FBI Whistleblower: Feds deleting files CIA : worried fired employees will commit treason
Obviously this needs to be investigated and should not be taken as true but whooo boy
WOW': Michael Shellenberger Drops ANOTHER Bombshell That FBI Employees Are Destroying Evidence
The whistleblower Shellenberger mentioned in his tweet is former FBI agent Garrett O'Boyle, who previously testified before Congress about the weaponization of the FBI under the Biden administration and the retribution the agency took on him and others for exposing its actions, despite whistleblower protection laws.
And on the same day we have the Feds worried their top people will commit treason and sell out to foreign countries
Imagine an election doesn't go your way and you decide that the best way forward is to sell out your country
Doesn't really tell a great story about our intelligence community
This is from CNN
And on the CIA’s 7th floor — home to top leadership — some officers are also quietly discussing how mass firings and the buyouts already offered to staff risk creating a group of disgruntled former employees who might be motivated to take what they know to a foreign intelligence service.
Fired employees create security risks Meanwhile, as the CIA weighs staff cuts, current and former intelligence officials say that mass firings could offer a rich recruitment opportunity for foreign intelligence services — like China or Russia — who may seek to exploit financially vulnerable or resentful former employees. The Justice Department has charged multiple former military and intelligence officials for providing US intelligence to China in recent years.
The agency has already fired more than 20 officers for their work on diversity issues, many of whom are now challenging their dismissal in court. The government has said in court filings that it is still weighing additional cuts to comply with Trump’s order to end all diversity work across the federal government. And sources say that career officials at the agency are also working on recommendations about which probationary staff whose names were emailed to the White House should be dismissed. A final number has yet to be determined, one of these people said. None have been accused of misconduct or fired for cause.
But, unlike most other fired federal employees, all of those people have had access to classified information about the agency’s operations and tradecraft.
“Terminating someone who works for Department of Agriculture — even if they’re disgruntled, if they’re not accessing classified information, what’s the risk?” one US official said.
I'm not sure "if you fire us we will commit treason" is a winning argument