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Tag Archives: Russian

Russian mobile game publisher Nexters will go public via a SPAC at $1.9 billion value

February 1, 2021   Big Data

Beyond the app store: Why mobile games need a multi-platform strategy

Learn how to go beyond the tried-and-true pathways to improve discoverability, create community, and scale your mobile business.

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Mobile game developer and publisher Nexters Global announced it will go public, raising money at a $ 1.9 billion enterprise value via a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC).

Nexters, which is based in Cyprus for its headquarters and has development operations in Eastern European cities such as Moscow, has struck a deal to merge with Kismet Acquisition One, a SPAC formed to take a private company public. Nexters’ biggest game is Hero Wars RPG, a role-playing game that was downloaded more than 36 million times on iOS and Android in 2020.

SPACs have become a popular way for fast-moving companies to go public without all the hassle of a traditional IPO. SPACs are set up by managers who raise money in a blind shell company, and the investors don’t know what they’re putting their money into.

We’re seeing a lot of similar transactions, such as the initial public offering of Playtika, the Israel-based company that recently had its own IPO and raised $ 1.9 billion at an $ 11 billion valuation. Huuuge also said it will raise $ 150 million in an IPO on the Polish stock exchange.

Taking advantage of the hot market, Nexters will wind up with $ 150 million in cash after the SPAC deal closes in the second quarter. It will have the ability to borrow hundreds of millions so that it will have the option of growing organically or making strategic acquisitions said Ivan Tavrin, TMT entrepreneur and executive and the founder of Kismet Capital Group, in an interview with GamesBeat.

Above: Hero Wars RPG was downloaded 36 million times in 2020.

Image Credit: Nexters

Nexters is a top-five independent game developer in Europe, and it builds mobile, web, and social games. The company generated $ 318 million in net bookings and $ 120 million in free cash flow to equity in 2020.

Based on the expected continued growth of Hero Wars and new mobile game titles launching in 2021, net bookings are projected to grow to $ 562 million in 2023, after platform fees.

Nexters founders Andrey Fadeev and Boris Gertsovsky and existing shareholders of Nexters – including Igor Bukhman and Dmitrii Bukhman of Playrix – will roll 92% of their holdings into the combined company and agree to a 12-month lock-up (where they won’t sell their shares for a year). Fadeev and Gertsovsky will continue to run the company.

“We are growing organically, and we want to continue growing organically,” Fadeev said in an interview with GamesBeat. “W are launching three more games this year, including one that is a casual game in the farming genre with adventures and expeditions. With this deal, we now have the currency to do deals.”

Kismet Capital Group (via an affiliate) will invest $ 50 million in additional capital to ensure alignment with founders, existing shareholders, and public investors. Kismet Capital Group is based on Cyprus, and it has offices in Moscow and London.

Above: Hero Wars RPG maker Nexters generated $ 318 million in net bookings in 2020.

Image Credit: Nexters

Kismet Acquisition One Corp. is the first SPAC formed in August, 2020, by Tavrin, who will serve on the board of Nexters after the deal is done. Nexters will be listed on Nasdaq under the ticker symbol GDEV in the second quarter.

Tavrin founded UTH Russia, one of the largest independent media companies in the country, and struck a joint-venture deal with Disney to air the Disney Channel in Russia. Tavrin also created Media One Holdings, which owns 35 TV stations and 55 radio stations in Russia. He was also CEO of MegaFon (the second largest mobile phone company in Russia), which raised $ 1.7 billion on the London Stock Exchange and Moscow exchange in 2012.

“The main purpose of this transaction is to do something for the employees and also create a currency for more transactions,” Tavrin said.

Based in Cyprus since 2017, Nexters was founded in 2010, and it really started to grow after launching Hero Wars in 2018. Hero Wars is a mid-core game, with hardcore gameplay in short session cycles. It is played in more than 100 countries, and it has delivered 8.5 times monthly active user growth in the past two years, and now it has six million monthly active users. In the past two years, the number of paying users also grew four times.

