Wednesday, 16 February 2022

'I have it in my bedroom': Rudy Giuliani claims he has evidence PROVING that Hillary spied on Trump and promises that Durham's blockbuster filing 'is just the start'

 Rudy Giuliani claims he has evidence that proves Hillary Clinton spied on Donald Trump after the 2016 election following a filing from Special Counsel John Durham, which reportedly backs these claims. 

Durham made new allegations on Friday claiming to have new evidence of how Clinton's election campaign paid money to a tech firm to 'infiltrate' servers that were at Trump Tower, and later the White House, to pose a Trump-Russia link. 


'I can't tell you exactly how, but I know how (Trump) knew about it back then,' Giuliani said on Newsmax TV. 'There's a lot more to come out.'  

'They may think it's gobbledygook, but it's gobbledygook supported by about 1,000 pieces of evidence, none of which have been revealed yet,' he said on Tuesday.  

Discussing the evidence, Giuliani insisted: 'I happen to have it in my bedroom, or my den, actually. I've had it there for years.' 

According to Durham's filings, the aim was to try and smear Trump by linking him to Russia, which had been accused of meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. 

Rudy Giuliani (pictured on Newsmax TV on Tuesday night) claims to have evidence that Hilary Clinton's campaign paid someone to spy on Donald Trump after the 2016 presidential election

Rudy Giuliani (pictured on Newsmax TV on Tuesday night) claims to have evidence that Hilary Clinton's campaign paid someone to spy on Donald Trump after the 2016 presidential election 

Clinton (pictured in New York City on Tuesday) waved off questions from a DailyMail.com reporter as she left a Queens restaurant with daughter Chelsea

Clinton (pictured in New York City on Tuesday) waved off questions from a DailyMail.com reporter as she left a Queens restaurant with daughter Chelsea 

Trump (pictured golfing in West Palm on Friday) has expressed outrage at the bombshell court filing, claiming what Clinton's campaign did amounted to 'treason'

Trump (pictured golfing in West Palm on Friday) has expressed outrage at the bombshell court filing, claiming what Clinton's campaign did amounted to 'treason'

Durham was appointed by then-Attorney General William Barr to serve as the Special Counsel for the United States Department of Justice in October 2020, while Trump was president. He continues to investigate a case that is sure to anger supporters of the 45th president.

Durham's motion looked a potential conflicts of interest with regards to former Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussman, who has been charged with making a false statement to a federal agent. Sussman has pleaded not guilty to the charge.

The former chief investigator of the Trump-Russia probe for the House Intelligence Committee under Republican Devin Nunes, Kash Patel, said Friday's filing 'definitively showed the Clinton campaign directly funded and ordered its lawyers at Perkins Coie to orchestrate a criminal enterprise to fabricate a connection between President Trump and Russia,' reports Fox News.  

Trump has claimed the probe into the former president's ties to Russia revealed the alleged spying by Clinton's campaign was 'treason at the highest level.' 

Special Counsel John Durham brought forward more allegations claiming to have new evidence against Clinton's campaign

Special Counsel John Durham brought forward more allegations claiming to have new evidence against Clinton's campaign

'It looks like this is just the beginning, because, if you read the filing and have any understanding of what took place - and I called this a long time ago - you're going to see a lot of other things happening, having to do with what, really, just is a continuation of the crime of the century,' Trump said in an exclusive interview with Fox News on Tuesday.

'This is such a big event, nobody's seen anything like this.'

The former president claimed he 'didn't have any' insight into the allegations outlined in Durham's February 11 court filing until it was made public, but noted that the Department of Justice official found 'things far bigger than anybody thought possible.'

Clinton has refused to answer questions about the allegations against her campaign. 

Clinton continued to stonewall questions later the same day as she and Chelsea emerged from a Filipino restaurant in Queens after approximately three hours during which they appeared to be filming. Head down and blanking all enquiries mother and daughter headed back into the city flanked by their Secret Service detail.

Exclusive pictures and video obtained by DailyMail.com show a stoney faced Clinton silently waving away repeated questions of whether she spied on Donald Trump.

The indictment against Sussman details how two months prior to the presidential election, in September 2016, he explained to FBI General Counsel James Baker he was not working 'for any client' when presented papers allegedly outlining a 'covert communications channel' between Trump's Organization and Alfa Bank, the largest of the private banks in Russia which has ties to the Kremlin.

