. But he has a "pattern" of using shell companies to purchase homes "in all-cash deals," as WNYC has reported, and then transferring those properties into his name for no money and taking out large mortgages against them.

Manafort's tendency to form shell companies to purchase real estate is not illegal. But it has raised questions about how much Manafort has been paid throughout his decades as a political consultant — and who paid him.

New York's attorney general, Eric Schneiderman, was recruited last month to help investigate Manafort for possible financial crimes and money laundering, and the IRS' criminal-investigations unit joined the investigation to examine similar issues.

The Wall Street Journal reported last week that Manafort was the subject of a new money-laundering investigation in New York.

Manafort also attended a meeting last year at Trump Tower with Trump's son Donald Trump Jr. and son-in-law Jared Kushner as well as two Russian lobbyists who were said to have offered dirt on Hillary Clinton.

SEE ALSO: Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort was just indicted — here's what you need to know about him

DON'T MISS: Mueller just threw a huge wrench in Trump's attempts to distance himself from Manafort

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Paul Manafort is at the center of the Trump-Russia investigation — here's what you need to know about him



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Paul Manafort's wife Kathleen has been a quietly pivotal part of the investigation against him— here's everything we know

Paul Kathleen Manafort wife marriage

• Special counsel Robert Mueller slapped Paul Manafort, US President Donald Trump's former campaign manager, with numerous charges Monday.

• Manafort's wife Kathleen is a lawyer who has largely stayed out of the public eye.



Former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort surrendered to the FBI Monday after being indicted on 12 counts, including conspiracy against the United States, Business Insider reported.

The indictment accuses Manafort of laundering $18 million from 2006 to 2016 to keep up his "lavish lifestyle."

While the investigation into the political operative's dealings has dominated the headlines for months, his wife Kathleen Bond Manafort has largely stayed out of the news cycle.

But she's very much been a presence during the investigation.

The couple was in bed together when FBI agents conducted a pre-dawn raid of their Alexandria, Virginia house in July. CNN reported the experience was a "jarring event" for the couple, and that Kathleen was even searched for weapons, as per standard FBI procedure.

Reports indicate the couple was married on August 12, 1978, according to Heavy.com. It's unclear how they first met.

Kathleen is a lawyer who graduated from George Washington University in 1979, the year after she reportedly married her husband. She has given money to her alma mater over the years, and is listed as a donor in the school's president's report for the years of 1986, 1990, and 1992, according to Archive.org.

In 1984, the couple attended a state dinner for Dominican Republic President Salvador Jorge Blanco, the Washington Post reported. Manafort was a partner in the DC lobbying firm Black, Manafort and Stone at the time. The Manaforts have two daughters — Jessica, who was born in 1982 and Andrea, who was born in 1985.

Kathleen subsequently earned her J.D. from Georgetown in 1988, and passed the Virginia bar the same year, according to The Washington Post. Kathleen was also admitted to the DC bar in 1991. Her various degrees are listed in online legal databases like LegalDirectories.com and Lawyers.com.

Over the years, Kathleen had a hand in some of the couple's major purchases.

The Manaforts have bought numerous in Florida, Virginia, New York, according to NBC, including a Trump Tower apartment together in 2006 and a horse farm in Wellington, Florida.

In 2003, San Diego — one of the horses owned by the couple — was stolen, according to "A Sunday Horse: Inside the Grand Prix Show Jumping Circuit" by Vicky Moon. The Manaforts — in partnership with the Wellington Equestrian Alliance — put up a $10,000 reward for information about the case. San Diego was found after several weeks and ex-veterinarian Cathy Crighton was charged with stealing the horse, the Sun Sentinel reported.

The Manaforts sold the Wellington, Florida property in 2004, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

Paul Manafort Hampton houseOther properties initially purchased in Kathleen's name have cropped up in the indictment.

Bloomberg reported Kathleen bought a $400,000 lot in Southhampton in 1992. The subsequent $5.6 million house included a pool and a tennis court. In 2002, she received a $150,000 mortgage on the home from a bank run by Jared Kushner's dad. Two years later, Thomas Barrack Jr. — a close friend of Trump's — gave her a $1.76 million mortgage for the house.

In 2007, Kathleen Manafort appears during the May 17, 2007 minutes of the Town of Southampton's zoning board, when she requested relief from certain "residential district dimensional regulations" for the property.

And NBC reported the deed for the home was transferred to Paul Manafort's Summberbreeze LLC in 2016.

