“He likes
porn stars, as we’ve seen throughout his life. And he has these habits. He’ll
push somebody against the wall and try and kiss them. He’ll grab a breast or a
buttock. When he’s in a property that he owns, whether it be a hotel or
Mar-a-Lago, he feels that he has the right to walk in on a woman in her room.”
Donald
Trump And The Making Of A Predatory President
In “All The President’s Women,”
journalists Barry Levine and Monique El-Faizy uncover 43 new sexual assault
allegations against the world’s most powerful man.
In “All The
President’s Women,” journalists Barry Levine and Monique El-Faizy uncover 43
new sexual assault allegations against the world’s most powerful man.
In the New
York Military Academy’s 1964 yearbook, there is a striking photo of a young man
with a young woman by his side. He stares smugly into the camera under the
caption “Ladies Man.”
This young
man would go on to become president of the United States.
“The young lady in the picture, however, was
not graduating senior Donald Trump’s girlfriend. Nor was she a visiting
friend,” write journalists Barry Levine and Monique El-Faizy in their new book,
“All The President’s Women: Donald Trump and the Making of a Predator.”
“The woman in
the picture is 19-year-old Fran D’Agati Dunn, a secretary who worked at the
school at the time and was asked to step in for the photo. Nothing more than a
prop.”
It is this
sort of narration, combined with a stunning 43 new allegations of Trump’s
sexual misconduct, that makes “All The President’s Women” such an impactful
read. Levine and El-Faizy painstakingly document Trump’s decadeslong history of
treating women as objects and accessories, from making derogatory comments to
walking into the dressing rooms of underage beauty queens to alleged rape.
In early
2018, when adult film star Stormy Daniels was dominating the news cycle, Levine
took notice. Between Daniels’ claim that Trump had paid her hush money and the
accounts of 20 other women who came forward against Trump during the 2016
election, Levine knew there had to be more there.
Once he
started digging, he realized he wanted to collaborate with another seasoned
journalist, specifically a woman, on the project. After a couple of initial
conversations, he decided he wanted to work with El-Faizy to tell a story that
went beyond individual allegations of inappropriate behavior.
“I think we
wanted to look at not just what he had done, but why and what it meant,” said
El-Faizy. “How he came to be formed as the predator he became.”
HuffPost
spoke with Levine and El-Faizy about the more than 100 interviews they conducted
over the year they were writing the book, the patterns that emerged, and what
the predatory behavior of the “most visible man on earth” says about our
culture at large.
You reported
43 new allegations of misconduct against the president in this book. How did
you all just go about locating the women that you spoke to? And also what made
these women want to share their stories publicly?
Levine: It
was extremely difficult. It was a very intensive period to cover, and that’s
why I focused on the reporting while Monique was able to shape the narrative.
But in terms of the women, I was fortunate ― in addition to finding Monique ―
there were two other journalists that I was able to put together on my small
team. One was Whitney Clegg, an investigative producer who re-interviewed some
of the victims who came forward in 2016. And then I also was able to
collaborate with Lucy Osborne, a producer for the BBC in London, who had done a
documentary on Donald Trump and women. She had some leads on some women,
particularly young models, that she had wanted to chase down. So she went off
in one direction, Whitney went off in another direction, Monique was taking all
the interviews as we were filing them and, under a tremendous deadline, turned
the book into what I would consider a great read.
But I’ll just
tell you one story, about Karen Johnson. She’s the woman who made the
allegations about the night at Mar-a-Lago during a New Year’s Eve party,
[during the time] when Melania Trump was dating Donald Trump. [Johnson says
that] when Melania was upstairs, she was attacked [by Trump]. She said he had
actually done to her [what he described doing in] the “Access Hollywood” tapes,
in terms of grabbing her. She was someone who held onto this story for many,
many years, and was fearful originally to come out with this story because she
had been a dancer in her earlier life. And she thought, if I come out and say this,
they’re going to attack me, they’re going to call me a liar because I had once
been a dancer. And so she kept this secret.
It took me
two full months before she even felt comfortable to begin telling me the
details. So, it’s been a very emotional journey in terms of getting these brave
and courageous women to come forward. And I just have to say, I’m just so
thankful that I was able to work with Monique and Lucy and Whitney to pull all
this together.
What patterns
emerged for you as you were going through all of the reporting?
El-Faizy: To
me, that was the unexpected power of the book. We’ve all heard the stories, the
women would come forward one by one. But when you put it all in one space,
first of all, it’s enormous, and that’s shocking in and of itself, but these
patterns really do emerge. [Trump] clearly has a thing for younger women. He
started talking about Ivanka being sexy when she was around the same age as
these models that he was kind of staring at backstage and pursuing at parties.
So that’s one of the patterns.
He likes porn
stars, as we’ve seen throughout his life. And he has these habits. He’ll push
somebody against the wall and try and kiss them. He’ll grab a breast or a
buttock. When he’s in a property that he owns, whether it be a hotel or
Mar-a-Lago, he feels that he has the right to walk in on a woman in her room.
What’s
interesting is that there were very few one-offs. We only put things in [the
book] that fit the pattern, because he has such well-established patterns over
the years. What was powerful about that is, when we would interview the women,
almost all of them in some way blamed themselves: “What kind of vibe was I
putting off? What was I wearing?” And when you look at them in the context of
these patterns, you realize it has almost nothing to do with that woman. If it
wasn’t that woman, it would’ve been another woman wearing something else and
putting off a totally different vibe.
He’ll push
somebody against the wall and try and kiss them. He’ll grab a breast or a
buttock. When he’s in a property that he owns, whether it be a hotel or
Mar-a-Lago, he feels that he has the right to walk in on a woman in her
room.El-Faizy
I think that
really comes across in the book, especially when you get to the end and you’re
reading the appendix, which outlines every single allegation. There are stories
that you’ll get to one and say, oh, that sounds exactly like that other woman’s
story, down to the details. It’s very striking.
Levine: About
six months into the reporting, we were getting all these new stories, in
addition to cataloging the earlier allegations that were made in 2016. And at
the same time, I was also digging into research and finding stories about
[Trump’s] inappropriate behavior with women that had popped up in the media but
had never really been cataloged ― everything from making horrible comments to a
model that was seated at a table with Graydon Carter, to incidents where he
himself said that he attacked women, [like] pouring a glass of wine on a
reporter in New York.
To me, [these
incidents] all needed to be cataloged. I think it’s very powerful, after you go
through the beautifully shaped narrative that Monique wrote, that you then get,
in very black and white fashion, every single allegation of inappropriate
behavior, in addition to the disparaging comments that I found he made
involving so many women. I just think when you read them one after another, it
is extremely impactful. And so the appendix of this book, to me, is as
important as the narrative itself.
As you both
alluded to earlier, you take a deep look into Trump’s early years, which is
probably something that most readers will know less about. To me, it seemed
like his treatment of women as objects and accessories began very early. Would
you say that that’s accurate?
El-Faizy:
Absolutely. That’s why I chartered the book the way I did. In his graduation
photo from the military academy, the woman standing next to him is an
accessory. To me, that said it all.
And I think
that that comes from his father, too. His father would bring these young,
pretty girls up to the academy. From what his classmates say, these were not
women that Donald Trump knew or had any kind of relationship with. They were
just girls that his dad would bring up for him, presumably for the image of it.
So I think that he didn’t develop that attitude in a vacuum.
And how do
you think those early experiences with women then impacted his relationship
with women later on in his life?
El-Faizy:
What’s interesting is that he never changes. We interviewed one of his
classmates, Sandy McIntosh, who said, “We were in an all-male academy. We
learned about women and girls from Playboy magazine. But then we got out and
realized, oh no, that’s not an appropriate way to look at women.”
And Trump
just never made that change. To me, what’s interesting is that nothing later in
his life impacted him enough to force him to reconsider his attitude.
The book also
gets into Trump’s obsession with models, with Playboy, and with beauty
pageants. You include a quote from a former Miss Arizona who says that she
believes Trump purchased the Miss Universe organization explicitly “to utilize
his power to get around beautiful women.” What did you take away from that?
El-Faizy:
Trump is, at his heart, a business guy. And if that’s your mind state, you buy
whatever you want in life. He had the money to do it; he wanted these women, so
he just went out and bought access to women, with the beauty pageant, with the
modeling agency. And I think for a lot of these men, it’s as much about being
around the women as it is how it looks to other men.
