Why do you want war with Russia? Comey thought
Post# of 65629
Comey thought he had found a direct line of communication between the “Trump Towers and Alpha Bank in Russia” that was supposedly sending money to Trump from three friends of Putin.
Franklin Foer of Slate News ran two articles as “October Surprises” to take down Trump at the last minute of the election with “proof” Trump was in bed with Putin. This “Trump Tower Server” was supposed to be the icing on the cake of the Page Dossier showing the big pay-off mechanism.
DUH - but turns out it was just a server used by Alpha Bank and Comey came up blank.
Comey’s FBI team went to Prague twice to the prison to visit Yevginy Nikulin, a hacker and offer him immunity and the witness protection program if he would “admit” to being the DNC hacker who was hacking to help Trump and harm Hillary directly for Vladimir Putin himself.
Twice, Yevginy turned the offer down and then reported the scam to the news and had the proof to show the FBI was in the prison twice.
FBI PROBE INTO CLINTON EMAILS PROMPTED OFFER OF CASH, CITIZENSHIP FOR CONFESSION, RUSSIAN HACKER CLAIMS
Russian citizen accused of being a hacker by both Russia and the U.S. has claimed U.S. officials offered to cut him a deal if he admitted to interfering in the 2016 presidential election.
Yevgeniy Nikulin, 29, has found himself in the middle of an international dispute between Washington and Moscow, at the very center of which lies U.S. allegations that Russia sponsored a series of hacks targeting Democratic Party candidate and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in favor of Republican candidate and current President Donald Trump.
On October 5, 2016, days before U.S. intelligence publicly accused Russia of endorsing an infiltration of Democratic Party officials' emails, Nikulin was arrested in Prague at the request of the U.S. on separate hacking charges. Now, Nikulin claims U.S. authorities tried to pin the email scandal on him.
While awaiting trial, he claims in an undated letter reportedly given to U.S. Russian-language news site Nastoyashchoe Vremya by Nikulin's lawyer, Martin Sadilek, that the FBI visited him at least a couple of times, offering to drop the charges and grant him U.S. citizenship as well as cash and an apartment in the U.S. if the Russian national confessed to participating in the 2016 hacks of Clinton campaign chief John Podesta's emails in July.
https://www.newsweek.com/fbi-investigation-cl...ack-607538
Yevgeniy Nikulin Indicted for Hacking LinkedIn, Dropbox and Formspring
A federal grand jury in Oakland, California, indicted Yevgeniy Aleksandrovich Nikulin 29, of Moscow, Russia, yesterday for obtaining information from computers, causing damage to computers, trafficking in access devices, aggravated identity theft and conspiracy, announced U.S. Attorney Brian J. Stretch for the Northern District of California and Special Agent in Charge John F. Bennett of the FBI.
https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/yevgeniy-nikul...formspring
Suspected Russian hacker extradited to US, faces cyber criminal charges
March 30, 2018 (His trial still has not started.)
An alleged Russian hacker suspected of stealing 117 million LinkedIn passwords in 2012 appeared in federal court in San Francisco Friday morning after being extradited to the United States following a protracted diplomatic struggle between the US and Russia.
Yevgeniy Nikulin, who arrived in the US overnight, faces cyber criminal charges including cyber intrusion and identity theft. Nikulin entered a not guilty plea to all charges. He declined to provide his name and age when asked by the judge, who then advised him of his right to remain silent, noting that he might already be aware of these rights.
The government told the judge that Nikulin poses a serious flight risk and said he is a Russian citizen who was extradited from the Czech Republic. Prosecutors said they have notified the Russian consulate in Houston of Nikulin's extradition and detention.
Nikulin was arrested by Czech police in Prague in 2016 after US authorities issued an international arrest warrant for him. A grand jury indictment filed in 2016 in California charged him with computer intrusion and aggravated identity theft, among other offenses.
According to the indictment, Nikulin managed to break into LinkedIn's computers in March 2012 because he stole the username and password of an employee who worked at the company's Mountain View, California, headquarters.
Nikulin denies all the charges.
The Nikulin case has further strained US-Russian relations. Russian authorities have objected to US efforts to extradite Russian nationals from third countries in connection with alleged hacking offenses. US authorities have filed extradition requests for Russian hackers arrested in Latvia, Spain and Greece.
THIS PROVES THAT THE FBI HAS NO PROOF THAT THE RUSSIANS HACKED THE EMAILS! THEY WERE SEARCHING FOR SOMEONE TO PIN IT ON!
https://www.cnn.com/2018/03/30/politics/yevge...index.html
https://www.newsweek.com/fbi-investigation-cl...ack-607538