Author Topic: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State  (Read 353189 times)


ccp

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" proud boy "
« Reply #1701 on: May 04, 2023, 09:14:18 AM »
gets 20 yrs for texting about 1/6.

he wasn't even in DC on 1/6!

https://nypost.com/2023/05/04/ex-proud-boys-leader-enrique-tarrio-found-guilty-of-jan-6-sedition-plot/

2 injustice systems in the USA
rule of law

rule of lawyers !

 

ccp

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what "deep state"?
« Reply #1702 on: May 05, 2023, 06:27:57 AM »
"deep state" is just a right wing conspiracy theory -

https://nypost.com/2023/05/05/ex-cia-chief-michael-morell-wrote-hunter-biden-laptop-disinfo-letter-for-biden-to-use-as-during-debate/

(we had no clue  :wink:)

if only we can dive into the CNN MSLSD NYT WP  emails
and put into black and white on the front page their machinations




Crafty_Dog

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G M

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Crafty_Dog

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1712 on: May 15, 2023, 02:28:24 PM »
Whoa.

Please stay on top of this for us.

G M

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Crafty_Dog

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1717 on: May 16, 2023, 07:44:24 AM »
AGREE.


ccp

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whistle blower and the entire team removed
« Reply #1719 on: May 16, 2023, 12:18:24 PM »
“Today, the [IRS] Criminal Supervisory Special Agent we represent was informed that he and his entire investigative team are being removed from the ongoing and sensitive investigation of the high-profile, controversial subject about which our client sought to make whistleblower disclosures to Congress,” the whistleblower’s lawyers said in a May 15 letter (pdf) addressed to multiple congressional lawmakers, first obtained by Just the News."

we will not only go after you, but we will go after your entire family !

so to speak ....

nothing to see here

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1720 on: May 16, 2023, 12:53:22 PM »
The Sounds of Silence on this are deafening  :cry: :cry: :cry:


ccp

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1722 on: May 18, 2023, 07:27:28 AM »
"Perhaps noted legal expert Andrew McCarthy could explain this..."

not clear why you are going after AM for this
I am pretty sure he would put his stamp of approval
on  your point about the lying hypocrisy of MSM from this post .

G M

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1723 on: May 18, 2023, 07:36:30 AM »
"Perhaps noted legal expert Andrew McCarthy could explain this..."

not clear why you are going after AM for this
I am pretty sure he would put his stamp of approval
on  your point about the lying hypocrisy of MSM from this post .

He avoids covering obvious criminal conduct from his friends at the DOJ.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1724 on: May 18, 2023, 07:40:16 AM »
A most fair point-- but one that should not be used to fail to acknowledge all the quality work AM does in other regards.

G M

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1725 on: May 18, 2023, 07:41:00 AM »
"Perhaps noted legal expert Andrew McCarthy could explain this..."

not clear why you are going after AM for this
I am pretty sure he would put his stamp of approval
on  your point about the lying hypocrisy of MSM from this post .

He avoids covering obvious criminal conduct from his friends at the DOJ.

https://media.gab.com/cdn-cgi/image/width=852,quality=100,fit=scale-down/system/media_attachments/files/138/135/746/original/95e41344895dc406.png



I want Deep State Andy to admit it.

Crafty_Dog

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Patriot Post agrees with GM
« Reply #1726 on: May 18, 2023, 07:43:00 AM »
« Last Edit: May 18, 2023, 07:47:59 AM by Crafty_Dog »

G M

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Re: Patriot Post agrees with GM
« Reply #1727 on: May 18, 2023, 09:18:52 AM »
I would love to have you interview him on FOX  :-D

=====================

https://patriotpost.us/alexander/97410?mailing_id=7495&utm_medium=email&utm_source=pp.email.7495&utm_campaign=alexander&utm_content=body

He wouldn’t enjoy it. He at least twice swore an oath to protect and defend the constitution against all enemies. He had plausible deniability when he criticized Tucker for Tucker’s accurate reporting on the J6 FEDsurrection, but he has exactly ZERO excuses now for not addressing that J6 was part of a COUP that ended the American Republic.

He at the minimum should use his position to scream to the masses the truth, instead he helps the COUP by his weak tea criticism of the DOJ.


G M

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Anyone with integrity is being destroyed by the Deep State
« Reply #1728 on: May 18, 2023, 09:50:09 AM »
https://ace.mu.nu/archives/404489.php

Hey Andy, I have a topic you might want to cover…


Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Durham on Comey's culpability
« Reply #1730 on: May 19, 2023, 10:08:33 AM »
second

Durham on Comey’s Culpability
The report shows FBI headquarters ignored all the rules in the Trump-Russia probe.
Kimberley A. Strassel hedcutBy Kimberley A. StrasselFollow
May 18, 2023 6:30 pm ET


Special Counsel John Durham leaves the U.S. Federal Courthouse in Washington, May 23, 2022. PHOTO: SAMUEL CORUM/ZUMA PRESS
The Federal Bureau of Investigation received some shocking intelligence in 2018, suggesting the Russians might have compromised Christopher Steele’s sources even before the opposition researcher began feeding his infamous dossier to the FBI. Just as shocking was the edict that came next.


According to special counsel John Durham’s report, the team reviewing the intelligence was told in a meeting with a top member of the Trump-Russia collusion probe to “be careful” because “issues relating to Steele were under intense scrutiny.” Dina Corsi, the deputy assistant director for counterintelligence, then ordered that findings be reported only “orally.” One FBI lawyer told the Durham team it was “the most inappropriate operational or professional statement” he’d ever heard at the FBI and that he was so “appalled,” he walked off the review. The lawyer didn’t know exactly who’d given the order but said Ms. Corsi was “speaking for FBI leadership.”

Readers won’t find many direct quotes in the report from former Director James Comey or former Deputy Director Andrew McCabe—both refused to cooperate with Mr. Durham. Mr. Comey has publicly distanced himself from events, honing his mastery of “I don’t recall.” The Durham report gives the lie to this claim, which in turn explains what went wrong. The Trump probe was run by the “seventh floor”—by two men who were thrilled to be playing political kingmakers, and who broke all the rules.

The roots of the collusion investigation were planted in early April 2016, when Mr. Comey requested from underlings “relevant information pertaining to any Presidential candidate.” (He was already deep in the Hillary Clinton email probe.) The report says that he was then briefed that the New York field office was looking at recently named Trump adviser Carter Page. It wasn’t “concerned about Page” so much as the “Russians reaching out” to him. Yet the Page case and “ones like it” became a “top priority for Director Comey.”


When the FBI got wind in July 2016 of a conversation between another Trump adviser and an Australian diplomat, Mr. McCabe ordered FBI agent Peter Strzok to skip all preliminary steps and launch a full counterintelligence investigation. Similarly, when the FBI received separate information from a Clinton attorney claiming a secret Trump server communicating with Russia, FBI leadership intervened to order a full probe, even though both cyber agents and Chicago-based agents were skeptical. One agent explained: “people on the 7th floor to include Director are fired up about this server.” McCabe would tell an inspector general that Mr. Comey “was getting daily briefings on this stuff.” Compare this with Mr. Comey’s later interview with Fox News’s Bret Baier in which he suggested he was only vaguely aware of details.

All this was then centralized in FBI headquarters. Line agents early on wanted to interview Mr. Page—a step agents said made only “too much sense” and the Durham report says would likely have put the whole issue to rest. They were “prohibited” by Messrs. Comey and McCabe, who remained fixated on getting a secret surveillance warrant on Mr. Page. The attorney prepping that application recalled “being constantly pressured” by “management” to push it through—being told that Mr. Comey “wants to know what’s going on,” while Mr. McCabe exhorted to “get this going.” When a deputy assistant attorney general raised concerns with the application’s reliance on Mr. Steele—given his work as a Clinton oppo researcher—supporters of the warrant went straight to Messrs. Comey and McCabe, who said to move ahead “despite his concerns.”


The Durham report is littered with agents recalling their frustration that they were “excluded from the flow of information and decision-making process” and steamrolled when they objected to unjustified inquiries. One agent was told in 2017 that his primary job was renewing the Page surveillance application. Yet his team didn’t believe Mr. Page to be a “threat” and thought the investigation a “dry hole.” When he told his superior, he was “ignored and directed to continue.”

That supervisor told the Durham team it wasn’t “normal” and she “did not know why the 7th floor was so involved,” but felt her boss, counterintelligence head Bill Priestap, was “not in charge and had to get approvals” from the brass. Mr. Priestap told Durham investigators that it drove him “insane” that his own underlings—Mr. Strzok and Lisa Page—went “around him to the 7th floor” whenever he disagreed with their approach. In 2018, as mistakes began to come to light, that seventh floor ordered a review team to stop writing things on paper.

Some are responding to the Durham report with calls to dismantle the FBI. But the report shows the rank and file doing exactly what the FBI is supposed to do—question, verify. The fault rests with an arrogant leadership that discarded the usual layers of oversight—a seventh floor that took charge with no regard for rules, little care for the truth, and no accountability from above.

Crafty_Dog

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WSJ
« Reply #1731 on: May 19, 2023, 10:16:41 AM »
third

How Can We Keep the CIA and the FBI Out of Our Politics?
Let’s not allow the 2024 presidential election to include the third straight intervention by the national-security state.
James Freeman hedcutBy James FreemanFollow
May 16, 2023 2:58 pm ET

This month brings more evidence that the U.S. government’s national-security apparatus was used to help Democrats in our last two presidential elections. The challenge for all Americans is to prevent this corruption from infecting the election of 2024.

