This document is page 5 of a geopolitical and economic analysis report (likely from 2017) discussing the Ukraine-Russia conflict, US foreign policy under the Trump administration, and the Ukrainian banking sector. It details the US stance on sanctions regarding Crimea, President Poroshenko's political strategy for the 2019 elections, and the nationalization of Privatbank due to insolvency caused by an oligarch's bad lending practices. The author offers an opinion that Crimea may never return to Ukraine, suggesting a financial settlement might eventually occur.
A formal recommendation letter dated September 22, 2014, written by Vladimir Yudashkin (Director of 1 Mother Agency, Kiev) to USCIS in support of an O-1 Non-immigrant Visa for Jean Luc Brunel. The letter praises Brunel's professional reputation, talent in model casting, and coordination skills, urging that he be allowed to work in the United States. The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp.
A 2015 briefing slide from Deutsche Bank Global Public Affairs (authored by Francis J. Kelly) analyzing the geopolitical situation in Ukraine and Russia. It discusses the strategic goals of Moscow, the economic impact of sanctions on Russia, the lack of Western aid for Ukraine, and the expansion of Russian military activity into Syria. The document includes two maps detailing withdrawal lines and linguistic demographics in Ukraine and bears a House Oversight Committee stamp.
This document appears to be a page (323) from a book or report included in House Oversight files. It details Alan Dershowitz's philosophy on human rights, his approach to balancing criticism of left and right-wing regimes, and his teaching career with Telford Taylor. It mentions his legal defense of John Lucido against the firm Cravath, Swaine and Moore, and transitions into a first-person narrative about the impact of his work and an encounter with cellist Mstislav Rostropovich.
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript (likely Alan Dershowitz's memoir) submitted to House Oversight. It details a legal trip to Ukraine to defend former President Kuchma regarding doctored audio recordings. The text describes the suspicious death of a colleague (attributed potentially to the KGB), references the Babi Yar massacre, and draws parallels to the narrator's previous experience with doctored tapes in the Claus Von Bulow case.
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir draft (dated 4.2.12) written by an attorney (contextually Alan Dershowitz) describing his retention in 2011 to defend former Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma against murder charges. The text draws a parallel between Kuchma's case and the historical conflict between King Henry II and Thomas Becket, specifically regarding 'surreptitious' recordings found under a couch in Kuchma's office. The page also details the author's emotional trip to Kiev and his visit to the Babi Yar memorial, noting his family's connection to the Holocaust.
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