July 19, 2018
MY CORNER by Boyd
Cathey
Hard Left attacks
Trump Supporters with Violence; NY Times Vicious Cartoon of Trump and Putin as “Gay
Lovers”; and Bill Browder, Poster-Boy for Fox News
Friends,
Several
short items make up MY CORNER today, and, as always, I will provide some
references for further reading or the complete item reprinted here.
(1)
First, back a week ago I came across a partial list, a catalogue if you will,
of SOME of the violent acts and physical threats that have been perpetrated
against “deplorables,” against folks who apparently support President Trump,
folks who hold traditional beliefs. The list I copy below includes just seventy
(70) such acts between March 1 and July 5—that is, four months. And these were
just the ones reported by the national press, which means that there were very
likely many other actions and threats by the far Left, which may have been perpetrated
locally and not reported by the national media.
As
you look over this list, let me ask this question: Are we not already in a real “civil war” of
sorts? Are not at least one-third of the
citizens of this country certifiably insane, people who accept a narrative that
advances a cultural Marxist transformation of what is left of the American
republic? And, in their revolutionary march, we are in their cross hairs, and
thus, must be suppressed, eliminated, and silenced.
Here is the list:
Rap Sheet: ***70*** Acts of Media-Approved Violence and Harassment Against Trump Supporters
by Jim Nolte
5 Jul 2018
When not calling Trump supporters “Nazis” as a means to dehumanize us, the establishment media like to whine about the lack of civility in American politics, even as they cover up, ignore, downplay, or straight-up approve of the wave of violence and public harassment we are seeing against supporters of President Trump.
It is open season on Trump
supporters, and the media is only fomenting, encouraging, excusing, and hoping
for more… The media are now openly calling Trump supporters “Nazis” and are blaming Trump for a mass murder
he had nothing to do with. This, of course, is a form of harassment
because it incites and justifies mob violence.
Here is the list, so far, and
remember that if any one of
these things happened to a Democrat, the media would use the story to blot out
the sun for weeks. But what we have when it comes to Trump supporters is a
media eager to normalize harassment and violence.
This list
will be updated as needed…
Please
email jnolte@breitbart.com with any updates or anything you think deserves to
be added to this list.
- July 5, 2018: Trump supporter wearing Make America Great Again hat allegedly assaulted in burger joint (video at link).
- July 3, 2018: Nebraska GOP office vandalized.
- July 2, 2018: Cher accuses ICE of “Gestapo tactics.”
- July 2, 2018: Man accused of threatening to kill Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) and his family.
- July 1, 2018: Washington Post reporter publicly calls on mobs to give Trump officials a “life sentence” of harassment.
- July 1, 2018: Man wearing MAGA hat refused service in restaurant.
- June 29, 2018: Media falsely blame Trump for murder of five journalists in Maryland.
- June 28, 2018: Journalist lies about Maryland mass-shooter being a Trump supporter.
- June 29, 2018: Hollywood actor calls on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) to be harassed at “every meal.”
- June 29, 2018: California man accused of threatening to kill FCC Chairman Ajit Pai’s children.
- June 28, 2018: Reuters editor says Trump has blood on his hands for murder of five journalists in Maryland. He still has a job.
- June 28, 2018: Singer John Legend praises and agrees with Rep. Maxine Waters for calling on mobs to publicly harass Trump officials out of public spaces like restaurants.
- June 28, 2018: Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) calls on “angry” Latinos to oust Trump.
- June 27, 2018: Media defend and champion Virginia restaurant owner who kicked White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders and her family out, and then reportedly harassed them as they ate at a nearby restaurant.
- June 26, 2018: Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-NH) blames President Trump for her intern yelling “F--k you!” at him through the halls of the U.S. Capitol. The intern was not fired.
- June 26, 2018: Comedienne Kathy Griffin attacks the Trump administration as “pro-Nazi.” Obviously, once you describe someone as a Nazi, you are calling for violence against them.
- June 26, 2018: Chicago bar refuses to serve Trump supporters.
- June 26, 2018: Singer John Legend calls on Trump officials to be harassed until our immigration policies are weakened.
- June 26, 2018: Late night comedians celebrate the harassment of Sarah Sanders and her family.
- June 25, 2018: Burned animal carcass left on Trump staffer’s porch.
- June 25, 2018: After refusing to serve Sarah Sanders and the family, we learn a restaurant owner then organized a mob to harass Sanders’ family at a nearby restaurant.
- June 25, 2018: Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) calls on mobs to confront Trump officials over immigration policies.
- June 25, 2018: CNN contributor attacks those on the right calling for civility.
- June 25, 2018: CNN’s Jake Tapper dismisses harassment of Sarah Sanders as a political ploy on Sander’s part.
- June 24, 2018: Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) publicly calls on mobs to “turn on” Trump officials, to “harass” them, ensure they “they won’t be able to go to a restaurant, they won’t be able to stop at a gas station, they’re not going to be able to shop at a department store.”
- June 23, 2018: Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi harassed, menaced, and reportedly spit at by left-wing protesters at movie theater.
- June 22, 2018: Sarah Sanders and her family booted out of restaurant by left-wing owner.
- June 22, 2016: Kirstjen Nielsen harassed by protesters outside her private home.
- June 22, 2018: Rep. Jackie Sperier (D-CA), compares border enforcement to Auschwitz.
- June 22, 2018: Left-wing activists vandalize billboard.
- June 22, 2018: On Morning Joe, Donny Deutsch smears Trump and his supporters as “Nazis.”
- June 21, 2018: Democrat state legislator in Pennsylvania greets Vice President Mike Pence with a “middle finger salute.”
- June 21, 2018: White House Senior Adviser Stephen Miller heckled and harassed at restaurant.
- June 21, 2018: Actor Adam Scott compares Tucker Carlson to a Nazi.
- Jun 20, 2018: Florida man accused of threatening to kill Rep. Brian Mast (R-FL), a U.S. combat veteran, and his children in a series of nearly 500 calls to his office.
