Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Paul Manafort's high-stakes trial starts today. Here's what you need to know about the prosecution's roadmap and Manafort's risky gamble

Paul Manafort

  • Paul Manafort, the former chairman of President Donald Trump's campaign, is going on trial in the first court case to come out of the special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation.
  • Jury selection begins Tuesday, then the trial is expected to last weeks after that.
  • Here's what you need to know about what to expect, the prosecution's roadmap, the defense's rebuttal, and Manafort's high stakes gamble.

Sign up for the latest Russia investigation updates here »


The former chairman of President Donald Trump's campaign will be the first to face trial Tuesday as part of the special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election.

Paul Manafort stands charged with 18 counts related to tax fraud, bank fraud, money laundering, failure to register as a foreign agent, and obstruction of justice.

The indictment, brought by the Department of Justice (DOJ) in the Eastern District of Virginia, says Manafort committed many of those crimes while working as an unregistered lobbyist in the US for the Ukrainian government and pro-Russia interests beginning in 2006.

Rick Gates, Manafort's longtime business partner and the former deputy chairman of the Trump campaign, was initially named as a co-defendant with Manafort, but he struck a plea deal with prosecutors in February.

Gates pleaded guilty to two counts related to conspiracy and lying to the FBI. He will testify on behalf of the prosecution in the Manafort trial.

What to expect

Robert Mueller

Jury selection begins on Tuesday.

The process kicked off last month when prosecutors submitted a lengthy questionnaire to screen potential jurors for any biases.

Prosecutors say they expect to be finished presenting their case to the jury in eight to 10 days.

The trial is expected to last a total of three to four weeks, which experts say is fairly typical for a fraud case like Manafort's.

US District Judge T.S. Ellis III, who is overseeing the trial, has repeatedly instructed the parties to leave politics out of it. He reminded potential jurors to do the same last week.

Alex Whiting, a former federal prosecutor in Boston and Washington, DC, said there are two things at play that protect a jury from being tainted by bias, political or otherwise.

The first is the screening process, known as voir dire.

The second thing, he said, is that there is a "culture and atmosphere created in the trial process and in the courtroom" that reminds jurors of the "importance of a fair trial, the stakes, and the consequences for a defendant if they don't put aside their biases."

Ellis indicated as much to the potential jury pool last week. He reminded them that their work was a critical facet of the US legal system, and that they had to judge Manafort solely based on the evidence presented at his trial.

"Nothing you do as an American citizen is more important," Ellis said. "Together with voting, it is one of the two cardinal duties of being an American citizen."

The prosecution's roadmap: Outline Manafort's 'lavish' spending

Rick Gates Paul Manafort

On Friday, prosecutors released a list of potential witnesses they may call on to testify during the trial.

The list, which included Gates, has 35 names, many of whom are Manafort's former business associates.

The list also included purveyors of luxury goods, like a high-end men’s clothing dealer, a Mercedes Benz salesman, and a ticket vendor for the New York Yankees.

Their inclusion indicates that prosecutors will spend at least some time highlighting Manafort’s extravagant spending over the last decade.

"Prosecutors love to throw in all the over-the-top spending fraudsters usually go for, and Manafort is no exception," said Jeffrey Cramer, a longtime former federal prosecutor who spent 12 years at the DOJ. "First of all, it's relevant because you're following the money. Second, it has a lot of jury appeal."

Whiting said that based on the indictment against Manafort, the government appears to have a strong case.

The document is a "speaking indictment," a term lawyers use to describe a charging document that is lengthy, detailed, and includes more information than is required by law.

Whiting said that while the case will include a little political context based on the nature of the charges, for the most part, it's a run-of-the-mill fraud case.

Cramer agreed.

"There's nothing special about Paul Manafort, other than that he was in close proximity to the president of the United States," he said. "The facts of this case have nothing to do with politics or Russian collusion or Trump. It's just a guy who was acting as a lobbyist when he shouldn't have been, collecting money for those efforts, and trying to hide that money away. That's what prosecutors will focus on."

The defense faces 'an uphill battle', but could play politics to their advantage

Paul Manafort.

The defense, meanwhile, "has an uphill battle" based on the indictment and other court filings the prosecution has made, Whiting said.

Joshua Dressler, a law professor at Ohio State University, told Reuters that although the evidence against Manafort seems strong, he lucked out by drawing a favorable judge like Ellis.

A Reagan appointee, Ellis is known to be tough on prosecutors, and he demonstrated as much during several pre-trial hearings in the Manafort case this year.

Dressler added that as much as the judge may try to keep bias out of the trial, the political climate surrounding the case increases the chances of a hung jury that can't reach a verdict.

Cramer echoed that point and said it was exactly why it would benefit Manafort for his legal team to weave more political subtext into the proceedings.

"If they fight this battle on just the facts, it's a tough case," he said. "If you're a defense lawyer, you want to talk about anything other than the facts here. So if you can taint the investigation as political in nature or a witch hunt, especially now, your hope is that it'll resonate with at least one juror and get your client off the hook."

Manafort's defense until now rested largely on two pillars: arguing that the case should be tossed out because the crimes he was charged with are irrelevant since they have nothing to do with Russian collusion, and arguing that the scope of Mueller's mandate was too broad.

Ellis rejected a motion last month from Manafort's lawyers to dismiss the Virginia case on both of those grounds.

Manafort's gamble: Could Trump pardon him?

Donald Trump, Trump

That said, the biggest question for legal experts isn't the dynamic of the case, but why Manafort chose to go to trial in the first place.

The answer to why Manafort hasn't flipped, they say, can likely be boiled down to one thing: a presidential pardon.

Rudy Giuliani, Trump's lead defense lawyer, said the president is not currently considering pardons for anyone caught in Mueller's crosshairs.

Giuliani said Trump wants to wait until the Russia investigation is over, at which point he may grant pardons to those he believes have been treated unfairly.

"Manafort maximizes his chances of getting a pardon by going to trial," Whiting said. "In his situation, given the facts of his case, the rational thing to do is plead guilty without cooperating and get the benefit of a guilty plea, or plead guilty and cooperate and get a bigger benefit. The only way it makes sense for him to go to trial is if he thinks he's going to get a pardon."

The New York Times reported in March that John Dowd, Trump's former lead defense attorney, floated the possibility of pardons to both Manafort and former national security adviser Michael Flynn last year, as the Russia probe was closing in on both men.

