Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Inside the FBI: agents' outrage at Hillary email decision

by Jon Rappoport
July 13, 2016

(To read about Jon's mega-collection, Power Outside The Matrix, click here.)

—You're an FBI agent. You sit and watch television night after night, as a Presidential candidate who should have been brought up on felony charges, and thereby disqualified and scuttled, moves through the land and makes promises about what she'll do as the next leader of the nation. You sit and watch, deepening your grasp on how the system actually works—

How much blood is boiling among FBI agents?

Sharyl Attkisson, former CBS News investigative reporter, has the story (sharylattkisson.com):

"Many people at the FBI are outraged, but cannot speak out," one insider told me," Attkisson writes.

We're talking about FBI Director James Comey's recommendation that Hillary Clinton not be prosecuted in her email scandal. This, after thousands of hours of FBI work scouring the emails connected to Hillary's illegal private server.

Here are several other comments FBI professionals made, off the record, to Attkisson, with my remarks in parentheses ():

"It appears to me they made a deal not to record [the key FBI-Hillary] interview."

(This failure, as I wrote, means the interview is lost forever. No stenographic transcript was executed, either. FBI agents' notes on the interview are useless. They can never be used against Hillary as ironclad evidence in a court of law.)

"Director Comey seems to have taken on responsibilities far beyond the FBI's purview—he assumed the duties of the Agent, US Attorney and Grand Jury."

(Indeed he did. He functioned as FBI Director, Grand Jury, Attorney General, and appellate judge. In this last role, he knowingly misinterpreted the Federal Penal Code, which clearly states that gross negligence in the handling of classified material is a crime, regardless of intent. Hillary was, at the very least, grossly negligent. FBI Director Comey acknowledged this.)

"It appears no Grand Jury was empaneled for this investigation. This is absurd, Grand Juries are used in nearly all criminal investigations."

"Even in the most straightforward of cases, the time span between a target interview [of Hillary] and prosecution opinion [on whether to file charges] takes weeks, not days. If a good interview were conducted [with Clinton] on Saturday, there would have been leads or other new pieces of information to verify or investigate prior to any conclusion to the case."

(In other words, the fix was already in.)

Attkisson: "During his Congressional testimony, Comey indicated he didn't look into Clinton's false statements. He said he needed an additional 'referral' or formal request [from Congress] for the FBI to investigate whether she committed perjury under oath to Congress. 'This makes no sense,' said a career agent. 'It is normal practice that if you came upon evidence of a crime different than the one you were originally investigating, it was fair game.'"

(There is no need to wait for a request to investigate from Congress.)

You can bet many people at the FBI are boiling over after Director Comey's recommendation that Hillary not be charged and prosecuted.

Level of Bureau morale now? Too low to measure.

How would you feel, if you'd spent months uncovering multiple breaches of the law, all of which your boss admitted were quite real—and then he turned around and said the suspect—a Presidential candidate—was innocent?

It's your job to prove serious violations occurred, and you did, in a case that would have been the highlight of your career, to say nothing of supporting a little item called justice; but then your work was flushed down the drain.

The next time a case even vaguely approaching the magnitude of this one is tossed in your lap, how much commitment are you going to be able to marshal? You'll know your facts and findings could well be deemed irrelevant, because the person at the top of your food chain is doing politics, not law. He's essentially working for players who aren't in your agency. He's breaking the law, but you can't touch him.

Your paycheck feeds your family and pays the rent. You want to do the right thing, but you're trapped. You joined up for honor, but that ideal is off the table.

Your colleagues at work, who feel their own outrage, advise you to keep your mouth shut and move straight ahead, if you want to hold on to your job and grab a promotion somewhere out in the future. That’s what they're doing.

So you're living in a culture of corruption.

How does that sit with you?

You're not naïve. For years you've known government is riddled with corruption and lies. But this time, it hits you. Personally. You’re paying the price. You did something honest and important, and suddenly it was transformed into nothing, and you have to pretend all is well.

You're an FBI agent. You sit and watch television night after night, as a Presidential candidate who should have been brought up on a felony charge, and thereby disqualified and scuttled, moves through the land and makes promises about what she'll do as the next leader of the nation. You sit and watch, deepening your personal knowledge of how the system actually works.

You're a federal agent, and once upon a time you thought you had signed on to work for the good of the Republic.

You're learning, when the chips are down, you're actually laboring for an extended crime family.

How does that sit? How does it feel?

Are you going to decide you were an idiot for believing in a ideal above and beyond gross personal advantage?

Are you now going to go over to the dark side, and look for ways to grease the wheels of your career?

Or are you, against long odds, somehow going to find a way to stick to your derided principles?

As you sit and watch the news of this Presidential campaign, night after night, that's the question you ponder, trying to see a way through the darkness.

Where is the dawn?

power outside the matrix

Of course, you and a few of your colleagues, who were intimately involved in the Clinton investigation, could decide to go public. On the record. You could find a media outlet somewhere that would listen to you. You could turn over your notes of the Hillary interview, and you could swear on a stack of bibles that those notes are an accurate reflection of the proceeding. You could explain your other findings. Perhaps, in all her emails, you found criminal connections between Hillary's State Department and the infamous Clinton Foundation. You could tell the whole truth. You could take that giant step. You could cause a national uproar. You could make your own federal case.

This, too, is going through your mind as you sit in the darkness.

Looking for a way out.

People have told you that, in life, some choices are hard.

But you didn't really believe these choices would be yours.

Now they are.

You're sitting in the dark, you're flying solo.

Looking for that way out.

"I [name] do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God."

At the end of your academy training, at your graduation ceremony, you took that oath, and as at every graduation, by long-standing tradition, the oath was personally administered by, of all people…

The Director of the FBI.

Jon Rappoport
________


Like Jon Rappoport suggests: "Power Outside the Matrix", but here is what it's like inside the matrix. This must be some kind of an inside joke where an oath to the Constitution is taken in public but then in private these people hold most of what they appear to be swearing an oath to in contempt. It's just PR for American public consumption to make themselves feel good about their lives and careers and service to the United States Corporation. The following image from Zero Hedge couldn't illustrate this fact any better. The image was put up by Zero Hedge suggesting what Hillary Clinton's swearing in ceremony would be like.


The concern shouldn't necessarily be about the emails and the servers, but rather the focus should be on the Clinton Foundation. A new congressional letter circulating among lawmakers, "charges the William, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation as a lawless, 'pay-to-play' enterprise that has been operating under a cloak of philanthropy for years." The greatest fear the FBI are faced with now is that if the American people find out just how serious the allegations are against the Clinton Foundation, civil war and violence would erupt on the streets of America. The entire elite power structure of the US government (much of it privatized) would be completely exposed. Comey himself looks like he was taken right out of central casting for his present role as FBI director.

Meanwhile, while no one is paying attention, the FBI continues acquiring increasingly sophisticated technology under its "secret surveillance program with a budget in the hundreds of millions of dollars." Any compromising of "constitutional rights" with iris scanning? Above and beyond everything else going on here, FBI employees want to retain their jobs, especially in light of the fact that the FBI's technology budget is estimated to be between $600 and $800 million. The FBI is totally compromised. To come down hard on the George Soros-spawned Clinton criminal syndicate would bring the entire government establishment down on the FBI. Good luck boys, J. Edgar Hoover would be proud.

Barack Obama welcomes new FBI director James Comey

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