• Ex-Treasury Democrat employee pleads guilty to leaking Trump team info,

    From That Sucking Sound@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 21 10:32:26 2024
    XPost: free.nancy.pelosi.sewage.plant, free.dumbass.gavin-newsom, alt.politics.media
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In article <t24sfd$3cnd5$1@news.freedyn.de>
    thefag <thefag@protonmail.com> wrote:

    That is one ugly pig-eyed woman. Stupid too. Another Reality
    Winner type.

    <https://a57.foxnews.com/static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/ uploads/2020/01/1862/1048/NatalieMayflowerEdwards.jpg?ve=1&tl=1>

    A former top Treasury Department official pleaded guilty Monday
    to conspiracy for leaking confidential banking reports
    associated with members of the Trump campaign, following her
    dramatic arrest in October 2018 as she toted a flash drive full
    of sensitive documents.

    Natalie Edwards, 41, entered the plea in Manhattan federal
    court, where U.S. District Judge Gregory H. Woods set sentencing
    for June 9. Although the conspiracy charge carried a potential
    penalty of up to five years in prison, Edwards signed a plea
    deal with prosecutors that recommended a potential prison
    sentence of zero to six months.

    Edwards was a senior adviser at Treasury's Financial Crimes
    Enforcement Network, also known as FinCEN. Prosecutors said her
    crime began in October 2017 and continued for a year, with
    Edwards sending a BuzzFeed News reporter numerous Suspicious
    Activity Reports (“SARs”). Banks must file SARs with the
    Treasury Department when they spot transactions raising
    questions about possible financial misconduct such as money
    laundering, but federal law strictly limited their disclosure.

    The SARs related to wire transfers made by Paul Manafort and
    other figures in former Special Counsel Robert Mueller's
    investigation, including campaign official Richard Gates, Maria
    Butina and the Russian Embassy.

    As law enforcement swooped in, she was carrying a government-
    issued USB flash drive containing not only thousands of SARs,
    but also "highly sensitive material relating to Russia, Iran,
    and the terrorist group known as the Islamic State of Iraq and
    the Levant," prosecutors said.

    "Edwards is not known to be involved in any official FinCEN
    project or task bearing these file titles or code names,"
    prosecutors said at the time.

    "I am sorry for what I have done and I apologize to you, your
    honor, and the court," Edwards said.

    Her arrest came on the heels of other high-profile, leak-related
    prosecutions under the Trump administration, which had pledged
    to go on the offensive against leakers whom the president has
    called "traitors and cowards."

    Prosecutors pointed to about a dozen related stories published
    by BuzzFeed News over the past year-and-a-half, including an
    article headlined, "GOP Operative Made 'Suspicious' Cash
    Withdrawals During Pursuit of Clinton Emails."

    Another article was titled, "These 13 Wire Transfers Are A Focus
    of the FBI Probe Into Paul Manafort."

    She transmitted the SARs to the reporter by "taking photographs
    of them and texting the photographs" using an encrypted
    application, according to charging documents, which showed that
    Edwards eventually confessed to doing so. FBI agents obtained a
    pen register and trap-and-trace order for Edwards' cellphone
    during their investigation.

    Edwards additionally sent or described to the BuzzFeed News
    reporter internal government emails or correspondence related to
    the reports and investigative memos and intelligence assessments
    published by her agency's intelligence division, prosecutors
    said.

    When the judge asked her if she knew she was committing a crime,
    Edwards said she did not "know of the regulation" at the time
    but she knew about the federal Whistleblower Protection Act.

    After consulting with her lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, she said she
    admitted that she agreed to disclose the SARs.

    She added: "I was not allowed under the law to disclose it."

    Outside court, Agnifilo said the case illustrated how "one's
    subjective motivations really do not serve as a defense."

    "I am sorry for what I have done and I apologize to you, your
    honor, and the court."

    — Ex-Treasury official Natalie Edwards
    He said prosecutors were "probably of the view that she was more
    politically motivated than she was for some conception like the
    good of our republic."

    Agnifilo said his client believed "certain critical facts"
    weren't being handled in the right way by the government
    agencies tasked with handling them.

    "She said: 'You know, if I can't trust government officials to
    handle this, I think I can trust the media to handle this and to
    bring this to the attention of the American people,'" the lawyer
    said.

    Agnifilo said Edwards was in contact with congressional
    subcommittees and others in government but didn't believe they
    were dealing adequately with the information she offered.

    In a release, U.S. Attorney Geoffrey S. Berman said Edwards
    violated the integrity of the system of suspicious activity
    reports relying on banks and other financial institutions
    alerting law enforcement to potentially illegal transactions.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/treasury-natalie-edwards- leaking-trump-documents-guilty-plea
     

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