Monday Noon ~ TheFrontPageCover

TheFrontPageCover
~ Featuring ~
The Fall of James Comey 
by David Limbaugh 
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Levin - Mueller Probe an 
Impeachment Fishing Trip - Comey a Clown
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{ rickwells.us } ~ After observing that he doesn’t remember anything blowing up on anyone the way Jim Comey’s book tour has blown up... on the disgraced former FBI Director, Brian Kilmeade asks Mark Levin, “What’s this book tour doing for Comey and this investigation?” The investigation in question is the criminal referral against Comey’s former deputy, Andrew McCabe. Levin says, “He’s done enormous damage to himself. He’s exposing himself to the American people as a very petty, superficial man.” He describes Comey as “conducting himself like a complete Bozo the Clown” who is damaging the FBI in the process. Levin reminds us that this guy was in charge of the FBI and his number two now has a criminal referral as well as the rampant criminal, treasonous political activity by Strzok, Page and others under his leadership. He details what he believes was an attempt by Comey to threaten to blackmail President Trump, which like the book tour, didn’t work out so well...  https://rickwells.us/levin-mueller-impeachment-fishing/.
Trump eases up on Mueller and Rosenstein 
with eye on bringing Russia investigation to a close
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by Gabby Morrongiello
{ washingtonexaminer.com } ~ President Trump might finally be ditching his urge to fire deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein... after spending months angrily venting to aides and members of his legal team about the widening scope of the Russia investigation. Questions surrounding Rosenstein’s fate have loomed large over the special counsel probe ever since it became clear that investigators were looking beyond possible collusion between Trump associates and Russia actors during the 2016 election and into financial and federal crimes committed by individuals in Trump’s orbit. In early April, following a raid on the hotel room and office of Trump’s longtime personal attorney Michael Cohen, the president insisted he and his legal team were “very calm and calculated” in their response to the incident. But behind the scenes, and later on Twitter, Trump lashed out at Rosenstein and special counsel Robert Mueller. The episode marked one of many public displays of frustration by Trump since his attorney general recused himself from the Russia inquiry last May, paving the way for the ongoing special counsel investigation...
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Desperate Dems Beg to Be Spanked - 
Trump Wants Servers From DNC, DWS
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{ rickwells.us } ~ The Democrat arrogance has once again emerged and resulted in what is a supremely stupid and self-injurious act... that invites serious consequences. Just as they invented a Russia collusion hoax to cover up their own dirty deeds, which is now coming back to haunt them, the Democrats, through the DNC, have sued President Trump’s campaign as a means of extending the narrative. The problem for them, and one they surely must have been aware of, is that they have opened the door for discovery and the acquisition of evidence against them. They really must be getting desperate, going for broke, as in the long run the knowledge of their crimes in the hands of their victims can only lead to more legal issues. Then again, perhaps they don’t anticipate there being a “long run.” A victory in the 2018 midterms with impeachment to follow immediately thereafter might be the objective that, in their determination, makes the prospect of a long-term consequence disappear...  https://rickwells.us/trump-servers-dnc-dws-dems/ 
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Comey memos show Valerie Jarrett's
 CNN daughter a useful tool for Democrats
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by Monica Showalter
{ americanthinker.com } ~ The memos are out from former FBI Director James Comey, and one of the big takeaways is how useful a tool Valerie Jarrett's daughter, Laura Jarrett... could be for the liar-Hillary Clinton campaign while she was employed at CNN. CNN, it seems, helped orchestrate the set-up of President Trump when it pressed the then-FBI director to have a meeting with Trump so that the matter could be leaked and the press would have a credible reason to report as news all the otherwise slimy opposition research contained within the Steele dossier. Up until then, Fusion GPS, the purveyor of the unverified garbage written by its Moscow sources, was having a bad time getting anyone to print it in the press, and had shopped it around for a year, drawing no buyers. The press knew it was unverified garbage and didn't want to wreck its reputation by going there. But then Comey briefed Trump about the existence of the dossier, and suddenly the matter was leakable. And by an interesting coincidence, it was CNN that did the leak...
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No official intel used to start FBI probe 
into Trump campaign-Russia collusion: Rep. Nunes
by Matthew Kazin

