Eric Ciaramella

The CIA snitch’s lawyer Mark Zaid declined to deny Paul Sperry’s Real Clear Investigations report exposing pajama boy Eric Ciaramella as his client.

However, attorney Mark Zaid lashed out at Paul Sperry in a statement and said publishing Ciaramella’s name “is at the pinnacle of irresponsibility and is intentionally reckless.”

Just because Ciaramella filled out a whistleblower form, doesn’t mean he is guaranteed anonymity.

Americans have every right to know who illegally leaked President Trump’s classified phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to the legislative branch so the rabid Democrat lawmakers can launch an impeachment inquiry.

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This is seditious coup and Ciaramella must answer to the American people.

As Cristina Laila reported earlier the Paul Sperry already reported on Zaid’s threats.

BREAKING: In statement, whistleblower's lawyer Mark Zaid declines to deny RealClearInvestigations report (below) that Eric Ciaramella is his client, but complains publishing his name "is at the pinnacle of irresponsibility and is intentionally reckless."https://t.co/ouFsM3CUHA — Paul Sperry (@paulsperry_) October 31, 2019

But Mark Zaid posted a series of tweets threatening anyone who discloses the name of their DNC operative attempting to overthrow the Trump White House.

READS:

In correspondence dated October 22, 2019, the Counsel of the Inspectors General on Integrity and Efficiency made it clear that “Whistleblowers play an essential public service in coming forward” by reporting their reasonable belief of waste, fraud, abuse, and misconduct, — Mark S. Zaid (@MarkSZaidEsq) November 1, 2019

that whistleblowers “ought to be heard out and protected” and “we should always work to respect whistleblowers’ requests for confidentiality.” Acting Director of National Intelligence Joseph Maguire — himself an appointee of President Trump — stated in his public testimony — Mark S. Zaid (@MarkSZaidEsq) November 1, 2019

on September 26, 2019, that the whistleblower “acted in good faith and followed the law every step of the way.” Members of the media have a similar role in protecting those who lawfully expose suspected government wrongdoing. — Mark S. Zaid (@MarkSZaidEsq) November 1, 2019