EFTA00160182.pdf
PDF Source (No Download)
Extracted Text (OCR)
From: FBI News Briefing
To: "FBINewsBriefing"
Subject: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Daily News Briefing - March 3, 2022
Date: Thu, 03 Mar 2022 11:20:04 +0000
Importance: Normal
ce.
View in Browser
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Seal
March 03, 2022
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Daily News Briefing
(In coordination with the Office of Public Affairs)
Mobile version and searchable archives available at https://fbi.barbaricumanalytics.com
Table of Contents
IN THE NEWS
CAPITOL VIOLENCE NEWS
COUNTERTERRORISM
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
EFTA00160182
• Ghislaine Maxwell: The Life Of The Jeffrey Epstein Associate Found Guilty Of Sex Trafficking
CYBER DIVISION
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
OTHER FBI NEWS
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
EFTA00160183
OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
BIG PICTURE
• Wall Street Journal
• New York Times
• Washington Post
. Financial Times
• ABC News
• CBS News
• NBC News
. Fox News
WASHINGTON SCHEDULE
IN THE NEWS
DOJ Says Hack Reporting Bill 'Makes Us Less Safe'
EFTA00160184
EFTA00160185
Back to Top
CAPITOL VIOLENCE NEWS
EFTA00160186
Back to Top
COUNTERTERRORISM
EFTA00160187
Back to Top
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE
Back to Top
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
EFTA00160188
EFTA00160189
EFTA00160190
EFTA00160191
Ghislaine Maxwell: The Life Of The Jeffrey Epstein Associate Found Guilty Of Sex Trafficking
Independent (03/02, Sommerlad, Wadhera) reported that the British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell was convicted
Wednesday of luring teenage girls to be sexually abused by the American millionaire Jeffrey Epstein. According to
the article, the verdict capped a month-long trial featuring sordid accounts of the sexual exploitation of girls as
young as 14, told by four women who described being abused as teens in the 1990s and early 2000s at Epstein's
palatial homes in Florida, New York, and New Mexico. Maxwell was convicted on five of six counts, including one
count of sex trafficking. Lawyers for Maxwell, who faces up to 65 years in prison, vowed to appeal. The article
noted that Maxwell's trial was widely seen as the reckoning Epstein never had and one of the highest-profile cases
in the wake of the #MeToo movement, which encouraged women to speak out about sexual abuse by famous and
powerful people.
EFTA00160192
Back to Top
CYBER DIVISION
Back to Top
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
EFTA00160193
Back to Top
OTHER FBI NEWS
Russian Money Flows Through U.S. Real Estate
Back to Top
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
IM
EFTA00160194
Back to Top
OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
EFTA00160195
Back to Top
BIG PICTURE
Back to Top
WASHINGTON SCHEDULE
EFTA00160196
• Hearings to examine recent actions of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission relating to permitting
construction and operation of interstate natural gas pipelines and other natural gas infrastructure projects. —
10:00 AM — Host: Energy and Natural Resources Committee
• Hearings to examine the Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress. — 10:00 AM — Host: Banking,
Housing and Urban Affairs Committee
• Business meeting to consider the nominations of Arun Venkataraman of the District of Columbia to be
Assistant Secretary and Director General of the United States and Foreign Commercial Service. Laurie E.
Locascio of Maryland, to be Under Secretary for Standards and Technology, and Grant T. Harris of California
to be an Assistant Secretary all of the Department of Commerce Gigi B. Sohn of the District of Columbia to
be a Member of the Federal Communications Commission Alvaro M. Bedoya of Maryland, to be a Federal
Trade Commissioner Mary T. Boyle of Maryland to be a Commissioner of the Consumer Product Safety
Commission and Mohsin Raza Syed of Virginia Christopher A. Coes of Georgia and Carol Annette Petsonk
of the District of Columbia each to be an Assistant Secretary of Transportation. — 10:00 AM — Host:
Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee
• Hearings to examine the Senate confirmation process and Federal vacancies. — 10:15 AM — Host: Homeland
Security and Governmental Affairs Committee
• Hearings to examine the nominations of Alina L. Romanowski of Illinois to be Ambassador to the Republic
of Iraq Douglas T Hickey of Idaho to be Ambassador to the Republic of Finland and Steven H. Fagin of
New Jersey to be Ambassador to the Republic of Yemen all of the Department of State and Erin Elizabeth
McKee of California, to be an Assistant Administrator of the United States Agency for International
Development. — 10:30 AM — Host: Foreign Relations Committee
US House of Representatives
• Hearing: The Neglected Epidemic of Missing BIPOC Women and Girls - 10:00 AM - Host: Committee on
Oversight and Reform I Subcommittee on Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
EFTA00160197
General Events
• Heritage Foundation: The State of Decision Support Analysis in the DOD — Thursday, March 3, 2022. Location:
Virtual Event, 1:00 PM. What size, posture, warfighting concepts, and equipment should the U.S. military
possess to defend our national interests? The Department of Defense makes these decisions every day.
Made incorrectly, these choices could cost U.S. servicemembers their lives, and America, a war. While
intuition can play a role, for the best chance of success, such decisions must be supported by data-driven
analysis. Yet in 2018, the National Defense Strategy Commission found DOD "struggled to link objectives to
operational concepts to capabilities to programs and resources" and blamed this on a "deficit in analytical
capability, expertise, and processes." A shortfall in DOD analytic capability should be a concern to all
Americans. Join Heritage and a group of distinguished former DOD senior leaders—both producers and
consumers of DOD analysis—to discuss the state of decision support analysis and what can be done to
improve its quality.
