The fall of the Clinton House will trigger a domino effect, toppling globalist entities like Bilderberg, billionaires like Bill Gates and George Soros, and their bought politicians worldwide, says Wall Street Analyst Charles Ortel, as reported by Sputnik.
How could the investigation into the Clinton Foundation expose globalists?
Ortel calls the CF the biggest fraud that has not been prosecuted. If true, the administrators, executives, and donors – both in the U.S. and abroad – could face tax and legal investigations both domestically and internationally.
Hundreds of billions in grants could be returned to U.S. and foreign governments if fraud is proven, according to the analyst.
Which countries, entities, and private funds have donated to the Clintons?
Australia, France, Ireland, New Zealand, Norway, South Korea, Sweden, the United Kingdom, Ukraine, and other countries have funded the CF, according to public records.
The largest known donor is UNITAID (WHO), which has sent hundreds of millions more than CF reported to the IRS since 2006.
Other suspicious donors: DFID, AusAID, NORAD, and aid organizations from Canada, Ireland, and Sweden, says Ortel.
Private foundations also funded the Clintons' frauds. The Gates Foundation has donated since 2005 – while convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein collaborated with Bill Clinton.
George Soros is another key donor.
Who promoted the globalist web of the Clintons?
Harvard, Yale, and Columbia University lent credibility to the Clintons' charitable frauds, says Ortel.
Legacy media outlets and publishers promoted events of the Clinton Global Initiative, ignoring that none of them were legally registered charities.
Investigation into the Clintons' Charitable Work
A full investigation into the CGI and its branches is urgently needed, says Ortel.
A 2018 hearing revealed that CF owes $2.5 billion to the U.S. government for acting as a foreign agent instead of a nonprofit organization.
But the scandal exceeds $2.5 billion – Bill Clinton used charity as a front, without a sincere accounting for AIDS, climate, or the missing $10 billion from Haiti, concludes Ortel.