Monday, January 22nd., 2018Who's Lying: FBI Says 5 Months Of Texts "Lost," Yet IG Horowitz Says His Office Received Them In August
Monday, January 22nd., 2018
Who's Lying: FBI Says 5 Months Of Texts "Lost," Yet IG Horowitz Says His Office Received Them In August
A
major contradiction has been discovered between
yesterday's revelation that the FBI "lost" five months of text messages,
and a claim by the DOJ's Inspector General, Michael Horowitz - who
claimed his office received the texts in question between FBI employees
Peter Strzok and his mistress Lisa Page last August. Michael Horowitz testifies before the Senate Judiciary CommitteeKnowledge
of the missing texts was revealed in a Saturday letter from Ron Johnson
(R-WI), Chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs Committee (HSGAC) - after the Committee received an additional
384 pages of text messages between Strzok and Page, several of which
contained anti-Trump / pro-Clinton bias. The new DOJ submission included
a cover letter from the Assistant AG for Legislative Affairs,
Stephen Boyd, claiming that the FBI was unable to preserve text messages
between the two agents for a five month period between December 14, 2016 and May 17, 2017 - due to "misconfiguration issues" with FBI-issued Samsung 5 devices used by Strzok and Page (despite over 10,000 texts which were recovered from their devices without incident).
However - as the Gateway Pundit's Josh Caplan points out, the lost text messages are in direct contradiction to a December 13, 2017
letter from the DOJ's internal watchdog - Inspector General Michael
Horowitz, to Senate Judiciary Committee Chuck Grassley and HSGAC
Chairman Ron Johnson, in which he claims he received the texts in question on August 10, 2017.
In gathering evidence for the OIG's ongoing 2016 election review, we
requested, consistent with standard practice, that the FBI produce text
messages from the FBI-issued phones of certain FBI employees involved in
the Clinton email investigation based on search terms we provided. After
finding a number of politically-oriented text messages between Page and
Strzok, the OIG sought from the FBI all text messages between Strzok
and Page from their FBI-issued phones through November 30, 2016,
which covered the entire period of the Clinton e-mail server
investigation. The FBI produced these text messages on July 20, 2017.
Following our review of those text messages, the OIG expanded our
request to the FBI to include all text messages between Strzok and Page
from November 30, 2016, through the date of the document request, which
was July 28, 2017. The OIG received these additional messages on August 10, 2017.
This glaring contradiction suggests someone is lying or perhaps simply incompetent.
Did Horowitz's office *think* they had received the texts in question
without actually verifying? Did the DOJ screw up and fail to read
Horowitz's letter before "losing" the text messages so that "leaky"
Congressional investigators wouldn't see them? Either way, this question
needs answering.
While you can draw your own conclusions, keep in mind that Inspector
Horowitz has been described as your archetypical Boy Scout bureaucrat -
who as we reported two weeks ago - fought the Obama administation to restore powers taken away from the OIG by then-Attorney General, Eric Holder.
After a multi-year battle, Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) successfully introduced H.R.6450 - the Inspector General Empowerment Act of 2016 - signed by a defeated lame duck President Obama into law on December 16th, 2016, cementing an alliance between Horrowitz and both houses of Congress.
And Congress has been very engaged with Horowitz's
investigation; spoon-feeding the OIG all the questions they need in
order to nail the DOJ, FBI and the Obama Administration for what many
believe to be egregious abuses of power. As such, the OIG report is expected to be a bombshell, while also satisfying a legal requirement for the Department of Justice to impartially appoint a Special Counsel to launch an official criminal investigation into the matter.
As illustrated below, the report will go from the Office of the
Inspector General to both investigative committees of Congress, along
with Attorney General Jeff Sessions. OIG report flowchart, courtesy TrumpSoldier (@DaveNYviii)
At this point, Horowitz's office needs to clarify whether or not they
indeed took delivery of the "lost" text messages. If the OIG
does indeed have them, it will be interesting to get to the bottom of
exactly what the DOJ claims happened, and particularly juicy if they're caught in a lie.
The letters in question can be seen below: