Monday, August 15, 2022

The FBI’s Mar-a-Lago Panty Raid

Three questions the FBI had better be prepared to answer.


In episode seven of season three of “The Sopranos,” Paulie Walnuts knocks on fellow mobster Chistopher’s door demanding entry so he can, “take a look around.” Paulie first jokingly identified himself as “FBI” before conducting a search that included girlfriend Adriana’s underwear drawer at which point . . . well see it for yourself.

Not surprisingly, the invasion of Adriana’s privacy outraged Christopher as it would any man forced to endure an adversary pawing through the clothes of the woman he’s supposed to protect. The scene came to mind as we learned that the FBI’s raid of Mar-a-Lago featured an intrusion into Melania Trump’s private wardrobe. This is the inner sanctum of privacy in a marital home. A bedroom wardrobe is the kind of place people keep lingerie and other items not meant for the eyes of anyone but a spouse. Whether the Trumps might have kept such things in their bedroom wardrobe is beside the point. It’s a private area that the government shouldn’t be searching without proper justification.

According to the New York Post, Trump maintained documents from the White House in a “windowless storage room,” to which Trump had previously granted access to both the FBI and lawyers representing the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). Why would the FBI need to search the entire compound if the documents were known to be stored in that basement? As reported by the Post, “The demeanor of the three Justice Department lawyers who accompanied the FBI was described by one eyewitness as ‘arrogant,’ and they repeatedly told Trump representatives: ‘We have full access to everything. We can go everywhere.’”

On Thursday, Attorney General Merrick Garland held a short press conference after which he refused to take questions. He announced that the Justice Department had filed a motion to unseal the warrant and the inventory of things taken from the Trump compound. He also disclosed that he personally had approved the warrant, and assured the public that it was narrowly tailored and employed only after less-intrusive means were exhausted. 

We can be skeptical of both of those statements. 

Notwithstanding the attorney general’s claim of investigative discretion, the FBI “sources” anonymously leaked to its network of journalists to stem the public relations disaster that the irregular search provoked, (herehere, and here).

The FBI’s puppets in the media are now floating the narrative that criticizing the FBI’s conduct makes the critic morally responsible for any threats or violence from the outraged public. 

But let us return to the search itself. For context, let’s start with the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution. It provides

The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. 

Although volumes have been written interpreting this short passage, the original language is reasonably clear and useful for reviewing what we know about the FBI’s intrusion into Trump’s private home.

Question 1: How did the Justice Department Justify Searching the Entire House?

Now that the warrant and return of property have been revealed, we have some clues as to how the Justice Department justified the comprehensive search. As mentioned above, the Constitution requires the warrant “particularly” describe the place to be searched and the things to be seized. It describes the areas to be searched “include the ‘45 Office,’ all storage rooms, and all other rooms or areas within the premises used or available to be used by FPOTUS (the former president of the United States) and his staff and in which boxes or documents could be stored.”

In other words, everything. Every drawer, every bookshelf, between mattresses, inside underwear drawers, and so on. Was the objective to retrieve official records or to intimidate and humiliate the former president by desecrating every private corner of his personal home? 

The warrant also identifies the property to be seized as, “All physical documents and records constituting evidence, contraband, fruits of crime, or other items illegally possessed in violation of 18 USC §§ 793 (possession of national defense information), 2071 (concealment, removal, or mutilation of records/maps), or 1519 (destruction of records).”

The warrant does not disclose why the FBI reasonably believed a search for missing boxes of records would take an FBI agent to the former First Lady’s underwear drawer. It is now being reported that an informant close to Trump guided the FBI to the location of certain documents. Yet, somehow, the FBI ended up with what resembles a general warrant with the authority to search every square foot of Mar-a-Lago. Was the FBI really looking for boxes of documents in Mrs. Trump’s wardrobe? Or was it channeling Paulie Walnuts in seeking to deliberately humiliate the Trumps through this gratuitous invasion of privacy? 

