SHUT IT DOWN!: The Clinton Foundation Is Too Corrupt to Exist
In
December 2008, Bruce Lindsey, the Chief Executive Officer of the
Clinton Foundation, and Valerie Jarrett, co-chairman of the Obama-Biden
Transition Team, signed a memorandum of understanding that
the activities of the Clinton Foundation would not “create conflicts or
the appearance of conflicts for Senator Clinton as Secretary of State.”
During Secretary Clinton’s tenure, at least 181 individuals, companies, and foreign governments gave money to the Clinton Foundation while officially lobbying the State Department.
From 2001 to 2015, the Clinton Foundation raised over
$2 billion in donations. From February 2001 to May 2015, Bill Clinton
gave 637 speeches and made $132,021,691 in speaking fees alone. Hillary
gave 92 speeches from February 2013 to March 2015. She was paid
$21,648,000. While the Clintons made speeches to Goldman Sachs and
Citigroup, it was the foreign donations to the Clinton Foundation that were the most disturbing.
In 13 speeches,
Bill made at least $500,000. Eleven of those speeches occurred when
Hillary Clinton was Secretary of State (2009-2013). All eleven of those
speeches were delivered outside of the United States, including Russia and China.
Since
people don’t give that kind of money for nothing in return, the
question is did these donors get pay for play immediately when Hillary
was Secretary of State or did they expect something only if Hillary was
elected president? In his 2015 book, Clinton Cash, author Peter
Schweizer argues that foreign donors have already received a return on
their investment when Hillary was Secretary of State through Bill
Clinton’s speaking fees and donations to the Clinton Foundation.
Russia: While
people question things that Trump has said about Putin, it is Hillary
Clinton that encouraged U.S. technology firms, including Clinton
Foundation donors Cisco, Intel, and Google, to do business with Russia.
As
Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton attempted a reset with Russia. One
of the more interesting ideas was to create a Russian Silicon Valley in
Skolkovo, which is just outside of Moscow. The idea was that Russia
needed to modernize its economy and not rely so much on oil revenues.
Instead
of helping Russians modernize their economy, Russian oligarch Viktor
Vekselberg, and other Russian donors to the Clinton Foundation, used
this project to improve Russian military technology. Despite repeated
warnings of Russians
developing hypersonic cruise-missile engines, new radar equipment, and
acquiring other sensitive technology from the West, the State
Department did not threaten to pull these companies out of the project if the Russians didn’t stop using Skolkovo for military research.
The
most disturbing case from Schweizer’s book is that Rosatom, a
state-owned Russian company, now controls one fifth of America’s uranium
reserves. The purchase of Uranium One by Salida Capital, a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Rosatom, had to be approved by the State Department among
other government entities.
When
Hillary Clinton became Secretary of State, Bill Clinton signed a
disclosure agreement that required the State Department to approve all
his speeches as well as annually provide a detailed list of donors to
each of the legal entities inside the Clinton Foundation. If the Clinton
Foundation was more transparent, it is highly unlikely the deal would
have gone through.
The
reason why is because Frank Giustra, a Canadian billionaire, with
mining interests all over world, set up a separate legal entity, the
Clinton Giustra Enterprise Partnership. Amy Davidson wrote in the New Yorker,
“Money given to the Canadian entity goes exclusively to the foundation.
Per an agency agreement, all of its work is done by the foundation,
too.” Since all of the donations of this Canadian nonprofit went straight to the Clinton Foundation, it is problematic that the Clinton Foundation did not disclose 1,100 donors to this nonprofit.
This
Canadian “charity” shielded donors from disclosure requirements. The
total money from these donors was $33 million including $2.35 million
from Ian Telfer, the chairman of Uranium One. Telfer used his family
charity, the Fernwood Foundation, to send the money to the Clinton
Giustra Enterprise Partnership. This money was bundled and eventually sent to the Clinton Foundation.
At the same time, Bill Clinton received a lucrative speaking fee while this deal was underway. According to the New York Times,
“And shortly after the Russians announced their intention to acquire a
majority stake in Uranium One, Mr. Clinton received $500,000 for a
Moscow speech from a Russian investment bank with links to the Kremlin
that was promoting Uranium One stock.”