This week Justice Department special counsel John Durham’s report confirms that right from the start, the FBI’s Russia collusion investigation of the 2016 Trump campaign was biased, reckless and irresponsible. The Durham report notes that the FBI’s Deputy Assistant Director for Counterintelligence Peter Strzok, who “had pronounced hostile feelings toward Trump,” opened the Crossfire Hurricane case as a full investigation in 2016 without even a modest attempt to vet claims about the Trump campaign and adds:

... FBI records prepared by Strzok in February and March 2017 show that at the time of the opening of Crossfire Hurricane, the FBI had no information in its holdings indicating that at any time during the campaign anyone in the Trump campaign had been in contact with any Russian intelligence officials.
The speed and manner in which the FBI opened and investigated Crossfire Hurricane during the presidential election season based on raw, unanalyzed, and uncorroborated intelligence also reflected a noticeable departure from how it approached prior matters involving possible attempted foreign election interference plans aimed at the Clinton campaign.
Of course as it went along the FBI’s conduct went from biased, reckless and irresponsible all the way to criminal in the case of FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith. He falsified an email that was critical to securing surveillance approval from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to target a law-abiding American participating in politics.

Some liberals have stopped worrying about abuses by the intelligence community because their team has generally been the beneficiary. To his credit George Washington University Law School professor Jonathan Turley is not among them. He writes in the Messenger and focuses on Mr. Durham’s reporting on the infamous Steele dossier of bogus claims about Mr. Trump:


The Justice Department — as well as the media that covered it — effectively shut down a duly elected presidency, based on what turned out to be a politically engineered hoax...The fact is, in this instance, Donald Trump was correct when he said he was the target of a political hitjob funded by the Clinton campaign and maintained by virtually every media outlet. There is a word for that: disinformation.
Speaking of disinformation peddled by numerous major media outlets, there is growing evidence that actors within both the FBI and the CIA encouraged the suppression of the New York Post’s accurate 2020 reporting about Biden family enrichment schemes.

Prior to the Post’s reporting during that campaign season, social media companies were warned by the FBI—which already had the material from Hunter Biden’s laptop—to be on guard against alleged Russian propaganda or hacked information. Then after the Post reporting, Joe Biden led an aggressive effort to falsely portray the facts about his family’s river of foreign cash as some sort of Russian disinformation. And it seems that the FBI wasn’t the only helpful government outfit. On Friday the Journal’s Kimberley Strassel wrote:

It seems President-elect Biden on Nov. 4, 2020, owed thanks not only to a cabal of former intelligence officials, but to the Central Intelligence Agency.
That’s the big takeaway of this week’s interim report from House committees detailing the origins of the October 2020 disinformation letter about Hunter Biden’s laptop. An earlier release revealed that Joe Biden’s campaign helped engineer a statement from 51 former U.S. spies that claimed the laptop had “all the classic earmarks of a Russian information operation.” That letter provided Democrats, journalists and social-media companies the excuse to dismiss and censor evidence of Hunter’s influence peddling, removing an obstacle from his father’s path to victory.
Now we find out that, according to a written statement supplied to the committee, an active CIA official joined the effort to solicit more signers to the letter. The campaign to elect Joe Biden extended into Langley.
A CIA employee participating in a campaign to deceive American voters is intolerable. The FBI targeting an American citizen and lying to a court to gain surveillance powers against him is intolerable. Sadly we now know that we can’t rely on the press to guard against such abuses, and we also know that big government doesn’t reform itself.

Steven Nelson of the New York Post reports this week:

The IRS on Monday removed the “entire investigative team” from its long-running tax fraud probe of first son Hunter Biden in alleged retaliation against the whistleblower who recently contacted Congress to allege a cover-up in the case, The Post has learned.
The purge allegedly was done on the orders of the Justice Department, the whistleblower’s attorneys informed congressional leaders in a letter.
“Today the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Criminal Supervisory Special Agent we represent was informed that he and his entire investigative team are being removed from the ongoing and sensitive investigation of the high-profile, controversial subject about which our client sought to make whistleblower disclosures to Congress. He was informed the change was at the request of the Department of Justice,” Mark Lytle and Tristan Leavitt wrote...
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The first son wrote in communications retrieved from the abandoned laptop that he paid up to “half” of his income to his father, and Hunter frequently involved then-Vice President Biden in his international business relationships.
As a very modest first step in limiting the ability of the rogue agencies to abuse our constitutional rights again in 2024, Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy (R., Calif.) should demand significant FBI and CIA budget cuts, including defunding any offices that have participated in any efforts to influence what is reported and shared in U.S. media.

***

James Freeman is the co-author of “Borrowed Time: Two Centuries of Booms, Busts and Bailouts at Citi” and also the co-author of “The Cost: Trump, China and American Revival.”

