Mueller dismisses top FBI agent in Russia probe for anti-Trump texts

7,732,955 Views | 49406 Replies | Last: 3 days ago by Garrelli 5000
titan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
S
aggiehawg said:

will25u said:


He has it backwards. He has to prove his assertions or at least give enough corroboration to lend credibility to them.

Real intelligence agents do not speak in absolutes, they speak in degrees of confidence. When Tenet supposedly told W that the case for Saddam having WMDs in Iraq was a "slamdunk" was not spook speak. Nor do I believe for a second that any of the intelligence reports he was given used such a term nor anything close to it.

Even when the raid on Bin Laden was approved, there was no certainty that it was really him at that location.

Back to Steele. He was offered a million dollars to provide further proof of his accusations. He could not. That alone disproves the validity of his information.
You are absolutely right that it was not. The entire business involves a careful combination of nuggets of fact with very informed and experienced (with the intel subject in question) speculation. But its a very dubious assumption that any discipline worth the name of intelligence services has existed in the 21st Century. Certainly, since Obama not. Covid was incredible--there was no way in the 20th Century we would have had only China's word to tell us what it was and what was happening there.
ravingfans
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
RyanM58699717 said:

will25u said:

RyanM58699717 said:

Interesting events unfolding.

I think Durham is done, but I also think there is something more than just a report coming [not indictments].



Welcome back. What do you think might be coming?
Special counsel regulations require that if AG Garland interfered that it gets reported to Congress once Durham is finished. That could be coming.

Could be something like that, which could have a Saturday night massacre impact.


Let's see, hmm does it get reported to the current congress who will aggressively pursue justice at least to the full extent they pursued the J6 idiocy???

Or does it wait until the new congress is seated in January??
aggiehawg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Quote:

Let's see, hmm does it get reported to the current congress who will aggressively pursue justice at least to the full extent they pursued the J6 idiocy???

Or does it wait until the new congress is seated in January??
Two things at play here. When a new Congress is sworn in on January 3-4, 2023 with the balance of power changing, the committees are reset. I'll give McConnell credit for neutering Judiciary Committee with equal number of members but hopefully that will also be under Republican control.

So Durham can pare down his staff while he is writing his final report until January. Both House and Senate Judiciary Committees can request him to testify to his findings. At that point, Garland would be hard pressed not to release the report. (provided Durham keeps the grand jury stuff in a separate appendices so as to not reveal secret grand jury materails.)

A scathing report on Garland's perfidy and malfeasance might tip the balance to warrant his impeachment and removal by the Senate. Or create such a s***storm to get Garland to resign.
whatthehey78
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
HIS will be done!
Alexander, Caesar, Charlemagne, and myself founded empires; but upon what foundation did we rest the creations of our genius? Upon force! But Jesus Christ founded His upon love; and at this hour millions of men would die for Him. - Napoleon Bonaparte
Line Ate Member
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
So Garland almost made it to the Supreme Court. Think about what he would have done there in regards to what he has done to circumvent the law as AG.
aggiehawg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Line Ate Member said:

So Garland almost made it to the Supreme Court. Think about what he would have done there in regards to what he has done to circumvent the law as AG.
The country really dodged a bullet on that one.
fka ftc
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Not fully dodged though. Hope his wings get clipped next Tuesday then he should be neutered euthanized when the new reps and senators are sworn in.

Edited to more appropriate comarison.
aggiehawg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Neutered would be a better term.
nortex97
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Decent piece by McCarthy about the FBI's descent into further political corruption over the past 25 or so years. Fair use excerpt:

Quote:

It is not so difficult for a single agency to assimilate the divergent law-enforcement and domestic-security missions when the security threats are foreign powers. Things get more complicated, however, when the security threats are American citizens, whether acting on behalf of foreign powers or participating in domestic groups. The scheming of Americans against their own government and fellow citizens is invariably bound up with dissent, association with like-minded dissenters, and other acts protected by constitutional guarantees that aliens cannot fully claim.