If the FBI was being guided by an informant, it certainly did not focus its search. According to one report, “A source familiar told Fox News that FBI agents went to Mar-a-Lago and looked in every single office and safe, and grabbed documents and boxes without going through them on the property. They took boxes and documents to go through them later.”

As noted by the U.S. Supreme Court, “The Fourth Amendment was in large part a reaction to the general warrants and warrantless searches that had so alienated the colonists.” So the first thing I’ll be looking for in the warrant and application is the Justice Department’s justification for searching the entire residence.  

Question 2: Did the FBI really exhaust all of the less-intrusive alternatives?

According to Fox News, Trump willingly cooperated with investigators to ensure mutual agreement on a process for securing the records during negotiations over the materials that should be returned to the National Archives. As Fox reported

Those investigators toured the area of the Florida resort where some documents were stored, then briefly viewed and took custody of a small amount of potentially sensitive material. Separate sources told Fox News that federal investigators had spoken with at least one person who relayed the possibility of more sensitive national security material in that storage room and other areas of the property.

FBI officials, that day, asked to see a storage facility where the records were located. The FBI asked that staff put a lock on the storage room, which they later did.

This source said Trump and his staff were, and are, committed to being in compliance with the Presidential Records Act, which requires presidential administrations to preserve certain documents. 

As the Justice Department’s inspector general has noted, “The [attorney general] Guidelines . . . require that ‘least intrusive’ means or method be ‘considered’ when selecting investigative techniques.” The Constitution guarantees freedom from unreasonable search. How can a search be reasonable if it is unnecessary?

Nothing in the search warrant or property receipt indicates that the FBI found the records in any location other than the dedicated basement room to which the FBI had already been given access. Did the warrant affidavit claim the records were in imminent danger of being destroyed or shared with foreign adversaries? We don’t know because the FBI is predictably keeping its justifications secret.

In its review of the Russia collusion hoax FISA warrants, the OIG faulted the Justice Department for using confidential human sources (spies) and a search warrant to obtain information from Carter Page while ignoring Page’s offer to voluntarily submit to an FBI interview. The explanation is simple. The FBI didn’t care what Page had to say and he wasn’t the real target of the search. Thus, an interview with FBI agents would have completely frustrated the pretext to use Page’s communications as a window into the Trump campaign. 

So when it applied for the warrants, the FBI withheld from the judge evidence of Carter Page’s history of cooperation. This included Page’s offer of an interview and a history of reliably providing information to the CIA about the very matter for which the FBI said it wanted a warrant. When Page later publicly disclosed his work with the CIA, the FBI reacted by falsifying an email from the CIA to contradict this claim and submitted that false evidence to the court to justify continued surveillance. 

In the instance of the raid on Mar-a-Lago, the stench of political retribution permeates the entire operation. Thus, one should closely scrutinize whether the FBI might have failed to disclose Trump’s history of cooperating with the probe when it applied for the warrant. Unfortunately, we don’t have that information within the warrant and receipt of property because the Justice Department withheld the supporting affidavit. The FBI has done nothing to acquit itself by failing to demonstrate it complied with the “least intrusive” doctrine.

Question 3: What did the FBI take and where did it find it?

Although the FBI had exclusive access to Mar-a-Lago from 9 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., it apparently scooped up documents indiscriminately without bothering to ascertain whether the records were the target of the search. The receipt of property contains 39 separate entries. With 30 agents working for over 9 hours, there should have been more than enough time and manpower to describe in particular detail what it needed to seize, and to leave behind materials not relevant to the search. What we hoped to see is a detailed description of documents gathered demonstrating that the FBI had reasonablycalculated those to be the records sought. 

But the FBI instead employed vague descriptions such as, “miscellaneous secret documents,” or “binder of photos.” The receipt for property does not disclose where the FBI located the seized items. Although the FBI seized 21 boxes, it did not state on the receipt for property that it had bothered to confirm that any of these boxes had anything to do with presidential records. The FBI’s sloppy, slapdash onsite inventory of the seized property means the FBI potentially seized and now has access to private Trump papers that have nothing to do with the dispute at hand. Many suspect that the FBI used the search as a pretext to look for dirt on Trump that could be used in connection with a January 6 prosecution. 

