The deputy director of the FBI Dan Bongino said on Monday that his agency will revive or devote more resources in many investigations on issues that were not resolved from the Biden administration that “obtained the public interest” and has long retreated from allegations of corruption by the allies and supporters of President Donald Trump.
Bongino specified three cases that he said referred to “potential general corruption”, including an investigation into a pair of pipe bombs found near the Democratic and Republican Party headquarters on January 6, 2021 and discovered a bag of cocaine in the White House in 2023.
The third case, Bongino, would be reviewed more review was the leakage of 2022 of the unpublished Supreme Court’s decision to end the federal protection of abortion rights. This investigation was closed after approximately eight months, which included forensic analysis, but was unable to identify the responsible person.
“We made a decision either to reopen or pay additional resources and interest in investigating, to these cases,” Bongino wrote in Posted on X.
“I receive a required briefing in these cases weekly and we are making progress,” Bongino added.
The new interest in issues comes at a time when the office faces pressure to investigate the allegations that Trump’s allies, including Bongino himself, have promoted: that the Biden administration and the “deep state” actors and the weapon of the Ministry of Justice.
Before the oath performed the constitutional oath earlier this year, Bongino accused The FBI to lie about the lack of knowledge of the tube launcher, saying, the agency “does not want to tell us because it was an internal function.”
In January, the FBI released a video clip linked to pipeline bombs, and said that he was filming a suspect who cultivated bombs outside the Republican and Democratic headquarters in Washington on the day of the Capitol riot.
Bongino also questioned the discovery of the cocaine bag that was discovered in the White House in July 2023, indicating shortly after the accident that cocaine belongs to a member of the Biden family. Then On x“There is absolutely a chance of anyone other than a family member who brought this cocaine inside the White House complex.”
The secret service has briefly investigated the accident and ended the investigation after the officials said that it had not discovered the DNA or the useable fingerprints and that security footage did not produce threads exceeding a list of 500 employees and visitors.