Judge Over Surveillance Court, Flynn Case Once Rep
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A federal judge, who briefly presided over the Michael Flynn case, once represented former secretary of state and 2016 Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in a federal lawsuit.
In December 2009, a man by the name of Tony Curtis Barring filed a complaint against Clinton alleging malicious interference, meaning he claimed she intentionally damaged a relationship he had with a third party. She was represented by three attorneys, one being Rudolph Contreras, who now works as a federal District Court judge appointed by Barack Obama in 2012, and also as a judge on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court since May 2016.
This discovery is significant because Judge Contreras would have been on the bench at the time Flynn was being subjected to FBI monitoring conducted after an order was granted through the foreign intelligence court.
This raises questions whether the court’s decision to grant the surveillance warrant was influenced by Clinton or her campaign leading up to the 2016 general election, or if the court proceedings following the indictment was as well.
Contreras was recused from the case just after accepting a guilty plea from Flynn in 2017.
This revelation adds another piece to a puzzle that’s quickly coming together.
As reported yesterday by RiseGOP, a obscure document was discovered that provided hard evidence of a 1.5-year-long Democratic National Committee project lead by Eric Schmidt of Google, Marc Elas of Perkins Coie law firm, Debbie Wasserman Schultz, Donna Brazile, and others which resulted in a report that identified each by name.
The more evidence that comes to light, the clearer the picture becomes that a network of connected high-profile individuals in government and the private sector were hard at work against both Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders.
Click here https://www.dccourts.gov/superior-court/cases-online to search D.C. Superior Court records for the case files related to this story.
http://risegop.com/index.php/2018/11/09/judge...n-lawsuit/