Every president has taken records with him which he conveyed to himself as president. The Clintons were famously required to return or purchase more than $100,000 in gifts they took with them as they left the White House. As noted by Stripes.com, “all recent administrations have had some violations of federal records lawsmost often involving the use of unofficial email and telephone accounts.” It’s hard to escape the perception that the Justice Department is treating Trump differently from other former presidents.




X22, Christian Patriot News, and more- August 15

 



Got 1 small bit of NCIS LA related news (no, it's not Hetty related, if it was, it'd have it's own article):


This episode starts filming next week. No, I don't think it'll be Hetty centric because the showrunner didn't write it. (I'm wagering a guess that anything related to Hetty will end up coming from episodes written by the stupid showrunner since the very few Hetty mentions from The Season from Hell all came from episodes written by the showrunner, except for 1).

Here's tonight's news:


Why Merrick Garland Is Losing the People ~ VDH

Is the attorney general disingenuous or simply naïve?


Attorney General Merrick Garland on Thursday held a belated press conference to explain that he had personally approved the FBI’s raid of Donald Trump’s Florida residence to seize documents deemed U.S. government property. 

A clearly agitated and nervous Garland sought to exude confidence in the raid. He went on to heatedly defend the professionalism and integrity of the Justice Department and FBI. 

But almost immediately after his sermon, the Justice Department and its affiliates were back to their usual selective leaking (“sources say” . . . “according to people familiar with the investigation”) to liberal newspapers. 

In no time, the Washington Post claimed the raid was aimed at finding Trump Administration documents relating to “nuclear secrets.” The now-familiar desired effect was achieved. “Presidential historian” Michael Beschloss quickly tweeted a picture of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, noting that in the past revealing such nuclear secrets had led to the death penalty. Former CIA Director Michael Hayden, previously known for comparing Trump’s border detention facilities to Auschwitz and falsely claiming the Hunter Biden laptop was Russian “disinformation,” replied: “Sounds about right.” That is, without any proof, it was legitimate to imagine that the former president of the United States, like the Rosenbergs, should be executed for passing nuclear secrets.

So, as intended, the Justice Department and FBI leaks touched off a round of intended liberal hysteria of the sort we saw during Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into alleged Russian collusion with Trump’s 2016 campaign aimed at disguising government misdeeds or overreach. 

Sources Tell Us

Despite Garland’s pious assertions, we know the modus operandi of selective leaking from the career of Andrew McCabe. The disgraced former interim FBI director admitted to lying to federal investigators about his role in leaking to the Wall Street Journal. And the inspector general found McCabe lied on several other occasions about his efforts to leak to and massage the media. At this point, we should assume that “sources tell us” and “according to unnamed sources” are indications that the sources are Justice Department and FBI contacts who were given the green light to manipulate the news by their superiors.

Let’s put Garland’s decision to approve the raid on Mar-a-Lago in the context of the past seven years. The Justice Department and FBI in 2016 interfered in a presidential election in two major ways: They exonerated Hillary Clinton’s clearly illegal use of a private server and her destruction of subpoenaed data. The FBI hired Clinton operative Christopher Steele as an informant and gave its “Crossfire Hurricane” imprimatur to the entire Russian collusion hoax, feeding a 2016 left-wing mantra that Trump was a Russian “asset.” 

In 2015, we learned that candidate Hillary Clinton, as Barack Obama’s secretary of state, had emailed classified government materials using her own private server, likely as a way of skirting Freedom of Information Act requirements. 

In the thick of the 2016 campaign a year later, FBI Director James Comey reported that Clinton had, in fact, broken the law. Yet he assumed a role of federal attorney that was not his own, deciding Clinton’s wrongdoing should not lead to an indictment. 

In that improper role, Comey, not U.S. attorneys, declined to hold Clinton accountable. We learned later that Attorney General Loretta Lynch had met secretly on an airport tarmac (“a brief, casual, social meeting”) with Bill Clinton. 

