Will Kash Patel rebuild the 2023 White House cocaine mystery? What did FBI say

Kash Patel is likely to reopen several unresolved cases including 2023 White House Cocaine Mystery.

FBI Director Kash Patel is likely to reopen the cocaine scam during the Biden-Hyris administration at the White House in 2023. A bag of cocaine was found inside a cube near an entrance of the West Wing-which was usually used to give tourism and where visitors kept their belongings. The investigation was closed and the Secret Service said it could not identify a suspect. But why would Kash Patel open the case again? FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino said that I wish and he evaluated several cases of potential public corruption, which had a lot of public interests. Bongino said, “We decided to either open, or to pursue additional resources and investigative attention in these cases.”

List of cases that Kash Patel wants to reopen

DC pipe bombing investigationOn January 5, 2021, a masked man dropped two pipes bombs outside Republican and Democratic Headquarters in Washington, DC carrying a backpack. Explosives did not explode, but the FBI evaluated at that time that they were viable. Despite comprehensive efforts – more than 1,000 interviews, reviewed 39,000 video files, and assessed 600 tips – the identity, gender and motives of the suspect remain unknown.Supreme Court Dobes case leakedIn May 2022, Politico published a leaked draft of Supreme Court Justice Shamuel Alto’s opinion, which in the case of Dobs V Jackson Women’s Health Service, keeping an Mississippi law, except for 15 weeks, banning abortion and regulation of procedure to each state. Despite an investigation, the leikar was not detected. White House Cocaine CaseA very small amount of cocaine (0.2 grams) was found in a very small amount of cocaine (0.2 grams) in the storage cuby near the West Wing Entrance near the West Executive Avenue entrance. The US Secret Service investigated with FBI assistance, but closed the case on 13 July 2023 citing insufficient evidence to identify a suspect. No fingerprint or usable DNA was found, and the surveillance footage failed to provide the lead due to the high traffic and a camera blind spot of the area. The investigation reviewed the visitor logs and security systems, identified a pool of about 500 potential individuals, but did not interview, so that it is disabled without physical evidence.

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