- June 20, 2018: Actor Peter Fonda calls for a mob to kidnap President Trump’s 11-year-old son and throw him in a cage with pedophiles.
- June 20, 2018: Actor Peter Fonda calls for a mob to sexually humiliate and abuse Sarah Sanders and Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen.
- June 20, 2018: Nancy Sinatra praises Peter Fonda for his tweets.
- June 20, 2018: Documentary filmmaker Josh Fox praises Peter Fonda for his tweets.
- June 20, 2018: Arnold Schwarzenegger calls for politicians in favor of border security to be put in cages.
- June 19, 2018: Kirstjen Nielsen harassed out of restaurant.
- June 19, 2018: Democrat interns screams “Fuck you!” at Trump through the halls of the U.S. Capitol. She was not fired.
- June 19, 2018: New Yorker fact checker publicly (and falsely) accuses a disabled war veteran who works for ICE of being a Nazi.
- June 15, 2018: CNN analyst heckles and screams at Sarah Sanders.
- June 14, 2017: A Bernie Sanders supporter opens fire on a group of Republican congressman. Rep. Steve Scalise is shot and nearly dies.
- June 12, 2017: Wire creator David Simon calls on mobs to pick up a “brick” if Trump fires special counsel Robert Mueller.
- June 10, 2017: Left-wing terrorists with AntiFa hurl urine at woman protesting against Sharia.
- June 6, 2017: “Trump” is stabbed to death in front of cheering audience in Central Park
- May 30, 2017: Kathy Griffin beheads Trump.
- April 15, 2017: Left-wing terrorists with AntiFa assult Trump supporter with bike lock.
- March 12, 2017: Snoop Dogg “shoots” Trump in the head.
- March 7, 2017: CNN points what looks like a sniper scope at the Oval Office.
- February 14, 2017: Stephen Colbert puts White House adviser Stephen Miller’s head on a pike.
- February 2, 2017: Comedienne Sarah Silverman calls on the military to overthrow Trump.
- February 1, 2017: Left-wing terrorist group AntiFa assaults Trump supporters at Berkeley.
- January 21, 2017: Madonna fantasizes about blowing up the White House.
- January 20, 2017: Left-wing terrorist group Antifa riots over Trump’s inauguration.
- January 19, 2017: CNN fantasizes about Obama staying in power if Trump is assassinated.
- January 5, 2017: Left-wing thugs kidnap, beat, and torture an 18-year-old with schizophrenia while shouting “fuck Trump” and “fuck white people.”
- November 16, 2016: Left-wing thugs assault 15-year-old Trump supporter.
- November 14, 2016: Avengers director Joss Whedon says Trump “CANNOT” be allowed to serve out his term in office.
- November 10, 2016: Orange Is the New Black star Lea DeLaria threatens “to pick up a baseball bat and take out every f*cking republican and independent I see.”
- November 9, 2016: Marilyn Manson “kills” Trump in music video.
- October 16, 2016: Left-wing terrorists firebomb GOP headquarters in North Carolina.
- October 7, 2016: Robert De Niro says he wants to “punch” Trump in the face.
- August 19, 2016: Left-wing thugs attack Trump’s motorcade and his supporters.
- June 2, 2016: Left-wing thugs violently attack Trump supporters. One women was surrounded by a mob and pelted with raw eggs.
- March 14, 2016: CNN treats man who tried to tackle Trump as folk hero.
- March 12, 2016: Man tries to tackle Trump at campaign rally.
- March 1, 2016: Former Daily Show contributor Larry Wilmore “jokes” about killing Trump.
(2)
Perhaps you have heard about—or seen—the salacious cartoon produced by The New York Times that portrays
President Trump and President Vladimir Putin as gay lovers? A little history here: The Times is one of
the most over-the-top vocal journals in the nation in its vociferous support of
homosexual rights; it is extravagant in presenting all the assorted
“grievances” and most outlandish demands of the LGBTQ lobby; for the Times, to
even insinuate the mildest critique of that lobby or its actions is an
“incitement to hate” and a “vile example of homophobia,” that should be banned
and punished. Yet, here is the Times employing “gayness” stereotypically and
despectively to attack Donald Trump, and imply that he has a secret homosexual
lust for Vladimir Putin, which, of course, is meant to be considered
negatively.
Where
is the powerful professional gay lobby to denounce this caricature? Where are
the prominent Hollywood voices who come on our television sets to decry this
anti-gay exercise?
Deafening
silence, that’s it.
It
seems as long as the target is President Trump (or some traditionalist believer
in our Western Christian heritage) everything
is fair game. The utter ideological hypocrisy, the putrid and rank praxis is,
to put it mildly, nauseatingly disgusting, and should cause any rational person to reject the Times and
denounce it. But, of course, that won’t
happen with the Mainstream Media, for whom The
New York Times remains the “newspaper of record.” I would suggest its motto, “All the news
that’s fit to print,” should be changed to: “All the cultural Marxism that we
can fit.”
Here’s the disgusting Times cartoon (if you can
stomach it):
(3)
Lastly, I return to a topic about which I’ve written before: the
very visible incline of Fox News to a much harder Left position in its news and
commentary.
Except
for Tucker Carlson, this trend has been palpably apparent now for some time.
And I will cite here just one fascinating example: the case of international
financier Bill Browder who has appeared four times during the past week on Fox
(mostly on the 7 p.m. Martha McCallum “news” program—along with support from
hard core Marxist Michael Isikoff, who co-authored with another hard core
ultra-Leftist, David Corn, the volume, Russian
Roulette, which essentially implies that Trump is a Russian puppet).
Who
is Bill Browder? He is the grandson of Earl Felix Browder, the head of the
Communist Party in the United State during the crucial years—the 1930s and
early 1940s, a firm supporter of the Soviets, and the author of the volume The Jewish People and the War (1940)
taking the Soviet line of “friendship” with the Nazis (after the Soviets had
invaded the eastern half of Poland in 1939, while the Germans had taken the
western half), that is, before the Germans ended that pact and attacked the
USSR.
