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Subject: FW: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Public Affairs News Briefing Monday,
September 21, 2020
Date: Mon, 21 Sep 2020 10:32:57 +0000
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From: Bulletin Intelligence
Sent: Monday, September 21, 2020 6:31:14 AM (UTC-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)
To: [email protected]
Subject: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Public Affairs News Briefing Monday, September 21, 2020
Mobile version and searchable archives available at fbi.bulletinintelligence.com.
FBI News Briefing
TO: THE DIRECTOR AND SENIOR STAFF
DATE: MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 2020 6:30 AM EDT
TODAY'S TABLE OF CONTENTS
LEADING THE NEWS
• Trump Pushes Back Against Wray's Testimony On Antifa, Russian Electoral Interference.
PROTESTS
• Federal Buildings Fortify In Anticipation Of Breonna Taylor Grand Jury Decision.
• Police Seeking Suspects In Shooting Attack On Home Of Two New Jersey Police Officers.
• Blake Shooting Occurred Amid Long-Running Tensions Between Kenosha Police, Communities Of
Color.
• DO3 Considering Federal Charges Over Portland Officials' Handling Of Protests.
• Authorities: Portland Murder Suspect Pointed Gun At Police During Fatal Shooting.
• Federal Prosecutors Charge Five With Damaging US Courthouse During Las Vegas Protests.
• Analysis: Most Violent Crime In Minneapolis Impacts Poor Neighborhoods Most.
• New York AG Moves To Expedite Release Of Police Body Cam Footage.
COUNTER-TERRORISM
• Woman Suspected Of Sending Ricin Letter To Trump Arrested.
• Federal Documents Show How Terror Networks, Drug Cartels Use Big Banks To Finance Crimes.
• CNN's Lemon: President Trump Ignores Domestic Threat Of White Supremacists.
• Analysis: ISIS Has Sufficient Money To Launch Comeback.
• Oregon Arsons Feed Conspiracy Theories About Wildfires.
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COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE
• Book: FBI Agent Investigating Anthony Weiner Helped Spark Investigation Into Hillary Clinton's
Emails.
• Wray: China Engaging In Massive Data Theft In US.
• University Of Nebraska-Lincoln Ends Confucius Institute Program.
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
• North Carolina Man Arrested Over Sex Crimes Against Minor.
• Former California Lawyer Sentenced Over Murder Of Ex-Wife.
• FBI Investigating Illinois Bank Robberies.
• Oklahoma Man Sentenced Over Shootings.
• Former Massachusetts Gang Member Pleads Guilty.
• Arizona Man Facing Attempted Murder Charge.
• FBI Investigating Stabbing In South Dakota.
• Former West Virginia VA Doctor Pleads Guilty.
• Tennessee Man Sentenced Over Sex Trafficking.
• West Virginia Man Charged With Homicides.
• Illinois Police Chief Indicted Over Extortion.
• Connecticut Drug Dealer Sentenced.
• FBI Investigating Unsolved Indiana Child Murder.
• Utah Man Arrested Over Crimes Against Children.
• Michigan Man Sentenced Over Drug Trafficking In West Virginia.
• New Mexico Police Announce Arrest Of Wanted FBI Fugitive.
• Pennsylvania Gang Member Sentenced Over Narcotics Trafficking.
• California Man Pleads Not Guilty To Kindapping.
• FBI Investigated Causes Of Oregon Wildfires.
• Chicago Police Preparing For Gang Warfare Following Shooting.
• Celebrity Cheerleader Arrested On Child Pornography Charges.
• Investigation: 74 Registered Sex Offenders Involved With US Cheerleading Organization.
• Judge Rules Psychiatrist Can Testify In Maryland Newspaper Shooting Case.
• Former Detroit Prosecutor Arraigned In Obstruction Case.
• US Attorney In Nevada Addresses Need For More Human Trafficking Arrests, Prosecutions.
FINANCIAL CRIME & CORPORATE SCANDALS
• FBI Investigating Hawaii Land Development Scheme.
• Indictment Of Former Atlanta CFO Points To Complexity Of Federal Probe Of City Government.
• Former Aide To Richard Daley Tied To Federal Corruption Investigation In Chicago.
• Federal Prosecutors Charge Six With Bribing Amazon Employees For Marketplace Advantage.
• Gambling Market Around College Football Player Availability During Pandemic Springs Up.
CYBER DIVISION
• FBI Investigating Cyberattack On Carmel, Indiana, Website.
LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICES
• FBI Warns About Sextortion Cases In Arizona.
• FBI Agents Develop Checklist For Investigators In Cases Of Missing Children With Autism.
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
• Prince Andrew Faces Increased Pressure To Cooperate With FBI After Private Chef Speaks To Agents.
OTHER FBI NEWS
• Rubio: FBI Was Warned By Intelligence Community Not To Rely On Steele Dossier.
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• Jordan: Comey Testimony "Key" To Answering Questions About Russia Probe.
• Tropical Storm Beta Headed Toward Texas And Louisiana.
• Trump: Mail-in Ballots A Recipe For Chaos, Fraud.
OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
• Pelosi Doesn't Rule Out Impeaching Trump To Stop Ginsburg Replacement.
• Reports: Barrett, Lagoa Top Trump's List As He Weighs Ginsburg Replacement.
• Trump: Democrats, Media Denigrating Vaccine To Hurt Reelection Chances.
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
• US To Sanction Two Dozen Targets Tied To Iran Arms Sales.
• Rouhani Dismisses US Efforts To Reimpose UN Sanctions.
• Airstrike In Kills At Least 10 Afghan Civilians, 30 Taliban Amid Peace Talks.
