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DOJ refuses to disclose top‑secret FBI/CIA source to House Intelligence CommitteeDOJ refuses to disclose top‑secret FBI/CIA source to House Intelligence Committee
DOJ refuses to disclose top‑secret FBI/CIA source to House Intelligence Committee The passage reveals that the DOJ and FBI are actively withholding the identity of a U.S. citizen who served as a top‑secret intelligence source in the Russia‑collusion probe, despite a subpoena from the House Intelligence Committee. This suggests possible obstruction of congressional oversight and raises questions about the source’s role, potentially implicating senior officials (Rod Rosenstein, Devin Nunes, Paul Ryan). While the source’s name is not disclosed, the documented refusal and claims of national‑security risk provide a concrete lead for further investigation (subpoena compliance, source protection arguments, internal DOJ communications). The controversy is high, but the novelty is moderate because the existence of a secret source has been reported before; however, the specific claim of DOJ “extortion” accusations and the involvement of top officials raise the score into the strong‑lead range. Key insights: DOJ and FBI allegedly concealed a top‑secret intelligence source from the House Intelligence Committee.; Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein accused the House of "extortion" and framed non‑disclosure as a constitutional duty.; Speaker Paul Ryan and Chairman Devin Nunes publicly demanded the source’s identity, citing oversight authority.
Summary
DOJ refuses to disclose top‑secret FBI/CIA source to House Intelligence Committee The passage reveals that the DOJ and FBI are actively withholding the identity of a U.S. citizen who served as a top‑secret intelligence source in the Russia‑collusion probe, despite a subpoena from the House Intelligence Committee. This suggests possible obstruction of congressional oversight and raises questions about the source’s role, potentially implicating senior officials (Rod Rosenstein, Devin Nunes, Paul Ryan). While the source’s name is not disclosed, the documented refusal and claims of national‑security risk provide a concrete lead for further investigation (subpoena compliance, source protection arguments, internal DOJ communications). The controversy is high, but the novelty is moderate because the existence of a secret source has been reported before; however, the specific claim of DOJ “extortion” accusations and the involvement of top officials raise the score into the strong‑lead range. Key insights: DOJ and FBI allegedly concealed a top‑secret intelligence source from the House Intelligence Committee.; Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein accused the House of "extortion" and framed non‑disclosure as a constitutional duty.; Speaker Paul Ryan and Chairman Devin Nunes publicly demanded the source’s identity, citing oversight authority.
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