House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) is probing whether the FBI acted in retaliation when it spied on two Republican staffers while lawmakers were investigating the bureau for possible misconduct regarding the now disproven Trump–Russia collusion narrative.
In a July 13 letter to FBI Director Christopher Wray, Mr. Jordan said the committee is conducting “oversight” of the FBI.
“In 2017, Google reportedly received subpoenas for private emails and records belonging to two Republican staffers of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) while HPSCI was investigating the FBI’s misconduct,” Mr. Jordan wrote.
“These subpoenas only came to light in 2022 due to Google’s policy of alerting customers five years after law enforcement takes such action. The timing of these subpoenas raise questions about whether the subpoenas were in retaliation for HPSCI’s oversight of the FBI,” the lawmaker continued.
‘Concerns About FBI Misconduct’
Google responded to the subpoena requests by Dec. 5, 2017—roughly a month after they were issued—and granted the FBI and DOJ access to an array of private information including Mr. Patel’s and the other staffers’ addresses, including mailing addresses, residential addresses, business addresses, email addresses, phone records, and personal telephone numbers.They were also able to see billing records from both Mr. Patel and the other staffer.
However, neither Mr. Patel nor the unnamed staffer was informed that the personal documents were handed over until 2022, in line with Google’s five-year policy.
In his letter, Mr. Jordan noted Special Counsel John Durham’s May report documenting the FBI’s “misconduct in opening and executing” the Crossfire Hurricane investigation against then-presidential candidate Mr. Trump.
That report “confirms many of the concerns about FBI misconduct advanced by HPSCI in 2017,” Mr. Jordan said.
‘Unlawful Surveillance, Snooping’
Concluding his letter, the lawmaker requested the FBI hand over “all documents and communications referring or relating to subpoenas issued to Google or any other email or telecommunications provider for records of members or staff of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence staff in 2017.”The FBI has until July 27 to turn over the requested documents.
“I can definitively say it was an unlawful surveillance and snooping of me and it wasn’t just me,” he said. “And I think it’s more than two people. And I think it’s more than just telephone and bank and phone records. I think they went further than that and got congressional records. So the House better step up right now. Because right now it affects them as much it affects me.”
“Congress needs to send out subpoenas, enough with the niceties and asking and put butts in the seat and get some answers to questions,” Mr. Patel added.
The Epoch Times has contacted the FBI for comment.