Kash Patel Delivers 700 Pages of Documents to Congress Relating to Operation Crossfire Hurricane
FBI Director Kash Patel has just delivered nearly 700 pages of new documents to Congress, revealing previously undisclosed details about Operation Crossfire Hurricane.
The operation is the FBI’s investigation into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 Trump campaign.
These documents will be made available to the public starting at 7 p.m. EST on JustTheNews.com.
This massive release promises to offer insight into the debunked narrative that President Donald Trump colluded with Russia to secure his victory over Hillary Clinton in 2016.
Despite the theory being thoroughly discredited, it was still perpetuated by Trump’s political opponents, especially after special counsel John Durham’s 2023 report declared that no evidence of such collusion ever existed.
One of the most vocal supporters of the Russiagate theory, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), has refused to back down.
He claims Durham’s findings were “flawed from the start” and continues to insist he has proof of a Russia-Trump connection, although he has failed to provide any credible evidence to support these claims.
In a speech this week, President Trump took aim at Schiff and the mainstream media, calling out their refusal to clear his name.
“He knows it’s a hoax because he made it up with Crooked Hillary,” Trump said, criticizing the California Democrat’s role in the scandal, per Trending Politics.
The new set of documents, titled “Crossfire Hurricane Redacted Binder,” was dated April 9th, 2025.
It follows a 2025 executive order issued by President Trump, which declassified key materials related to the FBI’s controversial investigation into the Trump campaign.
This order was based on a memorandum issued in January 2021, which called for the declassification of documents tied to the Crossfire Hurricane operation.
Trump’s January 2021 memo had determined that all materials referenced in a previous Presidential Memorandum should be declassified.
The Justice Department had provided these materials to Trump just before he left office, but due to redactions proposed by the FBI, much of it was withheld from public view.
Trump’s memo emphasized that the materials should be declassified “to the maximum extent possible.”
However, the FBI argued that certain pages of the investigation’s report were too sensitive to release.
The dispute led to an agreement in 2021 that most of the documents would be declassified, though the FBI continued to withhold a significant portion.
In 2023, Durham’s report became a pivotal moment in debunking the Russia collusion myth.
The findings of the report revealed no evidence supporting the allegations against President Trump.
Moreover, Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz criticized the FBI’s handling of the investigation, specifically pointing out the flawed reliance on the Steele dossier.
This document, created by a former British intelligence officer working for the Clinton campaign, was presented as evidence of Russian interference, despite its dubious origins.
These developments raise significant questions about the integrity of the FBI’s investigation and the political motivations behind the Russiagate narrative.
Critics argue that the investigation was an attempt to undermine the legitimacy of Trump’s presidency from the start, casting a shadow over the agency’s actions.
With these newly released documents, Kash Patel and President Trump are pushing to bring transparency to the investigation and hold accountable those who sought to destroy Trump’s reputation with unfounded accusations.
This move underscores the ongoing battle between the truth and the efforts to tarnish Trump’s legacy.
The release of these documents is expected to have far-reaching consequences, further exposing the depths of the FBI’s controversial investigation and potentially vindicating those who have long claimed the Russia collusion narrative was nothing more than a politically motivated hoax.
This is a major moment in the ongoing battle for transparency and accountability within our government.
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