[Pages H3967-H3970]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                     THE HISTORY OF ROBERT MUELLER

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Ferguson). Under the Speaker's announced 
policy of January 3, 2017, the Chair recognizes the gentleman from 
Texas (Mr. Gohmert) for 30 minutes.
  Mr. GOHMERT. Mr. Speaker, I do appreciate the words of my friend from 
North Carolina (Ms. Foxx), and she has an amendment that is going to 
help a lot of folks in my district.
  Mr. Speaker, I continue to hear some people say that they think 
Robert Mueller is going to be fair-minded, he is going to do a good 
job. But I think probably more than any of my Republican friends that 
profess to think they know Robert Mueller, I don't think they know him 
as well as I do, and on the research I have done on the man, the 
dealings I have had with him, the questions I have asked him.
  But I don't think they know him as well as Eric Holder does, and Eric 
Holder said a month or so ago he has known Bob Mueller for 20, 30 
years, and, in essence, he wasn't going to stop until he found 
something he could pin on Donald Trump.
  That is the essence, and I think he is right.
  We see from Robert Mueller's history that when he decides somebody is 
not a good person, even when he is 100 percent wrong, then it justifies 
in his mind putting them in prison, leaving them for the rest of their 
lives, destroying their lives, destroying any friendships, family, 
caring relationship. He doesn't care.
  He has destroyed good people, completely destroyed good people, and 
as he has said more than once after he has destroyed good people, and 
in the case of Dr. Hatfill, the government had an over $6 million 
payout to him for the

[[Page H3968]]

way Bob Mueller destroyed his life as an innocent individual, he said 
he had nothing to apologize for.
  And see, in his mind, he doesn't think he does. He is justified in 
destroying anybody he doesn't like, anybody he disagrees with. And he 
is determined in his mind that Donald Trump is somebody that needs to 
be brought down.
  It is so ironic, though. Here he was, pleading for the job of 
Director of the FBI again. He had already been that once. He did more 
damage than anybody since J. Edgar Hoover, and got 2 extra years 
because Obama liked the way that he was protecting President Obama and 
Eric Holder, and they gave him 2 extra years, much to the dismay of so 
many good FBI agents around the country and the thousands and thousands 
of years of experience of good FBI agents that he ran off, leaving our 
country all the more vulnerable because of his bad decisions.
  But after I had had some of our Members approach me after a 
Republican Conference and say: Louie, you know so much about Robert 
Mueller. Is there one article we could go read where we would kind of 
get up to speed on his background?
  And I said: Well, there are hundreds of articles I have read; some 
helpful, some not. But every time I did preparation to question him 
when he came before our committee, I did more and more study. And they 
said it would really be helpful if we had one place we could just go 
read stuff about Robert Mueller's background.
  So that inspired me to start writing, and I accumulated from other 
writers, always giving them proper credit, and put together a 48-page 
article about Bob Mueller. This does scratch the surface, but there is 
so much more that could be touched.
  Apparently, he served honorably and well in Vietnam, but that doesn't 
give him the right to ruin the country. It doesn't give him the right 
to destroy innocent people's lives.
  And so here is just one chapter from my 48-page article, Mr. Speaker, 
and this particular chapter is entitled ``Death of Dr. Steven Hatfill's 
Reputation and Productive Life.''
  Here is how Mollie Hemingway of The Federalist described the 
combination Mueller/Comey debacle: ``The FBI absolutely bungled its 
investigation into the anthrax attacker who struck after 9/11 terrorist 
attacks.
  ``Carl Cannon goes through this story very well, and it is worth 
reading for how it involves both Comey and his dear `friend' and 
current special counsel Robert Mueller. The FBI tried--in the media--
its case against Hatfill. Their actual case ended up being thrown out 
by the courts.''
  I believe this is Carl Cannon's account: ``Comey and Mueller badly 
bungled the biggest case they ever handled. They botched the 
investigation of the 2001 anthrax letter attacks that took five lives 
and infected 17 other people, shut down the U.S. Capitol and 
Washington's mail system, solidified the Bush administration's 
antipathy for Iraq, and eventually, when the facts finally came out, 
made the FBI look feckless, incompetent, and easily manipulated by 
outside political pressure.''
  And I would insert here, that is exactly what has been proven with 
most of the big cases that Robert Mueller has personally been involved 
in.
  Carl Cannon goes on and says, ``In truth, Hatfill was an implausible 
suspect from the outset. He was a virologist who never handled anthrax, 
which is a bacterium. Ivins, by contract, shared ownership of anthrax 
patents, was diagnosed as having paranoid personality disorder, and had 
a habit of stalking and threatening people with anonymous letters, 
including the woman who provided the long-ignored tip to the FBI.''
  So I would insert here, the FBI has gotten a lot of tips and warnings 
from very helpful, caring Americans, and even from Russia. Because we 
know that Russian officials tipped off Robert Mueller, tipped off the 
FBI, that the older Tsarnaev brother had become radicalized, he was 
going to be a threat to the lives of Americans, and, in fact, Russia 
had warned the U.S. twice.
  So perhaps there is the Russian collusion. Bob Mueller and the 
Russians, in fact. Unfortunately for all of those poor people that were 
killed or injured at Boston, Robert Mueller was not competent enough to 
realize the seriousness of the older Tsarnaev's radicalization, so 
people died and Robert Mueller continued to go on witch hunts for wrong 
people.
  He continued to protect radical Islamists. As some FBI agents have 
informed me, basically they said: Our training under Mueller on radical 
Islam was, when you get a credible warning or tip from an American 
citizen about a potential radical Islamist threat, then you probably 
have gotten that tip from an Islamophobe, and you probably need to 
investigate the person that gave you the tip.
  We know of cases played out in the news where that is exactly what 
happened. Poor guy, I believe it was in Florida, that gave the tips 
this guy is a threat, and what happened? The FBI investigated him, but 
they didn't investigate the man that would go kill others.

