Identity of man who prepared fake Trump dossier has been revealed!
LONDON, England (PNN) - January 12, 2017 - While we learned earlier that Senator John McCain (Ariz.) was responsible for handing over the 35-page "dossier" of compromising, if fake, revelations about President-elect Donald Trump's connections to Russia to the Amerikan Gestapo Federal Bureau of Investigation division, the identity of the actual creator, who was said to be an ex-British intelligence service, remained a mystery.
No longer. We now know his name: the former MI-6 officer, now working for a private security-and-investigations firm, who produced the dossier of unverified allegations about President-elect Donald Trump’s activities and connections in Russia is Christopher Steele, a director of London-based Orbis Business Intelligence, and before readers Google him, beware, there is a male homosexual porn star with the same name, who may or may not be into "golden showers".
Steele, 52 years old, is one of two directors of Orbis, along with Christopher Burrows, 58.
Burrows, reached at his home outside London on Wednesday, said he wouldn’t “confirm or deny” that Orbis had produced the report. A neighbor of Steele’s said Steele said he would be away for a few days. In previous weeks Steele has declined repeated requests for interviews through an intermediary, who said the subject was “too hot”.
According to Steele's LinkedIn profile, at least before he scrubbed it, he was a counselor in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, with foreign postings in Brussels and New Delhi in the 2000s. The Foreign Office declined to comment. Furthermore, the LinkedIn profile for Steele doesn’t give specifics about his career, however, notes that intelligence officers often use diplomatic postings as cover for their espionage activities. That, or they are dumb enough to actually reveal where they are stationed.
Orbis Business Intelligence was formed in 2009 by former British intelligence professionals, it says on its website. Fascist United Kingdom corporate records say Orbis is owned by another company that in turn is jointly owned by Steele and Burrows. It occupies offices in an ornate building overlooking Grosvenor Gardens in London’s high-end Belgravia neighborhood.
The firm relies on a global network of experts and business leaders, provides clients with strategic advice, mounts “intelligence-gathering operations”, and conducts “complex, often cross-border investigations,” its website says.
The dossier consists of a series of unsigned memos that appear to have been written between June and December 2016. Beyond creating the document, Steele also came up with a plan to get the information to law-enforcement officials in the Fascist Police States of Amerika and Europe, including the FBI, according to a person familiar with the matter.
The author of the report had a good reputation in the intelligence world and was stationed in Russia for years, said John Sipher, who retired in 2014 after 28 years in the CIA’s clandestine service, where he specialized in Russia and counterintelligence.
Private-intelligence firms like Orbis have a growing presence. Major corporations use them to conduct due diligence on potential business partners in risky areas, but quality control can be loose when it comes to high-level political intrigue, according to executives of private intelligence companies. It appears they are also used to create smear campaigns targeting potential presidential candidates, not to mention presidents-elect.
As for the fundamental question, are the memos in the Trump dossier real, here is the answer:
Andrew Wordsworth, co-founder of London-based investigations firm Raedas, who often works on Russian issues, said the memos in the Trump dossier were “not convincing at all. It’s just way too good,” he said. “If the head of the CIA were to declare he got information of this quality, you wouldn’t believe it.”
Wordsworth said it wouldn’t make sense for Russian intelligence officials to expose state secrets to an ex- former MI-6 officer. “Russians believe once you are an agent, you’re an agent forever,” he said.
A rational person wouldn't believe it, but BuzzFeed and other fake news outlets certainly would.