Illustrating that FBI Director James Comey is a liar and a fraud, his
agency helped convict a Navy reservist last summer of the same crime
that he just cleared Hillary Clinton of committing. In that case the
reservist from northern California got criminally charged—as per FBI
recommendation—for having classified material on personal electronic
devices that weren’t authorized by the government to contain such
information. The FBI investigation didn’t reveal evidence that the
reservist intended to distribute classified information to unauthorized
personnel, so he was just being “extremely careless” like Clinton and
her top aides.
Similar offenses, vastly different outcome. The key factor, of
course, is that one subject is a regular Joe without Clinton-like
political connections. His name is Bryan H. Nishimura and last July he
pleaded guilty to unauthorized removal and retention of classified
materials after the FBI found such materials were copied and stored in
at least one “unauthorized and unclassified system.” Clinton had droves
of classified and top secret materials in an “unauthorized and
unclassified system.” Nishimura had been deployed to Afghanistan as a
regional engineer for the U.S. military and had access to classified
briefings and digital records that could only be retained and viewed on
authorized government computers, according to the FBI announcement,
which defines the reservist’s crime in the following manner; “handled
classified materials inappropriately.” So did Clinton on a much larger
scale.
Last July Nishimura pleaded guilty to “unauthorized removal and
retention of classified materials” and was sentenced to two years of
probation, a $7,500 fine and forfeiture of personal media containing
classified materials. He was further ordered to permanently surrender
all government security clearance. Hillary Clinton could soon have the
highest security clearance available if she gets elected president
making Comey’s inconceivable recommendation that “no charges are
appropriate in this case” all the more outrageous. Incredibly, during
his 15-minute press conference this
week Comey provided details of how Clinton violated the law by
exchanging dozens of email chains containing classified and top secret
information and how she mishandled national defense information on her
outlaw email server. The FBI director even outlined how Clinton
compromised the country’s national defense to “hostile actors” yet he
asserts Clinton and her cohorts didn’t intend to break the law.
“Although we did not find clear evidence that Secretary Clinton or her
colleagues intended to violate laws governing the handling of classified
information,” Comey said, “there is evidence that they were extremely
careless in their handling of very sensitive, highly classified
information.” Enough to be criminally charged like the Navy reservist
from northern California.
When Comey, the federal prosecutor in the Martha Stewart case, put
the television celebrity in jail for participating in an insider trading
scheme, he acknowledged the importance of not granting special
treatment to a rich and famous person. Stewart went to prison for
obstructing justice and lying to investigators about a sudden stock sale
that helped her avoid losing thousands of dollars. In an interview with
his college newspaper a
few years after Stewart’s conviction Comey, then U.S. Attorney for the
Southern District of New York, said that if Stewart were Jane Doe she
would have been prosecuted. “I thought of my hesitation about the case
due to someone being rich and famous, and how it shouldn’t be that way,”
Comey said. “I decided we had to do it.”
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