Somewhere within this tangle of lies (both said they met only to talk about their grandchildren, not about whether the Justice Department would charge Hillary Clinton), we learned: 1) Lynch abdicated her role and simply let Comey play the role of investigator and prosecutor, and 2) Hillary Clinton had “bleached” thousands of emails, some of them under federal subpoena, and destroyed her communication devices and records—all federal felonies.

Trump won the election in 2016, but he never controlled the federal government. For 22 months, at a cost of $40 million, Robert Mueller investigated whether Trump had “colluded” with the Russians to take the White House. Ironically, there was ample evidence to show that Hillary Clinton may, in fact, have done exactly that. 

After all, Clinton worked with the Democratic National Committee,  which, in turn, hired the Perkins Coie legal firm, which hired Fusion GPS, which hired ex-spy Christopher Steele, who hired Russian disinformation source Igor Dyachenko, who used Moscow-based former Clintonite Charles Dolan to find dirt on Trump. Where Dyachenko and Dolan located their false dirt for Steele, no one knows for certain. Some Russian source is most likely the culprit. 

In the end, the ruse was exposed. But in the process of exposing that scandal, the Justice Department’s inspector general found that FBI lawyer Kevin Clinesmith had altered an application for a warrant from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to make it appear Trump campaign volunteer Carter Page was a Russian agent. (In reality, Page was working with the CIA.) Clinesmith’s FBI superiors had signed off on that fraudulent document that contained legions of errors. 

We learned also that two of the FBI investigators working for Mueller in 2017 were rank partisans and in their amorous exchanges before the 2016 election had texted about how to “stop” Trump amid  slanders and slurs about his candidacy and supporters. Until they were “reassigned,” both had played key roles in investigating Trump.

We also learned that the FBI had “lost” key cell phone data under court request. We were told that the point man of Mueller’s “dream team,” “all-stars,” and “hunter-killer team”—as the Left gushed of the liberal legal ensemble—former Justice Department attorney Andrew Weismann, before, during, and after his tenure on Mueller’s team was a self-admitted anti-Trump partisan. 

Mueller closed shop in 2019, finding no evidence of collusion, after putting two years of a presidency under a constant cloud of implied criminality. Mueller under oath admitted he knew nothing of the Steele dossier or the role of Fusion GPS in disseminating the fraud. No sane person could believe Mueller, given that the role of the dossier and Fusion GPS were the two chief catalysts leading to his own appointment. Was Mueller addled or simply not telling the truth?

The Walls Are Forever Closing In

Throughout this sordid nightmare, the FBI and Justice Department routinely leaked details the left-wing media serially blared were “bombshells” and evidence that the “walls are closing in.” All assured the public that Trump and his family would soon be behind bars for their ties to Russia and sundry other crimes 

No one has been held accountable for these lies. James Comey hired the lying Christopher Steele as an informant. The FBI fired him when they discovered he kept leaking secret information to his own media friends. When Comey was finally called to testify by Congress, he swore under oath 245 times that he had no memory or knowledge of the questions asked. 

Comey did admit, however, that after a private one-on-one conversation with President Trump, he immediately memorialized his version of the confidential discussion using FBI time and devices. He then acknowledged that he later leaked his version of events to the media through a third party. The goal was to prompt the appointment of a special counsel, eventually to be his friend Robert Mueller. Comey went to great but vain lengths to explain how leaking a government memo of a confidential presidential conversation, which was either classified or confidential, was not illegal. 

Comey also later bragged publicly how he sent agent Peter Strzok on a preplanned mission to surprise National Security Advisor Michael Flynn in hopes of finding Flynn in violation of the Logan Act, a 1799 law that has never been prosecuted successfully. Nevertheless, the threat of prosecution was enough to take down a high-profile Trump appointee.

After Comey was rightly fired, his deputy Andrew McCabe assumed control of the FBI. Again, he lied serially to federal investigators. McCabe oversaw the notorious email investigation that exonerated Hillary Clinton—at the very time his wife was running for office in Virginia, aided by funding from a political action committee with ties to the Clintons. McCabe, remember, also purportedly discussed wearing a wire stealthily to monitor Trump, in hopes of recording embarrassing private conversations that would help convince the cabinet to remove him under the 25th Amendment.