The Supreme Court grappled with this vexing challenge in the 1972 Keithcase, when it first required the FBI and Justice Department to obtain judicial warrants before conducting surveillance against Americans suspected of plotting to overthrow the government. In the aftermath of the Church Committee, Congress dubiously extended the logic of Keith to foreign threats, enacting the 1978 Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act (FISA), which requires warrants from a secret federal court before the FBI may monitor suspected agents of foreign powers whether those agents are American citizens or aliens. The proceedings of that tribunal, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC), are classified. There is no discovery and minimal due process for surveillance.

The FISA system does not keep the police honest.

Russiagate illustrates what a disaster this has led to, but it's been coming for a long time. After the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, the Clinton administration decided to regard jihadist terrorism as a law-enforcement issue, prioritizing the FBI as the nation's top security agency even in liaison with foreign governments, where the CIA had enjoyed pride of place. This subordination of the bureau's law-enforcement protocols to its domestic-security mission intensified after 9/11, when, understandably, there was intense criticism of the Clinton administration's "wall" a set of procedural safeguards put in place to prevent counterintelligence operations, with their minimal due-process standards, from covertly steering criminal investigations.

Such compartmentalization is a commonplace in law enforcement where, for example, if the government becomes aware of information subject to a confidentiality privilege (say, attorneyclient or doctorpatient communications), police and prosecutors are forbidden from using that information to build criminal cases.

But compartmentalization has no place in national-security operations, where any available intelligence must be exploited to safeguard the homeland and American interests abroad. From a law-enforcement perspective, the wall made sense. As a national-security policy, it was lunacy and jihadist terrorism is a national-security issue. Because the wall effectively barred intelligence agents from sharing information with their criminal-investigator counterparts, the bureau missed key evidence of terrorist plotting whose recognition might have prevented the suicide hijackings.

In the overcorrection to that failure, the bureau became an intelligence agency with a law-enforcement sideline. Except it is not an effective intelligence agency, and its prioritization of secrecy over due process has eroded its competence and trustworthiness as a law-enforcement agency.

Russiagate is the fallout.

Investigations are supposed to be run in field offices, to give agents insulation from the politics of Washington. Headquarters performs the indispensable role of supervision, preventing agents, who get very invested in their cases, from transgressing FBI protocols designed to keep them within legal bounds.

But in 2016, in Hooveresque fashion, FBI headquarters decided to get operational. Under the hands-on management of Andrew McCabe, the bureau's deputy director at the time, coordinating closely with then-director James Comey, the top of the FBI's hierarchy took over the politically fraught investigations of the two major-party candidates. When headquarters becomes the investigator, there is no detached supervisor to keep it on the straight and narrow.

Internal inquiries by the Justice Department's inspector general established significant political bias against Donald Trump by the bureau's investigators. It redounded to Hillary Clinton's benefit. First, FBI headquarters cleared her of wrongdoing in the emails scandal, despite finding she'd recklessly mishandled classified information and destroyed thousands of government records. Clinton still grouses that FBI disclosures cost her the election; she may be right, but she wouldn't have been able to run if Comey had not broken protocol, arrogated the Justice Department's charging discretion to himself, and publicly exonerated her (which is never the job of an investigator or prosecutor).

Then, as prosecutions in Durham's investigation have revealed, the bureau knowingly took Clinton-campaign-generated opposition research much of it outlandish and uncorroborated and used it as the premise to investigate Trump as a clandestine agent of Russia. When the government investigation leaked to the media, the Clinton campaign predictably exploited the news in the race's final weeks. (She lost because her weaknesses as a candidate were too profound to overcome, but the TrumpRussia "collusion" narrative benefited her campaign and was a coup for congressional Democrats during Trump's first years in office.) The FBI well knew that the partisan sources of this information were suspect. When Clinton lawyer Michael Sussmann brought the FBI patently skewed data suggesting that Trump had a communications back channel with the Kremlin, headquarters hid Sussmann's involvement from its own investigators, falsely claiming that the data had come from the Justice Department. When the bureau took farcical "intelligence reporting" from former British spy Christopher Steele, who it knew was generating the reporting for the Clinton campaign, it offered Steele $1 million if he could corroborate his allegation that Trump was in a "conspiracy of cooperation" with Vladimir Putin's regime. Steele could not verify his claims, yet the FBI relied on them in four sworn "verified applications" for FISC warrants, submitted 90 days apart, from October 2016 through June 2017 i.e., well into the first year of Trump's presidency. Agents withheld from the court Steele's connection to Clinton's campaign and the fact that Steele's main source, Igor Danchenko, had conceded to the FBI that the anti-Trump reporting was bogus.

