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Sharyl Attkisson

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Sharyl Attkisson

Rep. Buck questions FBI Director Wray about govt. spying on Attkisson and other journalists

At a recent House hearing, Rep. Ken Buck (R-Colorado) questioned FBI Director Christopher Wray about the government's illegal hacking into the computer of investigative journalist Sharyl Attkisson.

The Attkisson case was first announced by CBS News in August of 2013.

Read the CBS announcement

Since that time, the Department of Justice has declined to hold the guilty parties accountable and, instead, is continuing to use taxpayer money to fight Attkisson's lawsuits over the intrusion.

Meantime, numerous members of the House and Senate have asked the Department of Justice and FBI to answer questions about the case over the years, but the agencies have yet to answer the questions.

Watch Rep. Buck's interview on One America News (OAN) below:

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

WATCH: A "fix" for the forestry service's fire budget

The following is a transcript of an investigative report from FullMeasure.news. Click on the link at the end of the transcript to watch the story.

80 *billion* dollars.. Is one one estimated cost of last year's wildfires in California. Some have long argued these huge expenses could be lessened if we spent more tax money upfront preventing fires in the first place. Lisa Fletcher reports...a fix is finally kicking in.

This fire season, we followed the US Forest Service to see their daily race to stop disaster.

Lisa: What's the best prevention tool?

Jason Sieg: There’s not one tool, it’s a variety of tools

Jason Sieg is a district ranger at the Eldorado National Forest - an hour east of Sacramento. He showed us a site where crews do this - intentionally set a controlled burn to eliminate brush and vegetation that could fuel a wildfire.

Jason Sieg: The fire could still move through here, but if it did, the goal is that it would be an intensity and rate of spread to where suppression resources could be in here and work effectively

A different effort a mile up the road, where what looks like logging is actually fire prevention.

Jason Sieg: There’s a lot of acres on the landscape that need to be treated, need to be managed.

Protecting all that land is a massive, expensive endeavor, and too often, those efforts are shortchanged when money shifts from prevention projects to emergency firefighting. Four years ago, we decided to follow the money. Here's then-head of the Forest Service Robert Bonnie in 2016.

Robert Bonnie: Last year in a bad year, we spent North of 60% on fire related expenses. You can see that the agency is being more and more, less a forest service, and more a fire service.

At the time, the US Forest Service was spending so much of your tax dollars on emergency firefighting, it said it was forced to borrow money from other important budget areas, robbing from efforts to prevent fires in the first place. There's evidence of that beyond this line of green trees in Eldorado. This is where the King fire burned in 2014, scorching an area bigger than Atlanta, and forcing the evacuation of almost 3,000 people. Fighting that fire cost $117 million, putting budget pressure on the already strained Forest Service.

In 1995, 16 percent of the Forest Service's annual budget went to fires.

In 2015, that was up to 52 percent. And without change, by 2025, it was projected to be near 70 percent of the budget spent on wildfires. But that change may have arrived in 2020. This year, the fire funding approach is different.

Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI

Tony Scardina: This is going to be the first year that we're going to be able to explore a new tool that Congress has provided with the fire funding fix.

President Trump signed a spending bill last spring including a "fire funding fix." The fix allows the forest service to use federal disaster relief funds, treating fires more like other disasters like floods and earthquakes. It also raises the funding for firefighting by more than 2 billion dollars. Deputy regional Forester Tony Scardina calls it a good first step.

Tony Scardina: So at least in this situation, we’ll have that increased level of funding and not have to borrow from the prevention and mitigation side and see if that provides a new type of balance

Though, there's a lot to figure out.

Lisa: It's sort of akin to - we’ve stopped the bleeding, but the patient is still in the ER. Does that sound about right?

Scardina: We are a long way away from trying to turn the corner. We have to keep making steps forward and the fire funding approach and some of the help from Congress is going to help us take that step. But there’s a lot more to it than that.

Lisa: California's fire season is starting earlier and ending later, posing a threat to communities all over the state. The hope is new federal funding will allow the Forest Service to put the focus back on prevention.

Last fall, President Trump tweeted that California’s Governor had done a “terrible job” of forest management - and threatened to stop providing federal money for fires. There is a lot of back and forth on these complicated questions in California.

Click on the link below to watch the video report on FullMeasure.news:

http://fullmeasure.news/news/follow-the-money/firefighting-funds

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

WATCH: What does "Citizens United" case have to do with money and politics?

The following is a transcript of my cover story on FullMeasure.news. Click on the link at the end of the transcript to watch the story.

You’ve probably heard of the Supreme Court case known as Citizens United. This year is the tenth anniversary of the landmark decision. But odds are you don’t know much more than it has something to do with money in politics. As we move into campaign 2020— and lots of money in politics— we sort out what was really behind it and how it’s impacting elections today.

There's something you may not know about the whole court battle started by the conservative nonprofit Citizens United. It was inspired by a liberal documentary.

