CRIME Speaker Pelosi’s husband was “violently assaulted” in the couple’s San Francisco home - UPDATE, post 848, cop bodycam released on Friday

Great Northwet

Veteran Member
I think the problem NBC has is that Miguel Almaguer spoke of 30 minutes of the assailant and Pelosi alone in the house before police arrived. I'm not quoting on purpose. It's in the video that got pulled but is still here on the board. Maybe Almaguer is about to get cancelled? This is great theatre just before an election!
 

Bridey Rose

Veteran Member
Deportation solves the sticky problem of the attacker going to trial and having the defense tell the real story, including showing the surveillance video.

Yup. He’ll be deported within 30 days.

You heard it here first.
They'll try him first and have him serve his sentence before they deport him. That's what happened to the illegal Mexican alien who assaulted 2 of the religious sisters in my former church group and strangled one to death with her own rosary. He had assaulted a guy previous to the murder and was sentenced to 3 years, then deported after he had served his sentence, but came right back.

Of course, if DePape gets life in prison with no parole or early release, he won't be deported. He'll just sponge off the state on our dime for the rest of his life -- which might be short if he's murdered in prison. That possibility could be a good bet if Vegas is laying odds!
 

jward

passin' thru
still no speakers, but it's gotta be good


The Columbia Bugle
@ColumbiaBugle
2h

HAHAHAHAHAHAHA
@WhitlockJason
: "I'm outraged for Nancy Pelosi. This woman has taken the hard earned money she's made from insider trading & invested in a pair of cans at 82 years old, and comes home to find out that her husband is playing hide the hammer with a BLM guy?!"
View: https://twitter.com/ColumbiaBugle/status/1588695641890639872?s=20&t=KbQTUvXlH52jVOuaLlf0Mw
 

MinnesotaSmith

Membership Revoked
Former CNN+ host Rex Chapman said it's impossible for Paul Pelosi to be gay because Nancy Pelosi is "sexy personified."
RT 1:21secs
View: https://twitter.com/TuckerCarlson/status/1588334513092005888?s=20&t=4dXBTsBHQG0QbzyIXiFuAw
I've seen this photo of Nancy Pelosi with JFK in 1960, and she wasn't too bad then:

1667634240048.png

Keep in mind that was 62 years ago (!) Multiple generations of women have been born, reached physical maturity, and birthed other women that have since reached sexual maturity. To find her hot now, would just be a clinical case of Decrepophilia.
 
Last edited:

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
They'll try him first and have him serve his sentence before they deport him. That's what happened to the illegal Mexican alien who assaulted 2 of the religious sisters in my former church group and strangled one to death with her own rosary.
No, they won’t. The sisters in your former church group weren't related to anyone running the country. They were nobodies. Their assailant didn’t need to be kept from saying what really went on.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Hummm......

Posted for fair use.....

Pelosi to hand seat to daughter? As rumors swirl Nancy will be forced to step down after midterms wipeout, her activist daughter Christine is favorite to take over . . . with a little help from her mom's fundraising machinery and contacts​

  • With rumors she plans to step down if a red wave hits in Tuesday's midterms, plans have already begun to succeed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
  • Pelosi, who has served in Congress since 1987 and on two occasions as speaker, is currently helping her husband recover from a home invasion and attack
  • A story published Friday suggested that if Democrats suffer the expected midterms losses, Pelosi will step down, leaving her San Francisco seat open
  • Multiple local politicians appear to be setting up for a potential run at her heavily left-leaning district in 2024
  • One of the people who could be running for the seat: Pelosi's daughter, Christine, who is an activist, ex-assistant district attorney and former congressional chief of staff
  • At least one other candidate may try to outflank the liberal on both her left and right: State Sen. Scott Weiner
By STEPHEN M. LEPORE FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

PUBLISHED: 00:11 EDT, 5 November 2022 | UPDATED: 02:33 EDT, 5 November 2022

With rumors she plans to step down if a red wave hits Congress in Tuesday's midterms, plans have already begun to succeed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in California's 12th congressional district.

