FBI Director Kash Patel was not present in a Signal conversation where other top members of the Trump administration discussed in-depth attack ideas, but that didn’t stop him from being questioned by politicians this year about whether the most important law enforcement agency may conduct an investigation.
Patel testified he had never personally reviewed the text emails that were unintentionally shared with the editor-in-chief of The Atlantic and declined to comment on the probability during the two days of Senate and House sessions.
The reality is that the Justice Department and FBI have been in charge of enforcing Espionage Act rules, whether it be intentional or irresponsible, regarding the misuse of national defense information, like the kind shared on Signal, despite President Trump’s assertion that “it’s not really an FBI thing.”
Trending
- WATCH: Sen. John Kennedy Destroys Nationwide Injunctions
- OH NO! Biden-Era EPA Museum on Climate Change and ‘Environmental Justice’ to Be DOGED
- Bondi Ends Biden Death Penalty Moratorium, and Guess Who’s In Her Sights
- ‘Mario is going to be upset’: Internet reacts to demand of death penalty for Luigi Mangione
- Tax Americana: Trump terrifies world, and US, with global tariffs
- White House bats down tariff doubts and stock market jitters on Liberation Day eve: ‘Going to work’
- US Coast Guard ‘tripled’ personnel to prevent maritime human smuggling
- Concerns over cartel drone threats expanding