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Case File
d-21683House OversightFBI Report

Inspector General Report Claims FBI ‘Crossfire’ Probe Was Politically Biased, Tainting Mueller Special Counsel Work

The passage alleges that the FBI’s Crossfire‑Harris operation was politically motivated and that this bias taints all downstream actions of Special Counsel Mueller. It cites an Inspector General findi Inspector General concluded FBI bias "cast a cloud" over investigations, including Crossfire. Allegation that Crossfire was initiated for political, not national‑security, reasons. Claim that Mueller

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #026275
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage alleges that the FBI’s Crossfire‑Harris operation was politically motivated and that this bias taints all downstream actions of Special Counsel Mueller. It cites an Inspector General findi Inspector General concluded FBI bias "cast a cloud" over investigations, including Crossfire. Allegation that Crossfire was initiated for political, not national‑security, reasons. Claim that Mueller

Tags

inspector-generaldue-processpolitical-influencepolitical-biasfbidue-process-violationcrossfire-harrislegal-exposuremuellerhouse-oversightspecial-counsel

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What does this have to do with Mr. Mueller, who was appointed in May 2017 after President Trump fired Mr. Comey? The inspector general concludes that the pervasive bias “cast a cloud over the FBI investigations to which these employees were assigned,” including Crossfire. And 1f Crossfire was politically motivated, then its culmination, the appointment of a special counsel, inherited the taint. All special-counsel activities—investigations, plea deals, subpoenas, reports, indictments and convictions—are fruit of a poisonous tree, byproducts of a violation of due process. That Mr. Mueller and his staff had nothing to do with Crossfire’s origin offers no cure. When the government deprives a person of life, liberty or property, it is required to use fundamentally fair processes. The Supreme Court has made clear that when governmental action “shocks the conscience,” it violates due process. Such conduct includes investigative or prosecutorial efforts that appear, under the totality of the circumstances, to be motivated by corruption, bias or entrapment. In U.S. v. Russell (1973), the justices observed: “We may someday be presented with a situation in which the conduct of law enforcement agents is so outrageous that due process principles would absolutely bar the government from invoking judicial processes to obtain a conviction.” It didn’t take long. In Blackledge v. Perry (1974), the court concluded that due process was offended by a prosecutor’s “realistic likelihood of ‘vindictiveness’ ” that tainted the “very initiation of proceedings.” In Young v. U.S. ex rel. Vuitton (1987), the justices held that because prosecutors have “power to employ the full machinery of the state in scrutinizing any given individual . .. we must have assurance that those who would wield this power will be guided solely by their sense of public responsibility for the attainment of justice.” Prosecutors must be “disinterested” and make “dispassionate assessments,” free from any personal bias. In Williams v. Pennsylvania (2016), the court held that a state judge’s potential bias violated due process because he had played a role, a quarter-century earlier, in prosecuting the death-row inmate whose habeas corpus petition he was hearing. The passage of time and involvement of others do not vitiate the taint but heighten “the need for objective rules preventing the operation of bias that might otherwise be obscured,” the justices wrote. A single biased individual “might still have an influence that, while not so visible . . . is nevertheless significant.” In addition to the numerous anti-Trump messages uncovered by the inspector general, there is a strong circumstantial case—including personnel, timing, methods and the absence of evidence—that Crossfire was initiated for political, not national-security, purposes. It was initiated in defiance of a longstanding Justice Department presumption against investigating campaigns in an election year. And while impartiality 1s always required, a 2012 memo by then- Attorney General Eric Holder emphasizes that impartiality is “particularly important in an election

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