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Jared Kushner's lawyer PRANKED..

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4923098/Prankster-tricked-Kushner-lawyer-email-porn-claim.html

Prankster posing as Kushner tricked Trump son-in-law's lawyer into emailing with him - then 'confessed' Jared's private emails had weird porn with an actress who looked like HILLARY

Jared Kushner's lawyer Abbe Lowell fell for a prank by a person posing as his client

Person pretending to be Kushner asked Lowell for advice on 'adult' emails
It was revealed Kushner has done business on a private email account
'I need to see I think all emails between you and WH,' Lowell responded
'But we can bury it?'

Made-up description cites 'half naked women on a trampoline'

Claim that a video protagonist looks exactly like a 'young Hillary Clinton'
The prankster previously fooled Trump lawyer Ty Cobb into an exchange

By Geoff Earle, Deputy U.s. Political Editor For Dailymail.com
PUBLISHED: 17:44 EDT, 26 September 2017 | UPDATED: 07:51 EDT, 27 September 2017

A prankster tricked Jared Kushner attorney Abbe Lowell into thinking he was Kushner – then made increasingly bizarre claims about having porn on email exchanges with White House officials.

The prankster, who uses the Twitter account @SINON_REBORN, fooled Lowell into discussing confidential business with his client by using the email address kushner.jared@mail.com, and reaching out for help about whether it's okay to purge emails.

The prankster played off the timing of some real news: the discovery that Kushner and five other White House officials had used private email accounts.

Posing as Kushner, he wrote in an email that he had uncovered material of a 'sensitive nature' in his private account.

'Namely: some exchanges with a website featuring adult content,' he wrote.

Can I remove these?' the prankster wanted to know.
'Forwarded or received from WH officials?' Lowell wanted to know.
The prankster reeled in Lowell, considered a top defense attorney, by stating that a single message came from a fellow White House employee.

'I think one was forwarded from a White House official, we had discussed a shared interest of sorts,' the prankster wrote. 'It was unsolicited. Then there are a handful more, but not from officials.'

The Lowell proceeded to dispense legal advice, but in the process revealed that he apparently hasn't read all of Kushner's emails as of yet.

'I need to see I think all emails between you and WH (just for me and us),' he responded. 'We need to send any officials emails to your WH account. Not stuff like you asked about. None of those are going anywhere,' he reassured his client.

But we can bury it?' the prankster posing as Kushner wanted to know. 'I'm so embarrassed. It's fairly specialist stuff, half naked women on a trampoline, standing on legoscenes, the tag for the movie was #standingOnTheLittlePeople :('
'Don't delete. Don't send to anyone. Let's chat in a bit,' Lowell wrote back, not flummoxed by the claim and offering what appears to be sound legal advice.
The prankster then made another outlandish claims. 'There's one more,' the person wrote. 'I'll be SUNK if it's found out. The protagonist of the piece looks exactly like a younger Hillary Clinton.' Then, backing off, the prankster wrote: 'Hair's got more of a choppy fringe, though.

After Kushner's private email use was revealed, Lowell issued a statement saying: 'All non-personal emails were forwarded to his official address and all have been preserved in any event.'

The exchange, through the ruse, suggests that he made the statement without the benefit of seeing Kushner's emails.

Former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti told Business Insider he was 'shocked to learn that Kushner's lawyer did not review the relevant emails before issuing a statement making assertions about what was in them and how many there were.'

The same prankster was able to fool Ty Cobb, who is defending the Russia probe from the White House, by posing as White House head of social media Dan Scavino earlier this month.
At the end of that exchange, Cobb wrote that it is a felony to impersonate a government official.

SEE MORE CONTENT, VIDEOS, AND ALL REFERENCED EMAIL IN POSTED ARTICLE


ALSO SEE

http://www.businessinsider.com/email-address-verification-scam-trump-2017-9
Trump officials and lawyers keep falling for a basic email prank — here's how to avoid getting scammed by a stranger

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