Posted on 09/24/2017 8:46:04 PM PDT by bitt
There is infighting among editorial hierarchy at The Washington Post about its only in-depth story about the expanding Imran Awan and Hina Alvi investigation, according to sources.
The story was apparently put together with the cooperation of Awans lawyer Chris Gowen and sweeping legal team. No FBI sources are quoted in a story dealing with a federal investigation. And more than one news veteran at the Post agreed the end result was a puff piece that stinks like a cheap press release written by a first-year Congressional flak.
I dont care if the guy is guilty or not, said one Post editor. But lets tell the story, the entire story based on what the public already knows. We didnt do that. I think we tried to create another story. Its a goddam embarrassment.
Oh, we forgot to mention Awans attorney is a long-time campaigner for former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
Lets start with the basics.
Awan and Alvi, husband and wife, were indicted on bank fraud and financial crimes on August 17, but federal agents believe this case is much larger than mortgage-related crimes. There is growing evidence, for instance the Awans could have sold classified information to foreign governments outside the United States. Then there is growing talk that the Awans may have blackmailed Congress with damaging emails and photos. FBI sources also believe someone in Congress tipped the Awans off months before their grand jury indictment.
Awan and Alvi were charged in a four-count indictment charging the couple for defrauding the Congressional Federal Credit Union, making false statements and illegal money transfers to Pakistan. The Awans, along with two brothers, worked for Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz and dozens of other Democratic members of Congress, performing IT work.
The Washington Post didnt even get that part right and these are simply the basic background facts of the case.
The Post goes out of its way, however, to stress the case does not involves espionage. No matter what, espionage is not at play here, the Post repeatedly stresses.
No mention that the espionage portion of the case is far more complicated than simply saying no evidence exists.
If there is no evidence of espionage, a huge leap the Post makes with seamless efforts even though no FBI sources are in play, then the case must just be a grab bag of conspiracy theories fueled by right-wing kooks, according to the newspapers wisdom:
"It has attracted unfounded conspiracy theories and intrigue. Far-right news organizations seized on it as a potential coverup of an espionage ring that plundered national secrets and might have been responsible for the campaign hacking of the Democratic National Committee, a breach that intelligence agencies have linked to Russia. President Trump has fanned its embers from his Twitter account, reposting an article that claimed the mainstream media were ignoring a scandal engulfing Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a Florida Democrat who was slow to fire Imran Awan after news of the investigation broke."
Sure. Blame the Awans illicit behavior on conservatives and of course, President Trump. The old mainstream media fallback used to try and weasel its benefactors out of tight corners. Works well until its retorted with facts.
Keep in mind here the Post, the alleged flagship paper covering the nations politics, has written perhaps three stories on the Awan investigation. And this story was written by a reporter who arrived a year ago from North Jersey. That should tell you how seriously the newspaper is taking getting to the bottom of this scandal. To be fair, the reporter is a talented gentleman no doubt, but even the Posts editors who leaked a few gems wonder why the story was not assigned to a seasoned D.C. national security writer on the national desk.
The Post doesnt actually cite any direct FBI sources, yet insists there is no espionage at play here. Instead it uses hearsay to claim insider intelligence into the investigation, as it writes:
'Yet, according to a senior congressional official familiar with the probe, criminal investigators have found no evidence that the IT workers had any connection to a foreign government.'
The Post, however, is quick to quote attorneys on the Awan payroll. And of course it likewise provides plenty of cover for Wasserman Schultz whose handlers blamed this whole misunderstanding on right wing conspirators.
No mention of the Russians. Yet.
At the crowded trough in The Swamp its just another free round of political cover for all the Posts friends.
Again, FBI sources arent even quoted anonymously. Normally the Post at least fabricates quotes and sources when the newspaper is chartered with driving an agenda. It didnt even bother to gin that up this round. Perhaps it wanted to save itself from getting busted again.
But CrowdSource editor Jason Goodman uncovered something even more troubling. Goodman has had extensive interviews with Laurel Everly, a previous tenant of Awan who rented out a number of houses in the D.C beltway. The background on that relationship can be found here. Goodman said Everly spent hours detailing to the Post that Awan maintained computer equipment likely servers and a router at her home while she rented it.
Despite the interview with the Post and emails back and forth between Everly and the reporter, her name was never even mentioned in the Posts Awan story. Goodman released those emails in a recent broadcast.
