Pipe Bombs Lead to Contractor with Security Clearance, FBI Throttles Investigation
Former FBI agent also reveals bombs were never operable
“Who has established all the ends of the earth? What is his name, and what is his son’s name? Surely you know!” (Proverbs 30:4)
“They were inert devices. They just looked good.”
Former FBI agent Kyle Seraphin, who worked on the January 6 pipe bomb investigation, has revealed that the bombs themselves would never have worked.
“The devices were primitive and had all the components you would have for a bomb, but they weren’t assembled like a real bomb.”
This confirms what became apparent when we learned the “bombs” were fitted with one-hour kitchen timers. They were planted at the RNC and DNC the night leading up to January 6, which means they would have gone off in the middle of the night when no one was paying attention. Hardly a logical act of terrorism. They were always duds.
Because of the evidence I am of the opinion they were planted simply to add drama to the day and to draw away law enforcement from the capitol — which was already purposefully under-secured that day, that is, if you ask Capitol police who were there and who were recorded on body cam saying, “They set us up!”
The inoperability of the pipe bombs contradicts official reports from the FBI. The Washington Times reports:
“They would have exploded. They could have exploded,” Steven D’Antuono, a former assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Washington field office, told ABC News chief justice correspondent Pierre Thomas last year. “They are viable devices that could have gone off and exploded, causing a lot of serious injury or death.”
It also contradicts a statement from Acting U.S. Attorney Michael Sherwin who said the bombs “were viable.”
Seraphin was part of the team that tracked the bomb planter through the subway system using metro card data and the license plate of the car used by the bomb planter after exiting the metro. Both the metro card and the license plate led back to a a retired Air Force chief master sergeant turned contractor who has a security clearance.
The contractor bought the metro card the year prior and had never used it. The bomb planter who was using the metro card didn’t appear to be the contractor himself. This makes sense. As I have stated earlier, the bomb planter was a woman. Seraphin hints that the contractor’s girlfriend may be a person of interest.
As Catherine Herridge has noted, knowing where to go to plant the bombs required intimate knowledge of the D.C. area since the locations are off the beaten path and navigating between them is tricky. Did I mention the contractor lives in Northern Virginia?
Seraphin and his team surveilled the contractor for a few days, but when Seraphin requested permission to talk to the man, the FBI took his team off the case.
Now that’s what we call getting DEEP SIXED by the DEEP STATE.
More on the FBI and its bomb-astic shenanigans in a future post.