Everything you said here, Hunter Biden, aligns with what I personally witnessed and reported through official channels. In my experience, those reports were buried because the truth was inconvenient.
When I retained unclassified portions of my own reporting that I believed documented what had occurred, my home was raided under a contrived narrative centered on documents I printed on my final day in the office, when I was diagnosed PTSD and removed from stressful duty by my doctor.
I preserved those documents only after carefully destroying anything that was classified because I was preparing my whistleblower retaliation submission to the Inspector General and needed the supporting evidence.
Just two weeks before my home was raided by 20 heavily armed agents, some of whom were my friends just following orders, I personally reached out to FBI Director Christopher Wray asking for help, in writing, with my entire chain of command cced all the way down. After more than 15 years as an FBI Special Agent serving this country with the highest honors, I did not receive a single phone call in response and still have not. I told Director Wray that I was a whistleblower experiencing retaliation that I believed was politically motivated and avoided what I believed to have been a hit to kill me in the field, which my managers participated in. No one contacted me. Wow, after that serious of an allegation? That speaks volumes, with deafening silence.
It is very evident now that their objective was never to uncover a crime I allegedly committed with zero motive. It was to discredit me and prevent my allegations from receiving a fair hearing and cover up their own crimes.
The Bureau was attempting to avoid accountability for what I have described as the greatest counterintelligence failure in American history, while making me the fall guy for reporting it.
I took my concerns everywhere I believed they should go. The documentation they sought to seize was ultimately provided by me BACK to the appropriate authorities, including Congress, the Inspector General, and later the Department of Justice's Office of Attorney Recruitment and Management, in a way that they could not cover up. My whistleblower retaliation case was expected to receive a decision last May, yet it remains unresolved, with more deafening silence.
Hunter, I look forward to speaking with you soon. I respect the resilience it has taken for you to endure what you've been through and continue moving forward.
The larger question isn't whether the truth will eventually come out. It's whether people will be willing to listen when it does.
As I discussed during my interviews with Craig Unger, another question follows: will the public care, or will they dismiss it as "old news"? This kind of apathy is what the greatest counterintelligence failure in US history actually is the demoralization of a target population by the derivatives of the KGB through propaganda, pushed into the American public over a couple generations.
When investigators sought to identify those responsible for the September 11 attacks, no one suggested it was too late old a waste of time or old news, because the events had already occurred and the public deserved and demanded answers. Understanding the truth mattered then because it explained how we got there and how to prevent it from happening again. It wasn’t covered up, like what is being done today.
The same principle applies now more than ever. If we want to understand how our institutions arrived at this moment and make them better, we have to be willing to examine the hard facts—even when they are uncomfortable.