There’s a
story in the book from a hairstylist who used to blow-dry Marla Maples’ hair.
And he told me that Trump would come into the salon and just stand by her chair
and look around and see who was watching him be with Marla. So it wasn’t that
much about, “Oh, I want to see my girlfriend Marla.” It was about, “I want to
be seen in the presence of this young, beautiful blonde.” It’s the equivalent
of driving a red Ferrari.
Levine: I
tend to take a much darker view of those years. It’s absolutely clear in the
book that for Donald Trump, creating his own modeling agency and being a part
of some of these other beauty pageants and contests that he would arrange
parties for at the Plaza Hotel in the ’90s — that became his personal hunting
ground.
Take the
story, for instance, that Heather Braden told. Heather was a model, and she
told a story where Trump and these actors were in this giant Miami Beach
mansion with like 50 models. It really wasn’t a party. The whole thing was an
exercise for Donald Trump and these three other men to see how many of these
models they could take in the private rooms, sometimes two or three women at a
time.
Heather was
older at the time, and she was kind of watching everything take place. She
turned down Trump, but she said these younger models didn’t know any better.
And they would come out disheveled; they would look very uncomfortable when
they came out of the private rooms, and there was no question in her mind that
these were sexual experiences taking place. Donald Trump had created this
private hunting ground to allow himself access to young models. And he formed a
very tight relationship with John Casablancas, the founder of the Elite
modeling agency.
For Donald
Trump, creating his own modeling agency and being a part of some of these other
beauty pageants and contests ... that became his personal hunting ground.Barry
Levine
This book
puts all of these allegations together and uncovers a lot of new information,
but for years now, there has been a pretty well-documented history of Trump’s
misogyny and sexual misconduct. And yet it largely has not been seen as a
dealbreaker for his supporters. Why do you think that there are a lot of people
who feel allegations of sexual misconduct can be dismissed or overlooked?
El-Faizy:
Yeah, it’s interesting. I had written a book about evangelical Christianity
years ago, so I went back to that community for this book because, of course,
the evangelical community is probably what put Trump over the edge in 2016.
That community is very much run by male leaders, and so it was the men who
really drove that train for Trump.
One of the
evangelical women I spoke to and I said, “What is it? Why are they supporting
him?” She said, “I think that a lot of them think, ‘If I wasn’t a Christian,
that’s what I would be doing.’” Trump is surrounded by porn stars and beautiful
blondes and whatever. And so she thought there was a certain kind of male envy.
The structure
of the evangelical church, where Trump gets the bulk of his support, is very
patriarchal. For them, this kind of patriarchy is what God has instructed them
to do, and they find all kinds of different ways of rationalizing it. Early on,
I called an old source of mine. I said, “how on earth are you supporting him?”
And they said, “God uses imperfect vessels.” So they rationalize it by saying,
[Trump] is being used, he’s a tool of God. He doesn’t need to be perfect, we’re
all sinners. But at the very core of their support is just a comfort with
patriarchy and the idea that women are supposed to be submissive to men.
And then the
more cynical answer is the community supports him because he does what they
want him to do. He gets them conservative judges, he’s helping roll back
abortion laws, things like that. But in terms of the women being able to
support him, it’s because they live within a world in which they’ve completely
accepted the idea of patriarchy.
I feel like
another sentiment that I hear a lot, even among people who believe that Trump
is predatory, is exhaustion and frustration that these allegations don’t seem
to stick to him. So, why bother? What would you say to those people?
El-Faizy: I
think that’s part of the reason why it was important to put all these
[allegations] in one place, because it is easier to dismiss individual
behaviors. But when you look at it all in the aggregate, you realize it’s not
really just about one man’s behavior; it is about systems that allow this
behavior to go on for decades and decades. Trump is one of many men who has
been able to be predatory with women. I would argue, right now, he’s the one we
should be looking at because he’s the most visible man in the world and he sets
an example. But there needs to be a look at the systems that allow this to go
on.
When we brush
aside or when we say we’re tired of this, we’re being complicit, we’re letting
it go on. We have to get outraged about every one of these things. I’m now sort
of going off-topic a little bit, but when I read the Ta-Nehisi Coates book
“Between the World and Me,” that was the thing that I came away with. We can’t
just say, “Oh, there’s another black kid getting shot.” We have to be outraged
every time or this never ever changes.
It’s not
really just about one man’s behavior; it is about systems that allow this
behavior to go on for decades and decades.El-Faizy
Levine: This
is a man who wants another four years to be president of our country. You can’t
say, ‘Who cares?’ You can’t turn away from the truth.
Given the
sheer breadth of allegations that exist against President Trump, do you think
that we should be speaking about him in the same way that we speak about
predatory men like Bill Cosby or Harvey Weinstein?
El-Faizy: I
think absolutely.
Levine: The
reporting shows that Donald Trump has been a predator over the course of many
decades. There needs to be a reckoning here of his behavior. And we had to
attempt to connect the dots to show not only the actual instances of the
allegations but also to talk about how he became a predator. And I hope that
the readers will get answers to that.
Why is it so
essential for the American public to grapple with Trump’s predatory behavior?
What does this one man’s story say about our culture at large?
El-Faizy: I
think it’s his behavior, but also his policies. His behavior reveals an
attitude about women, and that attitude is being held by the man who formed
policy for American women and also for women around the globe. And we see the
manner in which those attitudes are affecting women around the world, and the
systems that are supporting these kinds of things.
What was so
hurtful about the confirmation [of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh] was
that you had an accuser [Christine Blasey Ford] who came forward, she was
credible, people listened to her. And yet there was very little investigation
and he was confirmed anyway. So I think a lot of women felt like, we thought we
made all these advances since the ’60s, but in fact, the patriarchy is alive
and well and still completely in control of the system. And I think that’s
important to examine.
So now the
book is out there in the world and we have this information. What should we be
doing with it? What do you hope comes next?
Levine: I
really think it is so important now, despite everything else going on with the
impeachment inquiry, that investigative news organizations take the time to
pick up these allegations and dig deeper because there are still so many
stories. There is so much more material out there on Donald Trump and women.
When I was
wrapping up the book, the E. Jean Carroll allegations [that Trump had attempted
to rape Carroll in the mid-’90s] surfaced. And first of all, after the
reporting I had done, everything that she said rang true. But beyond that,
there were news organizations who were wrestling with whether they were going
to present her allegations to begin with. And to me, that is the absolutely
wrong thing. We need to allow these women to tell their stories. To me, that’s
the most important thing.
El-Faizy: I
think that we’ve seen that women are not fully valued in society and we need
massive change. And I think that the midterm elections with all these young,
newly elected women, were the beginning of that. And I hope that that’s not
just a one-off and that that continues, because until we reach parity in the
power structures of organizations and in government, this is not going to be
fully addressed and fully changed. We need to see more women getting elected
and that this is not just a moment, but actually the beginning of some real
change.
Levine: I
hope that even if people hear these allegations and don’t even read the book,
that it will make them aware that the story of Donald Trump and women, his
predatory behavior, has not been fully written, and that this is something they
should remember when they consider whether or not they want him to be president
for another four years.
This
interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
“Our entire crony capitalist system, Democrat
and Republican alike,
has become a kleptocracy
approaching par with
third-world hell-holes.
This is the
way a great country is raided by its
elite.” ---- Karen
McQuillan
Scarborough then launched
into his own conspiracy theory:
But I think we all will be absolutely fascinated when we finally
figure out what Vladimir Putin has on Donald Trump and why Donald Trump has surrendered the Middle East,
helped ISIS, helped Iran, helped Russia, helped Turkey, helped all of our
enemies and betrayed all of our allies. You know, a lot of people think that it’s – he has
compromising pictures or something happened in a hotel in Russia years ago. No.
It goes back to money. It’s always about money.
GET THIS BOOK!
Peter Schweizer, author
of “Secret Empires: How the
American Political Class Hides Corruption and Enriches Family and Friends,”
BULLSHIT! TRUMP AND HIS PARASITE
CHILDREN
HAVE SCREWED EVERY CONTRACTOR AND
PERSON
THEY’VE DONE BUSINESS WITH FROM DAY ONE!
Eric
Trump on paying contractors: We
pay
‘people when they do great jobs’
The Trump Organization has been criticized for stiffing
contractors. Contractors have filed hundreds of
complaints, which date back to the 1980s, alleging that the real estate company
did not pay them.
“We
believe in paying people when they do great jobs. And we get people paid
incredibly quickly. And we pay contractors,” said Eric Trump, executive vice
president of The Trump Organization at Yahoo Finance’s All Market
Summit, adding that the organization only refuses to pay contractors
who fail to complete a job.
“Yeah,
well, they [the unpaid contractors] didn't finish a job. And they didn't do a
good job. And they flaked out. And they were two months behind schedule. And so
you had to let go of them. And you had to bring somebody else in to do the job
that they otherwise would have. And it's called the real world,” he said,
referring to the allegations. “People like to take cheap shots at us.”
Eric Trump’s defense echoes his father’s status quo response.
During the
2016 presidential debate,
President Donald Trump said something very similar. “Maybe he didn’t do a good
job and I was unsatisfied with his work,” he said in response to nonpayment
accusations.
Eric Trump
also noted to Yahoo Finance that The Trump Organization has developed
institutional knowledge about getting the best deals with contractors. “In New
York, we know what contractors are going to be incredible, what contractors are
going to — I won't use a word, but — take advantage of you,” he said. “And, you
know, you have that institutional knowledge. You know your way around. You know
the language. You know the laws. You know how things are built. You know what
kind of foundations work in the ground.”
ANN COULTER
TRUMP’S PARASITIC FAMILY
Jared’s BFF, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman (MBS), and the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, Muhammad bin Zayed (MBZ),
refer to Jared as “the clown prince.” Bone-cutter MBS assured those around him
that he had Jared “in my pocket.”
Following meetings at the White House and also with the Kushners over
their 666 Fifth Avenue property, former Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin
Jassim reported back to the emir that “the people atop the new administration
were heavily motivated by personal financial interest.”
“Truthfully, It Is Tough To Ignore Some Of The Gross
Immoral Behavior By The President” WASHINGTON POST
Trump's sister quits as a federal judge 10
days into formal probe of her possible role in massive family tax scam that
could have ended in her impeachment
· Trump's older sister resigned as an appellate court judge shortly
after a probe opened into her involvement in a family tax scheme
·
· 10 days ago an investigation into whether Maryanne Trump Barry violated
judicial conduct rules launched
·
· The case was closed after Barry resigned because retired judges are not
subject to the rules
·
· Barry had not heard a case in two years after transitioning to inactive
shortly after Trump's inauguration
·
· The Trump siblings were probed after an investigation found they were
involved in a tax scheme related to the transfer of their father's real estate
empire
President Donald Trump’s older sister
Maryanne Trump Barry, 82, retired as a federal judge just days after an
investigation opened into her possible role in family tax fraud scheme.
Barry was a federal appellate judge in the third district, which
includes Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware, and the investigation could
have led to her impeachment.
She had not presided over a case in more than two years, but was still
listed as an inactive senior judge in the third district – usually the step
taken before full retirement.
Barry did not give any reasons for her retirement.
The probe into the Trumps was first opened last fall, after a New York
Times investigation found the Trump siblings engaged in tax schemes in the
1990s, including fraud, that increased their inherited wealth.
+4
Maryanne Trump Barry resigned as a federal appellate judge 10 days into
an investigation into whether she violated judicial conduct rules
An investigation into the Trump siblings opened after the New York Times
reported that they transferred their father's real estate assets improperly in
the 1990s
PRESIDENT of the UNITED STATES DONALD TRUMP: Pathological liar,
swindler, con man, huckster, golfing cheat, charity foundation fraudster, tax
evader, adulterer, porn whore chaser and servant of the Saudis dictators
THE TRUMP FAMILY FOUNDATION SLUSH FUND…. Will they see jail?
VISUALIZE REVOLUTION!.... We know where they live!
“Underwood is a Democrat and is seeking millions of dollars in
penalties. She wants Trump and his eldest children barred from running other
charities.”
WHO IS
FINANCING ALL THE TRUMP AND SON-IN-LAW’S REFINANCING SCAMS???
FOLLOW THE
MONEY!
"I
doubt that Trump understands -- or cares about -- what message he's sending.
Wealthy Saudis, including members of the extended royal family, have been his
patrons for years, buying his distressed properties when he needed money. In
the early 1990s, a Saudi prince purchased Trump's flashy yacht so that the
then-struggling businessman could come up with cash to stave off personal
bankruptcy, and later, the prince bought a share of the Plaza Hotel, one of
Trump's many business deals gone bad. Trump also sold an entire floor of his
landmark Trump Tower condominium to the Saudi government in 2001."
