Kash Patel - Future FBI Director
We will go out and find the conspirators, not just in government, but in the media. ~Kash Patel
The period between 1890 to 1920 was known as the Progressive Era in America, when Progressives worked to establish a more transparent government, while supporting the expansion of business. After years of industrialization, the United States was becoming a wealthy country. Ford’s Model T was rolling off the assembly line, making automobiles more affordable and accessible to everyone. Factories were growing, and cities were rapidly expanding as immigrants pursued their idea of the American dream.
As with most rapid growth, the country was experiencing growing pains as it faced a new set of problems. Violence and corruption had erupted nationwide in both business and politics, and the two were often intertwined. Although some states had their own police force, the officers were usually poorly trained or politically appointed. Federal criminal laws had not yet been established.
An uprising of Marxist-supporting anarchists referred to as modern-day terrorists were attempting to abolish capitalism and eliminate the government. After a 28-year-old Polish immigrant anarchist lost his factory job, boarded a train to Buffalo, and shot President McKinley, it became clear that a federal law enforcement agency was needed. Eight days after President McKinley died, Vice President Teddy Roosevelt was sworn in as President.
President Roosevelt was a supporter of the Progressive Movement which aimed to address the problems caused by industrialization, urbanization, and political corruption in the United States. In addition to eliminating corruption in politics, Progressives sought to improve working conditions, promote better housing and sanitation, and increase women’s rights, among other things. President Roosevelt felt that the federal government should play a role in upholding justice in the nation. He had no tolerance for corruption and didn’t trust wealthy business owners who engaged in unethical practices for personal gain. Prior to becoming President, he served as a Civil Service Commissioner and as head of the New York Police Department. It was during his Presidency that the FBI was formed.
In early 1908, federal investigations were conducted by a group of accountants, civil rights investigators, and agents borrowed from the Secret Service. Members of Congress accused Roosevelt of expanding his executive power, so they banned the use of Secret Service agents by any federal department. At this point, the Attorney General had no choice but to create his own force of investigators, which he did with Roosevelt’s support.
It was July 1908 when the Attorney General requested a dedicated group of special agents be assigned to the Department of Justice. The Attorney General quietly hired nine of the Secret Service agents he had previously used and combined them with 25 of his own investigators to form a special agent force. On July 26, 1908, the Attorney General ordered attorneys from the Department of Justice to refer investigative matters to this new group of agents. Their mission was to conduct investigations for the Department of Justice.
In the beginning, agents investigated mostly white-collar and civil rights cases, and a few national security issues such as treason and crimes committed by anarchists. Congress didn’t object to the new group of investigators and began to use it as a way to advance its national agenda. By 1915, Congress approved the increase of FBI personnel to 360 from its original 34.
The 1920’s ushered in a rising tide of professional criminals made wealthy by Prohibition. In Chicago alone, an estimated 1,300 gangs had spread throughout the city, turning the streets into a war zone. Law enforcement was outgunned and unprepared for the surge in crime that had grown to include bank robbery, kidnapping, auto theft, gambling, and drug trafficking. In addition to being outgunned, local law enforcement was restricted to its own borders, which allowed crime to cross state lines without intervention.
The FBI was already developing a reputation for politicized investigations. In 1923, Americans learned that the FBI sent agents to spy on members of Congress. An overhaul was needed at the FBI, and it came at the hands of a young lawyer named J. Edgar Hoover. Hoover joined the Department of Justice and quickly rose through its ranks, achieving confirmation as the FBI Director in 1924. He served in that capacity for 48 years until he died in 1972. After his death, Congress passed legislation to limit the term of future FBI directors to ten years.
The mission of the FBI is to "protect the American people and uphold the Constitution of the United States." Today’s FBI is a member of the intelligence community and reports to both the Attorney General and the Director of National Intelligence. The FBI is responsible for investigating violations of more than 200 categories of federal crimes including public corruption, organized crime, and drug and human trafficking. Unlike the CIA who is not authorized for law enforcement authority in the United States (sure), the FBI works primarily in the United States, although it does operate offices in U.S. embassies and consulates around the world. The 2024 budget request from the FBI was $11.4 billion. Of that amount, $11.3 billion was earmarked for salaries and expenses for 37,312 positions.
The FBI has had its share of trouble since its inception. Some of the more well-known controversies during my lifetime include the Ruby Ridge standoff, the Waco, Texas siege, the 1996 Olympics bombing in Atlanta and the events surrounding Richard Jewell, and of course, the Hillary Clinton email scandal.