Whiting said that if such an offer was made — which Dowd denied — it could explain Manafort's willingness to face trial.

He added that this outcome is also the most beneficial to the president.

"If Trump pardons Manafort now, then Manafort can be subpoenaed to testify," he said. "And of course, if Manafort pleaded guilty, he may choose to cooperate. The pardon dangle encourages Manafort to hang tough, not cooperate, and reap the benefit later, maybe in a year or two."

But Cramer said there's an important caveat in Manafort's case.

"He's banking entirely on the whim of the president," he said. "So it's a high stakes game of poker that Manafort's playing here."

One intriguing possibility that hasn't been explored as much is whether Manafort could flip after being convicted.

If he chooses that route, the former Trump campaign chairman wouldn't benefit as much if he would have agreed to cooperate before going to trial.

"Unlike other defendants — and this is where politics come into it — Manafort is uniquely positioned to know things about other facets of the Mueller probe that have to do with the Trump campaign, and that's why he's valuable," Cramer said. "Would he talk about things other than what he's convicted for, about the president or anything else he knows?"

SEE ALSO: A federal judge who Trump praised denied Paul Manafort's motion to dismiss Mueller's charges against him

DON'T MISS: Read the indictment of Paul Manafort

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NOW WATCH: North Korean defector: Kim Jong Un 'is a terrorist'



source https://www.businessinsider.com/paul-manafort-trial-mueller-what-to-know-2018-7

Stephen Colbert discusses the sexual misconduct allegations against his boss, CBS CEO Les Moonves

colbert moonves

  • Stephen Colbert discussed the allegations of sexual misconduct against CBS CEO and chairman Les Moonves in his monologue on Monday.
  • Moonves, Colbert's boss, was accused of sexual misconduct by six women in a New Yorker report published Friday.
  • The "Late Show" host did a comic spit-take upon learning that Ronan Farrow, who previously wrote a bombshell report on allegations against Harvey Weinstein, had written the Moonves report for The New Yorker. 
  • "That's not good. Ronan isn't exactly known for his puff pieces about glamping," Colbert joked.

Stephen Colbert addressed the recent allegations of sexual misconduct against his boss, CBS CEO and chairman Les Moonves, in his "Late Show" monologue on Monday. 

Moonves was accused of sexual misconduct by six women in a New Yorker report by Ronan Farrow published on Friday. 

Colbert opened his monologue by joking that he had been in South Carolina without internet ("They don't have it there yet," he said), when he "heard there was an article about CBS chairman  — and man I hope isn't watching tonight's monologue — Les Moonves."

The "Late Show" host then did a spit-take upon learning that Farrow, who previously wrote a bombshell New Yorker report on allegations against Harvey Weinstein, had also written the Moonves report for The New Yorker. 

"That's not good. Ronan isn't exactly known for his puff pieces about glamping," Colbert joked.

Colbert threw to a news clip detailing the allegations against Moonves, which his accusers told The New Yorker appeared to be "a practiced routine" of forcible kissing and touching.

"Well, you know the old saying, 'How do you get in a Ronan Farrow article? Practice, practice, practice,'" Colbert said.

The host then addressed CBS' announcement on Monday that the company would not suspend Moonves during an outside investigation into the allegations against him.

"I don't know why they're outsourcing this," Colbert joked of the investigation. "They could just use the cast of the new CBS procedural: 'CSI: CEO.'"

Watch the clip below:

SEE ALSO: The CBS board won't suspend CEO Les Moonves during the investigation into sexual misconduct claims made against him by 6 women

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Why the World Cup soccer ball looks so different



source https://www.businessinsider.com/stephen-colbert-discusses-allegations-against-cbs-ceo-les-moonves-2018-7

Thursday, July 26, 2018

Mueller is reportedly examining whether Trump's tweets about Comey and Jeff Sessions could open him up to a witness-tampering charge

Robert Mueller

  • The special counsel Robert Mueller is reportedly looking into whether President Donald Trump's tweets could open him up not only to obstruction of justice, but a potential witness tampering charge.
  • Mueller is reportedly focusing specifically on Trump's tweets about Attorney General Jeff Sessions and former FBI Director James Comey.
  • Trump's lawyers are said to be worried that Mueller's team is centering its obstruction case around a consistent pattern of behavior on Trump's part that could point to attempts to obstruct justice or influence witness testimony.

Sign up for the latest Russia investigation updates here »


President Donald Trump's critical tweets about Attorney General Jeff Sessions and former FBI Director James Comey could open him up to a possible witness tampering charge under a broad obstruction of justice law.

The New York Times reported Thursday that the special counsel Robert Mueller is interested in questioning Trump about his tweets and private interactions with Sessions and Comey to determine not only whether Trump sought to obstruct justice, but whether he tried to use his power to influence potential witnesses, three people briefed on the matter told the outlet.

Mueller's obstruction case stems from the president's decision to fire Comey last May. The White House initially said Comey was fired because of the way he handled the FBI's investigation into Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server. But Trump later said on national television that "this Russia thing" was a factor in his decision.

Comey testified to the Senate Intelligence Committee in June that Trump asked him for his loyalty during a private meeting in January, shortly after he took office. The former FBI director also said the president asked him to let go of the FBI's investigation into former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

Sessions, meanwhile, became the target of Trump's fury when he decided to recuse himself from the Russia investigation last March, after it surfaced that he failed to disclose his Russia contacts to Congress during his confirmation hearing.

Trump's frustration with the attorney general reached a boiling point last summer because he reportedly felt like Sessions was not doing enough to protect him from what he often characterizes as the Russia "witch hunt." He also accused Sessions of not investigating then-FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe's ties to Hillary Clinton.

Rudy Giuliani, Trump's lead defense lawyer, argued that Trump was within his rights to fire Comey and criticize Sessions.

"If you're going to obstruct justice, you do it quietly and secretly, not in public," Giuliani told The Times.

But the report said that Trump's legal team is growing increasingly concerned Mueller's obstruction case will hinge on showing a consistent pattern of behavior on Trump's part — using his tweets, private interactions, and other statements — pointing to obstruction of justice and potential witness tampering.

Trump has made several public and private statements that experts say could land him in jeopardy in the Russia probe.

