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No wonder the Crooked Tout Wayne Allyn Root Loves his fellow crook. They employ the same dirty, boiler room tactics.

New York AG Slams Trump University as 'Three-Card Monte Game'

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New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman (Getty Images)
By Cathy Burke | Tuesday, 31 May 2016 04:19 PM

New York state's top prosecutor applauds a California judge's decision to release more documents pertaining to a lawsuit against Donald Trump's now-defunct namesake real-estate school, likening the operation to a "three-card Monte game."

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and the GOP presumptive presidential nominee have been embroiled in a bitter battle over Trump University since the Democratic attorney general filed a $40 million lawsuit in 2013, claiming students were bilked. That case is expected to head to trial as early as November, Politico reports.

"You’re not allowed to protect the trade secrets of a three-card monte game," Schneiderman said in an interview Tuesday on CNN, referring to efforts by Trump's lawyers in California to keep "playbooks" describing the real-estate school under wraps.

"Sections of the playbooks have been laid out in our papers that we've submitted in the New York court. It is clearly just a motivational speech to try to sell people at their weekend seminar that you can't possibly learn everything about real estate in three days. You got to spend $10,000, $20,000 on what were called the Trump elite program, so the playbook just shows it was a pitch up to try to dupe these people into spending more money."

Schneiderman said Trump's legal team been trying to quash the release of documents in the California case, and has fought against having the case go to trial.

"This was a fraud from top to bottom," Schneiderman said. "He’s using every trick he can do to delay the release of documents, to delay the trials — attacking the judge for his ethnicity, attacking me and accusing me of conspiring with the president of the United States."

"Telling people who are in hard economic times, we're talking about 2008, 2009, people desperate to hold onto their homes, to make some money, convincing them that he will teach them his entrepreneurial secrets," Schneiderman tells CNN.

"They would get them to raise credit limits and then use that extra credit to make them buy more Trump seminars… They bilked people. It was shameless and heartless. It's important information to get out there and I think that between the judge releasing these records and other things, I hope all the facts will get out that can between now and the election. I think it's important public policy. "


Breaking News at Newsmax.com http://www.newsmax.com/Politics/new...l-defends/2016/05/31/id/731589/#ixzz4AK9XLBtq

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Let’s examine the players in this lawsuit.


The players are:

The Judge: U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel, the California federal judge in the Trump University law suit case.

The Lawyers: Two law firms: Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP and Zeldes Haeggquist & Eck LLP.


And let’s not forget another player, this one in New York. That would be:

The New York Attorney General: Eric Schneiderman.


The Play: As detailed here in Law360, this is how the game works:


Law360, Los Angeles (October 28, 2014, 4:00 PM ET) — A California federal judge has granted class certification in a Racketeer influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act suit accusing Donald Trump of scheming to make millions of dollars by falsely claiming attendees of Trump University LLC seminars would learn his real estate secrets.
… In addition to certifying the class, Judge Curiel on Friday appointed Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP and Zeldes Haeggquist & Eck LLP as class counsel.


Stop. Stop right there. Let’s parse.


Who is the “California federal judge” who not only granted “class certification” to the lawsuit against Trump — but then assigned the two law firms now involved with the case?
That would be Gonzalo Curiel. Who is he? Trump has gotten flak for referring to Curiel’s Mexican heritage (he was born in Indiana). Yet right here the San Diego La Raza Lawyers Association is making a point of honoring Curiel for “his leadership and support to the community and to our Association!” — exclamation point theirs. The “community” in question is not the San Diego community of all ethnic groups, races, and genders who happen to be lawyers. What is the San Diego La Raza Lawyers Association all about? Their mission statement (here) reads, in part, this way:


Formed in 1979, with a handful of Latino attorneys, San Diego La Raza Lawyers Association (SDLRLA) has grown to represent over three hundred Latino and Latina lawyers practicing in San Diego County. SDLRLA is one of 18 affiliate bar associations of the California La Raza Lawyers Association, which serves several thousand Latino lawyers practicing in the State of California.
Our purpose is to advance the cause of equality, empowerment and justice for Latino attorneys and the Latino community in San Diego County through service and advocacy.



In other words? The group that honored Curiel, an Obama appointee (and campaign contributor to House Democratic Conference Chairman Xavier Becerra) proudly boasts that the sole reason for their existence is — their ethnicity. They are not about “the cause of equality, empowerment and justice” for all San Diego attorneys regardless of ethnicity. They are quite boldly only for these things when they concern, their words, “Latino attorneys and the Latino community.” And clearly they see Judge Curiel as one of their own. And apparently the Judge agrees. In other words, when Donald Trump points out the judge’s ethnicity “happens to be, we believe, Mexican,” at a minimum the judge himself is all too willing to associate himself with his ethnicity, eagerly accepting an award citing his willingness to give “support to the (Latino) community and to our (Latino) Association!” If the Judge himself goes out of his way to make certain everyone knows he is Latino — is not Trump more than justified in being wary of a judge deciding his case with what seems to be a serious ethnic axe to grind?



