Largely overshadowed by the Coronavirus pandemic, the FISA court scandal,
“the widest, most destructive corruption scandal in US history” remains
unresolved as
affirmed
at CPAC by Fitton in March. After years of efforts
aimed at exposing the illicit nature of the FBI’s spying on candidate and
then President Trump, Judicial Watch finally “exposed the truth” late
last year. Entirely consumed by the Schiff-Pelosi impeachment efforts, many
Americans may have forgotten about the true extent of the FISA
scandal.
Judicial Watch’s efforts to uncover the scandal resulted in the FISA
Court’s recent admission that “at least” two of the four court
authorizations to spy on Carter Page were “fraudulent.” Despite knowing
of its “lies” to the court, the FBI “
didn’t do anything about
it. They waited until the IG report to tell them [the FISA court] things
they should have known for at least two years.” To be clear, a
December 9, 2019 letter from the DOJ states “
there was insufficient
predication to establish probable cause to believe that Carter Page was
acting as an agent of a foreign power.” However, with the Presiding
Judge of the FISA Court, Judge Boasberg recently appointing an
ex-Obama-appointee and “anti-Trump activist” to investigate FISA
corruption, there may be little hope for justice over the
“coup-cabal’s” manipulation of the court. According to Fitton, this
decision compromises the independence of the court. In his recently
re-aired FISA clip, he states “
The independence of the courts?
That’s a big lie. the courts aren’t independent.. the courts too often
work hand and glove with the government against the interests of the
American people and contrary to law in my opinion.” The appointment,
in Fitton’s words “further undermines the confidence of the
American people in the court’s ability to administer
justice.”
“
Everything needs to be done with the thought that people should have
confidence in the fair administration of justice,” Fitton
states. Despite the now exposed corruption of the FBI in “lying to the
FISA court,” FBI Director Wray’s response is typical of DC politics, in
that his remarks reflect the DC mantra “
let’s make more laws but
not prosecute those who broke the laws,” according to
Fitton.
Today, “
because the FBI had invalid warrants, they’ve agreed to
sequester “wall-off” the information they gathered from the warrants,
the spy garbage they picked up on Trump, Carter Page and who knows who
else,” Fitton reports. When it comes to FISA reform, “
don’t
be distracted America. The debate should not be about whether the court
should be authorized, but who should be prosecuted for illegally spying on
President Trump.”