***
« Last Edit: May 19, 2023, 10:18:36 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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WT: FBI vs. Whistleblowers
« Reply #1732 on: May 19, 2023, 10:20:30 AM »
fourth

FBI whistleblowers describe retaliation by bureau brass against rank and file who speak out


Three FBI whistleblowers testified before a House Judiciary subcommittee Thursday and described abuses they witnessed at the bureau and how the FBI retaliates against its employees who speak out against the agency.

Two current and former agents testified before the House Judiciary Committee’s Weaponization of the Federal Government subcommittee and made several remarkable claims.

FBI Special Agent Garret O’Boyle, FBI Staff Operations Specialist Marcus Allen and former FBI Special Agent Stephen Friend testified that the bureau suspended or revoked their security clearances.

Additionally, they testified the bureau restricted them from seeking outside employment to support themselves and their families during their unpaid suspensions after they filed whistleblower disclosures to Congress about the agency.

The FBI told The Washington Times, “The FBI’s mission is to uphold the Constitution and protect the American people. The FBI has not and will not retaliate against individuals who make protected whistleblower disclosures.”

Mr. Friend said he “made protected whistleblower disclosures to my immediate supervisor, assistant special agents in charge and special agent in charge about my concerns regarding Jan. 6 investigations assigned to my office.”

“I believe our departures from case management rules established in the FBI as domestic investigations and Operations Guide could have undermined potentially righteous prosecutions and may have been part of an effort to inflate the FBI statistics on domestic extremism,” he said.


Mr. Friend also testified that he voiced concerns that the FBI’s use of SWAT and large-scale arrest operations to apprehend suspects accused of nonviolent crimes and misdemeanors and are represented by counsel and who pledge to cooperate with the federal authorities in the event of criminal charges created an unnecessary risk to FBI personnel and public safety.

“At each level of my chain of command, leadership cautioned that despite my exemplary work performance, whistleblowing placed my otherwise bright future with the FBI at risk,” he said.

Mr. Friend accused the bureau of leaking his private medical information “in violation of HIPAA” to a reporter at The New York Times.

According to Mr. Friend, the FBI for several months refused to furnish all his training records, which were necessary to obtain a private investigator and firearms licenses in Florida. After releasing some of the records, he said, the FBI would not confirm their legitimacy to the Florida Department of Agriculture, rendering the few documents it provided “practically useless.”

He added, “The FBI denied my request to seek outside employment in obvious attempt to deprive me of the ability to support my family. Finally, the FBI Inspection Division imposed an illegal gag order in an attempt to prevent me from communicating with my family and attorneys.”

The FBI sent a letter to the committee about the revocations of two of the FBI whistleblowers on Wednesday and said Mr. Friend had his security clearance revoked because he “refused to participate in the execution of a court authorized search and arrest of a criminal subject.”

The letter continued, “During his communications with his management about his refusal to participate, he espoused an alternative narrative about the events at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.”

“On September 3, 2022, Mr. Friend entered FBI space and downloaded documents from FBI computer systems to an unauthorized removable flash drive. The FBI then required Mr. Friend to attend a Security Awareness Briefing (SAB) regarding his actions, but he refused to do so,” the letter stated.

Mr. Friend disputed these assertions before the panel Thursday, saying he did not refuse to attend the briefing but asked for a lawyer to be present and was denied.

He informed committee staffers that he could not attend the briefing because he was suspended before the scheduled date.

Mr. Friend also disputed the bureau’s claim that he participated in an interview with a Russian government news agency without the bureau’s authorization. But he said his comments were taken from other sources and used by Russia Today (now known as RT) without his knowledge.

Mr. Allen, who told the committee he held a top secret security clearance since 2001 and was employee of the year in 2019, stated that the FBI suspended his security clearance after the bureau accused him of having conspiratorial views of Jan. 6, 2021, and of sympathizing with criminal conduct.

According to the FBI’s letter to Congress, in September 2021, Mr. Allen sent an email using his FBI email account to multiple colleagues that contained links to websites and urged recipients to exercise extreme caution and discretion in pursuit of any investigative inquiries or leads pertaining to the events of Jan. 6.

“I do not. I was not in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 6, played no part in the events of Jan. 6 and I condemn all criminal activity that occurred,” he said.

“Instead, it appears that I was retaliated against because I forwarded information to my superiors and others that question the official narrative of the events of Jan. 6,” he told the lawmakers. “As a result, I was accused of promoting conspiratorial views and unreliable information. Because I did this, the FBI questioned my allegiance to the United States.”

Mr. Allen indicated he believed that the bureau retaliated against him because he shared an email that questioned the House testimony of FBI Director Christopher A. Wray, who was questioned about FBI confidential human sources and FBI employees at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

“The suggestion that the FBI‘s confidential human sources or FBI employees in some way instigated or orchestrated Jan. 6th, that’s categorically false,” Mr. Wray said during a House hearing last November in response to Rep. Clay Higgins, Louisiana Republican.

