7-10-2021
Dark money PAC behind Trump's big tech lawsuit is pulling a fast one on his supporters:
According to Sollenberger, the head of a "dark money" PAC called America First Policy Institute (AFPI), which is assisting Trump with the lawsuit, then -
addressed the cameras and encouraged supporters of Trump to go online to add their name to the lawsuit.
"Brooke Rollins, a former Trump administration official who now heads up the organization, stood next to the former president on Thursday and said people could 'join the lawsuit' by going to 'take on big tech dot com.'"
he wrote before adding she claimed,
" We really are looking for the tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands of Americans."
But, as the Daily Beast report notes, anyone who thought they were signing up to become co-plaintiffs soon discovered they were being swept up in a fundraising scam by the PAC.
"That site won't sign anyone on to the lawsuit though.
The fine print on the landing page explicitly says entering a name does not make someone a plaintiff.
Instead, it's a fundraising effort for the nonprofit, Sollenberger wrote before adding, "...
___visitors to that website were redirected to a fundraising page for the Constitutional Leadership Partnership, an arm of AFPI headed up by former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi."
According to the report, those who kept following the links, "... will find a form where they can enter their information and donate to the group, as well as this fine print:
''Signing up as a supporter or donor does not make you a party to, or class member in, any lawsuit in which AFPI may or may not be engaged.'
((((BWAHAA! trump ''loves the uneducated'' for sure,
they didn't read as expected of the uneducated--suckers)))
Ari Cohn, a lawyer at think tank TechFreedom, stated that Trump's lawsuit is basically a scam aimed at getting money and email addresses for later donation requests and that the lawsuit will quickly go down in flames.
The legal maneuvering is nothing less than a "fundraising, publicity stunt," Cohn added,
"They know that they're going to lose,"
which appears to be a consensus opinion among
legal experts.
The report goes on to note that Ivanka Trump and husband Jared Kushner also have ties to the group as "advisers."