How To Neutralize The Campus Communists
Democrats Are Getting Desperate, Now Is The Time To Twist The Knife
National Insecurity, Courtesy of Joe Biden
America’s Accountability Crisis
The Most Important Date In American History
A 'Never Again Trump' Guide To Voting Trump
Eurovision: The silent Majority and the Vocal Minority
Biden’s Middle Eastern Foreign Policy Blunders
Unbridled Corruption of the Iranian Regime
This is How We Will Have to Fight Cheating in the 2024 Election
Traitor Joe's
Joe Biden Mother’s Day Message Sparks Outrage
Florida Proves It Doesn't Mess Around After 'Queers for Palestine' Block Entrance to...
Four Honduran Illegals Caught Selling Enough Fentanyl to Kill 1.6 Million Americans
Biden Admin Is Reportedly Bribing Israel to Not Invade Rafah
Tipsheet

More State Department Cover-up: Shooting of Two Pregnant Women and Two Men

Things for the State Department just keep getting worse. First we learned from CBS News that Department official covered up and interfered with inspector general investigations of sexual misconduct, including the
Advertisement
soliciation of prostitutes by an ambassador. Then we learned those sexual solicitations involved minors. Now, we're learning State Department officials covered up the shooting of four Hondurans. More from the New York Post:

A top State Department official stymied investigators trying to get to the bottom of four killings in Honduras involving DEA agents and local police — yet another revelation from internal memos leaked by a whistleblower claiming a pattern of coverups.

The incident ended in the deaths of two pregnant women and two men last year, after Honduran national police opened fire from a State Department-owned helicopter on a small boat.

Honduran police said drugs were involved, but locals said the boat was full of fishermen. The killings were referenced in a whistleblower memo obtained by The Post.

Two Drug Enforcement Administration agents were involved, an agency spokeswoman said, and they were accompanied by Honduran national police on two State helicopters with contractors as pilots.

According to an internal 2012 document, the DEA agents were under the authority of the State Department chief of mission in Honduras, funded by a counternarcotics program, and were “subject to investigation” by State investigators.

But when those inquiries began, “despite requests by the US ambassador to Honduras and congressional pressure, DEA reportedly [was] not cooperating.”
Advertisement


With everything happening in Washington right now, it's easy to let things like this slip through the cracks. It's more than clear the State Department is operating in a culture without accountability. But, what difference does it make?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement