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Gabbard Targets Trump Impeachment Players
Referrals Hit JusticeOffice of the Director of National Intelligence General…
Referrals Hit JusticeOffice of the Director of National Intelligence General Counsel sent criminal referrals to the Justice Department for Eric Ciaramella, the whistleblower tied to President Donald Trump’s first impeachment, and for former Intelligence Community Inspector General Michael Atkinson. Fox News Digital said it reviewed the referrals, which point to possible violations of federal criminal law linked to 2019 congressional briefings. In Washington, the paperwork always arrives with a grave face and a long memory. This time, the referrals turn the old impeachment file from a political fight into a possible legal one, or at least into another round of hard questions.The Complaint Behind the DramaThe case goes back to the July 25, 2019 call between Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. The complaint accused Trump of pressing Zelensky for a quid pro quo tied to an investigation touching the Biden family. But the form was built around second-hand information, and Atkinson later defended changes that let such material move forward. That is bureaucratic magic in its purest form: when the rulebook gets in the way, rewrite the rulebook and keep going. Critics say the complaint should never have been accepted as filed, especially since it concerned the President.Questions Over…
Magyar’s Putin Claim Sparks Balkan Blowback
Election Win, Fast TalkingPéter Magyar’s win in Hungary has already…
J6 Veteran Says Employers Keep Backing Off
The pardon did not end the problem Jeff McKellop, a…
The pardon did not end the problem Jeff McKellop, a retired Army Special Forces veteran, says the hard part did not end when the pardons came. His story is part of a larger Jan. 6 mess that keeps spilling past the courthouse and into daily life. First came the legal fight. Then came the social bill. In a country that loves to chant about fairness, fairness often needs a committee, a press release, and a very slow calendar. McKellop says he has spent years trying to rebuild work, family stability, and a name that the internet has turned into a warning label. That kind of public branding is easy for institutions and expensive for the people stuck under it. A job offer, then a background check He says he applied for work at a local farm and got what looked like a promising offer at $18 an hour. The first interview went well enough that he left thinking the search was over. Then the employer ran his name, called him back, and said the background check raised concerns because he had been at Jan. 6. That is how modern hiring works now: first the handshake, then the moral panic. McKellop…
Raskin Floats New Trump Removal Push
Another Run at the 25th Amendment House Democrats have introduced…
Oklahoma Principal Stops Armed Former Student
What Happened in Pauls Valley Pauls Valley High School in…
Macron’s Palace Blocks Police Search
Police Meet a Closed DoorFrench financial and anti-corruption police showed…

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