Those actions involve, among other things:

  • Reportedly pressing Sessions to reverse his recusal at least four times.
  • Suggesting Sessions' recusal was a "betrayal."
  • Asking why "my guys" at the "Trump Justice Department" weren't doing more to shield him from Mueller's scrutiny.
  • Pressuring Comey, when he was FBI director, to publicly exonerate him in the Russia investigation.
  • Putting together a draft letter — which was not ultimately sent — laying out his reasons for firing Comey.
  • Publicly and privately musing about firing deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein, who is overseeing Mueller.
  • Reportedly attempting to push top intelligence officials, including Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats and then CIA Director Mike Pompeo, to pressure Comey to back off from the Russia investigation.
  • Telling Russian government officials the day after Comey's firing that his dismissal had taken "great pressure" off of Trump.
  • Suggesting Comey should be investigated for rigging the FBI's investigation into Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server.
  • Reportedly ordering the White House counsel, Don McGahn, to fire Mueller. Trump backed off this request when McGahn threatened to resign.

Trump's lawyers appear to be aware of his vulnerability on the obstruction front. Earlier this week, The Times reported that the president's legal team is offering to allow Mueller to ask Trump about potential collusion — in exchange for curtailing his questions about obstruction.

SEE ALSO: Trump keeps conflating Russian meddling and collusion, and experts worry it could have a devastating effect on national security

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: North Korean defector: Kim Jong Un 'is a terrorist'



source https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-tweets-obstruction-comey-sessions-mueller-probe-2018-7

Country star Eric Church blames the NRA for Las Vegas festival mass shooting: 'We could have stopped the guy'

eric church

  • Country singer Eric Church discussed the October 2017 mass shooting that took place at the Las Vegas Route 91 Harvest Festival in a new interview with Rolling Stone.
  • In the interview, Church, who was a headlining performer at the festival last year, placed blame on the National Rifle Association and gun lobbyists for being a "roadblock" to safety.
  • “I blame the lobbyists. And the biggest in the gun world is the NRA," he said.

Country singer Eric Church was one of the headlining performers at the Route 91 Harvest Festival in Las Vegas last October, where a gunman opened fire on a crowd during the performance of headliner Jason Aldean and killed 59 people in the deadliest mass shooting in US history. 

In a new interview with Rolling Stone, Church discussed the Vegas shooting and placed blame on the National Rifle Association and gun lobbyists for being a "roadblock" to safety.

"There are some things we can’t stop," he said. "Like the disgruntled kid who takes his dad’s shotgun and walks into a high school. But we could have stopped the guy in Vegas.”

He added: “I blame the lobbyists. And the biggest in the gun world is the NRA."

Church, who paid tribute to the victims of the shooting in a moving performance at the Grand Ole Opry in October, days after the shooting, told Rolling Stone that he is not a member of the NRA, but that he considers himself "a Second Amendment guy."

"I feel like they’ve been a bit of a roadblock," Church said of the NRA. "I don’t care who you are – you shouldn’t have that kind of power over elected officials. To me it’s cut-and-dried: The gun-show [loophole] would not exist if it weren’t for the NRA, so at this point in time, if I was an NRA member, I would think I had more of a problem than the solution. I would question myself real hard about what I wanted to be in the next three, four, five years."

Church performed two days before the shooting took place and was not at the festival when it occurred. He said that the shooting changed his perspective on guns "a little."

"As a gun guy, the number of rounds [the shooter] fired was un-f------believable to me," Church said. "I saw a video on YouTube from the police officer’s vest cam, and it sounded like an army was up there. I don’t think our forefathers ever thought the right to bear arms was that."

The NRA did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Read the interview here.

SEE ALSO: Country star Eric Church broke down during a tribute to Las Vegas shooting victims: 'Those were my people'

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NOW WATCH: Why the World Cup soccer ball looks so different



source https://www.businessinsider.com/eric-church-lasvegas-festival-shooting-blames-the-nra-interview-2018-7

64% of women writers in Hollywood say they've faced sexual harassment at work, a new survey shows

Hollywood Sign Hero

  • 64 percent of women writers in the Writers Guild of America West said in a recent survey that they've faced sexual harassment at some point in their careers in film and TV.
  • The survey interviewed more than 2,000 WGAW members, male and female, and found that "a significant amount of the harassment writers experience occurs in the writers' room."
  • 11 percent of male writers in the guild said that they had also experienced sexual harassment at work.

In a recent survey conducted by the Writers Guild of America West, 64 percent of women writers in the Los Angeles-based guild said that they had faced sexual harassment at some point in their careers in film and television.

The survey interviewed more than 2,000 WGAW members, male and female, and found that "a significant amount of the harassment writers experience occurs in the writers' room," Deadline reported.

11 percent of male writers in the guild said that they had experienced sexual harassment at work, and the survey found that "many more writers have witnessed harassment."

The WGAW reportedly sent the results of the survey in a memo to guild members on May 22. The memo emphasized an "aim to ensure a respectful culture with zero tolerance for bullying, harassment and assault," according to The Hollywood Reporter.

"While the Guild is not the employer, that does not exclude us from also addressing this as a union," the memo read. "We are exploring the possibility of a series of member conversations about standards for a successful writing room. By proscribing sexual and other harassment among writers, these standards would enable all the writers in the room to fully participate, rather than being alienated by treatment no one should have to experience. These conversations would also address situations that arise for screenwriters, MOW writers and series writers in professional meeting settings."

The memo also referenced a 2006 California Supreme Court ruling, known as the "Friends" decision, after the sitcom of the same name, which ruled that sexually explicit talk in a writers' room did not amount to sexual harassment.

The WGAW said that the decision has been "mistakenly used to justify inappropriate behavior in the workplace" and "does not permit such talk to be aimed at an individual in the room," according to THR.

SEE ALSO: The pay-TV exodus is ramping up as Netflix and other streaming services pump out high-quality original shows

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NOW WATCH: Why the World Cup soccer ball looks so different



source https://www.businessinsider.com/64-percent-women-writers-in-hollywood-face-sexual-harassment-survey-2018-7

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Republican lawmakers introduce articles of impeachment against Rod Rosenstein

rod rosenstein

  • Republican lawmakers say they have introduced articles of impeachment targeting the deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein.
  • Conservative members of the House Oversight Committee have been critical of the Justice Department's ongoing Russia investigation into possible collusion between the Kremlin and members of Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign.
  • They allege Rosenstein failed to produce documents related to the DOJ's probe, and that those that were released were overly redacted as an attempt to "conceal certain facts."
  • Rosenstein has rejected the accusations, and Republican attempts to hasten the end of the Russia investigation, which is being led by the special counsel Robert Mueller under Rosenstein's oversight.