Grandson Bill was chairman of Hermitage Capital Management, an international financial
investment corporation with a very shady history.
Bill
Browder complains bitterly that “Putin is out to get him,” and that his
attorney, Sergei Magnitsky, was “assassinated” by Putin, and, in what may be
one of the more egregious examples of boosted self-importance, that “he is
Putin’s number one enemy” in the world.
And
Fox News has bought into this tendentious narrative full blast…Over the years,
counting his most recent appearances on Fox in one of those fascinating
conjunctions timed to coincide with the Helsinki Summit, he’s been featured more
than half a dozen times. And each time he’s not been challenged, not been
closely questioned at all by the network which claims to be “fair &
balanced.”
Thus,
he repeats the mantra that: “Putin is a thug,” “Putin is an assassin,” “Putin
is the new Hitler,” “Putin had Magnitsky killed” (something about which Browder
managed to convince an utterly gullible Deep State-dominated Congress, which
then passed legislation to punish the Russians).
The
facts are far different than the ideological, Russophobic line that Browder
spouts. Rather, as an international businessman he attempted successfully to
avoid taxes paid to Russia and the United States. He was found guilty by a
Russian court, and there have been a dozen reputable reports offering details
of this—NONE of which Fox cared to report. Not one. [I print three of them
below.]
And
the reason for that? As I have written in previous columns and in published
essays: Rupert Murdoch’s media empire is just as zealously Russophobic as the
“farther Left.” Post-Communist Russia—a nationalist Russia—a Russia that is
embracing its Christian past and heritage—a Russia that has doubts about the
value of American-style “liberal democracy” and our consumerist-driven culture—a
Russia that fails to embrace the secular humanist template of “human rights”—a
Russia that refuses to bow to and accept globalist control of its economy—THAT
kind of Russia is unacceptable to the Neoconservatives on Fox. And, in the
not-so-secret recesses of their thoughts and remote memories, there is the
recollection that it was pre-Communist Russia, that is, the Russia under the
tsars when Christianity was the religion of the state and nationalism was dominant,
that their ancestors largely from the Pale of Settlement for Russian Jews
suffered persecution. A careful reading of the various histories and accounts
demonstrate this fully—even if Fox will not admit it, and even if globalist
financial bandit Bill Browder won’t say it.
I
offer here, in this connection, researched pieces by Robert Parry and by Philip
Giraldi, who have done their homework…but have NOT been invited on “unfair
& and unbalanced” Fox (when it comes to such questions) to confront
Browder….
A Blacklisted Film and the New Cold War
https://consortiumnews.com/2017/08/02/a-blacklisted-film-and-the-new-cold-war/
August 2, 2017
Special Report: As Congress still swoons over the
anti-Kremlin Magnitsky narrative, Western political and media leaders refuse to
let their people view a documentary that debunks the fable, reports Robert
Parry.
By Robert Parry
Why
is the U.S. mainstream media so frightened of a documentary that debunks the
beloved story of how “lawyer” Sergei Magnitsky uncovered massive Russian
government corruption and died as a result? If the documentary is as flawed as
its critics claim, why won’t they let it be shown to the American public, then
lay out its supposed errors, and use it as a case study of how such fakery
works?
Instead
we – in the land of the free, home of the brave – are protected from seeing
this documentary produced by filmmaker Andrei Nekrasov who was known as a
critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin but who in this instance found the
West’s widely accepted Magnitsky storyline to be a fraud.
Instead,
last week, Senate Judiciary Committee members sat in rapt attention as
hedge-fund operator William Browder wowed them with a reprise of his Magnitsky
tale and suggested that people who have challenged the narrative and those who
dared air the documentary one time at Washington’s Newseum last year should be
prosecuted for violating the Foreign Agent Registration Act (FARA).
It
appears that Official Washington’s anti-Russia hysteria has reached such
proportions that old-time notions about hearing both sides of a story or
testing out truth in the marketplace of ideas must be cast aside. The new
political/media paradigm is to shield the American people from information that
contradicts the prevailing narratives, all the better to get them to line up
behind Those Who Know Best.
Nekrasov’s
powerful deconstruction of the Magnitsky myth – and the film’s subsequent
blacklisting throughout the “free world” – recall other instances in which the
West’s propaganda lines don’t stand up to scrutiny, so censorship and ad
hominem attacks become the weapons of choice to defend “perception management” narratives in geopolitical hot spots such as Iraq
(2002-03), Libya (2011), Syria (2011 to the present), and Ukraine (2013 to the
present).
But
the Magnitsky myth has a special place as the seminal fabrication of the
dangerous New Cold War between the nuclear-armed West and nuclear-armed Russia.
In
the United States, Russia-bashing in The New York Times and other “liberal
media” also has merged with the visceral hatred of President Trump, causing all
normal journalistic standards to be jettisoned.
A
Call for Prosecutions
Browder,
the American-born co-founder of Hermitage Capital Management who is now a
British citizen, raised the stakes even more when he testified that the people involved in arranging a one-time
showing of Nekrasov’s documentary, “The Magnitsky Act: Behind the Scenes,” at
the Newseum should be held accountable under FARA, which has penalties ranging
up to five years in prison.
Browder
testified:
“As part of [Russian lawyer Natalie]
Veselnitskaya’s lobbying, a former Wall Street Journal reporter, Chris Cooper of
the Potomac Group, was hired to organize the Washington, D.C.-based premiere of
a fake documentary about Sergei Magnitsky and myself. This was one the best
examples of Putin’s propaganda.
“They hired Howard Schweitzer of Cozzen O’Connor
Public Strategies and former Congressman Ronald Dellums to lobby members of
Congress on Capitol Hill to repeal the Magnitsky Act and to remove Sergei’s
name from the Global Magnitsky bill. On June 13, 2016, they funded a major
event at the Newseum to show their fake documentary, inviting representatives
of Congress and the State Department to attend.
