The Mercury News Weekend

Beware of misinforma­tion, narratives from the media

- By Victor Davis Hanson Victor Davis Hanson is a syndicated columnist.

U.S. intelligen­ce agencies said Russia was responsibl­e for hacking Democratic National Committee email accounts, leading to the publicatio­n of about 20,000 stolen emails on WikiLeaks.

But that finding was reportedly based largely on the DNC’s strange outsourcin­g of the investigat­ion to a private cybersecur­ity firm. Rarely does the victim of a crime first hire a private investigat­or whose findings later form the basis of government conclusion­s.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is many things. But so far he has not been caught lying about the origin of the leaked documents that came into his hands. He has insisted for well over a year that the Russians did not provide him with the DNC emails.

When it was discovered that the emails had been compromise­d, then-DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz weirdly refused to allow forensic detectives from the FBI to examine the DNC server to probe the evidence of the theft. Why did the FBI accept that refusal?

That strange behavior was not as bizarre as Wasserman Schultz’s later frenzied efforts to protect her informatio­n technology specialist, Imran Awan, from Capitol Police and FBI investigat­ions. Both agencies were hot on Awan’s trail for unlawfully transferri­ng secure data from government computers, and also for bank and federal procuremen­t fraud.

So far, the story of the DNC hack is not fully known, but it may eventually be revealed that it in- volves other actors beyond just the Russians.

There is not much left to the media myth of James Comey as dutiful FBI director, unjustly fired by a partisan and vindictive President Donald Trump. A closer look suggests that Comey may have been the most politicize­d, duplicitou­s and out of control FBI director since J. Edgar Hoover.

During the 2016 election, Comey, quite improperly, was put into the role of prosecutor, judge and jury in the investigat­ion of Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server while she was secretary of state. That proved a disaster. Comey has admitted under oath to deliberate­ly leaking his own notes — which were likely government property — to the media to prompt the appointmen­t of a special counsel. That ploy worked like clockwork, and by a strange coincidenc­e it soon resulted in the selection of his friend, former FBI Director Robert Mueller.

Comey earlier had assured the public that his investigat­ion of Clinton had shown no prosecutab­le wrongdoing (a judgment that in normal times would not be the FBI’s to make). It has since been disclosed that Comey offered that conclusion before he had even interviewe­d Clinton

omey was also less than truthful when he testified that there had been no internal FBI communicat­ions concerning the infamous meeting between Clinton’s husband, former President Bill Clinton, and former Attorney General Loretta Lynch on an airport tarmac. In fact, there was a trail of FBI discussion about that supposedly secret rendezvous.

Before he fired Comey, Trump drafted a letter outlining the source of his anger. But it seemed to have little to do with the obstructio­n of justice.

Instead, Trump’s anguished letter complained about Comey’s private assurances that the president was not under FBI investigat­ion, which were offered at about the same time a winking-and-nodding Comey would not confirm that reality to the press, thus leaving the apparently deliberate impression that a compromise­d president was in legal jeopardy.

There is also a media fantasy about the antifa street protestors. Few have criticized their systematic use of violence. But when in history have youths running through the streets decked out in black with masks, clubs and shields acted nonviolent­ly?

It was recently disclosed that the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security had warned the Obama administra­tion in 2016 that antifa was a domestic terrorist organizati­on that aimed to incite violence during street protests. That stark assessment and antifa’s subsequent violence make the recent nonchalanc­e of local police department­s with regard to antifa thuggery seem like an abject derelictio­n of duty.

Doubts about official narratives of the DNC leaks and the errant behavior of James Comey, and misinforma­tion about the violent extremists of antifa, illustrate media bias — not to mention entrenched government bureaucrac­ies that are either incompeten­t, ethically compromise­d or completely politicize­d.

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