DHS Security Officer Phil Haney Ordered to Delete Files That Exposed jihadis in America

From the Sabotage The Movie 

Brannon Howse:  Phil Haney, how were you prevented from doing your job at the Department of Homeland Security?  And if you had been allowed to do your job, do you think you could have prevented the ISIS terror attack at San Bernardino?

Phil Haney:  We talked about – or we just heard about the Purge.  That’s known as the Great Purge from ’11 and ’12 – 2011 and ’12, when all the training material was taken out of the FBI, the DOJ, the Department of Homeland Security that had anything derogatory vis-à-vis the Muslim Brotherhood.  But it really started before then.  It started in the year 2009, when I was ordered to start deleting information out of over 825 records in the system that we use in the law enforcement database and remove them.

Well, that was a crisis.  It was a constitutional, a patriotic, and a personal crisis – professional.  So, what I did is I obeyed orders, but I kept the information, and that’s when I began to go to Congress.  The bottom line is that the information that was removed related to the Boston Marathon bombing, the San Bernardino shootings, and the Orlando shootings.  And I very plausibly can state that if that information had stayed in the system, and law enforcement had followed through the way they should when we took our vow, that we could have very plausibly prevented Boston, San Bernardino, and Orlando.  Isn’t that our job as law enforcement officers?

[Applause and cheers]

Brannon Howse:  But because of political correctness, you were not allowed to do your job, and they even convened a grand jury against you for supposedly – what?  – violating the rights of the terrorist?

Phil Haney:  Yeah, the reasons that they investigated me and began to take the information out of the system – I was investigated nine times, eight of them by the Obama Administration for the violation of the civil rights and civil liberties of foreign nationals and violation of their privacy rights.

You might recall that after the San Bernardino shooting, DHS said publicly that the reason that they didn’t examine Tashfeen Malik, the wife of Syed Farook, her social media was because they were concerned about violating their civil right – her civil rights and civil liberties.  So, yes, they shifted from a law enforcement approach to counter terrorism to a focus on civil rights and civil liberties, which would be okay except that it was emphasized for foreign nationals.  And that’s why I got in so much trouble.

Brannon Howse:  You did your job, and other people did their jobs, and in comes the Obama Administration, and they wipe out all the work that could have potentially saved the lives of Americans.  Is that a fair statement?

Phil Haney:  Yes, it’s a fair statement.  My records were tagged, and I got an e-mail from all 67 of them when they were deleted, and they came back to my inbox exactly the moment when they were entirely deleted from the system.

 

Brannon Howse:  This was unconscionable.  Sometimes it’s the old saying, “Follow the money.”  But one thing I have learned from you guys, it’s sometimes it’s follow the friendship.  And Muslim Brotherhood and key leaders have been embedded with some of these high-ranking military people to convince them they’re good people, and that what we’re saying about Islam is totally false.  And so, they have been emotionally compromised by some friendships in key places.  In other words, they have sabotaged our military and our national intelligence through putting on the friendly face, while behind their back, their laughing at us and doing what they really want to do, which is sabotage.

Phil Haney:  That’s a great observation.  I want to try to bring this home.  I didn’t get shot or shot down, but at the same time these rules of engagement, because of political ideology, were being implemented and expressed in casualties in the foreign arena, the exact same thing was happening within the law enforcement community within the agencies of the government like mine – Customs and Border Protection, the Department of Homeland Security, FBI, DOJ.  We were being shot down by political correctness.  Our cases were being obliterated.  We were being blinded; we were being handcuffed.  We were told, “You’re going to be investigated” – not the ones with the derogatory information.

The rules of engagement, “Do not fire on hostiles if they’re within 50 meters of a house or a building,” are the same as, “We know that this person is a terrorist, but you’re going to let him in anyway.”  And have memos signed by Hillary Clinton and Janet Napolitano ordering my own colleagues to let individuals come right through; we call it DTR – down the road – when we knew exactly who they were.

And you say, “That’s a bold statement, Mr.  Haney.”  Well, my chain of command made a few mistakes along the way themselves; for example, leaving my name on their e-mail chains.

[Laughter and applause]

Phil Haney:  And for example, when they deleted the records out of the system that were specifically related to the San Bernardino network – by the way, Yasir Qadhi was mentioned earlier; he is part of it.  I know these people’s shoe sizes.

[Laughter]

Phil Haney:  And when they deleted the records out of the system, they did what we’re – they forgot what we’re taught in kindergarten, “Always look both ways before you cross the street.”

[Laughter]

Phil Haney:  They didn’t realize, apparently, that I had tagged all my records – little code down in the bottom right-hand corner – a little 1 is all it took – a 1– and every single one of the records that they deleted out of the system came bouncing back to my e-mail with an exact timestamp and the name of the person who deleted them.

[Applause and cheers]

Phil Haney:  So, I will say to Mike Pompeo, and I will say to John Bolton, and I will say to President Trump that if you want to drain the swamp, enlist some people like me.

[Applause and cheers]

Phil Haney:  Because I will tell you I know where the valves are.

[Laughter]

Phil Haney:  Some of the valves need to be closed, and some of those valves need to be open.  And we can take you right to them all.  We can put your hand on the valve.  You have to turn it, but we can put your hand on the valve.  And so, this political correctness that got people killed in foreign battle arenas also got people killed in Boston, in San Bernardino, in Tennessee, in Little Rock, Orlando, and Chattanooga.  It’s not theoretical.  I’m part of the cases; I’m talking to the families of survivors.