“Specifically, the Security Division found Mr. Allen espoused alternative theories to coworkers verbally and in emails and instant messages sent on the FBI systems, in apparent attempts to hinder investigative activity,” the FBI said.

One of the emails that the FBI took issue with contained a link to a website that stated, among other things, “By now it’s clear that federal law enforcement had some degree of infiltration among the crowds gathered at the Capitol on January 6,’ to which Mr. Allen commented, “brings up serious concerns about USG participation.’”

The FBI said he was told multiple times by a supervisor to “stop circulating these materials,” but Mr. Allen “continued.”

Mr. Allen’s testimony and email were corroborated by Supervisory Intelligence Analyst George Hill, who worked at the Boston field office and testified previously behind closed doors to the committee.

Mr. Hill’s video testimony was played before the committee.

In the video, Mr. Hill testified that the Washington field office pressured the Boston field office to open investigations into 140 people who traveled to Washington to attend the Trump Jan. 6 rally against what protesters saw as a rigged election.

When the Boston office asked the Washington office for more evidence, including video from the Capitol, to predicate the investigations properly, the D.C. office provided pictures of two individuals inside the Capitol.

However, the Washington office refused to provide video evidence from the Capitol out of fear it would disclose undercover officers or confidential human sources inside the Capitol, Mr. Hill said during his closed door testimony.

Mr. Allen has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit to recover his livelihood and restore his reputation. His attorney, Tristan Leavitt, filed a whistleblower complaint with the Justice Department’s Office of the Inspector General.

That complaint, according to Mr. Allen, set forth retaliation through misuse of the security clearance process, as well as reprisal against him for making a protected disclosure.

“I have never had the opportunity to defend myself. I only had one interview with the FBI, which occurred a year ago, after apparent prompting from Congress,” he said. “It has been more than a year since the FBI took my paycheck from me and we’re getting financially crushed. My family and I have been surviving on early withdrawals from our retirement accounts.”

Mr. O’Boyle told the committee he was transferred across the country only to be suspended by the FBI on his first day.

“They allowed us to sell my family’s home. They ordered me to report to the new unit when our youngest daughter was 2 weeks old. Then on my first day on the new assignment, they suspended me, rendering my family homeless,” he said.

Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, Ohio Republican, said the panel has talked to over two dozen FBI whistleblowers.

“If you’re a parent, attending a school board meeting, you’re pro-life or praying at a clinic, or you’re a Catholic, simply go into Mass, you are a target of the government, target of the FBI. And maybe even worse than all that,” Mr. Jordan said. “If you’re one of the thousands of good employees, brave whistleblowers who’s willing to come forward, you’re one of these folks willing to come forward and talk about what’s going on out there, you get attacked, they will try to crush you.”

The top Democrat on the committee, Rep. Stacey Plaskett of the Virgin Islands, excoriated each of the whistleblowers, who had served in the military, and listed names of recent federal employees who had leaked classified or top secret information.

“Just because someone served our country, in the military, and that they do work for a federal agency, does not exempt them immediately from being someone who could potentially commit espionage or lose security clearances,” she said. “Should we give everybody a pass just because they served our country? We respect their service, but if they break the law, then that means they have to face the consequences.”

• Kerry Picket can be reached at kpicket@washingtontimes.com.

Crafty_Dog

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Yet another chance for GM to take a win from AMcC
« Reply #1733 on: May 19, 2023, 05:09:11 PM »
Democrats Cook the FBI’s Books on Domestic Terrorism
By ANDREW C. MCCARTHY
May 19, 2023 12:29 PM

The projection of dystopian America mired in a terrorist war waged by the Democrats’ political adversaries is false.
Even before the Capitol riot of January 6, 2021, congressional Democrats had formulated a plan to project the illusion that the most perilous threat to American national security — not just in our time but in our history — was domestic terrorism fueled by white supremacists. This was, and remains, a political narrative through and through. Democrats are not even subtle in signaling to the public that they should think of Trump supporters — not just the unabashed MAGA faction but any of the over 70 million Americans who found Trump preferable to Democrats — as white supremacists, or at least sympathizers of white supremacists, and ergo abettors of domestic terrorism.


I laid this plan bare in January 2021. Again, even before the Capitol riot, House Democrats were proposing their so-called “Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act.” They haven’t gotten it enacted yet, but they’re trying hard, calculating that they can demagogue the Republicans they need to get it across the finish line by masquerading their political project as pro–law enforcement and pro–national security. And, of course, by inveighing that anyone who opposes the Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act must necessarily be in favor of domestic terrorism, right? That’s why House Democrats, while they had a slim majority, reintroduced and passed the legislation in 2022. That’s why, just a few days ago, Dick Durbin, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate, rolled out his symmetrical version in the Judiciary Committee.

