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To: Bob who wrote (651772)2/1/2018 10:52:43 AM
From: Bill10 Recommendations

Recommended By
alanrs
Bob
gamesmistress
Katelew
locogringo

and 5 more members

  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 793917
 
The statement by the FBI does not say the facts in the memo are wrong. It says there are other facts which are not in the memo that they believe should be in it. Well then, let's release the memo, and the FBI can then release the facts they believe should be added. What's so hard about that?



To: Bob who wrote (651772)2/1/2018 11:22:42 AM
From: carranza22 Recommendations

Recommended By
Alan Smithee
sm1th

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793917
 
nytimes.com

Obviously, such an important objection had to be read and approved by Wray, thus making it his own. It makes no difference at all whether someone else drafted the verbiage.

If he did not wish to have the objection made public, he could have prevented it. He is, after all the FBI's Director. So, yes, he owns the objections. There are his. It makes no difference whatsoever that his signature does not appear on it.