The indictment indicated Paul Manafort used offshore accounts to spend money on "personal items," including a total of $6,090,293 on a home improvement company and a landscaper in the Hamptons, Business Insider reported. According to Curbed, Paul Manafort was subpoenaed for a $3.5 million mortgage on the home.

Beyond public records about property purchases, not much is known about the relationship between Kathleen and Paul Manafort.

However, during the investigation, tabloids attacked the couple's marriage, Heavy.com reported. The National Enquirer — which is owned by American Media CEO David Pecker, a friend of Trump's — has printed stories alleging Paul Manafort was having an affair with a much-younger woman.

And in March, allegedly hacked text messages between the Manaforts' two daughters Andrea and Jessica indicated that their parents' marriage was in trouble.

Business Insider reported Andrea appeared to to say her parents couldn't go through a "public divorce" because it would unearth "too many skeletons."

SEE ALSO: Inside the Trump-endorsed marriage of Mike Pence, who calls his wife 'mother' and refuses to dine with other women

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Watch Paul Manafort — Trump's former campaign chairman — surrender to the FBI



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Former Trump aide deactivated his Facebook and got a new cell number after lying to the FBI

George Papadopoulos LinkedIn

  • A former aide to President Donald Trump's campaign deactivated his Facebook account and got a new cell phone number after interviews with the FBI.
  • George Papadopoulos, the former adviser, was trying to obscure communications he had with Russian-connected individuals.
  • Papadopoulos pleaded guilty earlier this month for lying to FBI agents about his contact with Russians.


One day after FBI investigators interviewed George Papadopoulos, a former foreign-policy adviser and aide to President Donald Trump's campaign team, he deactivated his Facebook account, which contained evidence of meetings with Russians.

Six days later, Papadopoulos got a new cell phone number, according to documents related to special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election.

Earlier this month, Papadopoulos pleaded guilty for lying to FBI agents during a January 27 interview about "the timing, extent, and nature of his relationships and interactions with certain foreign nationals whom he understood to have close connections with senior Russian government officials."

After a second interview with FBI officials on February 16, Papadopoulos scrambled to delete his Facebook account to obscure communications he had with an "overseas professor" with ties to high-level Russian officials.

The details of Papadopoulos' guilty plea were unveiled on Monday along with indictments against former Trump campaign manager, Paul Manafort, and his deputy associate, Rick Gates.

george papadopoulos twitterDuring the FBI interrogations, Papadopoulos described the professor as “a nothing," even though it was later revealed he knew the professor had significant ties to the Kremlin.

The court documents say that Papadopoulos "repeatedly sought to use the professor's Russian connections in an effort to arrange a meeting between the [Trump] campaign and Russian government officials."

In one instance, according to The New York Times, the professor told Papadopoulos that Moscow had "dirt" on Hillary Clinton, including "thousands of emails."

After Papadopoulos deleted his Facebook account, he created a new one that did not contain communications with the professor. Shortly thereafter, he began using a new cell phone number.

On July 27, Papadopoulos was arrested upon arriving at Dulles International Airport in Washington, DC. He has since complied with Mueller's probe and met with government investigators on numerous occassions to answer questions.

SEE ALSO: Early Trump campaign adviser pleaded guilty to making false statements about Russia contacts to FBI

DON'T MISS: Meet Rick Gates — the Trump ally indicted in the Russia probe and charged with conspiracy against the US

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 'It was an act of pure evil': Watch Trump's statement about the Las Vegas shooting — the deadliest shooting in modern US history



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Rose McGowan says Harvey Weinstein offered her $1 million in hush money, days before bombshell sexual misconduct allegations broke

rose mcgowan

  • Actress Rose McGowan told The New York Times she received a $1 million offer for her silence from someone close to Harvey Weinstein in late September.
  •  She said she declined the offer one day before a bombshell Times report set off a deluge of sexual harassment and assault allegations against Weinstein. 
  • McGowan has accused Weinstein of rape.

 

In September, days before a series of bombshell reports alleged sexual harassment and assault against Harvey Weinstein, actress Rose McGowan said someone close to the film mogul offered her $1 million in hush money, The New York Times reportsMcGowan is one of Weinstein's alleged sexual assault victims.

McGowan told the Times that the offer, presented to her through her lawyer, included signing a non-disclosure agreement.