After months of threats, a group of conservative Republican lawmakers say they have introduced articles of impeachment of the deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein.

The move follows months of wrangling between members of the House Oversight Committee and the Justice Department over the investigation of Russian meddling in the 2016 US presidential election.

The group, which includes Republican Rep. Mark Meadows of North Carolina and Jim Jordan of Ohio, have accused Rosenstein and the DOJ of not being fully cooperative with the House committee's demands related to the Russia probe.

Rosenstein oversees the special counsel Robert Mueller, who is leading the federal probe of Russia's US-election interference.

"The DOJ has continued to hide information from Congress and repeatedly obstructed oversight--even defying multiple Congressional subpoenas," Rep. Mark Meadows of North Carolina claimed on in a Twitter post on Wednesday.

Meadows and Jordan have been particularly critical of the Russia investigation which, among other things, is examining possible collusion between Russian agents and members of President Donald Trump's 2016 campaign.

"For 9 months we've warned them consequences were coming, and for 9 months we've heard the same excuses backed up by the same unacceptable conduct," Meadows said in a statement. "Time is up and the consequences are here. It's time to find a new Deputy Attorney General who is serious about accountability and transparency."

"The DOJ is keeping information from Congress," Jordan alleged in his statement. "Enough is enough. It's time to hold Mr. Rosenstein accountable for blocking Congress's constitutional oversight role."

Republicans alleged Rosenstein had failed to produce documents related to the Justice Department's decision to launch its Russia investigation, and that the documents which were released were overly redacted as an attempt to "conceal certain facts."

However, the Justice Department argued that it "substantially complied" with their requests, and that it was working so that any remaining requests would be "expeditiously completed." According to FBI Director Christopher Wray, his department turned over 880,000 pages of documents to Congress as of July.

It appears that the resolution will have little chance of success on the House floor, in part because Trey Gowdy, the chairman of the House Oversight Committee, has not signed on to to the impeachment effort, and has defended the DOJ's efforts to cooperate with the committee. "Impeachment is a punishment, it's not a remedy," Gowdy said according to The Washington Post.

House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin is also among the leadership who have not signed on to the Rosenstein impeachment effort.

SEE ALSO: White House reportedly stops releasing Trump's calls with foreign leaders after spate of embarrassing leaks

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: North Korean defector: Kim Jong Un 'is a terrorist'



source https://www.businessinsider.com/rod-rosenstein-impeachment-mark-meadows-jim-jordan-2018-7

Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Congress wants to halt F-35 sales to a NATO ally over Mattis' objections, and it's a sign of growing tension

trump Erdogan

  • US lawmakers have proposed blocking deliveries of the F-35 fighter jet to NATO partner Turkey.
  • The move comes largely in response to Turkey's plans to buy Russia's S-400 air-defense system, a move that could jeopardize the stealth fighter's technological edge.
  • The S-400 purchase is partially a response to fraying ties between Turkey and its NATO allies.

A US defense bill would bar delivery of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter to Turkey until the US government provides an assessment of the relations between Washington and Ankara — a move that comes over the objections of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and underscores growing tensions between Turkey and its NATO partners.

The conflict with Turkey — which fields NATO's second-largest army and hosts important NATO infrastructure — stems largely from its decision to buy the Russia-made S-400 air-defense system, one of the most advanced systems of its kind on the market.

NATO officials have cautioned Ankara about the purchase, saying the missile system would not be compatible with other NATO weapons and warning of "necessary consequences" for acquiring it. Using the F-35 and the S-400 together could compromise the F-35 and expose sensitive information.

Turkey plans to buy roughly 100 F-35s and has already received two of them. The country's defense industry has also taken an active role in the jet's development, with at least 10 Turkish companies building parts for it.

Russian military S 400

But the measure agreed upon by the House and Senate Armed Services Committees on Monday would bar Ankara from getting any more F-35s until the Pentagon delivers a report on how the measure would affect US-Turkey relations, what impact Turkey's purchase of the S-400 will have, and what the effects of Turkey's removal from the F-35 program would be for the US industrial base, according to Bloomberg.

The bill also includes a statement calling on Turkey to release "wrongfully detained" US citizens Andrew Brunson and Serkan Golge.

The Defense Department has 90 days to submit its assessment. The defense bill, which allots $717 billion for fiscal year 2019, still needs final approval; the House is expected to vote this week and the Senate could do so in early August.

Mattis also urged Congress not to block Turkey from acquiring the F-35, telling legislators in a letter earlier this month that doing so would cause an international "supply chain disruption" that could cause delays and additional costs.

"If the Turkish supply chain was disrupted today, it would result in an aircraft production break, delaying delivery of 50-75 F-35s, and would take approximately 18-24 months to re-source parts and recover," Mattis said.

In the letter, Mattis said the Trump administration was pressuring Turkey over the S-400 as well as the detention of US citizens on charges the US has called exaggerated. He also acknowledged lawmakers' concerns with Turkey's "authoritarian drift and its impact on human rights and the rule of law."

Mattis has cautioned lawmakers against sanctions on other partners, like India or Vietnam, for buying Russian weapons, including the S-400, arguing that they need to time to shift away from that weaponry. The compromise reached by US lawmakers would let Trump waive sanctions on countries doing business with Russia if the country in question is working to distance itself from Russian defense and intelligence firms.

f35a

The dispute over the S-400 purchase comes amid broader friction between Turkey and its partners in NATO — tensions that Turkey has helped stoke by boasting of the S-400's abilities to target NATO aircraft.

Erdogan has said he pursued the Russian-made system because NATO countries declined to extend deployments of their Patriot air-defense systems and would not sell Turkey a comparable system. Erdogan has also expressed frustration with the EU over its response to a coup attempt against him in 2016 and accused the bloc of "messing us about" on issues like visas and Syrian migrants.

The US's support for Kurdish fighters in Syria has also created tension with Turkey, which recently said it would not abide by Washington's request that other countries stop buying oil from Iran.

