President Donald Trump promised that he would go on offense against the deep state element that has burrowed deeply into the Justice Department, particularly the Federal Bureau of Investigation. And it looks like that promise is on its way to being fulfilled.
Recent reports have revealed that disgraced former FBI Director James Comey launched an off-the-record investigation into the president’s presidential campaign back in 2015, in which he employed the use of two female agents as “honeypots.”
For those unfamiliar with that term, a “honeypot” is a person who goes undercover to try and obtain sensitive information by using sex appeal. It’s kind of a dirty, sleazy tactic, especially when you’re using it to spy on a fellow American citizen.
But, in this life, you reap what you sow. And it’s time to bring in the crop.
Newly confirmed FBI Director Kash Patel is now launching an investigation into Comey and his little operation to spy on Trump’s campaign. Time to pay the piper.
“A whistleblower made Comey’s plans known in a protected disclosure to the House Judiciary Committee in 2024, which the Times reported on exclusively in October,” The Western Journal said.
It’s being reported that the agents who infiltrated the president’s campaign traveled with them and the whistleblower had personal information to confirm Comey ordered the investigation and that he “personally directed it.”
“Comey was not looking for evidence of a specific crime. Rather, he was attempting to meddle in the campaigns affairs to see what could be obtained against Trump,” the article read.
“The whistleblower also said, the plan was hidden from the Department of Justice Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz. Horowitz investigated FBI misconduct against the Trump campaign previously,” the report continued.
“The case had no predicated foundation, so Comey personally directed the investigation without creating an official case file in Sentinel or any other FBI system,” the whistleblower revealed, going on to add, “The FBI has multiple methods of protecting highly sensitive investigations, so Comey did not have a legitimate reason not to officially create an official investigation file or have a file number.”
So why did Comey shutdown the operation? There was fear that the identities of the agents would be discovered and exposed. And they had good reason to be afraid as a newspaper got their hands on a photo of one of the agents and was all set to publish it.
The press office inside the bureau then contacted the paper and informed them that if the agent in the photo was identified as an “FBI informant,” she would be killed. A bit melodramatic, right?
“Both agents are still federal employees — with one transfering to the CIA and the other being promoted within the FBI. The whistleblower said several FBI agents were told to never discuss Comey’s investigation ever again,” the article revealed.
Hopefully, Patel and his Deputy Director, Dan Bongino, can get to the bottom of the mess and ensure all parties involved in this operation are held accountable for their actions.