NPR: FBI arrests suspect in investigation into pipe bombs planted near DNC, RNC before Jan. 6 attack
The FBI has spent years searching for the person who put bombs near the Democratic and Republican committee headquarters, hours before the assault on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
That probably isn’t true.
Bondi said the FBI had no new tips or new witnesses but just relied on “diligent” police and prosecutorial work to identify the suspect.
Court papers also say a cell phone tied to Cole pinged cell towers near the RNC and DNC the night the bombs were placed.
And a license plate reader near the area captured his car, a Nissan Sentra, that evening.
For example, she said investigators looked at 233,000 purchases of black end caps of the type that was used to make the bomb in the attack, she said.
In October of 2020, 51 high level intelligence officials submitted a letter falsely claiming that the Hunter Biden laptop was a Russian disinformation operation. Five people signing were former directors of the CIA.
At the January 6th, 2021, protest, there were about 2500 people rummaging through the Capitol Building. There were 274 FBI agents amongst the crowd.
That morning, pipe bombs were found near the Democratic and Republican headquarters. They were actual, live bombs, but they did not detonate.
The day after, corporate media was calling the event an ‘insurrection’. The 14th Amendment to the Constitution bars anyone guilty of insurrection from holding a federal or state office.
Occam’s Razor: The simplest answer is usually correct.
Highly placed people in US intelligence agencies were actively working to undermine Trump. That is not in dispute.
Trump’s opponents intended for threatening and chaotic events on January 6th to make Trump ineligible to ever hold office.
The clear conclusion is that during President Biden’s term in office, the FBI never intended to find the person who placed bombs at the DNC or RNC. As long as the person was not found, corporate media and political opponents could imply or assume that the person was a right-wing Trump supporter.
Having the license plate and cell phone data, placed Brian Cole at the scene. Purchase history made Cole a primary suspect. Other surveillance video sealed the deal.
This could have been done four years ago. An investigation must be done to ascertain which FBI personnel were derelict in their duties.
Before joining the FBI as deputy director, Dan Bongino spread conspiracies about the bomber, and said it must’ve been an “inside job” by the government.
At the time, Bongino was a media influencer who got ahead of the evidence. It is not clear that FBI agents or anyone else, encouraged Cole to plant bombs.
It is curious that Cole lived 35 miles from Washington DC, and did nothing to hide his tracks or evade capture.
Cole was arrested, and based on the opinions of his neighbors, was a weird guy. If he talks, or the FBI finds anything on his computer, that may implicate others. If he dies, escapes, or something else unusual happens, this could be a dark conspiracy.
Lately, a conspiracy theory is just an inconvenient truth that corporate media isn’t forced to accept yet.
Jeffrey Epstein did not kill himself.
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