• US, UAE Officials To Hold Talks To Normalize Israeli-Sudanese Ties.
THE BIG PICTURE
• Headlines From Today's Front Pages.
WASHINGTON'S SCHEDULE
• Today's Events In Washington.
LEADING THE NEWS
Trump Pushes Back Against Wray's Testimony On Antifa, Russian Electoral
Interference.
The Washington Post (9/18, Itkowitz, Barrett, 14.2M) reports President Trump on Friday "didn't
dispute" a suggestion that he might replace FBI Director Christopher Wray "after Wray gave
congressional testimony Trump didn't like on Russian interference in the 2020 election and the
threat of antifa to Americans." Speaking Thursday before the House Homeland Committee,
Wray testified "that Russia is still working to interfere in the U.S. presidential election, trying to
'denigrate' Democratic candidate Joe Biden. Questioned about antifa protesters, Wray said they
were not a structured group, but an ideology or movement that attracts followers, and that
some of those adherents are under investigation for possible crimes." CNN (9/18, 83.16M)
broadcast Wray's comments were in "sharp contrast with what we've heard from President
Trump who continues to downplay Russia as a threat."
Fox News (9/18, Barrabi, 27.59M) reports Trump "hinted" that Wray's position "could be in
jeopardy following his testimony before Congress earlier this week regarding Russian election
interference and domestic security threats." Fox News quotes Trump telling reporters outside
the White House, "We're looking at a lot of different things. I did not like his answers yesterday
and I'm not sure he liked them either. I'm sure that he probably would agree with me."
The Hill (9/18, Samuels, 2.98M) reports Trump "would not say if he plans to keep or
remove" Wray, "expressing displeasure with his testimony to Congress about foreign election
interference and domestic terror threats for a second straight day." Trump "has questioned why
Wray did not put more emphasis on China's attempts to sway the election, and the president
has expressed dismay that the FBI director did not come down harder on antifa."
The Daily Caller (9/18, Hagstrom, 716K) reports Trump "criticized Wray's description of
antifa. Wray referred to antifa as 'a movement or an ideology' rather than a 'group' in
Congressional testimony on Thursday, a description with which Trump disagreed. Asked by
reporters whether he was considering a replacement, Trump said he is 'looking at a lot of
different' things, according to reporters at the White House." Moreover, "Wray has testified to
Congress that white supremacist groups presented a greater domestic terror threat than antifa,
an idea which stands in stark contrast to Trump's messaging in recent months." Also reporting
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are Forbes (9/18, McEvoy, 9.71M), the New York Post (9/18, Nelson, 4.57M), Politico (9/18,
Niedzwiadek, 4.29M), and USA Today (9/18, 10.31M).
Flynn Lawyer Powell Reportedly On Shortlist To Replace Wray. Newsmax TV
(9/18, 431K) reports according to reportage from Newsmax TV's Emerals Robinson on Friday,
"Sidney Powell, the lawyer for Gen. Michael Flynn, President Donald Trump's former national
security adviser, is on the White House shortlist of candidates to replace FBI Director
Christopher Wray." Robinson said she had been "exclusively told that the White House 'is
formulating a list of replacements right now' for Wray," but that "a change won't be made until
after the election."
PROTESTS
Federal Buildings Fortify In Anticipation Of Breonna Taylor Grand Jury Decision.
Fox News (9/20, Wallace, 27.59M) reports the federal courthouse and at least one other federal
building in Louisville, Kentucky, "will be closed to the public this week amid widespread
anticipation that the state will decide whether to bring criminal charges against the officers
involved in the Breonna Taylor shooting." The "courthouse and attached offices were being
boarded up Sunday ahead what could be a controversial grand jury decision." Protestors are
calling for all three officers involved in Taylor's death to be "charged with at least second-
degree manslaughter. But legal experts tell Fox News it's possible some of the officers will not
face homicide charges."
NBC News (9/19, 6.14M) reports the federal buildings "are closing for the week starting
Monday as the city waits for a possible announcement by the state attorney general on the
Breonna Taylor investigation. Federal officials have not announced why" the buildings "are
closing. But the Louisville Courier-Journal reported that a courthouse official said that building is
closing in anticipation of an announcement."
Louisville City Council Declares "No Confidence" In Mayor Over Handling Of
Taylor Death, Unrest. USA Today (9/18, Yancey-Bragg, Ladd, 10.31M) reports, "The
Louisville Metro Council on Thursday approved a resolution that not only declared 'no
confidence' in Mayor Greg Fischer over his handling of the death of Breonna Taylor and the
subsequent unrest but also offered him a list of ways to regain the city's trust." Language
calling on Fischer to resign was removed before the resolution "passed 22 to 4 after three hours
of debate." The resolution called for a public investigation into "the killings of Taylor and David
McAtee and subsequent civil unrest," a complete review of police procedures, and support for
"home ownership without displacement in impoverished areas."
Breonna Taylor's Mother Says She Will Not Go Away If Officers Not Charged. In
online coverage, NPR (9/18, Booker, 3.12M) (9/18, Booker, 3.12M) reported that it interviewed
Tamika Palmer, the mother of Breonna Taylor, who "was fatally shot by Louisville police during a
botched narcotics raid" in March. When asked what she will do if charges are not brought
against the police officers involved in that shooting, Palmer said, "I won't go away, I'll still
fight." The NPR article highlighted that late last month, Kentucky Attorney General Daniel
Cameron said he had obtained an FBI ballistics report that he called a "critical piece" of the
Taylor shooting investigation.
Police Seeking Suspects In Shooting Attack On Home Of Two New Jersey Police
Officers.