Kazakhstan: Clinton’s
adventures with Frank Giustra didn’t begin with Russia. In 2005,
Clinton went with Giustra to Kazakhstan to meet with President Nursultan
Nazarbayev. Giustra’s obvious connections with Clinton clearly made an
impression on the Kazakh dictator.
Two
days after this meeting, Kazakhstan’s state-owned company, Kazatomprom,
gave Giustra’s company the right to buy three uranium projects in the
country. A few months later, Giustra returned the favor to Clinton by donating $31.3 million to the Clinton Foundation.
In 2006, Frank Giustra described his relationship with Clinton saying, “He’s a brand, a worldwide brand, and he can do things and ask for things that no one else can.”
Colombia: This
could explain why Giustra allowed the Clinton Foundation to use his
private jet on 26 trips from 2005 to 2014. Clinton and Giustra were on
the plane for 13 of those 26 trips.
In 2005, President Clinton was paid $800,000 by Gold Services International to give four speeches in four days (June 21 to June 24). He gave the first two in Mexico City and Bogota and the final two in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
He
used Frank Giustra’s plane for that 2005 trip. Bill Clinton went to
Colombia again in 2007 where he received an award from President Alvaro
Uribe for helping improve Colombia’s image in the United States. Clinton also helped Giustra arrange meetings with Colombian officials.
In
2010, Frank Giustra and Bill Clinton were in Bogota again at the same
time that Hillary Clinton was in town on State Department business. The
three of them had dinner together the night before both Bill and Hillary
had separate meetings with President Uribe on the same day. Uribe first met Giustra in 2005 at the Clinton Global Initiative in New York.
According
to Peter Schweizer’s book, “Days after Hillary left Bogota, Prima
Colombia Properties, which Frank Giustra has ownership interest in
through a shell company called Flagship Industries, announced that it
had acquired the right to cut timber in a biologically diverse forest on
the pristine Colombian shoreline.” Giustra’s other company, Pacific
Rubiales Energy, got the right to drill for oil on six Colombian fields shortly after Hillary left.
In
2007, Frank Giustra and his business partners at Pacific Rubiales
Energy, gave $4.4 million to the Clinton-Giustra Enterprise Partnership.
In 2011 and 2012, the United Steelworkers and the Washington Office of
Latin America were wasting their time when they asked Clinton to pressure Pacific Rubiales to improve the treatment of their workers.
In April 2012, Hillary Clinton was in Colombia for the Sixth Summit of the Americas. At the time, she met with
Colombia’s Minister of Mining who was supposed to regulating Pacific
Rubiales. She should not have taken that meeting because of Clinton
Foundation’s ties to Pacific Rubiales.
Nigeria: Frank
Giustra wasn’t the only embarrassing billionaire donor to the Clinton
Foundation. Gilbert Chagoury helped Nigerian dictator Sani Abacha steal
$4 billion out of his country. After Abacha died in 1998, Chagoury returned $66 million to avoid prosecution.
Chagoury
visited the White House in December 1996 at a dinner for top DNC
donors. Since he wasn’t a U.S. citizen, he couldn’t give money to the
DNC. Chagoury was invited because he
gave $460 million to a pro-Clinton voter registration group called Vote
Now 96. At the time, relations between Nigeria and the United States
were officially strained because Abacha hanged nine of his political
opponents in 1995.
It
was only after Hillary became Secretary of State that Bill Clinton gave
two speeches in Nigeria in 2011 and 2012. Both times, he was paid
$700,000. What did Nigeria get in return?
It
was only after Hillary Clinton left the State Department in 2013 that
Boko Haram was listed as a terrorist organization. In 2012, the State
Department was resisting pressure from Congress and outside groups to
list Boko Haram as a terrorist organization.
In 2014, Robert Jackson, the State Department’s Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for African Affairs, testified before
Congress that, “The government of Nigeria feared that designating these
individuals and the organizations would bring them more attention, more
publicity and be counterproductive.”
Rwanda: In
2011, the Clinton Foundation lobbied the State Department to transfer
funding away from AIDS programs to a training program for health
professionals in Rwanda. This idea was approved over the explicit
objections of some State Department officials.