“The main strategy of the company was to go all mobile,” Fadeev said. We saw that RPGs became a very big genre on mobile.”

The company is planning to launch three new titles in 2021 in casual genres. Nexters plans to expand in Asian markets soon, as it believes its RPGs will be popular there.

As of 2020, 35% of the company’s net bookings came from the United States, 23% from Europe, and 19% from Asia, Tavrin said. The growth is expected to continue from 2021 to 2023. EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) is expected to come in at $ 138 million for 2021 and increase to $ 201 million by 2023.

Nexters aims to become the leading consolidator in the gaming space in Russian speaking countries, Eastern Europe, and beyond. The company has a strategic partnership with the founders of Playrix, the second-largest mobile game developer in the world by revenue.

The enterprise value of $ 1.9 billion represents 13.8 times projected 2021 and 11.6 times projected 2022 EBITDA. The company has 425 employees.


Watch on-demand: GamesBeat’s Driving Game Growth & Into the Metaverse


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goodness gracious, great balls of autogolpe as Trump tries to blame China for the Russian Hack

December 22, 2020   Humor
 goodness gracious, great balls of autogolpe as Trump tries to blame China for the Russian Hack

In 2017 Ivanka Trump was fast tracked trademarks by China. Including ones for coffins and voting machines.

If his puckered lips are moving, he’s lying, but the circular limit to that lie is that Ivanka has Chinese trademarks for, …. wait for it, voting machines. So this is all a delusional branding exercise,.. again. The firehose of disinformation is dribbling again, alwaystm but it dependstm on the magnitude of the desperation. Trump claims the Chinese did the Russian cyber-hack, but Pompeo says otherwise, definitely.

x

….discussing the possibility that it may be China (it may!). There could also have been a hit on our ridiculous voting machines during the election, which is now obvious that I won big, making it an even more corrupted embarrassment for the USA. @DNI_Ratcliffe @SecPompeo

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 19, 2020

x

“Officials at the White House had been prepared to put out a statement Friday afternoon that accused Russia of being “the main actor” in the hack, but were told at the last minute to stand down” https://t.co/GGHWccoNva

— Jonathan Lemire (@JonLemire) December 19, 2020

WASHINGTON (AP) — Contradicting his secretary of state and other top officials, President Donald Trump on Saturday suggested without evidence that China — not Russia — may be behind the cyberattack against the United States and tried to minimized its impact.

In his first comments on the breach, Trump scoffed at the focus on the Kremlin and downplayed the intrusions, which the nation’s cybersecurity agency has warned posed a “grave” risk to government and private networks.

“The Cyber Hack is far greater in the Fake News Media than in actuality. I have been fully briefed and everything is well under control,” Trump tweeted. He also claimed the media are “petrified” of “discussing the possibility that it may be China (it may!).”

There is no evidence to suggest that is the case. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said late Friday that Russia was “pretty clearly” behind the cyberattack against the United States.

“This was a very significant effort and I think it’s the case that now we can say pretty clearly that it was the Russians that engaged in this activity,” Pompeo said in the interview with radio talk show host Mark Levin.

Officials at the White House had been prepared to put out a statement Friday afternoon that accused Russia of being “the main actor” in the hack, but were told at the last minute to stand down, according to one U.S. official familiar with the conversations who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations.

It is not clear whether Pompeo got that message before his interview, but officials are now scrambling to figure out how to square the disparate accounts. The White House did not immediately respond to questions about the statement or the basis of Trump’s claims. The State Department also did not respond to questions about Pompeo’s remarks.

apnews.com/…

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So, Ivanka Trump gained 23 trademarks in China including coffins plus voting machines, Jared Kushner used the White House to find debt loaners for himself, and both made $ 413 million while “working” in daddy Trump’s administration, but Joe Biden’s son Hunter is the problem? Sure.