The New York Post (9/18, Steinbuch, 4.57M) reports police are seeking "at least two gunmen
who fired a barrage of shots on the Camden, Jew Jersey, home of two police officers and their
newborn - with six of the bullets penetrating the structure in the 'targeted' attack, according to
reports." The Camden County officers and their 10-day-old baby "were on the second floor at
the time of the attack," Camden Police Chief Joseph Wysocki said. "FBI Special Agent Michael
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Driscoll said that 'the possibility that someone may have targeted law enforcement causes a
true threat to the citizens of Camden."
The AP (9/18) reports authorities are offering "a $20,000 reward for information leading
to the arrests of two gunmen who opened fire on a home where two New Jersey police officers
and their newborn live." The family was "inside their home when six bullets struck it on Tuesday
night, authorities said. Some of the bullets penetrated the home, but the family was on the
second floor and no one was hurt." The FBI and other agencies are taking part in the
investigation. USA Today (9/18, Trethan, 10.31M) quotes Driscoll saying, "Obviously anyone
who opens fire on a private home is a threat." Also reporting are the Inquirer (PA) (9/18,
Goodin-Smith, Roebuck, 347K), NJ News (9/18, 1.72M), WPVI-TV Philadelphia (9/17, 536K),
and the New York Post (9/19, Dorn, 4.57M).
Blake Shooting Occurred Amid Long-Running Tensions Between Kenosha Police,
Communities Of Color.
The Washington Post (9/20, Klemko, 14.2M) reports on an incident eleven days before the
police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in which resident "Porsche Bennett heard
a commotion outside her house. In a neighboring backyard, she saw police taking a Black man
to the ground. Out of instinct, Bennett said, she pulled out her phone." Bennett was arrested
after recording footage of the incident, "another indignity at the hands of an overwhelmingly
White police force that has long drawn charges of targeting the city's Black and Latino
communities. As in other cities rocked by police shootings this summer, simmering tensions
between local residents and law enforcement fueled the explosion of violence that followed"
Blake's shooting. Kenosha "residents, community activists, former officials and six current and
former Kenosha police officers described a police culture bereft of diversity, tolerant of
excessive force and determined to cover up for its own."
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (9/20, 632K) reports on the first of a series of listening
sessions in the Kenosha, saying Mayor John Antaramian "sat onstage with a representative of
the Kenosha Police Department and listened as residents talked about how they felt about the
police shooting of Jacob Blake in August, the protests that followed and the clashes with police
and other armed individuals." The conference "was the first of four scheduled events with the
purpose of informing elected officials and law enforcement about how Kenosha residents feel on
various issues and possible solutions to them."
DOJ Considering Federal Charges Over Portland Officials' Handling Of Protests.
The Washington Post (9/17, Balsamo, 14.2M) reports a Department of Justice spokesperson
said Thursday that the department "explored whether it could pursue either criminal or civil
rights charges against city officials in Portland, Oregon after clashes erupted there night after
night between law enforcement and demonstrators." This revelation "underscores the larger
Trump administration's effort to spotlight and crack down on protest-related violence. The
majority of the mass police reform demonstrations nationwide have been peaceful." Breitbart
(9/19, 673K) also reports.
Authorities: Portland Murder Suspect Pointed Gun At Police During Fatal Shooting.
Fox News (9/18, Pagones, 27.59M) reports according to the Thurston County, Washington,
Sheriff's Office, Michael Forest Reinoehl, the "murder suspect who was killed in a police-
involved shooting in Washington at the beginning of September had pointed his gun at law
enforcement during the confrontation." Investigators continue "to investigate Reinoehl's Sept. 3
death during a shooting near Lacey, Wash." Reinoehl was suspected in "the Aug. 29 death of
Aaron 'Jay' Danielson in Portland."
Federal Prosecutors Charge Five With Damaging US Courthouse During Las Vegas
Protests.
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The AP (9/18) reports federal officials say "five people are facing felony charges of damaging a
downtown U.S. bankruptcy courthouse during protests May 30 following" the death of George
Floyd. US Attorney Nicholas Trutanich "labeled defendants Alejandro Avalos, Alexander Kostan,
Reginald Lewis, Kelton K. Simon and Jeanette R. Wallace 'agitators' and accused them of
inciting and escalating violence, vandalism and destruction during demonstrations." The AP
notes that hours after the protests in Las Vegas, "police and the FBI say they arrested three
Nevada men with ties to a loose movement of right-wing extremists and accused them of a
conspiracy to spark violence as part of a 'boogaloo' overthrow of the U.S. government."
Analysis: Most Violent Crime In Minneapolis Impacts Poor Neighborhoods Most.
The Minneapolis Star Tribune (9/20, Jany, Webster, 1.04M) reports that according to its analysis
of police statistics, "violent crime has surged to record highs across Minneapolis this year, rising
in more prosperous neighborhoods that typically experience few such incidents while continuing
to exact the heaviest toll in the city's poor, ethnically diverse areas." Overall, the city saw a
17% increase in violent crime "from the previous five-year average for this period." City Council
members last week "pressed Chief Medaria Arradondo to address crime in their wards. He
assured them that his department was up to the task," but "the police department has
experienced a wave of officer departures since George Floyd's killing. Insiders say that
department morale has sunk, and that some officers have become more wary of conducting
proactive police work out of fear they'll be fired or prosecuted for actions taken on the job."
New York AG Moves To Expedite Release Of Police Body Cam Footage.
