It's just not possible to cover up conspiracies that require the participation of a whole big bunch of conspirators. Somebody's gonna spill the beans, or leave some evidence, or something.
And so let us now re-affirm: three people can keep a secret as long as two of them are dead.
Also - I guess if you're prone to buy into the weird "theories" about stolen elections and liberal shape-shifting lizard people eating babies, and how it can all be kept hidden from the public because everybody's in on it expect you and Mike Flynn - then you're probably a good candidate to go along with a shitty little plot to overthrow the government, and believe it's all OK cuz it's a secret that no one will ever find out about, and after all, you're just doing the lord's work, and...whatever the fuck (?)
Anyway, let's take a look at this new wrinkle.
Organizers of the "Stop the Steal" rally that preceded the deadly Capitol attack on Jan. 6 allegedly communicated with members of former President Trump's family and administration, according to Rolling Stone magazine.
Multiple sources told Rolling Stone that Kylie Kremer, an organizer for the rally that took place at D.C.'s Ellipse park, had an aide buy three burner phones a few days before Jan. 6. Kremer said that it was "of the utmost importance" that the phones be purchased with cash, one source, who was a member of the March for Trump team, told the magazine.
Kremer kept one of the phones herself, while another was reportedly given to her mother, Amy Kremer, who was also an organizer of the rally. Sources could not say who the third was given to.
According to Rolling Stone, the phones were used to communicate with high-ranking members of Trump's inner circle, including his son Eric Trump, daughter-in-law and former campaign official Lara Trump, former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and former Trump surrogate Katrina Pierson.
Speaking of when Kylie Kremer bought the phones, the March for Trump member said, “That was when the planning for the event on the Ellipse was happening, she needed burner phones in order to communicate with high-level people is how she put it."
When reached for comment by The Hill, representatives for Donald Trump, Eric Trump and Kim Kremer did not immediately respond to the Rolling Stone article.
Rolling Stone reported last month that Trump White House officials and many of his GOP allies had been involved in the planning of the Jan. 6 rally, including Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (Ga.), Paul Gosar (Ariz.), Lauren Boebert (Colo.), Mo Brooks (Ala.), Madison Cawthorn (N.C.), Andy Biggs (Ariz.) and Louie Gohmert (Texas.).
Meadows, who was subpoenaed by the House Select Committee on Jan. 6, was reportedly "100 percent made aware of what was going on,” according to planners of the rally. The committee has recently demanded to know whether Meadows was using a private cell phone on Jan. 6 and has asked where his text messages from that day are.
The scope of this attempted coup is wide and deep. Which is why the coverup was bound to fail in the first place, but also why it takes a really long time to develop the case. The guiding principle is that you have to know a lot about the overall criminal activity before you can bring the charges, and you never ever go into court - or into a committee hearing that'll be televised around the whole fucking planet - without knowing the answer to every question you're going to ask every witness.
This is likely to get weirder and bigger as we go, which is both good and bad. Bad because the other side intends to run out the clock, hoping to take back majorities in Congress, which of course will kill the investigations. But good because the more people who get caught up in the probe, the better the chances are that somebody will crack and become the new John Dean (one confession is worth a thousand accusations).
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