The FBI has quietly opened an investigation into a decade of Democratic Party and intelligence community actions—ranging from the Russia collusion narrative to Special Counsel Jack Smith’s probes—raising the possibility of appointing a special prosecutor to examine whether these events form a coordinated criminal conspiracy to influence three U.S. elections in favor of Democrats and against President Donald Trump, Just the News reports.
The probe, dubbed the “grand conspiracy” investigation, began weeks ago after new FBI Director Kash Patel took office. It could gain momentum if Trump declassifies two classified batches of evidence believed to reveal a conspiracy origin dating back to summer 2016.
One key document is a classified annex from an inspector general inquiry into Hillary Clinton’s private email server, reportedly showing the FBI ignored credible allegations of misconduct. The other comes from Special Counsel John Durham’s final Russia investigation report, called the “Clinton plan intelligence,” withheld from public and most Congress members due to sensitive intelligence methods exposed.
Public portions of Durham’s report confirm U.S. intelligence knew the Clinton campaign planned to fabricate the Russia collusion narrative to harm Trump’s 2016 campaign before the FBI launched the Crossfire Hurricane probe, which partly relied on Clinton-linked information.
Recently, CIA Director John Ratcliffe criticized former CIA Director John Brennan for prioritizing “narrative consistency over analytical soundness,” endorsing the discredited Steele dossier. Trump officials are also considering a special prosecutor to investigate claims that the FBI ignored intelligence alleging China tried to interfere in the 2020 election with fake mail-in ballots to benefit Joe Biden. With the five-year statute of limitations looming, investigators face a narrow window to act.