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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Brooke Baldwin 20180803 19:00:00

and it certainly seems that this has to do with some of roger stone's more personal life, perhaps maybe his finances. we know that that's something that the special counsel has been looking at. others who have come before the special counsel, there have been others who have been asked questions about roger stone, but exactly why her we don't know. roger stone always the colorful person that he is issued a statement in response to this. she was at the special counsel on wednesday and here is what roger stone had to say about it, he says that kristin davis is a long time friend and associate of mine, i am the fod father to her two-year-old son. she knows nothing about russia collusion, wikileaks, collaboration or any other impropriety related to the 2016 election which i thought was the subject of this probe. he then says that he understands that she appeared voluntarily. i am highly confident she will testify truthfully if called upon to do so. we don't know if she actually testified before the grand jury. we believe, though, that she just met with special counsel and, again, really this story, this investigation just has everything as to what her role here is and what exactly the special counsel wants from her, we really don't know. >> thank you so much for the reporting piece of this. let's get some legal analysis. with me now joey jackson and bob bianchi who is the former head prosecutor in morris county, new jersey. so, gentlemen, joey, let me start with you. so the fact that mueller's team met with davis this week, this manhattan madam as she is known in a previous lifetime of hers, what does your gut tell you about what they're looking for as a lawyer? >> brooke, always a pleasure. always a pleasure with you, bob bianchi, too. the reality is we can't look at this isolation, you have to look at this in the broader context. we have this probe going on by the spenl counsel and what shoe has not dropped? the shoe relating to i won't say collusion because it's not a crime, conspiracy which is the agreement to commit an illegal act. if you do an illegal act with a foreign power it's problematic. how does all this relate? stone happened to be an adviser, strategist to the campaign and stone apparently was in contact with a twitter handle that was tied back to the russians and russian intelligence officers. so it demonstrates to me that the special counsel is focusing on stone. we cannot look at this interview in isolation. who else were they looking at? they were looking at andrew miller another associate of stone, they are looking at other people who are of, relating and concerning stone. so what it means to me is they are trying, that is the special counsel, to get that nexus to russia. what does roger stone know and who would know what he knows but people familiar with him, his associates and people who have an understanding of his m.o., mod does operandi and that would be of course someone who you are the godfather to your two-year-old son. it should be noted the special counsel asked the question as to whether he was actually the father of the son. it demonstrates to me that the special counsel is trying to establish that link to russia so once and for all we can put to bed the question who if anyone on trump's campaign was excluding -- excuse me, conspiring with russia. >> it's what she knows, if she knows anything injury ma inn to what request he you posed. i was talking to this document tearian on roger stone. they are all this footage, they were saying the most recent part of the arc of the relationship that was kristin davis and roger stone was the fact that she was his personal assistant, his clerical assistant and that a lot of information would have come through her. that said, bob, the fact is that she went in to talk to the mueller team on wednesday voluntarily. what would that tell you? >> brooke, great to be on with you and joey. always a measure. it tells me that there is disaster, storm clouds looming over mr. stone. The latest news from around the world with host Brooke Baldwin. servers, guccifer 2.0, wikileaks. they are not looking at these things as coincidences, they are looking at it and saying was somebody else involved in this higher up the food chain so if i were representing him i would download all the data he's got, i would go to the u.s. attorneys and say, hey, guys, are you interested? >> gentlemen, a pleasure. thank you so much. >> thank you, brooke. >> thank you. still ahead here, a suspected russian spy working inside the u.s. embassy in moscow not for one year or two, but for more than a decade. details on how she was caught and what information she had access to. also ahead, china strikes back, threatening a new round of $60 billion in tariffs as pay back for president trump's latest escalation. so we will talk about whether the trade threats are enough to derail an otherwise booming economy. and later a black woman trying to help the homeless is instead accused of stealing, and police show up to question her. we will talk to her live about how this all could have happened. this is not a bed. it's a high-tech revolution in sleep. the new sleep number 360 smart bed. it intelligently senses your movement and automatically adjusts on each side to keep you both comfortable. and snoring? how smart is that? smarter sleep. to help you lose your dad bod, train for that marathon, and wake up with the patience of a saint. the new sleep number 360 smart bed, from $999. smarter sleep will change your life. chicken! that's right, chicken?! candace-- new chicken creations from starkist. buffalo style chicken in a pouch-- bold choice, charlie! just tear, eat... mmmmm. and go! try all of my chicken creations! chicken! not a bad thing. that's a really good thing. now we're being hindered by the russian location. it's a hoax, okay? >> those comments coming mere hours after the heads of the fbi, homeland security, national intelligence warned the threat is real from russia. all