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PostPosted: 08/08/18 8:39 am • # 1 
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Read the charges against GOP Rep. Chris Collins

More-> https://www.cnn.com/2018/08/08/politics ... index.html?


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PostPosted: 08/08/18 9:23 am • # 2 
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I have not yet read thru the 50+ pages of charges in the op, but this seems to be a decent overview ~ maybe Collins just forgot the old adage "you play, you pay" ~ :ey ~ "live links" in original ~ Sooz

GOP Rep. Chris Collins, prominent Trump backer, indicted
08/08/18 10:33 AM
By Steve Benen

It’s not at all common for sitting members of Congress to get arrested. As we discussed a few years ago, members will occasionally engage in civil disobedience at a protest – Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) has been arrested dozens of times in pursuit of civil rights – but in general, lawmakers write laws; they don’t run afoul of them.

That makes it all the more remarkable that Rep. Chris Collins (R-N.Y.) surrendered to the FBI this morning on securities fraud-related charges. NBC News reported:

Quote:
Collins, 68, faces insider trading charges along with his son, Cameron Collins, and Stephen Zarsky, the father of Cameron Collins’ fiancée, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Southern District of New York.

The case is related to Innate Immunotherapeutics, an Australian biotech company, on which the elder Collins served on the board.

Collins, one of Donald Trump’s early supporters in his bid for president, is expected to appear in federal court later Wednesday in Manhattan.

This controversy has been simmering for a while. Indeed, circling back to our previous coverage, Collins was a major investor in Innate Immunotherapeutics – the New York Republican was given a seat on the company’s board – and Collins allegedly took the lead on pushing legislation that benefited the company.

The Daily Beast had an excellent piece on this in April, reporting that Collins either drafted or sponsored at least four pieces of legislation that would have benefited the company he’s invested in, while also “trying to make changes to a government program that would save the company millions of dollars if its drug is approved by the FDA.”

The article came six months after the New York Times, citing findings from the Office of Congressional Ethics, reported that Collins “may have violated federal law by sharing nonpublic information about a company on whose board he served” – an action specifically cited in today’s indictment.

To the extent that electoral considerations matter, Collins is supposed to run for re-election this year in New York’s 27th congressional district, and the conventional wisdom has been that he was a very safe bet for re-election.

That, of course, was before he was taken into FBI custody.

http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/gop-rep-chris-collins-prominent-trump-backer-indicted#break


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PostPosted: 08/08/18 9:40 am • # 3 
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It adds a sense of bemusement if Collins did do this from the WH ~ :s ~ Sooz

REVEALED: GOP congressman Chris Collins committed securities fraud while he was at Trump’s White House
Brad Reed / 08 Aug 2018 at 10:32 ET

Rep. Chris Collins (R-NY), the Trump-loving lawmaker who was arrested on Wednesday on insider trading charges, was allegedly at the White House when he broke the law.

According to the indictment leveled against Collins, the Republican lawmaker was attending the annual Congressional Picnic at the White House when he received an email from the chief executive of Australian biotech firm Innate Immunotherapeutics that informed him that the company had just suffered a massive drug trial failure.

Specifically, the email informed Collins that “top-line 12-month data… show no clinically meaningful or statistically significant differences in [outcomes] between [Innate’s experimental drug] and placebo… no doubt we will want to consider this extremely bad news.”

The indictment claims that, after receiving this email, Collins then called his son, Cameron Collins, to inform him of the drug’s failure — despite “knowing that it was in breach of his duties to Innate.”

According to prosecutors, Collins made the call to his son to get him to dump shares of the stock so that they wouldn’t have to take a massive financial hit when news of the drug’s failure broke.

“The following morning… Cameron Collins placed an online order with his brokerage firm to sell approximately 16,508 shares of Innate on the U.S. OTC market,” the indictment alleges. “This order was executed… when the U.S. OTC market opened.”

https://www.rawstory.com/2018/08/revealed-gop-congressman-chris-collins-committed-securities-fraud-trumps-white-house/


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PostPosted: 08/08/18 10:01 am • # 4 
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Oh, the irony...


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PostPosted: 08/08/18 4:39 pm • # 5 
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Anyone even remotely connected to trump seems to be corrupt in one way or another- so this does not surprise me..


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PostPosted: 08/09/18 6:28 am • # 6 
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What annoys me ALMOST as much as the crime itself are [1] Collins' obvious arrogance, and [2] the depth of the blind loyalty to anyone with an "R" after his name ~ :ey ~ Sooz

Despite arrest, Republican congressman expects to win re-election
08/09/18 08:00 AM
By Steve Benen

[Video, The Rachel Maddow Show, 8/8/18, 9:50 PM ET, "Long-brewing scandal leads to Republican congressman's arrest", accessible via the end link.]

Rep. Chris Collins (R-N.Y.) wasn’t just a major investor in Innate Immunotherapeutics, an Australian biotech company, he also encouraged others to follow his lead, including members of his family and his congressional colleagues. With that in mind, consider what the New York Republican did when the company’s CEO emailed him last summer to let him know about an unsuccessful clinical trial, which would inevitably push the company’s stock lower.