Pelosi, 82, who has served in Congress since 1987 and on two occasions as speaker, is currently helping her husband recover from a home invasion and attack last week while trying to help her party avoid devastating in Tuesday's midterm elections.

One of the people who could be running for the seat is Pelosi's daughter, Christine, a Democratic activist who has served as a proxy for her politician mother, if her seat were to open.

Multiple local politicians appear to be setting up for a potential run at her heavily left-leaning district in 2024, which President Joe Biden won in 2020 by over 70 points.

That could potentially make Christine the third generation in a long-running political dynasty, as her grandfather and Nancy's father, Thomas D'Alesandro Jr. was a real estate broker who served in Congress from 1939 to 1947 and as mayor of Baltimore, Maryland from 1947 to 1959.

Christine Pelosi, 56, often appears with her mother at various events and even wrote a book about her in 2019: 'The Nancy Pelosi Way: Advice on Success, Leadership, and Politics from America's Most Powerful Woman.'

Her political work goes into California Democratic Party positions, including a decade-long stint as chair of the state party's women's caucus.

She's also served in Washington as a staffer in the Clinton White House as a special counsel in the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Pelosi was a Chief of Staff to Representative John Tierney from 2001 to 2005.

The speaker's daughter also has been affiliated with the Young Democrats of America. Most prominently, she was one of California's delegates to the Democratic National Committee and an elector for the state in 2016.

In the wake of the #MeToo movement, she also served as legal counsel to an ongoing campaign to end workplace harassment, going so far as to tell lawmakers in Sacramento: 'There are rapists in this building' during a public address.

Christine, who is married to film producer Peter Kaufman, has created controversy in recent years with some of her comments online, including a since-deleted 2020 tweet that read: 'Rand Paul's neighbor was right' after the Republican senator was assaulted by a man who lived next door.

Paul mocked Pelosi's tweet when offering well-wishes to her father after he was hospitalized.

She's even antagonized her fellow Democrats: Prior to his victory in a recall election, she said that California Gov. Gavin Newsom should've resigned if it appeared he was going to lose.

Pelosi also antagonized party insiders by trying to get Democrats to stop taking corporate money and attempting to get a debate on climate change into the 2020 Democratic Primary.

While never holding elected office herself, she's authored two books seen as training for people who want to run campaigns.

Outside of politics, Pelosi has been a blogger for the Huffington Post and serves on the charity board of Major League Baseball's San Francisco Giants.

According to a Politico story, many see Pelosi, 56, as the favorite to replace her mother should she throw her name in, with the potential backing of the party apparatus.

Her uncle, Thomas D'Alesandro III, was also mayor of Baltimore from 1967 to 1971.

While Speaker Pelosi is one of the wealthiest members of Congress - with a net worth of up to $120 million, according to Yahoo Finance - her brother famously declined to run for a second term, claiming he couldn't afford to raise five children on a mayor's salary, the Washington Post said upon his 2019 death.

However, at least one other candidate may try to outflank the liberal on both her left and right: State Sen. Scott Weiner.

Weiner, 52, represents San Francisco in the state senate and would be the first openly gay member of Congress to represent the city.

Politico claims that while Weiner - along with the rest of the city's political establishment - doesn't want to upset Speaker Pelosi, he would have much of the city's LGBTQ community and San Francisco Mayor London Breed as an ally.

While many see him as left on many issues, he is viewed by some as a moderate, including San Francisco Labor Council Executive Director Kim Tavaglione, who said Weiner 'would really have to change his views on housing' to get their endorsement.

Pelosi's advantages are seen as being connections within the party, ties to Dems in Washington and the possibility of having her mother's considerable fundraising behind her.

Jane Kim, a former supervisor who lines up more with Bernie Sanders' Democratic Socialism, has said she won't rule out a challenge for the seat as well.

