DOJ launches bias probes into Minneapolis, Louisville police departments — and more are likely coming



Attorney General Merrick Garland announced Monday that the Department of Justice has opened a sweeping "pattern and practice" investigation into the Louisville Metro Police Department to probe whether systemic racial bias exists within the department.

The news followed the launch of a similar investigation into the Minneapolis Police Department last week following the conviction of former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin for his role in the death of George Floyd in late May.

Chauvin was pronounced guilty of murder and manslaughter by a jury on April 20 for kneeling on Floyd's neck for more than nine minutes during an arrest while Floyd repeatedly said that he couldn't breathe. The incident, which was captured on video, sparked violent protests across the country over alleged racial injustice and police brutality.

By launching two local police department probes within a week, the Biden administration appears determined to take on a much larger role in monitoring and overhauling local policing under the suspicion that systemic racism exists within the nation's police departments.

During a meeting following his announcement of the Minneapolis probe, Garland told leaders of some of the nation's largest law-enforcement organizations that more investigations would be forthcoming, the Wall Street Journal reported.

In a news release announcing the Louisville probe, the Justice Department said it will assess "whether LMPD engages in discriminatory policing, and also whether it conducts unreasonable stops, searches, seizures, and arrests, both during patrol activities and in obtaining and executing search warrants for private homes.

"The investigation will include a comprehensive review of LMPD policies, training, and supervision, as well as LMPD's systems of accountability, including misconduct complaint intake, investigation, review, disposition, and discipline," the release noted.

While the release made no mention of Breonna Taylor, the police-involved incident which resulted in her death almost certainly served as the impetus for the investigation.

Taylor, a 26-year-old black woman, was killed last March in Louisville, Kentucky, when police executed a no-knock search warrant on her home in connection to an active drug case. During the forced entry, Taylor's boyfriend, allegedly thinking officers to be home invaders, shot at them. Police returned fire, striking Taylor and killing her.

Three officers were fired from the department as a result of the incident and two of them have been indicted for recklessly firing a weapon and endangering Taylor's neighbors.

In the Justice Department news release, Garland suggests that the investigations are aimed at achieving "public trust" and "protecting the civil rights of everyone in our country."

Pamela S. Karlan, principal deputy assistant attorney general for the Civil Rights Division, added, "The Constitution and federal law require law enforcement officers to treat all people fairly and equitably, regardless of race, disability, or participation in protected First Amendment activities. The investigation we are announcing today will examine whether these laws are being violated, while also analyzing the root causes of any violations we may find."

Fellow GOP Rep. Adam Kinzinger tweets 'Matt Gaetz needs to resign' after new report of payments to women



Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) has called for fellow GOP Congressman Matt Gaetz (Fla.) to resign, citing a new report that alleges Venmo records show Gaetz paid a friend accused of sex trafficking who passed funds along to women — including an 18-year-old.

Gaetz himself is currently being investigated by the Department of Justice under claims of sex trafficking a 17-year-old, which reportedly sprang out of the same indicted friend whom he paid.

What are the details?

The Daily Beast reported Thursday that according Gaetz's Venmo records — which used to be public — the lawmaker made "two late-night Venmo transactions in May 2018" to former Florida tax collector Joel Greenberg totaling $900.

Greenberg has already "been federal indicted on 33 counts, including sex trafficking crimes involving a 17-year-old," The Beast noted, adding that "Gaetz and Greenberg are both connected through Venmo to this then-18-year-old woman—who now works in the porn industry."

According to the outlet, Greenberg passed along the payments to three women, including the 18-year-old, and labeled the transactions as being for "Tuition," "School," and "School."

The New York Times reported last week that that DOJ is focused on Gaetz's and Greenberg's "involvement with multiple women who were recruited online for sex and received cash payments" from the men in exchange for drug-fueled hotel romps.

Gaetz has adamantly denied all the allegations against him, and wrote in an op-ed earlier this week that while he is "not a monk," he's "certainly not a criminal."

Also on Thursday, Gaetz's office sent out a statement from the women who work in the lawmaker's congressional offices, which read that "at no time has any one of us experienced or witnessed anything less than the utmost professionalism and respect," adding that they "uniformly reject" the allegations against him "as false."

The same day, The Times revealed the Gaetz lost another high level aide, reporting that his legislative director, Devin Murphy, "abruptly quit in recent days." Gaetz lost his communications director, Luke Ball, last week.

But the purported records of transactions highlighted by The Daily Beast led Kinzinger to share the story online and become the first Republican to publicly call on Gaetz to leave office, tweeting, "Matt Gaetz needs to resign."

Matt Gaetz needs to resign. https://t.co/AygfqAxQJX via @thedailybeast
— Adam Kinzinger (@Adam Kinzinger)1617932422.0

Anything else?

Kinzinger was one of 10 House Republicans to vote for impeaching former President Donald Trump the second time around.

The only member of GOP leadership to vote for impeachment, Rep. Liz Cheney (Wyo.), was attacked by Gaetz over her vote. The Florida congressman then held a rally in Cheney's native Wyoming to call for Republicans to boot her from office with a primary challenge.

Meanwhile, Trump issued a statement Wednesday refuting reports that Gaetz has asked him for a blanket pardon before he left office. He added that "It must also be remembered that he [Gaetz] has totally denied the accusations against him."

Newly released DOJ records show improbable number of Mueller investigators claimed to have 'accidentally wiped' their phones



Newly released documents from the Department of Justice show that an improbable high number of investigators involved in the Robert Mueller investigation claimed to have "accidentally wiped" their phones of vital information.

The revelation was first caught by Sean Davis of The Federalist who posted screenshot from the 87-page document drop.

Andrew Weismann, a manager on the Mueller team, reported that two of his special counsel's office phones were wiped, one by accident, and another by entering the wrong password too many times.

"Wiped phone due to attempting the incorrect password to [sic] many times, believed had less than 10 text messages, and 5 photos of non-investigative or informational significance," read one entry for assistant special counsel Greg Andres.

"Phone was accidentally wiped prior to records review," read an entry for Kyle Freeny, a former prosecutor on the Mueller team.

Davis counted at least 15 phones that had similar entries where information and data had been wiped clean before their review by the DOJ.

"The newly released DOJ records from the OIG investigation of corruption during the Mueller probe shows that a key tactic used by the Mueller team was to put the phones in airplane mode, lock them, and then claim they didn't have the password," tweeted Davis.

Mueller was tasked with investigating the accusations of alleged collusion between the Trump campaign and the Russian government, and also into claims that the Russian government interfered with the 2016 election.

"What are the actual probabilities of more than a dozen top Mueller officials all 'accidentally' nuking their phones or accidentally putting them in airplane mode, locking them, and 'forgetting' their passwords so the DOJ OIG couldn't access and examine them? Negative 100,000%?" asked Davis.

Here's more about the Mueller report:

Mueller completes his investigation: Was the collusion probe a witch hunt?www.youtube.com