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Butina lawyer: Court's verdict 'impossible to separate from politics,' sets a dangerous precedent

Driscoll butina lawyer attorney
© Reuters/Mary F. Calvert/ File
Robert Driscoll, an attorney for Maria Butina
Gun activist Maria Butina is a victim of selective justice, caught up "in the anti-Russian hysteria," attorney Robert Driscoll told RT, warning that the precedent might backfire on US citizens abroad.

"I think it's impossible to separate [Butina's case] from the politics," Driscoll said. He added that it was hard to imagine that a citizen of any other country but Russia would get the same treatment in the US for such a minor offense.
"There's an underlying crime that she's pled guilty to which you can make out under US law. But I think that the notion that this would have been investigated or an arrest would have been made for a typical foreign national who wasn't Russian and wasn't in the current environment in the US... it's almost impossible to believe that."

Comment: Driscoll is not the only one to see the potential danger to students who travel abroad:
The politically motivated sentence of Russian gun activist Maria Butina makes anyone going to study abroad - including Americans - look like a criminal, analysts have told RT.

The 18-month prison sentence for Butina "is a horrific miscarriage of justice," said Daniel McAdams, executive director of the Ron Paul Institute. "The only thing she's guilty of is being a Russian in America at a time that America is under a spell of some kind of anti-Russian hysteria.

"This woman was held in maximum security solitary confinement for 10 months for a crime for which an average person would get a small fine and be sent off," McAdams added.

Butina, who arrived in the US on a student visa in 2016 before becoming active in pro-gun circles, was sentenced on Friday for acting as a foreign agent on behalf of the Kremlin without proper registration.

"What she did is what thousands and thousands of other foreign international students do in the US. They come to the US to get to know the country; to get to know how the political system works; to make friends... The idea that she is some sort of Russian spy is absolutely absurd," McAdams told RT.

Thousands of American students abroad do the same as well, and the ruling against Butina has "criminalized" them all, he added.

"There's danger that there could be a tit-for-tat response from Russia," said independent political commentator Anthony Webber.

"I don't think it helps relationships on the world stage. What's needed is for Russia is to be calm and not overreact," he told RT, adding that the history of Russian-American relations shows that Moscow is actually "good at not overreacting to over-the-top provocations."

After being held in solitary confinement for months, Butina pleaded guilty to being a de facto lobbyist, saying that she was unaware that registration was needed.

"Going to jail for that seems really over the top," Webber said. "I don't think it makes the democratic process or the judicial process look very good either."

Her whole case "has been blown out of proportion to fit the anti-Russian agenda, which has been going on in the US since the 2016 presidential election... She's just being made use of as a pawn," the analyst said.

The entire affair has been "political from the beginning," said Patrick Henningsen, editor at 21st Century Wire. "Some of the media stories that have been circulating about her early on have been proven to be false, like that she was exchanging sexual favors for information and somehow trying to corrupt the democratic system through her activities. This is all mainly in the wake of the 2016 election."

The prison sentence handed to the 30-year-old might have been "a face-saving exercise" on the part of the US, Henningsen suggested.

"To have her going free and speaking to the media, telling her story - it's going to be hugely embarrassing" for Washington, he told RT, adding that the ruling means Butina will be released "in the thick of the 2020 US presidential election. So this should be very interesting."

International attorney Douglas McNabb believes that 18 months is an appropriate sentence for Butina, however, considering that "the statutory maximum for the crime that she pleaded guilty to is five years."

With Butina receiving credit for her pretrial custody of nine months and 'good-time' credit cutting the sentence by another two months, she'll actually spend seven additional months in federal custody, McNabb pointed out.



Attention

Russian Foreign Ministry slams 'politically motivated' Butina verdict as a 'shameful stain' on US justice

butina

Maria Butina
The Russian Foreign Ministry called the 18-month prison sentence for student Maria Butina a "politically motivated" decision "in the spirit of McCarthyism," adding that her only crime was being a Russian citizen in the US.

"From the moment of her arrest we have pointed out that the accusations against her of attempting to influence internal American political processes were completely contrived and fabricated," the ministry said in a statement on Friday. "Her confession, which was coerced through harsh imprisonment conditions and threats of a lengthy sentence, changes nothing."

Butina was sentenced on Friday to 18 months in prison and deportation from the US by a federal judge in Washington, DC. She was arrested by the FBI in June last year and charged with being an unregistered foreign agent. The nine months she has already spent in jail - much of it in solitary confinement - will count towards her sentence.

Comment: Even Putin has weighed in on the patent absurdity of the sentence:
The US government knows that Russian gun activist Maria Butina isn't guilty of a crime, but sentenced her to prison anyway to avoid embarrassment, Russian President Vladimir Putin has claimed.

"[The US] is just trying to save face," Putin said while speaking at the 2nd Belt & Road Forum in Beijing on Saturday.

"There's nothing they can charge [Butina] with, so to avoid looking ridiculous, they decided to slap her with 18 months in prison."

The Russian president described Butina's 18-month prison sentence as "a travesty of justice."



Brick Wall

Lawsuit filed against Poroshenko asks for ban from leaving Ukraine

Poroshenko

Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko makes the announcement while addressing supporters in Kyiv on January 29.
National Police and SBU accused of conspiring against national security

The Kiev District Administrative Court is looking at prohibiting President Petro Poroshenko from being able to leave the country.

According to the press service of the court, in addition to the "guarantor" himself, the head of the presidential administration Igor Reinin and the first deputy chairman of the BPP faction Igor Kononenko may be barred from leaving the country .

It is noted that the District Administrative Court of Kiev received a lawsuit from the TV presenter of 1 + 1 Oleksandr Dubinsky against the National Police, the Security Service of Ukraine and the Administration of the State Border Service.

Comment:


X

Putin: 'If transit of Russian gas through Ukraine stops, there will be no reverse'

gas pipeline
© Gazprom
Ukraine still heavily relies on Russian gas, therefore it won't be able to use reverse flows if the gas transit stops completely, Vladimir Putin said. As of now, the reverse gas flows "exist only on paper."

There are no real reverse flows of gas in Ukraine, Putin said, adding that "if there's no transit, there're also no gas supplies." He was apparently referring to reports that Ukraine continues to buy reverse supplies of Russian gas at a higher price from European nations.

The Russian president said that Ukraine is buying gas at twice the price it could have paid. Meanwhile, Kiev is "fooling around" instead of coming to terms with the conditions of gas transit decided by Moscow. Eventually, it is the Ukrainian taxpayer who suffers the most, Putin argued.

Over the last few years, heating prices have increased by a whopping 1,400 percent while living standards have "dropped dramatically," he noted. Kiev maintains that reverse gas flows from the EU to Ukraine are to help the country overcome its reliance on Russian gas.

Comment: It must be tough to be Ukraine. On the one hand you hate Russia. On the other hand you need Russia. What to do in such a situation? Apparently, shoot yourself in the foot - repeatedly. See also:


Gold Coins

India joins China and Russia in gold buying spree

gold elephant
© Getty Images
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is expected to add 1.5 million ounces, or 46.7 tons, of gold to its growing stockpile which has reached record levels as the country appears to have joined the global anti-dollar push.

The world's tenth-largest gold holder, India, has purchased 8.2 tons of the precious metal so far this year, according to data from the International Monetary Fund. In 2018, the RBI reportedly bought 42.3 tons of gold. The regulator currently holds 608.7 tons of the yellow metal that accounts for about seven percent of the country's foreign exchange reserves.

The move reflects the current trend among global regulators. According to latest report from the World Gold Council (WGC), the central banks across the world acquired 651.5 metric tons of gold in 2018. The unseen year-over-year surge of 74 percent made the figure the highest annual total on record.

Many countries have been stockpiling bullion in an attempt to diversify their foreign reserves away from the US dollar due to multiple geopolitical conflicts, trade wars, and sanctions applied by Washington to participants of global markets under various pretexts.

