Russian lawyer answers queries on Trump Jr. meeting

Donald Trump Jr. asked a Russian lawyer at the June 2016 Trump Tower meeting whether she had evidence of illegal donations to the Clinton Foundation, the lawyer told the Senate Judiciary Committee in answers to written questions obtained exclusively by NBC News.
The lawyer, Natalia Veselnitskaya, told the committee that she didn’t have any such evidence, and that she believes Trump misunderstood the nature of the meeting after receiving emails from a music promoter promising incriminating information on Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump’s Democratic opponent.
Once it became apparent that she did not have meaningful information about Clinton, Trump seemed to lose interest, Veselnitskaya said, and the meeting petered out.
“Today, I understand why it took place to begin with and why it ended so quickly with a feeling of mutual disappointment and time wasted,” Veselnitskaya wrote. “The answer lies in the roguish letters of Mr. Goldstone.”
She was referring to Rob Goldstone, a music promoter who worked for the Agalarov family. They are Russian oligarchs with Kremlin connections who had business and social ties to the Trump family. Goldstone’s emails to Trump Jr. arranging the meeting on behalf of the Agalarovs called Veselnitskaya a “Russian government lawyer” who had dirt on Clinton as part of a Russian government effort to help Trump. Goldstone has since said he exaggerated.
In her 51-page statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee, Veselnitskaya said she did not work for the Russian government and was not carrying any messages from government officials. She said her motive was to get the Trump team to examine what she argues is a fraud that led the U.S. to impose sanctions on Russia known as the Magnitsky Act.
Her ultimate goal was a congressional investigation into that matter, she said. She has long argued that U.S.-born hedge fund investor Bill Browder lied about the circumstances of the death of his accountant, Sergei Magnitsky, who died in a Russian jail, and that the U.S. government imposed Magnitsky Act sanctions on Russia, which are named after the accountant, based on a fraud. Browder and American officials dismiss that allegation, calling it part of a Russian disinformation campaign.
Veselnitskaya said there was no discussion at the Trump Tower meeting of hacked or leaked emails, social media campaigns or any of the other main aspects of Russian interference in the U.S. election. Previously, she told NBC News she had raised the issue of potential questionable contributions to Clinton’s campaign by Americans accused in Russia of tax evasion.

Runaway teen hitches ride on semi

SEYMOUR, Indiana (WXIN) — Indiana State Police say a 17-year-old runaway from Ohio is lucky to be alive after hitching a ride on the outside of a semi for more than 50 miles through southern Indiana.
State Police Motor Carrier Inspector, Mike Buckly, was the first to spot the teen while working at the ISP/INDOT weigh station on I-65 near Seymour.
“We were just running trucks through like we do every day just weighing them,” Buckly said.  “And I happened to catch a face coming out behind one of the trucks on the tractor.”

Saudi Arabia slams Trump decision to recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital

Protestors shouts slogans against US President Donald Trump and burn Israeli flag during a protest in Cairo, Egypt, on Dec 6, 2017.
Protestors shouts slogans against US President Donald Trump and burn Israeli flag during a protest in Cairo, Egypt, on Dec 6, 2017

RIYADH (AFP) – Saudi Arabia on Thursday (Dec 7) slammed US President Donald Trump’s decision to recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, calling the move “unjustified and irresponsible”.
Mr Trump ended seven decades of US ambiguity on the status of the disputed city on Wednesday, prompting an almost universal diplomatic backlash and fears of new bloodshed in the Middle East.
He also kicked off the process of moving the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
“The kingdom expresses great regret over the US President’s decision to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel,” said a Saudi royal court statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency.
The decision goes against the “historical and permanent rights of the Palestinian people”, the royal court said, calling on Mr Trump to reconsider his decision.
“The kingdom has already warned of the serious consequences of such an unjustified and irresponsible move,” the statement said.
“The US move represents a significant decline in efforts to push a peace process and is a violation of the historically neutral American position on Jerusalem.”
Saudi King Salman on Tuesday had warned Mr Trump that moving the US embassy for Israel to Jerusalem was a “dangerous step” that could rile Muslims worldwide.
Mr Trump’s announcement appears to have cast a pall over relations between Saudi Arabia and the US, which have warmed in the months after his election, with the president choosing the Gulf kingdom for his first overseas visit in May.
While the two countries have long been allies, Riyadh viewed Mr Trump’s predecessor Barack Obama as overly friendly with its arch-nemesis Iran.
Israel and Saudi Arabia have no official diplomatic relations.

