Crossfire Hurricane: Where the Guilty Go Free

Crossfire Hurricane: Where the Guilty Go Free

The good news is that, thanks to the Durham Report, we now know it’s true. The bad news is that, today, there is no clear way that can be reversed.

Pictured above is Peter Strzok, former Deputy Assistant Director of the FBI’s Counterintelligence Division, and lead investigator into Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections. Renowned for his ability to smirk when testifying before the U.S. Congress; he knows they can’t touch him.

 

Americans familiar with the Durham Report largely fall into two categories:

(1) Those aligned with the Democratic Party who believe the FBI conducted a fair, appropriate and professional investigation into a Trump-Russia conspiracy during the 2016 Presidential election; and,

(2) Those who see the Crossfire Hurricane “investigation” as a fraud, aided-and-abetted by several senior, corrupt FBI employees at the center of a multi-layered cabal that shared a deep disdain for, and fear of, Donald Trump.

Today, the FBI is a federal agency whose reputation has been damaged beyond any immediate repair

The cabal basically included the Clinton Presidential Campaign; a US-based international law firm; a US-based firm specializing in political opposition research; a retired British MI-6 operative, and a Russian citizen living in the US who was the former MI-6 agent’s key supplier of false information concerning Donald Trump in the Steele Dossier.

By the way, the former MI-6 agent, Christopher Steele, once occupied the Russia Desk at MI-6 HQ that was made infamous–in the West–by the Russian spy Kim Philby. (Philby was a hero in the USSR and the basis for a book by an author pen-named John le Carré, plus the movie entitled “Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy”. Conventional history has it that Philby was allowed to escape to Russia where he lived out a long life, in order to not further embarrass MI-6.)

In tedious detail, Durham describes a monumental fraud, executed by an extensive cast of characters, that was led by the once most revered law enforcement agency in America, and known throughout much of the world.

Hillary Clinton once wrongly claimed: “It takes a village” to raise children properly. (Actually, it takes mature and sustained parental care.)

The accurate claim for Crossfire Hurricane is: “It takes a cabal” to sustain a fraudulent and complex political scheme to push the fake narrative that Trump colluded with Russians to beat Hillary Clinton.

Many in Group #2 are asking this question: Why do so few of those associated with Crossfire Hurricane remain free today?

Only two people faced any consequences for their cabal involvement: Clinton attorney Michael Sussmann; and FBI attorney Kevin Clinesmith.

1. Sussmann, a former Clinton campaign lawyer, was tried for allegedly lying to the FBI about his clients when claiming to have information about a secret link between Russia and Trump. His trial was largely ignored by the liberal media, and the jury of his Washington D.C. peers did not vote to convict.

2. Clinesmith pleaded guilty to one count of making a false statement by admitting he doctored an email submitted to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court as part of a FISA application used to surveil Carter Page. He received three months’ probation and was fired from the Bureau.

Durham anticipated questions about an absence of accountability. In pages 36-44, he lists the thirteen Statutes Used to Evaluate Possible Criminal Content. They are:

  1. Standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt; 
  2. False Statements; 
  3. Perjury; 
  4. Falsification of records; 
  5. Obstruction of justice; 
  6. Violation of civil rights; 
  7. Conspiracy to violate civil rights; 
  8. General conspiracy statute; 
  9. Campaign contributions; 
  10. Campaign contributions by foreign nationals; 
  11.  Fraud against the United States; 
  12. Money laundering; 
  13. Disclosure of national defense information.

As it stands today, the Department of Justice and the FBI hover above the law

Statute 1. obviates the applicability of Statutes 2-13 relative to Crossfire Hurricane. In part, it reads: “The government is not required to prove guilt beyond all doubt, or to a mathematical or scientific certainty. The burden is to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”

As it stands today, the Department of Justice and the FBI hover above the law.

The Pendleton Act of 1883 was passed at the 47th Congress of the United States and aimed to replace the “spoils system”. Pendleton meant to embed a professional and unbiased superstructure of government employees chosen based on merit. Not political connections.

But, in time, that bureaucratic superstructure grew to be a Leviathan. The Fourth Estate. Virtually an independent entity.

Then came a pivotal development.

In the first quarter of the 21st Century, the Department of Injustice and the FBI were weaponized by the Democratic Party.

They now stand above the U.S. Constitution.

The good news is that, thanks to the Durham Report, we now know it’s true.

The bad news is that, today, there is no clear way that can be reversed.

This article originally published at American Thinker. Reprinted here with permission.

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