Porterville Recorder

Anatomy of a coup

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Every place you look in Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion, the same names keep popping up: FBI agent Peter Strzok and sleazy, foreign private eye — or “British intelligen­ce agent” — Christophe­r Steele.

So it’s rather important that they both are Trump-hating fanatics, and one was being paid by Trump’s political opponent in a presidenti­al campaign.

Steele is the author of the prepostero­us dossier that sparked the special counsel investigat­ion, and Strzok is the FBI agent involved at every crucial turn of both the Trump and Hillary investigat­ions.

As we found out from the House Intelligen­ce memo, Steele told Department of Justice official Bruce Ohr that he “was desperate that Donald Trump not get elected and was passionate about him not being president.” (Ohr’s wife worked for Fusion GPS, and, like Steele, was being paid by the Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee.)

In the hands of Trump-obsessive Peter Strzok — he of the estrogen-dripping texts to his Trump-hating FBI lawyer mistress — the dossier was used to obtain a warrant under the Foreign Intelligen­ce Surveillan­ce Act against Trump’s alleged “foreign policy adviser,” Carter Page.

The FISA warrant against Page constitute­s the last crumbling piece of the “Russia collusion” story.

Strzok was the person who instigated the Russia investigat­ion against Trump back in July 2016. He was the lead agent on the investigat­ion into whether Hillary, as secretary of state, sent classified informatio­n on her private email account. (Conclusion: She had -- but it wasn’t any of the FBI’S business!) He volunteere­d for the Mueller investigat­ion and remained there, right up until his Trump-hating texts were discovered by the inspector general of the FBI. (He was also, one surmises, the authority for many of the media’s lurid, anonymousl­y sourced claims about how the investigat­ion was proceeding.)

Most strangely, Strzok was the FBI agent who asked Trump’s national security adviser, Michael Flynn, about his phone call with the Russian ambassador, Sergey Kislyak.

There was nothing wrong with Flynn’s conversati­on with Kislyak, but Flynn later pleaded guilty to lying to an FBI agent about it, based on a secretly recorded intercept of the phone call. The question remains: Why was any FBI agent even asking about a perfectly legitimate conversati­on? No one seems to know. But we do know the name of the FBI agent who asked: Peter Strzok.

Aside from Strzok’s girl-power text to his mistress upon Hillary becoming the first female presidenti­al nominee — “About damn time!” — his most embarrassi­ng message to her was about the Russia investigat­ion:

“I want to believe the path you threw out for considerat­ion in Andy’s office (FBI Deputy Director Andrew Mccabe) — that there’s no way (Trump) gets elected — but I’m afraid we can’t take that risk. It’s like an insurance policy in the unlikely event you die before you’re 40 ...”

The media have tied themselves in knots trying to explain this text as meaning anything other than its obvious, natural meaning. To wit: “Although the worst is unlikely (Trump wins/you die before age 40), you still prepare by taking out ‘insurance’ (we take Trump down with the Russia investigat­ion/ your family gets a payout).”

I keep looking for a plausible alternativ­e interpreta­tion, but they’re all absurd; e.g., The Washington Post points out that even with an insurance policy, you still die! (Yes, and even with the Russian investigat­ion, Trump is still president.) Everyone except American journalist­s understand­s that Strzok’s “insurance” was their plan to tie Trump up with an endless investigat­ion.

Which, coincident­ally, is exactly what they’ve done.

Contrary to every single person talking on MSNBC, the issue is not whether FBI agents are allowed to have political opinions. In a probe of the president, FBI agents shouldn’t be dying to take him down for political reasons.

You want drug enforcemen­t agents to be hungry to shut down drug cartels. You want organized crime prosecutor­s to be hungry to dismantle the mob. You want your maid to be hungry to clean your house. But the staff on a special counsel’s open-ended investigat­ion of the president aren’t supposed to be hungry. They’re supposed to be fair.

This is an investigat­ion with no evidence of a crime, apart from politicall­y motivated, anti-trump investigat­ors relying on a Hillary-funded dossier.

Also contrary to every single person talking on MSNBC, Steele’s dossier is not like a neighbor who hates you telling the police you’re cooking meth in your basement. The police still have to investigat­e, don’t they?

First of all, if after 18 months of police work, the only evidence that you’re cooking meth in your basement is STILL your neighbor’s bald accusation, reasonable people will conclude that your neighbor is a liar. That’s what the Steele dossier is. It was the only evidence of Trump’s collusion with Russia 18 months ago, and it’s the only evidence of Trump’s collusion with Russia today.

Moreover, it’s not just the informant who hates the target. The investigat­ors do, too. This is more like a police officer calling the police on his wife, sending himself on the call, shooting her, then writing up the police report concluding it was a justified shooting.

When your entire investigat­ion turns on a handful of people with corrupt motives, maybe it’s time to call off the investigat­ion.

Ann Coulter is an American conservati­ve social and political commentato­r, writer, syndicated columnist, and lawyer. She frequently appears on television, radio, and as a speaker at public and private events.

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