Until Hurricane Matthew hit Haiti nearly a month ago, on October 4, the impoverished island country was out of the headlines'pushed aside by election news. But new emails which were obtained through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit by the Republican National Committee and then shared with ABC News, made public on October 11, make Haiti part of the U.S. election news, as they highlight the cozy connections between the Clinton Foundation, Hillary Clinton's State Department and the Clinton's cronies. The corruption that has been brought to light is nothing short of scandalous'though, since it's merely one more such story, few are probably following it.

I'm aware of this new information due to my multi-year collaboration with Christine Lakatos and her Green Corruption Files. She alerted me to the "bombshell new evidence" and she now has a full 26-page report available.

Hurricane Matthew made clear that the billions of dollars that poured into Haiti after the 2010 earthquake did little to help the 1.5 million people who were displaced when the 7.0 magnitude earthquake destroyed their homes in 2010. According to the New York Times, 55,000 people were still living in shelters when Matthew hit. However, earlier this year, HBO's VICE newsmagazine series did a segment titled: The Haitian Moneypit. In it, Vikram Gandhi takes viewers through the deplorable conditions found in the refugee camps that have no electricity, fresh water, or functioning toilets. He claims: "hundreds of thousands of survivors are still displaced."

Gandhi says that despite the $10 billion in relief that came into Haiti after the earthquake, "many parts of Port-au-Prince still look like the earthquake struck just yesterday." He addresses the Zoranje model home project'described as a $2.4 million dollar showroom and the first approved reconstruction project headed by Bill Clinton and the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission. However, Gandhi reports, the homes were unsuited to Haiti. Once the expo was over, zero homes were built for Haitians. Today the model homes are occupied by squatters who live in the make-shift village without plumbing or electricity.

Perhaps the homes were never built because the companies didn't donate, or didn't donate enough, to the Clinton Foundation. In his film Clinton Cash, Peter Schweizer relays a story about a Florida firm with extensive disaster relief experience. The company spent $100 million getting equipment into Haiti, but only made a small contribution to the Clinton Foundation. The company didn't get any relief contracts. Many contracts went to relief organizations that were also involved in the Clinton Foundation'which brags about its role in Haiti.

Lakatos explains: "In digging through over 1000 emails from Hillary's State Department related to Haiti, I discovered additional damning proof that the Haiti G

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