In 2020, the FBI sat on the Hunter Biden laptop and its analysts helped feed leaks protecting Joe Biden’s presidential campaign  from otherwise damaging disclosures. 

Some of the laptop’s contents, however, were in the public domain prior to FBI confiscation, and they had variously suggested that Joe Biden and his family were likely involved in selling influence for sizable sums to foreign governments. The laptop evidence suggested, additionally, that Hunter Biden had committed a series of tax, drug, and sex felonies. 

Yet somehow, 50 former CIA and other intelligence officials—among them prior intelligence heads John Brennan, Leon Panetta, Michael Hayden, and James Clapper—believed they had enough knowledge of the laptop on the eve of the election to assure the country it was “Russian disinformation.” Note that Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and other senators believe that an FBI agent and or analyst had deliberately mischaracterized the laptop as “disinformation” to protect Biden.

Merrick Garland can defend but cannot explain the strange role of the FBI informants. Aside from the infamous Steele, informants keep reappearing in almost every sensationalized political event. Twelve of them apparently were the de facto architects in a plot to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer. 

Their nefarious role is one of the reasons why two of the charged defendants were acquitted and two were not found guilty due to mistrials. 

Nor could Garland explain the strange statement from New York Times reporter Michael Rosenberg: “There were a ton of FBI informants among the people who attacked the Capitol” on January 6, 2021. 

There is also the strange asymmetry of the FBI. It routinely now resorts to pre-dawn SWAT raids, shackling the legs and hands of elderly men, and swooping in on would-be targets on the street. Trump associates Peter Navarro, Rudy Giuliani, and John Eastman have all been confronted by the FBI, and either arrested, had their offices searched, or had their phones seized, or all three. But so far only Roger Stone, the target of an FBI SWAT team—which CNN just happened to be on hand to cover—was charged and convicted of a crime. 

Last week’s events at Mar-a-Lago are part of this pattern—raiding the home of the current Republican presidential frontrunner who would beat Joe Biden and Kamala Harris if the general election were held today.

The FBI: What Not to Do

So, to answer Merrick Garland’s scolding, how might the FBI not have lost the faith of the American people? 

It might not have altered documents to ruin the life of an American citizen. When subpoenas arrived for phone records, it could have submitted them rather than wipe them clean.

Its directors might not have stonewalled Congress while under oath or lied to federal investigators or leaked confidential government memos to the press. The FBI did not have to mislead about the contents of a controversial laptop. There was no need to hire foreign nationals during a presidential election to supply dirt on one of the two candidates. 

The attorney general did not need to meet secretly with the husband of someone under FBI investigation. Just as the FBI apparently did not need to raid Kevin Clinesmith’s home to find information about his doctoring of an email, or to put legs irons on Andrew McCabe for lying to a federal prosecutor, or to ambush Christopher Steele and grab his cell phone to ensure he stopped leaking FBI information and lying to the bureau, so too it had no need of shackling Peter Navarro or publicly seizing the phone of Representative Scott Perry (R-Pa.).

Finally, there are existential threats to the United States on the open southern border, from cartel drug runners and terrorists to child traffickers. For 120 days in 2020, Antifa and Black Lives Matter coordinated violent riots that led to over 35 dead, $2 billion in property damage, and over 1,500 law enforcement officers injured. A federal courthouse, a police precinct, and the historic St. James Episcopal Church in Washington were at various times torched. Rioters attempted to storm the White House grounds and sent the Secret Service scrambling to a secure bunker with the president. 

All of the above were mostly ignored by the FBI. Yet these and other violence and illegality posed far more dangers to the American people than do the worried Virginia parents upset about the critical race theory indoctrination of their children.

Finally, Garland has failed to explain why he had sought out a particular federal magistrate to approve the warrant to raid Mar-a-Lago—a magistrate who earlier had recused himself from another case involving Trump. Apparently, Magistrate Bruce Reinhart felt that either his own past partisanship or prior legal work made it impossible for him to remain unbiased in cases involving the former president—except on the present occasion to empower the FBI to raid Trump’s home.

