by John Solomon
Ukraine impeachment and China election meddling cases are at top of list for review after DNI declassifications revealed shocking behavior — from hiding evidence to out and out political biases.
The new chief watchdog for U.S. spy agencies has opened a review of several "urgent concern" whistle-blower complaints fielded by his predecessor after bombshell documents revealed that intelligence officials kept exculpatory evidence from President Donald Trump's 2019 impeachment proceedings and may have suppressed concerns about Chinese meddling in the 2020 election.
Officials told Just the News that Intelligence Community Inspector General (ICIG) Christopher Fox, who took over the job in October, ordered the review as part of a larger effort to reform and better resource his office to handle whistle-blower complaints that can range from abuse of civil liberties and fraud to unmitigated national security threats related to terrorism and espionage.
"It also relied more on the opinions of attorneys than the objective findings of investigators" ICIG says
"The past treatment of urgent concerns as more of a legal/document review than an investigative activity left important evidence on the table," the ICIG office said in a statement. "It also relied more on the opinions of attorneys than the objective findings of investigators. Ultimately, this process did not serve the Intelligence Community or the American people well."
Fox's review comes after Just the News reported Sunday that documents recently declassified by the Office of Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) showed that the ICIG office under Fox's predecessor, Michael Atkinson, flagged concerns about the CIA analyst who launched the 2019 impeachment proceedings against Trump with Ukraine policy-related allegations but those concerns were kept classified and never made public during the congressional proceedings.
The concerns included that the accuser had the "potential for bias," had provided false information in his initial complaint and had animus toward conservatives inside Trump's circles, according to documents declassified by DNI Tulsi Gabbard this week.
You can read those documents here.
Gabbard blasted Atkinson's work on Monday, suggesting the former watchdog had "weaponized the whistle-blower process" and used his office to "manufacture a conspiracy that was used as the basis to impeach President Trump."
Others, including former Trump defense lawyers, the FBI and members of Congress, also sharply criticized the withholding of such evidence for six years, with famed law professor Alan Dershowitz going so far as to suggest Trump might have grounds to expunge his 2019 impeachment in the House of Representatives.
China's hacking of voter data kept hidden by Intelligence Community
Separately, Just the News reported that the National Intelligence Council had concluded in 2020 that China had hacked or gained access to several states' voter registration databases, but that information was suppressed from the American public, state election officials and Congress despite a whistle-blower named Christopher Porter's complaints trying to bring attention to it.
The intelligence community ombudsman even raised concerns that U.S. spy agencies may have exhibited bias in trying to suppress word of China's election activities. Officials told Just the News that intelligence agencies were informed recently that Fox's office will be reviewing anew the handling of Porter's whistle-blower complaint. Fox's office said it can "neither confirm nor deny whistle-blower identities or details that might reveal them, or whether any specific matter is under investigation."
But it did confirm to Just the News that Fox has launched a systemic review of "urgent concern" whistle-blower complaints handled during Atkinson's tenure.
"IC IG Fox has also directed a comprehensive review of all past urgent concern complaints to identify lessons learned, improve internal policies, and determine whether previous matters warrant additional oversight activity," the office said.
Officials said under the old regime, "urgent concern" complaints from intelligence community whistle-blowers inside 18 separate agencies were handled by the Center for Protected Disclosures, operating separately from the Investigations Division and its trained investigators.
That meant most complaints just got a cursory review during a limited 14-day period that usually included:
- An intake interview;
- Limited witness interviews;
- An initial document examination.
"After the statutorily required 14-day review period, IC OIG did not historically continue any investigative activity. Instead, a memorandum reflecting the IC IG's determination would be transmitted to the DNI and to Congress, and the case would be administratively closed (frozen in time), regardless of the national security implications," Fox's office said.
Congress received "only a preliminary assessment based on an incomplete evidentiary record" ICIG says
Fox's office said the 2019 impeachment case revealed in the newly declassified documents that "Congress received only a preliminary assessment based on an incomplete evidentiary record."
In January, Fox launched what he called internally an “IC OIG 2.0” reorganization that consolidated six divisions into four offices, allowing a more robust and thorough "cross-disciplinary" to apply "consistent investigative rigor and objectivity to every complaint" that came in, officials said.
John Solomon
Source: https://justthenews.com/government/security/wednew-intel-watchdog-launches-review-past-whistleblower-complaints-after
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