Coming from an honorable law enforcement family it’s difficult for me to speak negatively toward any law enforcement. Prior to former FBI Director James Comey and his rise to fame during the Hillary Clinton email scandal, I don’t think I paid much attention to anything the FBI did. It wasn’t until we were shown the incompetence of the handling of that case that many of us started to pay attention. Suddenly the stories of mass shootings were followed up by reports that the alleged gunmen had been “on the FBI’s radar,” yet they were allowed to commit their crimes. Social media soon became filled with videos of Fed Boys dressed like Jake from State Farm marching at protests and rallies. The stories of undercover FBI agents at the J6 insurrection that wasn’t started to drift into our consciousness. Were they there to assist or to incite?
Just as the FBI needed an overhaul in the 1920’s, many Americans think it needs an overhaul now, 100 years later. As with everything else, it’s not fair to say that every person employed by the FBI is corrupt. We’ve probably all been employed in a position where the leadership was so inept it negatively affected the entire department. Reform needs to come from the top down. We know that many of the questionable leaders at the FBI have already been fired or left their positions. What is next for the FBI? Is it a necessary branch of the federal government?
I’ve been introduced to a lot of new people over the last two years and have watched as many of them have begun their awakening. I decided to conduct a non-scientific survey and asked those around me if they knew anything about Kash Patel. Not one of them knew anything about him other than his nomination by President Trump. There is much to be learned about Kash Patel, and I hope the information here helps. I’ve tried to include as many links as I can so that anyone who is not familiar with Kash can learn for themselves why so many of us are enthusiastic about his nomination.
Believing that information directly from the source is the best way to learn I spent a good deal of time listening to some of Kash’s past interviews (there are a lot). I’ve formed my own opinion of him and his views, and they are all positive. He strikes me as a law-abiding, do-the-right-thing kind of person and corruption does not sit well with him. He’s perfect for this role. He’s exactly what we need. He’s also a good reminder to us that President Trump knows what he’s doing.
There is a common thread in many of his interviews which is “there are no coincidences in government,” “follow the money,” and “there is a two-tiered system of justice.” Kash repeats these phrases often, emphasizing the point that he too wants the justice we’ve all been waiting for. With the number of interviews he’s sat for, along with his willingness to call out the corruption, he strikes me as a spokesperson for the Patriots.
His résumé is impressive with a wide variety of experience. He has spent time as both a public defender and a terrorism prosecutor at the Department of Justice, as well as serving in many other areas of the federal government. While working in the Trump Administration, Kash held several senior level positions. His last position in the Trump Administration was serving as the Chief of Staff to Acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller. Following the 2020 election, it was reported that Kash blocked Department of Defense officials from assisting in Biden’s transition.
In an interview with Glenn Beck, he said that he was working at the Obama Justice Department when Donald Trump announced he was running for President. Kash describes himself as the lead prosecutor during the Benghazi hearing and the person who discovered Hillary Clinton’s “email thing.” As the National Security Advisor and Senior Counsel for the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, Kash led the investigation into Russia’s attempts to influence the 2016 presidential election. According to Kash, the same people who launched the Russiagate investigation were the same people behind the Benghazi scandal.
With his background and experience, it’s clear that Kash Patel has a great understanding of the inner workings of the Deep State.
In an interview on American Thought Leaders in March 2021 Kash discussed the Russiagate scandal and explained how he became aware of it. A Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrant is a court order that authorizes surveillance of a person in order to gather foreign intelligence information. When Kash began investigating the origins of the Russian collusion allegations, he expected to find a well-sourced document substantiating the allegations with factual evidence and credible witnesses. Instead, what he discovered was that the entire FISA warrant consisted of the Steele Dossier. That dossier was later revealed to be opposition research by someone with a personal bias against Donald Trump who wanted to prevent his election. Add that to the fact that the dossier was paid for by the DNC and Hillary Clinton, and it was clear that this was not how DOJ investigations were supposed to be conducted.
Although Kash probably didn’t have all that information at the time, he knew that there were problems with the FISA warrant and he warned Congressman Devin Nunes who was the Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee. An investigation began and over sixty witnesses, including Attorneys General, former Attorneys General, and senior level people in the FBI, were interviewed under oath and asked if they had seen any conspiracy, collusion or coordination between Donald Trump and Russia. Every one of them said no. That didn’t matter to the media, who continued to falsely report on the events surrounding the Russiagate story. To dispute their reporting would risk leaking classified information, something Kash, Nunes, and others were not willing to do.
When asked if the American people will ever get closure, he thankfully responded yes. He continued by saying that for him, closure is synonymous with accountability. Accountability won’t happen unless the same punishments that are applied to individuals who are outside of the government are also enforced on those within the government who engage in the same type of crimes. When asked if accountability would happen, Kash replied that he wasn’t in charge and was no longer in government. The Thought Leaders interview took place in 2021. It’s now almost 2025 and this time Kash will (hopefully) be back in government. More importantly, he will (hopefully) be in charge.