— Andrea Junker ® (@Strandjunker) December 12, 2020

 goodness gracious, great balls of autogolpe as Trump tries to blame China for the Russian Hack

x

THE BIGGEST WINNER OF OUR NEW DEFENSE BILL IS CHINA!. I WILL VETO!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 13, 2020

x

Smartmatic—one of two voting machine manufacturers attacked by Trump and his allies (without evidence) for rigging the election—is demanding retractions and delivering legal notices to Fox, Newsmax, and OANN for promoting those baseless lies. https://t.co/dG5I0fQCko

— Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1) December 14, 2020

x

Supporters of President Donald Trump may publicly release and discuss information they’ve collected from an analysis of voting machines and data in Antrim County. https://t.co/VlIODPuBtI

— The Detroit News (@detroitnews) December 14, 2020

 goodness gracious, great balls of autogolpe as Trump tries to blame China for the Russian Hack

x

I’ve been covering Donald Trump for a while. I can’t recall hearing more intense concern from senior officials who are actually Trump people. The Sidney Powell / Michael Flynn ideas are finding an enthusiastic audience at the top. https://t.co/NxjC0sUrzI

— Jonathan Swan (@jonathanvswan) December 19, 2020

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Apple will reportedly store Russian user data locally, possibly decrypt on request

February 2, 2019   Big Data
 Apple will reportedly store Russian user data locally, possibly decrypt on request

Laws in Russia have mandated since 2014 that Apple store Russian citizens’ user data within the country, but the company has apparently dodged the requirement — until now. According to a Foreign Policy report (via AppleInsider), Russia’s telecommunications and media agency Roskomnadzor has confirmed that Apple will comply with the local data storage law, which appears to have major implications for the company’s privacy initiatives.

Apple’s obligations in Russia would at least parallel ones in China, which required it turn over Chinese citizens’ iCloud data to a partially government-operated datacenter last year. In addition to processing and storing Russian citizens’ data on servers physically within Russia, Apple will apparently need to decrypt and produce user data for the country’s security services as requested.

While Apple Russia has thus far indicated in government filings that it stores basic ID data such as user names, contact information, educational history, and family members, Russia generally requires telecom providers to archive more user data — such as multimedia messages — for six months, and provide government access to that data without a court order. It’s unclear whether Apple will need to offer access to such data, as well as the wider contents of iCloud accounts, but Russia broadly defines personal data in a manner that could subject photos, videos, music, and books to inspection.

Over the past few years, Apple has taken publicly broad positions on user privacy, yet kowtowed to foreign governments where necessary to continue offering services. Last February, the company handed over Chinese citizens’ iCloud accounts and encryption keys to provincially owned Guizhou-Cloud Big Data, but promised not to compromise users’ data security or create backdoors for governments to access customer data. Within months, the Chinese government was reportedly trying to get Apple to filter out user messages referencing pornography, gambling, or counterfeit goods.

Apple has not yet responded to a request for comment from VentureBeat, nor did it respond to Foreign Policy’s “repeated requests” for comment prior to its publication.

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We Should Hope Trump is a Russian Agent

January 17, 2019   Humor

An article in Wired magazine points out that, while the idea that Donald Trump has been compromised by the Russian government and is purposely acting as their agent is horrible enough, the alternative is even worse.

The pattern of his pro-Putin, pro-Russia, anti-FBI, anti-intelligence community actions are so one-sided, and the lies and obfuscation surrounding every single Russian meeting and conversation are so consistent, that if this president isn’t actually hiding a massive conspiracy, it means the alternative is worse: America elected a chief executive so oblivious to geopolitics, so self-centered and personally insecure, so naturally predisposed to undermine democratic institutions and coddle authoritarians, and so terrible a manager and leader, that he cluelessly surrounded himself with crooks, grifters, and agents of foreign powers, compromising the national security of the US government and undermining 75 years of critical foreign alliances, just to satiate his own ego.

In short, we’ve reached a point in the Mueller probe where there are only two scenarios left: Either the president is compromised by the Russian government and has been working covertly to cooperate with Vladimir Putin after Russia helped win him the 2016 election—or Trump will go down in history as the world’s most famous “useful idiot,” as communists used to call those who could be co-opted to the cause without realizing it.

Not just elected him, but after two years of insanity more than 40% of the American people still approve of him. Nobody will ever trust the USA again. Leader of the free world? We’ll be lucky if the rest of the world ever takes us seriously again.

A complementary article in USA Today comes to the conclusion that Russia must have compromising information on Trump. They believe this kompromat is most likely “the possible entanglement of Trump’s finances in New York with the Russian mob.”

The same article calls out “the titanic hypocrisy of the Republican Party and of Trump’s apologists in the conservative media.”

If President Barack Obama had shredded his notes of a meeting with the Iranian president, or if Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager were sitting in jail for lying about meeting a Chinese business associate — and alleged intelligence officer — to share polling data, that alone would have been enough for the GOP to impeach everyone from the president to the White House chef.

Related

 If you liked this, you might also like these related posts:
  1. A Pretty Good Imitation of a Russian Agent
  2. Turnabout or Russian Roulette?
  3. Flagging Trump’s Russian Connections
  4. Russian Roulette
  5. McCain – (real estate) Agent 007

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after false alarms and dashed hopes, maybe there's “ironclad proof” of Russian collusion

November 30, 2018   Humor
 after false alarms and dashed hopes, maybe there's ironclad proof of Russian collusion


It’s not so much the lies themselves as much as Paul Manafort’s lies confirmed by inference or by triangulation the existence of those rigged witches.

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The biggest news here isn’t that Trump criminally tampered with Manafort as a witness but that Mueller thinks he has ironclad proof of Trump’s collusion with Russia. Checkmate.https://t.co/VUlwpETXmX

— Laurence Tribe (@tribelaw) November 27, 2018

Striking a plea deal with Mr. Manafort in September potentially gave prosecutors access to information that could prove useful to their investigation. But their filing on Monday, a rare step in a plea deal, suggested that they thought Mr. Manafort was withholding details that could be pertinent to the Russia inquiry or other cases.

The question of whether Mr. Trump might pardon Mr. Manafort for his crimes has loomed over his case since he was first indicted a year ago and has lingered as a possibility. A former lawyer for Mr. Trump broached the prospect of a pardon with one of Mr. Manafort’s lawyers last year, raising questions about whether he was trying to influence Mr. Manafort’s decision about whether to cooperate with investigators.

The filing Monday suggested that prosecutors do not consider Mr. Manafort a credible witness. Even if he has provided information that helps them develop criminal cases, by asserting that he repeatedly lied, they could hardly call him to testify.

[…]

“Everybody who lies to Mueller gets called on it — so he had to know that Mueller would catch him. So the question is: What was he hiding that is worse than going to jail for the rest of your life?” said Joyce Vance, a professor of law at the University of Alabama law school and former federal prosecutor. “There are often rocky dealings with a cooperator, and Mueller didn’t cut bait at the first sign of trouble. It was likely more than one lie and this would not have been a minor detail — it had to be something material and significant and intentional.”

www.nytimes.com/…

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NO COLLUSION – RIGGED WITCH HUNT!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 23, 2018

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Russian Credit Health Keeps Rising

June 15, 2018   FICO
Russian Credit Health April 2018 Russian Credit Health Keeps Rising

The two-year trend of improving Russian credit health continued in Q1 2018. Following a slide that lasted four and a half years, the FICO® Credit Health Index for Russia began climbing in April 2016 and climbed another 2 points last quarter, from 92 to 94.

What does this mean? Just as millions of Americans check their FICO Scores to see how their credit is doing, FICO and the National Bureau of Credit Histories (NBKI), Russia’s leading credit bureau, keep tabs on the health of Russian consumers. The FICO Credit Health Index measures Russian credit health, based on the percentage of consumer loans and credit cards reported to NBKI that are delinquent by more than 60 days.

The base was set at 100 in July 2009, and it climbed until the end of October 2011. Then came the long fall, which was arrested in early 2016.

What happened? “The biggest impact to the index came as Russian lenders and their customers embraced a new kind of credit product: the credit card,” said my colleague Eugene Shtemanetyan, who manages FICO’s operations in Russia. “Unfortunately, late payments here didn’t carry the stigma or penalties of late payments on secured credit, such as a mortgage or car loan. It took awhile for the Russian market to understand the importance of timely card payments, and for Russian lenders to adjust their customer risk management practices. The market stabilized, and loans issued in the last three years are higher-quality than the ones from the years prior.”

Risk management is still very much a priority for Russian credit grantors. “The main risks for delinquency remain the same — a decrease in real incomes,” said Alexander Vikulin, CEO of NBKI. “Therefore, lenders need to continue to closely monitor market indicators such as the PTI (payment to income), as well as to monitor the financial behavior of borrowers for all types of loans.”

FICO and NBKI provide Russian creditors with data to help them better understand how the credit market is developing and to build quality loan portfolios. FICO Scores, available through NBKI, are used by more than half of the leading Russian banks.

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Russian hackers reportedly stole NSA data in 2015, likely via Kaspersky software

October 6, 2017   Big Data
 Russian hackers reportedly stole NSA data in 2015, likely via Kaspersky software

(Reuters) — Russian government-backed hackers stole highly classified U.S. cyber secrets in 2015 from the National Security Agency after a contractor put information on his home computer, two newspapers reported on Thursday.

As reported first by The Wall Street Journal, citing unidentified sources, the theft included information on penetrating foreign computer networks and protecting against cyber attacks and is likely to be viewed as one of the most significant security breaches to date.

In a later story, The Washington Post said the employee had worked at the NSA’s Tailored Access Operations unit for elite hackers before he was fired in 2015.

The NSA declined to comment, citing agency policy “never to comment on our affiliates or personnel issues.” Reuters was not able to independently verify the reports.

If confirmed, the hack would mark the latest in a series of breaches of classified data from the secretive intelligence agency, including the 2013 leaks of data on classified U.S. surveillance programs by contractor Edward Snowden.

Another contractor, Harold Martin, is awaiting trial on charges that he took classified NSA material home. The Washington Post reported that Martin was not involved in the newly disclosed case.

Republican U.S. Senator Ben Sasse, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in a statement responding to the Journal report that, if true, the details were alarming.

”The NSA needs to get its head out of the sand and solve its contractor problem,“ Sasse said. ”Russia is a clear adversary in cyberspace and we can’t afford these self-inflicted injuries.”

Tensions are already high in Washington over U.S. allegations of a surge in hacking of American targets by Russians, including the targeting of state election agencies and the hacking of Democratic Party computers in a bid to sway the outcome of the 2016 presidential election in favor of Republican Donald Trump.

Citing unidentified sources, both the Journal and the Post also reported that the contractor used antivirus software from Moscow-based Kaspersky Lab, the company whose products were banned from U.S. government networks last month because of suspicions they help the Kremlin conduct espionage.

Kaspersky Lab has strongly denied those allegations.

Russian government officials could have used flaws in Kaspersky software to hack into the machine in question, security experts told Reuters. They could also have intercepted traffic from the machine to Kaspersky computers.

Kaspersky said in a statement on Thursday that it found itself caught in the middle of a geopolitical fight.

“Kaspersky Lab has not been provided any evidence substantiating the company’s involvement in the alleged incident reported by the Wall Street Journal,” it said. “It is unfortunate that news coverage of unproven claims continue to perpetuate accusations about the company.”