The objective of this proposal is not to improve national security. As I explained in 2021, and as NR later editorialized, if that were the aim, Democrats would not engage in the subterfuge of attempting to change federal law’s perfectly serviceable definition of domestic terrorism — for the purpose of insulating jihadists and left-wing radicals while targeting their phantom white supremacists (i.e., Republicans, pro-life activists, parents who object to woke-progressive indoctrination in the schools, et al.).


The real purpose of this legislation is twofold: (1) stigmatize as terrorism policies that progressives oppose; (2) establish in law requirements that induce the FBI and other federal agencies to inflate the number of domestic-terrorism investigations, the better to insist that — though you’d never know it given the absence of, you know, actual terrorist attacks — the country is under a white-supremacist siege.

Exposing this demagogic scheme is an important purpose of House Judiciary Committee chairman Jim Jordan’s subcommittee on the weaponization of government. As our Brittany Bernstein has reported, that subcommittee held a hearing on Thursday at which three FBI agents testified as whistleblowers, relating both how the bureau has been politicized into serving this Democratic political gambit, and how they have been retaliated against for reporting the situation to Congress.


Brittany noted that Thursday’s hearing focused, in part, on testimony from Agent Steve Friend, a twelve-year veteran and SWAT-team member, who has detailed how the FBI labors to inflate the number of terrorism cases and uses SWAT resources unnecessarily in arrest scenarios to create the impression that it is apprehending dangerous terrorists:

Friend said the FBI’s handling of the January 6 Capitol riot-related investigations “deviated from standard practice and created a false impression with respect to the threat of DVE [i.e., domestic violent extremism] nationwide.”. . . He testified that the FBI is in need of reform in several areas: “the integrated program management system incentivizes the use of inappropriate investigatory processes and tools to achieve arbitrary statistical accomplishments” and there is “mission creep within the national security branch [that] has refocused counterterrorism from legitimate foreign actors to political opponents within our borders. . . . The FBI weaponizes process crimes and reinterprets laws to initiate pretextual prosecutions and persecute its political enemies[.]”

Jordan’s report excerpts portions of a subcommittee interview with Friend, in which he explains that the bureau is deviating from its normal case-opening and accounting practices in order to make it appear that there are more domestic-terrorism cases and that the suspected terrorists are making mayhem throughout the country. As you’d expect, these shenanigans are woven out of the events of January 6.

That should tell you much of what you need to know. The operating premise of congressional Democrats, the Biden administration, and — therefore — the FBI is that the Capitol riot was a terrorist attack. That is absurd, for reasons I explicated when Attorney General Merrick Garland, putting his office in the service of this narrative, preposterously claimed that the Capitol riot was the most dangerous threat to American democracy he had ever seen.

As a Clinton Justice Department official, Garland supervised the prosecution of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing — a terrorist attack in which a U.S. courthouse was destroyed, 168 people were murdered, and another 759 people were wounded. The Capitol riot was nothing like that, just like it was not like that era’s other jihadist attacks and plots — the World Trade Center bombing, the (unsuccessful) plot to bomb New York City landmarks, the “Bojinka” plot to blow U.S. airliners out of the sky (in which a tourist was killed and a plane nearly downed in a dry-run explosion), the bombing of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania (destroying buildings and killing 224 people), the Khobar Towers bombing (destroying a building and killing 19 U.S. Air Force members), the bombing of the U.S.S. Cole (killing 17 U.S. Navy members and nearly sinking a destroyer), and the 9/11 atrocities (killing nearly 3,000 Americans, annihilating the World Trade Center, badly damaging the Pentagon, and resulting in a missile-like explosion when Flight 93 crash-landed in Shanksville, Pa.).

What happened at the Capitol on January 6 was a protest that turned violent, devolving into a riot. But no one tried to destroy the Capitol (it sustained property damage that was trivial compared with the destructive force of a terrorist attack). No police and other security personnel were killed (though over a hundred were assaulted and some sustained serious injuries; three rioters died, two of natural causes trigged by the frenzy, one killed by a Capitol police officer). The worst of the violence was over quickly, the Capitol was cleared in a few hours, and so little damage was done — compared with a terrorist attack — that lawmakers were able to reconvene in the Capitol that evening.


It does not diminish the egregiousness of a riot to observe the incontestable fact that it was not an act of domestic terrorism — just like a murder, horrible as it is, is not a terrorist attack. And bad as the Capitol riot was, it did not approach in duration or lethality the radical left-wing rioting that beset this country for months after George Floyd’s death in police custody — rioting that Democrats take pain to exclude from their “domestic terrorism” bookkeeping because, sympathetic to the radicals’ ends, progressives turn a blind eye to their means.

But not January 6. You’re to see that not as a riot, but as domestic terrorism.

From that premise, the FBI’s books are being cooked to make its one “terrorism” case, based on an uprising in one place at one time (over a few hours), look as if it were over a thousand terrorism cases, posing persistent peril all over the country. To understand how, you need to know how the bureau usually works.