Ultimately, the presence of Speaker Pelosi appears to have many San Francisco Dems on eggshells.

Todd David, a former political director for Wiener, said: 'From a pure practical, political point of view, no one wants to offend Nancy Pelosi.'

Wiener himself told the New York Times in August: 'The longer she stays, the better for our country. I’m on Team Nancy.'

However, it's clear from the story and Dem consultant Max Szabo that the battle is already underway.

Szabo said: 'Given the fact that these positions don't have term limits, and given the ATM that is San Francisco, this is going to be a brawl. No one is going to leave anything on the field.'

Speaker Pelosi gave her first public comments after her husband Paul left the hospital, as he still recovers from an attack by an intruder at the couple's San Francisco home last week.

Via Zoom, Pelosi spoke on a Democrat Party fundraiser Friday called 'Strengthening Our Democracy' and addressed her husband's condition.

She said: 'Paul came home yesterday. That enables me to be at home with all of you. Thank you, thank you, thank you for kind words, your prayers and your good wishes for Paul.'

Pelosi added: 'It’s going to be a long haul, but he will be well. And, it’s just so tragic how it happened, but nonetheless, we have to be optimistic. He’s surround by family, so that’s a wonderful thing.'

The House Speaker also referenced her husband's condition in a state of the race fundraising email sent out Friday evening in which she expressed similar feelings.

The incident, just days before the November elections, has renewed calls in Congress to beef up security in light of a growing threats against lawmakers.
Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat who is second in the line of succession to the presidency, was in Washington at the time.
US Capitol Police Chief J. Thomas Manger said in a weekend memo to lawmakers that the attack 'is a somber reminder of the threats elected officials and families face in 2022.'
In a speech Wednesday, US President Joe Biden linked the attack to the political violence unleashed by ex-president Donald Trump's supporters against Congress on January 6, 2021.
Republicans, he said, have 'emboldened violence and intimidation of voters and election officials.'
'That is the path to chaos in America,' he said.
Read more:
 

Kathy in FL

Administrator
_______________
Hummm......

Posted for fair use.....

Pelosi to hand seat to daughter? As rumors swirl Nancy will be forced to step down after midterms wipeout, her activist daughter Christine is favorite to take over . . . with a little help from her mom's fundraising machinery and contacts​

  • With rumors she plans to step down if a red wave hits in Tuesday's midterms, plans have already begun to succeed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
  • Pelosi, who has served in Congress since 1987 and on two occasions as speaker, is currently helping her husband recover from a home invasion and attack
  • A story published Friday suggested that if Democrats suffer the expected midterms losses, Pelosi will step down, leaving her San Francisco seat open
  • Multiple local politicians appear to be setting up for a potential run at her heavily left-leaning district in 2024
  • One of the people who could be running for the seat: Pelosi's daughter, Christine, who is an activist, ex-assistant district attorney and former congressional chief of staff
  • At least one other candidate may try to outflank the liberal on both her left and right: State Sen. Scott Weiner
By STEPHEN M. LEPORE FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

PUBLISHED: 00:11 EDT, 5 November 2022 | UPDATED: 02:33 EDT, 5 November 2022

With rumors she plans to step down if a red wave hits Congress in Tuesday's midterms, plans have already begun to succeed House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in California's 12th congressional district.

Pelosi, 82, who has served in Congress since 1987 and on two occasions as speaker, is currently helping her husband recover from a home invasion and attack last week while trying to help her party avoid devastating in Tuesday's midterm elections.

One of the people who could be running for the seat is Pelosi's daughter, Christine, a Democratic activist who has served as a proxy for her politician mother, if her seat were to open.

Multiple local politicians appear to be setting up for a potential run at her heavily left-leaning district in 2024, which President Joe Biden won in 2020 by over 70 points.

