Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bets on how long Kash will last?
He’s not going anywhere. The FBI under Patel is doing remarkable work.
The last 24 hours at this FBI:
• FBI Scam Center Takedown: 503 fraud websites dismantled, over $700 million in stolen crypto restrained, and thousands of trafficking victims freed from forced-labor compounds in Burma and Cambodia. Chinese nationals charged with running the operations.
• Operation Gangsta's Paradise: 37 Mexican Mafia members and associates arrested in pre-dawn raids across Orange County. Drug trafficking, racketeering, and murder charges. 10 more indictments handed down to La Eme members already in state prison.
• Houston synagogue plot disrupted: 18-year-old arrested in North Carolina and a 16-year-old in Texas charged with conspiracy to commit mass murder at Congregation Beth Israel, Texas's oldest Jewish congregation. Tip came in Tuesday. Plot stopped.
• Maduro raid insider-trading case: Active-duty Green Beret Gannon Ken Van Dyke charged with using classified information to bet $33,000 on the Maduro capture operation, netting over $409,000 on Polymarket. Charges include commodities fraud, wire fraud, and theft of nonpublic government information.
• Denton County hostage rescue: FBI Hostage Rescue Team breached a home in Aubrey, Texas at 1 a.m. after a multi-day standoff. A young girl released safely the night before. The adult female victim rescued with only minor injuries. Suspect Michael Miller, 57, in custody on kidnapping, aggravated assault, and unlawful restraint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“ The FBI under Patel is doing remarkable work.”
According to Patel.
Useless post.
Are any of the items he listed false?
Nope.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“ The FBI under Patel is doing remarkable work.”
According to Patel.
Useless post.
Are any of the items he listed false?
Nope.
Why do you think he didn’t include stopping the mass shooting in New Orleans?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“ The FBI under Patel is doing remarkable work.”
According to Patel.
Useless post.
Are any of the items he listed false?
Nope.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
A little bit more on why the Atlantic may be in serious trouble on its @Kash_Patel piece:
If they had even one photo or video or email or text or phone recording or document or person on the record, or even one specific date for his alleged drunkenness, they'd have a much stronger defense. But they don't.
And even if they can show the piece accurately depicted his freaking out and worrying he had been fired when he couldn't log into to his FBI account, they may not be protected on the allegations about his drinking. Those are separate - and much more reputationally harmful - than alleging he is afraid for his job or bad at it.
A judge may want the writer to show at a minimum that the people she referenced are both real and had some evidence to back their allegations, evidence that she was able to review. We will see.
The judge will want Kash to show that the writer knew that these dozens of people were lying and published the story anyway. That’s the standard.
No. The judge will want The Atlantic to prove that their “sources” have evidence of their claims. You cannot prove something that isn’t true.
Anonymous wrote:“ The FBI under Patel is doing remarkable work.”
According to Patel.
Useless post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
A little bit more on why the Atlantic may be in serious trouble on its @Kash_Patel piece:
If they had even one photo or video or email or text or phone recording or document or person on the record, or even one specific date for his alleged drunkenness, they'd have a much stronger defense. But they don't.
And even if they can show the piece accurately depicted his freaking out and worrying he had been fired when he couldn't log into to his FBI account, they may not be protected on the allegations about his drinking. Those are separate - and much more reputationally harmful - than alleging he is afraid for his job or bad at it.
A judge may want the writer to show at a minimum that the people she referenced are both real and had some evidence to back their allegations, evidence that she was able to review. We will see.
The judge will want Kash to show that the writer knew that these dozens of people were lying and published the story anyway. That’s the standard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
+1 and the reporter said this on the Atlantic podcast today:
“Since the moment that I published this story I have been inundated, truly inundated, with new sourcing that goes to the highest levels of the government, who are offering corroborating information. So if you’ve reached out to me and I haven’t gotten back to you, it’s because I just haven’t made it there yet, but I am going to call you, don’t worry.”
This is so unfair to Kashyap!
![]()
Why do you support this horrible person?
Maybe it's sarcasm?
Anonymous wrote:
A little bit more on why the Atlantic may be in serious trouble on its @Kash_Patel piece:
If they had even one photo or video or email or text or phone recording or document or person on the record, or even one specific date for his alleged drunkenness, they'd have a much stronger defense. But they don't.
And even if they can show the piece accurately depicted his freaking out and worrying he had been fired when he couldn't log into to his FBI account, they may not be protected on the allegations about his drinking. Those are separate - and much more reputationally harmful - than alleging he is afraid for his job or bad at it.
A judge may want the writer to show at a minimum that the people she referenced are both real and had some evidence to back their allegations, evidence that she was able to review. We will see.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bets on how long Kash will last?
He’s not going anywhere. The FBI under Patel is doing remarkable work.
The last 24 hours at this FBI:
• FBI Scam Center Takedown: 503 fraud websites dismantled, over $700 million in stolen crypto restrained, and thousands of trafficking victims freed from forced-labor compounds in Burma and Cambodia. Chinese nationals charged with running the operations.
• Operation Gangsta's Paradise: 37 Mexican Mafia members and associates arrested in pre-dawn raids across Orange County. Drug trafficking, racketeering, and murder charges. 10 more indictments handed down to La Eme members already in state prison.
• Houston synagogue plot disrupted: 18-year-old arrested in North Carolina and a 16-year-old in Texas charged with conspiracy to commit mass murder at Congregation Beth Israel, Texas's oldest Jewish congregation. Tip came in Tuesday. Plot stopped.
• Maduro raid insider-trading case: Active-duty Green Beret Gannon Ken Van Dyke charged with using classified information to bet $33,000 on the Maduro capture operation, netting over $409,000 on Polymarket. Charges include commodities fraud, wire fraud, and theft of nonpublic government information.
• Denton County hostage rescue: FBI Hostage Rescue Team breached a home in Aubrey, Texas at 1 a.m. after a multi-day standoff. A young girl released safely the night before. The adult female victim rescued with only minor injuries. Suspect Michael Miller, 57, in custody on kidnapping, aggravated assault, and unlawful restraint.
Anonymous wrote:Bets on how long Kash will last?
Anonymous wrote:J Edgar Boozer