                              {time}  2100

  This article goes on: ``So what evidence did the FBI have against 
Hatfill? There was none, so the agency did a Hail Mary, importing two 
bloodhounds from California whose handlers claimed could sniff the 
scent of the killer on the anthrax-tainted letters. These dogs were 
shown to Hatfill, who promptly petted them. When the dogs responded 
favorably''--of course, they were being petted--their handlers then 
told the FBI that the dogs had alerted on Hatfill and he must therefore 
be the killer.
  There was no--let me repeat--there was no evidence whatsoever that 
Steven Hatfill was the anthrax killer.
  Talking to some folks in Washington recently, one of them pointed 
out: Well, you know, actually, that also fits the mold that Mueller has 
created for himself. Here he purged the FBI training materials of 
anything that offended radical Islamist terrorists, but as agents have 
told me, both intel and FBI, Mueller blinded our FBI of the ability to 
see our enemy. He took away some of their best training materials, one 
700-page bit of training workbook on radical Islam. He had ordered that 
destroyed. He didn't want anybody to know how to recognize a radical 
Islamist. He would rather his FBI--Mueller's FBI agents--investigate 
those making complaints for being Islamophobes.
  ``Unfortunately, both Mueller and Comey were absolutely and totally 
convinced of the innocent man's guilt. They ruined his life, his 
relationship with friends, neighbors, and potential employers.
  ``And from Carl Cannon, Real Clear Politics:
  ``You'd think that any good FBI agent would have kicked these quacks 
in the fanny and found their dogs a good home. Or at least checked news 
accounts of criminal cases in California where these same dogs had been 
used against defendants who'd been convicted--and later exonerated. As 
Pulitzer Prize-winning Los Angeles Times investigative reporter David 
Willman detailed in his authoritative book on the case, a California 
judge who'd tossed out a murder conviction based on these sketchy 
canines called the prosecution's dog handler `as biased as any witness 
that this court has ever seen.'
  ``Instead, Mueller, who micromanaged the anthrax case and fell in 
love with the dubious dog evidence, and personally assured Ashcroft and 
presumably George W. Bush that in Steven Hatfill, the Bureau had its 
man . . .
  ``Mueller didn't exactly distinguish himself with contrition, either. 
In 2008, after Ivins committed suicide''--that is the person he went 
after after they were assured Hatfill was completely innocent. They go 
after Dr. Ivins. He ends up committing suicide. ``. . . and the Justice 
Department had formally exonerated Hatfill.''
  It is important to know, Mr. Speaker, Mueller didn't exonerate 
Hatfill; the evidence did. Mueller doesn't believe in apologizing after 
he destroys people's lives, and he could not bother to apologize after 
he wrecks a constitutional government, republic, as we are here, and 
that is why, after the government paid Dr. Hatfill $5.82 million in a 
legal settlement--that is $150,000 per year for 20 years, plus $2.82 
million cash, but ``Mueller could not be bothered to walk across the 
street to attend the press conference announcing the case's resolution. 
When reporters did ask him about it, Mueller was graceless. `I do not 
apologize for any aspect