She said she considered taking the offer and made an unsuccessful counter offer of $6 million, due to her depleted funds. Ultimately, she decided to decline the offer one day before The New York Times broke a story in which multiple women in Hollywood accused Weinstein of sexual harassment. 

"I figured I could probably have gotten him up to three," McGowan told the Times of her counter offer. "But I was like — ew, gross, you're disgusting, I don’t want your money, that would make me feel disgusting."

McGowan had reached a $100,000 settlement with Weinstein in 1997 over an incident in a hotel room, but she told the Times on Saturday that she learned over the summer that the agreement she signed had not included a confidentiality clause. 

On October 12, a week after the New York Times first reported allegations against Weinstein, McGowan tweeted that she was raped by "HW," and confirmed that the initials signified Harvey Weinstein. She had previously said that she was a survivor of rape and that her assault was perpetrated by an unnamed, powerful studio boss.

Since the first Times report, over 60 women have accused Weinstein of sexual harassment or assault, including multiple rape claims. 

SEE ALSO: 19 powerful men accused of sexual misconduct in the wake of Harvey Weinstein

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Here's what Melissa Joan Hart — who played Clarissa and Sabrina the Teenage Witch — is doing today



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Meet Rick Gates — the Trump ally indicted in the Russia probe and charged with conspiracy against the US

Rick Gates

  • Businessman Rick Gates was indicted along with Paul Manafort on Monday.
  • Gates was Manafort's protégé. The two met as Washington lobbyists three decades ago.
  • He joined Donald Trump's election efforts in 2016 when Manafort became the campaign manager.


Paul Manafort, the former campaign manager for Donald Trump during the 2016 election, was indicted Monday morning along with his former business associate Rick Gates, according to multiple media reports.

The two associates were charged on 12 counts, including conspiracy to launder money, conspiracy against the US, and false and misleading statements surrounding their foreign bank and financial accounts.

Robert Mueller, the special counsel to the US Justice Department leading the probe into the Trump campaign's possible coordination with Russia in last year's election, had been investigating Manafort and Gates for their relationships with foreign leaders and suspicious financial dealings abroad.

Manafort, who has strong ties to Trump's inner circle, has been at the center of Mueller's investigation. Gates is a lesser known figure in Washington, but still an influential Trump booster with wide-ranging connections to powerful leaders and businessmen around the world. Here's what we know about him.

Gates' early days in Washington politics

Gates met Manafort nearly three decades ago while he was an intern at Black, Manafort, Stone, Kelly — one of the most powerful lobbying firms in DC.

The firm worked to help boost the image of dictators and strongmen around the world, including Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines, Mobutu Sese Seko of the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the Russian-aligned former president of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovych.

Although Manafort left the firm the same year Gates joined, the two reunited in 2006 at a new consulting company called Davis Manafort.

Two years later, Gates took over the company's affairs in Eastern Europe, flying to London, Paris, and Moscow, meeting with potential business partners, developing deals, and negotiating contracts, according to The New York Times. His trips to Russia included meeting with associates of Oleg Deripaska, a Russian oligarch linked to organized crime who is an ally of President Vladimir Putin.

Connections to the Trump campaign

Gates Manafort

Gates joined Trump election efforts in the spring of 2016 when Manafort became the campaign manager, working as Manafort's deputy. He traveled with Trump and grew close with many top campaign officials, including former chief of staff Reince Priebus and adviser Tom Barrack.

After Manafort was ousted as Trump's campaign chief in August 2016, Gates continued working on behalf of the soon-to-be president, helping fundraise $25 million for the pro-Trump nonprofit America First Policies and working on Trump's inaugural committee. As Mueller's probe intensified in the early months of the Trump administration, Gates left the nonprofit altogether.

As recently as June, however, The Daily Beast reported that Gates was still visiting the White House and working under Barrack, who has remained one of Trump's most trusted advisers.

Trump reportedly "had no idea [Gates] was in the building, otherwise he wouldn't be too happy," a source told the outlet. Gates still had access to the West Wing, even if it wasn't directly with the president.

Secret payments in Cyprus

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During his tenure at Davis Manafort, Gates helped start a private equity fund called Pericles that was set up to buy companies in Russia and Eastern Europe.

The money that was funneled through that fund, reportedly through offshore bank accounts in Cyprus, believed to be at the center of Mueller's indictment of Manafort and Gates.

Jason Maloni, a spokesman for Manafort, told the New York Times in June that "Paul's payments for his work abroad have all come through traceable wire transfers to his U.S. accounts."

