This is pretty much where my thinking has been. Ever since the Mule's team was made public. That is the most biased and conflicted investigative team ever composed. It seemed obvious to me that something else was up.
But like you I've flipped and flopped. Especially when Flynn was indicted and then plead guilty. But, 'how do you legally insert evidence into an investigation'?
I've never read a more gripping mystery/thriller novel than the one we've been living for the lasy year and a half.
Announcement that Andrew Weissman has left the SC team. That’s the last one. Report must be immenent.
-SB
This ties with what I’m thinking as well. My reasoning is that I believe Obama wrote blanket pardons for at least the key people he wanted to protect prior to leaving office and covering everything up to that point.
By allowing everyone to run crazy under the Mueller investigation and stringing them along thinking they would win somehow they were able to entice the DS players to commit or expose additional crimes that were as bad if not worse then the original stuff covered by the pardons.
That is the most biased and conflicted investigative team ever composed. It seemed obvious to me that something else was up.
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Either Frau Mueller gathered all of the guilty elite lawyers together to identify, gather, and hide the evidence under guise of ‘classified info in ongoing investigations’ OR he did said same to create the vault of evidence to use to bring darkness to light during THE STORM and he played the legal schills!.............
As judge Smells would say, “we’re waiting!” MAGA! Trusting The Plan!
Top Mueller Prosecutor Stepping Down In Latest Clue Russia Inquiry May Be Ending
Excerpt
One of the most prominent members of special counsel Robert Mueller’s team investigating Russia’s attack on the 2016 presidential election will soon leave the office and the Justice Department, two sources close to the matter tell NPR.
Andrew Weissmann, the architect of the case against former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, will study and teach at New York University and work on a variety of public service projects, including his longstanding interest in preventing wrongful convictions by shoring up forensic science standards used in courts, the sources added.