Tag Archives: FBIs

Scrutiny builds over FBI’s discovery of empty folders at Mar-a-Lago

Among the material allegedly seized from former President Trump’s home were numerous empty folders that once contained classified information or intel designated to be returned to the military, renewing questions over fallout from the potential mishandling of records and if they have since been recovered.

In an inventory from the Justice Department unsealed by a judge Friday, the government detailed that interspersed with Trump’s personal belongings were 48 empty folders with classified banners as well as another 42 empty folders that were labeled “return to staff secretary/military aide,” according to the filing.

The majority were found in Trump’s office, rather than the storage room at Mar-a-Lago. 

It’s not clear if the materials the folders once housed are elsewhere in the boxes of recovered evidence, but experts say the suite of questions the detail raises argues in favor of allowing the Justice Department to continue its investigation, even as Trump seeks to stall its progress.

“The ideal scenario that would describe this is that the empty folders are actually for the records that are somewhere else in the boxes — that someone just didn’t keep them in the folder in the way they were supposed to, so they’re not actually out there in the wild somewhere,” said Kel McClanahan, executive director of National Security Counselors, a nonprofit law firm specializing in national security law.

“The least optimistic scenario is that they are nowhere to be found because they are already with someone else.” 

The inventory list was given to U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon shortly before she heard arguments from Trump’s legal team asking to stall the FBI investigation so that a third-party special master could review the evidence to protect what they claim could be privileged material. The DOJ has argued such a move is unnecessary as its own team of staff not assigned to the case has already reviewed the evidence for privileged material.

Beyond the empty folders, the Friday inventory details in broad strokes the other types of documents that were found within Trump’s office among the tranche of more than 100 recovered classified records: three documents marked confidential, 17 documents marked secret and seven documents marked top-secret.

Larry Pfeiffer, who previously served as senior director of the White House Situation Room and was chief of staff at the CIA, said the system for tracking classified documents should allow investigators to account for what information should be in the folders and determine if it is still on site. 

But he expressed concern that the fact that they even ended up at Mar-a-Lago could mean proper record-keeping — even with career national security staffers on hand at the White House — may not have been taken seriously.

“To me, it sounds like there was either a horrific systemic breakdown in those processes, No. 1., or those people just felt completely intimidated by Trump and the people around him. Or there were people who were completely operating around the system — that documents were flowing in and out of the Oval and up into the residence without ever going through this tracking process,” Pfeiffer told The Hill. 

“I think it’s possible it was a mistake. I think it’s possible they were folders that were holding the documents that were already found. But I worry it could have been folders that had other documents in them and now the mystery is where are the other documents? And that’s the scary part.” 

That includes the materials that expressly directed they be returned to the military.

“Anything that was in the folder should have been returned. The folder being there suggests it wasn’t,” Pfeiffer said.

The inventory list notes that the records were found mixed with clothes, books and other personal effects as well as some 10,000 presidential records that likely should be maintained by the National Archives. 

That they were kept with Trump’s belongings — and in some cases, in his office — could be an important detail for the DOJ, one they alluded to in their filing. The department noted that “all evidence — including the nature and manner in which they were stored” — will inform their investigation.

“The co-mingling of all this stuff shows that there was no care taken with these records at a few different points in the process because at least one of two things happened to lead to this scenario,” McClanahan, the national security lawyer, said.

“No 1., while he was in office he or his staff haphazardly mixed all this classified and unclassified material together in boxes, showing that they weren’t handling it properly in the office. Or two, after he got home, he started rooting through the boxes and putting things in and taking things out, which would show that there was clear awareness and involvement of the classified nature of this material. I think that it’s probably going to be a mix of the two,” he added.

The confusion around the documents also adds another dimension to the special master case. Cannon noted she would weigh whether to allow the intelligence community to continue its review of the potential national security implications tied to the mishandling of material, including how to protect sources and methods. The review is being led by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI).  

“I don’t think finding empty folders gives it any more urgency than it already deserves. The fact that some of the most sensitive documents in our government were sitting around in storage rooms at a golf resort in Florida, intermingled with a bunch of other stuff, that clearly people [without clearances] could have physical access to … is frightening,” Pfeiffer said.

“The urgency is there regardless of whether there were empty folders found or not. And so therefore, having a special master now potentially put a halt to the damage assessment/risk assessment that the ODNI is doing, that would be further delay that we shouldn’t have to put up with.”

Others warn there’s no good way to block the Justice Department’s work while allowing the intelligence community to conduct its own assessment about the potential fallout.

“The FBI’s investigation and the Intelligence Community (IC) assessments are inextricably intertwined from a counterintelligence perspective,” Brian Greer, a former CIA attorney, told The Hill by email. 

“To assess the risks, it’s important for the IC to know who accessed a given document, and they can only get that from the FBI. But if the court prohibits the FBI from accessing certain classified documents because they might be subject to an executive privilege claim, that process will break down.” 

Cannon declined to make an immediate ruling on the matter when each side presented their arguments Thursday, but McClanahan said if she grants Trump’s request it could ultimately backfire for a former president who often insists he has been treated unfairly.

He noted a special master could easily decide the FBI did not obtain any materials that should be protected by either attorney-client or executive privileges, as Trump is asserting.

“He won’t be able to say, ‘the DOJ privilege review team wrongfully decided it,’ he’s going to have to say, ‘the DOJ privilege review team, and the subject matter expert that I asked for, and a federal judge wrongfully decided it,’” McClanahan said.

“And in an area like this where there’s not a whole lot of room for him to be right — that’s a very risky move.”

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Lawmakers demand data about online threats after FBI’s Mar-a-Lago search

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House Oversight Committee leaders are demanding social media companies take “immediate action” to address a flood of violent online threats against law enforcement, following the FBI’s search of former president Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

The lawmakers sent letters Friday to the executives of eight social media companies, including Facebook parent company Meta and the fringe right-wing platform Gab, demanding details about the number of threats against law enforcement. The letters cite a “spike in social media users calling for civil war” and other violence against law enforcement after Trump and some Republican members of Congress lashed out against the FBI.

The letters say these online threats have contributed to attacks against law enforcement, citing the threats that the gunman who tried to breach the FBI’s Cincinnati field office earlier this month shared on Trump’s social network, Truth Social.

“We are concerned that reckless statements by the former president and Republican Members of Congress have unleashed a flood of violent threats on social media that have already led to at least one death and pose a danger to law enforcement officers across the United States,” said the letters written by House Oversight Committee Chairwoman Carolyn B. Maloney (D-N.Y.) and House national security subcommittee Chairman Stephen F. Lynch (D-Mass.). “We urge you to take immediate action to address any threats of violence against law enforcement that appear on your company’s platforms.”

FBI attacker was prolific contributor to Trump’s Truth Social website

The letters request information about how the companies respond to threats of violence, including how many threats against law enforcement were removed and how many were reported to authorities. The lawmakers also ask for plans to ensure platforms aren’t used to incite further violence against law enforcement, and for documents about any advertising that appeared alongside violent comments.

Lawmakers also sent letters to executives from Twitter, TikTok, Truth Social, Rumble, Gettr and Telegram, canvassing a mainstream social networks, as well as alternative social networks favored by Trump’s supporters.

Law enforcement leaders have been sounding the alarm about threats to federal agents for a week, as top GOP leaders have accused the FBI, without evidence, of carrying out a politicized attack on Trump. The politicians have tapped into long-running hostility among Trump and his followers toward arms of the federal government, which some call the “Deep State.” The FBI and Department of Homeland Security issued a joint bulletin last week warning about an “increase in violent threats posted on social media against federal officials and facilities.”

Federal law enforcement leaders warn about danger as GOP assails FBI

The letters sent Friday cite specific threats on Truth Social. “The Second Amendment is not about shooting deer! Lock and load!” said one post directed at the “feds.” Another said: “Arm yourselves! We are about to enter into Civil War!”

