The Anatomy of Public Corruption

Get Em! Devin for crimes connected to 9/11



This former US Attorney graduated with persons connected to Southern Pacific in the 70s connected the Roseville Train Yard Explosion where 100 rails cars filled BOMBS AND ORDNANCE destined for VIETNAM VIA Concord Naval Weapons Station.

 the way the allies stopped the Nazis was to cut the caterpillar into separating the bullets from the shooters and the bombs from the bombers.

That is 101 military logistics cut the caterpillar strangle them, cut the food supply starve them cut the fuel make them Park their tanks.

 that is the Battle of the Bulge
Devin Nunes flashes 'as many as 10' criminal referrals to Justice Department
June 6, 2020 - 2:16 PM
After shipping eight referrals to Attorney General William Barr last spring, Rep. Devin Nunes, the ranking member of the panel, told Fox Business on Thursday that they have gathered enough evidence for "at least another five, possibly as many as 10" recommendations for prosecution as three U.S. attorneys conduct reviews of various aspects of the Russia investigation.
The California Republican said he and his GOP colleagues want to "get it right," but they plan to send the referrals within the next "week to 10 days or so." What exactly will appear in those referrals remains unclear, but Nunes explained what his investigators are examining.
"We now are looking at the overall Gen. Flynn investigation and how that was conducted and the rest of the Mueller team," he said. "And then, of course, as new information has come to light from the information that was declassified by acting Director of National Intelligence Ric Grenell, that information has also shown that there are other people who have lied or misled Congress or have, I think in some cases maybe, lied by omission, documents that were kept from Congress."
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Grenell was replaced by former Rep. John Ratcliffe late last month after the Texas Republican was confirmed by the Senate. During his three-month tenure as head of the U.S. Intelligence Community, Grenell declassified long-sought-after documents related to the case against former Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn and forced the hand of House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff to release dozens of witness transcripts from the panel's own investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. Schiff accused Grenell of "selective declassification for political purposes."
The Republican inquiry in the House is a more understated effort than the one that is playing out in the Senate, which is in GOP control. There, two committees are leading the charge in conducting oversight of the Russia investigation.With no support from Democrats, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee voted to give Chairman Ron Johnson the authority to subpoena Obama officials in its review of the Russia inquiry. Sen. Lindsey Graham, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, is also seeking subpoena power in his Crossfire Hurricane investigation, while Democrats on the panel say they want to hear more testimony from former special counsel Robert Mueller.
Nunes, who believes the government's intelligence powers were abused in an attempted "coup" against President Trump, stressed the need for "pure transparency." He teased what Republicans would do to escalate their investigation if they win back control of the House this year.
"We've got about 40 people that are on that list," he said, without naming anyone. "So, hopefully, if Republicans are put back in charge, we will be able to subpoena those people, but right now, we can’t."
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Pete Bennett, Michael Milken, Larry Ellison and Philip Anschutz

This was borrowed from Milken Institute where they're talking older homeless.

My blog about homeless stalled during Covid was created as clearing house for homeless solutions and services.  A striking connection to why i am homeless is police corruption and attacks on my legal cases leads to destitution and despair despair.

Try bayareahomeless.com

 my name is Pete Bennett I was once involved in litigation involving partners of Milken attorneys near manatt Phelps and Wilson sonsini somehow I ended up homeless thankfully Bono didn't pay his bills either


Cities Must do More to Protect Older Homeless Americans From COVID-19

Paul Irving
Paul Irving
Chairman, Milken Institute Center for the Future of Aging
Lauren Dunning
Lauren Dunning
Director, Center for the Future of Aging

The moral test of any society is how it treats its most vulnerable members, including those who are old and living in the shadows.

NOT SINCE THE 1918 Spanish flu have we faced such drastic nationwide measures to prevent the spread of a deadly disease pandemic. Communities across America are shut down and individuals are instructed to stay at home and distance from those outside their households. For older adults, who are at greater risk, particularly those with chronic conditions, physical isolation means protection. It can be a matter of life and death.
But what happens when that protection is out of reach?
This is the reality for older Americans who are homeless. Without privacy, access to soap, hand sanitizer, and other tools for hygiene, and the ability to safely store food and other necessities, the dangers of daily survival are daunting. Many public restrooms are now closed. Food banks and other charitable services are strained. Testing and care may be inaccessible and the prospect of rapid disease spread is high.
More people than ever are homeless in their "golden years." More than 10,000 Americans turn 65 each day, and an increasing number of them are aging on the streets. People age 50 and over now comprise approximately one-third of homeless Americans. With higher rates of age-related disease and an increased mortality rate, this group already lacks access to quality care and suffers from disparities and negative biases in the medical ecosystem. In Los Angeles, where the number of homeless older adults aged 62 and over grew by more than 20% in 2018, the homeless die 22 years earlier than the general population.
To be sure, efforts to scale up the response are progressing. Shelters will be supported by the federal stimulus package with up to $4 billion in new resources that can be used to modify operations to prevent the spread of the virus in close quarters. Community spaces are being repurposed. Los Angeles is adding 6,000 shelter beds at city-owned recreation centers. Seattle, an early hot spot for the virus, has deployed an event space and a number of community centers to ease crowded conditions. Several communities are working with the hospitality sector to secure housing. In San Francisco, more than 8,000 rooms have been offered by hotels and motels in response to a call to help homeless residents, health care workers and first responders in need of safe places.
Cities are allocating additional resources and revising policies to prevent the spread of the virus. San Jose, California, is providing hand sanitizer and masks at homeless encampments, while Los Angeles has temporarily halted encampment cleanups to avoid disruption of tents and belongings. Austin has installed portable bathrooms and hand-washing facilities in at least 20 locations citywide.
All of these strategies and more are needed to stem the devastating risks of the virus for homeless older adults. A new academic study predicts more than 21,000 hospitalizations and 3,400 deaths of homeless adults if swift action is not taken.
It is not just the current population of homeless older adults who are at risk. Many older Americans are on the edge, rent-burdened and on the precipice of homelessness. The Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies found that in 2019 in California, 35% of renters ages 65 to 79, and 42% of renters 80 or older, were rent-burdened, meaning that more than half of their incomes went to housing. The job losses and economic strains resulting from the coronavirus crisis are placing many more at risk of losing their homes.
Cities are responding by imposing moratoriums on evictions, including Los Angeles and Miami. Others are providing rental assistance, such as Chicago, which launched the COVID-19 Housing Assistance Grant program to provide 2,000 grants to assist residents impacted by the pandemic. Advocates are calling for further measures, including forgiveness of missed rent payments to prevent loss of housing once the immediate threat has subsided and policies are rolled back.
Taken together, these interventions add up. But much more must be done.
The moral test of any society is how it treats its most vulnerable members, including those who are old and living in the shadows. The coronavirus crisis is a moment of emergency that will measure our own morality. As neighbors and citizens, we must voice our support for homeless older adults and for those at risk of becoming homeless. Lives are at stake, and our leaders, communities, philanthropic organizations and all levels of government must work together now to provide resources and solutions to meet the immediate need.
This article was originally published in U.S. News on April 9, 2020 
Published April 21, 2020

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