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ABC7 obtained a letter sent directly to California Attorney General Rob Bonta warning him that Andy Duong — now federally indicted in a major bribery and corruption case — had secretly recorded him in a compromising situation and planned to use the footage for BLACKMAIL! The May 2024 letter from businessman Mario Juarez laid it out clearly. It told Bonta that Duong “has a recording of you in a compromising situation” and that he routinely recorded elected officials without their knowledge for later use in blackmail. This is the same Duong crime family that was deeply embedded with Bonta. They called him brother. They partied with him. They sat courtside together at Warriors games. Then the FBI raided them, and the indictments followed. Five months after receiving that letter, Bonta’s reelection campaign began spending campaign funds on private lawyers from one of the most expensive firms in the state. The total reached four hundred and sixty nine thousand dollars. Four hundred and sixty nine thousand dollars. Paid by the Attorney General of California while dealing with a blackmail threat tied to a federally indicted donor network. No one spends that kind of money on elite legal protection unless the situation is extremely serious. The top law enforcement officer in the largest state in America was lawyering up because one of his own donors allegedly had compromising footage of him. The letter is real. The warning about the video is real. The four hundred and sixty nine thousand dollars in campaign spending is real. All of it is now public.

BontaFiles.com

218,725 views • 22 days ago

Claim: Lazar Can't Show Us Why He Attended MIT Because He Doesn't Want to Risk Prison "[Lazar] had said he was at MIT, and that he was at Caltech." ~Dolan (No, Lazar said he had DEGREES from both. Surprised Dolan (Richard Dolan Intelligent Disclosure) downplayed that.) Luigi Venditelli (LV): "As far as things that I can say, [Lazar] shared with me, shared it also with my team, and also shared it with Joe Rogan in the past, in regards to his education...because that's something that I think a lot of people really attack Bob Lazar on, and rightfully so. Because if he doesn't have a paper to bring out, they can attack him. It's an easy, it's a low-hanging fruit attack for somebody who doesn't believe the story. "In regards to the MIT component, the only thing I can say is that there were national security issues there, okay?" (No, what you can say is that Lazar CLAIMED there were national security issues there. Unless you have proof that you're not sharing?) Dolan: "For people who don't know this, we'll just explain: Bob had said he was at MIT, and that he was at Caltech and no one was able to find or get any kind of confirmation that he was at those schools." (Lazar didn't just claim that he was AT those schools. He claimed he had degrees from both. This is from the 1993 Lazar Q&A at Rachel, Nevada near Area 51. Lazar: "As far as electronic technology, my degree there is from Caltech and physics is from MIT. [MIT] was a master's degree.") ~ LV: "Correct. Now, what's also important to note, specifically about MIT, is the one I wanna highlight, is that he said, 'I wasn't alone in this.' So, the government itself - he was at Los Alamos National Labs when this happened - he was sent to MIT." (Again, if LV wants to come across as unbiased and trying to get to the truth, he should be saying, "Lazar CLAIMS he was at Los Alamos and was then sent to MIT.") LV: "Now, the reason why this is important is because, and he also said, 'Not everything the government does or was doing was legal.' Okay? So there were things that were actually not necessarily legal, and they needed some scientists to go and learn certain things at MIT, and that's the reason why he was there. And there were other people there. "He said to me, 'Look, for me to bring this out, I would be revealing things that would, potentially, put other people in a compromising situation.' This had nothing...signed papers, something to do with national security. And he says, 'There's no reason for me to ruin other people's lives just to satisfy a small percentage of people who are constantly bickering about my education.'" (I don't think it's a small percentage. OK, so Bob, supposedly, says/claims he doesn't want to talk about the government allegedly sending him to MIT because he doesn't want to put other people in a compromising situation.) LV: "So, I understand that part. It's frustrating that it cannot be mentioned, but it it's also something that I understood, and it made perfect sense to me." (So Lazar can't mention any of it but LV can?) LV: "Now, I know it's frustrating to all of those who say we should still have something. Well, unfortunately, he's not gonna want to go to jail just to satisfy you." (So first it was: He doesn't want to "bring this out" because it would put people in a compromising situation and now it's: He doesn't want to risk prison. Which is it? How about we get that directly from Lazar instead of second hand?) LV: "And he would not be the only person ever to have been implicated in national security programs that were sending scientists to MIT. So that's a very important thing to also look into for history."

Joe Murgia

32,303 views • 3 months ago

An allegedly obscene video purportedly showing a serving Karnataka DGP in a compromising position inside his office has triggered a major institutional crisis and led to his suspension. K Ramachandra Rao, Director General of Police (Civil Rights Enforcement), was suspended after the video went viral on social media, prompting Chief Minister Siddaramaiah to order an immediate probe and stress that no rank is above accountability. The footage, reportedly stitched from multiple clips, appears to show the senior IPS officer with a woman or women in what authorities have described as a “compromising situation.” Officials have not confirmed the authenticity of the video, how it was recorded, or who circulated it. Rao has denied all allegations, calling the video fake and stating he has no knowledge of its origin. A formal investigation is now underway. Rao was promoted to the rank of DGP in September 2023 and took charge in October the same year. He has previously served as Inspector General of Police of the Southern Range and as Chairman and Managing Director of the Karnataka State Police Housing and Infrastructure Development Corporation. The controversy has also revived scrutiny of earlier cases linked to Rao. In 2014, during his tenure as IGP, his name surfaced in a high-profile cash seizure case involving a private bus travelling from Mysuru to Calicut. Police claimed ₹20 lakh was seized, while traders alleged the actual amount was ₹2.27 crore, accusing police personnel of collusion and robbery. Though Rao denied wrongdoing, a CID inquiry reportedly flagged serious lapses, with senior officers later stating there was a “great degree of lapse” on his part after it emerged that policemen, including his gunman, were allegedly involved. More recently, Rao faced public scrutiny following the arrest of his stepdaughter, Kannada actor Ranya Rao, in a gold smuggling case. She was arrested by the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence at Bengaluru airport after allegedly attempting to smuggle more than 14 kg of gold from Dubai, worth over ₹12 crore. Investigators alleged she had made multiple foreign trips and was part of a larger smuggling network. Gold jewellery and cash were also reportedly recovered during searches. Rao publicly distanced himself from the case, stating he had no prior knowledge of her activities and that the law should take its course. With multiple controversies now converging, the case has sparked a wider debate on ethics, oversight, and institutional credibility at the highest levels of Karnataka’s police leadership, as investigations continue on multiple fronts.

Mojo Story

16,077 views • 5 months ago