White House COCAINE Probe EXPLODES — FBI Scrambles

White House COCAINE Probe EXPLODES — FBI Scrambles

Finally, someone at the FBI is asking the questions we’ve all been demanding answers to: Who brought cocaine into the White House, who leaked the Dobbs opinion, and who planted those pipe bombs that magically appeared just before January 6th?

At a Glance

  • The FBI, under Deputy Director Dan Bongino and Director Kash Patel, is reopening investigations into three politically charged cases: the 2023 White House cocaine incident, the 2022 Supreme Court Dobbs leak, and the 2021 pipe bombs found near DNC and RNC headquarters.
  • Cocaine was discovered in a White House cubby in July 2023, but the Secret Service investigation ended without identifying a suspect despite the Biden administration’s promise they would “get to the bottom of this.”
  • The FBI is offering a $500,000 reward for information on the still-unidentified pipe bomb suspect from January 5, 2021 – a case that has mysteriously languished for over four years.
  • Bongino has requested weekly updates on these investigations and is encouraging public assistance in providing tips to solve these cases.

The FBI Finally Gets Its Priorities Straight

After years of chasing down parents at school board meetings and conducting pre-dawn raids on Trump supporters, the FBI appears to be redirecting its resources toward cases that actually matter to the American people. Deputy Director Dan Bongino announced the bureau is allocating additional resources to investigate what he called “a number of cases of potential public corruption that, understandably, have garnered public interest.” The cases in question have been lingering unsolved for years, raising serious questions about whether previous leadership had any real interest in finding the truth.

These aren’t just any cases – they’re investigations that strike at the heart of public trust in our institutions. The White House cocaine discovery, the unprecedented Supreme Court leak, and mysterious pipe bombs that conveniently diverted law enforcement resources just before the Capitol riot on January 6th. Funny how these high-profile incidents that could potentially embarrass Democrats have remained “unsolved mysteries” for so long, isn’t it?

The White House Cocaine Caper

Remember when cocaine was found in the White House in July 2023? The Secret Service quickly closed the investigation, claiming they couldn’t identify a suspect due to “lack of evidence and surveillance.” This despite the White House being one of the most heavily monitored buildings on the planet. The cocaine was discovered in a cubby in a highly trafficked area of the White House, and while then-Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre assured us, “We have confidence that they will get to the bottom of this,” they never did.

“I receive requested briefings on these cases weekly and we are making progress,” said Dan Bongino, suggesting that perhaps the original investigation wasn’t pursued with the vigor one might expect for drugs found in the people’s house.

While the Biden family was reportedly away when the cocaine was discovered, speculation has run rampant about who might have brought the substance into the White House. Former President Trump and others have raised questions about the possible involvement of Hunter Biden, whose history with substance abuse is well-documented. But apparently, investigating who brought illegal drugs into the White House wasn’t a priority until now.

The Supreme Court Leak That Shook America

The unprecedented leak of Justice Alito’s draft opinion in the Dobbs case was perhaps the most significant breach of Supreme Court confidentiality in American history. The May 2022 leak ignited protests across the country and represented a direct attack on the independence of the judicial branch. Yet somehow, a Supreme Court investigation was “unable to identify the source of the leak.” How convenient.

“Roe was egregiously wrong from the start. Its reasoning was exceptionally weak, and the decision has had damaging consequences. And far from bringing about a national settlement of the abortion issue, Roe and [Planned Parenthood v.] Casey have enflamed debate and deepened division.”

The leak was clearly designed to create public pressure on the Court to change its ruling. It was an attack on our constitutional system, yet until now, the FBI has shown little interest in getting to the bottom of who compromised the Court’s integrity. It’s almost as if certain elements within our government were perfectly content to let this violation slide since it served their political purposes.

The January 6th Pipe Bombs Nobody Talks About

Perhaps most disturbing is the case of the pipe bombs placed outside both the Democratic and Republican National Committee headquarters on January 5, 2021. These devices, which thankfully did not detonate, were discovered just before the Capitol protests the following day. The FBI has released surveillance footage and is offering a hefty $500,000 reward for information, yet four years later, no suspect has been identified.

A House GOP report released earlier this year indicated that initial inquiries revealed persons of interest, but curiously, little progress has been made. One might wonder why the same FBI that can track down grandmothers who briefly walked through the Capitol on January 6th hasn’t been able to identify who planted actual bombs the day before. These pipe bombs conveniently diverted law enforcement resources away from the Capitol just before the protests – a coincidence that deserves far more scrutiny than it’s received.

Deputy Director Bongino’s directive to “either re-open, or push additional resources and investigative attention” to these cases is long overdue.

The Path Forward: Restoring Trust Through Transparency

With Bongino receiving weekly briefings and the FBI finally putting real resources behind these investigations, there’s hope that Americans might actually get answers to questions that have lingered for far too long. The fact that it’s taken a change in administration for these cases to receive proper attention speaks volumes about the politicization of our law enforcement agencies in recent years.

The American people deserve to know who brought cocaine into the White House, who undermined the Supreme Court’s confidentiality, and who planted pipe bombs in our nation’s capital. These aren’t partisan issues – they’re matters of national security and institutional integrity. If we can’t trust our most sacred institutions to remain free from corruption and political manipulation, what’s left of our constitutional republic?