{ foxbusiness.com } ~ House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes said Sunday his review of FBI and Justice Department “electronic communication” documents shows... no intelligence was used to begin the investigation into possible collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia during the 2016 election. “We now know that there was no official intelligence that was used to start this investigation. We know that Sidney Blumenthal and others were pushing information into the State Department. So we’re trying to piece all that together and that’s why we continue to look at the State Department,” Nunes told Maria Bartiromo on “Sunday Morning Futures.” Nunes, R-Calif., cited the Five Eyes agreement as a way of knowing no intel was used. The U.S., along with Canada, the U.K., Australia and New Zealand, make up the “Five Eyes,” or countries that share intelligence in a more-trusted fashion than other arrangements, like NATO, particularly due to years of trust and a common language...  https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/no-official-intel-used-to-start-fbi-probe-into-trump-campaign-russia-collusion-rep-nunes.
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The Fall of James Comey 
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by David Limbaugh
{ cnsnews.com } ~ I originally assumed that former FBI Director James Comey is an honorable and truthful man who was striving to be objective and avoid undue political influence. He has earned my change of mind.

Our law enforcement and judicial institutions should operate, to the extent possible, above politics to ensure equal justice under the law.

The term "justice is blind" is more than a cliche. Justice, by definition, must be administered impartially, without regard to wealth, power, gender, race, religion or any other special status. The law must guide the judicial system, from start to finish — from the decision to indict to the verdict of guilt or acquittal.

Comey presents himself as a consummate professional, a moral paragon, dedicated to the law and consciously above rank political concerns. He has systematically undermined this carefully crafted image with his unseemly forays into the public arena, his professional decisions, his public statements, his book and his interviews.

FBI officials and agents I've met have always been highly professional, discreet and circumspect — so close to the vest that they won't even share with friends information pertaining to ongoing investigations. They want to make clear that they operate with no favoritism and that their allegiance is to justice and the law.

I assumed Comey would be no different. He initially projected a patina of professionalism, as we witnessed during parts of his news conference in which he announced he wouldn't prosecute liar-Hillary Clinton and during his congressional testimony. He came off as consciously committed to operating above the political fray and following the law.

As his news conference unfolded, it became obvious that he was trying to be all things to all people, but instead of pleasing everyone, he alienated most. He meticulously documented the litany of damning facts against liar-Clinton as if he were presenting a closing argument to a jury. But then he essentially told us that none of that mattered because she hadn't intended to break the law. My BS antenna started sending me strong signals, which were later confirmed when consulting the relevant statutes. He couldn't have laid out a better case for gross negligence and even willful criminal behavior, yet he chose to characterize her actions as noncriminal. If this weren't bad enough, we later learned that he drafted a statement clearing liar-Clinton of charges two months before the FBI interviewed her in its probe. His twisting the law into a pretzel to avoid prosecuting liar-Clinton screams that political considerations were paramount and superseded any legal analysis.

Moreover, Comey admitted in his interview with ABC News' George Stephanopoulos that he factored the likelihood ofliar-Clinton's winning the election into his decision to publicly announce reopening her email investigation, fearing that she would immediately become an illegitimate president. He might as well have just worn a sign into his interview reading "political animal."

Comey's decision to write a tell-all book about an ongoing investigation on which he was the senior investigator and for which he could be a witness was abominable. It has gravely diminished him and the FBI, and it has contradicted his claim that he is concerned with protecting the image and integrity of the bureau. I doubt that Comey would have ever been appointed to such a position in the FBI had people known he was the type to air dirty laundry and share inside information on matters that demand discretion. Indeed, many current and former colleagues are recoiling with disdain.

Some of Comey's statements in the book and interviews were particularly inappropriate. His duty of professionalism didn't end when he left office. His comments on Donald Trump's appearance were especially petty, more fitting for a teenage Twitter thread than from a former high-ranking law enforcement official.

Even worse was his reckless opinion to Stephanopoulos that it's "possible" that Trump obstructed justice, even though he admitted there is no evidence. Then there were his gratuitous statements that the Russians may have something on Trump and that it's possible the alleged incident involving prostitutes in a Moscow hotel room happened. How could anyone watch that interview and still respect Comey's intellectual honesty?

Free speech guarantees certainly apply to this publicity hound, but they don't insulate him from our reasoned opinion that he has no business saying Trump behaved like a mob boss or that he is morally unfit to serve.

Comey's conduct in this affair has been disgraceful. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein concluded that he made "serious mistakes," that he won't admit his mistakes and that both Democrats and Republicans called for his termination. Former attorneys general, judges and lead prosecutors believe that Comey violated his duty to preserve, protect and defend the FBI. He violated Justice Department policies and tradition. And he leaked four memos, at least one of which was classified, to a friend for publication instead of turning them over to investigators.

I suspect that Comey began writing this book expecting financial profit and professional and personal vindication. I'm afraid he'll have to settle for the big bucks alone. I would feel sorry for him if he weren't so sanctimonious.

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