The AP (9/20) reports New York Attorney General Letitia James "promised Sunday to expedite
the release of body camera footage in cases of alleged police misconduct that her office
investigates." Speaking in Rochester, "which has been in turmoil since the footage of Daniel
Prude's fatal encounter with police was released more than five months after his death," James
said her office "will be proactively releasing footage to the public on our own." According to the
AP, it was "unclear how many cases would be affected by the policy, since the attorney
general's office does not review all footage of police interactions with the public."
COUNTER-TERRORISM
Woman Suspected Of Sending Ricin Letter To Trump Arrested.
The CBS Weekend NewsVi (9/20, story 8, 0:15, Garrett, 875K) reported, "An envelope
containing the lethal poison Ricin has been intercepted in the White House mail at a
government facility away from the executive mansion." The letter was "addressed to President
Trump and appeared to come from Canada."
NBC News (9/20, 6.14M) reports, "A suspect who allegedly sent a letter containing the
deadly poison ricin to the White House was detained trying to enter the United States from
Canada, a federal law enforcement official said Sunday." CNN (9/20, Perez, Correspondent,
83.16M) reports, "The woman was carrying a gun and arrested by US authorities, according to
the law enforcement official."
The New York Times (9/20, Benner, 18.61M) reports, "No links to any international
terrorist groups have been found, according to two law enforcement officials." The AP (9/20)
reports the letter, which "appeared to have originated in Canada," was "intercepted earlier this
week before it reached the White House. The woman was taken into custody by U.S. Customs
and Border Protection officers at the Peace Bridge border crossing near Buffalo and is expected
to face federal charges."
Reuters (9/19, Shepardson, Ljunggren) reports a spokesperson for the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police "confirmed 'it has received a request for assistance from the FBI in connection
with a suspicious letter sent to the White House: The RCMP added 'the FBI conducted an
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analysis on the substance found in the envelope. This report indicated the presence of ricin, a
toxic substance.' RCMP said it working with the FBI but declined to discuss further details."
The Washington Post (9/19, Barrett, 14.2M) reports in prior coverage that the FBI and
Secret Service were "investigating an envelope mailed to President Trump that tested positive
for the poison ricin, officials said Saturday." Ricin, the Post explained, "can be made from castor
beans, but its effectiveness as a poison depends greatly on the care with which it is made."
Meanwhile, "the FBI's Washington Field Office said in a statement that federal agents 'are
investigating a suspicious letter received at a U.S. government mail facility. At this time, there
is no known threat to public safety."
The New York Times (9/19, Benner, 18.61M) reports that in addition to the letter sent to
the White House, letters containing ricin were also sent to a Texas sheriff's office as well as a
detention facility in that state. The Times paraphrases "a law enforcement official briefed on the
matter" as having said that investigators "have identified a woman as a suspect." Like the letter
sent to the White House, the letters sent to Texas were intercepted.
NPR (9/19, Slotkin, 3.12M) reports the "Secret Service intercepted the envelope which
was positively identified with mail meant for the White House, law enforcement sources tell
NPR. The ricin never made it to White House grounds, but authorities are still searching for
other undiscovered dangerous packages that may be linked to the ricin."
USA Today (9/19, Shannon, 10.31M) runs an article explaining what ricin is, saying the
"FBI has charged people for attempting to obtain the toxin, which became illegal in July 2019."
The substance "has surfaced in other plots targeting Trump and other officials. In 2018, a
federal grand jury returned a seven-count indictment against a Utah man, alleging that he
threatened Trump and other administration officials in letters, some of which contained the
natural ingredients used to make ricin. In that case, a series of suspicious letters were
addressed to Trump, then-Defense Secretary James Mattis, FBI Director Christopher Wray, CIA
Director Gina Haspel and others."
The Washington Post (9/19, Barrett, 14.2M) reports in prior coverage that the FBI and
Secret Service were "investigating an envelope mailed to President Trump that tested positive
for the poison ricin, officials said Saturday." Ricin, the Post explained, "can be made from castor
beans, but its effectiveness as a poison depends greatly on the care with which it is made."
Meanwhile, "the FBI's Washington Field Office said in a statement that federal agents 'are
investigating a suspicious letter received at a U.S. government mail facility. At this time, there
is no known threat to public safety."
The New York Times (9/19, Benner, 18.61M) reports that in addition to the letter sent to
the White House, letters containing ricin were also sent to a Texas sheriff's office as well as a
detention facility in that state. The Times paraphrases "a law enforcement official briefed on the
matter" as having said that investigators "have identified a woman as a suspect." Like the letter
sent to the White House, the letters sent to Texas were intercepted.
NPR (9/19, Slotkin, 3.12M) reports the "Secret Service intercepted the envelope which
was positively identified with mail meant for the White House, law enforcement sources tell
NPR. The ricin never made it to White House grounds, but authorities are still searching for
other undiscovered dangerous packages that may be linked to the ricin."
Also reporting are the Montreal (CAN) Gazette (9/21, 27K), CBS News (9/19, 3.68M), NBC
News (9/19, 6.14M), Fox News (9/19, Dorman, 27.59M), the Daily Caller (9/19, Kruta, 716K),
the Wall Street Journal (9/20, Viswanatha, Subscription Publication, 7.57M), The Hill (9/19,
Deese, 2.98M), the New York Post (9/19, Italiano, 4.57M), Business Insider (9/20, Ankel,
3.67M), and the Los Angeles Times (9/19, 4.64M).
Federal Documents Show How Terror Networks, Drug Cartels Use Big Banks To
Finance Crimes.