Routinely, the FBI field office in the place where the crime mainly happened (which is in the federal district where the case will be prosecuted) heads up the investigation. If the crime involves interstate activity, or if relevant participants or witnesses need to be pursued in other parts of the country, the field office whose agents are running the case sends out investigative “leads” to other field offices. Those field offices elsewhere in the country pursue these leads, which could just be interviewing a witness or could be something more serious like executing a search or arrest warrant. The fruits of those leads are then transmitted to the field office running the case.


To take an example, from 1993 through 1996, when I ran the prosecution of the Blind Sheikh’s jihadist cell – an actual terrorism case – the FBI’s New York field office was responsible for the investigation. Over those years, it sent out hundreds of leads to FBI offices throughout the country (and other parts of the world) to support the case, but it was still just one case, in Manhattan, with lots of leads returnable to the FBI in New York.

That is not what has happened with the Capitol riot. The FBI’s Washington Field Office is running the investigation, but instead of sending out leads, it often sends out directions to other field offices to open new cases in the places where subjects of the Capitol riot reside (and note that the Justice Department has prosecuted over 1,000 people from nearly all 50 states in connection with January 6).


As Agent Friend told Jordan:

The manipulative casefile practice creates false and misleading crime statistics. Instead of hundreds of investigations stemming from a single, black swan incident at the Capitol, FBI and DOJ officials point to significant increases in domestic violent extremism and terrorism around the United States.

He adds:

By opening a separate case for each individual as opposed to one case with however many subjects are involved, they’ve turned one case into a thousand cases. And by spreading them to the field they’ve given the impression that those domestic terror cases are around the country when, in fact, the subjects, if they committed any sort of violation or infraction, they committed a crime at the Capitol on one day as opposed to being a cell that’s operating in El Paso or Cleveland.

Of course, it’s not just turning one case into a thousand cases, but into a thousand terrorism cases. As another whistleblower, Agent Garret O’Boyle explains, the FBI classified “every single January 6 case . . . as a domestic terrorism case,” even though many of these cases involve “petty crimes” — misdemeanors such as trespassing and disorderly conduct.

The effect? The Washington Examiner’s Jerry Dunleavy crunches the numbers:

The bureau and the DHS revealed the FBI was conducting approximately 1,400 pending domestic terrorism investigations as of the end of fiscal 2020, and that jumped to roughly 2,700 domestic terrorism investigations by the end of fiscal 2021. The U.S. government report said the FBI arrested approximately 180 domestic terrorism subjects in 2020, while it arrested roughly 800 such subjects in 2021. The FBI and DHS said that “a significant portion” of the 2021 investigations “were directly related to the unlawful activities during the January 2021 siege on the U.S. Capitol.”

Thus, Matt Olson, the chief of the Biden Justice Department’s National Security Division, in his best “sky is falling” voice, has told Jordan’s committee that “the number of FBI investigations of suspected domestic violent extremism has more than doubled since the spring of 2020.” Yes, I’m sure you’ve noticed the mass-murderous explosions all over the country, right? Well, no . . . Olson concedes that a “that number does include the Jan. 6 cases,” and that while “not all of them are characterized as violent extremists . . . many are, and those do account for at least a significant portion of that jump over the past two years in the number of investigations.”

You don’t say?


The FBI is doing what Democrats have been demanding, what they’ve been trying — now, with a push from Durbin and Senate Democrats — to codify into statutory law: manufacture the perception that the country is enveloped by white-supremacist domestic terrorists.

Remember when, on October 4, 2021, Garland issued his outrageous memo directing the FBI and U.S. attorney’s offices throughout America to harass parents who dared to protest the conversion of schools into laboratories of woke-progressivism? It turned out that Garland was acting at the urging of the Biden White House, which had collaborated with progressive activists and the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security to craft a letter that described the parents as “domestic terrorists.” They were falsely ginning up threat incidents, many of which were exaggerated or fabricated, but which Garland would have the FBI and federal prosecutors investigate as potential terrorist activity occurring nationwide.

At the time, Jordan became alarmed that, based on Garland’s directive, the FBI had developed domestic-terrorism “threat tags” for these cases. Jordan feared the threat tags meant the bureau was using the Patriot Act and other counterterrorism authorities to monitor protesting parents. Well, they may try to do that ultimately, but as I pointed out at the time, the immediate purpose of the threat tag was to brand these investigations of local dust-ups as a dire nationwide threat, fit for a full-court press by federal, state, and local law enforcement:

Purporting to act pursuant to Garland’s October 4 memo, these top officials instructed FBI personnel that the bureau would henceforth use a new “threat tag” created by the two divisions. The “threat tag” is to be applied to all “investigations and assessments of threats specifically directed against school board administrators, board members, teachers, and staff.” Its purpose is to “scope this threat on a national level and provide an opportunity for comprehensive analysis of the threat picture for effective engagement with law enforcement partners at all levels.”