Manafort and Gates have denied any wrongdoing, even though both of their names appear on documents linked to those shell companies in Cyprus.

Read the full indictment for Gates and Manafort below:

SEE ALSO: Paul Manafort indicted in Mueller probe, surrenders to FBI

DON'T MISS: Meet Robert Mueller, the former FBI director and tenacious investigator now leading the Trump-Russia probe

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The 5 most annoying changes in the new iPhone update — and how to fix them



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Sunday, October 29, 2017

The FBI warned Bobby Kennedy a book was coming out revealing his affair with Marilyn Monroe and blaming him for her death

bobby kennedy jfk rfk

  • In 1964, the FBI sent then-Attorney General Robert "Bobby" Kennedy information about a forthcoming book purporting to reveal his affair with Marilyn Monroe.
  • The author, who often dabbled in "extremely questionable" allegations, according to the Bureau, published the 70-page book for $2 a copy.
  • This unexpected bit of history comes from the release of 2,800 previously classified JFK files.


In the summer of 1964, the FBI spent two weeks investigating a tip from author Frank Capell that he was publishing a 70-page book outlining Bobby Kennedy's alleged affair with Marilyn Monroe, accusing him and the Kennedy clan of being responsible for her death.

This unexpected bit of history comes from the release of over 2,800 previously classified documents about President John F. Kennedy's assassination in November 1963. President Donald Trump allowed the release of the so-called JFK files on Thursday.

It has long been rumored that Bobby Kennedy — who was married to Ethel Kennedy — had an affair with Monroe after JFK "passed her off to his brother," as People puts it.

"Did the trouble begin when Marilyn realized that her VIP had no intention of getting a divorce and marrying her?" Capell wrote in the "The Strange Death of Marilyn Monroe," labeling Bobby Kennedy "VIP." He added, "Since Marilyn could destroy him either by talking or with written evidence, did he decide to take drastic action?"

Capell went on to accuse Kennedy of using "the Communist Conspiracy which is an expert in the scientific elimination of its enemies" to murder Monroe.

In official memos, the FBI calls the rumored affair and allegation that Kennedy was with Monroe when she died "utterly false." Kennedy was the attorney general at the time, and thus oversaw the Bureau, raising questions about why FBI agents might have been looking into potentially salacious material about their boss.

Monroe died on August 5, 1962 at her home in Los Angeles. The coroner concluded it was "probably suicide" from a barbiturate overdose.

marilyn monroe

"The above allegation concerning the Attorney General has been previously circulated and has been branded as false as the Attorney General was actually in San Francisco with his wife at the time Marilyn Monroe committed suicide," an FBI agent from New York wrote.

The New York office was instructed to "follow this matter very closely," and send two copies of Capell's book to FBI headquarters once they were published so Kennedy could be "kept advised."

On July 15, 1964, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover sent Kennedy a copy of the book, writing that Capell "claims that you had a close relationship with Miss Monroe."

In March 1976, Sen. Frank Church requested "all FBI materials pertaining to communications between FBI Director Hoover and Attorney General Robert Kennedy with respect to the publication of a book about Marilyn Monroe by Frank Capell," suggesting he may have known such communications existed. In April, the FBI complied.

That's the last document in the entry named "Marilyn Monroe" in the JFK files.

Church conducted a far-reaching investigation into US intelligence agencies after Watergate. The Monroe files he requested fell under the JFK Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992, and were released to the public on October 26, 2017.

SEE ALSO: The most bizarre, outlandish documents from the newly released JFK files

DON'T MISS: Thousands of JFK files were just released — here's where to read them

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NOW WATCH: 'It was an act of pure evil': Watch Trump's statement about the Las Vegas shooting — the deadliest shooting in modern US history



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Trump's official behind the Jane Doe case urged 'savvy' lawmakers to make women get men's permission before getting abortions

jane doe abortion

  • Scott Lloyd, director of the Office of Refugee Resettlement, was the Trump administration official behind the Jane Doe case, in which the government refused to let an undocumented teen get an abortion.
  • Lloyd has written op-eds calling for "savvy state legislators" to pass laws requiring women to get permission from the father before they get an abortion.
  • He faced hard questions from Democrats when he appeared before the House Judiciary's Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security on Thursday.

The man behind the Trump administration's legal battle to keep an undocumented teen from getting an abortion has a long history of campaigning against reproductive rights.