BuzzFeed News (9/20, Leopold, Cormier, Templon, Warren, Singer-Vine, Pham, Holmes,
Ghorayshi, Sallah, Kozyreva, Loop) reports "a huge trove of secret government documents"
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dubbed the FinCEN Files "reveals for the first time how the giants of Western banking move
trillions of dollars in suspicious transactions, enriching themselves and their shareholders while
facilitating the work of terrorists, kleptocrats, and drug kingpins." The documents "offer an
unprecedented view of global financial corruption, the banks enabling it, and the government
agencies that watch as it flourishes." The documents "expose the hollowness of banking
safeguards, and the ease with which criminals have exploited them."
Reuters (9/20) reports the documents indicate that top global banks including HSBC
Holdings Plc, WMorgan Chase & Co, Deutsche Bank AG, Standard Chartered Plc, and Bank of
New York Mellon Corp "moved large sums of allegedly illicit funds over a period of nearly two
decades, despite red flags about the origins of the money." The documents include "leaked
suspicious activity reports (SARs) filed by banks and other financial firms with the U.S.
Department of Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCen)." These SARs "were
obtained by BuzzFeed News and shared with the International Consortium of Investigative
Journalists (ICIJ) and other media organizations."
Bloomberg (9/20, Yang, Surane, Onaran, 4.73M) reports despite "a wave of hefty fines
against major banks in the past decade" sparking "an explosion in the number of transactions
that lenders flag as suspect to the U.S. government," it remains unclear whether this is "making
a difference. Banks moved money for people or entities they couldn't identify, and in many
cases failed to file the required suspicious activity reports until years afterward, according to an
investigation released over the weekend by the International Consortium of Investigative
Journalists." Moreover, in some cases banks "kept moving illicit funds after receiving warnings
from U.S. officials." The documents "shed light on a faulty system where banks complain about
reports that get no follow-up from authorities, while critics say lenders are checking off boxes
without taking meaningful steps to stop financial crime."
Business Insider (9/20, Dzhanova, 3.67M) reports the documents show "how some of the
world's biggest banks have for years facilitated the movement of dirty money." This article lists
a number of examples of questionable transactions documented in the files.
The Miami Herald (9/20, 19K) also reports.
CNN's Lemon: President Trump Ignores Domestic Threat Of White Supremacists.
In a video on the website of CNN (9/18, 83.16M), CNN's Don Lemon says FBI Director
Christopher Wray told Congress "that white supremacists are the largest group of racially
motivated domestic terrorists. He says it accounts for the bulk of the bureau's work on
domestic threats." Wray is shown saying, "Within the domsetic terrorism bucket, the category
as a whole, racially motivated violent extremism is I think the biggest bucket within that larger
group, and within the racially motivated violent extremist bucket, people subscribing to some
kind of white supremacist type ideology is certainly the biggest chunk of that." Lemon
complains that "people don't want to hear" that white supremacists are responsible for
terrorism threats, and laments that "the president doesn't recognize the threat."
Analysis: ISIS Has Sufficient Money To Launch Comeback.
The Wall Street Journal (9/18, Al, Talley, Subscription Publication, 7.57M) reports an analysis
of data from security officials and government documents indicates that Islamic State has
ample cash reserves and continuing revenue streams despite recent setbacks, and the group
has therefore sufficient resources to mount a resurgence.
Oregon Arsons Feed Conspiracy Theories About Wildfires.
The Oregonian (9/19, 1M) reports there have been at least six men charged with arson in
Oregon as the state deals with devastating wildfires, but none "have ties to left- or right-wing
groups or appear to have been motivated by politics, according to police and court records."
Nevertheless, "the alleged acts have stoked fears amid a natural catastrophe unrivaled in
Oregon's recent past and fueled speculation into the causes behind some of the state's largest
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and most devastating wildfires." Arson cases have "helped fuel conspiracy theories about anti-
fascist activists starting the wildfires around the state, prompting local and county law
enforcement officials as well as the FBI to emphatically rebut the claims."
COUNTER-INTELLIGENCE
Book: FBI Agent Investigating Anthony Weiner Helped Spark Investigation Into
Hillary Clinton's Emails.
The Hill (9/18, Moreno, 2.98M) reports according to an excerpt of forthcoming book "October
Surprise: How the FBI Tried to Save Itself and Crashed an Election," FBI agent John Robertson
"found a tranche of top Clinton aide Huma Abedin's emails." Robertson "was tasked with
investigating former congressman Anthony Weiner's (D-N.Y.) interactions with a 15-year-old
girl. Wiener, who was later convicted on charges of transmitting sexual material to a minor, was
married to Abedin at the time." The book says that "while Robertson was searching Weiner's
laptop on a warrant to look for possible images of sex crimes involving children, he found
hundreds of thousands of emails between Adedin and Clinton."
The Washington Post (9/17, Barrett, 14.2M) reports pressure had been building on
Robertson "for weeks," and he "felt a growing sense of alarm that the next casualty of this
crazy presidential election would be his FBI career." Robertson's investigation of Weiner "was
not the problem. ... The more pressing issue was the hundreds of thousands of Abedin's emails,
including many that were to or from Clinton, that Robertson had found on Weiner's laptop. ...
Robertson's role has been examined by Justice Department internal investigators, but his
identity, history and internal documents about his actions in 2016 are being recounted here for
the first time."
Wray: China Engaging In Massive Data Theft In US.
The Washington Times (9/18, Gertz, 492K) reports FBI Director Christopher Wray, in prepared
testimony for the House Homeland Security Committee, warned that "China is engaged in
massive data mining in the United States and likely has stolen personal information on nearly
half of the entire U.S. population." Chinese government "hackers have conducted data collection
operations, such as the 2017 theft of financial information on 150 million people from the credit
bureau Equifax." The Times quotes Wray saying, "If you are an American adult, it is more likely
than not that China has stolen your personal data." Wray added that the "theft is 'on a scale so
massive that it represents one of the largest transfers of wealth in human history."
