A former aide to the presidential campaign of Donald Trump claims
the conference room of their headquarters is bugged.
The female former aide outlined this claim
in an email sent to the Daily Beast, which
The National Pulse obtained a copy of. While the aide anonymously sent the revelation, her identity is known to both news outlets. She recounted that senior leaders in the Trump campaign fired her after she raised concerns about a listening device planted in the conference room.
According to the former aide's email to the
Beast, campaign employees became convinced that leadership had installed "a listening device in a cut-out hole" at the conference room of the campaign's South Florida headquarters. The listening devices were ostensibly installed to
eavesdrop on private conversations by staffers.
The former aide also claimed that even Sean Dollman, the Trump campaign's chief financial officer, was worried about being spied on. She noted that he and others searched the conference room in an attempt to find the device and block its ability to intercept conversations.
"[Dollman] has alluded to the fact that he can't say things for fear of retaliation. There are napkins stuffed in all the gaps in the conference room now. It seems like they're willing to go to extremes."
Moreover, the former campaign aide alleged that senior leadership was pilfering campaign funds to line their pockets. She pointed her fingers at campaign heads Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles as the masterminds behind the embezzlement scheme – and the plot to illegally eavesdrop on employees' conversations.
"The grift and greed I've witnessed makes me sick, and I think leadership has been bad stewards of generous donors money," she wrote to a colleague after her termination. "I'm 100 percent on Team Trump. I want the very best for this campaign, but what I've witnessed is greedy and wrong."
Trump campaign denies former aide's claims
The former aide argued that LaCivita and Wiles have diverted millions in campaign money to two digital ad buyers who are overcharging for their services – Virginia-based Strategic Media Services and New York-based Zeta Global.
She also warned that Zeta Global CEO David Steinberg was a significant donor to the campaign of Vice President Kamala Harris and other Democratic campaign committees. (Related:
Trump campaign files FEC complaint over ILLEGAL transfer of $91.5M Biden campaign fund to Harris campaign.)
Prior to her termination, the campaign staffer had been responsible for placing Trump's official campaign ads on platforms such as YouTube, Facebook and Instagram. While she worked at the South Florida campaign headquarters for months, the Trump campaign did not employ her directly. Rather, she worked for Launchpad Strategies – an in-house ad firm founded and owned by Dollman.
According to the campaign worker, Dollman had fired her at Wiles' discretion. She then reached out to the senior campaign official to ask if she could get her job back. Wiles did not offer any immediate hope, only saying that she would give it "a great deal of thought."
"This is nothing more than fanciful lies and fabrications from a disgruntled former employee of a vendor," a senior Trump campaign staffer told the
Beast. "This person apparently was a terrible teammate who also disclosed private, internal information to outside individuals."
Dollman defended his decision to fire the unidentified staffer, and declined to respond to further questions about details of her claims. "Launchpad made the decision to terminate her for spreading rumors about clients and repeatedly showing poor judgment," he said in a text message to the outlet.
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Sources include:
TheNationalPulse.com
TheDailyBeast.com
Brighteon.com