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Monday, January 1, 2018

Lisa Bloom In U.S. Government: Is It A Bribe Or A Legal Fee?


Prominent Democratic donors gave at least $700,000 to women's rights lawyer Lisa Bloom in the final stretch of the 2016 race as she sought to publicize sexual misconduct allegations against Donald Trumpaccording to The New York Times.

American Bridge, a group associated with Democratic operative and Hillary Clinton ally David Brock, gave $200,00 to the effort, sources told the Times. Fashion entrepreneur Susie Tompkins Buell, a longtime donor to Brock, gave Bloom another $500,000.

The efforts did not result in any women coming forward, according to the Times. Bloom told the paper that one woman requested as much as $2 million for her story, a sum she was unwilling to offer.

Democratic donors familiar with Bloom's efforts say that Bloom kept the $200,000 from American Bridge but refunded the $500,000 from Buell.

In a statement, Bloom denied that the Clinton campaign had any knowledge of her efforts or that she had collaborated with Clinton's team "on any of this." She also denied that payments were needed before the women would come forward.

“It doesn’t cost anything to publicly air allegations,” Bloom said. “Security and relocation are expensive and were sorely needed in a case of this magnitude, in a country filled with so much anger, hate and violence.”

The Times report highlighted how payments, some accepted and some declined, after often in the mix before people make harassment allegations against public figures.

Right-wing activist Mike Cernovich, the Times notes, offered $10,000 in November for the details of sexual harassment settlements reached by members of Congress. Cernovich helped surface the details of one alleged settlement with Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.), who was forced to resign from Congress.

Lisa Bloom Sucks, Badly

For those of you who did not take the time and click the link, above, to get more of timeline, Lisa Bloom executed the exact, same fraud scheme.  She has a way of finding the right price to get someone to say something.

Sometimes they call it a bribe, sometimes they call it fraud.

Either way, I am quite sure my #Superfans are in full deep dive mode on this one.

But hey, what do I know?

The Hill first reported last month that Bloom offered to sell the stories of Trump's alleged victims in return for a commission for herself, and offered some victims as much as $750,000 in compensation.
“Donors reached out to my firm directly to help some of the women I represented,” Bloom told The Hill. She said any compensation she received went directly to her firm's operational costs.

I wonder if the "Legal Geniuses" (trademark pending) over there at Perkins Coie participated in the facilitation of this transaction.

Boy, I cannot wait to see the list of donor names and read the transcripts.

“Our standard pro bono agreement for legal services provides that if a media entity offers to compensate a client for sharing his or her story we receive a percentage of those fees. This rarely happens. But, on occasion, a case generates media interest and sometimes (not always) a client may receive an appearance fee,” she added.

“As a private law firm we have significant payroll, rent, taxes, insurance and other expenses every week, so an arrangement where we might receive some compensation to defray our costs seems reasonable to us and is agreed to by our clients,” Bloom said.

So, exactly how much did Lisa's clients get paid because we would never want the IRS, FEC, DOJ or Library of Congress to maintian fraudulent records, now would we?

Stay tuned.

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