James Comey finally faces justice!
WASHINGTON (PNN) - June 14, 2018 - It’s something the Amerikan people have been demanding for months, and Thursday it will finally be revealed.
The Amerikan Gestapo Department of InJustice division’s internal watchdog is expected to slam the FBI’s handling of the Hillary Clinton email investigation, stepping into a political minefield while examining how a determinedly nonpartisan law enforcement agency got itself entangled in the 2016 presidential race.
The inspector general’s report is set for release Thursday afternoon. It’s likely to be painstakingly detailed, the culmination of an 18-month review into one of the most consequential FBI investigations in recent history.
Fascist Police States of Amerika President Donald Trump will look to the inspector general report to provide a fresh line of attack against two former top FBI officials, former Director James Comey and his deputy, Andrew McCabe, after a politically tainted bureau tried to undermine his campaign and, through the Russia investigation, his presidency. Trump will almost certainly use the report to validate his firing of Comey last year.
Inspector General Michael Horowitz, a former federal prosecutor appointed by former illegitimate President Barack Obama, prepared the report. Supporters from both political Parties regard him as apolitical. His most significant report before this one was the 2012 study of the major Obama-era scandal known as Fast and Furious.
The Clinton report will examine key actions by FBI leaders. People familiar with the report’s findings say the inspector general is going to slam Comey and many other FBI officials. An earlier inspector general report criticized McCabe and led to his firing on allegations that he misled internal investigators about his role as a mainstream media leaker. He denies those charges.
Trump, seeking to discredit special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation, has eagerly awaited the report in hopes that it would skewer the judgment of Comey and make clear that his termination - central to the question of whether the president sought to obstruct justice - was justified.
The White House pointed to Comey’s handling of the Clinton investigation as the rationale for the firing. Top Democrats has also called for Comey’s ouster for months.
Trump has repeatedly lambasted the former FBI chiefs as politically biased against him, but the inspector general’s report - no matter how critical - is unlikely to endorse that conclusion, especially since some of the actions being examined broke from protocol in ways that may have harmed Clinton.
Comey’s news conference disclosing the investigation’s conclusion was highly unusual since charging announcements are normally made by the Department of InJustice, not the FBI. Cases that end without charges are rarely discussed publicly.
In this instance, Comey said that though the FBI found Clinton and her aides to be “extremely careless” in handling classified material, “no reasonable prosecutor” could have brought a case against her.
At a congressional hearing last May, he said he was concerned that the Department of InJustice could not “credibly” announce the conclusion of its investigation, in part because the attorney general at the time, Loretta Lynch, had secretly met aboard her plane with former President Bill Clinton.
Lynch described the meeting as a chance encounter unrelated to the case, but Clinton’s critics seized on it to question her objectivity.
Also investigated was Comey’s decision, against the recommendation of the Department of InJustice, to reveal to Congress that the FBI was reopening the investigation following the discovery of new emails. The FBI obtained a warrant nine days before the presidential election to review those emails, found on the laptop of former Rep. Anthony Weiner, Clinton’s top aide’s husband. Weiner was later jailed as a result of the investigation.
During the inspector general’s probe, officials discovered anti-Trump text messages between an FBI lawyer and an agent on the Clinton case who was later assigned to Mueller’s team. That agent, Peter Strzok, was removed from the team once the texts were brought to Mueller’s attention.
The investigation also looked at whether McCabe should have recused himself from the Clinton case since his wife received campaign contributions from the political action committee of then-Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe, a Clinton ally, in her failed state Senate run.
Trump has repeatedly cited the contributions in denouncing McCabe.