of them saying the interference is still happening. >> the intelligence community continues to be concerned about the threats of upcoming u.s. elections. both the midterms and the presidential elections of 2020. >> our democracy itself is in the cross-hairs. >> make no mistake, the scope of this foreign influence threat is both broad and deep. >> with me now cnn contributor frank bruni an op-ed columnist for "the new york times." thank you for coming back in. his intelligence chiefs just about this time yesterday could not have been more crystal clear and to see trump later that night refer to it as a hoax it's almost like two different foreign policies from the same white house. >> it's a tug of war within the administration, i think it's been going on for a long time. donald trump is all over the place, it is the russians, it isn't the russians, it's a 400 pound person. we've heard almost everything. the people around him, the more steady people around him, the people that were at the white house briefing room yesterday in that extraordinary assemblage that you saw, they get this and they're steady on it and certain about it. i guarantee you that donald trump did not ask them to go out and do that, but the good thing is they would never have done that without his permission. so for that moment in time and it means there are moments in time he did understand the graffiti of this, he did understand that his white house, his administration has to be sending a message to the american people that he gets it, but of course he gets it momentarily and then later on -- >> hang on a second. you're saying you don't think he sent them out there, but it certainly would have had to have his blessing to do that. then whose idea would that have been? >> i don't think that was his idea. i think it was the idea of those officials. those who convinced him we need to be unwavering. conversations like ours they know there are reasonable americans who have serious doubts about whether this president is compromised about russia, about why this president can't say that there was russian interference and it's an enormous problem for this democracy. for a moment in time they were able to communicate to the president this administration needs to make a strong statement. just visually that was an unbelievably strong statement. you had the national security adviser, the director of national -- you had a lineup of people. >> which is so different normally from various guests who come on at the beginning of a briefing who stand there and filibuster and almost they hope to be this bright shiny object to deflect off what needs to be addressed in the briefing. >> right. >> so this next monday will mark three weeks since helsinki. i know. three weeks. i know. and the director of national intelligence dan coats stood up there and fielded a question and it is clear to everyone in the room and everyone watching that he still doesn't know what happened between trump and putin. watch. >> i'm not in a position to either understand fully or talk about what happened at helsinki. >> not only did he not -- he wasn't able to answer, he then deferred to -- john bolton comes up and john bolton stands up there and quotes putin. >> right. >> alarm bells being raised? >> i don't think we are ever going to know exactly what happened in that conversation. >> what about the director of national intelligence, though. >> a, i don't think they've been able to get a briefing from trump that they trust. here is the thing, i mean, they can sit down with him, he can say here is what we talked b i'm not sure any of them -- because i think a lot of them are very seasoned people -- i'm not sure any of them think for a moment they are getting the full story from the president. i don't see that to imply something nefarious went on. something nefarious may have gone on, we don't know, but they work for a man whose unsteadiness they see minute by minute, hour by hour and they know he cannot be trusted to remember fully what he said, to be fully honest about t how often do we talk about this president's strange relationship with the truth. that is not only when he is at a microphone speaking to the american people or speaking to reporters, it's throughout the day. >> frank bruni, thank you so much. >> thank you. the $15,000 ostrich coat, the $18,000 python jacket, the stories of his lavish lifestyle setting the stage. now prosecutors are diving into the heart of this case, the details about paul manafort's alleged bank and tax fraud. day four of this trial is under way and we are still waiting to hear from the star witness from the prosecution's side, manafort's former right-hand man rick gates. manafort's legal team has signaled they plan to make gates a key portion of its defense, trying to blame gates for manafort's alleged crimes and because he controlled them and under u.s. law he is supposed to declare these foreign bank accounts on his taxes. we also heard from one of the first -- this is the first of five witnesses who have been given immunity to testify against paul manafort. cindy laporta who is one of his accountants, she talked about how she saw some very suspicious -- some very strange-looking loans, one for $900,000, $1.5 million was another one, and she didn't see all the documentations for these loans, which raise concerns for her. we also heard that from one of his other accountants that he was being asked by paul manafort to assure a bank that one property that he owned on fifth avenue, trump tower property, was being used as his personal residence when, in fact, it was being used as a rental property. of course, that affects his taxes. so according to the government this is the key part of this case, right? that paul manafort lied to his accountan accountants, loo id to his bookkeeper, lied to the fbi. we briefly heard, by the way, brooke, from paul manafort's main defense lawyer, kevin downing today in court and he really kind of focused on the complications of paul manafort's taxes. i think what we're going to get from them, from the defense, is, look, paul manafort was a wealthy