Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) is seeking answers from the FBI director and the Justice Department’s Inspector General (IG) regarding the FBI raid of a whistleblower’s home.
“Does the FBI consider Mr. Cain’s disclosures to be protected?” he asked. “Please explain.”
Cain, who had worked for an FBI contractor, discovered documents that indicated that Robert Mueller, then-FBI director and now special counsel in the Russia probe, failed to investigate potential criminal activity of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the Clinton Foundation, and Rosatom—the Russian state company that obtained about one-fifth of the U.S. uranium reserves by purchasing the Uranium One company in 2010, The Daily Caller learned from an unspecified document.
“The document gave us a good sense of the topics enclosed in some of the documents sent to the IG,” the author of the report, Richard Pollock, told The Epoch Times via email, adding The Caller “authenticated” the document and is confident it is “authentic and accurate.”
Pollock said he didn’t know who Cain’s contractor was, but that Cain’s background checked out.
“We are convinced by examining federal documents that he was a bonafide contract employee of the FBI,” he said.
Cain has a top-level security clearance and maintains a number of security-related credentials, according to his resume, which has since been deleted online.
Mystery Raid
The IG’s office provided the documents to House and Senate Intelligence committees, according to Pollock. But the IG’s office declined to comment, as well as the offices of both committees chairs—Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) and Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.).The FBI only vaguely confirmed that it indeed took some action in Cain’s hometown on the day in question.
“It was the FBI Baltimore Field Office that did court-authorized law enforcement activity on Nov. 19 in the Union Bridge area,” Dave Fitz, public affairs specialist for the FBI Baltimore Field Office told The Epoch Times.
The Twitter user confirmed to The Epoch Times that he’s indeed the whistleblower, but directed further inquiries to his lawyer, Michael Socarras, who declined to comment. A Fox News spokesperson also declined to comment.
Cain indeed used to work for the FBI, she said.
“I knew he left not happy because he was willing to take a job that was a pay cut of $40,000 a year,” she said.
According to Pollock, 16 agents raided the house for six hours with a warrant in hand signed Nov. 15 by federal magistrate Judge Stephanie Gallagher in Baltimore.
Lawyer Cries Foul
Socarras pointed out that the FBI behaved in a way he considered misconduct.“After the raid, and having received my name and phone number from Mr. Cain as his lawyer, an FBI agent actually called my client directly to discuss his seized electronics,” Socarras told The Daily Caller. “Knowingly bypassing the lawyer of a represented client is serious misconduct.”
He also suggested the FBI wasn’t forthright with the judge.
“I cannot believe the Bureau informed the federal magistrate who approved the search warrant that they wanted to search the home of an FBI whistleblower to seize the information that he confidentially disclosed to the IG and Congress,” Socarras said.
For her part, West vouched for Cain’s integrity.
“He’s a vet, he’s a patriot. He cares more about justice and the integrity of our government more than his own well-being,” she said.
Uranium One
The Uranium One scandal is a sensitive one for the Clintons. Millions of dollars flew to their foundation while the State Department and other agencies in the Obama administration approved the Uranium One acquisition by Russia.Former President Bill Clinton gave a speech in Moscow months before the deal and was paid $500,000 for it by Renaissance Capital, an investment firm with an interest in the Uranium One deal and ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
At the time, the Mueller-led FBI was aware that Russian authorities had staged a large-scale operation to blackmail and extort U.S. companies connected to uranium production and transportation. The agency had a source working in the uranium industry that provided evidence of bribery and corruption.
The investigation was killed in 2015 by Mueller’s successor, James Comey.
If confirmed, Cain’s allegations would turn the tables on Mueller. As special counsel, Mueller was appointed to probe whether the presidential campaign of Donald Trump colluded with the Russian government to influence the election. While Mueller is yet to substantiate such allegations after an 18-month probe, Cain’s story suggests he turned a blind eye to the Clintons’ potentially criminal collusion with the Russian government.
Grassley’s office didn’t respond to a request for further information.