FISA warrant claim In November 2016,
Heat Street published an article titled "Exclusive: FBI 'Granted FISA Warrant' Covering Trump Camp's Ties To Russia", written by Mensch. Although ultimately it was later confirmed that US law enforcement agencies did utilise a FISA warrant against one former Trump aide, most of Mensch's claims were later debunked. According to Mensch's article, the
FISA warrant giving permission to investigate the Trump campaign was granted in October 2016, in "connection with the investigation of suspected activity between the server [in
Trump Tower] and two banks, SVB Bank and Alfa Bank." The article also claimed that "it is thought in the intelligence community that the warrant covers any 'US person' connected to this investigation, and thus covers Donald Trump and at least three further men." In January 2017,
Paul Wood on
BBC News reported a FISA warrant issued on 15 October 2016 to intercept the electronic records from two Russian banks in relation to the Trump campaign; a week later,
McClatchy independently confirmed the BBC report, and in February 2017
The Guardian wrote that "former officials said they believed that the Mensch and BBC account of the Fisa warrants was correct." However,
Glenn Kessler, writing in
The Washington Post, wrote that
McClatchys article "like that of the BBC, differed significantly from the
Heat Street account. Despite this, Mensch often cited the
McClatchy article as evidence that her story was true. the BBC alleging that: "Neither Mr Trump nor his associates are named in the FISA order, which would only cover foreign citizens or foreign entities — in this case the Russian banks." Kessler stated: "
The Washington Post for months has sought to confirm this report of a FISA warrant related to the Trump campaign but has been unable to do so. Presumably, other major news organisations have tried to do so as well. So one has to take this claim with a huge dose of skepticism." Kessler added that the assertion that the FISA warrant was to examine possible activity between two Russian banks and a computer server in Trump Tower had not been confirmed by US news organisations, and that the Trump Organisation server communicating with Russian banks may have actually been located in
Philadelphia, not Trump Tower. Moreover, according to the FBI as reported by
The New York Times in October 2016, "there could be an innocuous explanation [for the server traffic], like a marketing email or spam." In April 2017,
The Washington Post reported that, during the summer of 2016, the FBI obtained a FISA warrant to monitor
Carter Page, an advisor to the Trump campaign; the story was later corrected to show the warrant was obtained in October 2016, after Page had left the Trump campaign. The warrant was granted as part of an investigation into possible links between Russia and the Trump campaign. Mensch had claimed that various revelations vindicated her own narratives about FISA warrants. The FISA warrants on Page did not entail the surveillance of two Russian banks, as Mensch had done, and Mensch had not identified Page in her report.
Conspiracy theories regarding Donald Trump and Russia During and after the
2016 US presidential election, Mensch's political commentary and social media accounts promoted numerous various
conspiracy theories about the
Russian government,
Donald Trump and various individuals in Trump's circle. Mensch claims that she has seen evidence that
Vladimir Putin had
Andrew Breitbart murdered to make room for
Steve Bannon at
Breitbart. She has stated that the
2017 Istanbul nightclub shooting was a Russian
false flag operation, with Russian intelligence operatives posing as ISIL terrorists; Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, and elements of
Mossad (Israel's intelligence service). In April 2017, Mensch claimed that "sources with links to the intelligence community" told her that it "is believed that
Carter Page," [the former campaign aide and foreign policy adviser, to Donald Trump] went to Moscow in early July carrying with him a pre-recorded tape of Trump offering to change American policy if he were to be elected, to make it more favourable to Putin. In exchange, Page was authorised directly by Trump to request the help of the Russian government in hacking the election." No evidence has ever surfaced or been published to corroborate any of these allegations either. When others have questioned her claims, she has often attacked them on social media as being witting or unwitting agents of Russia. Mensch claimed that former US Representative
Anthony Weiner was brought down as the result of a Russian intelligence operation to put the Clinton emails back in the news in the final days of the 2016 presidential election, saying: "I can exclusively report that there is ample evidence that suggests that Weiner was sexting not with a 15 year old girl but with a hacker, working for Russia, part of the US hacking group 'Crackas With Attitude', who hacked the head of the CIA, and a great many FBI agents, police officers, and other law enforcement officials." When the 15-year-old girl went public with her story for a
BuzzFeed article, Mensch continued to state that Weiner was speaking to hackers posing as underage girls, while he also happened to also be in touch with a real 15-year-old girl at the same time. ==Personal life==