That could potentially make Christine the third generation in a long-running political dynasty, as her grandfather and Nancy's father, Thomas D'Alesandro Jr. was a real estate broker who served in Congress from 1939 to 1947 and as mayor of Baltimore, Maryland from 1947 to 1959.

Christine Pelosi, 56, often appears with her mother at various events and even wrote a book about her in 2019: 'The Nancy Pelosi Way: Advice on Success, Leadership, and Politics from America's Most Powerful Woman.'

Her political work goes into California Democratic Party positions, including a decade-long stint as chair of the state party's women's caucus.

She's also served in Washington as a staffer in the Clinton White House as a special counsel in the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Pelosi was a Chief of Staff to Representative John Tierney from 2001 to 2005.

The speaker's daughter also has been affiliated with the Young Democrats of America. Most prominently, she was one of California's delegates to the Democratic National Committee and an elector for the state in 2016.

In the wake of the #MeToo movement, she also served as legal counsel to an ongoing campaign to end workplace harassment, going so far as to tell lawmakers in Sacramento: 'There are rapists in this building' during a public address.

Christine, who is married to film producer Peter Kaufman, has created controversy in recent years with some of her comments online, including a since-deleted 2020 tweet that read: 'Rand Paul's neighbor was right' after the Republican senator was assaulted by a man who lived next door.

Paul mocked Pelosi's tweet when offering well-wishes to her father after he was hospitalized.

She's even antagonized her fellow Democrats: Prior to his victory in a recall election, she said that California Gov. Gavin Newsom should've resigned if it appeared he was going to lose.

Pelosi also antagonized party insiders by trying to get Democrats to stop taking corporate money and attempting to get a debate on climate change into the 2020 Democratic Primary.

While never holding elected office herself, she's authored two books seen as training for people who want to run campaigns.

Outside of politics, Pelosi has been a blogger for the Huffington Post and serves on the charity board of Major League Baseball's San Francisco Giants.

According to a Politico story, many see Pelosi, 56, as the favorite to replace her mother should she throw her name in, with the potential backing of the party apparatus.

Her uncle, Thomas D'Alesandro III, was also mayor of Baltimore from 1967 to 1971.

While Speaker Pelosi is one of the wealthiest members of Congress - with a net worth of up to $120 million, according to Yahoo Finance - her brother famously declined to run for a second term, claiming he couldn't afford to raise five children on a mayor's salary, the Washington Post said upon his 2019 death.

However, at least one other candidate may try to outflank the liberal on both her left and right: State Sen. Scott Weiner.

Weiner, 52, represents San Francisco in the state senate and would be the first openly gay member of Congress to represent the city.

Politico claims that while Weiner - along with the rest of the city's political establishment - doesn't want to upset Speaker Pelosi, he would have much of the city's LGBTQ community and San Francisco Mayor London Breed as an ally.

While many see him as left on many issues, he is viewed by some as a moderate, including San Francisco Labor Council Executive Director Kim Tavaglione, who said Weiner 'would really have to change his views on housing' to get their endorsement.

Pelosi's advantages are seen as being connections within the party, ties to Dems in Washington and the possibility of having her mother's considerable fundraising behind her.

Jane Kim, a former supervisor who lines up more with Bernie Sanders' Democratic Socialism, has said she won't rule out a challenge for the seat as well.

Ultimately, the presence of Speaker Pelosi appears to have many San Francisco Dems on eggshells.

Todd David, a former political director for Wiener, said: 'From a pure practical, political point of view, no one wants to offend Nancy Pelosi.'

Wiener himself told the New York Times in August: 'The longer she stays, the better for our country. I’m on Team Nancy.'

However, it's clear from the story and Dem consultant Max Szabo that the battle is already underway.

Szabo said: 'Given the fact that these positions don't have term limits, and given the ATM that is San Francisco, this is going to be a brawl. No one is going to leave anything on the field.'

Speaker Pelosi gave her first public comments after her husband Paul left the hospital, as he still recovers from an attack by an intruder at the couple's San Francisco home last week.

