On Thursday acting FBI Director Christopher Wray refused to answer Rep. Ron DeSantis (R-FL) when asked if the Russian dossier was used to spy on President Donald Trump.

FBI Director Christopher Wray Refuses to Answer Rep DeSantis When Asked if Dossier Was Used to Spy on Trump’s Camp https://t.co/Semj3PjagD

Wray was testifying before the House Judiciary Committee.

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Wray was very evasive with the Republican-led committee.

Now this…

Jerome Corsi tweeted this out.

WRAY worked under Deputy AG Comey on ENRON prosecution – WEISSMANN severely criticized for PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT in Enron case — see SIDNEY POWELL book LICENSED TO LIE https://t.co/yPq7uZ61Fw WRAY a SWAMP CREATURE corrupt

Jerome Corsi reported this today at Infowars:

On Sept. 11, 2003, on being confirmed by the Senate as Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Criminal Division of the Justice Department, Wray worked under Deputy Attorney General James Comey.

While heading the Criminal Division, Wray oversaw the Enron Task Force, investigating among other issues the criminal malfeasance of auditor Arthur Anderson.

Sidney Powell, a former U.S. attorney whose 2014 book Licensed to Lie: Exposing Corruption in the Department of Justice is a shocking exposé of prosecutorial impropriety that she maintains still runs rampant today among Department of Justice prosecutors, warns that the Enron case was tarnished by a history of Department of Justice prosecutorial misconduct.

Powell focuses on the role played in the Enron prosecution by Andrew Weissmann, a DOJ prosecutor who is now part of Mueller’s team and is capable of extorting guilty pleas.

Noting on page 35 that Weissmann was the “driving force” behind the indictment of Arthur Anderson in the Enron case, Weissmann used the “special tactics” he developed prosecuting organized criminals, convinced that even if some of his special tactics went outside the bounds, the ends justified the means when prosecuting serious bad guys.

On page 410 of her book, Powell pointed that Weissmann forced Duncan into a guilty plea by misrepresenting to Duncan that his innocent conduct in the case was “criminal.”

Calling the DOJ prosecutors in the Enron case a “cabal” that came together in 2002, Powel charges that those involved in the Enron prosecution “emboldened and fed” each other’s worst traits (page 408).