[[Page H3969]]

of the investigation,' he said, adding that it would be erroneous `to 
say there were mistakes.' ''
  He ruins a man's life. People with better judgment than Mueller 
decided: My gosh, we have destroyed an innocent man. We will pay him $6 
million to try to recompense him in some way for all of the damage 
Mueller did to him and his family and his life. All Mueller has got to 
say is: It would be erroneous to say that mistakes were made.
  You have got to understand, Mr. Speaker, when Mueller goes after 
somebody to destroy them, even though they are not guilty of that for 
which he is pursuing them, he doesn't feel he has made a mistake. He 
presumes in his mind that he pursues only bad people, and when he 
destroys a person who is innocent of the crime for which he was 
pursuing them, in his mind it is not a mistake. He pursued a bad 
person, and, therefore, he doesn't owe an apology to anybody.
  Going back to the article: ``Though FBI jurisdiction has its 
limitations, Mueller's ego does not.
  ``Mueller and Comey's next target in the anthrax case was Dr. Bruce 
Ivins. As the FBI was closing in and preparing to give him the ultimate 
Hatfill treatment, Dr. Ivins took his own life. Though Mueller and 
Comey were every bit as convinced that Dr. Ivins was the anthrax 
culprit as they were that Dr. Hatfill was, there are lingering 
questions about whether or not there was a case beyond a reasonable 
doubt. Since Dr. Ivins is deceased and had some mental issues, we are 
expected to simply accept that he was definitely the anthrax killer and 
drop the whole matter. That's a difficult ask after taxpayer money paid 
off Mueller's previous victim. Mueller had relentlessly dogged Dr. 
Hatfill using life-destroying, Orwellian tactics. Either Mueller was 
wrong when he said it would be a mistake, `to say there were mistakes,' 
in the railroading of Hatfill or Mueller did intentionally and 
knowingly persecute an innocent man.''
  That is the bottom line. He says, ``we didn't make a mistake.'' If 
they didn't make a mistake, if Mueller didn't make a mistake, then it 
means he intentionally and knowingly used the full power of the United 
States Justice Department to destroy an innocent man, again, innocently 
and knowingly destroying the life of an innocent man.
  So either he lied when he said ``we made no mistakes,'' or he didn't 
lie when he said ``we made no mistakes.'' If he didn't lie, it means he 
intentionally destroyed the life of an innocent man. It is that simple.
  So the book goes through 48 pages, sets out a number of things like 
this. When I hear my friends, especially down the hall in the Senate, 
talk about what a great man Mueller is, either, number one, they are 
intentionally keeping themselves ignorant of facts, or, number two, 
they want Donald Trump kicked out of the White House as quickly as 
possible. Those are the two possibilities, and I hope the American 
public will wake up to that.

  Now, it is also interesting, here we have got Mueller raiding, or 
being an accessory to the raid of Donald Trump's personal attorney's 
home and office, places where he was. Lo and behold, it shouldn't 
surprise anybody, but it turns out this article from April 17, by Jeff 
Murdock: ``Federal Judge Kimba Wood, who is overseeing the court case 
against Donald Trump's personal attorney, Michael Cohen, officiated the 
2013 wedding of George Soros, a billionaire supporter of liberal 
political causes, according to the news reports at that time.''
  Now, I would submit, Mr. Speaker, that he is not just a supporter of 
liberal political causes. He supports anything that will help destroy 
the moral, upstanding United States of America that has been the 
greatest gift freedom has ever had in the world.
  The article goes on here, though it says: ``The judge,'' Kimba Wood, 
``is currently weighing whether to have a neutral third party review 
the documents seized in FBI raids on the office, home, and hotel of Mr. 
Cohen.
  ``Mr. Cohen's attorneys have sought to keep the government from 
reviewing the materials by asserting attorney-client privilege''--a 
legitimate privilege, of course. ``Prosecutors have demanded access to 
those documents claiming they are related to an ongoing criminal 
investigation.
  ``The government is currently probing Mr. Cohen's $130,000 payment to 
porn star Stephanie Clifford, better known as Stormy Daniels, for 
possible violations of campaign finance laws.
  ``Judge Wood, who will decide those issues, married Mr. Soros, then 
83, and his 42-year-old bride, Tamiko Bolton, in September 2013, media 
outlets reported at that time.
  ``The Bedford, New York, wedding was attended by 500 guests, 
including top Democrats such as House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi of 
California and then-California Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom. U2 
front man Bono also attended the reception, Reuters reported in a 2013 
article.
  ``In lieu of gifts, the couple asked that donations be made to 
several organizations, including Planned Parenthood and Global Witness, 
an environmental activist group, according to Reuters.
  ``Mr. Soros donated nearly $10 million to political action committees 
that supported Hillary Clinton in the 2016 Presidential election. He 
also chaired the national finance committee for a pro-Clinton PAC, 
dubbed Ready for Hillary.
  ``Judge Wood was also then-President Bill Clinton's second, but 
failed nominee for U.S. Attorney General in 1993. Mr. Clinton had 
nominated Zoe Baird, but she was withdrawn after it was revealed she 
had hired an illegal immigrant as a nanny and did not pay taxes on the 
employee. Judge Wood was then selected, but she had also employed an 
illegal immigrant, but did pay taxes on the employee. Fearing a repeat 
of the same disastrous nomination of Ms. Baird, Mr. Clinton quickly 
removed Judge Wood from consideration.
  ``Media reports at that time said Judge Wood had not told the White 
House about the nanny even when she had been asked directly. Judge Wood 
said in a statement that she had not misled the White House.''
  In any event, people that care about fair, impartial, and blind 
justice that doesn't decide a case by looking to see who is on either 
side, they are sickened by what has been happening at the Department of 
Justice, at the top of the FBI, and under a special prosecutor who has 
made abundantly clear by his hires of those--not who would be fair and 
impartial, but those who would help Mueller do as he is so good at 
doing, and that is finding somebody he doesn't like and destroying 
their lives.

                              {time}  2115

  The additional problem in this case is that if he destroys and uses 
his illegal tactics and unfair weight to throw against innocent people 
as he has in his past, it won't just be Bob Mueller destroying one 
life, as he has in a number of these cases we discussed, but it will be 
removing an elected President of the United States.
  I pray and I will do what I can to ensure that people wake up, people 
come peacefully out in America, and make clear that this railroading, 
egotistical, and unapologetic man who has destroyed the good that was 
once top to bottom of the FBI and who has destroyed innocent lives 
without apology, this man has no business being special counsel. In 
fact, he needs to be investigated for his role with Rosenstein, their 
role, along with the guy that Mueller brought along to help investigate 
Russia.
  I am not talking about the alleged collusion of the Trump campaign in 
Russia. I am talking about the real collusion with Russia where Mueller 
even had an inside informant providing evidence of Russia's illegal 
activity in trying to obtain American uranium, and instead of using all 
of that information of Russia's illegal activity to obtain American 
uranium, Rosenstein, Mueller, and Weissmann put the quash on 
information about all of that investigation.
  They threatened and coerced their informer into keeping his mouth 
shut so that the sale could go through of American uranium that would 
end up in Russian hands. So that sale would go through, and lo and 
behold, the Clinton Foundation would be $145 million richer in gifts 
from those grateful people that benefited from Russia ultimately 
getting American uranium.
  Mueller needs to be investigated, as does Comey, as does Rosenstein, 
as does Weissmann. They are the last people on this Earth who ought to 
be investigating somebody else over alleged

[[Page H3970]]

Russian collusion. Mr. Speaker, you needn't look any further than the 
investigators themselves.
  Mueller, in his arrogance, showed the country and world he was not 
interested in fair, impartial justice. He wanted people who hated Trump 
and who loved Hillary Clinton and helped her all they could, because he 
had determined that he was going to undermine the election of Donald J. 
Trump as President. And if he is not--Rosenstein is the one who has to 
be removed first. He has got to be removed. He has got to be 
investigated. I hope and pray that is going to happen, that Rosenstein 
is going to be investigated.
  I can't count on Bob Mueller to do the honorable thing. There are so 
many examples where he had a great opportunity to do the honorable 
thing by people whom he has wronged and whose lives he has destroyed. 
He was careful always to avoid doing the right thing, making comments 
as if he had nothing for which to apologize for destroying innocent 
lives.
  That doesn't even get into the Ted Stevens case. He had to have been 
all over the top of that case. He was the director of the FBI. You know 
good and well they didn't investigate the longest serving Republican 
Senator without Bob Mueller being all over the case. They framed an 
innocent man, manufactured evidence, and destroyed evidence of his 
innocence. It wasn't just a reasonable doubt he was innocent; he was 
innocent.
  They manufactured charges, and one might say: Well, but we don't have 
direct testimony, direct evidence that Mueller personally knew of the 
frame-up of Ted Stevens. But what we do know is when the whistleblower 
FBI agent came out with sworn testimony of the frame-up of the innocent 
Ted Stevens, that God-fearing whistleblower was run out of the FBI, and 
the one that he reported the wrongdoing on continued to get glowing 
praise, advances, and promotions from Bob Mueller.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.

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