Confirmed: Whistleblower Complaint Against Tulsi Gabbard Was Total Trash
The narrative presented in The Wall Street Journal was notably disorderly: a classified whistleblower complaint
was lodged against the Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi
Gabbard.
It allegedly caused concern within Washington regarding the
procedures for reviewing the complaint and communicating with Congress.
The attorney representing the whistleblower is unable to access the
evidence due to its highly sensitive nature. Furthermore, the inspector
general’s office examined the complaint and concluded that it lacked
credibility, thus delivering a decisive rebuttal to the narrative
propagated by certain media outlets.
This narrative serves as a nostalgic reference to the Russian
collusion hoax: releasing a story that the media heralds as a
significant revelation, only for it to diminish rapidly under
examination within twenty seconds. You think it’s a damning story until
you read or watch the liberal media narrative take a katana to the face.
Now, it’s confirmed that the complaint was garbage (via JustTheNews):
The
assessment by the current Inspector General, who was appointed after
the complaint, confirms to Congress his predecessor’s findings and also
provides new details about the allegations against Gabbard, the letter,
which was reviewed by Just the News, shows. That letter was transmitted
to the chairmen and ranking members of the Senate and House Intelligence
Committees.
According to the Intelligence Community watchdog
Christopher Fox, the whistleblower submitted a complaint on May 25,
2025, alleging that Gabbard restricted the distribution of a “highly
sensitive intelligence report for political reasons” and that the
responsible general counsel’s office failed to report the “potential
crime” to the Justice Department.
His predecessor, acting
Inspector General Tamara Johnson, determined on June 4, 2025, that “if
true” the allegation amounted to a matter of “urgent concern” but was
not able to assess the credibility of the allegations.
Under the
Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act of 1998, “urgent
concerns” are matters that “an IC employee reasonably believes to
evidence violations of law, rule or regulation; gross mismanagement;
gross waste of funds; an abuse of authority; or a substantial and
specific danger to public health or safety.”
However, in a
follow-up determination after reviewing new evidence, she assessed that
the claims “did not appear credible,” the current Inspector General
wrote. “On June 9, 2025, after receiving newly-obtained evidence, Acting
IC IG Johnson issued a supplemental determination memorandum, finding
that the first allegation did not appear credible while remaining unable
to assess the apparent credibility of the second allegation,” Inspector
General Christopher Fox wrote to the leadership of the House and Senate
intelligence panels.
Further, Fox told the congressional
leaders that in a fresh review of the whistleblower’s allegations, he
would disagree with his predecessor’s determination that the matter met
the definition of “urgent concern” under statute.
It’s now confirmed to be a Fugazi filing. The other page that was
dusted off from the deep state’s lawfare book against Trump during his
first presidency was that this story used the same method that was used
to impeach Trump during his first presidency, this time over the Ukraine
call.
And as we expected, the paper it was written on has more utility than cleaning yourself up after a bowel movement.
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