As is still the case today, Kash points out that there is a sizable portion of the American public that is unaware of what happened during President Trump’s first term. By this I assume he’s referring to Russiagate, spying, and countless other scandals. The American public can’t be forced to read reports and focus on what is happening in the government. I found this conversation of particular interest since it is my hope that America will be provided disclosure on a scale so grand that we won’t have to read reports or search for information. Hopefully, it will be presented to us in a way that will be impossible to dispute. As I cover in IP Addresses and The Only Way Is the Military, my instinct is that we will be provided the information we need to become an informed public. Will the disclosure come by bypassing the media and delivering evidence directly to the people?
Since President Trump has been visibly out of office, Kash has spent a lot of time sitting down for interviews with different media figures on our side. He wasn’t hiding in the weeds, and I don’t recall a time when he went missing as so many others have. The X22 Report was my original go-to after my awakening. I found 12 interviews between Dave of X22 and Kash and there may be more. The two men seem to have developed a mutual respect over the years and Kash provides valuable information when answering Dave’s questions. Following are highlights of some of the interviews I listened to.
In March 2023, Kash talked to Dave about the defamation lawsuits he filed against many people in the government and media, their staff, and any sources they used. He plans to publicize the discovery from the lawsuits to show the American people the corrupt actors in our government and how the mainstream media lied to us. Kash isn’t the only person filing lawsuits and gathering discovery. Journalist John Solomon sued the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) for memos surrounding the Russiagate scandal. Ric Grennell, Devin Nunes, General Mike Flynn, and others have also filed Defamation lawsuits. Kash says that they all plan to gather the discovery and expose corruption across the board. This is where I believe the DoD IP addresses will come into play. They can bypass the media and deliver the disclosure – the discovery – directly to the American people.
There was a time when Democrat members of Congress relentlessly hounded President Trump to release his tax returns. He did, and he set a precedent by doing so. Kash reminds us that the Trump Administration can now obtain Joe Biden, Hailey Biden, Jim Biden, and Hunter Biden’s tax returns, subpoena the Treasury Department and the IRS to get the documents from their end and “follow the money.” In addition to their tax returns, Kash says the Biden family should be subpoenaed and put under oath so their testimony is recorded and their corruption with China will be exposed. Will we get to see this someday?
Dave asked if the Biden’s could avoid testimony since Congress already has their documents, to which Kash responded that it could if Biden pardoned himself and his family. He says that he’s relying on Congress. This comment caught me off-guard. No one relies on Congress to hold meaningful hearings that produce real consequences. Surely Kash knows this. Congress may take some type of action in the future to provide the American public with disclosure, but I wouldn’t count on it. Kash’s comment sounds like disinformation to me.
In another interview with Dave he asks Kash if we are at the point where the military steps in to tell the American people that there was a coordinated effort to overthrow our government. Kash replies by saying he hopes we never get to that point, because if we do, the mainstream media will say that we are the conspirators trying to overthrow the government. What do we do when it all fails at once? According to Kash, they are relying heavily on the House investigations to expose a lot of the corruption. The only way we achieve a uniform system of justice and accountability is to elect President Trump in 2024. If that happens, they can go back and look at the investigations and decide if anyone should be charged. He knows that this is what every American has been talking about. Every American has also been talking about election fraud so I’m not sure how electing President Trump in another fake election in 2024 will provide us with justice and accountability. Our election system itself needs justice and accountability. How do we rely on elections to uncover government corruption when the electoral process itself is corrupt?
Throughout the X22 interviews, Kash calls out FBI Director Christopher Wray as a “government gangster.” In September 2023, he says that Christopher Wray and Merrick Garland were withholding information from Congress, and it is a crime to violate a Congressional subpoena. Steve Bannon and Peter Navarro were prosecuted for it, but Wray and Garland won’t arrest themselves. Congress has failed to use their inherent contempt of Congress law which was put in place specifically for this situation when the DOJ and FBI are criminalized at the highest levels. They have ceded their Constitutional authority. The American people are owed the documents by Congress. The inherent contempt of Congress law provides the Sergeant at Arms to arrest people who fail to carry out the will of Congress based on subpoenas. That law was designed by our founders as a rule for what to do when America’s top cop, and the architects of the two-tier system of justice are breaking the law. It hasn’t been used in 150 years.
Although in previous interviews Kash said that election integrity isn’t in his wheelhouse, he tells Dave that the Republican National Convention should be leading the ballot issues in every state. (The 2024 election had not yet occurred when this interview took place, so I have to assume Kash is referring to the 2020 election.) When Dave asks if it’s possible to require the states to use paper ballots and same day voting, Kash reminds him that neither the President nor the federal government have any authority over how states control their elections. The secretary of state, state attorney general, and the state governor run their statewide elections. In the spring Kash said that the only way to expose corruption was by electing President Trump. Just a few months later he admits there were problems with the ballots in the 2020 election. What are we to believe?
