Oversight Committee Uncovers ‘Disturbing’ Findings, LOOK at What They Found!!

House

James Comer, chairman of the House Oversight Committee, has announced that they’ve uncovered even more bank records with their probe of Biden family finances. Really “disturbing” ones. Joe Biden’s role, personally, “in his family’s foreign income will soon be revealed” he promises. Like cocaine in the White House library. Now we’ll learn how Joe pays for his Häagen-Dazs habit.

House excavation yields pay dirt

Ever since the House Oversight Committee pried a huge stack of Suspicious Activity Reports out of the Treasury Department, they’ve been digging deep into Biden family bank accounts. They hit more pay dirt with fresh and “disturbing” findings but aren’t ready to share the goods yet.

They want Joe and his high-paid lawyers to twist in the wind awhile, going spastic trying to figure out what damage will need controlling next.

All the Kentucky lawmaker will share with an inquisitive public is the clue that they just added two new banks to their collection and are currently sorting through records from six of them in total.

That chart the House committee put together, showing all the “overseas money flowing into the first family’s coffers,” just picked up a few more images and arrows.

Bank records, Comer declared, “don’t lie.” Unlike some of our government officials. “People make a big issue out of taxes,” he notes. “People cheat on their taxes all the time, but it’s hard to cheat on bank records.” The House is also expecting a separate batch of records from Janet Yellen and the money printers at the Treasury Department.

He’s convinced they have “information related to the bribery allegations” involving Joe Biden. Ones that a paid rat for the FBI handed the instigation bureau all the way back in June 2020. For some strange reason, the Delaware U.S. Attorney investigating Hunter Biden, David Weiss, wasn’t interested in any of that. Even though that’s exactly what he’s supposedly been looking for the past five years.

Entering the deposition phase

Comer explained that the House Oversight Committee investigation is now “entering the deposition phase.” These aren’t the typical congressional hearings where everyone gets a few minutes to spew out their sound bites under the guise of questioning the witness. These are highly intense interrogations, under oath.

The grilling isn’t done by bipartisan lawmakers, it’s handled by professional attorneys, after they did all their homework looking through the records first. They will say something like “do you see here on page 197 of this document where it says…. can you explain that?” The witness has to tell the truth or take the fifth. Any lies are good for prison time.

Devon Archer happens to be someone who’s trying to avoid some prison time. He’s Hunter Biden’s former business partner and also looking at a year and a day in jail on another bit of unpleasantness. That’s already a done deal but he’s hoping he might have something to tell the House Oversight Committee that gets some or all of it set aside.

Comer has a merry glint in his eye when he notes that “Devon Archer will be the first person of many to be deposed.” He could hardly keep from chuckling, just thinking about it.

We have a list of who’s who that were involved in the Biden organization that we plan on deposing throughout the summer.” Another thing that his committee is looking into is the cocaine found in the White House. He’s already requested the Secret Service drop by soon to brief them on what they’ve learned so far. With all the cameras, logs and security, Comer isn’t buying the suggestion that they might never figure out who’s it was. If it wasn’t Hunter’s then the one responsible needs to be fired for the breach of national security.

We have concerns about national security risks. Obviously, there are a lot of explanations that could be made for what happened there. But you know, at the end of the day, with all the money and all the security that we have around the White House, something like this should never happen.