The Department of Homeland Security on Sept. 13 banned Kaspersky products in federal networks, and the U.S. Senate approved a bill to ban them from use by the federal government, citing concerns the company may be a pawn of the Kremlin and poses a national security risk.

James Lewis, a cyber expert with the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the report of the breach sounded credible, though he did not have firsthand information on what had transpired.

“The baffling parts are that he was able to get stuff out of the building and that he was using Kaspersky, despite where he worked,” Lewis said. He said that intelligence agencies have considered Kaspersky products to be a source of risk for years.

Democratic Senator Jeanne Shaheen, who led calls in Congress to purge Kaspersky Lab products from government networks, on Thursday called on the Trump administration to declassify information about threats posed by Kaspersky Lab.

“It’s a disservice to the public and our national security to continue withholding this information,” Shaheen said in a statement.

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a strip-searched Russian lawyer and a former GRU officer walk into a Tower … #TrumpRussia

July 13, 2017   Humor
 a strip searched Russian lawyer and a former GRU officer walk into a Tower ... #TrumpRussia

As part of the GOP active measures, Chuck Grassley tries to attack the PBO administration via some Democratic party association with Fusion GPS ignoring the original GOP connection to the project’s funding, because why?

It couldn’t be trying to discredit the Steele Dossier, heavens to Betsy, no.

Because Don Jr. wasn’t responsible for his email-related meeting with Natalia Veselnitskaya, claiming it somehow allowed the Russian lawyer to stay beyond her visa.

What such a snipe hunt may actually reveal is the broader network of #TrumpRussia.

Was the so-far unidentified second person accompanying her to the 6 June 2016 Don Jr. meeting, Rinat Akhmetshin? And if not, who was this “translator”.

In the 21st Century’s strategy of tension, partisanship is still just starting its scorched earth policies, where lobbying for orphans was a pretext for lobbying against sanctions placed on a foreign power because … decades of money laundering using real estate… and someone was willing to solicit political opposition election research in the name of orphan lobbying, whose declarations were first signed off on by POTUS45* in the name of transparency.  

Four days after she visited Trump Tower in New York, Veselnitskaya traveled to Washington, D.C. for a screening of an anti-Magnitsky Act film at the Newseum.

The next day, June 14, Veselnitskaya was photographed sitting behind former U.S. ambassador to Russia, Michael McFaul, at a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing about “U.S. Policy Towards Putin’s Russia.”

DEdbH3KWAAEpOhS a strip searched Russian lawyer and a former GRU officer walk into a Tower ... #TrumpRussia
Veselnitskaya’s client was the owner of a Russian firm called Prevezon Holdings. Prevezon was accused by U.S. prosecutors of purchasing New York real estate in order to launder money stolen from Russia.

Prosecutors settled with Prevezon in May, days before the case was set to go to trial.

Prevezon was accused as part of a $ 230 million fraud scheme uncovered by lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who died in a Russian prison in 2009. The U.S. passed the Magnitsky Act in 2012, which sanctioned several dozen Russian officials over Magnitsky’s death and other alleged corruption.

Attending the same hearing was a lobbyist for Veselnitskaya’s group, Rinat Akhmetshin, photos given to The Daily Beast by Hermitage Capital show. (Hermitage is an investment company owned by Magnitsky’s former employer.)…

DEktdg4XUAE0eUM a strip searched Russian lawyer and a former GRU officer walk into a Tower ... #TrumpRussia
Apr 5, 2017 – Grassley requested all immigration information available on Rinat Akhmetshin, a Russian citizen who became an American citizen in 2009,
“I call him skilled because — though I am certain that they exist — I know of no Russian gun-for-hire who managed to run his campaigns so successfully, running circles around purportedly much more seasoned Washington hands,” says Steve LeVine, a veteran Washington reporter who explored some of Akhmetshin’s past work in his 2007 book The Oil And The Glory. 
More recently, Akhmetshin was caught up in a particularly nasty $ 1 billion legal fight concerning a potash-mining operation in central Russia. While a Dutch court was the main venue, the dispute spilled into U.S. courts when lawyers for one of the companies accused their counterparts of organizing a scheme to hack their computers and other communications.
The man who masterminded the scheme was Akhmetshin, according to a suit filed in November in New York state court that also accused him of being a former Soviet military intelligence officer who “developed a special expertise in running negative public-relations campaigns.”
www.rferl.org/…

Akhmetshin was paid $ 10,000 by Veselnitskaya’s group, according to his registered-lobbyist disclosure form. Akhmetshin was described by Radio Free Europe as a hired gun for various characters from the former USSR.

Charles Grassley claims Akhmetshin is a former Russian military intelligence officer who acts as an “unregistered agent for Russian interests and apparently has ties to Russian intelligence.”

In April 2017, Akhmetshin met Rep. Dana Rohrabacher in Berlin and reportedly approached him about the Prevezon case.

Rohrabacher, a pro-Putin Republican, told CNN he is “skeptical” about the case and echoed Moscow talking points that it may be intended to “create hostility and belligerence toward Russia.”

Rohrabacher is a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee whose hearing Akhmetshin and Veselnitskaya attended.

 a strip searched Russian lawyer and a former GRU officer walk into a Tower ... #TrumpRussia
 a strip searched Russian lawyer and a former GRU officer walk into a Tower ... #TrumpRussia

(June 2017)

When former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort belatedly filed as a foreign agent on behalf of a pro-Russian Ukrainian political party this week, he listed a meeting with just one U.S. politician — Rep. Dana Rohrabacher of Huntington Beach.

Manafort’s years-late filing with the Justice Department details $ 17 million in political consulting work he did between 2012 and 2014 for the Party of Regions, a Ukrainian party considered friendly with the Kremlin.

Rohrabacher told the Los Angeles Times on Wednesday that the March 2013 meeting happened over dinner at the Capitol Hill Club, a popular Washington Republican social club. He said Manafort billed it as a chance to get reacquainted decades after they worked together in the 1970s on President Reagan’s campaign. Still, he assumed Manafort had an agenda.

“I assume when old friends call me up and are wanting to get reacquainted and stuff I always assume they are in some way under contract with somebody,” Rohrabacher said.

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Russian Roulette

March 6, 2017   Humor

The list of people connected to Donald Trump’s presidential campaign or to his administration that were in frequent communication with the Russians just keeps growing longer.

Remember Paul Manafort, who actually worked for pro-Russian groups and then became Trump’s campaign manager? He was forced out because of that.

Then there is Michael Flynn, Trump’s national security advisor, who was forced to resign because he met with the Russian ambassador and lied about it.

Next is Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the nation’s top cop. He met with the same Russian as Flynn, more than once, and also lied about it. And until he recused himself, would have been in charge of investigating and prosecuting those contacts and lies.

But wait, there’s more! Now we find out that Trump’s son-in-law and senior aide Jared Kushner also had meetings with (yet again) the same Russian. And more Trump aides, national security advisors J.D. Gordon, Carter Page, and Walid Phares, also met with the Russian ambassador.

Why in hell did so many Trump people feel the need to meet with the Russian ambassador? Especially during the presidential campaign or just after it?

And their excuses are so weak. Sessions claims that his meetings with the Russian ambassador were done in his role on the Senate Armed Services Committee. When he denied ever meeting with the Russians, he was speaking about Trump surrogate Sessions, not Senator Sessions. Even if we accept his crazy multiple-personality defense, Sessions was the only member of that committee who had any such meetings. Why?

Even worse for Sessions, it turns out that the trip that Sessions made when he talked to the Russians was paid for with campaign funds rather than Senate committee funds. If he was acting on behalf of the Armed Services committee, why didn’t they pay for it?