Move on to the two law firms that Curiel selected to represent the class action case against Trump University. The first, Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP, lists as its senior partner partner Darren J. Robbins. And a check with the FEC shows that Robbins has made over a hundred campaign contributions over the years, far and away most of them going to Democrats. Including a contribution of $2700 on May 12, 2015 to Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.* That would be the Hillary Clinton who, assuming she polishes off the Sanders challenge, will be the Democratic nominee against… Donald Trump.



Then there’s that second firm selected by Judge Curiel to be involved in the Trump University lawsuit — Zeldes Haeggquist & Eck LLP. The senior partner in that firm? If you guessed she was a multiple contributor to Barack Obama you would of course be right. But she was also a one-time donor in 2004 to… MoveOn.org. You know Move On, the people who back there in 2004 were running an ad comparing President Bush to Hitler. Today? Today MoveOn has this to say about Donald Trump:

For as long as Donald Trump is a presidential candidate, MoveOn members will continue to call out and nonviolently protest his racist, bigoted, misogynistic, xenophobic, and violent behavior… Trump and those who peddle hate and incite violence have no place in our politics and most certainly do not belong in the White House.


And let’s not forget New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. Schneiderman filed a $40 million law suit against Trump University in 2013 charging fraud. This after repeated campaign solicitations to Trump family members and business associates, as I detailed here three years ago. Solicitations along the line of the Mafia Don who stops by to say “ya gotta nice little business going here, ya wouldn’t want anything to happen to it.” Curiously, this very same Eric Schneiderman got a $15,000 campaign contribution in 2010 from two lawyers in a law firm named… Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP. They being one of the firms Judge Curiel would assign to the Trump University class action cases. Amazing coincidence.



Let’s cut to the chase here, shall we? The accusation here is not that all these people have broken some law somewhere. The point is very simple. By October 2014 — when Judge Curiel granted that class certification to the Trump lawsuits and gave the nod to two law firms led by serious liberals who between them had given money to Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and MoveOn.org — it was well known that Donald Trump was considering a race for president in 2016, as noted here among other places by the Huffington Post. He was not a shy man about his views. And, of course, he was Donald Trump the famous billionaire whether he ran for the White House or not. What a big, fat exciting target for liberal activist lawyers!
None of this makes the media coverage. Has Eric Schneiderman endorsed Hillary Clinton for president? Yes.Is that factored in to the coverage? No.


Take this recent story from May 28 at the Washington Post — the Post itself a virulently anti-Trump paper. What’s missing in this Trump University story? Any references to the Judge’s waltz with legal-style identity politics that can easily lead an observer — like Donald Trump — to believe the Judge’s Latino heritage is in fact playing a role in his decisions on this case? No. Any look at the law firms involved, the money ties to Hillary and the rest of liberal land? No. In other words? Every effort is made to portray all of the Trump University cases as just a coldhearted billionaire-turned-presidential nominee shamelessly squeezing nickels from unsuspecting hard-working Americans. And if this storyline, saturated into the political discourse, happens to hinder the Trump campaign? Ah, well. Tough cookies.


Tough cookies indeed. What we have here is the case against Trump University being so riven with political conflicts of interest that it is clear Trump is not a defendant but the subject of a political witch hunt. A witch hunt fueled by everything from identity politics to campaign contributions.


To borrow a much used phrase from this election cycle? The case against Trump University appears to have been rigged right from the get-go.
Shocker.
 

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No wonder the Crooked Tout Wayne Allyn Root Loves his fellow crook. They employ the same dirty, boiler room tactics.

New York AG Slams Trump University as 'Three-Card Monte Game'

GetFile.aspx
New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman (Getty Images)
By Cathy Burke | Tuesday, 31 May 2016 04:19 PM

New York state's top prosecutor applauds a California judge's decision to release more documents pertaining to a lawsuit against Donald Trump's now-defunct namesake real-estate school, likening the operation to a "three-card Monte game."

New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and the GOP presumptive presidential nominee have been embroiled in a bitter battle over Trump University since the Democratic attorney general filed a $40 million lawsuit in 2013, claiming students were bilked. That case is expected to head to trial as early as November, Politico reports.

"You’re not allowed to protect the trade secrets of a three-card monte game," Schneiderman said in an interview Tuesday on CNN, referring to efforts by Trump's lawyers in California to keep "playbooks" describing the real-estate school under wraps.

"Sections of the playbooks have been laid out in our papers that we've submitted in the New York court. It is clearly just a motivational speech to try to sell people at their weekend seminar that you can't possibly learn everything about real estate in three days. You got to spend $10,000, $20,000 on what were called the Trump elite program, so the playbook just shows it was a pitch up to try to dupe these people into spending more money."

Schneiderman said Trump's legal team been trying to quash the release of documents in the California case, and has fought against having the case go to trial.

"This was a fraud from top to bottom," Schneiderman said. "He’s using every trick he can do to delay the release of documents, to delay the trials — attacking the judge for his ethnicity, attacking me and accusing me of conspiring with the president of the United States."

"Telling people who are in hard economic times, we're talking about 2008, 2009, people desperate to hold onto their homes, to make some money, convincing them that he will teach them his entrepreneurial secrets," Schneiderman tells CNN.

"They would get them to raise credit limits and then use that extra credit to make them buy more Trump seminars… They bilked people. It was shameless and heartless. It's important information to get out there and I think that between the judge releasing these records and other things, I hope all the facts will get out that can between now and the election. I think it's important public policy. "


Breaking News at Newsmax.com http://www.newsmax.com/Politics/new...l-defends/2016/05/31/id/731589/#ixzz4AK9XLBtq


storm-in-a-teacup-1.jpg



Nobody but liberals care about Trump University. Non issue!
 

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http://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/...roke-3&email_subject=trumps-campaign-is-broke

Trump's campaign is broke



markos.jpg

By kos
Tuesday May 31, 2016 · 5:23 AM PDT

Another broke effort by serial business loser Donald Trump.
Donald Trump's campaign has alerted Senate Republicans that he won't have much money to spend fending off attacks from Hillary Clinton over the next couple months.
The notice came when Paul Manafort, Trump's senior advisor, met with a group of Senate Republican chiefs of staff for lunch last week, sources familiar with the meeting told the Washington Examiner. The admission suggests that Trump will be far more dependent on the GOP brass for money than he has led voters to believe [...]
"They know that they're not going to have enough money to be on TV in June and probably most of July, until they actually accept the nomination and get RNC funds, so they plan to just use earned media to compete on the airwaves," one GOP source familiar with Manafort's comments told the Examiner.
The way Trump earns free media is to say stupid shit. It’s impressively effective, if your job is to serially alienate most segments of the voting public.
Remember when Trump bragged about how he wasn’t beholden to anyone because it was his money funding his campaign? Apparently that was another “suggestion” from a guy who is obviously making it up as he goes along.

Sack of shit has been lying about being "self-funded" all these months when he wasn't, now the chickens have come home to roost.:pointer:$$:($$:nohead:Shush()*
 

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Nobody but liberals care about Trump University. Non issue!

Ahhh, for the first time in American history, a candidate is running for President while he is being investigated for fraud-on multiple fronts-but YOU think it's a "non-issue."

You are one nosy, got-no-life-living-in-mummsy's-basement, brain dead cock sucker.
 
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Looks like the behavioral health team gave Finchy internet privileges. Should make for an interesting afternoon.
 

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Donald J. TrumpVerified account@realDonaldTrump
So I raised/gave $5,600,000 for the veterans and the media makes me look bad! They do anything to belittle - totally biased.




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DailyKos baby. It doesn't get any better than that.

Do you have any sources that refutes, or at least disputes, what was said, or, are you just gonna be a deflective asshole like yer butt buddy, Toboggan? Why am I asking, I already know the answer. Get ready to get butt fucked again the fall, Douchebag...
 

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Ahhh, for the first time in American history, a candidate is running for President while he is being investigated for fraud-on multiple fronts-but YOU think it's a "non-issue."

You are one nosy, got-no-life-living-in-mummsy's-basement, brain dead cock sucker.

xcot5.jpg
 

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Another precinct is heard from. Suck cock, Sheriff Jerk off, you're a fucking Birther Looney, like Frump. You dig up that evidence that Obama was born in Kenya yet, Scumbag?Loser!@#0:madassholSlapping-silly90))cockingasnook():nohead::trx-smly0:kissingbb
 

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Ahhh, for the first time in American history, a candidate is running for President while he is being investigated for fraud-on multiple fronts-but YOU think it's a "non-issue."

You are one nosy, got-no-life-living-in-mummsy's-basement, brain dead cock sucker.
This no life Brit Twit sicko and others like him don't care if Drumpf is a total con man and fraud, because they are con men and total frauds themselves.
 

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[h=6]- JUNE 01, 2016 -[/h][h=1]I WAS WRONG: TRUMP WILL BE THE NEXT PRESIDENT[/h]CNBC
A few months ago, I wrote that Donald Trump would win the GOP presidential nomination – but that would be the end of the line for him. I was sure that Trump just couldn't shore up enough of the already too small Republican base to win in November, thus nearly guaranteeing not only a loss but a big loss to Hillary Clinton in the general election.
Well, I was wrong.
In the 80-odd days since I wrote that piece, I've been seeing more and more evidence of why my predictions for Trump's demise were wrong — and that his chances of winning in the general election look pretty decent.
The biggest reason is something very familiar to CNBC's audience: management. In this case, it's the kind of disruptive management that refuses to accept all the conventional wisdom and truly disrupts the status quo.
Trump, a supposed political neophyte, seems to understand the Republican base better than party leaders. Trump may have failed to win over all the conservative elites represented by people like Bill Kristol and the National Review editorial board. But what I and others forgot was that on Election Day, there's not enough of that conservative elite base to fill a phone booth. Securing their support is no way to win a general election.
And, as Mitt Romney found out the hard way in 2012, even being a more moderate mainstream conservative with experience winning and running a liberal state like Massachusetts isn't good enough to win the White House anymore. And it's also impossible to hold down the conservative support and expand the potential Republican voting base at the same time.
What Trump and his advisers clearly realized a long time ago was that it would have to really disrupt the hardened "red/blue" divide to win. America's demographics, news media, and educational establishments have all successfully destroyed the traditional Republican message for at least a generation.
As someone who had never run for office before, Trump already had the best chance to run away from that party title and shrinking base to create a new coalition of voters. But he had another advantage I missed in this area: his bluntness.
To use the kind of blunt language Trump is so fond of, the current Republican Party is a "loser." So, Trump has to regularly prove he's not a part of that losing team while still getting the Republican National Committee's money and ground-game support on Election Day.
So far, that disruptive strategy has worked. He started by successfully capturing the attention of blue collar and union workers with his attacks on open borders and U.S. manufacturers outsourcing to Mexico and China. The coarseness of that message successfully separated him from more cautious Republicans. And by grabbing hold of a populist pro-blue collar message, he defused a traditional Democratic Party weapon. He continued by raising concerns about Muslim immigrants and even Muslim tourists in light of the San Bernardino Jihadist shootings. That blunt talk was considered foolish and even politically suicidal at the time, but it undoubtedly helped spur not only Trump's primary victories but also record participation in the Republican primary process. No Republican has done anything like this since Richard Nixon stole the Democrats' thunder in 1972 by not only withdrawing quickly from Vietnam but also making his historic trip to China.
Base? Trump doesn't need no stinking base.
And it hasn't ended there. Trump is still breaking conventional rules by recently insulting New Mexico Governor Susan Martinez, a GOP "golden child," because all the conventional wisdom says Republicans need more women and Latino voters to have a future. But remember, Trump is trying to make sure you don't primarily identify him as a "team player" Republican anyway. That team is a losing team and Trump wants little part of it. And he's probably also aware that it's a waste of time for any non-Democrat to run after elusive female and Latino voters anyway. It sounds crazy to slam Martinez, but as Trump is proving over and over again, Trump's campaign is crazy like a fox.
It also sounds crazy to a lot of people that Trump has been actively going after the white vote. Why does a non-Democrat ever have to do that? Because white voter turnout has been down in recent elections. Trump knows he needs to energize lots of white voters who have recently stopped voting. He did that in the primaries and it's all still working now.
GOP Chairman Reince Priebus is still coming along nicely and showing more support for Trump day by day. According to the latest NBC/WSJ poll, 86 percent of registered Republicans now support Trump over Clinton, up from 72 percent a month ago. By the end of the GOP convention in July, that number should be close to 95 percent. The remaining 5 percent of Republicans who will never support Trump won't matter. The conventional wisdom about shoring up your base was all wrong.
The second biggest mistake I made about Trump is something else the CNBC audience should appreciate: I didn't think his incredible abilities and experience at self-promotion would translate very well from the business and entertainment media world to the political arena. But I forgot that Trump has been a master business marketer for decades and has also been working closely with some of the best writers in reality TV for more than 15 years. And probably the best talent those writers have is making events and comments sound truly off the cuff and natural even when they are really completely planned and strategically weighed.
I don't think Trump has said one thing or sent out even one tweet during this campaign that didn't sound like something he truly believed and would naturally say or write. Even if you've hated 100 percent of the things Trump has said and written, it's important to understand that Trump has won a crucial marketing and persuasive victory simply by convincing you that what he's saying and writing is his genuine voice and authentic personality. It's called building a clear and identifiable brand. Winning an election is still very much about connecting personally with key voters and you can only do that if you present a clear personality or brand to the voters in the first place. If you're the person who sees Trump's personality/brand and have decided you hate everything about it, I have news for you: You're not the target audience. But you're still proof that Trump's messaging is at least very clear and that's often more than half the battle in business and politics.
And that brings me to my last mistake about Trump's chances: I underestimated how bad Hillary Clinton's campaign would be. To be fair, I never thought Clinton was a particularly strong candidate. But at every essential task of marketing and messaging, the Clinton campaign has been surprisingly bad.
We all know Trump's key slogan/promise is "Make American Great Again." I'm still not sure what Hillary Clinton's key slogan/promise is and I follow her campaign very closely. Is it "I'm with Her?" If so, it's not very good in that it doesn't seem to have anything in it for the person who isn't "her."
Clinton's Twitter feed and website are helping Trump immensely as they seem to pump out phrases like "a Trump presidency," and "President Trump" more often than Trump does himself. These kinds of messages present and reinforce the idea of an actual President Trump in our subconscious brains. This is why the old TV commercials for consumer products when we were growing up used to avoid naming competing products as anything other than "brand x."
Clinton is frankly being poorly served by campaign manager Robby Mook, who has worked on campaigns his entire career. Mook and his staff going up against master private-sector marketers like Trump and company have little chance to win in that arena. Heck, this group can't even put away Bernie Sanders, who, in contrast, is also a candidate who presents a lot more clear messaging and the appearance of a more authentic personality. And the worst news for Clinton is that it may already be too late to hire a new staff and present a new image to the public.
Of course, this election is still not over. But what is over is any notion that Trump is going to lose by some kind of landslide. I predict many more of my fellow pundits will come to this realization in the coming weeks.
 

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[h=6]- MAY 31, 2016 -[/h][h=1]HANNITY TELLS TRUMP: I’M VOTING FOR YOU IN NOVEMBER[/h]The Hill



Fox News anchor Sean Hannity told Donald Trump in an interview Tuesday night that he'll be voting for the Republican presidential candidate in November.
"I'm an opinion show and I don't hold back that I'll be voting for Donald Trump in November," Hannity announced on his show, prompting a "thank you" from the businessman.
The exchange came as Hannity pressed Trump for hints on whom he might select for Cabinet positions, should the presumptive GOP nominee win the general election in November.
"You're not giving me anything," Hannity bemoaned with a laugh. "You know, I am not the corrupt press. I am actually the conservative [press]."
"You happen to be right about that," Trump responded.
Trump regularly appears on Hannity's program, where the conservative commentator often goes after the businessman's political critics while also outlining Trump's campaign platform.
Trump has been similarly warm to Hannity, congratulating the Fox personality in a tweet on Tuesday for "tremendous in television ratings" and urging his followers to watch Hannity's show.
During their interview, Hannity mentioned efforts by Bill Kristol, editor of the conservative Weekly Standard magazine and a vocal opponent of Trump, to identify a candidate to mount an independent bid in November. Hannity also mentioned Libertarian Party efforts to present an alternative to Trump.
"[It] seems like they only want to help Hillary Clinton get elected," Hannity said, referring to the Democratic front-runner.
The interview capped off a day where Trump escalated his feuding with media following pressure from press to release details of money he raised for veterans groups early this year.
 

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Donald J. Trump@realDonaldTrump 4h

Crooked Hillary Clinton is a fraud who has put the public and country at risk by her illegal and very stupid use of e-mails. Many missing!
 

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Donald J. TrumpVerified account@realDonaldTrump
Same failing @nytimes "reporter" who wrote discredited women's story last week wrote another terrible story on me today- will never learn!
 

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[h=1]'Trump University' students praise real estate seminars in campaign video as it emerges that firm behind lawsuit paid Clintons $900,000 for speeches[/h]


  • Trump campaign video features three testimonials from former 'university' students but none of them is still involved in real estate
  • Billionaire Republican presidential candidate has been fixated on a class-action lawsuit filed by other former participants
  • He has publicly hammered the judge in the case as a 'hater' who won't give him a fair shake
  • Law firm behind case paid Bill and Hillary Clinton $900,000 for speeches, including $225,000 to Hillary in late 2014 after her presidential buzz started


By DAVID MARTOSKO, US POLITICAL EDITOR FOR DAILYMAIL.COM
PUBLISHED: 23:45, 1 June 2016 | UPDATED: 23:57, 1 June 2016


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