In sum, the FBI did what the Bill Clintonera wall regulations were meant to prevent: Lacking grounds for a criminal case, the bureau exploited its counterintelligence authority in hopes of eventually finding something that could be used to drive Trump from office. The FBI did this because, as an intelligence agency serving the progressive political establishment, it was confident that its sources could be concealed from Congress and that its highly classified submissions to the FISC would never see the light of day. When this proved a poor calculation, it led to a more comprehensive audit, which uncovered that quite apart from Russiagate the bureau's submissions to the FISA court over five years (201519) were rife with misrepresentations and abuse. In this, the FBI had flouted safeguards put in place two decades ago precisely because of a similar raft of misrepresentations that enraged the FISC in the 1990s. In 2016, assessing its propensity to misreport its counterintelligence monitoring of American citizens, the FISC bewailed the FBI's institutional "lack of candor."

Enough is enough…

He's vastly more optimistic about 'reforming' the organization than I. Smart, nice guy, but no idea why he thinks some portion of the CCP senate caucus would ever sign off on sufficient reforms to pass legislation ensuring it happens. For that matter, I doubt the GOP ever sticks together and makes it happen unanimously either. The swamp loves the FBI.

Myself, I see it's present state as, while utterly horrid/evil, inevitable. Born of totalitarian leftist political dreams, it's never going to be 'good' or stable. The data posted on this thread alone shows any neutral observer why 'FBI delende est.'
aggiehawg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Quote:

The data posted on this thread alone shows any neutral observer why 'FBI delende est.'
Certainly not where I was expecting to wind up when I first engaged on this thread and doing my research.

What a farce, without the humor.
will25u
How long do you want to ignore this user?
TRADUCTOR
How long do you want to ignore this user?
That sucks ass.
aggiehawg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
From the article:

Quote:

The key point Barr made was that criminal investigations require evidence and meticulous process. During the Durham investigation, Trump supporters who hoped to see Comey in an orange jumpsuit were either unaware of, or ignored, the requirements of a criminal investigation. "I tried to explain to people that when you're going to charge in order to pursue a government official for a crime when that official is performing their duties and doesn't do anything that is facially criminal, you need very strong proof of corrupt motives," Barr said. "And absent that, there wasn't going to be any case."
Gee, Barr, how about Comey's own memos about his hatred and distrust of Trump? Then couple that with not only accepting but embracing the POS Steele Dossier as gospel and that's not circumstantial evidence of his intent at the very least? How about Comey's self-pronounced fear that Trump would think that Comey was trying to blackmail him? I mean, if he wasn't flexing at Trump why would that even occur to him? And this was at a time in early 2017 when Comey already knew the Dossier was crap. But he brought it up to Trump anyway, without also telling him the FBI had found no corroboration.