“While they were conducting these operations in
Washington, D.C., at no time did they indicate that they were acting on behalf
of Russian government interests, nor did they file disclosures under the
Foreign Agent Registration Act. United States law is very explicit that those
acting on behalf of foreign governments and their interests must register under
FARA so that there is transparency about their interests and their motives.
“Since none of these people registered, my firm
wrote to the Department of Justice in July 2016 and presented the facts. I hope
that my story will help you understand the methods of Russian operatives in
Washington and how they use U.S. enablers to achieve major foreign policy goals
without disclosing those interests.”
Browder’s
Version
While
he loosely accused a number of Americans of felonies, Browder continued to
claim that Magnitsky was a crusading “lawyer” who uncovered a $230 million
tax-fraud scheme carried out ostensibly by Browder’s companies but, which,
according to Browder’s account, was really engineered by corrupt Russian police
officers who then arrested Magnitsky and later were responsible for his death
in a Russian jail.
Browder’s
narrative has received a credulous hearing by Western politicians and media
already inclined to think the worst of Putin’s Russia and willing to treat
Browder’s claims as true without serious examination. However, beyond the
self-serving nature of Browder’s tale, there are many holes in the story,
including whether Magnitsky was really a principled lawyer or instead a
complicit accountant.
According
to Browder’s own biographical
description of
Magnitsky, he received his education at the Plekhanov Institute in Moscow, a
reference to Plekhanov Russian University of Economics, a school for finance
and business, not a law school.
Nevertheless,
the West’s mainstream media – relying on
the word of Browder – has accepted Magnitsky’s standing as a “lawyer,”
which apparently fits better in the narrative of Magnitsky as a crusading
corruption fighter rather than a potential co-conspirator with Browder in a
complex fraud, as the Russian government has alleged.
Magnitsky’s
mother also has described her son as an accountant, although telling Nekrasov
in the documentary “he wasn’t just an accountant; he was interested in lots of
things.” In the film, the “lawyer” claim is also disputed by a female co-worker
who knew Magnitsky well. “He wasn’t a lawyer,” she said.
In
other words, on this high-profile claim repeated by Browder again and again, it
appears that presenting Magnitsky as a “lawyer” is a convenient falsehood that
buttresses the Magnitsky myth, which Browder constructed after Magnitsky’s
death from heart failure while in pre-trial detention.
But
the Magnitsky myth took off in 2012 when Browder sold his tale to neocon
Senators Ben Cardin, D-Maryland, and John McCain, R-Arizona, who threw their
political weight behind a bipartisan drive in Congress leading to the passage
of the Magnitsky sanctions act, the opening shot in the New Cold War.
A
Planned Docudrama
Browder’s
dramatic story also attracted the attention of Russian filmmaker Andrei
Nekrasov, a well-known critic of Putin from previous films. Nekrasov set out initially to produce a docudrama that
would share Browder’s good-vs.-evil narrative to a wider public.
Nekrasov
devotes the first half hour of the film to allowing Browder to give his
Magnitsky account illustrated by scenes from Nekrasov’s planned docudrama. In
other words, the viewer gets to see a highly sympathetic portrayal of Browder
and Magnitsky as supposedly corrupt Russian authorities bring charges of tax
fraud against them.
However,
Nekrasov’s documentary project takes an unexpected turn when his research turns up numerous contradictions
to Browder’s storyline, which begins to look more and more like a corporate
cover up story. For instance, Magnitsky’s mother blames the negligence of
prison doctors for her son’s death rather than a beating by prison guards as
Browder had pitched to Western audiences.
Nekrasov
also discovered that a woman who had worked in Browder’s company blew the
whistle before Magnitsky talked to police and that Magnitsky’s original
interview with authorities was as a suspect,
not a whistleblower. Also contradicting Browder’s claims, Nekrasov notes
that Magnitsky doesn’t even mention the names of the police officers in a key
statement to authorities.
When
one of the Browder-accused police officers, Pavel Karpov, filed a libel suit
against Browder in London, the case was dismissed on technical grounds because
Karpov had no reputation in Great Britain to slander. But the judge was sympathetic to the substance of Karpov’s complaint.
Browder
claimed vindication before adding an ironic protest given his successful
campaign to prevent Americans and Europeans from seeing Nekrasov’s documentary.
“These
people tried to shut us up; they tried to stifle our freedom of expression,”
Browder complained. “[Karpov] had the audacity to come here and sue us, paying
high-priced libel lawyers to come and terrorize us in the U.K.”
The
‘Kremlin Stooge’ Slur
A
pro-Browder account published
at the Daily Beast on July 25 – attacking Nekrasov and his documentary – is
entitled “How an Anti-Putin Filmmaker Became a Kremlin Stooge,” a common slur
used in the West to discredit and silence anyone who dares question today’s
Russia-hating groupthink.
The
article by Katie Zavadski accuses Nekrasov of being in the tank for the Kremlin
and declares that “The movie is so flattering to the Russian narrative that
Pavel Karpov — one of the police officers accused of being responsible for
Magnitsky’s death — plays himself.”
But that’s not true.
In fact, there is a scene in the documentary in which Nekrasov invites the
actor who plays Karpov in the docudrama segment to sit in on an interview with
the real Karpov. There’s even a clumsy moment when the actor and police officer
bump into a microphone as they shake hands, but Zavadski’s falsehood would not
be apparent unless you had somehow gotten access to the documentary, which has
been effectively banned in the West.
In
the documentary, Karpov, the police officer, accuses Browder of lying about him
and specifically contests the claim that he (Karpov) used his supposedly
ill-gotten gains to buy an expensive apartment in Moscow. Karpov came to the
interview with documents showing that the flat was pre-paid in 2004-05, well
before the alleged hijacking of Browder’s firms.
Karpov
added wistfully that he had to sell the apartment to pay for his failed legal
challenge in London, which he said he undertook in an effort to clear his name.
