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DIVE & RAW DATA - Carolyn Maloney Is A NY Dem Congresswoman Investigating Trump
DIVE & RAW DATA - Carolyn Maloney Is A NY Dem Congresswoman Investigating Trump
DIVE & RAW DATA - Carolyn Maloney Is A NY Dem Congresswoman Investigating Trump
With the midterms looming, we decided to take a look at her… our findings below~
UPDATED 8/24/2022– she loses to Nadler – see end of this paper~
Her husband was Clifton Maloney he was born in 1938, she was born in 1946..RAW
DATA & DIVE.
They had two daughters – its unclear what if any the relationship is between Carolyn
and Cliff Maloney Sr and one Cliff Maloney Jr, the leader of the Youth wing of the
Independent party YAF who in 2020 was accused of prior Sexual Misdeeds and
resigned in shame in 2022 #lookitUp.
Family
In 1976, Clifton Maloney Sr. married Carolyn Jane Bosher, who later was elected the United States
representative for what is now New York's 12th congressional district in parts of Manhattan, Queens
and
...
See more
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/clifton-maloney-dead-cong_n_300933
On September 24, 2009, at the age of 71, Maloney summited the nearly 27,000-foot
peak of Cho Oyu, the world's sixth-highest mountain, in Tibet. He reached the summit
of the "Turquoise Goddess", as the mountain is known, with the help of a sherpa and a
guide, Marty Schmidt. [2] He then descended to
...
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his Guide’s son was named Denali – his Daughter was named Sequoia.
Schmidt and his son died in 2013 in an avalanche. His wife the mother of son Denali
Marty and Denali were dual citizens of both US and New Zealand. Daughter /Denali’s
sister Sequoia was raised in Queensland until leaving Father and Brother behind and
moving to the USA and changing her surname to an Italian name. #LookitUp .
SUPPLIED/MARK GREEN
Sequoia Schmidt, whose father and brother - Marty and Denali
Schmidt - died climbing K2 in 2013.
When Sequoia Schmidt left her Hawke's Bay home for Houston 10
years ago, she had no way of knowing how dramatically, and how
quickly, her life would change.
She wanted to complete her final year of high school in her
grandfather's city of residence, leaving the Hastings flat she shared
with her mountaineering dad Marty and brother Denali.
Her dad moved to Christchurch and the pair barely spoke for the next
six years.
And then on July 27, 2013 Sequoia lost half her family. Marty and
Denali were on K2, the world's second-highest mountain, on the
China-Pakistan border. They planned to become the first father-son
duo to reach the mountain's summit. They were killed by an
avalanche.
READ MORE:
* Sequoia di Angelo confirms remains found on K2 not Marty or
Denali Schmidt
* Brother killed on K2 lives on in inspirational art
* Woman 'horrified' by video of corpses on K2 where father and
brother died
* Father, son killed on world's second highest peak
This month, Schmidt is back in New Zealand. The 26-year-old will
cycle from Queenstown to Auckland, visiting old friends and old
haunts, reconnecting with the country she considers "home".
SUPPLIED
Marty Schmidt and his son Denali were reported missing on K2 - the
highest point in the Karakoram Range which spans Pakistan, India and
China.
Two years after the mountain tragedy, a macabre Facebook post
spurred Schmidt's own expedition to K2. Swiss climber Mike Horn
posted footage of human remains at K2's base camp. Schmidt saw the
footage, and, convinced the face on her screen was that of her father or
brother, immediately applied for a travel visa and booked flights.
Within a month, she was on the mountain where her dad and brother
lost their lives.
"I knew at some point in my life I needed to make that trip, and I felt
like this... was a sign that the trip needed to happen when it
happened," Schmidt says.
The diary she kept during the 16-day trek became the subject of a
book, Journey of Heart, published in 2015. During her cycle tour
of New Zealand, she'll conduct talks and book signings at libraries
across the country.
She plans to climb Mt Aspiring and visit the three-bedroom flat she
shared with her dad and brother. When she lived there, there had been
pull-up bars on the lintels and a wind chime made of seashells by the
front door.
The living room was littered with trinkets from Marty's travels in
China, Ecuador and Tibet.
In Rotorua, she will do a bungy jump at the place her dad took her to
do her first.
Today, Schmidt is vague about their estrangement – "every family has
their complications". She changed her surname to Di Angelo when she
moved to the US and started a publishing company.
She describes her foray into the business world as a conscious act of
rebellion against her dad's nomadic, nature-loving lifestyle.
"After my father and brother passed away...
I was already trying to cope with grieving and the thought of being in
a place where I have the fondest memories of them was really hard,"
she says of staying away from New Zealand for so long.
"When I think of New Zealand, I think of them."
Since returning from Pakistan, Schmidt has reclaimed her family
surname. She says she feels like she's slowly becoming Sequoia
Schmidt again. She continues to seek adventure in the mountains,
learning to becoming the type of climber – one who carries her own
gear, who is knowledgeable, who is safe – her dad would be proud of.
It was on a climbing expedition in Nepal last year that she decided to
come home. The expedition was led by Wanaka-based Adventure
Consultants, and there were Kiwis among her teammates.
"It just felt like, OK now's the time."
It was two weeks before Schmidt discussed her dad and brother's
deaths with others on the trek.
She acknowledges the irony – when she's on tour for her book, she has
to talk about it all the time.
In the week before she departed for Pakistan, Schmidt contacted the
relatives of the 11 climbers who had died on K2 in 2008.
"We shared a similar understanding of what is acceptable in the
mountains and what isn't, and how we would want our family
members to be remembered," she says.
She had decided before her departure that it didn't matter who the
remains belonged to.
"If it was my family then it was my family and I could be there, and if
it wasn't my family then at least I could attempt to do something for
the other families involved."
Halfway through the trek, Schmidt sensed the remains would not be
her relatives. When she held the head that had been on Horn's video,
she knew she was right. Tests confirmed it.
She collected DNA samples from the remains before they were
wrapped in white burial cloth and laid at the camp's memorial to fallen
climbers.
At the time, she was calm and level-headed while conducting the
sampling. Today, she has nightmares about it.
"That's going to be forever burned into my mind," she says."But I'm
glad I did it. UPDATE: 8/24/2022:
Sources for graphic added: below:
Maloney / newsweek :https://www.newsweek.com/carolyn-maloney-warns-trump-
classified-documents-probe-fbi-mar-lago-1734665
Schiff clip is here: https://schiff.house.gov/news/press-releases/oversight-armed-
services-and-intelligence-committee-chairs-on-report-finding-retaliation-against-
lieutenant-colonel-yevgeny-vindman
To gettr 8/25/2022:: #nadleriscorrupt Carolyn Maloney had DEEP TIES to Adam
Schiff and MAGA is hot on Schiff's tail - Looks like the #DemDelusion thot it
better to redraw the district & install beta-male #nadleriscorrupt than leave
Loudmouth Maloney out in the open to TELL ALL - look for our coming Scribd
raw data dive on Carolyn Maloney - coming soon to a scribd near you~
https://www.theblaze.com/news/powerful-democrat-rep-jerry-nadler-
accused-of-ethics-violations-by-watchdog-group