The arrest of a Pennsylvania man charged with making threats of violence against FBI personnel is also cited by the letters. He allegedly posted on Gab: “Every single piece of [expletive] who works for the FBI in any capacity, from the director down to the janitor who cleans their [expletive] toilets deserves to die. You’ve declared war on us and now it’s open season on YOU.”

Gab CEO Andrew Torba responded to The Washington Post’s request for comment with links to a pair of blog posts, including one where Gab said it is “considering” its response to Congress and that it quickly responded to law enforcement requests related to the Pennsylvania arrest. The seven other companies did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

House Democrats are scrutinizing the renewed online calls for violence against law enforcement as they grapple with the role that social media played in fomenting the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. The demands to the social networks come after the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attacks sent subpoenas to major tech companies, after saying they weren’t cooperating with it. Social media posts and interviews with tech executives have been included in the committee’s recent hearings.

In the letters Friday, the lawmakers also ask the companies if legislation is needed to “protect law enforcement personnel and increase coordination with federal authorities.”

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Ricky Shiffer: An armed man tried to enter the FBI’s Cincinnati office and was fatally shot after a chase and standoff with law enforcement. Here’s what we know

The suspect has been identified as Ricky Shiffer, according to three federal law enforcement sources. A separate federal law enforcement source told CNN the suspect was believed to be armed with a nail gun and an AR-15 rifle.

After attempting to enter the FBI facility, authorities say he fled and his vehicle was followed by state police. When the vehicle pursuit ended, there was a lengthy standoff that ended when the suspect was shot and killed by law enforcement, according to authorities.

The FBI said in a statement that it is investigating the circumstances that led to the suspect being shot.

While authorities have not announced a motive, the FBI is investigating the man’s social media presence and whether he had ties to right-wing extremism, one of the sources told CNN.

Here’s what we know about the attempted breach and the suspect.

What happened when the suspect tried to enter the office?

At about 9:15 a.m. ET, an armed man tried to breach the visitor screening facility at the FBI field office, the agency said in a statement.

“Upon the activation of an alarm and a response by armed FBI special agents, the subject fled northbound onto Interstate 71,” FBI Cincinnati said in a statement.

Troopers from the Ohio State Highway Patrol responded and found the suspect at an interstate rest stop in a Ford Crown Victoria at around 9:37 a.m., the highway patrol said in a statement.

The troopers tried to initiate a traffic stop on the suspect, but he fled and a vehicle pursuit ensued, Lt. Nathan Dennis, a spokesperson for the Ohio State Highway Patrol, said at a news conference. He said shots were fired from the suspect’s car during the chase.

The suspect got off the highway at state Route 73 and came to a stop around 9:53 a.m. on a road in Clinton County, the highway patrol said.

How did the standoff unfold?

After stopping, the man got out and “engaged officers,” the highway patrol said. Gunfire was exchanged between law enforcement and the suspect, who used his vehicle for cover, they said.

The suspect was wearing body armor, according to a Facebook post from the Clinton County Emergency Management Agency. A lockdown was in effect within a 1-mile radius of the standoff location, the post said.

The standoff stretched for several hours as law enforcement unsuccessfully attempted to negotiate with the suspect, the highway patrol said.

“Once negotiations failed, officers attempted to take the suspect into custody by utilizing less lethal tactics,” the agency said. “At approximately 3:42 p.m., the suspect raised a firearm and shots were fired by law enforcement officers.”

The suspect was shot and died from his injuries on the scene, the agency said.

It is unclear what less lethal tactics authorities used during their attempt to arrest him.

What do we know about the suspect?

The FBI is investigating Shiffer’s social media presence and whether he had ties to right-wing extremism, a federal law enforcement source told CNN.

Authorities are also looking into whether he participated in the January 6 attack on the US Capitol or was associated with any groups that took part in the attack, a separate federal law enforcement source tells CNN.

A social media account bearing the name of Ricky Shiffer posted on the social media platform founded by former President Donald Trump, Truth Social, appearing to reference his attempt to storm an FBI office.

The post about the FBI office attack was made minutes after the Ohio State Highway Patrol said the incident at the office in Cincinnati began, shortly after 9:15 a.m.

