Friday, June 21, 2024

Ex-FBI undercover asset risks all to prove Jan. 6 was a 'Fedsurrection'

 For the last three and a half years, the FBI and federal prosecutors, in tandem with federal judges, have refused to disclose information regarding the extent to which the U.S. government deployed undercover informants in the crowd at the "Save America" rally in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 6, 2021.

Despite the potential legal ramifications, Myers insists the FBI ran an operation involving hundreds of undercover informants on Jan. 6 to entrap and incriminate Trump supporters.

"I'm going to try and word this in a way without compromising the FBI's contractual obligations. When we, as human assets, are signed into the program for the FBI, we typically must sign paperwork that says what we can and cannot do. Specifically, when it comes to being part of these rallies, or any sort of lawbreaking, we get a temporary designation by the District Attorney's Office in the Department of Justice," he said.

"These designations are called 'tier one,' 'tier two' or 'tier three,' and it is essentially a 'get out of jail free' pass for a certain amount of time."Essentially, inside the FBI, they're giving two designations for people that are actual federal agents.

For the FBI to give someone a 'tier two' designation, if that individual needed to smuggle drugs across the border to acquire intel on suspicious activity, you would be immune from doing so for a 36-hour window, as long as you were doing so in the capacity and under the direction of the Department of Justice.

Some of these suspected confidential human sources conspicuously have yet to be identified by the FBI, despite being seen in footage flagrantly breaking the law during the Capitol riot.

Myers provided details of his job with the FBI, surreptitiously infiltrating and spying on groups deemed "domestic extremists" by the Justice Department.

"The FBI would pay $450 a day per assignment, plus expenses that were reimbursed," he told WND. "If you were working that assignment for that day, be it for an hour or for 12 hours that day, you were paid a daily rate.

"In terms of these operations, I would go in as 'Derek Myers the journalist' and I was able to successfully infiltrate Antifa and some other organizations and take that information back to the FBI," he said.

Suddenly, the Proud Boys, a self-described "Western chauvinist," "American supremacist" group of men who safeguarded Trump supporters at rallies from incessant attacks by Antifa, became public enemy number one for the FBI. The four leaders of the Proud Boys who were found guilty of "Seditious conspiracy" and handed the lengthiest sentences of all J6 defendants were marked long before Jan. 6.

"Charlottesville was the first real rally that got the FBI's attention and they wanted to start putting people like me into place. Right after Charlottesville, that is when they said, 'Hey, we think you would be a good fit to go into organizations like this.' I told them that I had no interest and would not be of any help to them, going in and infiltrating the Proud Boys or any organization like that because my ideology just simply was not in line with. The FBI had indeed labeled the Proud Boys a 'domestic terrorist organization.'" The FBI also labeled Antifa a domestic terrorist organization, but there's only one group whose members are sitting in prison for peacefully protesting.

https://www.wnd.com/2024/06/ex-fbi-undercover-asset-risks-prove-jan-6-fedsurrection/

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