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"The Fall of the FBI" takes James Comey to task, and more

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Apr 19, 2023, 9:25:11 AM4/19/23
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I have only one criticism of the just-released book by long-time superstar
FBI agent Thomas Baker entitled “The Fall of the FBI.” It really should be
entitled “The Winter of the FBI.” That’s how bad things have gotten in the
upper echelons of the Bureau.

It wasn’t always that way. More than half the book is a collection of true
crime stories that illustrate the competence and professionalism of the
Bureau in the old days. Most end with the bad guys in jail.

Baker had a first-hand view of these cases because he was involved in many of
them. He was the first FBI agent on the scene at President Ronald Reagan’s
shooting when he happened to hear the news report on the radio (recall that
the shooting took place right in front of the press who were following the
President). Baker was in the neighborhood and sped to the scene, arriving
just minutes later. He became in charge of the investigation.

He was the Legal Attaché to the U.S. Embassy in France when Princess Di was
killed in a car crash in Paris. He was cross-examined by infamous lawyer F.
Lee Bailey in the trial of a mobster (Bailey lost that case). You get the
flavor. It’s real-life stories something like the stories my generation
remembers from the television series “The FBI.”

The rest of the book describes the sad decline in the culture of the Bureau.
Baker traces it to 9/11.

The Director at that time was Robert Mueller (the same Mueller who years
later supervised the investigation of Donald Trump for allegations of
colluding with the Russians – allegations that were ultimately shown to be as
groundless as they were explosive). He and his counterpart at the CIA were
summoned to the White House to brief President George W. Bush days after the
9/11 attack.

Mueller explained to the President what the Bureau was doing to identify the
perpetrators – exactly what the Bureau was supposed to do. Frustrated with
Mueller and understandably still upset by the horrific terrorism, Bush
snapped that he just wanted to make sure it didn‘t happen again.

The CIA Director then told Bush what his agency was doing to make sure it
didn’t.

Mueller left humiliated. His take-away was that the Bureau needed to shift
focus toward intelligence-gathering even if it meant sacrificing resources
for law enforcement. The Bureau became fewer cops and more spies.

Mueller’s successor was the notorious James Comey, whom Baker calls a
“charlatan” whose tenure as Director was a “disaster” for the Bureau. Baker
is indisputably right, even if you consider only the Bureau’s reputation.

But Baker points out that the disaster extends beyond reputation and well
into substance. Comey had all of Mueller’s bad instincts for centralization
and control by bureaucrats, and more. Comey seldom got into the nitty gritty
of Bureau work, but instead floated above it all.

Baker didn’t use this word, but I will: Comey was lazy. Like many lazy
people, he was also arrogant in thinking he was so smart he could do the job
without working hard. It was obvious from any of his pompous speeches that
what he loved most was attention.

It was that laziness, arrogance, and attention-craving that led Comey to
substitute his political leanings – his hatred of Trump – for professional
law enforcement procedures that were respectful of the legal process and
required quiet, hard work within it. Comey had a political agenda – to get
Trump.

He figured his agenda was a good and right one, and that the ends he
uncovered in an investigation by the newly intelligence-driven FBI – namely,
the Russian collusion he wishfully thought had taken place – would ultimately
justify the dishonesty and laziness of his means of uncovering it. He
imagined that in doing so he would be a public hero who might even make the
spooks at the CIA a little jealous.

He was proven wrong. Mueller, and history, unequivocally decided there was no
Russian collusion, Comey is no hero, and the only scandal was the
investigation itself – a scandal that respected prosecutor John Durham has
been, in turn, investigating for a long time.

Baker is too modest to expand his book about the rotting culture of the
Bureau into a commentary about society in general, but I’m not.

Like Comey, the Left – and, increasingly, mainstream Democrats – have decided
that their political opponents are not only mistaken, but illegitimate.
Democrats coddle criminals, and want to exterminate Republicans.

The end they seek is one-party rule, and they are willing to employ any means
to achieve that end. In America’s major cities, they’ve already achieved it
and we see the results.

Willfully blind to basic notions of honesty and fair play and incapable of
the art of persuasion, they instead riot, shout down speakers, cancel
careers, and make death threats against Supreme Court Justices after
slandering them with false accusations.

They circumvent both the political and the legal process by fabricating wild
and defamatory pee-pee stories, tricking judges into approving illegal
surveillance, and employing the firepower of the FBI.

Their unscrupulous allies in the “news” media report their defamatory
accusations on Page 1, but report the debunking of them on Page 19, if at
all.

I call on Tom Baker – a very good and engaging writer who can really tell a
story – to expand his commentary. His next book should be “The Fall (or
Winter) of America.”

--
Let's go Brandon!

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