DC_Vol
Bush league poster
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2008
- Messages
- 22,348
- Likes
- 41,992
After Trump declassifies the FISA applications, FBI 302 notes, etc. what will you say?Also, is there a team of lawyers investigating the veracity of Q nonsense? Or is it just a bunch of vague innuendos?
Each May, young women arrive in the South of France with big-screen ambitions, but even after the Harvey Weinstein scandal and the #MeToo movement, their journey to Hollywood often begins with producers promising movie roles and visas in return for sex.
...
Another form of sex trafficking that is bubbling under the radar on the Riviera but obvious to most producers in the know is one in which non-U.S. citizens meet film industry connectors on the Cannes yacht circuit. The go-betweens help the would-be actresses, often still in their teens and hailing from countries ranging from Britain to former Soviet bloc states, gain legal entry into the U.S. and land a small or nonspeaking role in an American movie. The unspoken quid pro quo is that once in the U.S., they are lent out — sexually — to other powerful industry men. With the threat of her H-1 visa being revoked, the actress effectively can't say no or go to the police.
"I have definitely seen cases where you see someone at Cannes in May, then you're in L.A. in September, and they're there," says one producer who has witnessed the gambit.
In fact, the producer says it should raise a red flag any time you see a foreign-born actress with no credits suddenly make her way into a U.S.-shot movie. "No one would legitimately pay for the H-1 visa for that kind of role. No way. It costs four or five thousand bucks," he says. "As a producer, there's no chance that there's this one-liner that should be a local hire [and] that we're going to go with a first-timer from Ukraine and get a work visa for her."
...
Epstein, for one, avoided a lifetime prison sentence for underage sex trafficking and abuse and instead served just 13 months thanks to a pitbull legal team that included Alan Dershowitz.
...
Ukraine remains one of Europe's most notorious sources of human trafficking.
Since 1991, more than 160,000 men, women and children have been exploited for labor, sex, forced begging and organ removal, according to a mid-2015 report from the International Organization for Migration (IOM).
Ukraine's Ministry of Social Policy, with recommendations from domestic and international nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), is currently in the final stages of updating the country's five-year action plan on combating human trafficking.
However, recent challenges—like Russia's continued aggression in eastern Ukraine and the country's 1.5 million internally displaced persons (IDPs)—have diverted the government's attention and resources from meaningful anti-trafficking collaboration.
...
1439
Unity Not Division
Q!CbboFOtcZs 22 May 2018 - 5:29:23 PM
UNITY NOT DIVISION.
Last post was simply for IDEN_reconf.
FBI, DOJ to brief lawmakers on handling of Russia probe on Thursday
Who is missing from the scheduled meeting?
[RR]
Who is Ed O’Callahan?
"Acting"
[Ed]
DECLAS_
Pain.
Enjoy the show.
Q