Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), a member of the House Oversight and Reform Committee, told Fox News that whistleblowers were beginning to talk and that he thinks charges against the Mueller Report are on the way.

It had been reported that on that same day, Meadows had spoken at the Democrat-led House intelligence committee hearing titled, “Lessons from the Mueller Report."

The hearing aimed to "explore the significant counterintelligence threats to the U.S. democratic system posed by the numerous links and contacts between members of the Trump campaign, transition and administration, and Russia and its proxies, as documented in Volume I of Mueller Report."

Fox News' Sean Hannity asked Meadows and Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.) whether U.S. intelligence officials had outsourced spying on the Trump campaign to foreign allies.

The high ranking member of the intelligence committee, Devin Nunes, said, "We don't know yet, but that's what Attorney General William Barr and Connecticut U.S. Attorney John Durham are trying to find out."

He added: "We have a right to know what countries were involved in this."

Meadows provided a statement in response to Hannity's question saying:

“We’re getting a lot of whistleblowers, primarily whistleblowers are coming forward because they believe Attorney General Bill Barr and John Durham are willing to get to the bottom of it. So people that perhaps were afraid under previous leadership to actually say, well, we knew this was wrong, they’re coming forward now.”

Meadows continued: “And when we look at intelligence, we know the intelligence community shares a lot of information. What we also know…is that the Steele dossier, Christopher Steele, his dossier -- not only does it have his origins with Fusion GPS and the Democrat National Committee, but other players that are connected -- Sidney Blumenthal -- and they were shopping it to every media outlet that they possibly could and the FBI knew it.”

“That’s the problem, the FBI knew it prior to that first FISA and here they are using it as credible information for a FISA application? I just think that that's totally wrong,” he added.

When asked where they saw the investigation going, and who should be worried, their responses were as follows;

Nunes responded that the former FBI agents involved in the text messages should be worried, as should "the dirty operations arms of the Clinton campaign."

“People need to go to jail, people need to be held accountable and I believe indictments are on their way," Meadows said.