Monday, August 5, 2024

Snow Job

New dope on the dope:
RealClearPolitics reporter Susan Crabtree reports that even though there were no fingerprints found on the container, some "DNA material" was found that could have led to the identity of the owner. The Secret Service officer who found the cocaine was being leaned on by the brass to drop the case, but he sent it to the FBI for testing. It came back with a "partial hit":
Several sources, citing private statements by a special agent in the Forensics Services Division who supervised the vault containing the cocaine evidence, said the agency ran the DNA material against national criminal databases and “got a partial hit.” The term “partial hit” is vague in this context, but in forensics lingo usually means law enforcement found DNA matching a blood relative of a finite pool of people. “The Congressional oversight committees need to put White under oath and confirm the ‘partial hit,’” a source told RCP. “Then the FBI needs to explain who the partial hit was against, then determine what blood family member has ties to the White House or what person matching the partial hit was present at the White House that weekend.”
Cheatle at some point called the evidence vault supervisor, Matt White, and tried to persuade him to destroy the evidence that protocol dictates be kept for seven years. Crabtree reports that Cheatle indicated that the Secret Service wanted to close the case quickly. Tests to determine whose cocaine it was were stopped. The case was closed after eleven days. They never questioned one person. They claimed there wasn't enough information to "approach" a would-be suspect. The Bidens were on vacation at the time the cocaine was discovered and came back with their families for the July 4, 2023, festivities. Hunter was living with the Bidens at the time in what looked like an attempt to avoid a subpoena for his gun and tax crimes.
His stash seems to have caught up with him...

No comments:

Post a Comment

Music Mania

Music still matters: The state-funded University of North Texas went after Prof. Timothy Jackson, and the case eventually involved TX Attorn...