It also looks really bad that the only reason we know about any of these numerous contacts with the Russians is because of leaks from the intelligence community, including the FBI and CIA. Leaks that Trump attacked, which only serves to substantiate them.

And speaking of Trump, his response to this mess was the following:

This whole narrative is a way of saving face for Democrats losing an election that everyone thought they were supposed to win. The Democrats are overplaying their hand. They lost the election and now, they have lost their grip on reality. The real story is all of the illegal leaks of classified and other information. It is a total witch hunt!

Given Trump’s role in the birther scandal and the total farce of the Benghazi investigations, which turned into the (ongoing!) Clinton email server investigation, and the Clinton Foundation pay-to-play investigation, I would think that Trump would know a witch hunt when he sees one.

Trump also has an ally in condemning the questions about collusion between Trump’s campaign and the Russians — the Russian foreign minister said “I can cite the media that say all this is very much reminiscent of a witch hunt and the McCarthyism era which we all thought was long gone.” The Russians are following the Trumpian pattern of not denying or refuting the accusations, but instead attacking anyone who asks questions.

Why can’t Trump just admit that this looks really really bad? We already have more than one smoking gun in that both Manafort and Flynn had to resign over their relationship with the Russians. Wouldn’t it be terribly bad for our democracy if the Trump campaign did conspire with the Russians to throw our presidential election? Shouldn’t they want to clear this up instead of making weak excuses and acting defensively?

But why take my word for it, when you can see video of Trump and his surrogates repeatedly putting both feet in their mouths trying to deny that there is any there there. Plus get some wonderful humor from both Seth Meyers and Stephen Colbert. Both are worth a “closer look”:

share save 171 16 Russian Roulette

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Trump “sexually compromised” by Russian intelligence – ALL CAPS doth protest too much

January 15, 2017   Humor
 Trump sexually compromised by Russian intelligence   ALL CAPS doth protest too much

Saturday Jan 14, 2017 · 7:29 AM PST

2017/01/14 · 07:29

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 Trump sexually compromised by Russian intelligence   ALL CAPS doth protest too much

“Deny everything. Admit nothing. Make counter-accusations” (Duplicity 2009)

 Trump sexually compromised by Russian intelligence   ALL CAPS doth protest too much

“Deny everything. Admit nothing. Make counter-accusations” (Duplicity 2009)

Orange Gazbag now trying to distract us from further reports about the source credibility of the ex-MI6 agent by attacking John Lewis and blurting out “fake news” in ALL CAPS.

“It started off as a fairly general inquiry,” he recalled. One question for him, he said, was, “Are there business ties in Russia?” The American firm was conducting a Trump opposition research project that was first financed by a Republican source until the funding switched to a Democratic one. The former spy said he was never told the identity of the client.

 Trump sexually compromised by Russian intelligence   ALL CAPS doth protest too much The billionaire politician, former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, was cleared of having sex with an underage exotic dancer at one of his notorious ‘bunga bunga’ (2015) parties. www.dailymail.co.uk/… 

The former intelligence official went to work and contacted his network of sources in Russia and elsewhere. He soon received what he called “hair-raising” information. His sources told him, he said, that Trump had been “sexually compromised” by Russian intelligence in 2013 (when Trump was in Moscow for the Miss Universe contest) or earlier and that there was an “established exchange of information between the Trump campaign and the Kremlin of mutual benefit.” He noted he was “shocked” by these allegations. By the end of June, he was sending reports of what he was finding to the American firm.

 Trump sexually compromised by Russian intelligence   ALL CAPS doth protest too much
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How dare you call someone an illegitimate president?!
- fans of the world’s biggest birther

— LOLGOP (@LOLGOP) January 14, 2017

C2I9YFdUkAAaJa0 Trump sexually compromised by Russian intelligence   ALL CAPS doth protest too much

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