Michael Boos: Originally back in 2004, Michael Moore produced a documentary film called “Fahrenheit 9/11.”

Sharyl: He's a big liberal activist.

Michael Boos: He is a big liberal activist.

Michael Boos is Vice President and General Counsel of Citizens United.

Michael Moore: Congressmen? We're trying to get members of Congress to get their kids to enlist in the Army and go over to Iraq.

The Michael Moore film criticized President George W. Bush and was released as he ran for reelection.

Movie Preview: From the corridors of power, to the streets of Middle America, comes the true story that will make your temperature rise.

Michael Boos: It was the top selling documentary film of all time. He ran television ads to promote that film which were the most effective political commercials against George W. Bush's reelection in the entire 2004 political campaign. They had pictures of President Bush on the golf course, made it look like it was right after 9/11. He used that very effective politically.

Sharyl: Michael Moore, do you know where his corporate money came from if you're alleging there was corporate money behind him?

Michael Boos: Sure, you're talking Viacom, Sony, the Weinstein brothers. They were behind Michael Moore and Fahrenheit 9/11. I think it was Harvey Weinstein may have personally had been involved with that.

At the time, it was illegal to use corporate money to promote or oppose political candidates during the election season. But campaign finance law exempted documentary makers like Moore. Citizens United decided to copy what Moore had done.

Michael Boos: We at Citizens United decided that we wanted to be movie producers and produce our movies and be covered by the same media exemption.

Sharyl: Did you know you were testing the system, tweaking this after the Michael Moore programming?

Michael Boos: Oh yes, it was deliberate. We also wanted to point out the hypocrisy in the law that certain corporations were completely exempt from the campaign finance structure, very powerful media corporations that had major influence over elections. Yet, an organization such as Citizens United was prohibited from doing the same thing because it wasn't a media entity.

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

In 2004, Citizens United asked the Federal Election Commission for an exemption to air the political material they produced, like Michael Moore. But the FEC said no because Citizens United had no history of producing documentaries. So the group set out to change that.

Sharyl: Celsius 41.11.

Michael Boos: That was our initial film in response to Fahrenheit 9/11.

Michael Boos: Over the next four years, we produced probably a dozen, dozen and a half documentary films.

Sharyl: You become your own conservative version of Michael Moore.

Michael Boos: That's correct.

By the time Citizens United had a dozen films under its belt, Hillary Clinton was facing off against Barack Obama. And the group had a film it wanted to release.

Sharyl: Tell me about the Hillary Clinton film that your group made.

Michael Boos: Well, the film addressed the Clinton years in the White House and the Clinton scandals. And it addressed Hillary Clinton's fitness from our perspective to be president of the United States. It did not expressly advocate her election or defeat, but it shed light on her public record and was highly critical of her.

But Citizens United still couldn’t get a media exemption because the FEC didn’t have have enough board members to issue an opinion. So in December 2007, the group filed a federal lawsuit. They argued the campaign finance law preventing their film’s release was unconstitutional. While the case worked its way through court, Barack Obama got elected president. Then, in 2009 instead of making a ruling, the Supreme Court threw a curve ball. It ordered both sides to argue a much larger question than about the Hillary Clinton film.

Sharyl: What was your thought when you heard the court was going to make this a much broader decision than you argued?

Michael Boos: We knew at that point that the case was going to be a major precedent.

A special Supreme Court session was held in September 2009. Arguing against Citizens United for the government was Elena Kagan who later became a Supreme Court Justice.

Elena Kagan: Mr. Chief Justice and may it please the court, for over 100 years, Congress has made a judgment that corporations must be subject to special rules when they participate in elections, and this court has never questioned that judgment.

The ruling came in January 2010. The Supreme Court struck down the longstanding ban on corporate money used on candidates in an election period. The Citizens United victory became one of the biggest political money cases of our time.

Meredith McGeehee: With Citizens United, it changed 100 years of jurisprudence about what the role of corporate money is in our elections.

Sharyl: Do you think for better or for worse?

Meredith McGehee: I think for much worse

Meredith McGehee heads up Issue One. It’s a nonprofit group that aims to reduce the role of money in politics. She says the Supreme Court should never have tossed out the original law that restricted corporate spending.

Meredith McGehee: They explicitly overturned that ruling because the majority on the Court basically disagreed with the reasoning that corporate money could distort the political process. So first off, they answered a question that wasn't asked, and really went to this decision that corporations can use treasury funds to influence the outcome of elections.

Ten years later, you might be surprised to hear that both sides agree on one thing: the impact of Citizens United isn’t quite as expected. McGehee says, some corporations that tried funded political races suffered a backlash.

Meredith McGehee: Target was involved in a race and they gave a contribution to a group that was supporting a gubernatorial candidate who was not in favor of gay rights. Then Target had people marching in front of their stores, “Why are you supporting someone who is against gay rights? Who wants to put up with this backlash, particularly if you're a forward-facing, consumer-facing corporation?”

