A "collection tool failure." Sure OK. https://t.co/MFZIGwgVjO - @washtimes— Monica Crowley (@MonicaCrowley) December 13, 2018
The special counsel allowed phones of Peter Strzok and Lisa Page to be wiped in the middle of a scandal involving their texting habits. WTH? Most of corporate America have better controls regarding handling of evidence in minor employment matters than the freaking FBI.— thebradfordfile™ (@thebradfordfile) December 14, 2018
COVERUP.
Washington Times
written by Jeff Mordock and Stephen Dinan
Thursday December 13, 2018
Investigators weren’t able to find any text messages between fired agent Peter Strzok and former bureau lawyer Lisa Page from their time on special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe because by the time their phones were recovered, they’d been reset for others’ use, an inspector general said Thursday.
The report also said the FBI still isn’t reliably collecting text messages of all of its employees — despite the black eye the bureau has suffered from Mr. Strzok and Ms. Page.
In fact, the FBI’s data collection tool misses about 10 percent of text messages sent on Samsung Galaxy S7 devices — the same phones issued to Mr. Strzok and Ms. Page. That rate doubles to about 20 percent for an earlier model of the phone also used by the two FBI officials.
The revelations came in a report Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz released to detail the efforts his team made to try to recover the texts between the two, who traded anti-Trump messages during the course of an adulterous affair they were having.
Investigators have already released many of the controversial messages, including one in which Mr. Strzok promised they would “stop” Mr. Trump from winning the White House.
But there was a gap in the text messages, or what the inspector general dubbed a “collection tool failure,” and the new report detailed investigators’ efforts to try to recover those messages directly from the Samsung Galaxy phones issued to both Mr. Strzok and Ms. Page.
All told about 19,000 messages were recovered according to the report.
The inspector general said there was “no discernible patterns” regarding the content of the text messages that were missed by the FBI’s collection tool, but later recovered by investigators.
“The messages included some political content, some work-related content, and some personal content,” the report said.
While messages were recovered from some phones, the inspector general said that wasn’t the case for the phones assigned to the two during their time on the special counsel’s probe.
Ms. Page joined that office on May 28, 2017, and left on July 15, 2017. Mr. Strzok joined in early June and was ousted from that team in late July, with his final clearance from the team coming Aug. 11, 2017.
They returned the phones issued to them, and they were both reset to factory settings and therefore had no content from their use.
The FBI employee who received Mr. Strzok’s phone says she didn’t remember it containing any substantive messages. Ms. Page’s phone couldn’t be located for several months, but when it was finally found this September, it had also been reset and had no messages.
Mr. Strzok had turned his device over to the Justice Department once he was removed from the special counsel’s team. A records officer for the special counsel’s office told the inspector general the phone had been reviewed for texts, but it contained “no substantive text messages.”
Ms. Page’s phone was not reviewed by the special counsel’s office for records that needed to retained, the report said.
The deputy attorney general told the inspector general that such resets are standard procedure when a user returns a device and it is to be reissued to another user.
In a response to the report, the FBI said it is reviewing its current collection method.
The FBI “appreciates and agrees with the OIG’s conclusion and explanation that the content of the text messages exchanged between Mr. Strzok and Ms. Page did not appear to be a factor in their collection or lack thereof,” the FBI response said. “Further, the OIG did not find that gaps in the collection were intentional on the part of the FBI or any FBI personnel.”
DOJ Destroyed Missing Strzok/Page Texts Before IG Could Review Them https://t.co/WWwFJA0SJy— Sean Davis (@seanmdav) December 13, 2018
The Federalist
written by Bre Payton
Thursday December 13, 2018
The DOJ wiped text messages between former FBI employees, Lisa Page and Peter Strozk, before the Office of the Inspector General could review them.
The Department of Justice wiped text messages between former FBI employees Lisa Page and Peter Strozk from their cell phones before the Office of the Inspector General could review them, a new report from the DOJ watchdog reveals.
Page and Strozk’s involvement with special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation has been heavily scrutinized after it was revealed they had sent numerous anti-Trump text messages back and forth to one another. Mueller has been tasked with looking into whether or not Donald Trump and his campaign associates coordinated with Russian officials to steal the 2016 election away from Hillary Clinton.
The 11-page report reveals that almost a month after Strzok was removed from Mueller’s team, his government-issued iPhone was wiped clean and restored to factory settings by another individual working in Mueller’s office. The special counsel’s Record’s Officer told investigators that “she determined it did not contain records that needed to be retained.”
“She noted in her records log about Strzok’s phone: ‘No substantive texts, notes or reminders,'” the report states.
When the OIG obtained his old cell phone in January, it had been issued to another individual within the agency and investigators were unable to recover any text messages sent or received by Strozk on that device.
Two weeks after Page departed Mueller’s team on July 15, 2017, her government-issued iPhone was also wiped and restored to factory settings and had not been reissued to another person within the agency. No one within the special counsel’s office or the Justice Management Divisions of the agency had any records as to who cleared all the data from the iPhone.
The OIG was able to recover more than 19,000 texts between Strozk and Page on their old government-issued Samsung Galaxy S5 devices that had been lost due to the agency’s “collection tool failure.” The OIG did not include the content of these texts in the report.
Also from Comey's testimony, Comey confirmed Lisa Page and Peter Strzok drafted the Hillary email exoneration letter. pic.twitter.com/iCfUml3CF7— JDubb (@kryptkeeper2018) December 9, 2018
BREAKING: Comey in his Friday testimony confirmed that the pro-Hillary Lisa Page, as well as her disgraced FBI colleague Peter Strzok, helped draft his exoneration-before-investigation statement for Hillary around the same time they were rooting for Hillary to win the election— Paul Sperry (@paulsperry_) December 9, 2018
Lisa Page's testimony is consistent with a lot of other testimony, to the point that neither she or Peter Strzok and the folks at the center of the Trump-Russia collusion investigation had any evidence of collusion with Russians nearly a year into the investigation. pic.twitter.com/3NKHCDOuVc— John Ratcliffe (@RepRatcliffe) September 17, 2018
https://t.co/L9v7MK3EBL๐บ๐ธAfter Bruce Ohr’s testimony, Congress wants to question Nellie Ohr for her part in the Russian dossier & investigation into President Trump. Congress is also seeking texts & emails between Bruce Ohr & FBI such as McCabe, Lisa Page & Strzok. ๐บ๐ธ— ๐บ๐ธAngel๐บ๐ธ (@36Angeldb) August 30, 2018
Lisa Page confirmed in testimony before Congress that Strzok thought the Russian Probe was meritless https://t.co/36LgLR3Rg0… ‘Russian Collusion’ has always been a seditious Dem scam aimed at unseating a duly elected President— John Betts (@JohnFromCranber) July 23, 2018
5. "Lisa Page previously worked for Bruce Ohr for 5 years"— Greg Rubini (@GregRubini) January 14, 2019
>> Lisa Page and Bruce Ohr know each other very well.
Lisa Page at the FBI, with McCabe and Peter Strzok
Bruce Ohr, number #4 at the DOJ, under Sally Yates and Loretta Lynch pic.twitter.com/hiBT3YthmX
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