“Well, I thought I had a way through bullet proof glass, and I didn’t,” the user posted at 9:29 a.m. Thursday. “If you don’t hear from me, it is true I tried attacking the F.B.I., and it’ll mean either I was taken off the internet, the F.B.I. got me, or they sent the regular cops while.”

It’s unclear whether the user was attempting to write more, as the post stops after, “while.”

Authorities have not yet confirmed that the account belongs to the suspect. However, a law enforcement source did confirm to CNN that a photo on the account matched a government ID photo of the suspect.

The FBI declined to comment on the account and its postings, citing the ongoing investigation.

On the account, which has only been active the last few weeks, the user posted thoughts that were politically violent and revolution-minded. But it was not until the FBI executed a search warrant on Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home that the user began to fixate on responding with violence toward the agency.

“People, this is it,” the user wrote on August 8, the day the FBI executed the warrant. “I hope a call to arms comes from someone better qualified, but if not, this is your call to arms from me.

In that post, the user encouraged people to go to gun and pawn shops to, “get whatever you need to be ready for combat.”

When another person responded to the user saying that they would be sending his photo and information to the FBI, the user responded by saying, “Bring them on.”

It’s unclear whether or not the information was in fact forwarded to the FBI.

On August 9, the user wrote that people were heading to gather in Palm Beach and said that if the FBI broke up the group, “kill them.”

The user of the account also claimed they were present in Washington, DC, on January 6, but did not say whether they entered the Capitol.

How has the FBI responded?

FBI headquarters is investigating the “agent-involved shooting,” the agency said in a statement. A law enforcement source told CNN the agency has deployed a Shooting Incident Review Team to the scene, which is standard practice when an FBI special agent or task force officer discharges a weapon.

The review team will gather evidence, interview witnesses, and ultimately determine whether the use of deadly force was justified, the source said.

“The FBI takes all shooting incidents involving our agents or task force members seriously,” the bureau statement read. “The review process is thorough and objective, and is conducted as expeditiously as possible under the circumstances.”

FBI Director Christopher Wray released a statement Thursday evening condemning attacks on law enforcement and the FBI.

“Unfounded attacks on the integrity of the FBI erode respect for the rule of law and are a grave disservice to the men and women who sacrifice so much to protect others. Violence and threats against law enforcement, including the FBI, are dangerous and should be deeply concerning to all Americans,” Wray said.

CNN’s Paul P. Murphy, Evan Perez, Michelle Watson, Caroll Alvarado, Chuck Johnston and Dakin Andone contributed to this report.

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Standoff with an armed suspect who tried to enter the FBI’s Cincinnati office has ended, officials say

Officials gave no additional details on how the standoff ended or details on the suspect’s condition. The standoff followed a chase with the suspect.

An armed man tried to enter the FBI office in Cincinnati Thursday morning around 9:15 a.m. ET, Lt. Nathan Dennis, a spokesperson for the Ohio State Highway Patrol, said in a news conference. The suspect was unsuccessful, however, and fled the area.

An Ohio state trooper spotted the suspect’s vehicle at a northbound rest stop along Interstate 71 about 20 minutes after the attempted breach, Dennis said, and tried to initiate a traffic stop before the suspect fled.

“The suspect vehicle did fire shots during that pursuit,” Dennis said. The suspect then exited onto State Route 73 and traveled east to Smith Road, where he headed north before eventually coming to a stop.

“Gunfire was exchanged between officers on scene and the suspect,” Dennis said, adding the situation remains contained to a specific area and there is no risk to the public outside the immediate area.

At the time of the news conference, no officers had been injured, Dennis said. He declined to answer questions about whether the suspect had been positively identified or injured in the standoff with authorities.

A law enforcement source later told CNN authorities have identified the suspect.

The FBI confirmed the incident in a statement, saying it had “an armed subject attempt to breach” the facility’s Visitor Screening Facility.

“Upon the activation of an alarm and a response by armed FBI special agents, the subject fled northbound onto Interstate 71,” the statement said. “The FBI, Ohio State Highway Patrol, and local law enforcement partners are on scene near Wilmington, OH trying to resolve this critical incident.”

