California Democrat Senator Adam Schiff might be wishing he had the same kind of sweeping legal protection Hunter Biden walked away with at the end of Joe Biden’s presidency. Hunter’s controversial pardon wiped away federal wrongdoing going back to 2014 — the very year he joined the infamous Ukrainian energy company Burisma, igniting years of scandal. Thanks to his father’s pen, Hunter’s trail of questionable conduct was effectively erased.
Schiff also secured what’s been described as a “preemptive pardon” — an immunity deal covering his role on the highly partisan January 6th committee. That legal shield was clearly meant to protect one of the Democrats’ most aggressive Trump critics from any fallout over the committee’s actions. But here’s the problem: new evidence suggests Schiff’s troubles go far beyond anything tied to January 6th.
Between 2003 and 2020, Schiff allegedly listed two different properties as his “primary residence” — a move that can mislead banks into offering better mortgage rates. In the real estate world, that’s a big no-no. And now, investigative journalist John Solomon has uncovered far more damaging allegations involving Schiff’s work on the House Intelligence Committee years before January 6th.
According to a Just the News report by Solomon and Jerry Dunleavy, FBI Director Kash Patel declassified a bombshell FBI 302 memo — an official summary of an interview with a trusted source. The source, a long-time Democrat staffer who worked for Schiff, claims Schiff approved leaking classified material to smear Donald Trump during the now-debunked “Russiagate” scandal.
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