Bombshell: How far did Obama spying go?
The Sharyl Attkisson case
During the transition between election and inauguration, Trump associates have phone conversations with foreign leaders. Those conversations are recorded by U.S. intelligence agencies and turned into secret intelligence reportsâŚ
Former Obama National Security Advisor, Susan Rice, is accused of âunmaskingâ the names of Trump team members contained in those U.S. intelligence reports and illegally leaking their names to the press. Bloomberg reports: âOne U.S. official familiar with the reports said they contained valuable political information on the Trump transition such as whom the Trump team was meeting, the views of Trump associates on foreign policy matters and plans for the incoming administration.â
In other words, U.S. intelligence agencies, under Obama, were spying on Trump associates â and Rice obtained the names of those associates, which are supposed to be kept confidential.
Leaking the names to the press, in the current political atmosphere, would result in the impression that Trump associates were having improper conversations with foreign leaders, or even âcolludingâ with them. Lots of innuendo here.
The Susan Rice spying scandal points to what? More. Other Americans the Obama team spied on. Other Americans who were opposed to the Obama agenda. Other Americans who were critical of the Obama administration. Other Americans who were exposing the Obama administration.
For example, former CBS star investigative reporter, Sharyl Attkisson â who has sued members of the Obama team and several federal agencies. That lawsuit has just been referred to another venue by the judge in the case. He could have dismissed the suit, but he didnât. He wants it to proceed. He wants Attkisson to have her day in court.
You might remember Attkisson was uncovering highly embarrassing details about the gun-walking operation, Fast & Furious, and the attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi. She was making the Obama administration extremely uncomfortable.
But let me quote Judge Emet Sullivanâs recent order transferring Attkissonâs suit:
âIn 2011Â â at the same time that Ms. Attkisson was conducting investigations and issuing certain of her high-profile news reportsâthe Attkissons âbegan to notice anomalies in numerous electronic devices at their home in Virginia.â These anomalies included Ms. Attkissonâs work-issued laptop computer and a family desktop computer âturning on and off at night without input from anyone in the household,â âthe house alarm chirping daily at different times,â and âtelevision problems, including interference.â All of these electronic devices used âthe Verizon FiOS line installed in [the Attkissonsâ] home,â but Verizon was unable to stanch the anomalous activity despite multiple attempts. In January 2012, the Attkissonsâ residential internet service âbegan constantly dropping offâ.â
âIn February 2012, âsophisticated surveillance spywareâ was installed on Ms. Attkissonâs work-issued laptop computer. A later forensic computer analysis revealed that Ms. Attkissonâs laptop and the familyâs desktop computer had been the âtargets of unauthorized surveillance efforts.â That same forensic analysis revealed that Ms. Attkissonâs mobile phone was also targeted for surveillance when it was connected to the familyâs desktop computer. The infiltration of that computer and the extraction of information from it was âexecuted via an IP address owned, controlled, and operated by the United States Postal service.â Additionally, based on the sophisticated nature of the software used to carry out the infiltration and software fingerprints indicating the use of the federal governmentâs proprietary software, the infiltration and surveillance appeared to be perpetrated by persons in the federal government.â
âAn independent forensic computer analyst hired by CBS subsequently reported finding evidence on both Ms. Attkissonâs work-issued laptop computer and her familyâs desktop computer of âa coordinated, highly-skilled series of actions and attacks directed at the operation of the computers.â Computer forensic analysis also indicated that remote actions were taken in December 2012 to remove the evidence of the electronic infiltration and surveillance from Ms. Attkissonâs computers and other home electronic equipment.â
âAs Ms. Attkissonâs investigations and reporting continued, in October 2012 the Attkissons noticed âan escalation of electronic problems at their personal residence, including interference in home and mobile phone lines, computer interference, and television interference.â In November of that year, Ms. Attkissonâs mobile phones âexperienced regular interruptions and interference, making telephone communications unreliable, and, at times, virtually impossibleâ.â
âAdditionally, in December 2012, a person with government intelligence experience conducted an inspection of the exterior of the Attkissonsâ Virginia home. That investigator discovered an extra Verizon FiOS fiber optics line. Soon thereafter, after a Verizon technician was instructed by Ms. Attkisson to leave the extra cable at the home, the cable disappeared, and the Attkissons were unable to determine what happened to it. In March 2013, the Attkissonsâ desktop computer malfunctioned, and in September of that year, while Ms. Attkisson was working on a story at her home, she observed that her personal laptop computer was remotely accessed and controlled, resulting in data being deleted from it. On April 3, 2013, Ms. Attkisson filed a complaint with the Inspector General of the Department of Justice. The Inspector Generalâs investigation was limited to an analysis of the compromised desktop computer, and the partially-released report that emerged from that investigation reported âno evidence of intrusion,â although it did note âa great deal of advanced mode computer activity not attributable to Ms. Attkisson or anybody in her householdâ.â
âThe Attkissons allege that the âcyber-attacksâ they âsuffered in [their] homeâ were perpetrated by âpersonnel working on behalf of the United States.â Accordingly, they have asserted various claims against the United States and against former Attorney General Eric Holder, former Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe, and unknown agents of the Department of Justice, the United States Postal Service, and the United States, all in their individual capacities. Those claims include claims against the United States under the FTCA and claims against the individual federal officers for violations of constitutional rights under Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Fed. Bureau of Narcotics, 403 U.S. 388 (1971)âŚâ
Spying, surveillance, harassment, interference, attempts at intimidation.
Are you noticing any significant mainstream news coverage of this case? Of course not.
Ordinarily, mainstream reporters protect their own colleagues, but here there is silence.
Letâs call it what it is: Partisan political silence.
The silence is based on a principle they donât teach at journalism schools:
 âWe omit the news that contradicts our agenda. Our agenda IS the news.â
Memo to the new Attorney General, Jeff Sessions: You could launch your own investigation into the Attkisson case. Bring it front and center. Uncover all the nasty details. Expose the perpetrators.
Now.
â Jon Rappoport