On Thursday morning, Scott Lloyd testified before the House Judiciary's Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security. As the director of the US Department of Health and Human Services Office of Refugee Resettlement, he oversees the agency responsible for the children's center in Texas where the 17-year-old Jane Doe was detained after she entered the US illegally from Central America.

Lloyd sent an email directing government detention centers under his purview not to let minors access abortion services, but instead take them to "pregnancy services and life-affirming options counseling", according to The Washington Post. Lloyd wrote that the ORR "should not be supporting abortion services pre or post-release."

'They put this guy in charge?'

At the hearing, Democratic representatives had hard questions for him — few of which he answered — while the Republicans largely praised him and the other officials present for the Trump administration's stricter refugee vetting protocols.

Many of those questions were about Lloyd's hand in the Jane Doe case. After a month-long legal battle, she was finally able to get her abortion on Wednesday.

scott lloyd jane doe orr

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee of Texas asked Lloyd if he had any direct contact with Doe, or any of the other pregnant minors his agency is responsible for, and he wouldn't answer, saying he couldn't comment on individual cases.

When she asked him if he was aware that 60% of female refugees crossing the US border from Central America are raped, and would likely need medical attention including abortions, Lloyd said he "wasn't aware" of that statistic. It comes from an Amnesty International report, and other investigations have found the number may be even higher.

"It's disturbing that Director Lloyd didn't seem to understand the US Constitution and was unable to answer simple questions from members of the committee," Ranking Member Zoe Lofgren, a Democrat from California, said in a statement to Business Insider after the hearing. "And they put this guy in charge?"

In another case from March, according to reports from The New York Times and Buzzfeed News, Lloyd directed shelter officials to stop another pregnant minor under ORR care from taking the second pill for a medication abortion.

The American Civil Liberties Union also alleges that Lloyd "personally visited a young woman who was seeking an abortion to attempt to dissuade her from her decision." HHS did not respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

Jackson Lee told Business Insider that she planned to draft a letter to President Donald Trump asking him to clarify how immigrant women are treated, how pregnant minors like Doe are treated, and how he thinks they should be treated under his policies. Asked about Lloyd's views on abortion and his actions, Jackson Lee said he was an "example of the leadership of President Trump."

"The public servants who welcome the offer to serve, they serve," she said. "It is the policies of this administration that I oppose vigorously, and his persons whom he has selected are in fact representative of what I believe is a truly inhumane policy. It is President Trump who has to change those policies."

Sheila Jackson Lee women congress

At the hearing, Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington asked Lloyd if he was trained to provide counseling or medical services, and what expertise he had to make him qualified to decide whether Doe should end her pregnancy. Lloyd's agency bio says he is an attorney licensed in Virginia.

"It's extremely troubling to me, Mr. Lloyd, what's happening," she concluded at the hearing. "I think you're far overreaching over your expertise or your jurisdiction."

A history of anti-abortion efforts

As right-leaning Breitbart News wrote in April, "Lloyd's appointment came with little fanfare and almost went unnoticed."

He came to the Trump administration from the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic organization where he served as an attorney in public policy.

Before that, Lloyd served on the board of directors for a crisis pregnancy center, which offer ultrasounds and counsels women to consider adoptions or becoming a mother, often actively discouraging them from getting abortions. The center in Virginia that Lloyd was involved with mentions a "medical director" and employs a registered nurse, but doesn't list any doctors or OB/GYNs on staff.

He also co-founded the WitnessWorks Foundation for a Culture of Life, an anti-abortion religious organization that even has its own "pro-life, pro-faith search engine."

scott lloyd refugee resettlementLloyd worked on Capitol Hill and as an HHS lawyer for the Bush administration, when he co-authored the controversial "conscience rule" in 2008 that allowed healthcare providers to refuse to provide abortions, contraception, end-of-life care, infertility treatments, or family planning care.

When they learned of Lloyd's interference with women's decisions to get abortions as ORR directors, Democratic Sens. Patty Murray, Diane Feinstein, Richard Blumenthal, and Bob Menendez sent a letter to the acting HHS secretary on October 20 calling "to immediately cease all undue and improper interference in the health care decisions of young women" under HHS care.

Over 100 organizations, including the ACLU and Planned Parenthood, sent a letter on October 25 denouncing Lloyd's actions.

"By blocking Jane and others from accessing abortion care, ORR has openly disregarded its legal duty to provide prompt access to safe medical care to those within its charge," the letter read.

