Tribunal for Hillary Clinton for clean up 84m dollars during the US campaign

The US Federal Election Commission (FEC) has been indicted for ignoring the laundering of 84m dollars on the part of the Hillary Clinton campaign and National Democratic Committee (DNC) through campaign donations. The indictment made by a group called the Committee for the Protection of President (CDP) claims Hillary Victory Fund (HVF) received donations [...]
The indictment made by a group called the Committee for the Protection of President (CDP) claims that Hillary Victory Fund (HVF) received donations from large-named donors and pockets and instructed them to send the money into the accounts of local Democratic Party groups; donations then passed to the DNC, which, in turn, sent them to the Hillary team.
The CDP, formerly known as Stop Hillary PAC, alleges in the indictment that the FEC knew Clinton's camp had started the scheme and even disclosed that an investigation should be launched for considering donations, but no action has been undertaken so far, Fox News reports.
The Clinton Machine has long escaped responsibility for illegal practices”, said CDP chairman Ted Harvey. “After months of review, the FEC has refused to address the 84m-dollar laundering scheme by Clinton by violating several campaign financing laws”.
The indictment says the FEC violates the Federal Election Campaign Act and called it a lack of action “armirre, biased, anti-law and abuse with competencies”.
“Call on the court to move and seek action from the FEC. The American people demand that the most corrupt political figures respond to their actions”, the group insists.
The indictment presents facts that large donations were made to the branches of parties in states, but on the same day, the same amount was transferred from local organisations to the national Democratic Party camera.
The scheme enabled large donors to avoid legal restrictions on donations, sending them to local organisations instead of sending them directly to Clinton's campaign, but the same money eventually went to Hillary Clinton.
The FEC has made no comment on the issue, citing privacy rules.