But again, Garland did give a spirited, almost angry defense of the Justice Department and FBI. He was in hot denial that they were anything but professional civil servants. Yet he did not explain why “nuclear secrets,” long sitting in a locked room at Mar-a-Lago, were suddenly putting the nation in harm’s way in a manner they had not eight or 18 months ago.

That raises the question whether Garland is disingenuous or simply naïve. After all, the American people have long trusted their FBI. They want to remain confident in its leadership. Yet it was not the public, but high-ranking Justice and FBI officials themselves—among them most recently Merrick Garland himself—who squandered that confidence. And they should now look inward rather than blast critics for what they have done to themselves and to the country.



Random Act of Journalism: Karine Jean-Pierre Gets Called 'Orwellian' During Interview


Bonchie reporting for RedState 

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre appeared on ABC News Sunday morning and things didn’t go quite as she had planned. Long used to the kid glove treatment because she’s so intersectional, Jean-Pierre ended up facing some unexpectedly tough questions from Jonathan Karl, a leftwing hack in his own right.

At one point, Karl pressed Jean-Pierre on continuing to claim the faux-named “Inflation Reduction Act” will help lower inflation, asking if the White House’s messaging is “Orwellian.” The press secretary quickly put on her dancing shoes and gyrated around in an attempt to deflect.

The Daily Wire provides a transcript of the exchange.

“But let me ask you, it’s called the ‘Inflation Reduction Act,’ but the Congressional Budget Office, which is nonpartisan, said that there would be a negligible impact on inflation this year and barely impact inflation at all next year, isn’t it almost Orwellian?” Karl asked. “How can you call it inflation reduction when the nonpartisan experts say it’s not gonna bring inflation down?”

“I appreciate the question. We’ve actually addressed this with the CBO,” Jean-Pierre continued. “It was the top line number; there’s more in there that shows it will have the money from– remember how we’re doing this, too, it’s making sure that billionaires in corporate America are paying their fair share, making sure that the tax code is a little bit more fair, and so when you do that, put it in its totality, you will see that it will bring down, lower the deficit, which will help fight inflation.”

…“So you disagree with the assessment of the CBO?” Karl pressed.

“Well, there’s more to it than that,” she replied. “It was just the way that Republicans did that was so that [they] could make an argument that is false. It is going to fight inflation, it has been proven and said by economists across the board, on the Republican side and the Democrat side.”

Is she taking speaking lessons from Kamala Harris? Because there are times reading that excerpt where I’m not even sure what she’s trying to say. Who are these “economists across the board” who say the Democrat spending bill will lower inflation? More importantly, what are they basing that analysis on? I’m old enough to remember the White House citing faceless economists to suggest inflation was “transitory,” so color me unimpressed with their expertise.

As to the CBO, it is easily manipulated and has long been willing to rubber stamp Democrat budgetary tricks. Given that, if even they are saying this bill isn’t going to do what the administration says it will do, you know things are bad. Jean-Pierre’s response, though, is to essentially accuse the CBO of being dumb while quickly jumping to her talking points about taxing the rich. Who does she think will end up bearing the burden of those tax increases, though? Corporations pass on their costs, and that’s exactly what will happen here.

Karl’s accusation of the White House being Orwellian is on the money. Just like with the redefining of what a recession is, Biden and his handlers are content to lie to the American people while insisting water is not, in fact, wet.

Can you blame them, though? This is an administration that believes it is invincible, and it just might be. After all, who is going to hold them accountable? Those in the bureaucracies won’t because they are run by like-minded radicals. Those in Congress won’t because Republicans either lack the power to do so or the will to act when they do have the power. The courts have tried to be a check, but Biden’s lawlessness is so brazen that he’s put them in a position of always being a step behind.