A federal law enforcement source told CNN thse suspect was believed to be armed with a nail gun and AR-15. Another federal law enforcement source with knowledge of the incident told CNN FBI facilities around the country are reviewing their security posture in the wake of the incident.

The incident follows violent rhetoric posted online after the FBI went to former President Donald Trump’s Florida home to serve a search warrant.

In a message reviewed by CNN on Thursday, FBI Director Chris Wray told the bureau’s employees their “safety and security” was his “primary concern right now.”

“There has been a lot of commentary about the FBI this week questioning our work and motives,” Wray said. “Much of it is from critics and pundits on the outside who don’t know what we know and don’t see what we see. What I know — and what I see — is an organization made up of men and women who are committed to doing their jobs professionally and by the book every day; this week is no exception.”

In remarks Thursday announcing the US Justice Department has filed a motion to unseal the search warrant served to Trump’s Florida home, Attorney General Merrick Garland said he could not “stand by silently when their integrity is unfairly attacked. The men and women of the FBI and the Justice Department are dedicated, patriotic public servants.”

CNN’s Evan Perez, Caroll Alvarado and Brynn Gingras contributed to this report.

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Sexual abuse of Olympic athletes: The FBI’s shocking, inexplicable failure

I’ve covered endless congressional hearings over the years, and nearly all of them drone on until everyone is awash in a sea of political bloviation.

As dazed reporters wait for a handful of usable quotes, lawmakers plow the same ground, again and again, punctuated by partisan finger-pointing, and witnesses repeat their defensive talking points.

So it came as something of a shock Wednesday to watch Simone Biles, Aly Raisman, McKayla Maroney and Maggie Nichols talk about the gut-wrenching sexual abuse they suffered — and change our understanding of a story we thought we knew.

My sense is that their testimony gripped people watching on the three cable news networks, even in scandal-weary Washington. That’s what happened to me. It was painful to watch and impossible to look away.

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The depraved misconduct of this monster, Larry Nassar, the former Olympic team doctor, was no longer an abstraction. Here were his victims, saying that the trauma they suffered at his hands remains with them to this day, even as they compete at the highest level of their sport.

But it was the focus on the FBI and other agencies that came across like a slap in the face. Why had the bureau failed so badly? Why has a grand total of one FBI agent been fired? Why hasn’t anyone been prosecuted? Why is no one being held accountable?

Why has a grand total of one FBI agent been fired? Why hasn’t anyone been prosecuted? Why is no one being held accountable?

FBI Director Christopher Wray said he was “deeply and profoundly sorry,” making no attempt to defend the inexcusable mistakes that happened before he took over. Republican and Democratic senators were appalled. But there were no real explanations for this miscarriage of justice.

Washington Post sports columnist Sally Jenkins doesn’t mince words: “It’s time for a special prosecutor to probe this reeking, bottom-drawered, law enforcement coverup.”

The plain fact is the FBI did nothing for a year, during which time Nassar abused at least 70 and possibly as many as 120 more girls. That inaction — criminal neglect, in my view — cleared the way for this pedophile to claim many more victims. He’s now serving a prison term of at least 40 years.

The FBI did nothing for a year, during which time [Larry] Nassar abused at least 70 and possibly as many as 120 more girls.

Biles put it bluntly: “I blame Larry Nassar, and I also blame an entire system that enabled and perpetrated his abuse.” She said “the scars of this horrific abuse continue,” and “the impact of this man’s abuse will never be over.”

U.S. gymnasts, from left, Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, Aly Raisman and Maggie Nichols are seen at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington about an Inspector General’s report on the FBI’s handling of the Larry Nassar investigation, Sept. 15, 2021. (Associated Press)

Raisman told the “Today” show that she described what happened to the FBI in graphic detail, but “the agent just kept diminishing my abuse and telling me that, you know, he didn’t feel it was that big of a deal and maybe I should drop the case.”

Maroney testified that she told an FBI agent by phone in 2015 about “all of my molestations in extreme detail.” And then “I cried, and there was just silence” on the agent’s part. Finally, he said, “Is that all?” The bureau, she said, then falsified her statement.

