Trump Finds Obama's Secret MOLE in White House – Identity Rocks DC
Attorney General Jeff Sessions just made a huge move to help President Donald Trump on
Thursday night when senior Justice Department officials announced criminal charges against
Senate Intelligence Committee's long-time director of security James Wolfe.
Breitbart reported that in the indictment, Wolfe is accused of making false statements
to the FBI.
The indictment claims that Wolfe passed classified information to a series of media outlets,
confirming long-standing suspicions of the career intelligence community's complicity
in leaks.
Wolfe has been charged with three separate instances of making false statements to the
FBI in the indictment, which appears to detail how he did allegedly leaked classified information
to reporters and then allegedly lied about it to the FBI.
The indictment does not name who the classified documents were leaked to, identifying them
as "Reporter #1," "Reporter #2," "Reporter #3," and "Reporter #4" as well as "MALE-1"
respectively.
However, it is believed that "MALE-1" is ex-Trump aide Carter Page, and "Reporter
#2" is then-Buzzfeed News now New York Times reporter Ali Watkins.
It has been reported that Watkins and Wolfe were "in a romantic relationship" at the
time Wolfe leaked the Carter Page documents.
The indictment includes text messages that reveal that not only was Wolfe willing to
leak to Watkins, he had a strong personal connection to her as well.
"I always tried to give you as much information that I could and to do the right thing with
it so you could get that scoop before anyone else . . . . I always enjoyed the way that
you would pursue a story,like nobody else was doing in my hal1way," read one text
from Wolfe to Watkins.
"I felt like I was part of your excitement and was always very supportive of your career
and the tenacity that you exhibited to chase down a good story."
Back in November, Sessions testified that the Justice Department had numerous ongoing
leaks investigations, including presumably this one.
"Members of the committee, we had about nine open investigations of classified leaks
in the last three years," Sessions testified to a House committee.
"We have 27 investigations open today.
We intend to get to the bottom of these leaks."
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