Uranium One convict’s release date is on May 31st
Mark T. Lambert
According to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, Mark T. Lambert, 60, a Uranium One defendant, will be released on May 31st.
Uranium One involved shipping $150 billion of uranium from 19,000 Russian nuclear bombs to America.
A jury convicted Mark of paying $1,514,079 in bribes to the Russian Federation for uranium.
Lambert’s four-year sentence started on Nov. 29th, 2021.
The Justice Department’s press release of the sentence is linked here:
The Judge approved Mark’s early release based on poor health, a heart condition.
Lambert is currently on home arrest.
https://www.bop.gov/mobile/find_inmate/byname.jsp#inmate_results
The company Lambert was working for, Transportation Logistics International Inc. (TLI), paid the Justice Department a criminal penalty of two million dollars.
TLI admitted that the firm received over $9.5 million of business in exchange for bribes.
The agreement was signed on January 12th, 2018, without Lambert’s knowledge.
The 20-page settlement complete with signatures of the parties is linked here:
Russian Gen. Vadim Mikerin also pleaded guilty in another Uranium One case.
He served 18 months in jail.
The General didn’t understand English.
His court-appointed attorney didn’t understand Russian.
Mikerin’s original sentence was four years.
The General was released on April 24th, 2018.
Vadim worked for a Russian Federation company called Tenex, buying and selling uranium.
Maria Butina, a convicted Russian spy, was his sales rep in the U.S.
Butina was fluent in English and Russian.
They both worked for Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Lambert and the General were the only people to do jail time for the Uranium One fiasco.
Rod Rosenstein (right) and Andrew McCabe
FBI and Justice Department attorneys who were in charge of Uranium One were:
Robert Mueller
Rod Rosenstein
Andy McCabe
Who has the 19,000 nuclear bombs?
Who were they sold to?
When?
For how much?
The federal government never took an inventory.
Details are in this story:
Details of Lambert’s trial and bribery conviction are in these stories linked here:
https://www.brassballs.blog/search?q=lambert
Prosecutors used false FBI warrants were used to convict Lambert.
A ghost, David Gadren, signed the warrants.
His sworn statement said he was a Special Agent for the U.S. Department of Energy Inspector General.
Gadren never worked for the FBI.
Inspector Generals have no power to make arrests.
There is no proof that Gadren was a real person.
He was read into the court transcripts as making appearances but never said a word.
Nor did Gadren testify in court.
Details are in this story:
A CIA trial attorney, David Ira Salem, prosecuted the case.
The jury trial took 17 days.
It covered up the CIA’s role in the Uranium One fiasco.
It was disclosed during the trial that Lambert’s former boss, Daren Condrey, was an FBI informant for Mueller and McCabe.
Daren pleaded guilty in 2008 but never served a day in jail.
Neither did his wife, who did the books for their uranium transport company.
The trial judge, Theodore Chuang, destroyed three million documents to cover up the details of the Uranium One fiasco.
The Judge also banned the words “Uranium One” from being used in the case.
He feared those words would have swayed the jury to find Lambert innocent.
Chuang was on the Harvard Law Review with President Barack Obama.
Tip from:
George Webb
John O’Laughlin
They attended Lambert’s trial.