there are many ways to handle it.
I’ve been reading Luke Rosiak’s “Obstruction of Justice”.
To be honest, compared to George Webb’s fast break metadata based investigation of the Congressional spy/criminal Imran Awan who was deeply involved with the democrat party and protected by the republican leadership, reading “Obstruction of Justice” is like trudging through shallow quicksand after a spin in a Lamborghini.
The only reason I keep going back to it is for the occasional diamond of insight Rosiak provides whether it’s intended or not.
Rosiak mostly treads lightly as he lays out his story but he can throw off his restraints; in later chapters he almost approaches, what I think for him would be, reckless abandon. As a former investigator for the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee the naïve crystal he filtered much of his scrutiny through early in the book brings the term sophistry to mind.
The indisputable departure from his disappointingly vague account of a story that thousands of shocked and enraged people are already familiar with through Webb’s dogged efforts struck me as notable and worthy of mention.
First some background.
Awan’s legal team from Wasserman Schultz’s Miami area mentioned on pages 171/172 of Obstruction of Justice included Chris Gowen and Jesse Winograd. Winograd is an espionage law specialist and Gowen followed Bill and Hillery Clinton as a personal aide from Hillery’s senate office to her 2008 presidential campaign and the Clinton Foundation.
Gowan described Imran’s arrest as “clearly a right-wing media-driven prosecution by a United States Attorney’s Office that wants to prosecute people for working while Muslim”. (pg 173 Obstruction of Justice).
One of Gowan’s responses to a story Rosiak published stunned Rosiak into realizing something bigger was going on. He began suspecting the defense team and elements of the Justice Department were working together.
Rusiak writes…
I emailed Bill Miller, a former Washington Post reporter who is now the spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s office in Washington, and sent him a detailed outline of what I was writing: that the government had improperly handed over evidence to the defense. Instead of getting a response from Miller designed to ameliorate my concerns, three hours later, I got a response from Gowan.
“I hear you are writing another article about me – I assume you don’t want to fact check it?” Gowan wrote. “From what I hear, you have it totally wrong as usual.” I had not told a soul but Miller about any upcoming story involving Gowen.
I followed up with Miller to ask if prosecutors had provided information about my upcoming story to Gowen. “I’m not going to get into what we do internally,” Miller said. “I communicate with the prosecutors regularly when I get media inquiries.”
I asked Gowan how he got the information. “I have been told by my source on the Hill,” he said. If true, this would imply that prosecutors were leaking to Democrats, who were providing information about an ongoing criminal case to the attorney of a hacking suspect… (pgs199/200 Obstruction of justice)
Making Should I Stay or Should I Go the UNofficial FBI theme song when democrats are involved in crimes against the People
and the republican congressional leaders UNofficial theme song when democrats are making up their defense against such charges
and the main stream media’s official theme song all the time.