‘Over 10,000 texts’ between ex-Mueller team officials found, after discovery of anti-Trump messages By Jake Gibson | Fox News

Justice Department officials are reading through “over 10,000 texts” between FBI officials Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, Fox News has learned, after it emerged Strzok was removed from Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia probe following the discovery of anti-Trump messages between them.

Department of Justice officials told Fox News they are in the process of going through the texts so they can hand them over to the House Intelligence Committee.
Strzok, who was an FBI counterintelligence agent, had worked on the Mueller probe, but was reassigned to the FBI’s human resources division after the discovery of anti-Trump text messages with Page, with whom he was having an affair. Page was briefly on Mueller’s team, but since has returned to the FBI. 
The disclosure of those messages revived Republican concerns about the objectivity of Mueller’s probe.
It’s unclear whether a significant number of the 10,000 texts have anything to do with Trump or the probe itself. 
Justice Department officials say the process of reading and redacting the texts could take “weeks,” and that the thousands of text messages between Strzok and Page span over “several months.”
The review process comes as the committee also threatens to move forward with a contempt resolution against top DOJ and FBI officials barring an imminent breakthrough — after the agencies did not comply with a deadline to hand over long-sought information that goes well beyond text messages.
Strzok is a focus of their efforts. House investigators have long regarded him as a key figure in the chain of events when the bureau, in 2016, received the infamous anti-Trump “dossier” and launched a counterintelligence investigation into Russian meddling in the election that ultimately came to encompass FISA surveillance of a Trump campaign associate.
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., has sought documents and witnesses from the DOJ and FBI to determine what role, if any, the dossier played in the move to direct the surveillance. 
Strzok briefed the committee on Dec. 5, 2016, sources said. But within months of that session House Intelligence Committee investigators were contacted by an informant suggesting that there was “documentary evidence” that Strzok was purportedly obstructing the House probe into the dossier.
Early Saturday afternoon, after Strzok’s texts were cited in published reports by the New York Times and the Washington Post – and Fox News had followed up with inquiries about the department’s refusal to make Strzok available to House investigators – the Justice Department contacted the office of House Speaker Paul Ryan to establish a date for Strzok’s appearance before House Intelligence Committee staff, along with two other witnesses long sought by the Nunes team.
The Justice Department maintains that it has been very responsive to the House panel’s demands, including private briefings for panel staff by senior DOJ and FBI personnel and the production of several hundred pages of classified materials available in a secure reading room at DOJ headquarters on Oct. 31
But Nunes voiced skepticism on Saturday.
He said that after the Strzok texts were revealed, the DOJ expressed a “sudden willingness to comply with some of the Committee’s long-standing demands” but added: “This attempted 11th-hour accommodation is neither credible nor believable, and in fact is yet another example of the DOJ’s disingenuousness and obstruction.”
A DOJ spokeswoman said Sunday they will “continue to work with congressional committees to provide the information they request consistent with our national security responsibilities.”
Fox News has learned that Strzok also oversaw the bureau’s interviews with ousted National Security Advisor Michael Flynn – who pleaded guilty Friday to lying to FBI investigators in the Russia probe.
He also was present during the FBI’s July 2016 interview with Hillary Clinton at the close of the email investigation, shortly before then-FBI director James Comey called her actions “extremely careless” without recommending criminal charges.

We may someday need to worry about volcanoes in New England

Clouds of ash from the Mount Agung volcano are lit with warm sunset light in Karangasem, Bali, Indonesia, on Nov. 30, …
Scientists have detected an enormous mass of warm rock rising up beneath part of New England that could one day spark a volcanic eruption, according to a new study.
But don’t worry too much: We are millions of years away from such an event, said Vadim Levin, the study’s lead author and a geophysicist and professor in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Rutgers University. 
Scientists from Yale and Rutgers University looked at data from the National Science Foundation’s EarthScope program, which has placed thousands of seismic measurement devices across North America. They hoped to learn more about the continent’s structure and evolution, as well as the processes that cause earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
The Atlantic margin of the North American continent, which covers the entire eastern seaboard, has always been considered a so-called passive margin, meaning no major geologic activity is thought to happen there. But after looking at the EarthScope data, Levin and his team found a surprise. 
“We found that this warm thing was moving up,” he said. 
Fortunately, there is no immediate danger associated with this upswelling of rock beneath parts of Vermont, New Hampshire and Massachusetts, according to Erik Klemetti, associate professor and chair of the Department of Geosciences at Denison University in Ohio.
“It would take a very long time before anything that’s happening with this swelling would generate enough melting to produce volcanoes,” he said. And by a very long time, he means millions of years.
Levin said his team’s discovery shows there is a lot scientists still don’t know about the structure of the earth. “There is so much more to learn about the planet we live on,” he said.
The study was published last week in the journal Geology.