“Honor costs a lot sometimes,” the police officer said.
Karpov
also explained that the investigations of
Browder’s tax fraud started well before the Magnitsky controversy, with an
examination of a Browder company in 2004.
“Once
we opened the investigation, a campaign in defense of an investor started,”
Karpov said. “Having made billions here, Browder forgot to tell how he did it.
So it suits him to pose as a victim. … Browder and company are lying blatantly
and constantly.”
However,
since virtually no one in the West has seen this interview, you can’t make your
own judgment as to whether Karpov is credible or not.
A
Painful Recognition
Yet,
in reviewing the case documents and noting Browder’s inaccurate claims about
the chronology, Nekrasov finds his own doubts growing. He discovers that
European officials simply accepted Browder’s translations of Russian documents,
rather than checking them independently. A similar lack of skepticism prevailed
in the United States.
In
other words, a kind of trans-Atlantic groupthink took hold with clear political
benefits for those who went along and almost no one willing to risk the
accusation of being a “Kremlin stooge” by showing doubt.
As
the documentary proceeds, Browder starts avoiding Nekrasov and his more pointed
questions. Finally, Nekrasov hesitantly confronts the hedge-fund executive at a
party for Browder’s book, Red
Notice, about the Magnitsky case.
The
easygoing Browder of the early part of the documentary — as he lays out his
seamless narrative without challenge — is gone; instead, a defensive and angry
Browder appears.
“It’s
bs,” Browder says when told that his presentations of the documents are false.
But
Nekrasov continues to find more contradictions and discrepancies. He discovers
evidence that Browder’s web site eliminated an earlier chronology that showed
that in April 2008, a 70-year-old woman named Rimma Starova, who had served as
a figurehead executive for Browder’s companies, reported the theft of state
funds.
Nekrasov
then shows how Browder’s narrative was changed to introduce Magnitsky as the
“whistleblower” months later, although he was then described as an “analyst,”
not yet a “lawyer.”
As
Browder’s story continues to unravel, the evidence suggests that Magnitsky was an
accountant implicated in manipulating the books, not a crusading lawyer risking
everything for the truth.
A
Heated Confrontation
In
the documentary, Nekrasov struggles with what to do next, given Browder’s
financial and political clout. Finally securing another interview, Nekrasov
confronts Browder with the core contradictions of his story. Incensed, the
hedge-fund executive rises up and threatens the filmmaker.
“I’d be very careful going out and trying to
do a whole sort of thing about Sergei [Magnitsky] not being the whistleblower,
it won’t do well for your credibility on this show,” Browder said. “This is
sort of the subtle FSB version,” suggesting that Nekrasov was just fronting for
the Russian intelligence service.
In
the pro-Browder account published
at the Daily Beast on July 25, Browder described how he put down Nekrasov by
telling him, “it sounds like you’re part of the FSB. … Those are FSB
questions.”
But
that phrasing is not what he actually says in the documentary, raising further
questions about whether the Daily Beast reporter actually watched the film or
simply accepted Browder’s account of it. (I posed that question to the Daily
Beast’s Katie Zavadski by email, but have not gotten a reply.)
The
documentary also includes devastating scenes from depositions of a sullen and
uncooperative Browder and a U.S. government investigator, who acknowledges
relying on Browder’s narrative and documents in a related case against Russian
businesses.
In
an April 15, 2015 deposition of Browder, he, in turn, describes relying on
reports from journalists to “connect the dots,” including the Organized Crime and
Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), which is funded by the U.S. government and
financial speculator George Soros. Browder said the reporters “worked
with our team.”
While
taking money from the U.S. Agency for International Development and Soros, the
OCCRP also targeted Ukraine’s freely elected President Viktor Yanukovych with
accusations of corruption prior to the Feb. 22, 2014 coup that ousted
Yanukovych, an overthrow that was engineered by the U.S. State Department and
escalated the New Cold War with Russia.
OCCRP
played a key role, too, in the so-called “Panama Papers,” purloined documents
from a Panamanian law firm that were used to develop attack lines against
Russian President Vladimir Putin although his name never appeared in the
documents.
After
examining the money-movement charts published by OCCRP about the Magnitsky
case, Nekrasov notes that the figures don’t add up and wonders how journalists
could “peddle these wooly maths.” He also observed that OCCRP’s Panama Papers
linkage of Magnitsky’s $230 million fraud and payments to an ally of Putin made no sense because the dates of the
Panama Papers transactions preceded the dates of the alleged Magnitsky fraud.
The
Power of Myth
Nekrasov
suggests that the power of Browder’s convoluted story rested, in part, on a
Hollywood perception of Moscow as a place where evil Russians lurk around every
corner and any allegation against “corrupt” officials is believed. The
Magnitsky tale “was like a film script about Russia written for the Western
audience,” Nekrasov says.
But
the Browder’s narrative also served a strong geopolitical interest to demonize
Russia at the dawn of the New Cold War.
In
the documentary’s conclusion, Nekrasov sums up what he had discovered: “A
murdered hero as an alibi for living suspects.” He then ponders the danger to
democracy: “So do we allow graft and greed to hide behind a political sermon?
Will democracy survive if human rights — its moral high ground — is used to
protect selfish interests?”
But
Americans and Europeans are being spared the discomfort of having to answer
that question or to question their representatives about the failure to
skeptically examine this case that has pushed the planet on a course toward a
possible nuclear war.
Instead,
the mainstream Western media has hurled insults at Nekrasov even as his
documentary is blocked from any significant public viewing.
Despite
Browder’s professed concern about the London libel case that he claimed was an
attempt “to stifle our freedom of expression,” he has set his lawyers on anyone
who might be thinking about showing Nekrasov’s documentary to the public.
The
documentary was set for a premiere at the European Parliament in Brussels in
April 2016, but at the last moment – faced with Browder’s legal threats – the
parliamentarians pulled the plug. Nekrasov encountered similar resistance in
the United States. There were hopes to show the documentary to members of
Congress but the offer was rebuffed. Instead a room was rented at the Newseum
near Capitol Hill.
