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Ex-Top FBI Lawyer Worried Hillary Clinton Would Be Indicted If She Won Election Against Trump


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While Hillary Clinton is dodging subpoenas left and right in a desperate effort to avoid paying for her crimes, a new book makes clear what is at stake for her.

Former FBI General Counsel James Baker stunned the world in a new book where he revealed that he and others in the FBI  “believed it was likely that the FBI could find new evidence of wrongdoing by Clinton” when they found emails on Anthony Weiner’s laptop.

But that is not all – the top guys at the FBI were panicked as they were looking at the real possibility of facing a nightmare scenario – they thought and were getting ready for the possibility that Hillary would be indicted after winning the election but before she was sworn in.

From The Washington Examiner:

The FBI’s top lawyer was torn over what to do when FBI Director James Comey asked in 2016 whether he should inform Congress that the bureau was reopening the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s emails.

FBI General Counsel James Baker had been told that FBI agents discovered between 600,000 and 1 million emails on disgraced former Rep. Anthony Weiner’s laptop relating to Clinton. The 2016 Democratic presidential nominee’s top aide, Huma Abedin, was married to Weiner, who was being investigated for sending illicit texts to an underage girl.

Baker, who left the FBI in May 2018, told author David Rohde that he felt like the “fates had thrown him a hundred-mile-an-hour fastball.”

Baker “believed it was likely that the FBI could find new evidence of wrongdoing by Clinton,” Rohde wrote in his recently released book, In Deep: The FBI, the CIA, and the Truth about America’s “Deep State.”

“She wins the election, we go to DOJ, and we recommend that they indict her before she becomes president,” Baker said, describing his nightmare scenario. “That’s not a good place for the country. That’s not a good place for the FBI.”

Baker also worried that the bureau’s credibility would be damaged if Comey did not inform Congress.

“I thought, ‘What is best for the law enforcement and judicial system?’” he said. “I said, ‘I thought the director had an obligation to notify Congress.’ Director Comey agreed with my advice.”

Comey told Congress of the new findings less than two weeks before the 2016 election, sending letters to the chairmen and chairwomen and ranking members of the eight committees that investigated Clinton’s use of a private email server while she was secretary of state.