Comey takes the same escape route as last time

The Guardian:

FBI director: new Hillary Clinton emails do not show criminal wrongdoing

Washington Post:

After new review, FBI director says agency once again won’t recommend charges over Clinton email

Well.

It is nice to see a guy that high up in a major organization, working on a Sunday I guess.

Although if anyone else, a military General for example, had done anything remotely like this they would be doing hard time.

Or this poor shmoe:

US Navy sailor jailed for taking photos of classified areas of nuclear submarine.

H/T ilona szilagyi, Trico.

 

 

About Eeyore

Canadian artist and counter-jihad and freedom of speech activist as well as devout Schrödinger's catholic

13 Replies to “Comey takes the same escape route as last time”

  1. Looks like we are going to see if the NY City Police Chief meant what he said about going public with all of the evidence.

    Hillary broke the law many times and Comey is proving that he is staying bought, he deserves a prison sentence for corruption.

  2. Former Los Alamos Scientist Wen Ho Lee Criticizes FBI of Racism (Feature Story by Celeste Berry – 1/28/2002)
    http://www.civilrights.org/criminal-justice/racial-disparities/former-los-alamos-scientist-wen-ho-lee-criticizes-fbi-of-racism.html?print=t?referrer=https://www.google.com/
    However, despite the foibles of the government, Lee is not an innocent. He acknowledges that he committed a security violation by downloading classified computer codes unto un-secure sources. Yet he maintains that he did so “to protect my files [and] to make a backup copy,. . . because there were no lab rules against making copies, and most prudent people [kept] many copies of their important documents.”

    After spending close to nine months in solitary confinement in a Santa Fe prison, Lee made the decision, on the advice of his lawyers John Cline and Mark Holscher, to plead guilty to one count of mishandling classified information. They told him that he had a 95 percent chance of winning if he went to trial, but a five percent chance that he could lose. “If we lose,” his lawyers advised him, “you could face life in prison. Are you willing to take that risk?” Saying, “it was not worth the risk of spending the rest of my life in prison,” Lee agreed.

    • http://articles.latimes.com/2000/jan/24/news/mn-57185
      Over a year, Lee’s password was used about 70 times to log in to the unclassified Los Alamos network from the UCLA campus. Investigators are examining whether it was a coincidence that three of those sessions took place within hours after Lee downloaded fresh batches of secrets to the unclassified computer.