Browder’s
lawyers then tried to strong arm the Newseum, but its officials responded that
they were only renting out a room and that they had allowed other controversial
presentations in the past.
“We’re
not going to allow them not to show the film,” said Scott Williams, the
Newseum’s chief operating officer. “We often have people renting for events
that other people would love not to have happen.”
In
an article about the controversy in June 2016, The New York Times added that
“A screening at the Newseum is especially controversial because it could
attract lawmakers or their aides.”
One-Time
Showing
So,
Nekrasov’s documentary got a one-time showing with a follow-up discussion
moderated by journalist Seymour Hersh. However, except for that audience, the
public of the United States and Europe has been essentially shielded from the
documentary’s discoveries, all the better for the Magnitsky myth to retain its
power as a seminal propaganda moment of the New Cold War.
After
the Newseum presentation, a Washington Post editorial branded Nekrasov’s documentary Russian “agit-prop”
and sought to discredit Nekrasov without addressing his many documented
examples of Browder’s misrepresenting both big and small facts in the case.
Instead,
the Post accused Nekrasov of using “facts highly selectively” and insinuated
that he was merely a pawn in the Kremlin’s “campaign to discredit
Mr. Browder and the Magnitsky Act.”
Like
the recent Daily Beast story, which
falsely claimed that Nekrasov let the Russian police officer Karpov play
himself, the Post misrepresented the structure of the film by noting that it
mixed fictional scenes with real-life interviews and action, a point that was
technically true but willfully misleading because the fictional scenes were
from Nekrasov’s original idea for a docudrama that he shows as part of
explaining his evolution from a believer in Browder’s self-exculpatory story to
a skeptic.
But
the Post’s deception – like the Daily Beast’s falsehood – is something that
almost no American would realize because almost no one has gotten to see the
film.
The
Post’s editorial gloated: “The film won’t grab a wide audience, but it offers
yet another example of the Kremlin’s increasingly sophisticated efforts to
spread its illiberal values and mind-set abroad. In the European Parliament and
on French and German television networks, showings were put off recently after
questions were raised about the accuracy of the film, including by Magnitsky’s
family.
“We
don’t worry that Mr. Nekrasov’s film was screened here, in an open
society. But it is important that such slick spin be fully exposed for its
twisted story and sly deceptions.”
The
Post’s arrogant editorial had the feel of something you might read in a totalitarian society where the public only hears about dissent when the
Official Organs of the State denounce some almost unknown person for saying
something that almost no one heard.
It
is also unlikely that Americans and Europeans will get a chance to view this
blacklisted documentary in the future. In an email exchange, the film’s
Norwegian producer Torstein Grude told me that “We have been unsuccessful in
releasing the film to TV so far. ZDF/Arte [a major European network] pulled it
from transmission a few days before it was supposed to be aired and the other
broadcasters seem scared as a result. There have been threats. Netflix has
declined to take it. …
“The
film has no other release at the moment. Distributors are scared by Browder’s
legal threats. All involved financiers, distributors, producers received thick
stacks of legal documents (300+ pages) threatening lawsuits should the film be
released.” [Grude sent me a password so I could view the documentary on Vimeo.]
The
blackout continues even though the Magnitsky issue and Nekrasov’s documentary
have become elements in the recent controversy over a meeting between a Russian
lawyer and Donald Trump Jr. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “How Russia-gate Met the Magnitsky Myth.”]
So
much for the West’s vaunted belief in freedom of expression and the democratic
goal of encouraging freewheeling debates about issues of great public
importance. And, so much for the Post’s empty rhetoric about our “open
society.”
Investigative
reporter Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated
Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest book, America’s Stolen Narrative, either in print here or as an e-book (from Amazon andbarnesandnoble.com).
=========================================================================================
Meet the Corrupt Billionaire Who Has Brought About a New Cold War
One has to ask why there is a crisis in US-Russia relations
since Washington and Moscow have much more in common than not, to include
confronting international terrorism, stabilizing Syria and other parts of the
world that are in turmoil, and preventing the proliferation of nuclear weapons.
In spite of all that, the US and Russia are currently locked in a tit-for-tat unfriendly
relationship somewhat reminiscent of the Cold War.
Apart from search for a scapegoat to explain the Hillary Clinton
defeat, how did it happen? Israel Shamir, a keen observer of the American-Russian relationship, and celebrated
American journalist Robert Parry both think that one man deserves much of the credit for the new Cold
War and that man is William Browder, a hedge fund operator who made his fortune
in the corrupt 1990s world of Russian commodities trading.
Browder is also symptomatic of why the United States government
is so poorly informed about international developments as he is the source of
much of the Congressional “expert testimony” contributing to the current
impasse. He has somehow emerged as a trusted source in spite of the fact that
he has self-interest in cultivating a certain outcome. Also ignored is his
renunciation of American citizenship in 1998, reportedly to avoid taxes. He is
now a British citizen.
Browder is notoriously the man behind the 2012 Magnitsky Act,
which exploited Congressional willingness to demonize Russia and has done so
much to poison relations between Washington and Moscow. The Act sanctioned
individual Russian officials, which Moscow has rightly seen as unwarranted
interference in the operation of its judicial system.
Browder, a media favorite who self-promotes as “Putin’s enemy
#1,” portrays himself as a selfless human rights advocate, but is he? He has
used his fortune to threaten lawsuits for anyone who challenges his version of
events, effectively silencing many critics. He claims that his accountant
Sergei Magnitsky was a crusading "lawyer" who discovered a $230
million tax-fraud scheme that involved the Browder business interest Hermitage
Capital but was, in fact, engineered by corrupt Russian police officers who
arrested Magnitsky and enabled his death in a Russian jail.
Many have been skeptical of the Browder narrative, suspecting
that the fraud was in fact concocted by Browder and his accountant Magnitsky. A
Russian court recently supported that alternative narrative, ruling in late December that
Browder had deliberately bankrupted his company and engaged in tax evasion. He
was sentenced to nine years prison in absentia.
