Wednesday, July 17, 2019

FBI Spreadsheet Showed Majority Of Dossier Claims 'Were Either Wrong Or Unverifiable'

In this Sept. 4, 2013, file photo, then-incoming FBI Director James Comey talks with outgoing FBI Director Robert Mueller before Comey was officially sworn in at the Justice Department in Washington.

Sources have told investigative reporter John Solomon that the vast majority of claims made in Christopher Steele's infamous dossier were "Either wrong, unverifiable or things that an intern could find on the internet."

In early 2017, the FBI began on a significant effort to assess the credibility of the Steele dossier.

They then took every factual statement in the Steele dossier memos and put them in a spreadsheet and analyzed them and came to conclude that the vast majority of them were either wrong, unverifiable despite all the investigative tools the FBI had or things that an intern with a google search could find on the internet.

Solomon's report about the FBI's spreadsheet corroborates the claim that top officials were well aware that the dossier had not been verified.

Several months ago, Solomon reported that State Department official Kathleen Kavalec emailed the FBI following a meeting with Christopher Steele to express her doubts about his motives and the credibility of the dossier itself.

It would mean that not only did the FBI file at least the last two FISA Court applications after the dossier had been debunked, but that Rod Rosenstein appointed a Special Counsel to investigate allegations against the President the FBI knew to be false.

https://www.redstate.com/elizabeth-vaughn/2019/07/17/fbi-spreadsheet-showed-majority-dossier-claims-either-wrong-unverifiable/

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