Ya'll gotta read this shyt. Its fukking wild. Theres too many tweets to post.
Another GOP consultant is revealing that there was a massive catfishing campaign involving possibly illegal donations and she is a whistleblower on it.
AND theres another active FBI investigation into Trump!!!!!
Anti-Trump operatives targeted in online ‘catfishing’ scheme
Posing as a British solicitor, a con man sought information on the operatives' plans to attack Trump.
Ben Schreckinger08/23/2016 05:16 AM EDT
Steven Wessel is a convicted con man with a Big Apple flair, feigning connections to Ronald Reagan and pretending to be an Oxford man while bilking rich Manhattanites of $750,000. But his last scam before heading to prison this spring targeted a very different kind of mark: Republican operatives opposed to Donald Trump.
And now those operatives are wondering who put Wessel up to it.
Assuming a variety of fake online identities, including that of a female solicitor in England, Wessel gushed in emails, phone calls and Twitter messages about (made-up) extramarital affairs with the likes of the late Lee Atwater, showered marks with gift cards to the swanky Mandarin Oriental, and invited them to go pheasant-hunting in Scotland — all in an apparent attempt to glean more about the operatives and their intentions regarding Trump. That was until federal prosecutors learned of the activity and a judge revoked Wessel’s bail in April, sending him to prison to begin serving a 55-month sentence ahead of schedule.
In a campaign season marked by the mind-bending, the — until now unreported —caper of Wessel’s months-long “catfishing” of operatives Rick Wilson, Liz Mair and Cheri Jacobus ranks among more bizarre episodes. It could get more bizarre still. The targets of the scheme do not believe that Wessel, described by his own lawyer as mentally ill, was acting alone. This month Jacobus, who said she believes Wessel was working in concert with allies of Trump, renewed her efforts to get the FBI to investigate the scheme.
Wilson, one of Trump’s most outspoken Republican critics and the head of a super PAC that opposed the New York billionaire during the primaries, said that only a political professional would think to pump him for the information Wessel sought about his PAC. “The questions were of such a degree of granularity and specificity and political acumen that unless [Wessel] had political experience it would be hard for him to come up with them,” he said.
Wessel, who is currently in federal prison in North Carolina, did not respond to letters seeking comment.
Meanwhile, the operatives claim that Trump backers were behind the scam, which sought no money, only information about the operatives’ plans for targeting the billionaire presidential candidate. Wessel’s motives remain murky, and the identities of his accomplices, if any, remain unknown. Targets of the scheme have floated a number of figures whom they suspect of participating. Citing emails traced to servers in Colorado and the use of a Colorado phone number in the scheme, Wilson suggested the possible involvement of Make America Great Again PAC, a now defunct pro-Trump super PAC that shut its doors after reports surfaced of possible improper coordination with the campaign.
In text messages, Colorado political operative Mike Ciletti, who ran Make America Great Again and is an ally of former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, said there was “nothing to comment on” and that he was not familiar with the targets of the scheme. “Who is Cheri Jacobus and Rick Wilson? I don’t know either of them and have no context as [to] who or what they do,” he said. “If I am coming for you, you will know.”
Online catfishing is an emerging tactic in the world of political dirty tricks. When Paul Manafort joined the Trump campaign earlier this year, to the chagrin of Lewandowski, conservative operatives who objected to the move emailed Manafort under false pretenses in an attempt to obtain damaging information about his personal life, according to one of the operatives involved in that effort.
“I don't know that [catfishing] is becoming more common, but in a crazy election cycle like this, where you have no idea where people's allegiances are, you can see how it might be useful,” said the operative.
Late last week — after POLITICO began informing people about the impending publication of this article — Jacobus said thousands of emails disappeared from her personal account and that her Internet provider, AOL, told her the account had been hacked. Jacobus said the hack targeted only emails she has received, not those she has sent, and she believes it was an attempt to prevent her from tracing the origins of more emails sent to her as part of the scheme. Over the weekend, a friend of Jacobus’ reported the hack to the FBI’s Cyber Division on her behalf.
Trump spokeswoman Hope Hicks said the campaign had no knowledge of the scheme. A spokeswoman at the FBI’s New York field office — where Jacobus first filed a complaint about the scheme this spring — declined to comment, citing the bureau’s policy of neither confirming nor denying the existence of investigations.
Richard Baum, the public defender who represented Wessel in his most recent fraud cause, declined to comment on the record.
The scheme began last year on October 18, the day The Washington Post published an
article about ties between Make America Great Again, the super PAC run by Ciletti, and the Trump campaign. The Post reported that the campaign was using WizBang Solutions, a printing firm that lists Ciletti as a director, as a vendor, an arrangement that would only be legal if WizBang had instituted a firewall to prevent coordination between the PAC and the campaign. Lewandowski, who was campaign manager at the time, initially told the Post that he did not know Ciletti — a longtime associate of his — before conceding that the two knew each other. At the time, the campaign was denying that it had blessed any super PACs, and Lewandowski threatened to sue the Post over the story.
In response to the Post article, Jacobus took to Twitter, where she revealed that Lewandowski had told her about plans for a pro-Trump super PAC during preliminary job discussions she had with Trump’s campaign. Soon after she posted the tweets, Wessel apparently contacted Jacobus through a Twitter account with the handle @JustBeingMeagan, which purported to belong to an American expatriate lawyer living in England named “Meagan Lancaster.”
Lancaster told Jacobus that she served as the representative of wealthy donors, including some who had given to a pro-Carly Fiorina super PAC. She talked of getting Jacobus work with the Fiorina campaign.
Lancaster also inserted herself into the political conversation on Twitter, lambasting Trump and exchanging tweets with the likes of Republican strategist
Matthew Dowdand Fox News host
Greta Van Susteren. She told Jacobus that her clients included the British billionaire brothers David and Simon Reuben, who could donate to political causes in the U.S. through an American wife.
Lancaster dished to Jacobus about a concocted personal life, claiming to have had an extramarital affair with Atwater and talking of made-up plans to meet with CNN host Chris Cuomo in Paris. Jacobus now believes this was designed to induce her to confide personal information to Lancaster that could be used to blackmail her.
Lancaster lavished Jacobus with two $250 gift certificates to the Mandarin Oriental hotel, which Jacobus now cites as additional evidence that Wessel, left broke by his legal troubles, was not acting alone. And Lancaster wrote breezily in emails of a glamorous lifestyle, telling Jacobus at one point that she was jetting off for a ski weekend at St. Moritz in the Swiss Alps.
As months of back-and-forth went on, talk of work with the Fiorina campaign faded and new fake personas entered into the scheme. There was a phone call and emails from someone calling himself “Allen Wayne,” an Aspen-based adviser to her donors who died suddenly and was replaced by the persona of Annapolis-based adviser “Will Elliot,” who had worked previously in Wichita.
In December, Lancaster said her clients were looking to plow millions of dollars into anti-Trump efforts, and Jacobus offered to put her in touch with Rick Wilson and Liz Mair, who were running an anti-Trump super PAC called Make America Awesome. But Jacobus was also growing suspicious, and she warned the operatives to handle Lancaster with care.
Lancaster told the pair that her clients needed to know what the group had on Trump before deciding to make an investment, and asked detailed questions about the group’s strategy, according to Wilson and Jacobus. Mair and Wilson stopped playing ball, and Wilson came away convinced that he was being targeted by a political opponent.
“Con artists want money,” said Wilson. “They were asking us for information.”
Mair, a British national who practiced law in London, said she found the scammer’s attempt to pass as an English solicitor laughable. “Using the ‘Lancaster’ name was also particularly moronic when dealing with someone who, as a hobby, extensively studies British medieval history, but hey, that’s all right in line with the people who I believe put Wessel up to this,” she said
In an appearance on CNN on the eve of the Iowa caucuses, Jacobus criticized Trump as coming off like a “third-grader” in interviews and debates. Lewandowski responded the next day on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” by dismissing Jacobus as a spurned job-seeker. A few days later, Jacobus criticized Trump again and the businessman responded by tweeting, “@cherijacobus begged us for a job. We said no and she went hostile. A real dummy!”
@DonKnock @SJUGrad13 @88m3@Cali_livin @Menelik II @Hogan in the Wolfpac @wire28 @smitty22 @Reality @fact @Hood Critic @ExodusNirvana @Blessed Is the Man @THE MACHINE @OneManGang @duckbutta @TheDarceKnight @dtownreppin214 @The Taxman