William Browder is again in the news recently in connection with
testimony related to Russiagate. On December 16th Senator Diane Feinstein
of the Senate Judiciary Committee released the transcript of the testimony provided by Glenn Simpson, founder of
Fusion GPS. According to James Carden, Browder was mentioned 50 times, but the repeated citations
apparently did not merit inclusion in media coverage of the story by the New
York Times, Washington Post and Politico.
Fusion GPS, which was involved in the research producing the
Steele Dossier used to discredit Donald Trump, was also retained to provide
investigative services relating to a lawsuit in New York City involving a
Russian company called Prevezon. As information provided by Browder was the
basis of the lawsuit, his company and business practices while in Russia became
part of the investigation. Simmons maintained that Browder proved to be
somewhat evasive and his accounts of his activities were inconsistent. He
claimed never to visit the United States and not own property or do business
there, all of which were untrue, to include his ownership through a shell
company of a $10 million house in Aspen Colorado. He repeatedly ran away, literally, from attempts to subpoena him so he would have to testify
under oath.
Per Simmons, in Russia, Browder used shell companies locally and
also worldwide to avoid taxes and conceal ownership, suggesting that he was
likely one of many corrupt businessmen operating in what was a wild west
business environment. My question is, “Why was such a man granted credibility
and allowed a free run to poison the vitally important US-Russia relationship?”
The answer might be follow the money. Israel Shamir reports that Browder was a major contributor to Senator Ben Cardin of
Maryland, who was the major force behind the Magnitsky Act.
========================================================================
The Magnitsky
Hoax?
Who stole all the money?
PHILIP GIRALDI • JUNE 28, 2016
Sergei Magnitsky was a Russian
lawyer hired by an Anglo-American investment fund operating in Moscow to
investigate the apparent diversion of as much as $230 million in taxes due to
the government. He became a whistleblower after discovering that the money had
been stolen by the police, organized crime figures and other government
officials. After he went to the authorities to complain he was unjustly
imprisoned for eleven months. When he refused to recant he was both beaten and
denied medical treatment to coerce him into cooperating, resulting in his death
in jail at age 37 in November 2009. He has become something of a hero for those
who have decried official corruption in Russia.
The Magnitsky case is of
particular importance because both the European Union and the United States
have initiated sanctions against the Russian officials who were allegedly
involved. In the Magnitsky Act, sponsored by Russia-phobic Senator Ben Cardin
and signed by President Barack Obama in 2012, the U.S. asserted its willingness
to punish foreign governments for violations of human rights. Russia reacted
angrily, noting that the actions taken by its government internally, notably
the operation of its judiciary, were being subjected to outside interference.
It reciprocated with sanctions against U.S. officials as well as by increasing
pressure on foreign non-governmental pro-democracy groups operating in Russia.
Tension between Moscow and Washington increased considerably as a result and
Congress will likely soon approve a so-called Global
Magnitsky Act as part of the current defense appropriation bill. It expands the
use of sanctions and other punitive measures against regimes guilty of
egregious human rights abuses though it is unlikely to be applied to U.S.
friends like Saudi Arabia and Israel. It is also sponsored by Senator Ben
Cardin and is clearly intended to intimidate Russia.
The tit-for-tat that has
severely damaged relations with Russia is based on the standard narrative
embraced by many regarding who Magnitsky was and what he did, but is it true? I
had the privilege of attending the first by invitation only screening of a documentary “The Magnitsky Act: Behind the
Scenes,” produced by Russian filmmaker Andrei Nekrasov. The
documentary had been blocked in Europe through lawsuits filed by some of the
parties linked to the prevailing narrative but the Newseum in
Washington eventually proved willing to
permit rental of a viewing room in spite of threats coming from the same
individuals to sue to stop the showing.
Nekrasov by his own account had
intended to do a documentary honoring Magnitsky and his employers as champions
for human rights within an increasing fragile Russian democracy. He had
previously produced documentaries highly critical of Russian actions in
Chechnya, Georgia and Ukraine, and also regarding the assassinations of Russian
dissident Alexander Litvinenko in London as well as of journalist Anna
Politkovskaya in Moscow. He has been critical of Vladimir Putin personally and
was not regarded as someone who was friendly to the regime, quite the contrary.
Some of his work has been banned in
Russia.
After his documentary was
completed using actors to play the various real-life personalities involved and
was being edited Nekrasov returned to some issues that had come up during the
interviews made during the filming. The documentary records how he sought
clarification of what he was reading and hearing but one question inevitably
led to another.
The documentary began with the
full participation of American born UK citizen William Browder, who virtually
served as narrator for the first section that portrayed the widely accepted
story on Magnitsky. Browder portrays himself as a human rights campaigner
dedicated to promoting the legacy of Sergei Magnitsky, but he is inevitably
much more complicated than that. The grandson of Earl Browder the former
General Secretary of the American Communist Party, William Browder studied economics at the
University of Chicago, and obtained an MBA from Stanford.
From the beginning, Browder
concentrated on Eastern Europe, which was beginning to open up to the west. In
1989 he took a position at highly respected Boston Consulting Group dealing
with reviving failing Polish socialist enterprises. He then worked as an
Eastern Europe analyst for Robert Maxwell, the unsavory British press magnate
and Mossad spy, before joining the Russia team at Wall Street’s Salomon
Brothers in 1992.
He left Salomons in 1996 and
partnered with the controversial Edmond Safra, the Lebanese-Brazilian-Jewish
banker who died in a mysterious fire in 1999, to set up Hermitage Capital
Management Fund. Hermitage is registered in tax havens Guernsey and the Cayman
Islands. It is a hedge fund that was focused on “investing” in Russia, taking
advantage initially of the loans-for-shares scheme
under Boris Yeltsin, and then continuing to profit greatly during the early
years of Vladimir Putin’s ascendancy. By 2005 Hermitage was the largest foreign
investor in Russia.