The administration’s attitude smacks of the kid learning a cheat code in a video game and just using it over and over again. They’ve got no reason to stop because it keeps working for them. Heck, there’s even talk of Democrats avoiding a wipeout in November now (a political prediction I don’t agree with). Until the American people actually hold this White House accountable, the insanity will continue.




Representative Scott Perry Discusses His Encounter with a Tyranical DOJ

Representative Scott Perry, R-Penn., appears with Maria Baritomo to discuss his experience with the FBI after agents confiscated his cell phone. Additionally, Mr Perry discusses the Biden administration’s handling of national security issues including China, Iran and the U.S-Mexico border. {Direct Youtube Link}



Who Knew? Liz Cheney's Husband's Law Firm Represents Hunter Biden in DOJ's Grand Jury Probe



Mike Miller reporting for RedState 

Anyone with even a passing interest in Wyoming “Republican” Representative Liz Cheney’s stage 4 Trump Derangement Syndrome and her apparent willingness to flush her political career down the toilet as a result, has to wonder: Is Cheney’s obsession with Trump based solely on her disdain for The Donald, or is she a raging Democrat trapped in the body of a very bad Republican impersonator?

With just 48 hours remaining (as I write) before Cheney is likely destroyed by Trump-backed challenger Harriet Hageman in Tuesday’s Wyoming primary — Cheney presently trails Hageman by 30 points — reports confirm that Cheney’s husband, Philip Perry, is a partner in a law firm that represents Hunter Biden in a Department of Justice grand jury probe. Trump-appointed U.S. prosecutor David Weiss is investigating Hunter and his various associates for tax violations and lying to law enforcement about illegally purchasing a firearm.

Perry’s partner Chris Clark represents Hunter in the “grand jury investigation regarding tax issues,” his company biography says.

As reported by Breitbart, Perry owns between a $1,000,001 and $5,000,000 million stake in the firm, according to Cheney’s 2020 Personal Financial Disclosure. Moreover, as noted by Breitbart, Latham & Watkins is a Democrat “powerhouse, which employs attorneys who have donated more than half a million dollars to President Biden’s 2020 campaign.” And according to Federal Election Commission records, Clark himself gave $3,800 to Biden’s 2020 presidential campaign.

So… are we looking at a mere coincidence, or is this a classic case of If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck? I report, you decide. For now, anyway.

Here’s where the “plot” thickens.

Just kidding; I’m not a conspiracy theorist. That said, check it out — via Breitbart:

Perry’s firm has advised a Chinese Communist Party-linked technology company named TME and Exelon Corporation. The State Department in 2019 dubbed TME a tool of the Chinese government.

According to the Wall Street Journal, in 2011, Exelon Corporation agreed to provide consulting and training services to an arm of the state-owned China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC).

The state-owned CNNC’s president and vice president are appointed by the highest administrative position in the government of China, the Premier of the People’s Republic of China. The CNNC supervises all facets of China’s nuclear programs.

Hunter and China?

RedState has reported extensively on Hunter Biden’s troubling business deals in China, many of which have paid him millions of dollars for jobs and assignments for which his only “qualification” appeared to be he’s Joe Biden’s son. 

Among reports we’ve covered, the disclosure that Bohai Capital, the private equity arm of Bank of China International Holdings Ltd., is the majority owner of Hunter Biden’s venture capital firm, BHR; Hunter’s closest business partner met with then-Vice President Biden at White House 19 times, and a prominent senator predicting a “deal” to a Hunter Biden indictment from the American people.

And, Joe? 

Meanwhile, Joe Biden continues to make two statements that cannot both be true. Out of one side of his lying mouth, the “Big Guy” ridiculously continues to insist he has never talked with Hunter or any of his associates over his business dealings. Out of the other side of his mouth, Joe categorically insists that Hunter has done nothing wrong or illegal.

Sorry, no. Those are mutually-exclusive statements, Jack.

The bottom line:

While I’m generally not fond of the whataboutism game, The Adventures of Joe Biden and His Crackhead Son screams “What about…?”