While tensions with NATO may push Ankara to consider new relationships, it remains closely entwined with the trans-Atlantic defense alliance and its defense industry is reliant on Western firms. Turkey could expand dealings with other non-US partners in Europe, but it's not clear those countries or the US would assent to such a shift.

Turkey's warming relations with Russia and Erdogan's crackdown have already alienated some in the US.

"Turkey may be an ally, but it is not a partner," Richard Haass, the president of the Council on Foreign Relations and former director of policy planning for the State Department, said in September 2017.

SEE ALSO: India says it's going ahead with a major Russian arms deal, and the US may have already backed itself into a corner

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NOW WATCH: How Russia's most advanced military equipment stacks up against NATO hardware



source https://www.businessinsider.com/congress-halts-f-35-sale-to-turkey-over-mattis-objection-amid-tensions-2018-7

Monday, July 23, 2018

R Kelly sings 'they tryna lock me up like Bill' Cosby over 'sex cult' allegations in a new song

r. kelly

  • R Kelly released a 19-minute song on Monday addressing the allegations that he has held young women captive in an abusive "sex cult." 
  • On the song, titled "I Admit," Kelly expresses fear that he'll be sent to prison like Bill Cosby over the series of new allegations that started with a Buzzfeed News report in October 2017. 

R Kelly released a new 19-minute song on Monday morning that addresses the allegations that he has held young women captive in an abusive "sex cult." 

On the song, titled "I Admit," Kelly expresses fear that he'll be sent to prison "like Bill" Cosby — who is facing up to 30 years in prison after being found guilty of sexual assault — because of the sexual misconduct allegations against him.

Kelly specifically addresses and denies the allegations that he kidnapped women and prevented them from eating, as first reported by Buzzfeed News in October 2017.

"What's the definition of a cult? / What's the definition of a sex slave? / Go to the dictionary, look it up / Let me know I’ll be here waiting," Kelly sings on the track. "Said I'm abusing these women, what the f--- that’s some absurd s--- (what?) /  They're brainwashed, really? (really) / Kidnapped, really? (really) / Can’t eat, really? (really) / Real talk, that shit sound silly (yeah)." 

"Take my career and turn it upside down, 'cause you mad I’ve got some girlfriends (girlfriends) / Ain’t seen my kids in years, they tryna lock me up like Bill (in years, like Bill)," he continues, referencing Cosby.

Kelly has not faced criminal charges over the allegations of the past year, and has previously denied the allegations in statements from his attorney.

In 2008, Kelly was found not guilty on child-pornography charges, after he was accused of filming and photographing sexual encounters with a 14-year-old girl.

Listen to the song below:

SEE ALSO: R Kelly's ex-girlfriend accuses the singer of physical abuse, sexual coercion, and punishing her with starvation

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NOW WATCH: Why the World Cup soccer ball looks so different



source https://www.businessinsider.com/r-kelly-says-they-tryna-lock-me-up-like-bill-cosby-over-sex-cult-allegations-2018-7

At least 3 dead, including gunman, in a shooting in Toronto

Toronto shooting

  • Three people have died in a shooting in Toronto's Greektown neighborhood on Sunday evening.
  • The suspected shooter is among the fatalities.
  • At least 12 other people are believed to be injured.
  • A young girl is reported to be in critical condition.


Three people, including the suspected gunman, died in a shooting in Toronto's Greektown neighborhood on Sunday evening that left at least 12 others injured by gunfire.

The Toronto Police Service, paramedics, and firefighters responded to the shooting near Danforth Avenue and Logan Avenue at about 10 p.m. local time. The shooting took place in Toronto's east end, where several popular restaurants, cafés, and shops are located.

The first person to die in the attack was a woman, while the identity of the second fatality is not known. A young girl was critically wounded.

A reporter from Canada's Global TV wrote on Twitter that victims were "spread across many blocks."

Toronto is grappling with a sharp rise in gun violence this year. Deaths from gun violence in the city so far have risen 53%, to 26, compared with the same period last year, Reuters reported, citing police data released last week showing the number of shootings rising 13%.

Toronto deployed about 200 police officers from July 20 in response to the recent spate of shootings, which city officials have blamed on gang violence.

This is a developing story. Click here to refresh this page. Reuters contributed to this report.

SEE ALSO: Video appears to show Toronto shooting gunman open fire

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source https://www.businessinsider.com/toronto-shooting-multiple-injuries-2018-7

Disappointing photos show what 9 supposedly-glamorous jobs look like in real life

Lufthansa flight attendant air hostess

  • Some jobs have a reputation for being particularly exciting, glitzy, or lucrative.
  • Occasionally, that's partly because of inaccurate media depictions.
  • Other jobs do boast a number of major perks, but they also come with trade-offs.


Glamorous jobs might seem enticing, but, at the end of the day, work is work.

And sometimes, jobs that sound especially fancy or thrilling turn out to have a less-than-luxurious side. Many have hidden tradeoffs, at the very least.

Here's a look at the reality of certain glam-sounding jobs:

SEE ALSO: 19 US presidents' surprising first jobs

DON'T MISS: 37 brilliant questions to ask at the end of every job interview

SEE ALSO: The top 25 companies where American business students dream of working

What's more glamorous than getting paid to travel? That's the job description of a flight attendant in a nutshell, which comes complete with perks like flying standby for free or discounted prices and getting to explore exotic locales during layovers.

Source: Business Insider, Business Insider, Travel and Leisure



But the job isn't a constant glitzy adventure, even if you're working in first class. The job can be frustrating, as many passengers dismiss flight attendants as "waiters and waitresses on a plane," according to longtime Delta flight attendant Danny Elkins. The reality is flight attendants are trained to ensure everyone's safety aboard the aircraft.

Source: Business Insider, Business Insider, Travel and Leisure, Business Insider



And, while frequent travel is a great perk, many flight attendants don't necessarily get to see the world on a regular basis. "Most layovers are short, and you barely have time for food and a good night's sleep," a flight attendant previously told Business Insider's Rachel Gillett.