• Center for Strategic and International Studies: bunch of the Feb. 2022 Issue of the International Review of
the Red Cross: "Counterterrorism Sanctions and War" — Thursday, March 3, 2022. Location: Virtual Event,
9:00 AM. Combatting terrorism remains a priority for the international community, yet there is a growing
debate over the effectiveness and second order implications of the financial and regulatory tools used to
reduce terrorist financing. A growing body of scholarship studying these impacts demonstrates that
sanctions and other efforts to combat and deter terrorism often hinder the effective delivery of
humanitarian assistance and are in tension with international humanitarian law and core humanitarian
principles. Reconciling the tension between counterterrorism measures, including sanctions, and the ability
to deliver critical humanitarian aid is an urgent priority.
• Center for Strategic and International Studies: Advancing Global Climate Action: A Conversation with MEP
Mohammed Chahim — Thursday, March 3, 2022. Location: Virtual Event, 4:00 PM. CSIS will host a livestream
conversation with Mohammed Chahim, Member of European Parliament from the Netherlands and
rapporteur on the carbon border adjustment mechanism currently proposed in the European Union. Mr.
Chahim will discuss how carbon pricing is central to Europe's climate plans, the legislative report he is
preparing on the proposed border adjustment mechanism, the respective U.S. and EU approaches, and the
path to advancing climate action globally in the coming years.
• American Enterprise Institute: A conversation with House Armed Services Committee Chairman Adam Smith
— Thursday, March 3, 2022. Location: Virtual Event, 9:00 AM. As the Ukraine crisis intensifies, the Biden
administration is poised to release a new National Defense Strategy and defense budget request. What will
the new strategy and associated defense program investments mean for the future size and composition of
the US military? While the Biden administration has focused on strategic competition with China, how
prepared is the Pentagon to respond to a crisis in Europe? Are there wider implications for the future of
America's global military footprint? What will the administration get right, and where will course corrections
be required?
• Atlantic Council: What sanctions mean for the Russian and global economy — Thursday, March 3, 2022.
Location: Virtual Event, 10:00 AM. Over the past 10 days, the G7 has unveiled sweeping sanctions designed
to cripple the Russian economy. From the commercial banking system to the central bank, the set of
measures has raised questions about implementation, effectiveness, and the wider global impact. An
estimated $360 billion in foreign reserves is now out of reach for Putin and his government. In anticipation,
the Central Bank of Russia had already reduced its exposure to dollars. Still, Governor Nabiullina is now
employing unorthodox policies to maintain some supplies of western currencies and to reassure domestic
lenders. Will it work? And what will be the spillovers on energy and food prices for rest of the world?
• Wilson Center: Russia's Aggression: European Perspectives and Responses — Thursday, March 3, 2022.
Location: Virtual Event, 10:00 AM. As fighting between Russia and Ukraine intensifies, attention has been
EFTA00160198
focused on the global community and its responses to the war. A sense of European weakness in the face of
Russia's aggression and concern for the future of other former members of the Soviet empire—most notably
the Baltics—has grown. In this event, we will consider European perspectives and responses to the war and
consider how EU's most vulnerable Eastern European members can protect themselves.
• Wilson Center: Wilson Policy Briefing: Russia Sanctions Financial Markets and Cryptocurrencies — Thursday,
March 3, 2022. Location: Virtual Event, 4:00 PM. Join us for a Wilson Policy Briefing to discuss how sanctions
against Russia are impacting global financial markets and financial institutions, including the role of
cryptocurrency in averting international pressure. In response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the United
States is leading coordinated efforts to cripple Moscow financially. As a growing amount of nations and
corporations deny a number of Russian financial institutions access to SWIFT, and other payment methods,
Russia's challenge will be to seek alternative methods to conduct transactions. Moderator Shihoko Goto, the
Wilson Center's Deputy Director for Geoeconomics, will speak with former U.S. Executive Director of the IMF
Meg Lundsager and Marco Dell'Erbra, Wilson Center Global Fellow, about Russia's access to financial markets
and its position in international financial institutions as well as the limitations of crypto in averting sanctions
from the international community.
. Hudson Institute: Opportunities for Applying the AUKUS Model in South Korea — Thursday, March 3, 2022.
Location: Virtual Event, 12:00 PM. The AUKUS agreement's transfer of nuclear submarine technology to
Australia could substantially enhance Indo-Pacific security, giving Canberra the high-endurance, long-
distance, stealthy platform it needs to project power to seas that China might contest. But the AUKUS model
could also be applied to benefit other U.S. Asian allies—most importantly South Korea and Japan. Although
leaders in both nations advocate acquisition of nuclear submarines to counter threats from China and North
Korea, do other advanced non-nuclear anti-surface and anti-submarine warfare options make more sense?
Which set of options might be most likely to strengthen alliance security ties between Washington, Seoul,
and Japan?
. INSA: Coffee & Conversation With Troy Meink — Thursday, March 3, 2022. Location: Virtual Event, 9:00 AM.
Join us online on Thursday, March 3, from 9:00-9:45 am ET, for Coffee & Conversation with Troy Meink,
Principal Deputy Director, National Reconnaissance Office. In this moderated conversation with INSA
President Suzanne Wilson Heckenberg, Dr. Meink will provide insights into NRO's current challenges and
priorities, including: engagement with commercial launch, imagery, and ground architecture partners,
funding and development for critical satellite systems, physical and cyber resiliency of space assets,
collaboration with Space Force and other government partners, and innovations needed to improve the
NRO's capability, capacity, and speed.
Mobile version and searchable archives available at https://fbi.barbaricumanalytics.com
EFTA00160199
Document Preview
PDF source document
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
This document was extracted from a PDF. No image preview is available. The OCR text is shown on the left.
Extracted Information
Document Details
| Filename | EFTA00160182.pdf |
| File Size | 438.6 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 12,508 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-11T10:59:50.117721 |