When Glenn Beck interviewed Kash In December 2023, he said that he wanted to speak to somebody who knew and understood the Deep State, and that person is Kash Patel.
“How bad is it?” Glenn asked.
“It’s way worse than I thought it could ever be,” Patel said. “It’s not just one guy; it’s not five … it’s like a thousand.”
In the book, Government Gangsters, Kash said he doesn’t believe it’s necessary to dismantle the FBI, and offers ways to fix it. One of Kash’s recommendations was to shut down the Hoover building immediately and open it the next day as a museum of the Deep State, free to everyone 365 days a year. According to Kash, the FBI should be run by 20 people in a SCIF, while the other 7,000 people are chasing criminals. Considering the 2024 FBI budget request contained funding for 37,312 positions, this would be a substantial cut to the FBI.
In December 2023, Kash agreed with Steve Bannon on "War Room" when he said that Donald Trump is "dead serious" about his intent to seek revenge against his political enemies should he be elected. Kash said:
"We will go out and find the conspirators — not just in government, but in the media ... we're going to come after the people in the media who lied about American citizens, who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections ... We're going to come after you. Whether it's criminally or civilly, we'll figure that out. But yeah, we're putting you all on notice, and Steve, this is why they hate us. This is why we're tyrannical. This is why we're dictators ... Because we're actually going to use the Constitution to prosecute them for crimes they said we have always been guilty of but never have.”
An ABC News story at the time wrote about the Bannon interview saying that “Trump had ratcheted up his anti-government and anti-media rhetoric,” saying that journalists were concerned as they see Trump’s messaging as a threat to the freedom of the press. The media should be alarmed by these comments because they know their control over the American people is coming to an end.
Kash was back on X22 the following January 2024. For eight years the FBI lied by saying they didn’t have anyone involved in J6 and they have now admitted it. Kash says that they had so many sources that they had to poll the FBI field offices to determine how many taxpayer-funded sources were at the J6 rally. Until another J6 committee forces Wray to answer questions and provide documentation, we won’t know the truth surrounding the FBI’s involvement in J6. Documents were destroyed by the J6 committee, and Kash wonders what else was destroyed. We can all assume he already knows the answer to that question.
He goes on to say that J6 was the biggest sweeping criminal enterprise operation in modern history that the FBI put into play. I wonder if the FBI was working for or against the American people. Was it the biggest sweeping criminal enterprise operation because of the theory I outline in J6: A Different Perspective? Were members of our government detained on that day? Did members of the FBI contribute to the distraction that was necessary while military operations were undertaken?
On November 30, 2024, President Trump posted to Truth Social that he was nominating Kash Patel as FBI Director in the new Trump Administration.
The media lost their minds.
I apologize for the length of the following video. It’s about 7 minutes long but I think it’s worth it, for the comedic relief alone.
Did you watch it? Do you hate the media as much as I do?
Steve Bannon played this clip on his December 2, 2024, War Room podcast (Episode #4095). In my opinion, Joe Scarborough’s reaction is a little over the top. At first, I thought he was trying to incite fear in his viewers over the nomination of Kash Patel.
Then I had a different thought.
In November Joe Scarborough and Mika Brezinski met with President Trump at Mar-A-Lago to reopen the lines of communication. Was there an ulterior motive for that meeting? What better way to get people talking about Kash Patel than to repeatedly play that video so that it goes viral. It may cause people to be curious why Kash Patel triggers such a reaction in the media. They may learn things they were previously unaware of like the Benghazi scandal, Hillary’s email server, Russiagate, and more. Are Joe and Mika helping to awaken Americans to the corruption we’re going to be shown? The more people who wake up beforehand, the less trauma and disruption we will experience when the disclosure campaign ramps up.
As I was finalizing this paper, Christopher Wray agreed to step down as FBI Director. The timing couldn’t be better. I see this as a move forward for the disclosure campaign. The blocks to learning what our intelligence agencies have been up to are being removed and we are prepared for it, with the perfect lead to take us there. The phrase “he knows where the bodies are buried,” is overused in the Truth Community. But if anyone knows where the bodies are buried, it’s Kash Patel.
If there is a confirmation hearing and Kash Patel doesn’t receive 100% support, you’ll know who has skeletons in their closet. Every elected official who wants to rid our country of corruption should be supporting Kash Patel. If they aren’t, we should be concerned because as someone once told me, those who have nothing to hide, hide nothing.
This is awesome Dawn. You have me convinced! I also appreciate the reminder of your January 6th theory in a previous paper. It would be great if disclosure could bypass the mainstream. I trust the plan. The plan is slow. But unfortunately so are most of our fellow citizens.