Jim Hoft
The Gateway Pundit
7/17/2013
BOOM!
FOX News reporter Carl Cameron told Bill O’Reilly tonight that House Oversight Committee Chairman Darrell Issa (R-CA) has information that will move the IRS scandal up into the White House. The committee is meeting on Thursday.
“What he said to me today was make sure to watch tomorrow’s hearing because he’s going to present the evidence to prove it…. That he can get it right up all the way into the White House before it was all revealed.”
This is devastating…
…At Least 292 Conservative Groups Were Targeted by the IRS…
The complete article, with video, is at The Gateway Pundit.
Related: Bombshell: IRS Chief Counsel Was Involved in Targeting Tea Party Groups
…The chief counsel’s office for the Internal Revenue Service, headed by a political appointee of President Obama, helped develop the agency’s problematic guidelines for reviewing “tea party” cases, according to a top IRS attorney….
…We’re getting ever closer to discovering that the White House through its counsel’s office was involved in, and probably directing, the abuse of citizens who were organizing to speak out against the Obama agenda. Catherine Engelbrecht’s case indicates that the IRS abuse is just one line of attack; the Obama government unleashed the full alphabet soup on her after she founded True the Vote.
That’s part of why Eric Holder has been unleashed on George Zimmerman. The right hand is hammering an innocent man while the left hand tries to wave Obama’s most dangerous scandal away. They’ll risk civil unrest to keep this particular scandal off the front pages.
Update: Earlier today Congressman Trey Gowdy wrote on his Facebook page:
Tomorrow, the House Oversight Committee will hold a hearing to investigate the systematic targeting of groups by the IRS. Ahead of the hearing, the Washington Post reports breaking news on the IRS investigation:
“The chief counsel’s office for the Internal Revenue Service, headed by a political appointee of President Obama, helped develop the agency’s problematic guidelines for reviewing “tea party” cases, according to a top IRS attorney.”