Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Quote of day from ABC

Corsi said that Stettner was questioned by the FBI in recent weeks because he has, on and off over the course of many years, helped fix Corsi's computers. Of particular interest to the FBI agents, Corsi said, was a computer of his that Stettner wiped of all its contents in the weeks leading up to Corsi’s subpoena to testify before the special counsel's grand jury in late August. Corsi and his wife, Monica Corsi told ABC News in a recent interview following Stettner's encounter with the FBI that Stettner wiped the computer because Monica Corsi wanted to use the computer for her New Jersey-based small business, rather than buy a new one. He said neither he nor his wife had nefarious intentions. “I don’t see how I can be accused of destroying evidence or a conspiracy to obstruct justice when I simply allowed – before I knew I was under investigation -- my stepson to restore a computer,” Corsi told ABC News. “I didn’t see the harm in wiping [the computer] instead of buying a new one.” Corsi told ABC News that he has an external hard-drive that stored a back-up software application that completely backed up the computer his stepson wiped. "My attorneys David Gray and Larry Klayman are in the process of writing a letter to [the special counsel] offering to make the desktop Mac, the external hard drive with the [back up application] data, and an internal hard drive we had replaced for a solid state internal hard drive available to [their office]," Corsi said. (MORE: Special counsel witness says he expects to be charged in Mueller probe) Corsi, known for promulgating political smear campaigns and conspiracy theories, rejected a plea deal he says was offered to him by Mueller in November, saying he could not sign on to a plea deal for a crime he says he did not commit.

Heat stroke symptoms--

Symptoms: Throbbing headache, confusion, nausea, dizziness, body temperature above 103°F, hot, red, dry or damp skin, rapid and strong pulse...