It isn’t surprising that the Biden administration is scrambling to
hide its abusive machinations.
The latest: The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is
releasing only 65 out of more than 1,600 pages of records related to the
Biden administration’s unprecedented raid on the home of former President
Trump.
We're seeking the records in a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
lawsuit we filed in
U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia after NARA failed to
respond adequately to a February 2022 request (
Judicial Watch v
National Archives and Records Administration (No.
1:22-cv-02535).
We’re asking for:
- All records regarding the referral from NARA to the Department of
Justice regarding the records management procedures of former President
Donald Trump (https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/national-archives-asks-doj-investigate-trumps-handling-white/story?id=82781128
). This request includes all related records of communication between any
official or employee of NARA and any official or employee of the Department
of Justice and/or any other branch, department, agency, or office of the
federal government.
- All records regarding the retrieval of records from President Trump or
any individual or entity acting on his behalf by the National Archives and
Records Administration. This request includes related records of
communication between any official or employee of NARA and President Trump
and/or any individual or entity acting on his behalf.
On October 3 the Archives released documents for only two categories of
records: 1) all emails between NARA officials and representatives of former
President Trump and 2) NARA emails to external entities other than Trump
representatives related to the 15 boxes as of March 31, 2022.
The Archives recently sent us
two letters in which
it stated that it found 309 pages relating to Category 1 but was releasing
only 11 pages, less than one percent, nine pages in full and 2 in part.
The Archives said it found 1,303 pages of emails in Category 2 but was
releasing only 54, 39 in full, 15 with redactions. Again, less than one
percent of the records.
The National Archives released
a few pages of
correspondence with Congress and an email with former President Trump’s
representatives in which the Archives asserted alleged authority over
records in Trump’s personal possession.
NARA referred to numerous
FOIA exemptions as the
reasons for its withholdings:
- Exemption (b)(5) was asserted to protect NARA’s deliberations with
Trump’s representatives, Congress, and other federal agencies
- Exemption (b)(6) was asserted to protect personal privacy.
- Exemption (b)(7)(A) was asserted to withhold records compiled for law
enforcement purposes.
- Exemption (b)(7)(C) was asserted to withhold records compiled for law
enforcement purposes, the disclosure of which could reasonably be expected
to constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.
- Exemption (b)(7)(E) was asserted to protect law enforcement
information related to techniques and procedures that, if disclosed, could
reasonably be expected to risk circumvention of the law.
The Biden administration is in cover-up mode on its abusive and
unprecedented raid of former President Trump’s home. The National
Archives pretends to be concerned about public access to public information
while unlawfully ignoring FOIA law and using a myriad of excuses to hide
records about its manufactured dispute over the Trump records.
We are at the forefront of the court battle for transparency regarding the
abusive Biden raid on Trump’s home.
In August, we
forced the release
of the raid affidavit through a
court request to
unseal the warrant materials used in the unprecedented raid on the home of
former President Trump.
We also just filed two
lawsuits against the
Justice Department for records of the Mar-a-Lago raid search warrant
application and approval, as well as communications about the warrant
between the FBI, Executive Office of the President and the Secret
Service.
And more lawsuits are coming…
Judicial Watch Sues over Possible FBI Obstruction of Hunter Biden
Investigation
The FBI is corrupt and can’t be trusted to engage fairly with the
American people or their elected representatives in Congress.
Whistleblowers have been revealing the extent of the dishonesty, and
we’re paying attention.
We filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the Department
of Justice for all records in the possession of FBI Supervisory
Intelligence Analyst Brian Auten regarding an August 6, 2020, briefing
provided to members of the U.S. Senate (
Judicial Watch v. U.S.
Department of Justice (No. 1:22-cv-02821).
Ron Johnson (R-WI) and Chuck Grassley (R-IA) raised concerns that the
briefing was intended to undermine the senators’ investigation of Hunter
Biden. Indeed, Johnson suggested that, if these allegations are true, they
would represent “one of the greatest episodes of Executive Branch
corruption in American history.”
We sued after the DOJ failed to reply to an August 2, 2022, FOIA request
for:
All unclassified records including emails, email chains, email
attachments, notes (digital and / or hand-written), briefings, data,
documents, letters, evidence, assessments, in the possession of FBI
Supervisory Intelligence Analyst Brian Auten concerning an August 6, 2020,
briefing provided to members of the U.S. Senate, specifically, Senator’s
Johnson and Grassley.
Here’s the background.
In a July 25, 2022,
letter to Attorney
General Merrick Garland and FBI Director Christopher Wray, Senator
Grassley, ranking member of the Committee on the Judiciary, wrote:
On May 31, 2022, I wrote to you regarding likely violations of Federal
laws, regulations and Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”)
guidelines by Assistant Special Agent in Charge (“ASAC”) Timothy
Thibault of the Washington Field Office (“WFO”) based on a pattern of
active public partisanship in his then public social media content…. My
letter … invited individuals, including current and former government
employees, to contact me and my office to confidentially report allegations
of fraud, waste, abuse and gross mismanagement by FBI and Justice
Department (“Department”) officials including, but not limited to, ASAC
Thibault. In response, my office has received a significant number of
protected communications from highly credible
whistleblowers.