It was Comey who sent in Strzok and Pienta to violate all protocols and procedures to sandbag General Flynn. That's not evidence?
whatthehey78
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
These people make me sad that I wore a uniform to "defend" the likes of them and the lies they spew.
titan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
S

Robert Heinlein has a more upbeat take on what could happen if your view became a common one among those who served worldwide.
Sid Farkas
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
aggiehawg said:

From the article:

Quote:

The key point Barr made was that criminal investigations require evidence and meticulous process. During the Durham investigation, Trump supporters who hoped to see Comey in an orange jumpsuit were either unaware of, or ignored, the requirements of a criminal investigation. "I tried to explain to people that when you're going to charge in order to pursue a government official for a crime when that official is performing their duties and doesn't do anything that is facially criminal, you need very strong proof of corrupt motives," Barr said. "And absent that, there wasn't going to be any case."
Gee, Barr, how about Comey's own memos about his hatred and distrust of Trump? Then couple that with not only accepting but embracing the POS Steele Dossier as gospel and that's not circumstantial evidence of his intent at the very least? How about Comey's self-pronounced fear that Trump would think that Comey was trying to blackmail him? I mean, if he wasn't flexing at Trump why would that even occur to him? And this was at a time in early 2017 when Comey already knew the Dossier was crap. But he brought it up to Trump anyway, without also telling him the FBI had found no corroboration.

It was Comey who sent in Strzok and Pienta to violate all protocols and procedures to sandbag General Flynn. That's not evidence?


This standard does not apply to associates of Trump or Republicans in general.
txags92
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Sid Farkas said:

aggiehawg said:

From the article:

Quote:

The key point Barr made was that criminal investigations require evidence and meticulous process. During the Durham investigation, Trump supporters who hoped to see Comey in an orange jumpsuit were either unaware of, or ignored, the requirements of a criminal investigation. "I tried to explain to people that when you're going to charge in order to pursue a government official for a crime when that official is performing their duties and doesn't do anything that is facially criminal, you need very strong proof of corrupt motives," Barr said. "And absent that, there wasn't going to be any case."
Gee, Barr, how about Comey's own memos about his hatred and distrust of Trump? Then couple that with not only accepting but embracing the POS Steele Dossier as gospel and that's not circumstantial evidence of his intent at the very least? How about Comey's self-pronounced fear that Trump would think that Comey was trying to blackmail him? I mean, if he wasn't flexing at Trump why would that even occur to him? And this was at a time in early 2017 when Comey already knew the Dossier was crap. But he brought it up to Trump anyway, without also telling him the FBI had found no corroboration.

It was Comey who sent in Strzok and Pienta to violate all protocols and procedures to sandbag General Flynn. That's not evidence?


This standard does not apply to associates of Trump or Republicans in general.
Doesn't matter what evidence you have. You could have video and a signed confession of them raping a child and you will not get a DC area jury to convict a democrat politician or political operative/bureaucrat.
will25u
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Some Junkie Cosmonaut
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Paul looks like an incel.
Sid Farkas
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
I'd love to tweet back at the FBI on that one. But I figure I'm on their list of insurrectionists already…and I don't need to push my luck and wind up locked-up, uncharged for months in a DC jail for having the temerity to exercise my right to free speech.
aggiehawg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG


Watch about 10 minutes statrting at 3:21 minutes. There was sealed testimony from Crowdstrike's head honcho, Shawn Henry, to House Intel committee (Schiff) that they never could prove Russia had anything to do with the DNC hack. And that testimony occurred in December 2017, when this thread started.

Wrtten article on same subject is HERE

Helluva journey on this thread.
will25u
How long do you want to ignore this user?
This belong here?
TexAgs91
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
will25u said:


Barr said:

And I think it is ruinous to the country, and the next Republican administration is going to have to clean things out."

Thanks to you being pretty much done with your job long before you left office there probably won't be another Republican administration.
TRADUCTOR
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Treasonous swine.
FJB
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG


Didn't see this get much play but very interesting timing.
whatthehey78
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Boy! Do these people have something they want to remain hidden or what? Can't be good for them or their agency!
Alexander, Caesar, Charlemagne, and myself founded empires; but upon what foundation did we rest the creations of our genius? Upon force! But Jesus Christ founded His upon love; and at this hour millions of men would die for Him. - Napoleon Bonaparte
titan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
S

Considering what they claimed was a simple case, for the FBI to "have more info on Seth" probably means the Assange version tied to the DNC as the culrprits is correct.