Michael Boos: The other side had said it would result in this massive corporate spending by publicly held multinational corporations which would drown out the voices of everyone else by spending upwards to a trillion dollars an election cycle in order to impose their will on the people. The fact of the matter is that has not happened at all. These publicly held corporations are extremely risk adverse.

Whatever the case, recent polling shows strong opposition to Citizens United, with a majority supporting a constitutional amendment to reverse it.

Sharyl: To those who hear Citizens United and equate that with something very negative in terms of campaign spending, what do you say?

Michael Boos: We've had a profound impact on politics in the country. Before that decision, no one even knew what the Citizens United name was about. Now we're sort of like a brand name in the world of politics. Everyone's heard of Citizens United. Now, some people may have a negative reaction to it, but among our friends, the reaction is mostly positive, and so we're quite happy with that.

This past week, a Democrat-led House subcommittee held a hearing on Citizens United with the goal of figuring out how to reverse it.

Click on the link below to watch the cover story on FullMeasure.news:

http://fullmeasure.news/news/cover-story/citizens-united-02-03-2020

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

BFTP*: Obamacare Exchanges: "Disappointing" Enrollment. Fewer Than Expected.

*Blast from the past: This story was first published in 2014.

With hard statistics difficult to come by and the Obama administration declining to release them, I consulted with many sources and combed through available surveys to come up with the best estimates available regarding Obamacare success to date. Here's what I found:

Obamacare Exchanges Are ‘Disappointing’ With Fewer Than 4 Million Newly Insured. The Government Hoped for 26 Million.

Click here to read my 2014 Obamacare Report on the Daily Signal

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

Poll: "Hands off my information"

The vast majority of people who responded to our latest unscientific poll at SharylAttkisson.com do not want third parties filtering their information.

In one of the most overwhelming votes among our polls, 98% said "hands off" when asked if they want the government and/or social media to "curate" their information.

Facebook, Twitter, Google and the news have been alternately encouraged to censor information and criticized for doing it.

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) is being sued by a physicians' group for stepping in to censor vaccine safety information online. He allegedly contacted Google, Facebook and Amazon.

The World Health Organization recently announced a partnership with Google to make sure searches for "coronavirus" turned up government-approved information.

Read the full results below. Meantime, be sure and vote in our latest poll at SharylAttkisson.com on the home page. Look for the black box in the right sidebar or scroll way down on the mobile site!

Do you want govt./social media to "curate" your info?

1% Yes! Absolutely!

98% No! Hands off!

0% It depends

1% Don't know/don't care

Fight government overreach and double-standard justice by supporting the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund for Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions. Click here.

UConn student's expulsion on hold after Court says investigation unfair

A U.S. District Court put a hold on a University of Connecticut student's expulsion for an allegedly non-consensual sexual encounter because the school's investigation was unfair, according to a story in Reason.com.

The school reportedly refused to allow four witnesses to testify during its investigation.

The witnesses were said to be with the two students just prior to the encounter. They reportedly would have cast doubt on the female student's version of events leading up to the alleged assault.

The school's lawyer reportedly argued that the witnesses did not have any relevant testimony because they were not present when the encounter took place. The District judge disagreed, according to the story.

Given the severity of the sanction here, how is it in compliance with due process that he's not allowed to question, or have somebody question, at least statements that were being relied on by witnesses who—excuse me—by the hearing officers by witnesses who weren't even present?

US District Judge Michael Shea, Reason.com

Click on the link below to read the story:

Judge Upbraids UConn for Unfair Investigation
Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

Citizens United... It didn't turn out like they thought (PODCAST)

Ten years after one of the most unpopular Supreme Court decisions ever, Citizens United didn't turn out quite the way supporters or opponents thought it might.

Heading into the heart of the 2020 campaign, we dissect how it's impacting the political money scene.

Listen to this podcast by clicking the link below, or the arrow in the player below. Or listen on iTunes or your favorite podcast distributor under "The Sharyl Attkisson Podcast" and "Full Measure After Hours." Subscribe, Share, Review and Follow my podcasts on Twitter @TheSharylPodcast @FullMeasureAH

Thank you to the thousands who are supporting the landmark case of Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions.

POLL: Vast majority say ripping up Trump's speech was mistake

Over 95% of the respondents say that Nancy Pelosi made a "big mistake" when she ripped up President Trump's speech on national TV. That's according to the latest unscientific poll at SharylAttkisson.com.

Less than 2% of the respondents said it was brilliant.

Read the full results below. Meantime, be sure and vote in our latest poll at SharylAttkisson.com on the home page. Look for the black box in the right sidebar or scroll way down on the mobile site!

Should Pelosi have ripped up Trump's speech?

2% Yes, brilliant!

95% No, big mistake!

3% Don't know/don't care

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.
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