Source: Business Insider



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

source https://www.businessinsider.com/jobs-that-look-glamorous-but-arent-2018-7

A gun advocate who Sacha Baron Cohen duped for his new show wrote a 'warning' to fellow conservatives back in April

who is america

  • A gun-rights activist who Sacha Baron Cohen duped in the pilot episode of his new Showtime series "Who Is America?" wrote a 1,400-word Facebook post about his experience of filming his segment in April, as a "warning" to fellow conservatives.
  • Philip Van Cleave, the president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League, wrote that he suspected he'd been the "victim" of  "someone like Michael Moore, or, even worse, a Sacha Baron Cohen-esq 'Borat'-type of shock comedy meant to be devastatingly embarrassing and humiliating to the victim in the crosshairs."

In the strongest segment of the pilot for Sacha Baron Cohen's new Showtime satirical series, "Who Is America?," Cohen, disguised as an Israel "anti-terror expert," convinces conservative politicians and gun-rights advocates to endorse a program that would arm American toddlers with guns.

One of Cohen's unsuspecting guests, Philip Van Cleave, the president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League, who recognized that he was being duped after filming his part for the show, wrote a 1,400-word Facebook post recapping his experience on the project as a "warning" to fellow gun advocates and conservatives way back in April, The Daily Beast reported.

In the pilot, Van Cleave appears alongside Cohen's character Col. Erran Morad in a segment promoting various stuffed-animal hybrid guns for young children, with names like “Puppy Pistol,” “Gunny Rabbit,” and “Uzicorn.”

Van Cleave wrote on the Virginia Citizens Defense League's Facebook page in April that he suspected he'd been duped by "someone like Michael Moore, or, even worse, a Sacha Baron Cohen-esq 'Borat'-type of shock comedy meant to be devastatingly embarrassing and humiliating to the victim in the crosshairs."

Van Cleave claimed that he realized he was being tricked during the filming of the segment, but went along with it, "so I could find out who was behind this and where this was going."

"I figured if I was right about this being a set up, I could blow the whistle and get a warning out to the gun-rights community across the country to protect as many people as possible and maybe derail this attack. If it turned out to be nothing, then no harm, no foul," he wrote. "Sadly for me, I’m sure I’m going to be in whatever crazy film finally comes out, looking really stupid and, just as sadly, I’ll probably be in good company. A few of us will no doubt get hammered, but if we can get the word out IMMEDIATELY, we might be able to save the reputations of many other good people."

Read his whole, ineffective "warning" post here, and watch his segment on the show below.

SEE ALSO: All the notable people and politicians Sacha Baron Cohen has 'duped' for his new TV series, 'Who Is America?'

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Why the World Cup soccer ball looks so different



source https://www.businessinsider.com/gun-advocate-sacha-baron-cohen-duped-wrote-warning-to-conservatives-2018-7

Before he became the president of Russia, Vladimir Putin was a KGB spy — take a look at his early career

Vladmir Putin sunglasses boat

  • Vladimir Putin was recruited as a KGB agent after graduating from university.
  • The current president of Russia served as an agent in East Germany for five years.
  • Putin's experience as a KGB operative may have helped to mold his worldview.


Vladimir Putin's KGB career may have ended decades ago, but that didn't stop the Russian president from citing his spy credentials during Monday's press conference with US president Donald Trump.

Dissmissing the idea that Trump's presidential campaign colluded with Russia in 2016 and disputing the credibility of the Steele dossier, Putin said, "I was an intelligence officer myself, and I know how dossiers are made up."

Russia is accused of hacking the DNC's emails and engaging in other forms of cyber subversion in order to throw the race to Trump. A series of politically-charged and disinformation-spreading social media groups and advertising campaigns have been traced back to Russia.

Putin has denied hacking the election. Trump has argued that he "doesn't see any reason" why Putin would meddle in the election, despite the consensus of the US intelligence community that Russia interfered in order to ensure a Republican victory.

Here's a look into Putin's early career as a KGB spy:

SEE ALSO: Vladimir Putin's hard-core daily routine includes hours of swimming, late nights, and no alcohol

As a teenager, Putin was captivated by the novel and film series "The Shield and the Sword," writes Steven Lee Myers in "The New Tsar: The Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin."

Source: "The New Tsar: The Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin"



The story focuses on a brave Soviet secret agent who helps thwart the Nazis.

Source: "The New Tsar: The Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin"



Putin later said he was struck by how "one spy could decide the fate of thousands of people."

Source: "The New Tsar: The Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin"



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

source https://www.businessinsider.com/vladimir-putin-kgb-spy-2017-9

Sunday, July 22, 2018

Nine people injured, gunman dead after shooting in Toronto

canada

Nine people have been injured after a shooting in Toronto's Riverdale neighborhood Sunday evening. 

Toronto Police responded to the shooting near Danforth and Logan avenues around 10 pm local time. 

Police say nine people, including a young girl, where shot after a gunman opened fire. Their conditions are not yet known, police said. 

The shooter has been confirmed dead.

A reporter from Canada's Global TV wrote on Twitter that victims were "spread across many blocks."

This is a developing story.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Super-Earths are real and they could be an even better place for life than Earth



source http://www.businessinsider.com/toronto-shooting-multiple-injuries-2018-7

Thursday, July 19, 2018

Disappointing photos show what 9 supposedly-glamorous jobs look like in real life

Lufthansa flight attendant air hostess

  • Some jobs have a reputation for being particularly exciting, glitzy, or lucrative.
  • Occasionally, that's partly because of inaccurate media depictions.
  • Other jobs do boast a number of major perks, but they also come with trade-offs.


Glamorous jobs might seem enticing, but, at the end of the day, work is work.

And sometimes, jobs that sound especially fancy or thrilling turn out to have a less-than-luxurious side. Many have hidden tradeoffs, at the very least.

Here's a look at the reality of certain glam-sounding jobs:

SEE ALSO: 19 US presidents' surprising first jobs

DON'T MISS: 37 brilliant questions to ask at the end of every job interview

SEE ALSO: The top 25 companies where American business students dream of working

What's more glamorous than getting paid to travel? That's the job description of a flight attendant in a nutshell, which comes complete with perks like flying standby for free or discounted prices and getting to explore exotic locales during layovers.

Source: Business Insider, Business Insider, Travel and Leisure



But the job isn't a constant glitzy adventure, even if you're working in first class. The job can be frustrating, as many passengers dismiss flight attendants as "waiters and waitresses on a plane," according to longtime Delta flight attendant Danny Elkins. The reality is flight attendants are trained to ensure everyone's safety aboard the aircraft.