guy, his taxes are really, really complicated, jurors don't buy what the government is telling you if there were mistakes made it's because it's so complicated. >> evan perez, again, waiting for rick gates to testify. thank you so much for the update on all things paul manafort. as the unemployment rate falls again, china retaliating in the president's trade war. look at the numbers today. up 135 points here with 40 minutes to go. here the dramatic move and we will ask how far will this go economically speaking. and new details on the accused russian spy who got close to everyone from republicans to treasury officials, how she bragged about her russian ties when she had a little bit too much to drink. we will talk with a former cia agent about that ahead. your brain changes as you get older. but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. i'm a small business, but i have... big dreams... and big plans. so how do i make the efforts of 8 employees... feel like 50? how can i share new plans virtually? how can i download an e-file? virtual tours? zip-file? really big files? in seconds, not minutes... just like that. like everything... the answer is simple. i'll do what i've always done... dream more, dream faster, and above all... now, i'll dream gig. now more businesses, in more places, can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. breaking news on that 12-year-old chinese tourist that appeared to have been abducted from that washington, d.c. airport. guess what we've just -- we've learned she's been found. she was found today in the new york city borough of queens. police say she is safe. that she is now in the custody of her parents. that's all i know so far. i know there is all kinds of questions out there so you know investigators are on there nd and as soon as we get updates we will pass them along. let's talk about the economy, new unemployment figures out today, the positive news the rate has dropped to 3.9% that is nearly an 18-year low, but economists do point out that wages are rising at a much slower rate than they have in previous economic booms so far. the threat of a trade war has not slowed economic growth, something president trump was touting at that rally last night in pennsylvania. >> manufacturing, consumer and business confidence has reached the highest level in the history of our country. i'd say that's pretty good. confidence is a good thing. having confidence, what do you think, having confidence is good, right? if you have confidence and you know what you're doing, you can't lose. now that we have the best economy in the history of our country, this is the time to straighten out the worst trade deals ever made by any country on earth at any time. >> here are the concerns, there are worries that the president's tariffs could put the brakes on growth, the administration is threatening to raise tariffs from 10% to 25% on $200 billion of chinese imports. today china retaliated saying it would add its own tariffs on $60 billion of u.s. imports. cnn went to spartanburg, south carolina, where a lot of jobs are tied to the bmw plant there. 80,000 cars made at that plant are exported to china. one county commissioner who supports president trump says he is worried about a trade war. >> i'm extremely concerned because the impact, the ripple effect, it goes beyond bmw and the automotive industry. these tariffs could put the foot on the throat of growth and stop it. we don't need that. >> richard quest is with me now and, you know, so the unemployment numbers continuing to go down, wonderful news. jobs -- the wage not as fast as it should be. what's going on? >> well, that is a slight concern, not only because americans want to have higher wages. >> yeah. >> but at this point in the cycle we should be seeing more wage growth. effectively to all intents and purposes the united states is now at full employment. arguably anybody who wants a job there is a job for them. >> okay. >> and that creates a pricing pressure because suddenly companies can't find workers. suddenly employers are having to bid up wages and we're not seeing that fully yet. now, it could still happen. so there are still great uncertainties. a lot of unease about what is happening longer term in the economy, but make no bones about it, the president is right in the sense of the economy is -- is in sparkling form and now is the time to sort out the trade issues if you want to have a trade battle. >> well, on that i was talking to a pork farmer last week, we were talking about that $12 billion bailout. while the farmers are grateful for the help he was saying that that is not the long-term solution at all. >> it's not even enough. it's not even enough. if this carries on, that $12 billion will be spent and gone in no time at all. the thing i think we should focus on today, besides -- look at the market, it's on a frol lick of its own. >> on a frolic. >> frolic of its own, and it's august. >> you want to talk about toyota. >> i do, because toyota had results and toyota warned today what the effects would be. it says about $1,800 on a camry from tariffs from a domestically made camry. $6,000 extra on an imported camry. so this trade war will have an effect. prices will go up and companies are now warning of the real damage being done. the paragraph says this is a pain that has to be endured for the longer good and that now is the time to do it. the et volunteerers in the midterm will decide that of course. >> that will be looming depending on how this looks -- >> frolic of its own. >> frolic of its own. use that in a sentence over the weekend. richard quest, thank you so much. coming up next this russian woman who had access to the state department and secret service, she was caught meeting with russian intel. how this suspected spy got away with working inside the u.s. embassy in moscow for over a decade. when i received the diagnoses, i knew at that exact moment ... i'm beating this. my main focus was to find a team of doctors. it's not just picking a surgeon, it's picking the care team and feeling secure in where you are. visit cancercenter.com/breast ♪ ♪ our new, hot, fresh breakfast will get you the readiest. 