A recent dump of documents from Georgia Tech reveals that explosive detail and several other facts connected to the continuing special counsel investigation into Spygate.
Last month, The Federalist first reported that Special Counsel John Durham's team asked lead Georgia Tech researcher Manos Antonakakis: "'Do you believe that DARPA should be instructing you to investigate the origins of a hacker that hacked a political entity?'" Antonakakis responded that that was a question for the DARPA director, an implied acknowledgment that yes, DARPA had asked him to investigate the hack.
Significantly, the subpoena also sought "All documents, records, and information" related to the Alfa Bank and Yotaphone research, including work conducted under or pursuant to contracts with DARPA. The Georgia Tech documents also reveal that this subpoena is the second served on the university by the special counsel's office, with the first issued in fall 2020, according to another email.
Last Friday, in response to Sussmann's claim that Durham should be required to provide Joffe immunity so the tech executive would testify on Susssmann's behalf, the special counsel noted that to date it had only immunized one witness-Dagon.
Another email from Dagon's attorney to Georgia Tech noted that "David Dagon was given full statutory immunity by the Special Counsel in its investigation."
After the special counsel dropped its second subpoena on Georgia Tech, Dagon's attorney emailed a lawyer at Georgia Tech, noting that Dagon would not be responding to the subpoena served on Georgia Tech-that was solely Georgia Tech's responsibility.
Dagon's attorney then added: "We have never seen the first subpoena Georgia Tech produced or your production; nor have we seen this second subpoena. Although Georgia Tech agreed to an informal joint defense agreement, after we produced our subpoena and relevant documents, Georgia Tech pulled back from that and refused to share any information, ... We are also not privy to your discussions with the Special Counsel office."
It's becoming increasingly difficult to discern fact from fiction, and unfortunately the media has a strong bias. They spin stories to make conservatives look bad and will go to great lengths to avoid reporting on the good that comes from conservative policies. There are a few shining lights in the media landscape-brave conservative outlets that report the truth and offer a different perspective. We must support conservative outlets like this one and ensure that our voices are heard.
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