FBI Whistleblower Garret 'Boyle told the House Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government that "this government will crush" not only those who "expose the truth about things that they are doing that are wrong" but their families as well.
O'Boyle, one of four witnesses who testified Thursday, noted he had devoted his life to the service of the United States. Before joining the FBI and working his way up to being a special agent, he served in the United States military with deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. After returning stateside, 'Boyle served as a police officer in Wisconsin while he attained his criminology and law degrees from Marquette University, as Committee chair Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) pointed out.
He "was suspended without pay after he raised concerns with his chain of command and then made disclosures to Congress," as the Hill reported. O'Boyle testified that he was suspended only after the FBI
"allowed [him] to accept orders to a new position halfway across the country." As he said:
"In weaponized fashion, the FBI allowed me to accept orders to a new position halfway across the country.
They allowed us to sell my family's home. They ordered me to report to the new unit when our youngest daughter was only two weeks old. Then, on my first day on the new assignment, they suspended me; rendering my family homeless and refused to release our household goods, including our clothes, for weeks.
All I wanted to do was serve my country by stopping bad guys and protecting the innocent. To my chagrin, bad guys have begun running parts of the government making it difficult to continue to serve this nation and protect the innocent."
https://t.me/FuryRoad_Intel/30275 FBI Whistleblower Garret 'Boyle told the House Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government that "this government will crush" not only those who "expose the truth about things that they are doing that are wrong" but their families as well.
O'Boyle, one of four witnesses who testified Thursday, noted he had devoted his life to the service of the United States. Before joining the FBI and working his way up to being a special agent, he served in the United States military with deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. After returning stateside, 'Boyle served as a police officer in Wisconsin while he attained his criminology and law degrees from Marquette University, as Committee chair Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) pointed out.
He "was suspended without pay after he raised concerns with his chain of command and then made disclosures to Congress," as the Hill reported. O'Boyle testified that he was suspended only after the FBI
"allowed [him] to accept orders to a new position halfway across the country." As he said:
"In weaponized fashion, the FBI allowed me to accept orders to a new position halfway across the country.
They allowed us to sell my family's home. They ordered me to report to the new unit when our youngest daughter was only two weeks old. Then, on my first day on the new assignment, they suspended me; rendering my family homeless and refused to release our household goods, including our clothes, for weeks.
All I wanted to do was serve my country by stopping bad guys and protecting the innocent. To my chagrin, bad guys have begun running parts of the government making it difficult to continue to serve this nation and protect the innocent." https://t.me/FuryRoad_Intel/30275