Congress’s House Committee on Oversight and Accountability has recommended holding the director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Christopher Wray, in ‘contempt of Congress‘ for failing to comply with a subpoena which would release documents relating to President Biden’s crooked financial affairs.
The Committee asserts that Wray “willfully failed to comply” with the committee’s subpoena issued last month, and that this has “interfered with the Committee’s investigation” into political corruption and influence peddling of President Biden when he was Vice President. The allegations pertain to long-standing deals with Chinese Communist affiliated organizations.
Committee Chairman James Comer (R-MI) pushed the subpoena following information provided by a whistleblower which suggested that “then-Vice President Biden allegedly engaged in a bribery scheme with a foreign national.”
The decision to hold Wray in contempt of Congress follows the committee “[h]aving exhausted all available options for obtaining compliance.”
“Americans have lost trust in the FBI’s ability to enforce the law impartially and demand accountability,” tweeted Comer, announcing the report.
Having failed to produce the requisite documentation, Wray then changed his story from ‘we don’t have it’, to ‘we’ll show a few of you’ but not the public. The Committee is having none of it, and plans further action Thursday morning.