FBI
Still Hiding Biden Twitter Censorship Records
We were in court this week
for a
hearing ordered by U.S. District Judge Sparkle L. Sooknanan in our FOIA
lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Justice for “Twitter
Files” records concerning Hunter
Biden’s laptop and other censorship. The only issue remaining in the
lawsuit is the FBI’s continued hiding of records
documenting two meetings between Twitter and the Biden FBI.
We filed
the April
2023 lawsuit
against the Justice Department, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security
and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence after the FBI
failed to respond to a December 2022 FOIA request for the records of any
FBI official and key Twitter employees between June 2020 and December 2022
(Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of Justice (No.
1:23-cv-01163)).
The lawsuit references Yoel Roth, Vijaya Gadde, and
Jim Baker, who were prominent in internal discussions at Twitter about
censoring the New York Post’s Hunter Biden laptop story, as
journalist Matt Taibbi revealed in the December 2022 release of the “Twitter
Files.”
It is frustrating beyond belief for us to have
to go to federal court for basic information on Biden’s abuse of the FBI,
using Twitter to censor and monitor Americans.
Earlier this year, FBI
Director Kash Patel committed
the FBI to a “new era” of transparency:
The FBI
is entering a new era—one that will be defined by integrity,
accountability, and the unwavering pursuit of justice. There will be no
cover-ups, no missing documents, and no stone left unturned — and anyone
from the prior or current Bureau who undermines this will be swiftly
pursued. If there are gaps, we will find them. If records have been hidden,
we will uncover them. And we will bring everything we find to the DOJ to be
fully assessed and transparently disseminated to the American people as it
should be. The oath we take is to the Constitution, and under my
leadership, that promise will be upheld without
compromise.
Through FOIA and other direct litigation, we
continue to investigate and litigate the broad range of censorship that had
been imposed upon tens of millions of Americans.
In November 2024, we
uncovered
records from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) revealing
an extensive effort by government and non-government entities to monitor
and censor social media posts on fraud during the 2020 election.
In
June 2024, heavily redacted Homeland Security records
from a Judicial Watch FOIA lawsuit showed state election officials in the
days before and after the 2020 election flagging online content deemed
“misinformation” and sending it to the Center for Internet Security
(CIS), a DHS-funded nonprofit, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure
Security Agency (CISA), which is a division of DHS, the Election Integrity
Partnership (EIP), which was created to flag online election content for
censorship and suppression, and others.
In December 2023, Homeland
Security records
from the same lawsuit showed a close collaboration between its
Cybersecurity and Information Security Agency (CISA) and the leftist
Election Integrity Partnership (EIP) to engage in “real-time narrative
tracking” on all major social media platforms in the days leading up to
the 2020 election.
In November 2023, we uncovered Homeland Security
records
that showed the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA)
communicating during the 2020 election campaign with the Election Integrity
Partnership (EIP). The CISA records showed government involvement in the
EIP pressure on Google, Twitter, Facebook, TikTok, Pinterest, Reddit and
other platforms to censor “disinformation.”
In September 2022, we
sued the
Secretary of State of the State of California for having YouTube censor a
Judicial Watch election integrity video. In March 2025, Judicial Watch
asked the Supreme Court of the United States to
review the case.
In July 2021, we uncovered
records from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which
revealed that Facebook coordinated closely with the CDC to control the
Covid narrative and “misinformation” and that over $3.5 million in free
advertising was given to the CDC by social media companies.
In May
2021, we revealed
documents showing
that Iowa state officials pressured social media companies Twitter and
Facebook to censor posts about the 2020 election.
In April 2021, records
from the Office of the Secretary of State of California revealed how state
officials pressured social media companies (Twitter, Facebook, Google
(YouTube)) to censor posts about the 2020 election. Included in these
records were “misinformation briefings” emails that were compiled by
communications firm SKDK, which lists
Biden for President as their top client
of 2020. The records show how the state agency successfully pressured
YouTube to censor a Judicial Watch video concerning mail-in voting and a
Judicial Watch lawsuit settlement about California voter roll clean
up.
CHARGES: Bribed USAID Official Helps Minority
Businesses Get $550 Million in Contracts
The United States
Agency for International Development has been in the news lately as
President Trump’s administration exposes its use as a cash cow for the
Left. Now there’s news of outright bribery at the agency, as our
Corruption Chronicles blog reveals.
