• March 28, 2024

What The FBI Was Just Caught Doing Is Sending The Deep State Into A Total Panic!

The Federal Bureau of Instigation has been facing a lot of controversies and backlashes because of so many misconducts that continue to happen inside the organization. This only made people wonder if what the main goal of the FBI is really if it is it stop crimes or even make it spread by engineering Deep State political mayhem

This time another incident has exposed them from their misconduct, “entrapment.” And this has been reported by BuzzFeed which also the one who revealed Christopher Steele’s now-debunked dirty dossier in its entirety.

Here’s an excerpt from the BuzzFeed report:

When federal officials announced, on Oct. 8, 2020, that they had foiled a plot by militant extremists to kidnap Michigan’s governor, it was quickly hailed as one of the most important domestic terrorism prosecutions in a generation. They didn’t mention FBI agent Jayson Chambers by name, but those who had worked the case knew that his role helping to run a central informant had been crucial.

There was, however, something about Chambers that some colleagues might not have known: 18 months earlier, he’d incorporated a private security firm and had spent much of 2019 trying to drum up business — in part by touting his FBI casework. The bureau won’t say if Chambers had gotten permission to set up his new venture, as agents would be required to do, but just five days after BuzzFeed News revealed its existence this August, federal prosecutors announced that he would not be on the list of witnesses testifying in the upcoming trial.

A continuing BuzzFeed News investigation reveals new information about how Chambers’ business, along with an array of issues involving other FBI agents and informants, has bedeviled the prosecution. Those issues may well affect the course of the trial. But beyond the integrity of the case, the problems are serious and widespread enough to call into question tactics the FBI has relied on for decades — and to test the public’s trust in the bureau overall.

“A second FBI agent, who had served as the case’s public face, was charged with beating his wife when they returned home from a swingers party.” A “third agent was accused of perjury.” Meanwhile, “a state prosecutor in a related case was reassigned and then retired in the face of an audit into his prior use of informants.”

Speaking of informants, one “crucial to the investigation” was “indicted on a gun charge and is now under investigation for fraud.” Stephen Robeson was a fed rat who “identified and recruited potential targets in multiple states.”

He also “organized many of the events” which turned out to be the hatching of a kidnap plan. The FBI claims they know nothing about the misconduct of their carefully handled asset.

Defense attorneys hired private investigators to look into agent Chambers and his background. They plan to argue “the defendants were entrapped by an overzealous and compromised investigation.”

In total, 14 men were accused and charged in 3 separate courts. Six of them are facing life in prison. Many were members of the Wolverine Watchmen. On Monday, December 20, a Michigan state judge will hold a hearing on a motion filed by three of them who claim they were the victims of entrapment. The FBI has a shady history of misconduct when it comes to informants.

The FBI wouldn’t be able to do a thing without rats. “The FBI has long relied on undercover agents and confidential informants.” These are all civilians, and “some of them paid for their service to infiltrate closed groups.” Like the Bundy bunch up in Malheur or the Proud Boys. Similar misconduct is also alleged in both of those.

As BuzzFeed points out, “officially, these agents and informants are supposed to blend in and report back, not to directly steer the group’s actions and certainly not to push them to commit crimes the groups would not otherwise have contemplated.” That is just what happened though, the evidence suggests.

“At least a dozen confidential informants, as well as two or more undercover FBI agents,” worked the Michigan kidnapping case. The misconduct comes in when allegedly “defendants built and detonated bombs, twice surveilled Whitmer’s vacation home, talked about trying and executing her, and practiced forcibly entering structures they called ‘kill houses.’”

What the FBI doesn’t want to talk about is at “the center of much of that action was Stephen Robeson, an informant who had a long history of criminal behavior.” All those were his ideas.

After a patriotic-themed meeting “in a private room at a Delaware tavern said to have been a gathering place for the Founding Fathers,” Robeson “ushered many of his guests to nearby hotel rooms, where he got them to vent their anger about governors who enacted COVID-19 restrictions.” The ones who made sympathetic noises were indoctrinated into the Deep State plot.

“He also urged people to plan violent actions against elected officials and to acquire weapons and bomb-making materials. Some of those contacts say he called them nearly every day.” That sounds like misconduct to most folks. The prosecution might not be calling him but the Defense will. “They say he can shine a light on what the government did to drag targets into the alleged plot and on the FBI’s conduct overall.”

Sources: Deep State Rabbit Hole, Buzz Feed News

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