EXCLUSIVE: Jack Smith Team Bypassed Internal Safeguards in Trump Probe, DOJ Records Claim
New records show the special counsel’s office directly accessed texts from 44 members of Congress, prompting a Justice Department investigation.
7 Articles
7 Articles
Jack Smith’s legacy under scrutiny as questions mount over Trump case tactics
The Biden Justice Department’s pursuit of President Donald Trump is facing fresh scrutiny after newly released materials showed former special counsel Jack Smith’s team accessed text messages to or from 44 members of Congress before a DOJ filter team had completed its privilege review — as well as other revelations that call into question the tactics Smith used to prosecute Trump. The disclosure, released Tuesday by Senate Judiciary Committee Ch…
New Records Fuel Calls for Federal Probe Into Jack Smith’s Testimony on Lawmakers’ Text Messages
Senate Republicans say documents showing investigators accessed private messages belonging to 44 lawmakers conflict with Jack Smith’s congressional testimony that requested telephone records did not ... The post New Records Fuel Calls for Federal Probe Into Jack Smith’s Testimony on Lawmakers’ Text Messages first appeared on [your]NEWS.
Smith vetted texts from 44 lawmakers, senators say
WASHINGTON — Former U.S. Special Counsel Jack Smith's team reviewed text messages from 44 Republican and Democratic members of Congress during his investigation into President Donald Trump's attempts to overturn the 2020 election, according to two Republican senators.
Sen. Ron Johnson to Newsmax: Jack Smith Lied About Text Messages
Speaking on Newsmax's Bianca Across the Nation, the Wisconsin Republican discussed reports that Smith's team obtained text messages from 44 members of Congress during its investigation into Trump's efforts to challenge the 2020 election.
Documents Reveal Smith Team Bypassed Rules for 44 Lawmakers
Smith Team Ignored the RulesJack Smith’s team broke the law to read your representatives’ private texts. They accessed messages from 44 members of Congress without proper approval. This was not a mistake. It was a calculated move to bypass legal safeguards.New documents show the special counsel’s office ignored the filter team process. The filter team is supposed to stop investigators from seeing privileged data. But they went around it anyway. …
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 66% of the sources lean Right
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium





![[your]NEWS](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgroundnews.b-cdn.net%2Finterests%2Ffb6dc495f74049f513563c33352175eaa0ecd509.jpg%3Fwidth%3D60&w=128&q=75)