Imagine for a nanosecond the histrionics and full-metal meltdown of the Democrat Party, the liberal lapdog media, Planet Looney Tunes Hollywood, and every other hypocritical liberal in America, if Donald Trump Jr. or Eric Trump had participated in a hundredth of the nefarious, distasteful crap we already know about, much of it photographed. Then toss on the credible accusation and the probable federal indictment.

Can you imagine? Me, too. Very clearly.



Another Awkward Peepaw Biden Photo-Op

He’s as lifelike as a Bendy Bunny doll.

As I mentioned the other day, Peepaw Biden and his family decided to forgo their vacation home in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware to spend a week at a rich donor’s estate on an island off the coast of South Carolina.

And while they were there, the House passed the massive tax and spend bill formerly known as the “Inflation Reduction Act.”

Of course, it stopped being called the “Inflation Reduction Act” once it passed Congress. Now it is being described as the most “sweeping” and “ambitious” Climate Change spending bill in history.

To mark the event, the White House staffers decided to pose Peepaw Biden awkwardly standing a couple of feet away from a TV supposedly while watching the House vote take place.

Peepaw Biden photo-op

And like all the other Peepaw Biden photo-ops, this photo-op is an optics disaster.

First of all, Congress is voting on “sweeping” legislation to spend half a trillion dollars to “save the planet” from the ravages of Climate Change that, they tell us, has made tornadoes more powerful and hurricanes more deadly.

It stands to reason that Peepaw Biden and his family aren’t worried about the ravages of Climate Change making hurricanes more deadly. If they were, they wouldn’t be vacationing at a millionaire’s estate on an island off the coast of South Carolina … during hurricane season.

Second of all, what the heck is going on with Peepaw’s hands?

Peepaw Biden clenched fists

One time I wanted to take a picture of my late dog Mary wearing a patriotic pair of glasses.

I thought it would be cute.

However, it ended up looking like a hostage photo.

awkward Mary

Honestly, have you ever seen a more uncomfortable and awkward pose?

Well, yeah. I have now. It’s Peepaw Biden standing with his fists clenched just a couple of feet from a TV with a fake smile plastered on his face.

Joe looks as lifelike as a Bendy Bunny doll.

Remember those? The rubbery plastic bunny with stiff wires in its arms and legs so you could bend and pose it in any way you wanted. They worked great until the wires snapped. Then Bendy Bunny was Boneless Bunny, unable to hold a pose.

Anyroad.

Maybe like me, you can imagine the conversation between old Joe and his handlers just before the picture was taken.

STAFFER:
Quick! Someone wake the President up from his nap
and get him down here! Let’s pose him in front of the
television and get a picture of him watching the vote!

The dazed, half-awake Joe is led into the room by Jill.

JILL:
Now, just stand here in front of the TV, Joe.

JOE:
Can’t I sit?

STAFFER:
It’s more powerful if you stand, Mr. President.

JOE:
But there’s a chair right here—

JILL:
Just stand!

Biden stands ten feet away.

STAFFER:
Closer, Mr. President. Come right up to the TV.

JOE:
But Jill says I’ll go blind if I get too close. She says that
every time I pull the chair up to the TV to watch Matlock.

JILL:
Not this time. It’s okay to do it this time, Joe.

Joe ambles toward the TV, stands awkwardly with his
fists clenched.

STAFFER:
Hang on! Put a pen in his hand. Make it look like he’s
been working.

Jill shoves a pen into Joe’s clenched left hand.

STAFFER:
He’s right-handed. Put it in his right hand!

JILL:
Nobody’s going to notice. Just take the picture.

STAFFER:
Unclench your fists, Mr. President.

JILL:
Smile Joe. (PAUSE) No, that’s a grimace. Smile!
(to Staffer) Now! Take it now!

STAFFER:
But he’s still clenching his fists.
Mr. President? Can you unclench your fists?

JILL:
Oh, just forget about his fists and take the damn
picture!

The staffer takes the picture on his iPhone.

STAFFER:
Got it!

JILL:
Good. Now post it to Twitter. Okay, Joe. Let’s put you
back to bed.

JOE:
Is Matlock on? I want to watch Matlock.