In
yet another case that demonstrates the deep-rooted corruption at the
dismantled United States Agency for International Development (USAID) , a
contracting officer at the scandal-plagued State Department offshoot has pleaded
guilty to bribery of a public official for running a decade-long scheme
involving over half a billion dollars in contracts. The criminal operation
was facilitated by a government program that helps socially and
economically disadvantaged businesses by giving them lucrative federal
contracting opportunities through “set-asides and solo-source”
contracts exclusively available to minorities and women without a
competitive bidding process. All the parties involved in this criminal
enterprise, including the veteran USAID employee, are minorities.
It
is important to note that the mainstream media, which collectively
expressed outrage when President Trump dismantled USAID, has failed to
report on the pervasive fraud that has long gripped the foreign aid agency
and still ignores cases like this that support the administration’s move.
Only a few local Maryland news outlets covered this huge bribery operation
because the perpetrators were from the Baltimore area. The corrupt USAID
contracting officer, Roderick Watson, is from Woodstock, which is just west
of Baltimore. Federal prosecutors say he received over a million dollars in
bribes in exchange for using his position as a trusted overseer of taxpayer
money to direct 14 prime federal contracts to his three buddies, Walter
Barnes, a certified Small Business Administration (SBA) minority business
owner, Darryl Britt another minority business owner and Paul Young, a
subcontractor of the men’s companies. Barnes has pleaded guilty to
conspiracy to commit bribery of a public official and securities fraud.
Britt has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery of a public
official and Young has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery of a
public official.
“The defendants sought to enrich themselves at the
expense of American taxpayers through bribery and fraud,” said Matthew R.
Galeotti, head of the Department of Justice (DOJ) criminal division.
“Their scheme violated the public trust by corrupting the federal
government’s procurement process. Anybody who cares about good and
effective government should be concerned about the waste, fraud, and abuse
in government agencies, including USAID.” Galeotti added that those who
engage in bribery schemes to exploit the U.S. Small Business
Administration’s vital economic programs for small businesses— whether
individuals or corporations acting through them—will be held to account.
The U.S. Attorney for the
District of Maryland, where the case is being tried, emphasized that Watson
was entrusted to serve the interests of the American people and his
criminal actions for his own personal gain undermine the integrity of
public institutions. “Public trust is the hallmark of our nation’s
values, so corruption within a federal government agency is intolerable”
the U.S. Attorney, Kelly O. Hayes, said.
The elaborate scheme began
in 2013 when Watson, while a USAID contracting officer, made a deal with
Britt to steer government contracts his way in exchange for bribes.
Britt’s company, Apprio, benefitted from the special minority exception
and therefore did not receive much scrutiny but when it graduated from the
program and was no longer eligible to be a prime business for new contracts
with USAID under the initiative, they brought Barnes onboard. His
minority-owned company, Vistant, shifted to the prime contractor that
cashed in thanks to
Watson’s influence between 2018 and 2022. Britt and Barnes concealed the
bribes—cash, computers, cellular phones, jobs for relatives, down
payments on two residential mortgages—by passing them through Young, the
president of another subcontractor to the men’s businesses. Watson helped
his accomplices by manipulating the procurement process at USAID by, among
other things, recommending their companies to other agency decisionmakers
for noncompetitive contracts, disclosing sensitive procurement information,
providing positive performance evaluations, and approving increased funding
and security clearances. “Watson exploited his position at USAID to line
his pockets with bribes in exchange for more than $550 million in
contracts,” according to Guy Ficco, chief of the Internal Revenue Service
Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI). “While he helped three company owners
and presidents bypass the fair bidding process, he was showered with cash
and
lavish gifts.”
Judicial Watch has for years exposed inherent fraud,
waste, and corruption at USAID. Most recently, we sued
the agency for records involving $27 million in Gaza grants that went to
“Miscellaneous Foreign Awardees.” The Biden administration claimed the
recipients could not be disclosed because the agency’s workers could be
put at risk by Israel. The involvement
of employees of the U.S.-backed United Nations Relief and Works
Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA) in the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack
on Israel underscores the importance of transparency in who receives
American taxpayer dollars and how the money is
spent.
Until next week,
