
Tweet #16: Special Counsel John Durham spent four years investigating what happened to American elections.
His final report was delivered to Congress in May 2023.
Inside that report was a criminal referral.
Not to the Department of Justice. Not to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
To the Department of Defense Inspector General.
The internal watchdog of the entire United States military.
The referral identified one specific matter:
"One matter involving the execution of a contract between the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the Georgia Institute of Technology."
One sentence. In a Special Counsel report to the United States Congress.
Durham had reviewed the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency contract with Georgia Tech and found something significant enough to send to the Department of Defense's own internal investigator for potential criminal review.
Not a footnote. Not a passing mention. A formal referral.
Now look at what you have seen in this thread about that exact contract:
A Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency planning document targeting voting machine manufacturers eight months before the election.
The Pythia surveillance weapon deployed inside the Department of Homeland Security before the election.
Active reconnaissance jobs running against Dominion Voting network infrastructure thirteen days before the election.
Egress points found in Dominion Voting network data.
United States Army soldiers trained on the surveillance weapon at Georgia Tech's campus.
Central Command military network data handed to a civilian university professor for analysis.
Russian and Iranian command and control confirmed in election related state and local government networks.
A Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency employee writing "I know who to talk to if we find anything."
And the man who found egress points in Dominion Voting data named to Georgia's official election security task force on the very same day.
Durham saw enough in that contract to make a criminal referral to the Department of Defense Inspector General.
Here is what happened next: Nothing.
-No findings were announced.
-No charges were filed.
-No public report was released.
-The referral was received.
-Then it vanished.
The Department of Defense Inspector General has
never publicly addressed it.
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has never publicly addressed it.
Nor Georgia Tech, and Congress never held a single public hearing about it.
Think about what that means.
The top prosecutor in America found something troubling enough in a Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency contract with a university to formally refer it for potential criminal investigation.
And every single institution that received that referral went silent. Durham found it. The Department of Defense Inspector General received it. Washington buried it.
There is only one question left.
Who had the power to make a Special Counsel criminal referral disappear - and why did they use it?
Emails obtained by Patriot @TheAndersPaul