Attention

Israeli forces wound 110 Palestinian civilians on 56th Friday of Great March of Return - 37 children, 3 women, 4 paramedics, 1 journalist

gaza march
On Friday, 26 April 2019, in excessive use of force against peaceful protesters on the 56th Friday of the Great March of Return and Breaking the Siege, Israeli forces wounded 110 civilians, including 37 children, 3 women, 4 paramedics, and a journalist, in the eastern Gaza Strip. Two of those wounded sustained serious wounds.

According to observations by PCHR's fieldworkers, the Israeli forces who stationed in prone positions and in military jeeps along the fence with Israel continued to use excessive force against the protesters by firing bullets and tear gas canisters at them. As a result, dozens of the protesters were hit with bullets and teargas canisters without posing any imminent threat or danger to the life of soldiers.

During this week, Israeli forces have escalated their attacks against the medical personnel in the field, wounding 4 members of them. This indicates that there is an Israeli systematic policy to target the medical personnel and obstruct their humanitarian work that is guaranteed under the rules of the international humanitarian law.

On Friday, 26 April 2019, the incidents were as follows:

At approximately 16:00, thousands of civilians, including women, children and entire families, started swarming to the five encampments established by the Supreme National Authority of Great March of Return and Breaking the Siege adjacent to the border fence with Israel in eastern Gaza Strip cities.

Comment: Imagine if this were Russia shooting at Ukrainians. Or Syria shooting at civilians in Idlib. Or Iran. Or Venezuela. But no, it's Israel. Therefore there is no widespread outcry amongst the Western politicians Israel has bought off or blackmailed into silence.


Blue Planet

Trump appreciates supportive statements made by Russia's Putin about North Korea

trump kim korea
US President Donald Trump said he appreciated the statements made by Russian President Vladimir Putin after the summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Vladivostok.

China's efforts on the denuclearization front were also helpful, Trump told reporters at the White House.

The two heads of state met on Thursday in the Russian city of Vladivostok, where they discussed North Korea's nuclear program, among other security issues. It was the first-ever meeting of the two leaders.

Speaking to the press after the summit, President Putin urged international cooperation, and that the DPRK be given a security guarantee.

Bad Guys

Remind us who the bad guys are? US forces and allies killed more Afghan civilians than the Taliban and other terrorists

US killing Afghan civilian

The numbers are apparently so disturbing that UN officials are now calling for an investigation into the killings.
A rather disturbing report was released by the United Nations this week detailing how in the first part of 2019, US forces and their allies killed more civilians than the Taliban and other terrorist groups.

According to the most recent UN data, Afghan civilians were killed in greater numbers by NATO and pro-government security forces in the first three months of 2019 than by armed militants. Half of those slaughtered by allied troops were women and children.

While the number of overall civilians killed slightly decreased, according to the report, this is the first time since the invasion after 9/11 that the US and its allies have slaughtered more civilians than the terrorist groups they are ostensibly fighting.

The United Nations data breaks down as follows:
  • In the first quarter of 2019, pro-government forces were responsible for the deaths of 305 civilians, while insurgents killed 227.
  • The leading causes of civilian deaths were air strikes (145 fatalities) and ground search operations primarily carried out by US-backed Afghan forces (72).
  • Women and children comprised half of civilian casualties from aerial operations, with international forces responsible for the vast majority of these.
  • Overall, 581 civilians were killed and 1,192 wounded, representing a 23 percent decrease in overall casualties on the same quarter last year.
The numbers are apparently so disturbing that UN officials are now calling for an investigation into the killings.

Comment: Remember this the next time the Pentagon claims it uses 'precision strikes' to minimize the deaths of civilians.