As for Barr, don't forget the peculiar connection to Epstien a thread on F16 documented that was news to hear and might have made more sense of what saw in 2020 if knew then.
aggiehawg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
titan said:


Considering what they claimed was a simple case, for the FBI to "have more info on Seth" probably means the Assange version tied to the DNC as the culrprits is correct.

As for Barr, don't forget the peculiar connection to Epstien a thread on F16 documented that was news to hear and might have made more sense of what saw in 2020 if knew then.
Botched robbery attempt, not a complicated crime scene. That was the official story since his death in 2016.

The FBI has been asked via FOIA over and over again for records pertaining to Rich. At first they claimed they did not have any. And then it became using the courts to kick the can down the road for the next six years.

Now the FBI admits they were lying all of that time.
akm91
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Quote:

Now the FBI admits they were lying all of that time.
Seems like the FBI's been lying to the public for decades now.
"And liberals, being liberals, will double down on failure." - dedgod
whatthehey78
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
aggiehawg said:

titan said:


Considering what they claimed was a simple case, for the FBI to "have more info on Seth" probably means the Assange version tied to the DNC as the culrprits is correct.

As for Barr, don't forget the peculiar connection to Epstien a thread on F16 documented that was news to hear and might have made more sense of what saw in 2020 if knew then.
Botched robbery attempt, not a complicated crime scene. That was the official story since his death in 2016.

The FBI has been asked via FOIA over and over again for records pertaining to Rich. At first they claimed they did not have any. And then it became using the courts to kick the can down the road for the next six years.

Now the FBI admits they were lying all of that time.
Should be a RULE. FBI lies - "Proceed straight to jail...do not pass GO...do not collect $200" Oh, and throw away the key!!!!!
Alexander, Caesar, Charlemagne, and myself founded empires; but upon what foundation did we rest the creations of our genius? Upon force! But Jesus Christ founded His upon love; and at this hour millions of men would die for Him. - Napoleon Bonaparte
richardag
How long do you want to ignore this user?
txags92 said:

Sid Farkas said:

aggiehawg said:

From the article:

Quote:

The key point Barr made was that criminal investigations require evidence and meticulous process. During the Durham investigation, Trump supporters who hoped to see Comey in an orange jumpsuit were either unaware of, or ignored, the requirements of a criminal investigation. "I tried to explain to people that when you're going to charge in order to pursue a government official for a crime when that official is performing their duties and doesn't do anything that is facially criminal, you need very strong proof of corrupt motives," Barr said. "And absent that, there wasn't going to be any case."
Gee, Barr, how about Comey's own memos about his hatred and distrust of Trump? Then couple that with not only accepting but embracing the POS Steele Dossier as gospel and that's not circumstantial evidence of his intent at the very least? How about Comey's self-pronounced fear that Trump would think that Comey was trying to blackmail him? I mean, if he wasn't flexing at Trump why would that even occur to him? And this was at a time in early 2017 when Comey already knew the Dossier was crap. But he brought it up to Trump anyway, without also telling him the FBI had found no corroboration.

It was Comey who sent in Strzok and Pienta to violate all protocols and procedures to sandbag General Flynn. That's not evidence?
This standard does not apply to associates of Trump or Republicans in general.
Doesn't matter what evidence you have. You could have video and a signed confession of them raping a child and you will not get a DC area jury to convict a democrat politician or political operative/bureaucrat.
Sounds a lot like Hunter Biden, a perfect example of the complete lack of equal treatment under the law.
Among the latter, under pretence of governing they have divided their nations into two classes, wolves and sheep.”
Thomas Jefferson, Letter to Edward Carrington, January 16, 1787
will25u
How long do you want to ignore this user?
It's been a month... So, where is Durham?? Sure he has run out of money by now.

will25u
How long do you want to ignore this user?
This is pertinent here.


Ellis Wyatt
How long do you want to ignore this user?
will25u said:


...but they acquiesced anyway.
FJB
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Coincidence with the leak of the Biden classified docs?
Who is John Galt?

2026
First Page Last Page
Page 1399 of 1412
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.