University Of Nebraska-Lincoln Ends Confucius Institute Program.
The Omaha (NE) World-Herald (9/20, Ruggles, 641K) reports, "Charles Wood built his
reputation as a virus researcher at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and enjoyed a side gig
running the university's Chinese language and culture program. But his part-time role
overseeing the Confucius Institute, caught up in UNL budget problems and perhaps politics, is
about to end." The university is looking to fill a $38 million budget shortfall, and "has found
about $150,000 - 0.4% of it - by eliminating the Confucius Institute." The article speculates on
whether the university ended the program due to political pressure regarding allegations that
the program is a front for Chinese propaganda and espionage.
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
North Carolina Man Arrested Over Sex Crimes Against Minor.
The Washington Times (9/20, 492K) reports Joshuah Taylor Bradshaw was "apprehended by the
FBI" on Sunday, and he is "facing more than 300 separate counts for sex-related crimes
involving a juvenile."
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WRAL-TV Raleigh, NC (9/20, 338K) reports Hoke County detectives "responded to the
1000 block of Fairfield Circle in Raeford for a report of a juvenile sexual assault" on August 7.
The call resulted in an investigation yielding 156 charges against Bradshaw, who "fled North
Carolina."
WWAY-TV Wilmington, NC (9/20, 6K) reports Bradshaw "is being held on a $20,000,000
secured bond, and his first court appearance will be Monday, Sept. 21."
WTVD-TV Raleigh-Durham, NC (9/20) also reports.
Former California Lawyer Sentenced Over Murder Of Ex-Wife.
The Washington Post (9/18, 14.2M) reported Lonnie Loren Kocontes "was sentenced Friday to
life without the possibility of parole for strangling his ex-wife and throwing her body off a cruise
ship in the Mediterranean in 2006." He "was convicted in June of first-degree murder with a
special circumstances enhancement of murder for financial gain." The FBI investigation "began
in 2008 after Kocontes tried to transfer $1 million between various bank accounts."
FBI Investigating Illinois Bank Robberies.
The Chicago Tribune (9/18, Williams Harris, 2.65M) reported that the FBI "is asking for the
public's help identifying a woman suspected of robbing several banks in the area, including one
Thursday on the city's Southwest Side." She "was described as a Black woman between the
ages of 25 and 35 who wears a surgical mask during the robberies."
The Chicago Sun-Times (9/19, 875K) reported that the suspect "implied she had a
weapon and demanded money using a note."
Oklahoma Man Sentenced Over Shootings.
KOKH-TV Oklahoma City (9/18, Washington, 28K) reported that a federal jury has "found
Dominice Eugene Hunt, 26, of Oklahoma City, guilty of numerous firearms, ammunition, and
drug-related charges after five years of criminal conduct." He "is expected to be sentenced
within the next few months."
Former Massachusetts Gang Member Pleads Guilty.
The Fall River (MA) Herald News (9/18, 83K) reported former Latin Kings New Bedford gang
member Shelton Johnson "pleaded guilty Thursday to racketeering charges," and he "admitted
to participating in a June 2019 shooting of another Latin Kings member who was in bad
standing with the gang." The FBI supported the investigation.
Arizona Man Facing Attempted Murder Charge.
KRQE-TV Albuquerque, NM (9/17, 35K) reported Robert Benjamin Nelson "is facing a charge of
attempted murder for allegedly shooting and wounding a New Mexico State Police officer last
weekend west of Albuquerque." Prosecutors say he "fired through the passenger-side window of
his vehicle Saturday at a uniformed state police officer working a law enforcement stop as part
of a federal task force."
FBI Investigating Stabbing In South Dakota.
The Yankton (SD) Press & Dakotan (9/17, Dockendorf, 24K) reported that the FBI "is working
on the apparent stabbing death that occurred Tuesday night (Sept. 15) on the Yankton Sioux
reservation." The victim "has been identified as 54-year-old Isaac Primeaux."
Former West Virginia VA Doctor Pleads Guilty.
The Miami Herald (9/18, 1.09M) reported former Veterans Affairs official Dr. Jonathan Yates
"pleaded guilty to three counts of depriving veterans of their civil rights and two counts of
sexually abusive conduct." He "worked at the Beckley VA facility as the Whole Health Director
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from April 2018 to June 2019 and is accused of sexually abusing veterans between the ages of
32 and 61 while treating them for chronic pain."
Tennessee Man Sentenced Over Sex Trafficking.
The Jonesboro (AR) Sun (9/20, 57K) reports Craig Gillum, who was "accused of trafficking a
Trumann girl," has been "sentenced to 23 years in federal prison for porn he produced with the
teen." Authorities say Gillum "sent explicit photos of himself to the girl and he solicited the
same from her and received them." The FBI investigated the case.
West Virginia Man Charged With Homicides.
The Martinsburg (WV) Journal (9/18, LeRose, 51K) reported David Ray Sanford Jr, who is
"incarcerated in the Eastern Regional Jail on one felony murder charge stemming from the
kidnapping and killing of another man in Jefferson County," has been "charged with allegedly
murdering a witness of the killing." He "was arraigned Wednesday in Berkeley County
Magistrate Court on the" charge.
Illinois Police Chief Indicted Over Extortion.
WLS-TV Chicago (9/18, 391K) reported McCook Police Chief Mario DePasquale "has been
indicted on federal extortion charges in the same investigation as former McCook Mayor Jeffrey
Tobolski." Prosecutors "said the two worked together to shake down a restaurant owner who
needed city approval to serve alcohol."