Source: Business Insider, Business Insider, Travel and Leisure, Business Insider



And, while frequent travel is a great perk, many flight attendants don't necessarily get to see the world on a regular basis. "Most layovers are short, and you barely have time for food and a good night's sleep," a flight attendant previously told Business Insider's Rachel Gillett.

Source: Business Insider



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

source http://www.businessinsider.com/jobs-that-look-glamorous-but-arent-2018-7

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

A gun advocate who Sacha Baron Cohen duped for his new show wrote a 'warning' to fellow conservatives back in April

who is america

  • A gun-rights activist who Sacha Baron Cohen duped in the pilot episode of his new Showtime series "Who Is America?" wrote a 1,400-word Facebook post about his experience of filming his segment in April, as a "warning" to fellow conservatives.
  • Philip Van Cleave, the president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League, wrote that he suspected he'd been the "victim" of  "someone like Michael Moore, or, even worse, a Sacha Baron Cohen-esq 'Borat'-type of shock comedy meant to be devastatingly embarrassing and humiliating to the victim in the crosshairs."

In the strongest segment of the pilot for Sacha Baron Cohen's new Showtime satirical series, "Who Is America?," Cohen, disguised as an Israel "anti-terror expert," convinces conservative politicians and gun-rights advocates to endorse a program that would arm American toddlers with guns.

One of Cohen's unsuspecting guests, Philip Van Cleave, the president of the Virginia Citizens Defense League, who recognized that he was being duped after filming his part for the show, wrote a 1,400-word Facebook post recapping his experience on the project as a "warning" to fellow gun advocates and conservatives way back in April, The Daily Beast reported.

In the pilot, Van Cleave appears alongside Cohen's character Col. Erran Morad in a segment promoting various stuffed-animal hybrid guns for young children, with names like “Puppy Pistol,” “Gunny Rabbit,” and “Uzicorn.”

Van Cleave wrote on the Virginia Citizens Defense League's Facebook page in April that he suspected he'd been duped by "someone like Michael Moore, or, even worse, a Sacha Baron Cohen-esq 'Borat'-type of shock comedy meant to be devastatingly embarrassing and humiliating to the victim in the crosshairs."

Van Cleave claimed that he realized he was being tricked during the filming of the segment, but went along with it, "so I could find out who was behind this and where this was going."

"I figured if I was right about this being a set up, I could blow the whistle and get a warning out to the gun-rights community across the country to protect as many people as possible and maybe derail this attack. If it turned out to be nothing, then no harm, no foul," he wrote. "Sadly for me, I’m sure I’m going to be in whatever crazy film finally comes out, looking really stupid and, just as sadly, I’ll probably be in good company. A few of us will no doubt get hammered, but if we can get the word out IMMEDIATELY, we might be able to save the reputations of many other good people."

Read his whole, ineffective "warning" post here, and watch his segment on the show below.

SEE ALSO: All the notable people and politicians Sacha Baron Cohen has 'duped' for his new TV series, 'Who Is America?'

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Why the World Cup soccer ball looks so different



source http://www.businessinsider.com/gun-advocate-sacha-baron-cohen-duped-wrote-warning-to-conservatives-2018-7

Monday, July 16, 2018

Before he became the president of Russia, Vladimir Putin was a KGB spy — take a look at his early career

Vladmir Putin sunglasses boat

  • Vladimir Putin was recruited as a KGB agent after graduating from university.
  • The current president of Russia served as an agent in East Germany for five years.
  • Putin's experience as a KGB operative may have helped to mold his worldview.


Vladimir Putin's KGB career may have ended decades ago, but that didn't stop the Russian president from citing his spy credentials during Monday's press conference with US president Donald Trump.

Dissmissing the idea that Trump's presidential campaign colluded with Russia in 2016 and disputing the credibility of the Steele dossier, Putin said, "I was an intelligence officer myself, and I know how dossiers are made up."

Russia is accused of hacking the DNC's emails and engaging in other forms of cyber subversion in order to throw the race to Trump. A series of politically-charged and disinformation-spreading social media groups and advertising campaigns have been traced back to Russia.

Putin has denied hacking the election. Trump has argued that he "doesn't see any reason" why Putin would meddle in the election, despite the consensus of the US intelligence community that Russia interfered in order to ensure a Republican victory.

Here's a look into Putin's early career as a KGB spy:

SEE ALSO: Vladimir Putin's hard-core daily routine includes hours of swimming, late nights, and no alcohol

As a teenager, Putin was captivated by the novel and film series "The Shield and the Sword," writes Steven Lee Myers in "The New Tsar: The Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin."

Source: "The New Tsar: The Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin"



The story focuses on a brave Soviet secret agent who helps thwart the Nazis.

Source: "The New Tsar: The Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin"



Putin later said he was struck by how "one spy could decide the fate of thousands of people."

Source: "The New Tsar: The Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin"



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

source http://www.businessinsider.com/vladimir-putin-kgb-spy-2017-9

Wednesday, July 11, 2018

7 things we learned about Apple's self-driving car project from the explosive FBI investigation into stolen trade secrets (AAPL)

Tim Cook in a car

  • The FBI has charged a former Apple employee with theft of trade secrets.
  • He worked on Apple's self-driving car project, Project Titan. 
  • The FBI's criminal complaint reveals that Project Titan is significantly larger than previously believed, based on the number of employees with access to information about the project. 

A Chinese engineer was boarding a flight from California to Beijing on July 7 when he was yanked off at the last minute by an FBI agent. 

It's not a spy movie — it's a real life story of trade secrets allegedly stolen from Apple, an American icon, for the purposes of potentially handing them to a small, relatively unknown Chinese company. 

Those secrets are related to self-driving cars, one of the hottest technologies in the world. Every major technology company is working on some project related to cars that drive themselves, but Apple's work in the space is particularly high-profile because of its secrecy and its reputation in Silicon Valley.

Self-driving car technology is valuable enough that Alphabet and Uber publicly fought in court over a $680 million deal that allegedly included Waymo self-driving trade secrets.

In this specific case, the FBI alleges that Xiaolang Zhang, a hardware engineer who used to work for Apple, stole trade secrets related to the company's work on self-driving car technology. He planned to work at Xiaopeng Motors, a little-known Chinese startup backed by Alibaba. 

