Biden Corruption Gets WORSE!
Biden Secret Service Records Show Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Was
Denied Protection Despite Numerous Threats
The Biden administration doesn’t look good on this one –
to put it mildly.
We received 11-pages of
Secret Service records detailing the denial of protection to
presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., despite his having received
numerous threats from “known subjects.”
We received the document from the in response to a July 28, 2023,
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for records and communications
of:
a) Director Kimberly A. Cheatle
b) Deputy Director Ronald L. Rowe, Jr.
c) Chief Operating Officer Cynthia Sjoberg Radway
d) Assistant Director, Office of Protective Operations, Michael
Plati
On July 28, 2023, Kennedy posted to
X (formerly Twitter), “Since the assassination of my father in 1968,
candidates for president are provided Secret Service protection. But not
me.”
Just last week, Kennedy again
requested Secret Service protection following an incident on the
campaign trail involving an armed man impersonating a police officer.
The records we obtained include a Secret Service “Protective
Intelligence and Assessment” that reveals numerous threats to Kennedy
(“Behaviors of Interest”):
On April 23, 2023, a known subject [Redacted] submitted an inappropriate
comment on the White House website addressed to President Biden [Redacted]
stated, “Born to a political family, his twelfth cousin—Robert
Kennedy—announces their candidacy to succeed Joseph Biden for
‘President of the United States.’ There’s no way you'd... assassinate
former president Donald Trump. `Go get 'ern, kiddo!” No further USSS
investigation was conducted.
[Redacted]
A known subject [Redacted] mailed a nonsensical letter to the hotel
where Kennedy held his presidential campaign announcement event [redacted]
warned a “madman” may commit a “serious terrorist act” and wanted
to discuss his sins with Kennedy. [Redacted] is of record with the USSS
[Secret Service] since March 2023 after he sent a nonsensical letter to
President Biden with similar rhetoric. The USSS investigation is
complete.
A known subject [Redacted] sent numerous packages, including gifts
and a wedding band, to Kennedy [Redacted] stated that she loves
Kennedy and expressed anger about being kept away from him. [Redacted]
A known subject [Redacted] sent materials to Kennedy’s residence. One
letter contained a 32-page manifesto in which [Redacted] made nonsensical
religious references and described himself as a “commissioned messenger
of God.”
A known subject [Redacted] regularly sends threatening emails, stating
he will “bury” Kennedy, “everyone will die,” and that he will make
Kennedy “suffer.”
A subject [Redacted] sent inappropriate communications to Kennedy. The
subject believed Kennedy was spying on him, paying people to follow him,
and was responsible for vandalism against him. The
subject state “your behavior has complete [sic] freaked me out.
Focus on your damn campaign and leave me the hell alone.”
The assessment also notes:
Many comments suggested that, for no other reason than that he is a
Kennedy, he would be at risk of assassination. In May 2023, Kennedy
received increased media attention after accusing the CIA of involvement in
the assassination of his uncle. Kennedy has advocated for the release of
the individual currently imprisoned for assassinating his father,
Sirhan Sirhan, because he believes a CIA contractor was responsible
for the death.
Kennedy has received both support and criticism for his stance on
vaccines and has been described as an anti-vaccine activist.
In a July 28, 2023, email chain with the subject line “RFK Jr
Says Biden Administration Denied Him Secret Service Protection - The
Messenger” Secret Service officials discuss a news article in which
Kennedy makes a case for protection.
The chief of communications, whose name is redacted, writes to Michael
Plati, the assistant director of Protective Operations, and others:
“We’re getting Press calls on this and sending to DHS.”
An official in the Office of Intergovernmental and Legislative Affairs,
whose name is redacted, responds: “Request for protection to DHS dated
5/26; Response by Congressional Advisory Board 7 /11; Passed to DHS front
office on 7 /14.”
The deputy special agent in charge, whose name is redacted, adds:
[T]he following language was key to the recommendation and
subsequent decision.
“Protection under these guidelines should only be granted within one
year prior to the general election. Protection more than one year prior to
the general election should only be granted in extraordinary, case by case
circumstances in consultation with the committee, based on threat
assessment and other factors.”
