Posted on 11/29/2017 6:01:52 AM PST by sdthree
Secret donors are financing the lawsuit against President Donald Trump and White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney over who runs the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB).
Deepak Gupta, the lead lawyer of a boutique law firm that launched its suit on behalf of CFPB acting director Leandra English, confirmed in a CNBC interview that English is not paying for his hourly fees, but rather unknown anonymous donors are.
Gupta refused to name who is funding the lawsuit, making it difficult to ascertain the motives, intentions, or any special interests of those underwriting the case.
The D.C. lawyer appeared caught off guard when CNBC hosts asked who was financing his effort. He stumbled over his words in his first answer and said some form of unidentified structure was being put in place to accept funds from anonymous donors.
Well, uh, its, its not, um, Miss, um English, um, ah. There are ethics lawyers that weve consulted, and we have a structure set up that is with ethics rules and, um, well and well be talking about that once we have that, he told CNBC.
When repeatedly asked who is paying for the case, which could go all the way to the Supreme Court, Gupta answered, Its just not appropriate for me to be talking about that right now.
CNBCs host asked Gupta if his firm is handling the case pro bono. No. Were not, Gupta replied.
Gupta previously worked for Ralph Naders litigation group, which historically has always demanded openness and transparency from government entities.
Trump installed Mulvaney as CFPB acting director after former director Richard Cordray stepped down over the Thanksgiving weekend. Cordray named English his successor before stepping down, leading to the battle for control of the agency that is the brainchild of Sen. Elizabeth Warren and former President Barack Obama.
English claims she is rightful acting director, and the case is now before U.S. District Judge Timothy J. Kelly.
CFPB did not finance the case and the bureaus own lawyers do not support Englishs argument.
Mary E. McLeod, the CFPBs internal general counsel, said she sided with the White House in the dispute, according to the Washington Post.
I advise all Bureau personnel to act consistently with the understanding that Director Mulvaney is the Acting Director of the CFPB, she told employees.
Gupta repeatedly refused to identify any of the donors. His law firm, Gupta Wessler, is known as the anti-Trump law firm in the nations capital.
Former U.S. Attorney Joseph DiGenova said Gupta and Englishs reliance on anonymous donors really focuses on the dangers of not having full accountability for the expenditure of funds for this type of litigation.
The usual suspects like Styer and Soros could well be funding this. However, from a government accountability point, this is Bad Government 101, he said.
It is unclear if some of the financiers are billionaire liberal donors such as George Soros or Tom Steyer.
The lack of transparency, which Democrats ordinarily would be all over it, Im sure are just thrilled about this for the moment. Its utterly disgraceful, he added.
We dont know if some of the funds are coming from the financial institutions or organizations shes regulating. We dont know who it is. In which case, that would be criminal.
DiGenova said the presiding judge could ask English who is financing her litigation effort.
The DCNF contacted Gupta on Monday, but he declined to return our calls.
Does Matt Lauer or David Letterman (ahem) "sleep" there?
Now *that* is invasive...
After interviews.
The GOP Congress needs to pass legislation that any money collected by a federal agency through the regulatory process or legal process must be deposited in the Treasury general fund. No agency can spend funds without an appropriate from Congress (per the Constitution). It is long past time to end the practice of federal agencies using the power of the government to shake money out of citizens and private sector companies and then pay that money out to leftist organizations.
Here is your answer from 2015. CFPB Joins Justice In Shaking Down Banks For Democrat Activist Groups (Flashback from 2015)
Investors Business Daily ^ | 6/7/2015
Posted on November 28, 2017 at 8:57:48 PM CST by sdthree
Extortion: The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is diverting potentially millions of dollars in settlement payments for alleged victims of lending bias to a slush fund for poverty groups tied to the Democratic Party. We’ve seen this before at the Justice Department, which Congress earlier this year scolded for “shortchanging” alleged victims of Bank of America and Citibank the same way. Justice funneled at least $150 million into a slush fund for Democratic interests, unconstitutionally avoiding Congress. Now, a little-noticed item on the CFPB’s website reveals the powerful new agency is launching its own scheme to provide backdoor funding for nonprofit urban groups politically aligned with Democrats. The CFPB plans to create a so-called Civil Penalty Fund from its own shakedown operations targeting financial institutions. Through ramped-up (and trumped-up) anti-discrimination lawsuits and investigations, the agency will bankroll some 60 liberal nonprofits, many of whom are radical Acorn-style pressure groups. It says these organizations will provide “financial coaching” for low-income homebuyers, as well as “housing and social services.” But their activities are more political than charitable.
BINGO!!!
Thank you!
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