U.S. Inspector General Michael Horowitz’ report on the Obama administration’s wiretap of then-presidential candidate Donald Trump’s campaign in 2016 has released — and what we found on page 341 is jaw dropping.
Horowitz said that investigators never found “documentary or testimonial evidence of intentional misconduct,” of the FBI — a conclusion Attorney General William Barr disagreed with.
And the actual contents of the IG report seems to read otherwise, too.
There’s a bombshell hidden in plain sight on page 341 of the 430-page report — and The Horn News found it.
The report reads that in Aug. 2016, FBI agents used a briefing with President Donald Trump as “opportunity to gather potentially relevant investigative information” on Michael Flynn, the former National Security Advisor, who will be headed to prison on Dec. 18.
In plain English, it seems the FBI entered the meeting involving Trump and Flynn under false pretenses… so they could spy and gather secrets.
And that’s not all.
Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., said he uncovered another shocker deep within the report.
Meadows claims the FBI skipped some steps and hid critical information to obtain the FISA warrant, which granted access to the infamous wiretap of Trump aide Carter Page.
On page 361, the report shows investigators found “numerous factual errors and omissions in the application” which essentially invalidated the allegations made by the FBI.
“That, alone, is indefensible,” Meadows wrote on Twitter.
Predictably, some media allies of Democrats spinning hard. This is what the investigation was about, pg 361:
IG found "numerous serious factual errors and omissions in the FISA applications … that undercut certain allegations in the applications."
That, alone, is indefensible
— Mark Meadows (@MarkMeadows) December 9, 2019
So not only did Barr reject the findings of IG Horowitz’ report, as The Horn News covered yesterday, but the report itself shows the FBI intentionally hid evidence in the FISA applications and undercut their own allegations.
You can view and download the report for yourself by clicking this link here.
The Horn editorial team