The records were produced earlier this week, the day after we filed
aFOIA lawsuit against
the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) over similar but broader
requests for DHS/Secret Service leadership records regarding the decision
to not provide Secret Service protection for Kennedy (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of Homeland Security (No.
1:23-cv-02846)).
The Biden administration’s refusal to provide Secret Service
protection to Mr. Kennedy is dangerous and vindictive. These FOIA requests
and our new lawsuit aim to get the full truth on why Mr.
Kennedy’s life is being put at unnecessary risk by the Biden
administration.
We’ll be sure to keep you apprised if we uncover any other documents
on this disturbing issue.
Biden Agency Spends $100 Million to Help Disadvantaged
Communities by Fixing Broken
Electric Vehicle Chargers
What happens when two of the ideology-driven
Biden administration’s policies come in contact? You get
an outrageous waste of your tax dollars, as our Corruption
Chronicles blog reports.
Besides subsidizing the electric vehicle (EV) industry with a
staggering $15.5
billion, the Biden administration is investing an
additional $100
million in federal funding to prioritize the repair and
replacement of EV charging stations throughout the U.S. The venture will
“ensure disadvantaged communities benefit from upgraded charging
infrastructure,” according to the Department of Transportation (DOT),
which is doling out the money. The costly EV charger project is part of the
administration’s Justice40
Initiative which requires 40% of all federal government
investments to flow to “disadvantaged communities that are marginalized,
underserved, and overburdened with pollution.” The president signed an
executive order within days of taking office to allocate unprecedented
public funds to poor minority communities in the name of environmental
justice.
The multi-million-dollar EV charger restoration project will operate
under a Justice40 initiative known as National Electric Vehicle
Infrastructure (NEVI) Formula Program that provides states with money to
strategically deploy charging stations and establish an interconnected
network to facilitate data collection, access and reliability.
“The Biden-Harris Administration has set a goal of building a convenient,
affordable, reliable, equitable, and Made-in-America electric vehicle (EV)
charging network along the Nation’s highways and within our
communities,” according to the grant announcement issued this month by
the DOT. Because it is a Justice40 program the feds will use a White
House Climate
and Economic Justice Screening Tool to track how assisted chargers
aid needy communities. “Recipients of awards under this program can also
use the tool to ensure disadvantaged communities benefit from
upgraded charging infrastructure,” the grant document states, adding that
“the tool can be used to help prioritize and sequence projects to
maximize benefits to disadvantaged communities.”
The White House launched the Climate and Economic Justice Screening Tool
in response to the president’s January 2021 order to
tackle the “climate crisis at home and abroad.” The directive includes
an extensive section dedicated to securing environmental justice for
disadvantaged, historically marginalized and overburdened communities, by
among other things, creating a White House Environmental Justice
Interagency Council consisting of top government leaders.
The heads of key federal agencies—including the attorney general,
secretaries of defense, labor, transportation and energy—were
essentially ordered to address environmental justice in minority and
low-income populations. “Agencies shall make achieving environmental
justice part of their missions by developing programs, policies, and
activities to address the disproportionately high and adverse human health,
environmental, climate-related and other cumulative impacts on
disadvantaged communities, as well as the accompanying economic challenges
of such impacts,” according to Biden’s order.
It is not clear what the EV ownership rate is in marginalized or
overburdened communities or the demand for chargers because the government
has failed to provide that information. However, the administration does
reveal that as of this month, 6,261 public charging ports out of 151,506
nationwide were identified as being temporarily unavailable. California has
the largest number (1,707) of broken chargers followed by New York (541),
Texas (379), Florida (356) and Massachusetts (265). The objective of the
administration’s $100 million investment is to enhance and maintain the
reliability of the charging network by focusing on the repair
or replacement of existing chargers that are currently
non-operational, a goal it asserts “will be aligned with the Biden-Harris
Administration’s Justice40 Initiative.” The connection is not fully
explained.
Just weeks before the charger allotment the administration announced
that, as part of the president’s Investing in America agenda, the
Department of Energy is disbursing $15.5 billion to “support a strong and
just transition to electric vehicles.” The money will focus on
“retooling existing factories for the transition to electric vehicles,”
according to the agency. Jennifer Granholm, Biden’s energy secretary,
claims the funding shows that the president “understands that building
the cars of the future also necessitates helping the communities challenged
by the transition away from the internal combustion engine.”
