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tv   Keiser Report  RT  January 13, 2018 10:00pm-10:31pm EST

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jennifer originally claimed such a hero and worked as a secretary for most of the second and most of aged either by your financial greed or perhaps lust for adventure one way or another she managed to sell a huge quantity of her employer's documents she then went out into the marketplace to sell or vendor them to the public or to law enforcement and my information was that some of that information was sold to law enforcement agencies who of course will probably. not corroborate that information and of course not identify themselves. everybody i'm stephen ball. task hollywood guy you know suspects. proud american first of all i'm just george bush and r.v. enthusiastic this is my buddy max famous financial guru and we're just
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a little bit different i've thought of. going to windows up with all the drama happening in our country and i'm shooting the brood have some fun every day americans. and hopefully start to bridge the gap this is the great american people which. join me every thursday on the alec simon sure and i'll be speaking to guests of the world of politics sports business i'm show business i'll see you then. in the heart of the swiss alps this is a place probably more secretive than the pentagon more mysterious than the cia and better guarded than for knox swiss customs are here permanently all the site is
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controlled by them and they impose the opening times. opposite it is from his office the procedures in place of the strictest in all europe masterpieces by artists like pecan so and modigliani i can't boards and sold inside this warehouse that's where the report comes in it covers up deals which are naturally discreet commercially discreet felt but also discreet because they concern fraud. some of those paintings are linked to dark secrets nobody knows how many of these secrets a kept inside the geneva freeport system you'll never obtain an inventory of all the works in the freeport who knows how many there are three hundred three thousand three hundred thousand is it a matter of confidentiality only is it the world's black box of the art business. moses. when you don't. see the.
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most. space. let alone. claiming to know. that. you speak french. continue. to. here's what people have been saying about rejected in the us exactly the full on. billy show i go out of my way to launch you know a lot of the really packed a punch oh yeah mr john oliver of r t america is doing the same we are apparently better than. the sea people you've never heard of love back to the night my
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president of the world playing very. seriously send us an e-mail. johnny. i have a small present in this or that thing it is. for deal like to see it. is said to me what i think it is. that. it is even more than you thought it would be. bad.
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and is even born then you thought it would be. put. down nothing. and obviously. it was not easy. and not go to prison
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for you to. treat more of the worst side of the. car crash. it. is convinced that john doe wasn't a company employee. of the family it wasn't an office it wasn't a company it was the family of people working together but there were more than
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three hundred employees in prague and i believe six hundred collaborators worldwide . is confident that its database was hacked by an outsider. it was an illegal hog of information with some very. very powerful people that were behind this war and clearly some. kind of media and t.v. presenter and cyber security expert. confirms that hacking into most accounts second security system wasn't difficult the fact that many security practices were not followed is also one of the factors that played a role for example using the same password to send emails out to customers that was being used to administrator the entire network according to many industry analysts the problems and most are sick of the did back several years so they may have not updated their systems in several years leaving the door open for people to attack
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them from the outside. why was a window left open for john doe and i who. may have been able to explain but the code. if a business to give interviews the company continues to remain silent. that's no mistake the scandalous duns appear to have had three directors. the mosquito falling into the well number three. but the fact that marty for me showed. that good leak. in the most safe and cigar case where from the ny thing seventeen when they open a business to be to go through fourteen when does a guy stop working with them. is it possible that as well as being the leaks instigator was also one of the company had.
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been the focus of animal papers journalists fredricka just you know also mention the kristof is only. one second from the one hundred ninety seven and was a member of the company's management team. investigators who point a finger to. both him abs with one of my priceless pics i mean. most awful sick. they don't make people partners. who do half big. all the employee is on the working beef for ten years maybe he was in anything or maybe he was in but if unfolding no choice there thing are you to be in fear report video report on here.
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top down nothing. i don't need money. curse an hour of work. what's important is to shut this firm down once and for all. to ship the film down to get the rate of the owners to be more precise ideally yes.
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here is the money that you don't. have. missed is all against it firstly refuses to be interviewed for the moment he states that he was never either a second board member or shareholder. bastiaan frederick obama refer in the book to a document dated the twenty first of may two thousand and eight. showing that
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krista mazola guy had a ten percent of the company's shows. the other ninety percent was divided between from one fund second. despite selling his claim. he left the company and twenty eleven his name appears in internal company correspondence until july twenty fifteen. who was in a position to steal the most scandalous archives of the decade and what was that unknown fiefs objective revenge personal gain or a more noble sense of justice. there are many black holes in my socks on seconds history. available information is often fragmented and contradictory. but we've managed to piece together a timeline showing how the firm became one of the biggest players in the world's offshore market. and nine hundred seventy seven a young lawyer named. there in an internship at
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a london returns to panama when founded his own firm. in one nine hundred eighty three there was an incident in london that remains a mystery to this day at heathrow airport six thieves stole seven thousand gold ingots weighing three terms. a large hole of diamonds and five hundred million pounds. the old theft would become known as the bricks measure robbery. and was immediately dubbed the crime of the century but how does that involve mass x. company. referring to the panama documents the i.c.i. j. investigation states in one thousand nine hundred five a famous london wheeler dealer named gordon parry. with the help of yoga. founded a firm called fab area inc. that company laundered millions of pounds through banks in switzerland liston stein. jersey and the isle of man.
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the journalists are convinced that those funds were the proceeds from selling the stolen heathrow gold. interestingly the company came out of that scandal with clean hands the police could bring no charges against the lawyers perhaps that was the moment when you're going to realize that laundering billions could make him millions. but of course the main event of nine hundred eighty three was the coming to power of one of the toughest and most corrupt dictators in modern history man well not a year ago. it's no secret of the general had actively cooperated with the cia since the nineteen fifties. the united states invaded panama many years ago and with mr know. they had a problem with him in the drug cartels and so forth but america gives panama for
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many reasons the panama canal and so forth the drug barons had all but taken control of panama. because the journalists discovered. the atmosphere of fear and impunity the rule the country during those years didn't stop the company from making good money. in one nine hundred eighty five when the usa announced the hunt for manuel noriega's front. drug barack out of quinto. became the nominal director of the offshore firm that acquired older bloodthirsty motorist essence. a bachelor sudden passing i have only just learned you were
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a south and taken your last to bang turn. your at right up to you as we all knew it would i tell you i'm sorry. so i write these last words in hopes to put to rest these things that i never. off my chest. i remember when we first met my life turned on each breath. but then my feeling started to change you talked about war like it was again still some are fond of and those that didn't like to question our arc and i secretly promised to never be like it said one does not leave a funeral the same as one enters my mind gets consumed with the death of this one quite different person i speak to now because there are no other takers. to claim that mainstream media has met its maker. i had a great education a good job and a family that loved me. i never had to worry about how i would eat somewhere i
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would sleep. but i'm facing christmas alone out on the streets of london well you learn to be a bit older i'm not a cut above the boy like you got the whole you know to simulate the still give up food for the. birds. but you don't really feel like the human being in that. and then. the guy just came over to me assure me a good judge of this book. financial survival. when customers go by the reduced. well reduced
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and lower. that's undercutting but what's good for market is not good for the global economy. the two thousand and eight economic crisis turns some countries into paix these are the countries with weaker economies that needed austerity policies if you are in a situation of even the recession austerity is a very bad idea it doesn't work it makes millions of people very unhappy those who are unemployed see their wages decline almost a decade how good are the results she saw all of these are providing people. with the water all good people with you what i. believe will be she was i mean tiffany told. me she found. while the same mission is still in place to one of the consequences to weaken
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bluebirds. will first. the truth be consider is the consequences are actually quite acceptable to the decision makers.
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president trump agrees to again waive certain sanctions on iran but warns that the u.s. will walk away from the nuclear deal on list revisions army. washington post bureau chief in beirut is blasted on twitter for praising the bravery of a syrian journalist who is reputed to be a terrorist sympathizer of. the new york police union sues the forces commissioner on the city murder claiming bodycount video is being released the political game. over your churning in from right around the world this hour welcome to moscow and to r.t. international good to have your company my names you know only donald trump has
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agreed to extend sanctions relief for a round but he say's it's for the last time four months from now the u.s. president will again have to decide whether to suspend sanctions required by the nuclear pact the ravine insists that if do the hard fought agreement are not made america will walk away in two thousand and fifteen the obama administration foolishly traded away strong multilateral sanctions to get his weak nuclear deal despite my strong inclination i have not yet withdrawn the united states from the iran nuclear deal instead i have outlined two possible paths forward either fix the deal with disastrous flaws or the united states will withdraw. even though trump has repeatedly vowed to tear up the iran deal he has decided to keep the deal intact extending sanctions relief but also warning that this will be the last time until the deal is strengthened
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a bit sanctions will be added on iranian entities for their alleged support of terrorist groups now this comes after his national security advisers and other signatories have all urged him to comply with the agreement and the e.u. has been urging washington to stick to it for months and great the value of the treaty c.p.o. way that you give you the room the deal is working you want to. protect just a few way. why it should pay for this do this crucial for the security of the region but also for the security of the well the agreement was signed in two thousand and fifty and it was hailed as a breakthrough in u.s. iran relations as it ended international concern over iran's nuclear program and it's often described as obama's signature foreign policy achievement but trump has always accused the country of violating the quote spirit of the deal now at the last deadline that trump the way of sanctions but decertified iran's compliance with the deal which is completely unrelated to all of this a it's not part of the deal and b.
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iran's ballistic missiles already been capable of carrying nuclear warheads now we'll just have to wait and see if congress and u.s. allies will agree to trump's demands there's been quite a reaction from the iranian side the foreign minister has had donald trump saying the u.s. should stop jeopardizing the pact and we should all feel pretty disparate to people in tehran asking them what do you think. he knows that he trumps plan will never be practical because it's harmful for america this is a global agreement and it's not just the us that imposes sanctions and puts pressure on iran if the us wants to be isolated then yes it is the right way forward on where iran should stand strong against these actions because the more weaknesses show the more demanding the us becomes. when i don't think there is a brain in trump head he's crazy and he's the one who is unpredictable and i guess i think if he were really able to kill the deal he definitely would have done it by now i think it is more of
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a threat well in response to trump's threats european officials have voiced their support for the around deal germany's foreign ministry said berlin is committed to its full implementation and a former adviser to runs team during the nuclear negotiations told us that the us cannot afford to poll out of the pact. this is the president that makes decisions and have to go one day at a time and place to match. all to meet them today because this deal serves uses national interest as. defensive to. another's. leaders just cut the days of yore this is. through force has confirmed fully. there is really you know rationale or justification for trying to war against this crowd
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and really you know landed big stop on the us this could debility international scene while the u.s. tries to restrict iran's nuclear activity the pentagon has reportedly been busy working on a major revamp of its own atomic arsenal the plans were to for release next month but have already been leaked to the media this is what we know the first of its kind in eight years the nuclear posture review extensive plans to upgrade replace some of the i dated arsenal it also aimed at developing smaller nukes so-called low yield weapons a move that opponents say makes nuclear war more likely the plan wants funding doubled over the next decade as well and the document lists russia china and north korea as threats which need to be countered. with a federation of american scientists say the us already has well over a thousand nuclear warheads and in fact are as powerful as the bombs dropped on
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japan during the second world war their proposed expansion is in contrast to president trump's earlier pledge to seek global d. nuclear isolation. number one i would like to do you know the world i would like russia and the united states and china and pakistan and many other countries that have nuclear weapons to get rid of them well the pentagon has stated that it's not going to comment on the preliminary version of the document robert nigh i mean from the just a foreign policy campaign group thinks war weapons won't actually strengthen washington's position or in fact deter nuclear conflict nobody really think. any sane person is going to use nuclear weapons in a strategic competition the point of having a few if there is any point at all is you know so the other person will be deterred supposedly using your nuclear or their nuclear weapons because then you might use
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yours how doing more nuclear weapons doesn't change the contractors are going to make money of producing nuclear weapons so they'll create parochial interests there are pushing these things there are now something that is not in the interest of the world it's not in the interest the majority. or headline stories this hour the washington post bureau chief in beirut has faced a volley of criticism after posting a tweet praising the bravery of a journalist from free syrian t.v. it was quickly revealed the about the reporter has links to extremist groups down off looked into everybody needs a hero even beacons of independent journalism like the washington post and what better candidate than a man doing his job despite the constant threat of bombs. this syrian journalist
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standing in the open field well bombs explode all around him is very lucky to be alive not flood jacket or helmet you can barely hear the explosions he and his colleagues are very brave a professional for all of us journalists to look up to right wrong this book may have a pretty cover but it's the gripping content that's of most interest this man in the video is to hear our model and possibly the best way to understand them is this tweet shiite militia turned into minced meat sixty people killed in an eyesore suicide attack some respect for the dead maybe no now i'm satisfied he writes the different mission of bloodlust if you ask me in this picture is all smiles and handshakes with the saudi cleric a jihadi role model here. is sitting down against the backdrop of terrorist flags
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here's the one of i saw and here is not as he worked as a mediator trying to reconcile the groups back in twenty fourteen he set up and ran a training camp for child soldiers in syria and has reportedly made repeated calls for sectarian genocide no wonder he's on the u.s. security blacklist my city is far from the only terrorist has rubbed shoulders with many bells that night at this hour now bit of a. thought the group is embedded with in this video. is internationally designated as terrorist born as a branch of an al qaeda affiliate later they swapped sides figuring i saw flavored terrorism was more to their liking when i reached out to the washington post's beirut bureau chief about her tweet she disputed the fact that she ever gave praise to the man or his so-called journalism. i dispute that they gave praise to the journalist or his journalist i pointed out that standing out in the field and
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continuing to talk while explosions and there were no fall around you is brave she still admires is bravery though the mainstream media has a history of becoming in chanted by jihadi affiliated want to be reporters take karim the story teller when it came to the battle for aleppo people executed it's as simple as that what can i do here and see a blend in the crowd i don't think so am i going to turn my so over to regime forces absolutely not so was that he's giving a platform to a suicide bomber right at least he's taking all the right boxes they say you have to protect human rights. they support the terrorism so how on earth. ports human rights i support terrorism that's that's the bottom line of it they are hippocratic they have double standards if this happens is.

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