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how do you see this? >> for sure it's an issue of national security. in any u.s. embassy overseas typically we rely on what are called foreign service nationals, that is locals who are going to work at the embassy. that said, they are generally subjects of a great deal of scrutiny and vetting before they are hired, specifically because they are locals, it's sometimes unclear where their loyalties may lie and certainly in a place like russia anybody -- any foreign service national who is at the u.s. embassy is in a great position to collect intelligence on the u.s. and on u.s. personnel. so it's kind of astounding to me that this could be classified as anything but an issue of national security. that's exactly what it is. >> so the secret service says that this woman was never in a position to obtain national security secrets but the fact that she was on the inside, lindsey for more than a decade, what potential threats would this pose? >> i think it poses a lot of potential threats. first of all, she obviously had access to the secret service intranet and their e-mail system. so certainly she had access to internal communications possibly and probably access to the schedules of visiting american personnel, of the president, the president's spouses. so that's very sensitive information. now, look, this is not the first time we've seen the secret service as an agency show kind of galling lack of accountability when it comes to counterintelligence. if you think back to 2012 when there was this scandal in colombia with secret service agents soliciting and could sororitying with colombian prostitutes there was hull la bloo about the moral implications of secret service agents cheating on their wives or whatever but there wasn't a lot of attention given to the larger and more critical issue of when you have secret service agents in compromising positions that's a huge counterintelligence threat and concern. >> hullabaloo then and now. it's not like this video, you know, was in there for six months. >> right. >> this is ten years. >> she was there for a decade, right. >> ten years. >> and that's a long period of time. >> what kind of safeguards, precautions, are in place to expose people like this? >> well, i was really a pounded to learn that this came up in a routine investigation conducted by investigators from the regional securities office there because i would certainly think that for any foreign service national working in the u.s. embassy in moscow there would be investigations and scrutiny beyond a five-year routine check. i think we will find out more about the circumstances of how this woman was hired and whether or not she was vetted, and my guess would be that it wasn't all above board or kosher or by typical hiring protocol. >> sure. while i have you, in other russia spy news, the alleged russian spy, maria butina, her spy skills leave a lot of people saying that she was this not so secret agent because sources say at least two times she was inebriated, she bragged about her connections with the russian government, comments that were so alarming that two of her classmates reported them to law enforcement. would someone in her situation be told to keep a low profile and maybe stop taking too many shots with your colleagues? >> for sure she would have been instructed by her handler to maintain a low profile. i don't think that she went to any kind of elite russian intelligence training academy. i think she was essentially what's called an access agent and she was a target of opportunity for russian intelligence. they realized that they could manipulate her. but, look, spies are not always the most stable people and they are human, that's why it's called human intelligence. so it's not to say she wasn't a spy, she just wasn't a good spy. >> thank you so much. >> thank you. coming up next an african-american woman trying to help the homeless instead questioned by police after a grocery store employee called 911 on her. we will talk to her about how this happened. in my johnsonville commercial, it starts out in the park, and a family is grilling johnsonville brats. one of the kids asks, "where are johnsonville brats made?" and the mom says, ♪"johnsonville brats are made in the usa."♪ all of a sudden, the fire department storms in, yelling, ♪"johnsonville brats are made in the usa!"♪ the teachers come. the mayor comes. you won't believe it: lady liberty shows up. she's going, ♪"johnsonville brats are made in the usa!"♪ and the wolf huffed and puffed... like you do sometimes, grandpa? 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(giggles) get symbicort free at saveonsymbicort.com. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. napping while black, golfing while black, mowing the wall now black, now you can add eating lunch to the growing list of reasons people call police on african-americans for no good reason. a student at smith college in massachusetts says a school employee called police on her because she appeared, quote/unquote, out of place. she was eating her lunch and reading a book in a room that is only available to people with key card access, which, by the way, she has because she's also a teaching assistant. so she says she remembers someone pacing back and forth by the door just looking at her shortly after an officer arrived who she credits with deescalating the whole thing. >> hi. >> how are you doing? >> good. how are you. >> we were wondering why you were here. >> i was eating lunch. i'm working the summer program so i was just relaxing on my -- >> you were taking a break. >> yeah. >> you are with one of the summer programs. >> yeah, i'm actually a t.a. >> so that's what it was? >> all right. >> he didn't know who it was. he watches over -- >> yeah. i -- it's okay. it's just like kind of stuff like this happens way too often where people just feel like threatened. >> the school and the campus police issued statements condemning the unnecessary 911 call. they say they