SESSIONS ORDERS INVESTIGATION OF FBI; PROMISES “APPROPRIATE LEGAL DISCIPLINARY ACTION”

SESSIONS ORDERS INVESTIGATION OF FBI; PROMISES 
“APPROPRIATE LEGAL DISCIPLINARY ACTION” 
BY C. MITCHELL SHAW
republished below in full unedited for informational, educational, and research purposes:
 

As a result of the FBI failing to preserve text messages between two
senior FBI agents who appear to have worked to protect Hillary Clinton
during the “investigation” into her e-mail scandal, Attorney General
Jeff Sessions ordered the Justice Department on Monday to investigate
the FBI.


The missing texts are from a crucial five-month period covering both
the presidential transition and the beginning of the Mueller probe. Both
of the agents — Peter Strzok and his mistress, Lisa Page — were
involved in both the Clinton investigation and the Mueller probe. While
those five months of text messages are “missing,” another 50,000
messages between the two have been found that show — among other things:

The couple was part of a “secret society” of highly placed people in both the FBI and the Department of Justice.

• That “secret society” is working against President Trump.

• Strzok texted Page about “an insurance policy” to get rid of Trump if he were elected.

• Both Strzok and Page were “pressured” to “wrap up” the Clinton
investigation as soon as it became apparent that Trump would secure the
GOP nomination.


• Strzok and Page appear to have known ahead of time that Comey would not recommend indictment against Clinton.

The attorney general’s order to launch this investigation comes
amidst a plethora of other similar investigations. This investigation
will focus on the FBI’s failure to preserve the text messages, which are
seen as evidence in an already ongoing investigation into the FBI’s
mishandling of the Clinton e-mail investigation. In that investigation,
there appears to have been a decision — before all the facts were known
and even before many key witnesses (including Clinton herself) were
interviewed — to clear Clinton of any wrongdoing. There is a word for
that. It is not “investigation.” It is “cover-up.”

In his statement about the investigation, Sessions said that his
office is determined to recover the missing text messages and to
“confirm with certainty” why they “are not now available.” That
statement said, in part:

We will leave no stone unturned to
confirm with certainty why these text messages are not now available to
be produced and will use every technology available to determine whether
the missing messages are recoverable from another source.

His statement also made it clear that those responsible will be held
accountable and that “if any wrongdoing” is discovered, “appropriate
legal disciplinary action” will be taken. From that statement:

I have spoken to the Inspector General
and a review is already underway to ascertain what occurred and to
determine if these records can be recovered in any other way. If any
wrongdoing were to be found to have caused this gap, appropriate legal
disciplinary action measures will be taken.

The New American previously reported that the text messages
that are known reveal the existence of a “secret society” that both
Strzok and Page belong to. That “secret society” is comprised of highly
placed people in both the FBI and Department of Justice and works
against President Trump. Leading Republicans are demanding action to uncover that “secret society.”

Besides the demands of leading Republicans and the new investigation ordered by Sessions, there is also the four-page
memo circulated among the House of Representatives showing systemic
abuses of of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA)
.
Again, leading Republicans — who could not discuss the specifics of the
memo, because it is classified — have led the charge, demanding that the
memo be made public. They say that if it is made public, government
officials will “go to jail.”

All of these revelations connect — in one way or another — to the
Trump/Russia collusion narrative put forth by leading Democrats that is
responsible for the probe led by Special Counsel Robert Mueller. That
probe — and the lies on which it stands — are coming unraveled as more
information comes to light.

Even Strzok — who held a lead role in the Mueller probe — admitted he
does not believe there is anything to the allegations of Trump/Russia
collusion. In a text message to Page in May 2017, he wrote that he was
hesitant to join the probe because “you and I both know the odds are
nothing.”

The outcome of these multiple investigations may help finally prove that.