the next time you want to bring up an issue like this, I suggest you Copy and Paste one or two interesting sentences then give some links to the articles where you got the information. That way we will all have something that is actually readable and you don't have to spend a lot of time trying to regurgitate what you read.
For instance, there is no "Senator Charles Gersla" but there is a "Senator Charles Grassley".
In another case, you wrote "... worker admitted in 1800 that fell porn sites ...". What does the phrase "that fell porn sites" mean? The sentence I found said: "An SEC accountant attempted to access porn websites 1,800 times in a two-week period and had 600 pornographic images on her computer hard drive". I underlined the word her because it reads like a female SEC accountant is interested in porn at work. Oh well, maybe she did that outside of normal work hours.
And I didn't know what a "Shokeda" is, so I looked it up. A Shokeda is a religious settlement in southern Israel. My imagination went crazy, so I Googled the three words "Shokeda porn SEC" and came up with only nine hits. Of those nine hits only three had the word Shokeda, and two of those were nothing more than lists of domain names. And it turns out that Shokeda.com is not used. The third hit wasn’t in English so I couldn’t read it, and there were no pictures. Most of the other hits were porn sites; and after studying those at length and finally getting disgusted with it all, I text searched for Shokeda on those sites and didn't find that word, or SEC, anywhere. Darn ... I was hoping to find porn sites just for kinky rabbis. Oh well, I never did think Google was a very good search engine. But then I don't think there is such a thing as a good search engine.
Translation please? I don't know what this means: "findings of the review who find the booty Onigahu the SEC". In fact, I can't even pronounce "Onigahu". Google doesn't have a clue what it is either -- 0 hits. But I do know what booty is.