Biden Homeland Security Department Greatly Inflates Number
of Transnational Criminal Organizations It Dismantles
The massive Department of Homeland Security is enabling a literal
invasion is also dropping the ball on related criminal threats on our
unsecured borders. Our Corruption
Chronicles blog explains.
The U.S. government has long assessed that Mexican drug cartels are the
greatest criminal threat to the country and earlier this year federal
sources in counterterrorism, intelligence and drug enforcement confirmed in
a congressional hearing that the illicit operations have seized
unprecedented control of the southwest border. They are officially
known as Transnational Criminal Organizations (TCO) and the Biden
administration’s reckless open border policies are facilitating their
business model, which includes operating in cities throughout the nation
with the help of U.S.-based street gangs that have overrun American
communities with drugs.
To address the crisis President Trump issued an executive
order in 2017 to dismantle TCOs and prevent international
trafficking by, not only strengthening the enforcement of federal law, but
also ensuring that Homeland Security agencies devote sufficient resources
to identifying, interdicting and disrupting TCOs. “These organizations
derive revenue through widespread illegal conduct, including acts of
violence and abuse that exhibit a wanton disregard for human life,”
Trump’s order states. “They, for example, have been known to commit
brutal murders, rapes, and other barbaric acts.” In the document the
former president also directs federal agencies to share information and
coordinate with each other to identify, interdict and destroy TCOs. This
includes improvements in the collection, reporting and sharing of relevant
data as well as quarterly reports detailing convictions in the U.S.
relating to TCOs and their subsidiaries.
All these years later the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has no
clue how many TCOs it has dismantled and, even worse, the agency created
after 9/11 to safeguard the country inflates the figures markedly. During a
recent five-year period Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), DHS’s
principal investigative arm responsible for disrupting terrorist and
transnational threats, failed to accurately measure and publicly report its
progress dismantling TCOs, according to a report issued
this month by the DHS Inspector General. The watchdog reviewed a sample of
422 Significant Case Reports (SCR) and determined that 253 (60%) did not
describe an entity that aligned with HSI’s definition of a TCO. “From
FY 2017 through FY 2022, HSI did not accurately publicly report its
progress against its established performance measure of disrupting or
dismantling TCOs,” investigators write in the report. “Instead, the
results that HSI publicly reported included cases that did not involve
entities meeting its definition of a TCO.” Specifically, many of the
approved case reports identified in the probe as not TCO-related involved
one individual committing a crime in the United States and not crossing any
international borders. “HSI included 171 of these non–TCO-related SCRs
in its public reporting of TCO disruptions and dismantlement’s,” the IG
found.
HSI created the SCR process over a decade ago to identify its most
important cases and measure its success in disrupting criminal
organizations such as TCOs as well as to justify more congressional
funding. The DHS IG found that the embellished stats occurred because the
agency relied on data in the case reports which conveniently failed to
distinguish between TCO-related and non-TCO-related probes. Nevertheless,
the agency repeatedly reported them as successful TCO disrupting
investigations. As a result, the report states that Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE), Congress and the public do not know how many TCOs HSI
succeeded in dismantling or interrupting during the period examined. The
DHS watchdog reveals that “to be considered significant, the
investigation must involve a high-threat TCO engaged in criminal activity
related to child exploitation; travel or finance (both drug-related and
non– drug-related); illicit trade; counterterrorism; worksite
enforcement; gangs; or national security.”
Nine Mexican TCOs have the greatest drug trafficking impact on the U.S.
according to the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA). Among them are the
Sinaloa and Juárez cartels, Los Zetas, La Familia Michoacána, Los
Rojos and Guerreros Unidos. The TCOs maintain drug distribution cells in
cities across the U.S. that report to leaders in Mexico and dominate the
nation’s drug market. In a DHS identifies Mexican
cartelsas the greatest threat to the U.S. because of their ability to
control territory and co-opt parts of government, particularly at a state
and local level. “They represent an acute and devastating threat to
public health and safety in the Homeland and a significant threat to U.S.
national security interests,” the DHS writes in the document. Just
this week the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control
(OFAC) sanctioned several
Sinaloa Cartel affiliates and fugitives.
Until next week,
Tom Fitton
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