Rep. Lofgren and Rep. Beto O'Rourke of Texas sent HHS a letter on October 16 demanding that ORR stop preventing women from getting abortions and requesting more information about Lloyd's direct involvement in the reported cases.

"Regardless of the administration's views on abortion," they wrote, "the Constitution protects abortion access and it remains the law of the land."

'Women must notify the men of their decision to abort'

Lloyd has written extensively on abortion, contraception, and other reproductive healthcare that he opposes on religious grounds.

In a blog post from 2011, which Buzzfeed noted, Lloyd called for "savvy state legislators" to require women to get the father's permission before getting an abortion, thus restoring "men's rights" as long as the women didn't "lie."

"They could do this by writing a law that says essentially that women must notify the men of their decision to abort, and gain their consent, except in situations where their reasons for aborting relate to the physical realities of pregnancy," he wrote.

march for life mike pence abortion

This type of statute isn't law anywhere yet, but lawmakers in Oklahoma proposed a bill this year that would require the father's permission for a woman to get an abortion. Non-invasive paternity tests are only available after eight weeks into pregnancy, which would be the earliest women could scientifically confirm who they would need to get permission from before aborting.

In 2011, Lloyd wrote another blog post outlining what constituted as an abortion, including birth control in his definition.

"Our tax dollars are being used to help trick people into aborting their own children, when they would not do so if someone was not lying to them," he wrote.

Writing about embryonic stem cell research in 2006, Lloyd wrote, "This is just the latest manifestation of a process that began when the medical field sold its healing soul for a new, abortive reality, when medicine taught women to rely on chemicals rather than their wills to avoid pregnancy, and men learned to expect (or even demand) them to do so, and when medicine invited us to trade sex and adoption for the Petri dish."

That post identified him as the co-founder of "Americans On Call," a now seemingly defunct grassroots organization with the stated goal of convincing women not to get abortions across the country.

The website is no longer available, but archived web pages show Lloyd likely founded it with other law students in 2006 who "were enjoying a couple beers at a bar and we had an idea." They wrote that "the end of abortion depends on YOU," and sold pins and T-shirts to fund their efforts and spread their message.

Watch the full House subcommittee hearing below:

SEE ALSO: The undocumented teen in Texas who was fighting the Trump administration for an abortion was finally allowed to have one — here's what she went through

DON'T MISS: The Supreme Court overturning Roe v. Wade isn't the biggest threat to abortion rights

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NOW WATCH: TRUMP: Women who want abortions may have to 'go to another state'



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Take a look inside 'The Rook' — an armored vehicle SWAT teams use to tear through vehicles, block an active shooter, or bust through a riot

The Rook armored Caterpillar SWAT police

Dozens of defense contractors showed off their latest gear and technology at the annual International Police Chief Association conference and exhibition this past week in Philadelphia. 

Everything from lethal and non-lethal weapons, body armor, drones, policing software, uniforms, and even vehicles were on display, including a new armored vehicle called "The Rook."

The Rook, designed by Ring Power Corporation, a heavy equipment company that modifies vehicles, is essentially an armored Caterpillar vehicle that has been modified for SWAT and other police units. 

It comes with four attachments and can be used for all kinds of scenarios, including hostage rescue, barricaded suspects, riots, and natural disasters.

At least 25 different police departments across the US have purchased one, and many more are interested, a Ring Power Corporation sales manager, Shaun Mitchell, told Business Insider Tuesday. 

Check it out below:

 

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The Rook is built off a Caterpillar chassis that has been modified with armor, night vision, thermal imaging, multiple cameras, a wireless remote control and four attachments.

The Rook is named after the chess piece, meaning checkmate, Miller said. 



It was designed by a man named Jeremy Eckdahl about 10 years ago, but wasn't marketed much until Ring Power Corporation bought the design 5 years ago.

Source: Shaun Mitchell, Ring Power Corporation. 



It retails for about $315,000 and has been sold to 25 police departments so far

The Rook was even used by the San Bernardino Police to take down Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik, the married couple who carried out the terrorist attack in 2015. 

Here are some other police departments using The Rook:

  • New York Police Department
  • New Mexico State Police
  • Albuquerque Police
  • Pennsylvania State Police
  • Mississippi State Police
  • Jacksonville Police 
  • Boca Raton Police


See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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Saturday, October 28, 2017

WSJ editorial board calls for Mueller's resignation and accuses Clinton and DNC of collusion

robert mueller

  • The Wall Street Journal editorial board accused Hillary Clinton and the Democratic party of colluding with Russia earlier this week.
  • The board also called for special counsel Robert Mueller to resign, and for the FBI to be investigated for its "role in Russia's election interference."
  • There is no evidence that the FBI, the Clinton campaign, or the Democratic party colluded with Russia.


The Wall Street Journal's editorial board called this week for a full Russia investigation — not into President Donald Trump, but into the Democratic party, the FBI, and special counsel Robert Mueller.

"It turns out that Russia has sown distrust in the U.S. political system—aided and abetted by the Democratic Party, and perhaps the FBI," the editorial began. "This is an about-face from the dominant media narrative of the last year, and it requires a full investigation." 

The editorial argued that a Washington Post report published Tuesday "revealed" that Hillary Clinton's campaign and the Democratic National Committee hired the Perkins Coie law firm, which in turn retained the opposition-research firm Fusion GPS and funded a now-infamous dossier containing salacious allegations about Trump's ties to Russia. The dossier was compiled by ex-British spy, Christopher Steele, who has several deep Russian sources. 

"Strip out the middlemen, and it appears that Democrats paid for Russians to compile wild allegations about a US presidential candidate," the editorial said. "Did someone say 'collusion'?"

It had been previously reported that Democrats took over funding for the opposition research from anti-Trump Republicans after Trump won the GOP nomination. On Friday, lawyers for The Washington Free Beacon, a conservative publication, told the House Intelligence Committee that the outlet originally funded the dossier's production. 

The FBI also reached an agreement before Election Day to continue paying Steele for his work, though the plan was terminated after BuzzFeed published the dossier in January.

CNN reported in April that the bureau used information in the dossier to bolster its case for a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act warrant targeting early Trump campaign adviser Carter Page. 

The Journal's editorial board said revelations about who had financed the Steele dossier indicated that the "FBI's role in Russia's election interference must now be investigated."

James Comey

Mueller, the board continued, is a former FBI director who worked closely with former FBI director James Comey. Mueller was appointed special counsel after Trump fired Comey in May, and he is tasked with investigating Russia's election interference, as well as whether the Trump campaign colluded with Moscow to tilt the election in his favor. 

Comey was spearheading the bureau's Trump-Russia investigation in 2016, when it was in possession of the Steele dossier. "It is no slur against Mr. Mueller's integrity to say that he lacks the critical distance to conduct a credible probe of the bureau he ran for a dozen years," The Journal's editorial board said. "He could best serve the country by resigning to prevent further political turmoil over that conflict of interest."

They continued and said the revelations about who funded the Steel dossier posed a "troubling question" regarding the FBI's involvement in what it called a "Russian disinformation campaign."

"Did the dossier trigger the FBI probe of the Trump campaign, and did Mr. Comey or his agents use it as evidence to seek wiretapping approval from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Trump campaign aides?" the editorial said. 

Legal experts said in April, however, that if CNN's report was true, it indicated that the FBI had enough confidence in the dossier's validity to work to corroborate it and present it in court. 

"In my long experience in dealing with FISA processing, unconfirmed information about a potential target cannot (and has not been) included in the application‎," John Rizzo, the former acting general counsel of the CIA, told Business Insider in an interview at the time.

"So, if the CNN report is accurate, then I have to believe that the FBI and Department of Justice concluded (and the Court agreed) that the info in the dossier about Page was reliable," Rizzo said, "and in all likelihood was backed up by other available intelligence."

And while the document does contain several unproven allegations, it has been reported that the FBI is using it as a "roadmap" for its investigation. The Senate Intelligence Committee also revealed earlier this month that it has been "working backwards" to verify the document's allegations. 

Nevertheless, The Journal's editorial board called for Congress to home in on the FBI's role in producing the dossier and to reinstate the embattled Rep. Devin Nunes as chair of the House Intelligence Committee. Nunes recused himself from the panel's Russia investigation after it emerged that he bypassed his own committee and briefed the White House on classified intelligence.

Despite recusing himself, Nunes quickly began conducting his own investigation into "unmaskings" by the Obama administration and the credibility of the dossier, and subpoenaed Fusion GPS to appear before the committee. 

Natasha Bertrand contributed reporting.

SEE ALSO: Mueller's latest move has Trump's staunchest allies melting down on Twitter

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