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“After six years of asking,” Jenkins writes, “where are the federal charges against those who knew about Nassar and did nothing, whose deliberate inaction let him victimize more women even after Maroney told everyone about him?”

“Instead, there have been mysterious refusals to pursue obvious crimes. A negligent if not corrupt FBI agent was allowed to retire with a pension despite lying to the inspector general.”

That’s appalling.

Two FBI agents in the Indianapolis office who did nothing about Maroney’s account were Michael Langeman and his boss, W. Jay Abbott. They didn’t even bother to write a report. Langeman was finally fired a few days ago, with the FBI knowing it would get hammered at the hearing. Abbott, who also lied to the bureau, retired. As the Post notes, the U.S. attorney at the time, Josh Minkler, has recently been representing Abbott.

It was a dogged local investigator in Michigan, not the feds, who wound up busting Nassar.

It was a dogged local investigator in Michigan, not the feds, who wound up busting Nassar.

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If Wray’s words of apology are to be anything but hollow, he needs to take more decisive action. A special prosecutor, who would also look at USA Gymnastics and the U.S. Olympic Committee, would seem to be in order. Given the magnitude of the pedophilia here, how can anyone defend the lack of consequences?

But will this be a two-day story? Will the Hill just move on after a single hearing? Some female anchors have denounced this tragedy, but will everyone now just move on? If so, the pain suffered by Simone Biles, her teammates, and so many other young women will be exacerbated.

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Larry Nassar hearing: Takeaways from the Senate hearing on the FBI’s failures to investigate gymnasts’ charges

Simone Biles, McKayla Maroney, Maggie Nichols and Aly Raisman focused on how the FBI botched its investigation into allegations against Nassar and the intimidation that came from the sport’s governing bodies.

Raisman described the lapses as being akin to “serving innocent children up to a pedophile, on a silver platter.”

As Biles put it, it was not just Nassar who she blamed, but also an entire infrastructure that “enabled and [perpetuated] his abuse.” She said she had decided to compete in the Tokyo Summer Olympics, in part, because her presence on the team would not allow the “crisis” to go “ignored.”

Their testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee was incredibly moving and put a new light on how those who had turned a blind toward the abuse had not yet been held fully accountable.

Here are the key takeaways from the hearing:

The gymnasts revealed new details about how the FBI botched the investigation

The gymnasts gave new insight into how the FBI had mishandled their allegations, with accounts of what exactly they had told the FBI and how they had to work to get their allegations heard.

It was 14 months after she reported her allegations that Raisman finally got to speak to the FBI, she said, despite having repeated her requests for an interview.

USA Gymnastics head Steve Penny arranged for the interview to take place at the Olympic Training Center, Raisman said, “where I was under the control and observation of USA Gymnastics, and the United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee.”

“The day of my interview, Steve Penny flew to the Olympic Training Center, and he made sure I was aware he was there,” she said.

She said she also had been pressured by the FBI to accept a plea deal that was being proposed for Nassar.

“The agent diminished the significance of my abuse. It made me feel my criminal case wasn’t worth pursuing,” Raisman said.

Maroney, meanwhile, recalled the graphic details of Nassar’s abuse that she had provided to the FBI in September 2015. The agent who conducted the interview waited until 2017 to write a formal summary, and in it he included false information, according to the IG report.
“They chose to falsify my report, and to not only minimize my abuse, but silence me yet again,” Maroney said.

The gymnasts are still haunted by how the FBI botched the case

The gymnasts are still dealing with lasting effects of how FBI’s mishandled their allegations.

Maroney, recounting her 2015 interview, described how the agent who interviewed her remained “dead silent” as she started crying on the phone.

“I was so shocked at the agent’s silence and disregard for my trauma. After that minute of silence, he asked, ‘Is that all?’ ” Maroney recalled. “Those words, in itself was one of the worst moments of this entire process, for me to have my abuse be minimized and disregarded by the people who were supposed to protect me.”

Raisman, meanwhile, recalled how an FBI agent had “made me feel like my abuse didn’t count and it wasn’t a big deal.”

