After 20 long months, the staff at @US_OSC told us that the IRS could not support its decision to remove IRS SSA Gary Shapley and SA Joe Ziegler from the Hunter Biden case.
That removal happend, of course, shortly after the IRS learned that they were blowing the whistle to Congress.
Their work life has been changed ever since. Look how far the IRS management will go.
One recently altered the date on document to hide slow walking on another ongoing law enforcement operation, apparently trying to falsely paint Shapley in a bad light.
One of many examples.
It's time for the bureaucratic mumbo jumbo and delays to end. The system is too slow to give whistleblowers the meaningful remedies they deserve.
@US_OSC took too long confirm these primary allegations, and still failed to substantiate all the other instances of retaliation we have been reporting to them since.
SSA Shapley has been passed over for promotions and we will still seek remedies for that retaliation before the @USMSPB.
As recently as January 2025, IRS management altered the date on a request from Shapley, seemingly to conceal its own delays and misrepresent the timeliness of Shapley’s request relating to an ongoing law enforcement operation.
1. Few saw the historical significance of this issue when it first surfaced publicly last year. Bravo to @ProfMJCleveland, @mtaibbi, @LovelaceRyanD, and all those who won't let it go.
Why do supposedly professional investigators make snap judgments about what to pursue (Steele Dossier) v. what not to pursue (Clinton E-Mail probe/Clinton Plan Intel)?
It's not the Federal Bureau of Gut Feelings or What Feels True.
Our appeal of Judge Boasberg's order keeping secret the DOJ's arguments for hiding its collection of my and my Capitol Hill colleagues communications records a secret for more than six years—even after the probe that supposedly justified it was closed.
DOJ attorneys targeted the communications records of attorneys for the oversight committees in Congress probing DOJ's misconduct in the Carter Page FISA application.
We argue that the Judge Boasberg failed to apply the proper standard.
He improperly characterized these judicial gag order applications, which are governed by statute, as "ancillary grand jury materials" under 6(e).
But DOJ submitted these filings to a court, not a grand jury.
We outline 18 legally protected whistleblower disclosures @GOBactual made.
Many were to Congress and already got lots of public attention. But look at #17.
It was an internal report, not on a high-profile politically charged issue.
But was it the catalyst for what came next?
@GOBactual An ambush criminal interview, followed by stranding his family without their belongings and blowing up his life in the middle of a cross country move?
This feels like more than just typical FBI CYA on something politically embarrassing.
Proven high performers before they blew the whistle on the @TheJusticeDept taking a dive in the Hunter Biden case.
Everything changed. Isolated. Frozen out of career advancement. Scrutinized relentlessly, looking for anything to hang them with. Work life became hell.
The double standard was there from the very beginning. Just to open the case, the bar was higher "for a political family like" the Bidens.
The protected disclosures internally within the IRS started from the very beginning too.
3/🧵Don't just take our word for it. We provided ample evidence to Congress about weaponization of the security clearance process to target the employees for political beliefs rather than legit security risks. The @JusticeOIG has testified about it.