The information provided to my office involves concerns about the
FBI’s receipt and use of derogatory information relating to Hunter Biden,
and the FBI’s false portrayal of acquired evidence as disinformation. The
volume and consistency of these allegations substantiate their credibility
and necessitate this letter.
First, it’s been alleged that the FBI developed information in 2020
about Hunter Biden’s criminal financial and related activity. It is
further alleged that in August 2020, FBI Supervisory Intelligence Analyst
Brian Auten opened an assessment which was used by FBI Headquarters (‘FBI
HQ’) team to improperly discredit negative Hunter Biden information as
disinformation and caused investigative activity to cease. Based on
allegations, verified and verifiable derogatory information on Hunter Biden
was falsely labeled as disinformation.
The basis for how the FBI HQ team selected the specific information for
inclusion in Auten’s assessment is unknown, but in more than one instance
the focus of the FBI HQ team’s attention involved derogatory information
about Hunter Biden. Accordingly, the allegations provided to my office
appear to indicate that there was a scheme in place among certain FBI
officials to undermine derogatory information connected to Hunter Biden by
falsely suggesting it was disinformation.
Importantly, it’s been alleged to my office that Auten’s assessment
was opened in August 2020, which is the same month that Senator Johnson and
I received an unsolicited and unnecessary briefing from the FBI that purportedly related to our
Biden investigation and a briefing for which the contents were later leaked
in order to paint the investigation in a false light.
On July 26, 2022, Senator Johnson, the ranking member of the Permanent
Subcommittee on Investigations of the Committee on Homeland Security, wrote
a letter to Garland,
Wray, Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines, and DOJ Inspector
General Michael Horowitz:
Yesterday, Senator Grassley sent a letter to the Department of Justice
(DOJ) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) revealing information
that may confirm what I have suspected for years: “[T]here was a scheme
in place among certain FBI officials to undermine derogatory information
connected to Hunter Biden by falsely suggesting it was
disinformation.”
***
[O]n August 6, 2020, Senator Grassley and I
received a briefing from the FBI which we always assumed was a set up to
intentionally discredit our ongoing work into Hunter Biden’s extensive
foreign financial entanglements. Indeed, months after that briefing—which
was not specific and unconnected to our investigation—it was leaked to
the Washington Post who reported on it and tied it to “an extensive
effort by the [FBI] to alert members of Congress . . . that they faced a
risk of being used to further Russia’s attempt to influence the
election’s outcome[.]”
If these recent whistleblower revelations are true, it would strongly
suggest that the FBI’s August 6, 2020 briefing was indeed a targeted
effort to intentionally undermine a Congressional investigation. The FBI
being weaponized against two sitting chairmen of U.S. Senate committees
with constitutional oversight responsibilities would be one of the greatest
episodes of Executive Branch corruption in American history.
Auten is reportedly
under investigation
for his role in the FBI Crossfire Hurricane investigation targeting Trump
and just testified in the Durham Special Counsel trial of Igor Danchenko,
who was paid by both the Clinton campaign and the FBI to dig up dirt on
President Trump.
It is no coincidence the FBI operatives implicated in improperly protecting
Hunter and Joe Biden were also abusing President Trump. The Justice
Department and the FBI have been irredeemably compromised and their refusal
to follow federal transparency law further confirms their corruption.
Through FOIA, we have uncovered significant information about Hunter Biden,
who served on the
board of directors for
Ukrainian energy firm Burisma Holdings despite having no previous
experience in the energy industry.
We recently
sued the Department of
Homeland Security for Secret Service records related to the investigation
of Hunter Biden’s gun, reportedly disposed of in a dumpster in
Delaware.
In December 2020, we received
records from the State
Department tying Hunter Biden’s Burisma Holdings’ lobbying operation to
an influence-peddling operation involving the Clinton campaign during the
2016 election. Also uncovered were State Department
records showing that
former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie “Masha” Yovanovitch had
specifically warned in 2017 about corruption allegations against Burisma
Holdings.
In October 2020, State Department
records that included
a briefing checklist of a February 22, 2019, meeting in Kyiv between
then-U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch and Sally Painter,
co-founder and chief operating officer of Blue Star Strategies, a
Democratic lobbying firm which was hired by Burisma Holdings to combat
corruption
allegations. The briefing checklist notes that Painter also planned
to meet with Foreign
Commercial Service (FCS) Officer Martin Claessens “regarding the Burisma
Group energy company.” (Painter was implicated in the Clinton-era
fundraising
scandal we exposed that involved the alleged sale of seats on
Commerce Department trade missions to Democratic National Committee
donors.)