Quote:
[W]ithin six minutes came a flurry of phone calls to reach his son, who owned more than 2 percent of Innate stock, prosecutors said. He finally reached Cameron Collins, who allegedly passed the information from his father to [Stephen Zarsky, the father of Cameron Collins’ fiancée], and other unnamed co-conspirators, who then engaged in “timely trades” of the stock.

Cameron Collins unloaded his Innate shares, as did his fiancée and Zarsky, in the days that followed. Zarsky’s wife and a friend also benefited from the move, prosecutors said.

On June 26, news of the failed drug trial was made public and the stock took a nosedive. The defendants managed to avoid more than $768,000 in losses, prosecutors allege.

Given these details, it shouldn’t surprise anyone that Chris Collins has been charged with, among other things, insider trading. What is surprising is that the New York Republican insists he’s innocent and expects to be re-elected in three months, while out on bail.

Indeed, watching Collins yesterday was a dizzying experience. In the morning, he surrendered to the FBI. In the afternoon, the congressman pleaded not guilty and issued a statement that read, “Because my focus is to defeat these charges in Court, after today, I will not address any issues related to Innate Immunotherapeutics outside of the courtroom.” Soon after, Collins announced he’d host a press conference, at which he said he looked forward “to being fully vindicated and exonerated.”

Time will tell whether the GOP lawmaker avoids conviction, but in the meantime, it’s hard not to wonder whether someone like Collins can win re-election under circumstances like these.

The answer is: it’s entirely possible.

Collins represents New York’s 27th congressional district, which is literally the most Republican district in the northeast, and a district Donald Trump won by nearly 25 points.

The indictment against the GOP congressman is absolutely brutal, and it’s easy to imagine Collins ending up behind bars as a result of his alleged misdeeds, but that doesn’t necessarily mean Republican voters in the district will hold any of this against him.

That said, Roll Coll reported yesterday that Democrats are “salivating at the possibility that the congressman’s arrest Wednesday puts his Western New York seat in play.”

Quote:
“With Collins’ arrest for corruption, unprecedented grassroots energy, and the strong candidacy of Nate McMurray, this seat is firmly in play for Democrats,” Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee spokeswoman Meredith Kelly said in a statement Wednesday.

McMurray, the Grand Island town supervisor, has referenced Collins’ ethics troubles as part of his campaign. Up to this point, his campaign hasn’t received much attention, in part because of his modest fundraising. He had $82,000 in cash on hand as of June 30, according to Federal Election Commission documents. Collins’ campaign had $1.3 million on hand.

In case this isn’t obvious, a Democrat running in the region’s most Republican district cannot expect to seriously compete with $82,000 in the bank. The question is just how much the race will change in the wake of Collins’ indictment.

The McMurray campaign said it raised more money yesterday morning than it had in the entire race to date, and while that’s a start, it will need to maintain that pace – and then some – in the final three months of the campaign.

As for the broader electoral landscape, Collins’ criminal proceedings don’t do his party any favors. The public is now hearing about a wealthy New York Republican and Trump cheerleader allegedly putting himself above the rules everyone else has to play by, trying to play a rigged game to enrich his associates.

The swamp, evidently, is not being drained.

http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/despite-arrest-republican-congressman-expects-win-re-election#break


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PostPosted: 08/09/18 7:12 am • # 7 
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Apparently there's more than just 1 "another ..." ~ maybe they all just forgot the life lesson of if you want to share in the rewards, you need to be prepared to share in the risks ~ :ey ~ Sooz

Sam Baker 1 hour ago
How one failed drug ensnared so many GOP lawmakers

One Australian drug company — with only one (failed) product in one (failed) clinical trial — just keeps tripping up current and former House Republicans.

Driving the news: Federal prosecutors in New York indicted Rep. Chris Collins yesterday on charges of insider trading, stemming from the sale of shares in a company called Innate Immunotherapeutics.

It's the same company you may remember from Tom Price's confirmation as Health and Human Services secretary. He tripled his investment when divesting of the stock to become secretary, according to the Wall Street Journal.

    Collins had been an investor in the company for 15 years, the WSJ reports, and was a member of its board.

    Price bought almost 500,000 shares in the company, most of them in 2016, at a discounted rate only offered to a few Americans. At least four other GOP lawmakers also bought shares of Innate a few months later, according to the watchdog group CREW.

    Of those six lawmakers, four — Collins, Price, and Reps. Billy Long and Markwayne Mullin — sat on committees with direct health care jurisdiction.

The company did not have any FDA-approved drugs on the market, and had just one product in development at the time the members of Congress bought their stock. It was in the midst of clinical trials for a multiple sclerosis drug.

    That trial was deemed a failure on June 22, 2017. According to the indictment, the company let Collins know, because he was a board member. From an event on the South Lawn of the White House, he wrote back: “Wow. Makes no sense. How are these results even possible???”

