FBI Raids US Home of Soviet-Born Former Trump Adviser
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has raided and searched the house of Dimitri Simes, who used to be a political advisor to former President Donald Trump and a vocal critic of the administration of President Joe Biden.
According to the Virginia-based newspaper Rappahannock News, which first reported the story, the FBI agents executed a search warrant on the home of Simes, a Russian-born political pundit and author, on Aug. 13.
Simes, whose name was included more than 100 times in the 2019 report by former Special Counsel Robert Mueller into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election, told the news outlet that he was out of the country and had not been notified about the search ahead of time. He was unaware he was the focus of any current law enforcement investigation.
“I’m puzzled and concerned,” he said. “I have not seen a warrant. I was not contacted by any law enforcement or anyone else whatsoever.”
For Simes, the raid was “clearly an attempt to intimidate, not only somebody from Russia but just anyone who goes against official policies and particularly against the Deep State”
“I suspect that instead of trying to get me to come to the United States and to interrogate me or even to arrest me, their real purpose is to make sure that I would not come back,” he added.
(Related: Total tyranny: FBI agent admits questioning Americans “every day, all day long” about social media posts.)
The author’s son, Dimitri Simes Jr., described it as “a bandit-like intimidation attempt” by the U.S. government in a statement posted on X.
“The Biden regime is terrified of being called out over Ukraine and Israel,” he wrote. In another post, he added: “Elements of Biden regime are trying to disrupt any possibility for de-escalation with Russia and plunge America into World War III.”
In an email, FBI spokesperson Samantha Shero declined to comment on the raid, except to confirm that it had been authorized by a court.
Simes, who was born in Moscow, is a naturalized U.S. citizen who immigrated to the country in 1973. He served as an informal foreign policy adviser to former President Richard Nixon before leading the media company Center for the National Interest for nearly three decades. He was described by U.S. media as providing “a sympathetic platform for the Russian government in the heart of the D.C. policy establishment,” after Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) named him as a foreign policy adviser in 2014.
He was one of the people investigated by Special Counsel Robert Mueller as a suspected contact between Trump and the Russian government. The report finalized in 2019, which failed to find any evidence of collusion between Moscow and Trump’s 2016 campaign, also vindicated the political expert, confirming that his activities were normal for how D.C. operates.
Last year, Simes moderated a conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum. And in June, Simes participated in a closed-door meeting with Putin, the state-owned Russian news agency TASS reported.
Antonov calls out U.S. for “witch-hunt”
Russian Ambassador to the U.S. Anatoly Antonov slammed the FBI’s actions as part of “a witch-hunt.” He expressed outrage over the apparent increase in aggressive government actions against those deemed to be Russian sympathizers.
The ambassador explained that these attacks come against the backdrop of the U.S. election campaigns amid a growing nationwide crackdown against those who Washington claims are Russian foreign assets working “in violation of foreign agent laws.”
Antonov expressed concern, saying: “We are certainly worried about what is happening.” He criticized Washington for its “double standards in the field of democracy and freedom of speech,” noting that “hundreds of people are declared objectionable simply because they dare to contradict the administration’s policies,” leading to actions such as “home break-ins, searches and seizure of documents.”
The incident has sparked discussions about law enforcement’s role in political affairs. Opinions diverge sharply on whether the FBI’s actions strike at the heart of Democratic freedoms or represent justified steps to maintain security.
Meanwhile, supporters of the Biden administration’s methods argue they are necessary to safeguard national interests. But critics see the raid as inappropriate, claiming it could discourage open discourse about critical global issues.
BigGovernment.news contains stories related to the government’s abuse of power to push its agenda.
Man Arrested in Pakistan for ‘Cyber Terrorism’ Over UK Riots
The arrest this week of a Pakistani national suggests that prime minister Sir Keir Starmer’s campaign against ‘disinformation’ in the wake of riots prompted by the murder of three young girls in Southport has no borders.
Farhan Asif was arrested at his home in Lahore on Tuesday on suspicion of cyber terrorism, in relation to disinformation alleged to have helped fuel the UK riots.
Pakistani police said Asif, a web developer, was linked to the news aggregation site Channel3Now, which gave a false name for the Southport attacker and incorrectly suggested that he was a Muslim illegal migrant who arrived in the UK after crossing the Channel.
British police have since charged 18-year-old Axel Rudakubana, whose parents are from Rwanda, with three counts of murder and 10 counts of attempted murder over the mass stabbing at a Taylor Swift-themed children’s dance class in the northern English town.
Asif’s arrest has prompted some British commentators to question the establishment’s focus during the riots on England’s ‘far-right’—and particularly on the long-defunct English Defence League. Free Speech Union director Toby Young said “it does suggest that Keir Starmer’s analysis … that these riots were organised by ‘far-right’ agitators … was itself fake news.”
‘Starmer’s claim that these riots were organised by far right agitatiors was itself, fake news.’
— GB News (@GBNEWS) August 21, 2024
Director of Free Speech Union, Toby Young, reacts to a man in Pakistan identified for allegedly giving a false name for the Southport attacker. pic.twitter.com/6OfmSwfELh
There are questions to be asked, too, about how the arrest came about. The British High Commission in Islamabad has declined to comment on whether Britain asked for the arrest, claiming that “this is a matter for the Pakistani authorities.”
But The New York Times notes that the arrest came after a meeting on Sunday in Lahore between the British high commissioner in Pakistan and the chief minister for the state of Punjab, as well as former Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif. The paper also cites local police sources who “indicated that the arrest was made at the request of the British authorities, although there was no official confirmation.”