This would seem to be more than a mere oversight by anyones journalistic standards.
Everly in fact had photo and video evidence of Awans clandestine computer set up in the basement and garage area of her home. Goodman said Post wasnt interested.
Everly also detailed Awan may have been using other parts of the property she rented to warehouse more servers. Much of what Everly told the Post about Awan included:
Awan pumped electricity from the main house to a detached locked storage shed that used cooling towers to preserve and maintain electronic equipment. Everly said she paid the electricity bill for set up but was not allowed access to the unit. Everly once reported to Awan the basement at her rented home had flooded and said the landlord panicked and showed up within minutes to check the equipment in the locked garage area. Everly thought Awan might be using her rental of the property to implicate her or set her up for possible illegal things he was involved in. Awan had his own key to the property and often used the house when Everly or her family members were away. Awan did not live at the house but used the address to receive personal mail at the location, often addressed to the names of different alias he employed. Awan demanded rent be paid in cash only. Everly maintained her own internet router and cable boxes on a different floor from Verizon at the rental property, separate from the Awan set up in the basement. Awan pressured the woman to sublet her basement to a number of Pakistani nationals who had relocated to the United States. Yet neither Everlys name nor her revelations ever even made it into the Post.
You do the math.
There are in fact so many inconsistencies, unfounded conclusions, and lazy errors in the Post story that it would bore us to write about and certainly bore the hell out of True Pundit readers to read about.
On the opposite side of boredom comes upstart CrowdSource the Truth who excoriated the Post story on the Awans, hammering its portrait photograph of Imran which they said was taken outside his lawyers office. The photo indeed looks like it originated from the Olan Mills Portrait Studio and getting Awan to pose could have only been arranged via his legal team. This is a man wearing an ankle monitor who was busted at Dulles International Airport by the FBI trying to jump on a flight to Pakistan. His wife pulled off that maneuver in March. She is still in Pakistan.
AWAN PING
Who really cares about any WaPo navel gazing?
AND ANOTHER RECENT STORY
It’s called propaganda ...
This piece at least relates that there is pressure for the WAPO to stop trying to bury the story..
and there is finally more written info about the renter Everly and the hardware on 24/7 in her basement and shed that Imran was so concerned about..
Or I suppose they could stun the world with an objective in-depth investigation into the spy ring operating out of the US Congress, winning Pulitzer prizes and re-establishing the WaPo to it’s one-time stature.
But nah....back to gorebal walming, muh Russia, and Trump is Hitler.
how about another ?
why did the repubs (except Gohmert) all of a sudden get lockjaw, right from the get-go, when it comes to the Awans ?
Maybe Awan wasn’t spying for a foreign government; perhaps he was collecting dirt for a future President Clinton.
Somehow the murder of Seth Rich seems to be tied into this. Is there a connection and , if so ,what is it?
and there is this:
In August 2016, rumors began circulating that Shawn Lucas had died unexpectedly; Lucas was known to many frustrated Democrats as the young man who served the Democratic National Committee (DNC) with a lawsuit in early July 2016 charging that the DNC had committed fraud in favoring Hillary Clinton over Bernie Sanders during the Democratic primary process.
Or how about this:
Activities that involve tax dollars.
OOPS.......did I say "Democrats?"
That right there explains the crummy reporting.
Mr. Rago made his biggest mark writing about health care. In 2011, he captured the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing for what the Pulitzer organization called his well crafted, against-the-grain editorials challenging the health care reform advocated by President Obama.
No matter where you fall in the debate of health care reform, the arguments advanced by Joseph Rago in his series of editorials in The Wall Street Journal were impossible to ignore, the judges wrote. Not paying attention to these editorials was not an option for policymakers.
FReepers have been asking this for months. I know Ive seen that pointed out here, long ago.
He had full access to the emails and files of dozens of Democrat members of Congress, However, Democrat members of Congress that employed the Paki clan have not treated the situation as a potential security breach......instead saying that they "trust Imran" and "do not think" he would sell their data or use it for nefarious purposes like blackmail.
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(sniffle) Golly, the Democrats are so tolerant and compassionate (sob).
Until Legal Authorities of the US admit this is a problem, the entire exercise is futile. Clintons are behind the Awan mess and no one will bother to “look into same”.
There are so many people involved with this story of corruption and treason and spying. Only focus is on this couple. Who don’t they want you to look at?
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