In September 2020, State Department
records include a
January 17, 2017, email from George Kent, the Obama administration’s
deputy assistant secretary of state in charge of Ukraine policy, which was
copied to then-U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch, highlighting
Russia-linked media “trolling” Joe Biden over “his son’s
business.” An
email was sent
four days prior to the inauguration of President Donald Trump to a redacted
recipient and CCd to Yovanovitch with the subject line “medvedchuk-linked
vesti trolls Biden.” Kent writes: “Burisma – gift that keeps on
giving. (With medvedchuk affiliated Vesti pushing the troll like storyline
on visit day)”
In June 2020, U.S. Secret Service
records showed that,
for the first five and a half years of the Obama administration, Hunter
Biden traveled extensively while receiving a Secret Service protective
detail. During the time period of the records provided, Hunter Biden took
411 separate domestic and international flights, including to 29 different
foreign countries. He visited China five times.
We are also
suing the DHS for
Secret Service records on Hunter Biden’s travel and security costs, and
suing the State
Department for messages sent through the
SMART (State Messaging
and Archive Retrieval Toolkit) system that mention Hunter Biden.
As the FBI and other agencies obstruct to help cover up Biden corruption,
Judicial Watch advances in the courts to uncover the truth!
COVID Funds: $300,000 to Study How College Grading Perpetuates
‘Inequalities’
President Biden’s bureaucrats are throwing your tax dollars at disturbing
leftist projects. Here’s just one example,
reported in our
Corruption Chronicles blog.
A public university is getting hundreds of thousands of dollars from the
Biden administration’s fraud infested COVID relief fund to study how
traditional grading in college perpetuates systemic inequalities toward
nontraditional and rural students. “Common classroom practices, such as
grading and the use of grades to assess knowledge and performance, may have
unintended consequences on students who invariably derive an awareness of
their own academic abilities from the results of those grading
structures,” according to the National Science Foundation (NSF), which is
doling out the money. “In fact, these traditional practices may
inadvertently create and promote inequities among different student groups,
particularly in large enrollment courses, but these issues have largely
been unexplored.”
Beginning early next year, the agency will give North Dakota State
University (NDSU) $300,000 to explore
the phenomenon. The project is officially titled “Reimagining Grading to
Support Nontraditional and Rural Students in High Enrollment, Gateway STEM
Courses” and it will be funded by the American Rescue Plan of
2021, the nearly $2 trillion measure passed by Democrats to provide
immediate and direct relief to families and workers impacted by the
COVID-19 crisis through no fault of their own. When the law passed last
spring, the Biden administration promoted it as one of the most progressive
pieces of legislation in history that would build a bridge to an
equitable economic recovery. The administration justified the measure
by asserting that the public health crisis and resulting economic crisis
devastated the health and economic wellbeing of millions of Americans,
particularly people of color, immigrants, and low-wage workers.
The reality is that a lot of the money—billions and counting—has
gone to unrelated causes and the administration’s monstrous taxpayer
funded COVID relief program is rife with fraud and corruption. The problem
is so bad that the Department of Justice (DOJ) created a COVID-19 Fraud Enforcement
Task Force to “enhance efforts to combat and prevent
pandemic-related fraud.” The special unit has been quite busy prosecuting
a multitude of scams, false statements, and money laundering related to
pandemic relief. This month House Republicans issued a report documenting 500
days of massive waste, fraud, and abuse in the American Rescue Plan. It
includes more than $783 million in stimulus checks for convicted prisoners
including the Boston Marathon bomber, $40 million to expand libraries in
Delaware, $2 million for a Florida golf course and $16 million for electric
vehicle charging stations in Maine and $20 million to modernize the
state’s fish hatcheries. The list goes on and on.
The scathing report may seem like the $300,000 for the latest
questionable project is a drop in the bucket, but it highlights that cash
flow has not been deterred by waste. The NDSU researcher (Tara Slominski)
who will conduct the study beginning next year claims in a university article
that that traditional grading practices perpetuate systemic inequities for
college students. “Her work will directly address this challenge by
providing STEM faculty with equitable and practical assessment and grading
approaches to better support today’s college students,” the piece
states, adding that the work will create more equitable learning
environments. Slominski teaches biology at NDSU and has already developed a
curriculum to promote success among at-risk students. She claims that
“the findings from this work will help faculty across the country and
across disciplines create more equitable learning environments that are
better suited to support the needs of today’s college students.”
The NSF, which funds more than a quarter of research conducted at
American colleges with its $8.5 billion annual budget, explains that
Slominski’s postdoctoral research fellowship project seeks to examine the
impact of grading practices on self-concept and STEM persistence with a
special focus on rural and nontraditional students. “The project has
promise to produce new insights about equitable classroom and grading
practices for rural and nontraditional students that are compatible with
the constraints of high enrollment gateway courses,” the agency writes in
the grant announcement. It is not clear how this may provide immediate and
direct relief to families and workers impacted by the COVID-19 crisis
through no fault of their own as the American Rescue Plan intended.
Until next week …