Connecticut Drug Dealer Sentenced.
The San Antonio Express-News (9/18, 762K) reported Maurice Tucker, who was "convicted on
drug trafficking and gun charges," has been "sentenced to serve nearly six years in prison." The
investigation "began in 2018 when the FBI's Northern Connecticut Gang Task Force began
investigating Ricardo Reyes, also known as 'Rick the Ruler,' a member of the 'Los Solidos street
gang who was distributing fentanyl, heroin, cocaine and crack' in Hartford."
Hartford (CT) Patch (9/18, 1.03M) also reports.
FBI Investigating Unsolved Indiana Child Murder.
WXIN-TV Indianapolis (9/20, 434K) reports that the FBI is continuing to support the
investigation into the unsolved death of De'Shaun Swanson, who died from gun violence in
2015. The FBI's renewed interest in the case is part of Operation Legend.
Indianapolis (IN) Star (9/19, 633K) also reports.
Utah Man Arrested Over Crimes Against Children.
Gephardt Daily (UT) (9/19) reported John Robert Krampf, who is known on YouTube as "The
Happy Scientist," has "been booked into the Washington County jail after a three-day operation
by the FBI." Dixie State University Police Chief Blair Barfuss "said Krampf first came to the
attention of federal authorities when he allegedly shared digital files - containing pornographic
images prepubescent children - with an IP address that was part of an undercover FBI
operation."
Michigan Man Sentenced Over Drug Trafficking In West Virginia.
WVVA-TV Bluefield, WV (9/18) reported United States Attorney Mike Stuart "announced that
31-year old Clifford Howell of Eastpointe, Michigan was sentenced to 60 months in federal
prison, followed by a five year term of supervised release." He pleaded guilty in June 2020, and
he "admitted that between June 2018 and September 17, 2019, he worked with other members
of a drug trafficking organization (DTO) in Raleigh County, W. Va. to distribute heroin."
New Mexico Police Announce Arrest Of Wanted FBI Fugitive.
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KVIA-TV El Paso, TX (9/18, 11K) reported that New Mexico State Police announced Friday the
arrest of Dakota Don Briscoe, who "faces two open counts of murder and aggravated arson."
The FBI "had offered a reward of up to $10,000 for Briscoe's capture."
The Las Cruces (NM) Sun-News (9/19, 58K) reported he "was linked to a series of crimes
on Albuquerque's West Side Sept. 7 in which he was accused of killing Eric Carbajal, 36, and
Nathan Garcia, 39, torching their bodies inside a vehicle and carjacking a woman at gunpoint to
make his escape."
Pennsylvania Gang Member Sentenced Over Narcotics Trafficking.
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (9/18, Ove, 616K) reported U.S. District Judge Arthur Schwab has
"sentenced Jaymare Jackson, 30, to that term followed by four years of probation" over his role
in a narcotics trafficking operation. He "was a member of the SCO gang in Braddock that the
FBI and its partners in the Greater Pittsburgh Safe Streets Task Force dismantled following a
wiretap investigation."
California Man Pleads Not Guilty To Kindapping.
KCAL-TV Los Angeles (9/18) reported Alexis Ivan Romero Velez, who "was arraigned on Friday
for allegedly being involved in the 2018 kidnapping and death of a luxury car dealer," has
pleaded not guilty. He "could face up to life in prison."
FBI Investigated Causes Of Oregon Wildfires.
The Oregonian (9/19, 1M) reported that the FBI is looking into the cause of the recent wildfires
in Oregon, and it "issued a statement saying it had investigated several claims about extremist
groups starting the fires in Oregon, and found them to be untrue." The rumors "emerged in the
days after a public Zoom meeting in Oregon's Clackamas County on Sept. 10, when a captain
from the sheriff's office said he had received reports of 'suspected antifa' agitators 'armed with
chainsaws' near Estacada, Oregon."
Chicago Police Preparing For Gang Warfare Following Shooting.
The Chicago Tribune (9/18, Sobol, Gorner, Nickeas, Pratt, 2.65M) reported that Chicago Police
"were bracing for retaliation shootings on the South Side after a rapper was killed in a brazen
Gold Coast attack, possibly because he had recently made a video featuring 'derogatory
statements' about rival gang members who have died." Gangster Disciples member and local
rapper Carlton Weekly "was shot Tuesday afternoon while standing in line in front of the Milani
Boutique."
Celebrity Cheerleader Arrested On Child Pornography Charges.
NBC News (9/17, 6.14M) reports Jerry Harris, who was featured in the Netflix documentary
"Cheer," "was arrested to face a charge of production of child pornography, according to federal
prosecutors." Assistant US Attorney Joseph Fitzpatrick said "Harris is expected to appear in
federal court in Chicago on Thursday." According to court documents, Harris "allegedly solicited
child pornography images and videos from two 14-year-old twin boys on multiple occasions. ...
One of the boys told authorities that Harris had solicited oral sex from him in a bathroom during
a cheerleading competition they both attended."
The Washington Post (9/17, Babwin, 14.2M) reports Harris "was arrested Thursday and
charged with producing child pornography, three days after twin boys filed a lawsuit alleging he
sent them sexually explicit photos of himself and cornered one of them in a bathroom and
begged for oral sex." Harris "admitted during an interview after FBI agents raided his home in
the Chicago suburb of Naperville on Monday that he had asked one of the teens to send him
photographs and videos of his penis and buttocks on Snapchat." Harris also "admitted to
requesting and receiving on Snapchat child pornography from 'at least between 10 to 15 other
individuals he knew were minors,' according to the complaint."
