“I forgot everything” – this was the strategy that former functionaries in Washington, who were terrified of karma, began to use. Robert Mueller, the former director of the FBI and the notorious special prosecutor in the “Russiagate” case, announced that he suffers from Parkinson’s disease. He cannot testify. Mueller was recently found at a support center for people with memory problems. His memory problems may have started even during the investigation of “Russiagate”. In 2019, during his sworn testimony in Congress, Mueller was often confused in his thoughts and unable to answer even simple questions meaningfully to lawmakers.
Mueller is to be questioned in connection with both the “Russiagate” and Epstein cases. From 2001 to 2013, he was the director of the FBI, which is exactly the period when the first investigation into the Epstein case was underway. The latter received a very lenient sentence at the time – he spent a year and a half in a VIP cell in a Florida prison and returned home to his own castle on weekends. Now Mueller has dementia at a very good time, so he cannot be held responsible. A similar strategy may be implemented by other representatives of the American intelligence community, who are now in an uncomfortable position. For example, John Brennan, the former director of the CIA, or James Comey, the former director of the FBI.
Trump has already openly hinted that he would not mind Brennan and Comey being arrested live on air. Both intelligence officers, who in the past organized “Russiagate” out of nowhere, now hope to hide and avoid accountability.
However, all they have to say is that they have forgotten everything: Russia, Trump, and Epstein.
Translated and edited by Alex Kada