Although Secretary Clinton officially recused herself, she had her Chief of Staff Cheryl Mills decide the issue. The problem is that before Mills got her job in the State Department, she was a board member at the Clinton Foundation.
She
actually remained on the Clinton Foundation board briefly as an unpaid
member for a few months while working for State Department. For her
first four months at the State Department, Cheryl Mills also worked for
NYU and got paid $198,000 in 2009. She also received another $330,000 package in severance and vacation payments.
Cheryl
Mills isn’t the only top Clinton advisor to work for both the State
Department and the Clinton Foundation simultaneously. Huma Abedin,
Hillary’s Deputy Chief of Staff, also worked for the Clinton Foundation
in her last six months at the State Department. She was working as a
“special government employee” program while simultaneously working for the Clinton Foundation as well as the consulting firm Teneo.
India: In 2006,
then-Senator Hillary Clinton voted for three amendments designed to put
limits on the U.S.-India Civil Nuclear Agreement. One of those
amendments called for India to end its military cooperation with Iran so
that any nuclear energy deal could not help the Iranian mullahs develop
its nuclear program further. The amendments failed to pass in 2006. In
2008, this deal passed, and Senator Clinton supported it, without the amendments.
In October 2008, Senator Clinton voted for the deal. It passed the U.S. Senate 86-13.
In
September 2008, Hillary Clinton met with Amar Singh to discuss the
legislation. In 2008, the Clinton Foundation also received a donation
between $1 million and $5 million from Singh. At the time, Singh was a
member of the Indian parliament. Singh first met with President Clinton
in 2005 through his friend Indian-American businessman Sant Chatwal.
Chatwal also gave millions to the Clinton Foundation as well. He also contributed to Hillary Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign.
Haiti: There
are too many stories to tell about the corruption at the Clinton
Foundation for just one article. The most unbelievable story was how the
Clinton Foundation helped its donors profit from the 2010 earthquake in
Haiti, which killed approximately 200,000 Haitians.
After
the earthquake, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and USAID set up
the Haiti Mobile Phone Initiative. In January 2011, Digicel received the
first award of $2.5 million so that Haitians could receive money over a
mobile phone network. The Digicel Group is owned by Irish billionaire
Denis O’Brien. By 2012, only two years after the earthquake, Digicel’s
operation in Haiti made a profit of $86 million from $439 million in revenues in 2012.
It was no surprise to find out that O’Brien was a Clinton Foundation donor. O’Brien gave between $5 to $10 million to
the Clinton Foundation. In October 2010, two months before Digicel was
awarded the money for helping Haiti, the company sponsored an event in
Jamaica where Bill Clinton got paid $225,000 to give a speech.
Another
person who profited from Haiti’s earthquake was Hillary Clinton’s
younger brother Tony Rodham. In October 2013, he joined the board of VCS
Mining.
In
December 2012, VCS Mining was one of two companies to win a contract to
mine for gold in Haiti. Haiti had not issued permits to mine gold in
almost 50 years prior to this deal. How did VCS do it?
In
2012, VCS chief executive Angelo Viard met Tony Rodham at a Clinton
Global Initiative (CGI) event. If Viard didn’t hire Rodham because of
his family ties, then why did he also pay $20,000 membership fee to the Clinton Foundation.
It
is worth noting that mining for gold can be extremely hazardous to the
environment of Haiti. To separate the gold from the rock, some mining
companies use cyanide. If another earthquake hits Haiti, there is a chance that
the cyanide could escape into the soil and/or the water supply. Many
Haitians could die to service the greed of Clinton Foundation donors and
recipients.
It
is obvious that the 2008 agreement did not work. If Hillary is elected,
the only way to avoid a conflict of interest is to shut down the
Clinton Foundation indefinitely. Democrats and Republicans must work
together to make sure that candidates in the future will not follow the
Clinton example. The only way to do that is to shut down the Clinton
Foundation.
The forwarder of this article contends that all
of the parties in these multiple scams and clear incidents of bribery
should be prosecuted by the U.S. Government -- especially Bill and
Hillary Clinton.
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