have reached out to the student and opened an investigation. to california now, for this one. a woman who had the police called on her when she was trying to help the homeless. erica martin says employees at a safeway supermarket in mountain view california picked up the phone and called 911 on her and her family last month because apparently the store suspected them of shoplifting. so i want you to listen here, this is the video that her sister recorded on her cellphone once police arrived to question them. >> right here at safeway mountain view. someone called the police on erica and accused her of stealing. she was in her car the whole time. this is crazy. crazy. now four cops here. for one black person. absolutely nuts. >> safeway has since apologized but erica says she was actually helping a homeless man that she knew, giving him some treats and food for his dog. so, erica and her sister faith join me now. so, ladies, thank you so much for coming on and, erica, let me start with you. help me understand, take me back to this moment. y'all are at the grocery store, you know, with your kids and what happens? >> my sister and i we were at the grocery store and i had saw the homeless guy, his name is rabbit, and i, you know, gave him the bag of dog food through the window and i was feeding his dog through the window. i saw my sisters come into the parking -- safeway parking lot and i decided to park in front of safeway and my sisters they parked on the opposite i'm just sitting in anymy car and i see my the sister, faith and other sister, ashley, get out the care packages that our church put together for the homeless people. and so my sister walks over to the two homeless guys and they both give them the packages and our kids are inside the store getting free cookies and the free samples from the deli. i'm in my car listening to some gospel music. my sisters walk over, we're just talking then i see a safeway employee run from safeway and he's look iing at me, my sister and he looks at my car and he goes right in to safeway and two or three minutes later as we're getting ready to leave, i'm backing out in my car, a cop car blocks me in. and he's like asking me do i know what's going on. i tell him no. what's going on? he wouldn't tell me what was going on. there's a female officer comes to my side of my car and asked me do i have any warrants. why was i at safeway m i told her i was giving a bag of dog food to a homeless guy and she was like, are you waiting for somebody to come out of safeway? i told her no. then she was like are you married? no, i'm not. what is going on. i kept asking her what was going on. she wouldn't tell me. all of a sudden, she was like, we were called by safeway because you fit the description of someone takie ininge ining ie store and putting them into your car. she said i was wearing a blue spaghetti strap shirt and i wasn't. i was wearing a t-shirt. >> let me jump in because from your sister's perspective, faith, let me ask you. we hear your voice. you say crazy. you take this video, crazy, four cops for one black person. obviously we know that your sister was not shoplifting. was in fact helping this homeless person and feeding his dog. we should say the safeway store apologized. they're investigating. why do you think the cops were called on your sister? >> because we're black. that's why. they saw kids in the store. going and asking for cookies, asking for a sample. they didn't like what they saw. so they saw us outside talking and they knew that the kids belong belonged to us. so why i believe they called the police. >> this has been happening to black people in this country for a long time. we were talk iing about inciden more recently making the news mowing a lawn while black. campaigning while black. does this discourage you from helping others less fortunate? >> no. >> it does not. >> tell me why. >> it actually makes me want to get out there and do it more. >> yeah. >> exactly. >> because there's too many homeless people in this korworl where this world is full of money. but a lot of homeless people who are living on the street. without homes, without food. it's everywhere. and it's not right. >> especially in silicon valley. >> i appreciate both of you coming on and saying that and telling your story, faith and erica. thank you so much. >> thank you. >> thank you. back to our breaking news in the russia investigation. robert mueller, his team just interviewed a woman who once ran a high priced new york call girl ring. she was known as manhattan madame. we'll talk about her tied to roger stone. it was here. i couldn't catch my breath. it was the last song of the night. it felt like my heart was skipping beats. they said i had afib. what's afib? i knew that meant i was at a greater risk of stroke. i needed answers. my doctor and i chose xarelto® to help keep me protected from a stroke. once-daily xarelto®, a latest-generation blood thinner significantly lowers the risk of stroke in people with afib not caused by a heart valve problem. warfarin interferes with at least 6 of your body's natural blood-clotting factors. xarelto® is selective, targeting just one critical factor. for afib patients well managed on warfarin, there is limited information on how xarelto® compares in reducing the risk of stroke. don't stop taking xarelto® without talking to your doctor, as this may increase your risk of stroke. while taking, you may bruise more easily, or take longer for bleeding to stop. xarelto® can cause serious, and in rare cases, fatal bleeding. it may increase your risk of bleeding if you take certain medicines. get help right away for unexpected bleeding or unusual bruising. do not take xarelto® if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. before starting, tell your doctor about all robert mueller. learn all you can to help protect yourself from a stroke. talk to your doctor about xarelto®. owners always seem so happy? 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Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth - How to Craft All 7-Star Weapons (All Base Weapon Locations)

Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth - How to Craft All 7-Star Weapons (All Base Weapon Locations)
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Honolulu
Hawaii
United-states
Yokohama
Kanagawa
Japan
Kasuga
Fukuoka
Tomizawa
Yamagata
Hamakita
Shizuoka

Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth Ultimate Weapons: Best Weapon for Each Job

We cover how to get the ultimate weapon for each job in Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth and the materials needed to craft them.

Tomizawa
Yamagata
Japan
Hamakita
Shizuoka
Yokohama
Kanagawa
Chitose
Japan-general
Hawaii
United-states
Isezaki-ijincho

Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth Party Member Tier List

Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth Party Member Tier List
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Yu-nanba
Ichiban-kasuga
Eric-tomizawa
Kiryu-dragon
Joongi-han
Tianyou-zhao
Chitose-fujinomiya
Kazuma-kiryu
Koichi-adachi
Saeko-mukoda
Infinite-wealth

Like a Dragon Infinite Wealth Best Jobs

Like a Dragon Infinite Wealth Best Jobs
gamerant.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gamerant.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Koichi-adachi
Eric-tomizawa
Kazuma-kiryu
Tianyou-zhao
Ichiban-kasuga
Chitose-fujinomiya
Joongi-han
Saeko-mukoda
Yu-nanba
Infinity-wealth
Infinite-wealth

Like a Dragon Infinite Wealth Party Members Guide

Like a Dragon Infinite Wealth Party Members Guide
gamerant.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from gamerant.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

South-korea
Han
Eric-tomizawa
Chitose-fujinomiya
Saeko-mukoda
Ichiban-kasuga
Tianyou-zhao
Kazuma-kiryu
Koichi-adachi-yu-nanba
Likea-dragon-infinite-wealth-party-members
Infinite-wealth
Dragon-infinite-wealth-party-members

Things To Do In Yokohama Before Leaving For Hawaii - Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth Guide

Things To Do In Yokohama Before Leaving For Hawaii - Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth Guide
ign.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ign.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Yokohama
Kanagawa
Japan
Hawaii
United-states
Koichi-adachi
Ichiban-kasuga
Yu-nanba
Level-up-party-members-and-jobs
Homeless-guy
Suspicious-men

Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth jobs guide | Best jobs and when they unlock

With our guide we'll give you the list of which Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth jobs are best to utilise, and of course, when they unlock.

Tomizawa
Yamagata
Japan
Chitose
Japan-general
Hawaii
United-states
Mafia
Infinite-wealth
Suijimon-master
Action-star

Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth Will Include New Jobs

There will be several new jobs in Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth that you'll be able to put your characters in to customize your party.

South-korea
Japan
Han
Kazuma-kiryu
Saeko-mukoda
Ichiban-kasuga
Chitose-fujinomiya
Koichi-adachi
Tianyou-zhao
Yu-nanba
Eric-tomizawa

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