A sampling of the US' 'consideration' for civilian welfare:


Pistol

Sri Lankan police engaged in shootout during search of 'suicide vest factory' - UPDATES

sri lanka police
© Reuters/ Dinuka Liyanawatte
A Sri Lankan police officer walks into the motel where the Australian and British-educated suicide bomber had detonated his device inside, in Dehiwala on the outskirts of Colombo, Sri Lanka April 26, 2019.
Sri Lankan police searching for suspects connected to the Easter bombings have engaged in a shootout with men during a search operation in the city of Ampara Sainthamaruthu.

The shootout erupted as police attempted to raid a location believed to have been used for the manufacturing of suicide vests, Sri Lankan news outlet News First reports. A police spokesperson said the raid was being conducted by the Army and the Police Special Task Force.

Comment: Southfront adds:
Heavy clashes erupted in the coastal town of Sammanthurai on April 26, when Sri Lanka security forces raided a suspected bomb factory linked to the recent Easter Sunday bombings.

Citing a military spokesman, Sky News reported that an explosion rocked the area and when officers went to investigate they were fired upon. Later more explosions were heard. The Police believe that some of the suspects may have blown themselves up.

Earlier, a joint force of Sri Lanka army, police and Special Task Force (STF) uncovered a hideout in Sammanthurai. Explosive materials, a large amount of fuel, a small drone and an ISIS flag were found there.

Seven suspects, who are believed to be linked to the terrorist attacks, were also apprehended in two separate security operations in the towns of Dharga and Kilinochchi.

More than two hundreds pf civilians were reportedly killed in the bombings, which targeted the St. Anthony's Church in Colombo, St. Sebastian's Church in Negombo, the Zion Church in Batticaloa as well as the Shangri-La, Cinnamon Grand and Kingsbury five-star hotels.

ISIS claimed responsibility for the attacks few days later and released a photo of the suicide bombers. Infamous radical scholar, Zahran Hashim, was among the attackers.

Sri Lankan authorities are currently searching for 140 suspects thought to have links with the terror group. It remains unclear how many of these suspects have been arrested so far.
UPDATE - 26/04/19 18:41: From Sputnik

Local media reports, citing police, that the suspects blew themselves up at the beginning of a major gunfight when security personnel, including the military, attempted to raid a location believed to have been used for the manufacture of suicide vests.

Security personnel seized clothing and flags linked to Daesh terror group, 150 gelignite sticks, 100,000 iron balls, drones and at least one suicide vest during a raid in the same locality.

21:05:

The Sri Lankan army reports one civilian dead, three injured in crossfire. The Army hasn't cleared the cordoned off area yet. We have observed two dead bodies suspected to be terrorists. We can confirm one explosion occurred during the shootout", Army spokesman Brigadier Sumith Athapaththu said.

UPDATE 27/04/19: Casualties in Sri Lankan shootout:
A total of 15 bodies, including six children, have been found at the site of a prolonged gun battle between military police and suspected Islamic militants believed to be linked to Sunday's church and hotel bombings in Sri Lanka.

The dead were discovered in a house in Sainthamaruthu as authorities cleared the area on Saturday morning following the overnight shootout, which police and military had earlier said killed four gunmen and a civilian. Fighting broke out on Friday night between the troops and suspected terrorists believed to be connected with the Easter Sunday attacks, which targeted several churches and luxury hotels, killing 253 and injuring hundreds more.

Nearly 10,000 soldiers are searching the country for suspects linked to the bombings, and over 70 individuals have been detained so far.



Arrow Down

DOJ could build Assange case on Espionage Act, carries possible death sentence

Free speech
© Reuters / Simon Dawson
Julian Assange could be charged under the Espionage Act for leaking classified material in addition to the hacking charge he already faces, a US Department of Justice document indicates.

The Department of Justice (DOJ) is investigating "possible violations of United States federal criminal law regarding the unauthorized receipt and dissemination of classified information," said a letter addressed to former WikiLeaks spokesman Daniel Domscheit-Berg, requesting an interview.

The letter suggests the DOJ is looking for evidence to charge the WikiLeaks founder with more than the computer crime detailed in the indictment against him unsealed in April.

Comment: See also: