Maybe Nate is short for Nathan
A former FBI contractor-turned-whistleblower who supplied documents related to former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and the Uranium One controversy is blasting the FBI over a mysterious raid on his home last month.
Questioning whether we now live in a secret police state, Dennis Nathan Cain took his frustration to Twitter on the heels of a report that the Justice Department is trying to keep the justification for the raid secret.
So I blow the whistle on the FBI, get raided by the same FBI, and now they want to keep the FBIs reasons secret? Do we now live in a secret police state? Feels a little like 1984, Cain tweeted late Monday, citing The Daily Caller report.
The Daily Caller requested that the court unseal the search warrant materials, but the U.S. Attorney in the District of Maryland, in a court filing, said: the request should be denied.
Public disclosure of any search warrant materials would seriously jeopardize the integrity of the ongoing investigation, the court filing by the U.S. Attorneys Office said. Continued sealing is essential in order to guard against possible tampering of witnesses and destruction of evidence, to maintain the ability of the grand jury to investigate this matter, and to prevent the disclosure of sensitive investigative techniques and methods.
A spokesperson for the U.S. Attorney in the District of Maryland declined to comment.
Sixteen FBI agents raided Cains home on Nov. 19. His lawyer, Michael Socarras, told The Daily Caller that the agent who led the raid accused his client of possessing stolen federal property. In response, Cain reportedly claimed that he was a protected whistleblower under federal law, and said he was recognized as such by Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz.
Socarras also claimed that Horowitz had transmitted information on the sale of Canadian mining company Uranium One to a Russian firms subsidiary to both the House and Senate intelligence committees.
Good work. These Q drops are a piece of cake.