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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(107,839 posts)
Sun Sep 12, 2021, 08:59 PM Sep 2021

Rudy Giuliani's 9/11 Anniversary Speech Was Every Bit as Batshit as You'd Expect

America’s disgraced mayor, Rudy Giuliani, continued his descent into obscurity at his annual dinner commemorating the 20th anniversary of the attacks on September 11th, 2001.

In a rambling, nearly incoherent speech that led many on Twitter to question his level of intoxication, Giuliani riffed on a number of subjects, including how he wants to “shove” General Mark Milley’s Army decorations “down his throat,” a critique of Biden’s handling of Afghanistan, a denial that he ever engaged “with a woman or young girl” in the company of Prince Andrew and an impression of Queen Elizabeth.

Speaking about Afghanistan, Giuliani began by criticizing Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Milley, who said at a press conference that the military chose to protect the U.S. Embassy in Kabul over Bagram Air Base, saying the airport took “a significant level of military effort” and that “we had to collapse one or the other.”

“How the hell’s that guy a general? Jesus,” he said. “The other day he said the Bagram Air Force Base is not strategically important.”

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/rudy-giuliani-9-11-anniversary-171023518.html

Drunk again.

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Rudy Giuliani's 9/11 Anniversary Speech Was Every Bit as Batshit as You'd Expect (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Sep 2021 OP
Well that was fun underpants Sep 2021 #1
Not widely reported? Pantagruel Sep 2021 #2
 

Pantagruel

(2,580 posts)
2. Not widely reported?
Sun Sep 12, 2021, 10:24 PM
Sep 2021

NEW YORK (AP) — A Florida businessman who gained notoriety for helping Rudy Giuliani seek damaging information on Joe Biden in Ukraine pleaded guilty Friday to a charge alleging he facilitated illegal foreign campaign contributions in an effort to build a marijuana business in the U.S.

Igor Fruman, 56, entered the plea in federal court in Manhattan after reaching a deal with prosecutors. Fruman’s plea agreement does not require him to cooperate in other cases, U.S. District Judge J. Paul Oetken said.

Initially charged in a wide-ranging indictment, Fruman pleaded guilty to a single count of solicitation of a contribution by a foreign national. The plea resolves the case against him.

Federal sentencing guidelines call for a punishment of 37 to 46 months in prison, though Fruman could get up to five years, the judge said. Sentencing is scheduled for Jan. 21.
The plea leaves two men — Lev Parnas, another Soviet-born Florida businessman and Giuliani associate, and Ukraine-born investor Andrey Kukushkin — to face trial next month. A fourth person, David Correia, was sentenced in February to a year in prison for fraud involving a company he ran that brought Giuliani on as a consultant.

“Mr. Fruman is not cooperating with the government and has determined that this is the fairest and best way to put the past two years of his life behind him,” Fruman’s lawyer, Todd Blanche, said in a written statement after the plea hearing. “He intends to continue to work hard, as he has his entire life, and raise his family in this country that he loves. We will not have any further public communications.”

Fruman was also charged with, but did not plead guilty to, arranging hundreds of thousands of dollars in illegal donations to Republicans and political action committees while trying to get Americans interested in investigating Biden’s son in Ukraine during the Democrat’s successful run for president.

Fruman apologized in court. He said he was not aware of laws prohibiting foreign campaign contributions at the time he engaged in the donation scheme.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicolas Roos said in court Friday that Fruman sent text messages to the foreign national and that person’s agent seeking $1 million in political contributions and that the foreign national wired two $500,000 installments for that purpose.

In court Friday, Fruman said the donation scheme was part of an effort to encourage support for a fledgling marijuana distribution business that he and others were starting in states where the drug was being legalized.

While prosecutors have kept the identity of the donor secret, a lawyer for one of the defendants revealed him during one court hearing to be Russian businessman Andrei Muraviev."

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