Asif told police that he wrote the Channel3Now article based on information copied from a UK-based social media account without verifying its authenticity. He also told journalists:
I don’t know how such a small article or a minor Twitter account could cause widespread confusion. Channel3Now mentioned that [the suspect was] a Muslim and an immigrant, but this has no connection to the chaos, which is being caused by people in his own country. If there was misinformation, it could have been addressed calmly. Why was there such an uproar?
Channel3Now has been taken offline.
Google Faces Court Showdown Over Alleged Secret Chrome Data Harvesting
Although a lower court had dismissed the case, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has decided that Google will have to go to trial after all, for allegedly secretly collecting data from Chrome users, regardless of whether they chose to sync information from the browser with their Google account.
The class action lawsuit, Calhoun v. Google LLC., accuses the tech giant of using the browser, by far the most dominant in its market, to collect browsing history, IP addresses, unique browser identifiers, and persistent cookie identifiers – all without consent.
The case was initially filed in 2020 and then dismissed in December 2022, but now the appellate court – in a ruling signed by Judge Milan D. Smith Jr. – said that the decision failed to take into account, looking into Google’s disclosures, i.e., the privacy policy agreement, “whether a reasonable user reading them would think that he or she was consenting to the data collection.”
The plaintiffs are certain this was in fact happening without explicit permission, and consider the way Chrome was set up to work in this context is “intentional and unlawful.”
Google on the other hand defended its actions when the case was originally filed by saying that explicit permission happened when users accepted its privacy policy. The lower court judge, Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers, accepted this argument to dismiss the case, saying Google’s disclosure about the data collection was “adequate,” and therefore had the users’ consent.
According to Judge Smith, despite its general policy, Google was pushing Chrome “by suggesting that certain information would not be sent to Google unless a user turned on sync.”
Interestingly enough, Google is removing the sync option from all versions of Chrome – after iOS, this will now be the case on desktops and Android as well. All it will take is to sign into the Google account on Chrome to link the data from the browser to the account – although signing in is not mandatory, at least for now.
A Google spokesman who commented on the decision of the court of appeals – which sent the case back to a lower court – confirmed that the change “is not related to the litigation.”
As for the litigation – “We disagree with this ruling and are confident the facts of the case are on our side. Chrome Sync helps people use Chrome seamlessly across their different devices and has clear privacy controls,” claims Jose Castaneda.
89-Year-Old Death Camp Survivor, 6 Other Pro-Lifers Face 10+ Years in Prison on Face Act Charges
(LifeSiteNews) — Seven pro-life advocates, including a communist prison camp survivor, face over a decade in prison after having been convicted on Tuesday for a peaceful protest conducted outside of an abortion facility.
Chester Gallagher, Heather Idoni, Joel Curry, Justin Phillips, Cal Zastrow, his daughter Eva Zastrow, and 89-year-old Eva Edl, who survived a concentration camp, were found guilty of violations of the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act and of a “conspiracy against rights,” a charge originally created to deal with the Ku Klux Klan.
“Isn’t Jesus good? Let’s go to the sidewalk and sing,” Cal Zastrow reportedly said immediately after the verdict.
READ: Biden DOJ indicts doctor who exposed transgender child mutilation at Texas hospital
Their conviction stems from a “rescue” protest the pro-lifers conducted outside of the Northland Family Planning Clinic in Sterling Heights, Michigan — an abortion mill where preborn babies are killed — along with a group of other pro-life advocates. Edl and Idoni were also convicted on a charge due to a similar protest they participated in at the Women’s Health Clinic abortuary in Saginaw, Michigan.
All seven pro-lifers could face over 10 years in prison as well as hundreds of thousands in fines upon sentencing.
Edl, who came close to death by starvation and endured squalid conditions as a little girl in a Yugoslavian concentration camp, has contemplated the possibility that she may die in prison after sentencing for this peaceful pro-life protest.
“When I was indicted, I began to prepare to die there,” Edl told The Daily Signal’s Mary Margaret Olohan earlier this year. “Right now, I am ambivalent. … I’m doing the best I can to get ready. Haven’t talked to a funeral director yet.”
“I’m just being sensible,” she added. “There’s no guarantee that I survive it.”
“I feel very strongly, because of my background, that human life is sacred,” she told Olohan. “Government does not have the authority to permit what God forbids. And murder is forbidden by God.”
Throughout the trial on Tuesday, Edl testified that what sustains her is her faith in Jesus Christ and her understanding that suffering strengthens her, The Daily Wire reported.
She compared the trials with a blacksmith’s “refining fire,” telling the Wire, “We need suffering in our lives in order to be purified and not feel sorry about ourselves,” adding that Christians should say, “Hammer away, Lord, at that anvil.”
Former rescuer Caroline Davis was also charged for the Northland protest, but she is now cooperating with the government and has agreed to testify against her co-defendants at this trial, as she has during other rescue trials. She “pled down her felony charge to a misdemeanor” and has not yet been sentenced for the Michigan rescue, according to The Daily Wire.
Judge Matthew Leitman, an Obama appointee, reportedly “clashed” with Phillips’ attorney David Peters throughout the trial. On Monday, Leitman accused Peters of going “way over the line” by pointing out that the conspiracy against rights charge was designed to deal with groups like the Ku Klux Klan and not peaceful demonstrators.
READ: 3 more pro-lifers sentenced on FACE Act charges after Biden DOJ prosecution
Later, when Peters quoted John Adams’ remark that the Constitution was made for a “moral and religious people,” Leitman reportedly said that he was laying the foundation for jury nullification, in which a jury member opts to not convict due to a moral objection to the law.
Thomas More Society attorneys have filed a Motion to Dismiss the felony “Conspiracy Against Rights” charge, asserting that the June 28 Supreme Court decision Fischer v. United States “prevents the Department of Justice’s use of the statute to multiply the potential prison time associated with non-violent, first-time FACE Act charges.”
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