Kushner in Trouble

I disagree here. A special prosecutor is a large part of rehabilitating the DNC and specifically the Clinton brand after their humiliating election loss. If they can blame a shadowy conspiracy of foreign governments, they don't have to own up to pissing off a large chunk of their base during the campaigns and an even bigger one by losing to Trump.

It would have happened no matter what. Because the entire DNC is completely captured and devoted to the single premise that NOTHING is ever Hillary's Fault.
Trump and his administration's crimes are all Hilary's fault. If its a conspiracy, you have nothing to worry about, why are you worried, why is Trump tweeting like a crazy person? He badmouthed the FBI, Clinton, Oprah (seriously Oprah), media,Obama, but not Russia and Putin.
 
What test is this? I've held a TS/SCI for years in the military and some years following and never took a test.

If he can't get a permanent clearance due to failing background, then his interim will expire. But while he has interim clearance, he can access classified material under NDA to the level of his interim clearance.

You should just stop talking about this. Because you are ignorant of the process.
"pass the test (pending background investigation)"
 
I disagree here. A special prosecutor is a large part of rehabilitating the DNC and specifically the Clinton brand after their humiliating election loss. If they can blame a shadowy conspiracy of foreign governments, they don't have to own up to pissing off a large chunk of their base during the campaigns and an even bigger one by losing to Trump.

It would have happened no matter what. Because the entire DNC is completely captured and devoted to the single premise that NOTHING is ever Hillary's Fault.

The Democrats wanted it for sure, but Trump and Rosenstein could have avoided it had they not bungled the whole Comey firing. The Trump administration was an absolute trainwreck for many months and didn’t have the knowledge they needed to be in DC. I don’t think Trump thought putting in a good word and trying to protect Flynn was a bad thing, he literally just didn’t know. His blond spokeslady encouraged people to buy Ivanka’s clothes while being interviewed on national television. Not doing that is covered on the first day of Civil Service 101. They were neophytes and showed.
 
They could have avoided it by firing the AG and deputy AG on day 1. Other than that the DNC was going to get it's circus.
 
They could have avoided it by firing the AG and deputy AG on day 1. Other than that the DNC was going to get it's circus.
He appointed them !!!

He easily could have avoided everything if he didn't fire Comey.
 
He cant pass the the fucking background check you moron.

You're talking about the full investigation and SF84. That takes months and has nothing to do with an interim clearance, I.E. your claim he is accessing classified material illegally is simply incorrect.

End of conversation.
 
Other matters “directly related” and the federal regulation doesn’t apply for it includes purjury, obstruction of justice, and destruction of evidence.

So again I ask, how is kushner negotiating with potential buyers of his building from China and Quatar directly related to Russia’s efforts to interfere with the 2016 election and this investigation?

Quotation marks are used for direct quotes. Where does it say “directly related?” It says “directly from.” The meaning is completely different. That is how they were able to get folks on the Ukrainian money laundering that occurred before the campaign.
 
You're talking about the full investigation and SF84. That takes months and has nothing to do with an interim clearance, I.E. your claim he is accessing classified material illegally is simply incorrect.

End of conversation.
SF84 blah blah blah, read below, something Fox wont report.
John Kelly overhauls White House security clearances
White House Chief of Staff John Kelly is overhauling the Trump administration’s security clearance process for staff. The decision comes in the wake of the Rob Porter scandal and amid reports that dozens of White House officials, including Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, still lack long-term security clearances even as Trump enters his second year in office.

Kelly, who has come under scrutiny for his handling of domestic abuse allegations against former White House staff secretary Rob Porter, laid out new rules and procedures for security clearance standards in the Trump administration in a memo first obtained by the Washington Post and later released by the White House.

The memo lands after revelations that Porter was allowed to remain on the job and had an interim security clearance despite knowledge of the allegations of physical and emotional abuse from two ex-wives and a former girlfriend.

“The events of the last ten days have focused immense attention on a clearance process that has been in place for multiple administrations. The American people deserve a White House staff that clearly meets the highest standards and that has been carefully vetted — especially those who work closely with the president or handle sensitive national security information,” the memo, which is addressed to White House counsel Don McGahn, National Security Adviser HR McMaster, and Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations Joseph Hagin. “We should — and in the future, must — do better.”

Among the proposed changes is that the FBI, which conducts background checks for senior administration hires, hand-deliver checks upon completion and verbally brief the White House counsel on any “significantly derogatory” findings. It also seeks to reduce the “tie lag” between discovery of derogatory information to disclosure to the White House.

It also discontinues interim Top Secret or SCI-level (Sensitive Compartmented Information) clearances that have been pending since before June 2017 and limits access to highly-classified information for individuals with interim clearance.

Kelly’s memo states he is creating a “working group” to “study the clearance process generally” and take action to “streamline, harmonize, and modernize standards” across the executive branch.

The memo is also copied to Attorney General Jeff Sessions, National Intelligence Director Dan Coats, and FBI Director Christopher Wray.

It’s not just Rob Porter whose interim security clearance is questionable
The allegations against Porter and the White House’s botched handling of them have brought to light a broader problem with security within the Trump administration: A lot of people still haven’t been cleared. According to reports from NBC News and CNN this week, about 100 White House administrations lacked long-term security clearances as of November 2017.

Among them: Trump’s son-in-law, Kushner, and his daughter, Ivanka Trump, both of whom reportedly have interim clearance for Top Secret and SCI clearance — exactly what Kelly’s memo revokes next week.

Shane Harris, Josh Dawsey, Carol Leonnig, and Robert Costa at the Washington Post pointed out that the Kelly clearance overhaul could put a “bull’s eye” on Kushner. The 37-year-old investor and real estate developer in his role as a senior adviser to the president has been able to see some of the United States’ most sensitive secrets — even though his background check is not yet complete.

He has access to the president’s daily brief, a daily digest of intelligence updates, and, according to one person with knowledge of the situation, issues more requests for information to the intelligence community than any White House employee apart from the National Security Council staff.

To be sure, there appear to be plenty of White House officials whose security clearance status remains in question. National Economic Council official George David Banks, who had served since February 2017, resigned this week after being informed he wouldn’t receive a permanent security clearance. He told Politico it was because of past marijuana use.

The Post quotes two US officials who say they don’t think Kushner will receive a permanent security clearance at least in the near future.

Kushner has repeatedly made amendments to forms detailing his contacts with foreign officials and financial assets and has often simply claimed to have forgottenvital information in his dealings with Congress and the ongoing Russia probe. Thus far, it doesn’t look like he’s going anywhere.
 
Anyone else notice the pattern that these leaks arent relevant to Muellers current tasks? Not in relation to his mandate, but seems to be a public misinformation campaign designed around hiding their current information.

For all the guilty pleas from Trump campaign officials, no-knock warrant done on Manafort and now these indictments came out of no where.
 
Anyone else notice the pattern that these leaks arent relevant to Muellers current tasks? Not in relation to his mandate, but seems to be a public misinformation campaign designed around hiding their current information.

For all the guilty pleas from Trump campaign officials, no-knock warrant done on Manafort and now these indictments came out of no where.
That team is airtight.
 

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