The State Department on Thursday offered a reward of up to $10 million for information about Russian interference in American elections, including a close associate of Russian President Vladimir Putin and a troll farm that officials say fueled a divisive social media campaign in 2016. [How is what FB, Twitter or MSM do any less divisive or less worthy of investigation?]
The reward, offered by the department's Rewards for Justice program, seeks information about the Internet Research Agency, Yevgeniy Prigozhin — a wealthy businessman whose ties to Putin earned him the nickname “Putin Chef” — and other entities accused in some quarters of interfering in the 2016 U.S. election won by Republican Donald Trump.
They should call it a bribe not a reward. They still can't get over Shillary's loss. More money, investigations and crying foul over 2016 while ignoring 2020. Traitors to the core.
The reward, offered by the department's Rewards for Justice program, seeks information about the Internet Research Agency, Yevgeniy Prigozhin — a wealthy businessman whose ties to Putin earned him the nickname “Putin Chef” — and other entities accused in some quarters of interfering in the 2016 U.S. election won by Republican Donald Trump.
They should call it a bribe not a reward. They still can't get over Shillary's loss. More money, investigations and crying foul over 2016 while ignoring 2020. Traitors to the core.