You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
-Lurid Crime Tales-
Former U.S. Attorney: Agents See FBI Chief Comey as a 'Dirty Cop'
2016-10-14
[Spectator] James Comey presides over an FBI in revolt over his leadership, a former U.S. attorney tells The American Spectator, and pursues "paranoid, delusional, and vindictive" measures to prevent negative information leaking out to the public.
Well, what do you expect from a man that is deeply in bed with the Clintons?
"I know that inside the FBI there is a revolt," Joseph diGenova tells The American Spectator. "There is a revolt against the director. The people inside the bureau believe the director is a dirty cop. They believe that he threw the [Hillary Clinton email] case. They do not know what he was promised in return. But the people inside the bureau who were involved in the case and who knew about the case are talking to former FBI people expressing their disgust at the conduct of the director."

The loss of faith in the bureau chief stems in part from a dishonest rendering of the decision not to indict Mrs. Clinton as unanimous rather than unilateral and in part from the bureau's decision to destroy evidence in the case and grant blanket immunity to Clinton underlings for no possible prosecutorial purpose.

"There is a consensus among the employees that the director has lost all credibility and that he cannot lead the bureau," diGenova explains. "They are comparing him to L. Patrick Gray, the disgraced former FBI director who threw Watergate papers into the Potomac River. The resistance to the director has made the agency incapable of action. It has been described to me as a depression within the agency unlike anything that anyone has ever seen within the bureau. The director's public explanation for the unorthodox investigation are viewed by people in the bureau as sophomoric and embarrassing."

Comey maintained in July that he came to the decision to recommend not indicting Clinton for the inclusion of classified material in 110 emails stored on a private server based on an "entirely apolitical and professional" investigation despite conceding that others in a similar spot would face "consequences" and that "evidence of potential violations" existed. He insisted then, "No outside influence of any kind was brought to bear."

But agents trained to sniff out malfeasance smell something rotten here.
They ain't the only ones
"When the director said that it was a unanimous decision not to recommend prosecution, that was a lie," diGenova points out. "In fact, the people involved in the case were outraged at his decision, which he made by himself. When people realized that he was lying publicly about their role and when they knew he had approved of the destruction of laptops that were subject to congressional subpoena, that flipped the switch."
Why else were the investigators forced to sign a NDA? The powers that be knew they would be betrayed.
Critics of the FBI and the broader handling of the case by the Justice Department remain skeptical over investigators' ostensible belief in Clinton's claim that she "lost" 13 Blackberry devices and did not understand that documents marked "C" meant confidential. Decisions to grant Clinton aide Cheryl Mills attorney-client privilege in a case involving her, to destroy her laptop and with it any evidence desired by Congress, and to limit the investigation's search to documents from before January 31, 2015 to obstruct any possible obstruction of justice case against Mills also similarly baffled. Direct evidence of Clinton hiding public business on a private server (and thereby making it easier for enemy governments to see what the American government could not) and "bleaching" her hard drive after the story became public presented the FBI clear evidence of wrongdoing. But authorities sought to protect rather than prosecute the malefactors.

"The director's public explanation for the unorthodox investigation are viewed by people in the bureau as sophomoric and embarrassing," diGenova notes. "The people in the bureau anticipate that there will be subpoenas for their testimony. Comey in a telephone conference with special agents in charge around the country, within the last few days, warned that if they received a phone inquiry about the investigation, or any inquiry about the investigation, they were ordered to report the call and the caller to the director's office."

DiGenova describes such control tactics as something out of J. Edgar Hoover's FBI. Yet, it's Hoover's successor, L. Patrick Gray, who offers the clearest parallel to Comey. As diGenova puts it, "There is a Deep Throat."

Agents involved in the case now fear congressional subpoenas thanks to Comey's head-scratching handling of the case. DiGenova met this week with figures requesting attorneys for FBI officials. The former independent counsel and U.S. attorney affirms his willingness to serve in that capacity and to represent potential whistleblowers.

"These people are trained to be loyal, honest, and forthright," diGenova points out. "What [Comey] did was force them to corrupt their oath of office. They have had enough."
I'll know they have had enough when they arrest their superiors, members of the DOJ and Hillary. Otherwise they are just wanking into the wind.
Posted by:DarthVader

#6  James Comey presides over an FBI in revolt over his leadership

Yet not one has resigned.

Yet not one has retired.

Yet not one has spoken out.

They know what side their bread is buttered on.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2016-10-14 17:00  

#5  We can't close Gitmo

President Trump might need it for the new detainees coming from the DNC.

Now pass me the bong. Also, F150 F150 ARCLIGHT
Posted by: SteveS   2016-10-14 15:10  

#4  And coming from State. Hey, it's Fantasy Friday.
Posted by: JohnQC   2016-10-14 14:48  

#3  the Close Guantanamo movement. We can't close Gitmo. We might need it for the new detainees coming from DOJ.
Posted by: JohnQC   2016-10-14 14:47  

#2  Comey said the decision was unanimous? He meant among himself, the Director of the FBI, and himself, all three agreed in the decision, and they were the only three that count. And he agrees with them.
Actually, in his own mind, Comey believed he was being fair. He stated correctly that the FBI investigation found that Mrs. Clinton had committed more than one felony.
That was a plus for Republicans.
He then decided that it would be unfair for Mrs. Clinton to suffer any punishment for her behavior because she was running for president and that might be a disaster for Democrats. Thus he went beyond his FBI role to give his personal opinion that she be let off, as a compensating benefit for Democrats.
I wonder if this means that by the Comey rule, any felon can claim immunity from prosecution by declaring his/her self to be a Democrat candidate for President; perhaps even candidate for membership in the Senate or House.

The notion that when fairness favors one side, it is OK to be unfair to balance that fact, is the death warrant for justice.
To find that a murderer is guilty should similarly be balanced by letting him off. That is, after all, the logic of the Close Guantanamo movement.
Posted by: Grins Snese4215   2016-10-14 14:38  

#1  Ah, come on. It's the Chicago Way. The new 'Touchables'.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2016-10-14 14:18  

00:00