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Weinstein Claims #MeToo Was Money Grab
Prison Interview, Plain Talk Harvey Weinstein gave a long interview…
Prison Interview, Plain Talk Harvey Weinstein gave a long interview from Rikers Island and blamed much of the public fury on money. He told the reporter that when Alyssa Milano posted "Me too" the movement swelled and suddenly many people pointed at him. He described life in the jail as tense and said he felt attacked even when he stepped outside. The setting makes a soundbite look smaller and a legal fight look messier. Video and Tweeted Clips https://twitter.com/THR/status/2031392022578311552?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw https://twitter.com/OliLondonTV/status/2031422367541653697?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw On Settlements and Motive Weinstein told the reporter that settlements created an incentive structure. He cited examples of checks for $500,000 and even $3 million, and suggested that money encouraged claims. That is worth unpacking. Civil settlements do not equal criminal guilt, but they also do not prove innocence. Corporations and studios often prefer quick payouts to long legal fights. That pattern benefits lawyers and PR teams more than it serves truth. What He Admits and What He Denies In the interview Weinstein said he made mistakes. He admitted to inappropriate advances and overplaying his hand in some encounters. He denied committing sexual assault. He also insisted he will clear his name. He has been at the center of prosecutions…
Jan. 6 ‘Hero’ Officer Indicted on Sex Crimes
The arrest and the charges Federal and local court filings…
Native Contract Loophole Exposed on Tape
The tape and the claim An undercover journalist recorded executives…
The tape and the claim An undercover journalist recorded executives linked to Chenega Architecture and Design and Cherokee Federal saying these firms use Native ownership on paper to win 8(a) set aside contracts and then outsource much of the work. One executive summed it up in plain language. The issue reported is not gossip. It is a direct claim about how the government contracting system is being used. https://twitter.com/JamesOKeefeIII/status/2031483270278627476?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw How the paper ownership game works According to the footage, companies list tribal members on boards while hiring non Native executives to run operations. That lets the firm qualify for small business and tribal preference programs. Then the company contracts out the actual labor and keeps a large share of the revenue. The arrangement raises obvious questions about who is doing the work and who benefits. Numbers that caught attention In the recording an executive described revenue splits and percentages going to tribes and back to the business. Another said firms often do a small portion of work themselves and rely on subcontractors for the rest. Those numbers matter because they determine whether a firm is truly meeting program rules or just qualifying on paper. The federal response The Small Business…
California Congressman Leaves GOP, Still Backs Republicans
What happened Rep. Kevin Kiley, a California congressman, said he…
Thune Won’t Kill Filibuster for SAVE Act
Quick take Senate Majority Leader John Thune told reporters he…
Trump Boasts Most-Favored-Nation Drug Win
What he told Republicans Speaking at the Republican Members' Issues…

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