Leonardo Da Vinci’s ‘Salvator Mundi’ painting headed to Louvre Abu Dhabi

The painting was sold last month in New York for US$450.3 million, with auction house Christie's steadfastly declining to identify the buyer.
The painting was sold last month in New York for US$450.3 million, with auction house Christie’s steadfastly declining to identify the buyer.

ABU DHABI (AFP) – “Salvator Mundi”, a painting of Christ by Leonardo Da Vinci that was recently sold for a record US$450 million (S$606.96 million), is heading to the Louvre Abu Dhabi in a coup for the bold new museum, it announced on Wednesday (Dec 6).
The Louvre Abu Dhabi, the first museum to bear the Louvre name outside France, has been billed as “the first universal museum in the Arab world”, in a sign of the oil-rich emirate’s global ambitions.
“Da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi is coming to #LouvreAbuDhabi,” the museum said on Twitter in Arabic, English and French, displaying an image of the 500-year-old work.
The announcement only partially resolves the mystery over the painting’s sale last month in New York for US$450.3 million, with auction house Christie’s steadfastly declining to identify the buyer.
“Congratulations,” Christie’s said in a tweeted reply to the Louvre Abu Dhabi.
But the auction house said no more, with a Christie’s representative declining to offer more details on the identity of the record bidder.
The French weekly Le Journal du Dimanche reported that two investment firms were behind the purchase as part of a financial arrangement involving several museums.
The newspaper said that the work will be lent or resold to museums, largely in the Middle East and Asia.
The sale more than doubled the previous record of US$179.4 million paid for Pablo Picasso’s “The Women of Algiers (Version O)” in 2015, also in New York.
The Louvre Abu Dhabi opened on Nov 8 in the presence of French President Emmanuel Macron, who described the new museum as a “bridge between civilisations”.
It is the first of three museums slated to open on the emirate’s Saadiyat Island, with plans also in place for an edition of New York’s Guggenheim.
The island will also feature the Zayed National Museum, which had signed a loan deal with the British Museum – although the arrangement has come increasingly into question due to construction delays.
Featuring a vast silver-toned dome, the Louvre Abu Dhabi was designed by French architect Jean Nouvel, drawing inspiration from Arab design and evoking both an open desert and the sea.
The museum opened with some 600 pieces, including items from early Mesopotamia. Under a 30-year agreement, France provides expertise, lends works of art and organises exhibitions in return for one billion euros (S$1.59 billion).
The first works on loan from the Louvre in Paris include another painting by Da Vinci – “La Belle Ferronniere”, one of his portraits of women.
“Salvator Mundi”, which means “Saviour of the World”, went on public display in 2011 in a dramatic unveiling at The National Gallery in London, where the work was declared to be the first newly discovered Da Vinci painting in a century.
It is one of fewer than 20 paintings generally accepted as being from the Renaissance master’s own hand, according to Christie’s.
It had sold for a mere 45 British pounds in 1958, when the painting was thought to have been a copy, and was lost until it resurfaced at a regional auction in 2005.
Its latest sale was initiated by Russian tycoon Dmitry Rybolovlev, the boss of football club AS Monaco.
He had bought the painting in 2013 for US$127.5 million, although he later accused a Swiss art dealer of overcharging him.

Donald Trump Jr grilled by US House Intelligence committee over Russia contacts

 Donald Trump Jr was grilled behind closed doors in Congress about his contacts with Russia as pressure builds on his father over alleged collusion with Moscow in last year's election.
Donald Trump Jr was grilled behind closed doors in Congress about his contacts with Russia as pressure builds on his father over alleged collusion with Moscow in last year’s election.

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Mr Donald Trump Jr was grilled behind closed doors in Congress on Wednesday (Dec 6) about his contacts with Russia as pressure builds on his father over alleged collusion with Moscow in last year’s election.
His June 2016 meeting with Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya at the height of the presidential campaign has made him a key figure in investigations into the Trump campaign’s possible ties to the Kremlin.
A separate 2016 meeting with Mr Alexander Torshin, a senior Russian politician and central banker close to President Vladimir Putin, has added to the scrutiny of President Trump’s eldest son.
He entered and exited the House Intelligence Committee hearing from a back door, avoiding the media, and nothing was immediately released about the discussions.
But according to CNN, the Veselnitskaya meeting, and how the White House tried to explain it away as a discussion about US adoption of Russian orphans, was one focus of the questioning.
NBC News reported on Tuesday that, in recent written testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee, Ms Veselnitskaya said Trump Jr had asked her in the June 2016 meeting for evidence of illegal donations to the foundation of former president Bill Clinton, the husband of Mr Trump’s Democratic election rival, Mrs Hillary Clinton.
But Ms Veselnitskaya said she hadn’t offered anything like that and had only met to discuss the US Magnitsky Act used to place sanctions on high-level Russians.
“Today, I understand why it took place to begin with and why it ended so quickly with a feeling of mutual disappointment and time wasted,” Ms Veselnitskaya wrote of the meeting, according to NBC.
She also said that when he found that she did not have any dirt on the Clintons, Mr Trump Jr appeared to lose interest.
In May last year, Mr Trump Jr also met Mr Torshin at a US National Rifle Association event.
Mr Trump Jr’s lawyer Alan Futerfas said last month that there was only “small talk” between them.
But e-mails have shown Mr Torshin trying to arrange a meeting with then-candidate Trump, an overture that was turned down by Mr Jared Kushner, Mr Trump’s son-in-law.
Those contacts and others not previously reported publicly by the Trump campaign are important to the investigation by special prosecutor Robert Mueller, who is looking at allegations of collusion and also possible obstruction of justice by President Trump and people around him.
Mr Mueller has charged four people so far, including two – George Papadopoulos, a campaign foreign policy adviser who maintained Russian contacts, and former White House national security adviser Michael Flynn – with lying to investigators.

The FBI issues its largest retrieval of guns in 10 years

Federal authorities get tougher on the gun vetting system
A USA TODAY review found that federal authorities sought to retrieve guns from thousands of people who should have been blocked by background checks from buying the weapons. Who are these prohibited buyers? People with criminal records, mental health issues or other problems that would block them from buying weapons. Or someone like Devin Kelley, who had a domestic violence record but still purchased a rifle used in the Texas church massacre in November that killed 25 people, including a pregnant woman whose unborn baby also died. The more than 4,000 requests last year by the FBI to retrieve weapons represent the largest number of such requests in 10 years. But the government has a mixed record in retrieving these guns. 
It’s Colin Kaepernick week
The free-agent QB Colin Kaepernick is stepping out in a series of rare high-profile appearances and is on the short list for Time magazine’s Person of the Year. He got a standing ovation Sunday night when he accepted an award from the ACLU. “We all have an obligation no matter the risk, and regardless of reward, to stand up for our fellow men and women who are being oppressed,” he said. He knows the risk well: He started kneeling during the national anthem at NFL games to draw attention to police brutality and racial inequality. And he last played for the San Francisco 49ers in 2016. Despite still being unsigned, he’s recognized for his efforts: Time unveiled Monday that Kaepernick joins President Trump, special counsel Robert Mueller and the #MeToo movement, among others, as finalists for the magazine’s cover. And he’ll be feted by Sports Illustrated  on Tuesday night 
Trump makes historic rollback to Obama, Clinton national monuments
President Trump is becoming the downsizer in chief when it comes to the federal government. It looks likely he’ll soon be signing a tax cut bill, and he’s also making historic cuts to lands under federal protection. Trump traveled Monday to Utah to announce drastically reducing the size of two nationals monuments in the state: one designated by President Barack Obama last year and another designated by President Bill Clinton in 1996. Trump also used the occasion to urge the Republican tax plan across the congressional finish line. The federal government could run out of money if Congress can’t avoid a shutdown before Friday’s deadline — and Trump may have to negotiate with the Democrats to make that happen.
In a word: Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr
The coldest air of the season is poised to invade most of the central and eastern USA this week. All together now: How cold is it? Well, even portions of Florida will be seeing nighttime temperatures in the 30s. And, unlike previous cold snaps this fall, this one looks to stay around for a while, potentially until the first day of winter. (Hint: Dec. 21.) Areas that can expect snow include the eastern Dakotas, northwest Minnesota and the upper Great Lakes. Yes, it’s beginning to look feel a lot like Christmas.  
CVS may be your one-stop shop for basic medical services
Watch out Amazon. CVS, the nation’s No. 1 drugstore chain, is buying insurer Aetna in a $69 billion deal that could reshape basic health care. Forget getting candy bars, toothpaste or makeup at CVS. With the Aetna deal, the drug store is hoping to remake itself as a health care provider first and a retailer second. It recently announced plans to offer next-day delivery in a move widely viewed as a pre-emptive strike at Amazon. It also plans to bolster its MinuteClinic, which provides nurse-practitioner treatment for minor conditions. The two companies have pledged to lower health care costs. There is still uncertainty on how the deal will play out for consumers. 
The Short List is a compilation of stories from across USA TODAY.

‘The president stole your land,’ Patagonia homepage says

Outdoor clothing retailer Patagonia plans to sue the Trump administration in response to the president’s announcement Monday that he would dramatically reduce the size of two national monuments in Utah. 
“Americans have overwhelmingly spoken out against the Trump Administration’s unprecedented attempt to shut down our national monuments,” said Patagonia CEO Rose Marcario in a statement. “We’ve fought to protect these places since we were founded and now we’ll continue that fight in the courts.”
A screenshot taken from the homepage for the clothing company Patagonia, Dec. 4, 2017.
Patagonia
The company also posted a message on its homepage that was highly critical of President Trump’s decision to cut the size of the monuments.
“The president stole your land,” the message declared in large type across the screen. 
“In an illegal move, the president just reduced the size of Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monuments,” read a message in small font. “This is the largest elimination of protected land in American history.” 

President Trump defends Michael Flynn for lying to FBI by claiming Hillary Clinton did the same thing

WASHINGTON – President Trump defended his former national security adviser Michael Flynn on Monday for lying to the FBI – by bashing 2016 election opponent Hillary Clinton and claiming she did the same thing.
“Hillary Clinton lied many times to the FBI, nothing happened to her,” Trump told reporters at the White House. “Flynn lied and they destroyed his life. I think it’s a shame.”
President Trump
JIM WATSON, AFP/Getty Images
The Justice Department did not bring charges against Clinton over her use of a private email server while she was secretary of State, and law enforcement officials have said they do not believe Clinton misled investigators. “We have no basis to conclude she lied to the FBI,” then-FBI director James Comey said during congressional testimony in July 2016. 
Yet Flynn, who was forced out of the White House in February after less than a month on the job, pleaded guilty last week to charges of lying to the FBI about his pre-inauguration contacts with the U.S. ambassador to Russia
The retired Army lieutenant general also agreed to cooperate with Special Counsel Robert Mueller in his probe of Russian efforts to interfere in the 2016 presidential election and possible collusion with Trump associates. The U.S. intelligence community has accused Russia of orchestrating a campaign to hack of Democratic party emails and push fake news to influence the election in favor of Trump.
Flynn told the FBI – along with Vice President Pence and other Trump administration officials – that he did not speak with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak about economic sanctions that former President Obama slapped on Russia over its election interference.  Flynn later admitted the issue did in fact surface.
When he fired Flynn in February, Trump cited his lies to Pence in February. In a tweet over the weekend, Trump also indicated he knew about his ex-aide’s lies to the FBI. One of his lawyers, John Dowd, later said he wrote that tweet and made a mistake because Trump did not know about the FBI at the time.
Mueller’s office is also investigating whether Trump sought to obstruct justice when he fired Comey in May. The former FBI director later testified that Trump asked him to go easy on Flynn, which Trump denied. 
Trump spoke to reporters before beginning a day-long trip to Utah.
The president is scheduled to meet with Mormon leaders and deliver a speech on public lands during his visit to Salt Lake City. Trump is expected to announce plans to shrink the size of two national monuments in Utah created by predecessor Obama.
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