“And I remember sitting there with the FBI agent and him, trying to convince me that it wasn’t that bad,” she said. “And it’s taken me years of therapy to realize that my abuse was bad, that it does matter.”

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat, asked the gymnasts whether they knew any of the victims who had been abused by Nassar in the period after they had relayed their allegations in 2015. All four of them said they did, and Raisman said she felt “guilt and shame” about the athletes who had been abused by Nassar after they had reported their allegations.

“I can’t tell you how horrifying it is to meet young girls who look up to me, who watch me compete in the Olympics, and tell me that they went to see Nassar, because of me and my teammates, because they wanted to see the Olympic doctor,” Raisman said.

Gymnasts and lawmakers were enraged by DOJ’s refusal to prosecute FBI agents

The decision by the Justice Department not to charge two former FBI employees who were referred by the department’s inspector general for potential prosecution left both the gymnasts and lawmakers irate.

“Why?” Maroney asked pointedly, while criticizing Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco for declining a request to testify at Wednesday’s hearing.

“A message needs to be sent: If you allow a predator to harm children, the consequences will be swift and severe. Enough is enough,” Biles said.

Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz noted later in the hearing that the false information one agent is accused of putting into a 2017 summary he wrote of his 2015 interview with Maroney could have jeopardized the criminal case brought against Nassar. Additionally, that agent and the other employee violated several FBI protocols, which led to a months-long delay in the probe, during which Nassar abused some 70 athletes, according to the report.

The FBI recently fired Michael Langeman, the agent who had interviewed Maroney, while the other official, Jay Abbott, retired in early 2018.

Lawmakers bashed the Justice Department for both its refusal to prosecute those individuals and how it had rebuffed their request that top department officials testify about the decision.

“The American people and these victims of sexual assault are left to wonder whether their claims are really being taken seriously, if there is simply a declination by the Department of Justice to prosecute, and no real willingness to come explain the rationale for that or why there isn’t some accountability where accountability can be had,” said Sen. John Cornyn, a Republican from Texas.

Attorney General Merrick Garland and Monaco are expected to appear before the committee in October.

Questions remain about the FBI’s cozy relationship with USA Gymnastics

The gymnasts emphasized the need for more investigation to understand the relationship between the FBI’s failures and how its agents interacted with the gymnastics organizations that overlooked Nassar’s abuse.

As the IG report recounted, the FBI agents and USA Gymnastics discussed the organization’s response to media stories about the allegations. Abbott also proposed an FBI statement that would put USA Gymnastics in a positive light, according to the IG. And he discussed with Penny, then the USA Gymnastics head, the potential that he could get a job at the US Olympic Committee. Abbott looked into applying to be the head of USA Gymnastics as well, the report said.

Nichols — an alum of the US’ world championship team whose allegations were among those brought to the FBI in 2015 — referenced Abbott’s USA Gymnastics aspirations as she ticked through questions that had not yet been answered about the FBI’s failures.

“The survivors of Larry Nassar have a right to know why their well-being was placed into jeopardy by these individuals who chose not to do their jobs,” Nichols said.

The gymnasts were failed by every level of the organizations that are supposed to protect them

What the gymnasts’ testimony made clear is that several people — in both the sport and in federal law enforcement — were aware of the allegations against Nassar and yet did not act to stop him.

“It is astonishing and disturbing how many adults let you down, and failed at one of the most basic responsibilities of adulthood, which is to look out for children,” said Democratic Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse of Rhode Island.

Biles recalled being left in the dark going into the 2016 Olympics that there were investigations into the allegations. For some time, she was also not aware that a top official in USA Gymnastics had been informed by Nichols in 2015 that Biles was also likely a victim.

Maroney accused the FBI of working “in concert” with the athletic organizations to “conceal” that Nassar was a predator.

“By not taking immediate action from my report, they allowed a child molester to go free for more than a year,” she said, “and this inaction directly allowed Nasser’s abuse to continue.”

Raisman said it was “horrible” to know about the victims who could have been spared the abuse had their allegations been acted on properly.