“The Wahhabis
finance thousands of madrassahs
throughout the
world where young boys are
brainwashed
into becoming fanatical foot-soldiers
for the petrodollar-flush
Saudis and other emirs of
the Persian
Gulf.” AMIL IMANI
I recommend that Ignatius read Raymond Ibrahim's outstanding
book Sword and Scimitar, which
contains accounts of dynastic succession in the Muslim monarchies of the Middle
East, where standard operating procedure for a new monarch on the death of his
father was to strangle all his brothers. Yes, it's
awful. But it has been happening for a very long
time. And it's not going to change quickly, no matter how outraged
we pretend to be. MONICA SHOWALTER
WHAT WILL TRUMP AND HIS PARASITIC FAMILY DO FOR MONEY???
JUST ASK THE SAUDIS!
JOHN DEAN: Not so far. This has been right by the letter
of the special counsel’s charter. He’s released the document. What I’m
looking for is relief and understanding that there’s no witting or unwitting
likelihood that the President is an agent of Russia. That’s when I’ll feel
comfortable, and no evidence even hints at that. We don’t have that yet. We’re
still in the process of unfolding the report to look at it. And its, as I say,
if [Attornery General William Barr] honors his word, we’ll know more soon.
Morning Joe: Trump Is ‘Owned by Putin,’ Head of ‘Criminal
Organization’
Listen to
the Article!
Following a discussion of President
Trump’s decision to withdraw U.S. troops from Syria, on Thursday, MSNBC’s Morning
Joe went far beyond standard criticism of the controversial foreign
policy move and wildly claimed it was proof that Trump was “owned by Putin” and
heading up a “criminal organization” that had been “laundering money” for the
Russian autocrat for decades.
As the 6:00 a.m. ET hour segment about
Syria was wrapping up and co-host Mika Brzezinski was starting to go to a
commercial break, left-wing pundit Donny Deutsch interrupted to squeeze in an
unfounded conspiratorial rant in which he accused the President of multiple
crimes: “Let’s not forget it. This is all about failed casinos. He is
owned by Putin because he’s been laundering money, Russian money for the last
20, 30 years. He’s owned by him. That’s what this is.”
Brzezinski voiced her agreement with
irresponsible and unsubstantiated attack: “Oh, my lord....Yeah.”
Deutsch continued his tirade
unchallenged:
You talk to any banker in New York,
any business person in New York, any real estate person in New York, we
have a president that’s selling out our military, that’s costing lives because he
is owned by our geopolitical enemy because he’s been laundering money for him
as a criminal organization for the last 30 years. That will come out in time.
Co-host Joe Scarborough seemed to
offer a small dose of sanity in response: “That is – that is speculation and
only speculation right now.” However, he quickly added: “I will say that it is
speculation among New York bankers who have loaned Donald Trump money in the
past and who have been following his business career for 30, 40 years.”
Brzezinski chimed in: “Who know a lot.”
Scarborough then launched into his
own conspiracy theory:
But I think we all will be absolutely
fascinated when we finally figure out what Vladimir Putin has on Donald Trump and why Donald Trump has
surrendered the Middle East, helped ISIS, helped Iran, helped Russia, helped
Turkey, helped all of our enemies and betrayed all of our allies. You
know, a lot of people think that it’s – he has compromising pictures or
something happened in a hotel in Russia years ago. No. It goes back to money.
It’s always about money.
He concluded the unhinged discussion
by asserting: “And this president is selling not only America, but its
most important allies, down the river for money he wants to make either while
in office or when he leaves office, period, end of story.”
It’s never enough for the liberal
media to simply express a policy disagreement with Trump and say that the U.S.
abandoning its Kurdish allies in northern Syria would have a negative outcome.
Instead, journalists and pundits must always try to outdo each other to make
the most outrageous declarations imaginable to prove their bona fides as
members of the resistance.
Here is a full transcript of the
October 24 exchange:
6:48 AM ET
DONNY DEUTSCH: Make no mistake,
because it’s easy to forget. Let’s not forget it. This is all about failed
casinos. He is owned by Putin...
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