DEVELOPING! Rosie Could Be Headed To Prison For YEARS Over Illegal Payments She Made Blamed Trump!
Please Subscribe: https://goo.gl/DodZjS
Source: https://goo.gl/Kqf4LR
President Trump has a long list of liberal enemies who would love to see him fall. The only problem is they can’t seem to find anything that will bring him down. These people have fabricated fake news stories, and have paid millions of dollars for fake dossiers to try, and connect President Trump to the Russian meddling in our 2016 presidential election. Every last desperate attempt has failed. Well, the only way to bring down the Presidents agenda is to elect more Democrats across the board.
Rosie O’Donnell thought she could do just that. Over the last year or so, the liberal “comedian” donated large amounts of money to Democratic candidates in hopes of shaking up Washington D.C and derailing the Trump Train. According to a Post analysis of campaign filings, O’Donnell donated far more than the Federal Election Commission rules allow for each candidate. The max amount of donations one person can donate per person is $2700 per election. The limit applies separately to primaries, runoffs, and in the general election. It’s also come to light that O’Donnell used five different New York addressed in order to donate to each candidate.
According to the Post, O’Donnell donated:
$4,700 to former federal prosecutor Doug Jones, who defeated Republican Roy Moore in last year’s Alabama Senate race.
$3,600 to Pennsylvania Rep. Conor Lamb in the March special election he won against Republican state Rep. Rick Saccone.
$1,000 for Lamb’s bid in November for a full two-year term in a different congressional district.
$4,200 to Illinois congressional candidate Lauren Underwood, who is squaring off against Republican incumbent Rep. Randy Hultgren.
$3,450 to Democrat Omar Vaid, a little-known congressional candidate in Staten Island and Brooklyn. – Newsmax
Filings show O’Donnell gave a combined $5,400 in contributions over the limit to the five candidates and used five different New York addresses and four variations of her name.
O’Donnell donated $2,950 to California Rep. Adam Schiff, a 17-year veteran of the House, for his primary, according to his campaign filings. His campaign didn’t return messages seeking comment.
Asked how much she gave to Vaid, O’Donnell wrote, “I have no idea.”
She said she assumed ActBlue “limits donations to the max allowed.”
She added, “I keep donating” and that her brother Tim handles her money.
She gave more than $90,000 the 2017-2018 election cycle to 50 different federal candidates and committees, filings show.
Both donors and candidates are legally liable for contributions over the limit. But it’s unlikely O’Donnell or her benefactors will be penalized for breaking FEC rules. Contributions over the limit can be refunded or counted toward a different election, and married donors can attribute the money to a spouse. – NYP
According to the Blaze
Lamb’s campaign said it would notify O’Donnell of her “error” and either refund her the money or allow her to roll it over to Lamb’s November election.
Meanwhile, Vaid’s campaign told the Post-it “inadvertently designated” some of O’Donnell’s money to the “wrong election” and would amend their campaign finance filings.
Will O’Donnell be prosecuted?
While both campaigns and donors are responsible for following all campaign finance laws, experts told the Post that O’Donnell likely won’t go to jail for her over-donations.
“Donors are rarely fined for excess contributions and then only if they are hiding the donations from the recipients. Campaigns generally are not penalized for isolated contributions over a limit. However, multiple excessive donations may lead to an investigation. Fines could result in such cases,” prominent campaign finance lawyer Jan Witold told the Post.
The question that many Americans are asking is if Rosie will be treated the same way Dinesh D’Souza was treated during the Obama reign of terror? Hopefully, President Trump’s DOJ takes a closer look at the details, and treat O’Donnell the same as D’Souza was treated. Afterall, there should be no favorites played. The only problem with going after O’Donnell is the picture the media would paint. They would smear the Trump DOJ as well as President Trump as playing favorites and going after his critics. What about the other campaigns? Will they be giving back the donations O’Donnell made to them? The DOJ should investigate both O’Donnell and the campaigns. Afterall, they along with Robert Muller have spent millions of dollars investigating the fake Russian Collusion story made up by the Clinton camp.
Megyn Kelly tried very hard to derail the Trump train during the 2016 debates calling out then-candidate Trump on his references to wom