Browder had renounced his U.S.
citizenship in 1997 and became a British citizen apparently to avoid American
taxes, which are levied on worldwide income. In his book Red Notice: A True Story of
High Finance, Murder and One Man’s Fight for Justice he
depicts himself as an honest and honorable Western businessman attempting to
function in a corrupt Russian business world. That may or may not be true, but
the loans-for-shares scheme that made him his initial fortune has been
correctly characterized as the epitome of corruption, an arrangement whereby
foreign investors worked with local oligarchs to strip the former Soviet
economy of its assets paying pennies on each dollar of value. Along the way,
Browder was reportedly involved in making
false representations on official documents and bribery.
As a consequence of what came
to be known as the Magnitsky scandal, Browder was eventually charged by the
Russian authorities for fraud and tax evasion. He was banned from re-entering
Russia in 2005, even before Magnitsky died, and began to withdraw his assets
from the country. Three companies controlled by Hermitage were eventually
seized by the authorities, though it is not clear if any assets remained in Russia.
Browder himself was convicted of tax evasion in absentia in 2013 and sentenced
to nine years in prison.
Browder has assiduously, and
mostly successfully, made his case that
he and Magnitsky have been the victims of Russian corruption both during and
since that time, though there have been skeptics regarding
many details of his personal narrative. He has been able to sell his tale to
leading American politicians like Senators John McCain, Ben Cardin and
ex-Senator Joe Lieberman, always receptive when criticizing Russia, as well as
to a number of European parliamentarians and media outlets. But there is,
inevitably, another side to the story, something quite different, which Andrei
Nekrasov presents to the viewer.
Nekrasov has discovered what he
believes to be holes in the narrative that has been carefully constructed and
nurtured by Browder. He provides documents and also an interview with
Magnitsky’s mother maintaining that there is no clear evidence that he was
beaten or tortured and that he died instead due to the failure to provide him
with medicine while in prison or treatment shortly after he had a heart attack.
A subsequent investigation ordered
by then Russian President Dimitri Medvedev in 2011 confirmed that Magnitsky had
not received medical treatment, contributing to this death, but could not
confirm that he had been beaten even though there was suspicion that that might
have been the case.
Nekrasov also claims that much
of the case against the Russian authorities is derived from English language
translations of relevant documents provided by Browder himself. The actual
documents sometimes say something quite different. Magnitsky is referred to as
an accountant, not a lawyer, which would make sense as a document of his
deposition is apparently part of a criminal investigation of possible tax
fraud, meaning that he was no whistleblower and was instead a suspected
criminal.
Other discrepancies cited by
Nekrasov include documents demonstrating that Magnitsky did not file any
complaint about police and other government officials who were subsequently
cited by Browder as participants in the plot, that the documents allegedly
stolen from Magnitsky to enable the plotters to transfer possession of three
Hermitage controlled companies were irrelevant to how the companies eventually
were transferred and that someone else employed by Hermitage other than
Magnitsky actually initiated investigation of the fraud.
In conclusion, Nekrasov
believes there was indeed a huge fraud related to Russian taxes but that it was
not carried out by corrupt officials. Instead, it was deliberately ordered and
engineered by Browder with Magnitsky, the accountant, personally developing and
implementing the scheme used to carry out the deception.
To be sure, Browder and his
international legal team have presented documents in the case that contradict
much of what Nekrasov has presented in his film. But in my experience as an
intelligence officer I have learned that documents are easily forged, altered,
or destroyed so considerable care must be exercised in discovering the
provenance and authenticity of the evidence being provided. It is not clear
that that has been the case. It might be that Browder and Magnitsky have been
the victims of a corrupt and venal state, but it just might be the other way around.
In my experience perceived wisdom on any given subject usually turns out to be
incorrect.
Given the adversarial positions
staked out, either Browder or Nekrasov is essentially right, though one should
not rule out a combination of greater or lesser malfeasance coming from both
sides. But certainly Browder should be confronted more intensively on the
nature of his business activities while in Russia and not given a free pass
because he is saying things about Russia and Putin that fit neatly into a Washington
establishment profile. As soon as folks named McCain, Cardin and Lieberman jump
on a cause it should be time to step back a bit and reflect on what the
consequences of proposed action might be.
One should ask why anyone who
has a great deal to gain by having a certain narrative accepted should be
completely and unquestionably trusted, the venerable Cui bono?standard.
And then there is a certain evasiveness on the part of Browder. The film shows
him huffing and puffing to explain himself at times and he has avoided being served with
subpoenas on allegations connected to the Magnitsky fraud that are making their
way through American courts. In one case he can be seen on YouTube running away from a server, somewhat
unusual behavior if he has nothing to hide.
A number of Congressmen and
staffers were invited to the showing of the Nekrasov documentary at the Newseum but
it is not clear if any of them actually bothered to attend, demonstrating once
again how America’s legislature operates inside a bubble of willful ignorance
of its own making. Nor was the event reported in the local “newspaper of
record” the Washington Post, which has been consistently
hostile to Russia on its editorial and news pages.
A serious effort that a friend
of mine described as “hell breaking loose” was also made to disrupt the
question and answer session that followed the viewing of the film, with a
handful of clearly coordinated hecklers interrupting and making it impossible for
others to speak. The organized intruders, who may have gained entry using
invitations that were sent to congressmen, suggested that someone at least
considers this game being played out to have very high stakes.
The point is that neither
Nekrasov nor Browder should be taken at their word. Either or both might be
lying and the motivation to make mischief is very high if even a portion of the
stolen $230 million is still floating around and available. And by the same
measure, no Congressman or even the President should trust the established
narrative, particularly if they persist in their hypocritical conceit that
global human rights are best judged from Washington. They should in particular
hesitate if they are considering tying policy towards Russia based on a
presumption of guilt on the part of Moscow without really knowing what actually
did occur. That could well be a decision that will bring with it tragic
consequences.
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