Although Eric Proudfoot, the FBI agent investigating the case, said that the information in the Tuesday affidavit does not include every fact he's aware of, the complaint filed on Wednesday is still an incredible look behind the secrecy curtain into Apple's car project, as well as the security at Apple's Cupertino headquarters. The FBI had extensive cooperation from Apple, according to the criminal complaint.

Zhang faces up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine if he's found guilty of the federal felony of theft of trade secrets. His lawyers requested a Mandarin translator. 

Here are 7 things we learned from the document:

Apple was designing hardware specifically for self-driving cars, including a proprietary chip 

The affidavit says that Zhang's role was on the Computer Team, and he designed and tested circuit boards to analyze sensor data. A 25-page PDF he allegedly pilfered contained electrical schematics for "one of the circuit boards that form Apple's proprietary infrastructure technology for the product." An employee also showed Zhang a "proprietary chip."

Screen Shot 2018 07 11 at 3.05.57 PM

Apple has 5,000 employees who have been told about "the Project," likely the self-driving car project

According to the complaint, 5,000 of Apple's 135,000 employees are "disclosed" on a project which is likely Project Titan, Apple's project name for self-driving car technology.

That's a significantly larger number of employees than was previously believed, although it's possible that these employees have only been told about a small portion of the project, such as cleaning digital maps for self-driving cars. 

Previously, the best public estimate for the number of Project Titan employees was 1,000. 

Screen Shot 2018 07 11 at 3.09.06 PM

"Disclosed" — how Apple handles secret projects internally 

The complaint also has a lot of information about how Apple handles "disclosure," or an internal term that describes when an employee can be told about a top-secret project, according to former employees. 

According to the complaint, a manager needs to "sponsor" an employee before he becomes "disclosed" on any given project, whether it's Project Titan or Apple's augmented reality division.

Asking whether an employee is "disclosed" is not an uncommon conversation at Apple, according to former employees. 

Apple's self-driving groups are organized under a "Research and Development organization"

Screen Shot 2018 07 11 at 3.09.47 PM

There's still a lot of mystery outside of Apple how it organizes its automotive project within the company. Apple has what's called a "functional structure," where employees report up to an executive depending on what their skill is. 

Software engineers, for example, are usually in Craig Federighi's group, because he's Apple's senior vice president of software engineering. 

Apple's self-driving group was reportedly led by Bob Mansfield, an Apple old-timer who had to be coaxed back out of retirement. But it was less clear where it ultimately fit inside the company.

One line from the complaint, however, suggested that it is under the "research and development" organization. 

Apple closely tracks the number of employees who can access information from its systems

Screen Shot 2018 07 11 at 3.13.54 PM

One key piece of information underpinning the government's case against Zhang is that Apple recorded the number of times he accessed information from "disclosed" internal Apple databases after he had resigned from the company. 

According to the criminal complaint, apparently Zhang generated "581 rows of user activity" two days before he resigned, according to Apple Information Security.

Apple was building prototypes and had requirements for power, battery system, and "drivetrain suspension mounts"

Screen Shot 2018 07 11 at 3.12.56 PM

Screen Shot 2018 07 11 at 3.13.01 PM

Some of the technical PDFs that Zhang allegedly stole described requirements for a prototype. Although Apple has publicly alluded to its car project, it has never confirmed that it planned to build custom prototypes of any car parts, including sensors. 

Apple has secrecy training specifically for its self-driving car project

In addition to the secrecy training for new hires and interns when they join Apple, apparently the self-driving car project had a separate secrecy training, too. 

Screen Shot 2018 07 11 at 3.12.09 PM

Read the entire document below: 

USA v. Zhang by Kif Leswing on Scribd

 

SEE ALSO: Researchers find that owning an iPhone or iPad is the number-one way to guess if you’re rich or not

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: These 13 medical technologies are changing lives



source http://www.businessinsider.com/apple-self-driving-car-project-details-fbi-stolen-trade-secrets-investigation-2018-7

Tuesday, July 10, 2018

Questions are being raised about Facebook's decision to give a Russian internet company temporary special access to its user data (FB)

Mark Zuckerberg and Yuri Milner

  • Facebook acknowledged that it gave Mail.Ru special access to user data after 2015, when it officially ended the system that allowed third-party apps to access user data.
  • Mail.Ru was among dozens of companies that were granted special temporary access to Facebook user data.
  • Mail.Ru has ties to the Kremlin, according to news reports.


Facebook is facing fresh scrutiny over its data-sharing practices following the publication of reports highlighting how a Russian internet giant with ties to the Russian government gained access to user data. 

On Tuesday, CNN and Wired published reports exploring how Mail.Ru built apps that were able to access Facebook user data after the social network locked down its platform in 2015. Facebook recently disclosed in written testimony to US Congress that Mail.Ru had built apps that integrated with its platform — and that it was one of a select group of app makers that was given an extension beyond the formal 2015 cut-off date.

According to CNN and Wired, Mail.Ru was granted an extra two weeks of access to this user data. Facebook did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

Mail.Ru's parent company was founded by Alisher Usmanov, a Russian businessman with links to the Kremlin. As such, Mail.Ru's activity on the platform has raised some eyebrows, and prompted calls for more information: The Russian government infamously used Facebook to sow disinformation and propaganda during the 2016 US presidential election.

What's more, a former Mail.Ru CEO and Chairman, Yuri Milner, invested $200 million for a 2% stake Facebook in 2009 through his firm Digital Sky Technologies, and another few hundred million dollars in the following years. Milner, who stepped down as Mail.Ru Chairman in 2012, has since sold its stake in Facebook, CNN reported.

In a statement given to CNN, Democratic senator Mark Warner called for more information: "In the last 6 months we've learned that Facebook had few controls in place to control the collection and use of user data by third parties.

"Now we learn that the largest technology company in Russia, whose executives boast close ties to Vladimir Putin, had potentially hundreds of apps integrated with Facebook, collecting user data. If this is accurate, we need to determine what user information was shared with mail.ru and what may have been done with the captured data."

BI PRIME: A third of Facebook’s ad revenue growth now comes from Instagram — and it couldn't come at a better time

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: A diehard Mac user switches to PC



source http://www.businessinsider.com/facebook-granted-russian-company-mailru-extended-access-user-data-2018-7