Obama, Director of National Intelligence and Russia
Digest more
Gabbard called for Obama officials to be prosecuted over their analysis of Russian interference in the 2016 election
Tulsi Gabbard sends DOJ evidence related to the actions of senior intelligence officials before and after the creation of the 2016 intelligence community assessment on Russian meddling.
11h
Baller Alert on MSNNational Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard Says Obama Led a “Treasonous Conspiracy” — Wants Him Charged [Video]National Intelligence Director Tulsi Gabbard is making waves after calling for former President Barack Obama and several senior national security officials from his administration to face prosecution, accusing them of engaging in what she describes as a “treasonous conspiracy” tied to Donald Trump’s 2016 election win.
The Democratic lawmaker is stressing the controversies over Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard at the same time that her standing with President Donald Trump has appeared precarious.
For months preceding the 2016 election, the Intelligence Community shared a consensus view: Russia lacked the intent and capability to hack U.S. elections,” Gabbard tweeted on Friday. “But weeks after President Trump’s historic 2016 victory defeating Hillary Clinton,
The latest on the Russia collusion hoax had Steve Bannon calling for “perp walks” as top officials from the Obama administration were implicated for alleged “treason.” “… […]
The US Director of National Intelligence declared that her office has submitted relevant documents to the US Department of Justice, calling for a full criminal investigation.
11don MSN
The investigation into the Obama-era spy chief involves allegations that he made false statements to Congress and is currently underway.
The US Senate is considering giving up crucial authority over key intelligence officials responsible for assuring major agencies comply with legal restrictions and the Constitution.The top legal officials at the Central Intelligence Agency and the Office of the Director of National Intelligence would no longer need Senate confirmation under the latest version of a broad policy bill approved by the Senate Intelligence Committee.