Creating an illusion of a domestic-terrorism siege by overhauling the way federal agencies account for investigations has always been the point of the Democrats’ push for Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act legislation. To repeat what I said in early 2021:

The Democrats’ new proposal . . . would target domestic terrorism in an unprecedented way. There would be no new domestic terrorism crimes, at least not yet; but there would be a new concentration on investigating, arresting, and prosecuting domestic terrorists. Just not all domestic terrorists. In fact, just a very specific breed of domestic terrorist: white supremacists and neo-Nazis — i.e., what Democrats consider to be right-wing terrorism or, more specifically, Trump-inspired insurrectionists in the wake of the January 6 Capitol riot.


The proposed legislation would require domestic terrorism units to be created in the Department of Homeland Security, the Justice Department, and the FBI, in addition to a new “Domestic Terrorism Executive Committee” made up of high-ranking federal law-enforcement officials. Besides staffing up, these agencies would be required to file semi-annual reports for the next decade, outlining the extent of the domestic terrorist threat and the efforts they are making to combat it — how many investigations, arrests, indictments, etc. There would also be a mandate to establish “Training to Combat Domestic Terrorism” so that the feds could instruct state, local, and tribal law-enforcement in how to detect domestic terrorists, keep them from infiltrating police forces, and prosecute them.

But again, Democrats are not interested in combating all  domestic terrorism. Not only have they effectively excluded from coverage American-based jihadists who are associated with or inspired by foreign terrorist organizations and their state sponsors. The new proposal, again and again, is explicit in focusing on “white supremacists and neo-Nazis.”

The required reports, for example, would have to “include an assessment of the domestic terrorism threat posed by White supremacists and neo-Nazis, including White supremacist and neo-Nazi infiltration of Federal, State, and local law enforcement agencies.” They would itemize “any White-supremacist-related incidents or attempted incidents” that have occurred since April 19, 1995.

Why that date? Because that’s the date of the aforementioned Oklahoma City bombing. In Democrat lore, served up by the house organ itself, the New York Times, Timothy McVeigh was inspired to bomb the federal courthouse by The Turner Diaries. That’s a novel in which a group of white-supremacists attacks . . . yes . . . the Capitol, in their racist zeal to overthrow the government. Democrats would have us instructed, by writing into law, that there is a straight line from the Oklahoma City bombing to the Capitol riot — a line reflective of an existential threat that has thrummed through the United States for decades, with imminent terrorist attacks now a clear and present danger all over the country.


This is nonsense, of course. There are ideologically driven militants of many stripes. Undoubtedly, there is a smattering of white-supremacism among the -isms, but to suggest that they are ubiquitous and on the rampage — or, indeed, that they are more numerous and dangerous than radical leftists (e.g., Antifa and Black Lives Matter) and jihadists — is delusional.

The projection of dystopian America mired in a terrorist war waged by the Democrats’ political adversaries is false. Since it doesn’t exist in reality, congressional Democrats and the Biden administration are trying to create it by FBI bookkeeping. As we’ve seen over the last eight years, and again this week with the release of the Durham Report, when Democrats say jump, the FBI says, “How high?

G M

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The one true branch of government
« Reply #1734 on: May 21, 2023, 03:13:41 PM »
https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2023/05/a_cabal_of_sociopaths.html

Not subject to your vote no matter how hard you vote.


Crafty_Dog

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1736 on: May 24, 2023, 06:34:34 AM »
Shades of rumored transvestite J. Edgar Hoover!

G M

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1737 on: May 24, 2023, 06:37:20 AM »
Shades of rumored transvestite J. Edgar Hoover!

The FBI never quit that pattern of conduct, no matter who was supposed to be running it.


Crafty_Dog

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1738 on: May 24, 2023, 06:42:47 AM »
DC is the Rome of our day.

Coincidentally, at the moment I find myself rewatching the Spartacus series.

G M

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1739 on: May 24, 2023, 06:48:17 AM »
DC is the Rome of our day.

Coincidentally, at the moment I find myself rewatching the Spartacus series.

Or, if you want to get biblical, the Babylon of our day.


ccp

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G M

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Re: DC - > Rome , Babylon or / and
« Reply #1742 on: May 24, 2023, 07:23:59 AM »
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodom_and_Gomorrah

https://bible.knowing-jesus.com/topics/Babylon

Funny how many verses seem to apply to the FUSA, especially from the book of Revelation.

Must be a coincidence...


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ccp

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Crafty_Dog

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Re: The war on the rule of law; the Deep State
« Reply #1749 on: May 26, 2023, 07:14:36 PM »
Well, that sure did not age well!

In fairness, I don't remember anyone calling Garland the scumbag hack he has turned out to be back when he was nominated for SCOTUS