The bombs keep dropping. The Deep State has nothing but the most radical option left.
Bkmk
Nellie Ohr sought out Glenn Simpson for the job in 2015, not vice-versa. Fusion GPS and the dossier were part of a sting operation from within the CIA (John Brennan) that was already underway and had been long planned.
This set-up and design would align with what we already know about the CIA using foreign intelligence assets (Five Eyes etc.) overseas to run against Trump campaign people to dirty them up and give the impression needed to initiate the FBI counterintelligence operation known as Operation Crossfire Hurricane in July 2016.
If Nellie Ohr approached Glenn Simpson, and was part of a process of using that cover to plan the corrupt CIA dossier for Christopher Steele, then it makes sense Nellie Ohrs communications with government officials, and the usurping intelligence community, would be a risk; a very serious risk.
This would necessitate some very unusual communication safeguards.
The Ham radio license corresponds to the timeline when the Clinton campaign officially hired Fusion-GPS as for the Trump Dossier research.
And it is immediately after when NSA Director Mike Rogers discovered FISA abuse, and shut down contractor access to the NSA database.
And that explains quite directly why John Brennan has put himself front and center, with all the extreme risks attendant in doing so. He’s been campaigning for his life, to stay out of the electric chair.
This is a key event and hasn't received the attention it's due. What Rogers reportedly found was Fusion GPS people - uncleared civilians - typing away happily at workstations connected to the highly classified NSA databases for purposes of opposition research. How did they get there? Did DOJ director Bruce Ohr call on behalf of his wife, a Fusion GPS employee, to tell them it was OK? The NSA conducted an internal investigation of this, including what was searched for and what that team may have taken away, so presumably they can answer those questions.
Lock her up. And whose idea was the HAM radio license?