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Ex-CIA Chief Brennan Referred to DOJ for False Steele Dossier Testimony

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Under President Trump’s second term, the wheels of justice are grinding, slowly but surely, against America’s betrayers.

Former CIA Director John Brennan, a poster child for Deep State deceit, now faces a criminal referral from House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan for lying to Congress about the Hillary Clinton-funded Steele dossier’s role in the 2017 Intelligence Community Assessment on Russian election interference.

Americans, fed up with elitist corruption, demand these crooks trade their suits for orange jumpsuits, and while justice creeps forward, the reckoning is undeniable.

On Tuesday, Jordan, a dogged Ohio Republican, urged the Justice Department to prosecute Brennan, accusing him of "willfully and intentionally false" testimony in May 2023.

"We write to refer significant evidence that former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) John Brennan knowingly made false statements during his transcribed interview before the Committee on the Judiciary on May 11, 2023," Jordan wrote to Attorney General Pam Bondi.

He cited CIA records and House Intelligence Committee findings that contradict Brennan’s claims, stating, "Making false statements before Congress is a crime that undermines the integrity of the Committee’s constitutional duty to conduct oversight."

Brennan’s lies surfaced during a 2023 exchange with former Rep. Matt Gaetz. When Gaetz pressed, "The fact that the DNC was providing the financing for the Steele dossier’s development doesn’t give you concern that it might be partisan?"

Brennan dodged, claiming, "No, I was not involved in analyzing the dossier at all. I said the first time I actually saw it, it was after the election. And the CIA was not involved at all with the dossier. You can direct that to the FBI and to others."

Declassified documents, however, expose Brennan’s deceit.

"A CIA officer drafted the annex containing a summary of the dossier; Brennan made the ultimate decision, along with then-FBI Director James Comey, to include information from the dossier in the ICA,"Jordan noted.

Trump’s allies, emboldened by his return, are pushing a relentless accountability campaign.

The president has replaced top prosecutors with loyalists, praising indictments as
"justice finally being served."

Critics, including legal scholars, warn of a politicized Justice Department, but supporters insist it’s a long-overdue purge of corrupt officials who weaponized power against Trump’s 2016 campaign.

As Washington braces for the 2026 elections, the Brennan referral signals a deepening divide.

The Steele dossier, a 2016 collection of unverified claims about Trump’s Russia ties, remains a lightning rod—its allegations debunked, yet its shadow looms.

Will the Justice Department act?

For now, the slow churn of accountability offers hope that the guilty will face their day in court, as America’s patience wears thin.

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