“All we needed was one adult to do the right thing,” Raisman said.

Wray was limited in his ability in front of the Senate to contain the damage

Faced with the calls for the individual agents to be prosecuted, Wray had to repeatedly tell lawmakers that it was not his call, but the Justice Department’s.

“I have done what I can do,” he said.

Wray was not the director of the FBI when the lapses occurred, and he said he was “heartsick and furious” once he learned the extent of the agency’s failures.

His testimony nonetheless walked a fine line of describing the individuals’ actions as “unacceptable” while claiming that they were not reflective of the agency as a whole.

“I want to make sure the public knows that the reprehensible conduct reflected in this report is not representative of the work that I see from our 37,000 folks every day. The actions, instead, of the agents described in this report are a discredit to all those men and women who do the job the right way,” Wray said.

While he described several policy changes — like new training requirements — that the FBI had made to prevent similar lapses, lawmakers expressed skepticism that that would be enough.

“You don’t change hearts and minds because somebody goes through this kind of training,” said Sen. Mazie Hirono, a Democrat from Hawaii.

If you or someone you know is dealing with the aftermath of sexual assault, there are organizations that can help. Please click here for more details.

CNN’s Paul LeBlanc and Evan Perez contributed to this report.

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The FBI’s Fake Encrypted Honeypot Phones Are Showing Up Online

Photo: Olivier MORIN / AFP (Getty Images)

About a month ago, it was revealed that an encrypted phone company was actually a front for a gargantuan FBI operation called “Trojan Shield.” The company, which was really a law enforcement honeypot, sold a product called “ANOM,” an encrypted chat application installed on specific, hardened phones that the bureau was secretly distributing to track and monitor organized crime groups.

Criminals thought they were getting a secure, impenetrable communication platform but, in reality, their networks were owned by the FBI and other law enforcement agencies—the devices having been designed by the bureau in collaboration with a high-level criminal informant who had previously sold such hardened, encrypted devices to underworld networks.

Now it’s being reported by Motherboard that those phones are weirdly being resold on the secondary market, popping up on Craigslist-like forums and online retailers.

Online forums devoted to Android merchandise have been abuzz with talk about how these phones, stripped of their original powers, now seem to be circulating as cheap, used products on online retailer sites.

“I bought this phone online, for ridiculously low price, now I understand why,” one second-hand buyer told Motherboard. “Probably this phone was used by some drug dealer :D,” they added.

“This is a phone the used with that FBI ANON [sic] application to read the message with the users,” another forum user helpfully wrote, in a poorly worded PSA.

For the most part, the phones don’t seem to work anymore and many of them have largely been wiped of their creepy features. It’s also unclear who’s selling these devices, though one could assume they’re being peddled by former users trying to evade the heat—or at least just get some of their money back.

Motherboard actually managed to get ahold of one of the phones, procuring it from one of the people who had bought it second-hand. Thus, the outlet has revealed some really interesting details about the device and, suffice it to say, it’s pretty weird.

Upon first glance, the phone seems normal: A user inputs a PIN to log in, taking them to what looks like a fairly normal home screen. But the device comes equipped with what are, essentially, decoy apps—stuff like Netflix, Instagram, Snapchat, and Tinder—that, if you click on them, don’t actually work. Instead, to get a functioning interface, a user has to reset the phone and type in a different PIN. Doing this resets the home screen, leaving only a clock and calculator app and the device’s settings. If the calculator app is clicked on, it delivers a new login screen, prompting the user to enter an “Anom ID” and a password. From there, the phone’s real purpose—to act as an encrypted, clandestine communication channel—is ostensibly opened.

The phone also apparently offers “a shortcut for what appears to be a wipe feature on the phone, with an icon showing a piece of paper going through a shredder,” Motherboard reports, in reference to an apparent data wiping feature.

So, yeah, fairly cloak-and-dagger stuff. Anyway, if you see a cheap, weird phone for sale on some obscure web forum that matches this description, probably best to steer clear. You’re either being sold a useless, former honeypot device or maybe stumbling into the next federal sting operation, both of which sound like bad times all around.

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