    "Within about fifteen seconds of sending his email," the indictment says, Collins started calling his son, who — along with his girlfriend and her family — quickly unloaded their Innate shares.

Why it matters: An indictment on charges of insider trading, with a pharmaceutical company, while writing the laws for pharmaceutical companies, is not the look Republicans would have wanted heading into what's already a difficult midterm election.

    The indictment, and other lawmakers' stock ownership, also raise substantive questions about whether Congress has strong enough protections in place to prevent members from profiting off information they possess or votes they cast.

— An earlier version of this story misstated the drug Innnate Inmunotherapeutics was testing. It was a drug for multiple sclerosis.

https://www.axios.com/chris-collins-gop-lawmakers-innate-immunotheraputics-026904c0-4f2f-41c6-aef6-3846330be45d.html


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PostPosted: 08/10/18 6:07 am • # 8 
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Maybe it's just me, but I have a problem with using "campaign funds" to pay personal legal bills ... even during an investigatory stage ~ :ey ~ "live links" in original ~ Sooz

LIVEWIRE
Collins Will Stop Using Campaign Donations To Pay Legal Bills, Spox Says
By Matt Shuham | August 9, 2018 3:14 pm

Rep. Chris Collins (R-NY) used campaign donations to pay his legal bills for a congressional probes into his alleged insider trading, but he has pledged to stop doing so a day after being indicted on charges of insider trading and lying to the FBI, CNBC reported Thursday.

A Collins spokesperson told the network, in its words, that “going forward, the congressman will pay for his legal bills out of his own pocket.” Collins’ son, and his son’s fiancé’s father, were also indicted Wednesday.

Collins’ campaign finance filings show multiple payments for “legal services” to the law firm BakerHostetler. A Collins spokesperson told CNBC those were payments for similar investigations into alleged insider trading and other matters by the Office of Congressional Ethics and House Ethics Committee.

CNBC said Collins had paid the firm up to $60,000 a month for legal services since July 2017. In October 2017, The Buffalo News reported that Collins’ campaign had paid the firm $162,823.27 over July, August and September 2017 on legal fees.

The House Ethics Committee announced last year that it was probing Collins’ behavior upon receiving a recommendation to do so by the Office of Congressional Ethics.

An OCE report to the committee in July 2017 said there was “substantial reason to believe” Collins had broken the law by sharing nonpublic information about the biotech firm Innate Immunotherapeutics, where he was then a board member and the largest shareholder, in addition to contacting employees at the National Institutes of Health in an attempt to aid the company.

In June 2017, prosecutors alleged Wednesday, Collins set off a series of insider trading violations when he called his son to warn him that Innate’s primary drug had failed a clinical trial.

The OCE investigation had begun a few months earlier, well after reporters overheard Collins bragging about “how many millionaires I’ve made in Buffalo the past few months.”

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/collins-will-stop-using-campaign-donations-to-pay-legal-bills-spox-says


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PostPosted: 08/10/18 7:15 am • # 9 
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$60,000./month? Small wonder USian lawyers are regarded as crooks.


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PostPosted: 08/10/18 7:31 am • # 10 
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oskar576 wrote:
$60,000./month? Small wonder USian lawyers are regarded as crooks.

Big name lawyers/law firms make BIG bucks the moment a client calls or walks in the door ... especially when litigation is involved ~ :ey

Sooz


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PostPosted: 08/10/18 8:01 am • # 11 
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sooz06 wrote:
oskar576 wrote:
$60,000./month? Small wonder USian lawyers are regarded as crooks.

Big name lawyers/law firms make BIG bucks the moment a client calls or walks in the door ... especially when litigation is involved ~ :ey

Sooz


Might explain why there's a legal system rather than a justice system.


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PostPosted: 08/11/18 8:41 am • # 12 
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From my Facebook feed ~ DISCLAIMER: I have NOT seen this anywhere else so I'm not attesting to its "truth" ~ but I'm thinking "hope springs eternal" ~ :ey ~ Sooz

Image


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PostPosted: 08/11/18 8:52 am • # 13 
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WOOO HOOO!!! ~ CONFIRMATION!!!!! ~ Sooz

Embattled GOP Rep. Collins suspends re-election campaign to fight insider trading charges
Tom Boggioni / 11 Aug 2018 at 10:39 ET

According to Politico, embattled Rep. Chris Collins (R-NY) is suspending his campaign for re-election and is seeking to remove his name from the ballot.

The report states Collins made the announcement on Twitter, as he tries to clear his name over insider trading charges.

Collins’ tweeted statement can be seen below:

Quote:
JUST IN: Rep. Chris Collins announces that he is suspending his campaign for re-election to Congress amid insider trading charges. pic.twitter.com/gEPUJAsscS

— MSNBC (@MSNBC) August 11, 2018

https://www.rawstory.com/2018/08/embattled-gop-rep-collins-suspends-re-election-campaign-fight-insider-trading-charges/


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PostPosted: 08/11/18 10:53 am • # 14 
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It just means another goofball, probably even worse than Collins if the GOP follows its usual practice, will take his place.


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