Via Zoom, Pelosi spoke on a Democrat Party fundraiser Friday called 'Strengthening Our Democracy' and addressed her husband's condition.

She said: 'Paul came home yesterday. That enables me to be at home with all of you. Thank you, thank you, thank you for kind words, your prayers and your good wishes for Paul.'

Pelosi added: 'It’s going to be a long haul, but he will be well. And, it’s just so tragic how it happened, but nonetheless, we have to be optimistic. He’s surround by family, so that’s a wonderful thing.'

The House Speaker also referenced her husband's condition in a state of the race fundraising email sent out Friday evening in which she expressed similar feelings.

The incident, just days before the November elections, has renewed calls in Congress to beef up security in light of a growing threats against lawmakers.
Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat who is second in the line of succession to the presidency, was in Washington at the time.
US Capitol Police Chief J. Thomas Manger said in a weekend memo to lawmakers that the attack 'is a somber reminder of the threats elected officials and families face in 2022.'
In a speech Wednesday, US President Joe Biden linked the attack to the political violence unleashed by ex-president Donald Trump's supporters against Congress on January 6, 2021.
Republicans, he said, have 'emboldened violence and intimidation of voters and election officials.'
'That is the path to chaos in America,' he said.
Read more:

I thought people were already complaining of nepotism on both sides of the aisle. The Kennedy family. The Bush family. Pelosi already has Newsome as a nephew by marriage or something like that. I'm sure there are a few others out there.
 

MinnesotaSmith

Membership Revoked
Questions, questions...


Sunday, November 6, 2022​

20221106​


02 November, 2022

"When I said ‘be sure to tip your server,’ I didn't mean telling her ‘don't go home with that guy.’
Some people ask ‘what am I missing?’ or ‘what am I getting wrong?’ to find their mistakes and keep them from happening again. They may even ask this in the planning stages to find possible mistakes. Others just assume they’re right about everything.

For instance, Nancy Pelosi isn’t asking why her home was attacked twice and she still doesn’t have working security. She even makes speeches about how dangerous and evil Trump supporters are. That reckless behavior could endanger her or her husband. If you don’t want to be attacked by dangerous people, security helps to prevent that.
Things would be so different now if Paul Pelosi kept a gun near his bedside for easy access. That could have stopped an attacker with a short-range hammer.

There’s also the type of people who refuse to learn from other people’s mistakes. Do any of Nancy Pelosi’s co-workers ask how people can protect themselves from evil Trump supporters? You know, the ones they complain to the media about and need protection from? The ones who might attack even if they don’t have guns?
Why didn’t Paul (or whoever) call 911 for help right away? The police made a “welfare check” instead. If you desperately need help right now, you call 911.

But the police still showed up immediately, not like in poor neighborhoods where people have to wait. Was this deliberate? A 911 call may be registered in places the caller doesn’t want, a “welfare check” call from the same phone or location wouldn’t.

That may not be relevant, I don’t know the San Fran police’s procedures, but it is odd. 911 has only three digits, quicker and easier to use in a moment of physical crisis."
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
She will have no interest in politics once she is no longer Speaker of the House.

She's on her way out, I bet she retires, now. Minority leader just doest have the power she's accustomed to.
 

NCGirl

Veteran Member
No way in hell is Nancy moving to Italy no way in hell is she giving up power.

Here's what I think is going to happen. They're going to get rid of Bidet somehow between now and January, camel toe will step aside and Nancy will become president.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.

Pelosi to hand seat to daughter? As rumors swirl Nancy will be forced to step down after midterms wipeout, her activist daughter Christine is favorite to take over . . . with a little help from her mom's fundraising machinery and contacts​


So we're now living in a monarchy?
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
I thought people were already complaining of nepotism on both sides of the aisle. The Kennedy family. The Bush family. Pelosi already has Newsome as a nephew by marriage or something like that. I'm sure there are a few others out there.

And somehow kamala is related to this group.
 
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