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Investigation: 74 Registered Sex Offenders Involved With US Cheerleading
Organization.
USA Today (9/18, 10.31M) reports that the US All Star Federation, which oversees competitive
cheerleading, has "extensive rules" which "cover everything from stunt safety to hair bows."
However, "a USA TODAY investigation found" many people worked "in cheerleading despite
charges or convictions for sexual misconduct involving minors." The paper "identified nearly 180
individuals affiliated with cheerleading who have faced charges relating to sexual misconduct
involving minors but were not banned by the sport's two governing bodies, USASF and USA
Cheer. More than 140 of them - a group that includes coaches, choreographers and others
directly tied to the activity - have been convicted, and 74 are registered sex offenders."
Judge Rules Psychiatrist Can Testify In Maryland Newspaper Shooting Case.
The AP (9/4, White) reports a Maryland judge has ruled that "a psychiatrist retained by
prosecutors in the sanity phase of a trial for a man who killed five people at a Maryland
newspaper isn't barred by law from testifying about whether he believes the gunman was
criminally responsible, but he can't directly compare him to other mass shooters in an FBI
report." The judge ruled that "Dr. Gregory Saathoff can testify before a jury about his findings
relating to the criminal responsibility of Jarrod Ramos, even though Saathoff has not examined
him in person." Ramos pleaded guilty in October for killing five employees at the Capital
Gazette in Annapolis.
Former Detroit Prosecutor Arraigned In Obstruction Case.
The Detroit News (9/18, 825K) reports former prosecutor Eric Smith of Macomb County,
Michigan, "was arraigned on an obstruction of justice charge Friday in federal court, the first
step toward pleading guilty in a corruption scheme that forced him from office earlier this year."
Federal prosecutors accuse Smith of "obstructing an investigation into whether he stole
campaign funds, a charge punishable by up to 20-years in prison."
US Attorney In Nevada Addresses Need For More Human Trafficking Arrests,
Prosecutions.
KSNV-TV Las Vegas (9/20, Treanor, 62K) reports despite the massive scale of the problem of
human trafficking, "according to the Human Trafficking Institute, the U.S. Attorneys Office in
Nevada managed just one prosecution in 2019." Asked why it is "so hard to arrest, charge and
convict traffickers," US Attorney Nicholas Trutanich said, "There's trauma bonding between
victim and trafficker, and there's an issue we're dealing with right now, which is lawful access.
We have phones that are encrypted and essentially warrant-proof." Trutanich "will be the first to
admit that the numbers when he took office last year weren't good," but says "now his office is
getting creative to try and take more criminals off the streets."
FINANCIAL CRIME & CORPORATE SCANDALS
FBI Investigating Hawaii Land Development Scheme.
The Hawaii Free Press (9/20) reports on the difficulties developer Danny Julkowski has faced in
trying to construct "commercial lots and housing on an oddly shaped 11.7-acre parcel he
purchased in 2018" in Hawai'i County, Hawaii, which had "once been part of a much larger
development that was proposed in the late 1990s as the Waikoloa Highlands golf estates." The
paper reports that in buying the lot, Julkowski "unwittingly bought into a scheme that is now
the subject of an FBI investigation."
Indictment Of Former Atlanta CFO Points To Complexity Of Federal Probe Of City
Government.
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The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (9/18, Deere, scott Trubey, 895K) reports two years ago, US
Attorney Byung J. "BJay" Pak "announced he had devoted nine prosecutors to the corruption
investigation of City Hall" in Atlanta "-- a stunning amount of resources. The government had
also added more IRS and FBI agents to the case, prompting a former federal prosecutor to
compare the assets at Pak's disposal to Special Counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation."
Thus far, the biggest "payoff of that investment was announced Wednesday, when prosecutors
made public a federal grand jury indictment of Jim Beard, the city's chief financial officer under
former Mayor Kasim Reed." Beard "faces eight criminal charges including wire fraud and illegal
possession of machine guns."
Former Aide To Richard Daley Tied To Federal Corruption Investigation In Chicago.
The Chicago Sun-Times (9/18, 875K) reports When Richard M. Daley was mayor of Chicago,
"one of his most powerful - if least visible - aides was Victor Reyes, Daley's City Hall patronage
chief." Reyes, now a major Chicago lobbyist, "still likes to stay out of the spotlight. But that's
getting harder as federal authorities continue to pursue their wide-ranging investigation of
political corruption in Chicago and the suburbs, a dragnet that so far has resulted in criminal
charges against" several politicians. Reyes "hasn't been charged with any crime," but "he or one
of his firms has come onto the radar of federal authorities in two of the cases they're
investigating, records show."
Federal Prosecutors Charge Six With Bribing Amazon Employees For Marketplace
Advantage.
CBS News (9/18, Brooks, 3.68M) reports federal prosecutors announced Friday that "six people
allegedly conspired to bribe Amazon employees and contractors in order to gain a competitive
advantage on the retailer's marketplace." DOJ says "those charged posed as consultants and
worked with third-party sellers whose products had previously been removed from Amazon
Marketplace get the items back on the platform. The six then paid a total of more than
$100,000 in bribes to least 10 Amazon employees in exchange for their restoring the banned
products or services, the indictment alleges."
Reuters (9/18, Bose, Dastin) reported the Justice Department announced Friday that a
grand jury in the State of Washington has indicted six individuals on charges of conspiring to
bribe Amazon employees and contractors in an effort to obtain advantages on Amazon
marketplace. The defendants are charged with using "bribery and fraud" to "reinstate products
and accounts that Amazon had suspended or blocked entirely from doing business on its
marketplace." Reuters added, "Those indicted planned to pa
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