"The evidence about the bias and credibility of the whistleblower who started the scandal should have been front and center in the 2019 impeachment."
The 2019 impeachment of Trump focused on allegations that Trump pressured Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden while holding up military aid. Concerns with the key whistleblower, whose name and face have not been disclosed publicly, were documented by the Intelligence Community Inspector General. The documents released by Gabbard show that he admitted to being a "registered Democrat" who had worked closely with Biden on Ukraine issues. The memos on the derogatory information on the whistleblower were kept classified by then-Inspector General Michael Atkinson and then-House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence (HPSCI) Chairman Adam Schiff.
DNI Tulsi Gabbard said, "Newly-declassified records expose how deep state actors within the Intelligence Community concocted a false narrative that Congress used to usurp the will of the American people and impeach duly-elected President Donald Trump in 2019."
The whistleblower also did not like a number of conservatives in the president's orbit. The investigators were also able to get an apology out of the whistleblower, who said, “I do not have direct knowledge of private comments or communications by the President." The whistleblower had claimed that Trump improperly pressured Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to investigate Hunter Biden. The admission was on his August 2019 intake form.
However, that stunning admission from the whistleblower, which was key to the 2019 impeachment, was not included in the 9-page letter Schiff released that ultimately led to the impeachment of Trump by the Democrat-controlled House at the time.
Atkinson "did not follow standard IG procedures and relied upon politicized, manufactured narratives – only conducting interviews with four individuals: the Whistleblower, the Whistleblower’s friend who was a co-author of the January 2017 Russia Hoax Intelligence Community Assessment (ICA) and close colleague of disgraced former FBI Agent Peter Strzok, and two character references who had zero firsthand knowledge of the July 2019 phone call," a press release stated.
Defense lawyers for Trump voiced concern about the revelation. "Our adversarial system of justice requires the government to turn all exculpatory evidence over to the accused. That’s especially true when lawmakers seek to remove a duly elected president through impeachment and a Senate trial," Harvard law professor emeritus Alan Dershowitz told Just the News, who first reported on the documents."The evidence about the bias and credibility of the whistleblower who started the scandal should have been front and center in the 2019 impeachment, but it was hidden by bureaucrats and that was a disservice to justice and to the American people," Dershowitz added.
The documents disclosed a number of other details about the whistleblower which were not public at the time in 2019, which included that the individual disliked Republicans in Trump's orbit such as Devin Nunes and Kash Patel, claimed he was a victim of a campaign from "right-wing bloggers," said that then-top Trump National Security Council staffer Michael Ellis was "slippery and untrustworthy" during an interview.
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