nate33 wrote:dckingsfan wrote:tontoz wrote:
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Looks like Trump now has a "get out of jail free" card.
Wow - 9 lives!
Yup. Khan's law firm has deep ties to the Clinton Foundation, Saudi Arabia, and even Clinton's home brew email server.
Sigh. Hogan Lovell is a multinational firm with 2,500 lawyers. Prior to the merger, Hogan & Hartson had 1,100 lawyers. In both instances, I'd wager that ~40% of those lawyers are partners with equity stakes in the firm (maybe more, maybe less; the rest would be associates or of counsel). Law firms are decentralized confederations of partners, each with their own clients. Law firms don't have "deep ties"; partners have clients. So, the fact that one or more Hogan partners may have represented Clinton, the CF, or Saudi interests doesn't necessarily have any impact on Khan's practice (other than the fact that he'd be conflicted from representing parties adverse to the aforementioned). He may have represented those parties; he may not have. He might have even stayed clear of those matters entirely. The article doesn't say.
And insinuating that Khan is somehow culpable or tainted because (and stay with me) Hogan represented a client who acquired the patents in the technology Clinton used in her email server is *utterly* ridiculous. The article doesn't bother to mention or describe what technology was used, so for all we know, that patent-acquiring client could be Apple, or IBM, or Western Digital.
If biased media outlets want to spend time looking for dirt on Khan, feel free. Focus on the EB5 immigration program. And, FWIW, this is the EB5 program:
USCIS administers the EB-5 Program. Under this program, entrepreneurs (and their spouses and unmarried children under 21) are eligible to apply for a green card (permanent residence) if they:
- Make the necessary investment in a commercial enterprise in the United States; and
- Plan to create or preserve 10 permanent full-time jobs for qualified U.S. workers.
This program is known as EB-5 for the name of the employment-based fifth preference visa that participants receive.
Congress created the EB-5 Program in 1990 to stimulate the U.S. economy through job creation and capital investment by foreign investors. In 1992, Congress created the Immigrant Investor Program, also known as the Regional Center Program. This sets aside EB-5 visas for participants who invest in commercial enterprises associated with regional centers approved by USCIS based on proposals for promoting economic growth.
https://www.uscis.gov/eb-5
I don't know whether *this* the EB5 program:
Breitbart hack wrote wrote:The EB5 program, which helps wealthy foreigners usually from the Middle East essentially buy their way into America,
The author could've provided evidence that the EB5 program disproportionately benefits wealthy Middle Eastern investors (I'd be interested in seeing that data). The author didn't bother -- or the evidence doesn't exist.
All I (or any rational reader) can actually gather from the article is the following:
- Khan's practice used to include immigration law, focusing (in part) on the EB5 program
- a US senator has criticized that program
- Khan used to be a partner at a large multinational firm (with 1000-2000 attorneys)
- another partner (or other partners) at one point or another have represented Clinton, the CF, and Saudi interests
- someone at that firm also represented a tech company that acquired a patent that relates to technology that Clinton used in her email server
- (EDIT: I forgot to add) the website for Khan's personal firm is down
That's it!? If your story is that threadbare, why bother clicking "publish"?
Oh, because the point isn't to actually build a real journalistic case against Khan, it's just to squirt a little skunk spray on him, and hope it smells. Which is *stupid*, because the only reason why this story has legs is because Trump keeps responding. If Trump picks up one of these poorly-substantiated talking points and tweets about it, he does *more* harm to himself and to his supporters.
It's annoying to see people repost and quote an article this unsubstantiated as if it's fact, just because it fits into a desirable narrative.


