Clinton ignored questions about the bombshell filing as she headed into her daughter home

Clinton ignored questions about the bombshell filing as she headed into her daughter home

Chelsea Clinton was also seen dressed up in a black coat, blood orange skirt and black heels

Chelsea Clinton was also seen dressed up in a black coat, blood orange skirt and black heels

Hillary dines with daughter, dodges more questions about spying
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In Durham's filing on Friday, he revealed how Sussman 'had assembled and conveyed the allegations to the FBI on behalf of at least two specific clients, including a technology executive (Tech Executive 1), named as Rodney Joffe, at a U.S.-based internet company (Internet Company 1) and the Clinton campaign.'

The name of the internet firm has not been disclosed in any reports or court documents so far.

But Joffe is the founder of UltraDNS, the first cloud-based company to market 'domain name services,' which connects a website's numerical address to a more user-friendly letter-based domain name.

DNS has been referred to as the 'phone book of the internet,' and DNS servers such as Joffe's UltraDNS and the more modern Cloudflare are generally able to access and view their millions of users' internet histories.

UltraDNS was bought by tech company Neustar for nearly $62 million in 2006. Joffe's LinkedIn shows he served as an executive at Neustar from then until retiring in September 2021.

Neustar is a Virginia-based internet analytics and data firm that recently aided an unnamed U.S. state in its COVID-19 contact tracing program, according to the tech firm's website.

Durham's claims the aim of the Clinton campaign was to try and smear Trump by linking him to Russia, which had been accused of meddling in the 2016 presidential election

Durham's claims the aim of the Clinton campaign was to try and smear Trump by linking him to Russia, which had been accused of meddling in the 2016 presidential election 

Former Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussman's indictment is part of Durham's probe of the FBI investigation into claims that Trump's campaign colluded with Russian officials
Rodney Joffe is the person referred to as “Tech Executive-1” in Sussman’s indictment for allegedly lying to the FBI by withholding his connections to Hillary Clinton’s losing 2016 election campaign against former President Donald Trump

Former Clinton campaign lawyer Michael Sussman's (left) indictment is part of Durham's probe of the FBI investigation into claims that Trump's campaign colluded with Russian officials. Rodney Joffe (right) is the person referred to as “Tech Executive-1” in Sussman’s indictment for allegedly lying to the FBI by withholding his connections to Hillary Clinton’s losing 2016 election campaign against former President Donald Trump

It also aided Scandinavian airline SAS in cutting down its marketing costs by analyzing the most targeted and effective approaches to reach customers, reflecting the company's massive data mining abilities.

Sussman's own 'billing records' show he 'repeatedly billed the Clinton Campaign for his work on the Russian Bank-1 allegations.'

It also states how Sussman and the Tech Executive (Joffe) met to speak with another lawyer working as General Counsel to the Clinton campaign, who Fox identify as Marc Elias from Perkins Coie law firm.

The filing also reveals how Josse worked with Sussman at the instruction of the Clinton campaign to 'assemble the purported data and white papers' - essentially to gather information that would tie Trump to Russia.

Durham tells how Tech Executive-1 said he was trying to please certain 'VIPs,' which is said to have been a reference to the Clinton campaign. 


Durham explains that at Sussman's trial, the government will prove how Joffe was able to able to see what websites were being viewed on computers at Trump Tower, Trump's Central Park West apartment and at the White House.

Durham notes that Joffe's position as a 'Tech Executive' saw him entrusted to maintain dedicated servers for the White House and president's office.

'Tech Executive-1 and his associates exploited this arrangement by mining the Executive Office of the President's DNS traffic and other data for the purpose of gathering derogatory information about Donald Trump,' Durham states.

Joffe is not accused of any wrongdoing and had simply 'retained Sussman as his lawyer'.

Neither Neustar nor UltraDNS are named in the filings or explicitly linked to 'Internet-company-1.'

Sussman's compiled 'suspicious data' which included all manner of websites including those of a Russian mobile phone company before going on to claim that Trump and those around him were 'using rare, Russian-made wireless phones in the vicinity of the White House and other locations.'

Trump raises John Durham stakes: 'I hear there's a lot coming.'
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But Durham's report essentially pours cold water over such suggestions, or that there was anything unusual with the looking-up of a Russian cellphone company.

'The Special Counsel's Office has identified no support for these allegations,' Durham wrote noting the 'lookups were far from rare in the United States.'

'For example, the more complete data that Tech Executive-1 and his associates gathered--but did not provide to Agency 2--reflected that between approximately 2014 and 2017, there were a total of more than 3 million lookups of Russian Phone-Prover 1 IP addresses that originated with U.S.-based IP addresses,' Durham stated.

'Fewer than 1,000 of these lookups originated with IP addresses affiliated with Trump Tower.

Some of the lookups occurred as early as 2014 when the Obama administration was still at the White House.   

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