A coalition of 14 states has filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the Biden FBI relating to investigations of parents who were critical of their local school boards over masking, CRT, and the rape of a child in the Loudoun School District in Virginia. The Biden administration combined with the Loudoun School Board led to an uprising against woke school boards. There were accusations that these parents were domestic terrorists.
As a result, the 2021 election in Virginia led to a sweep by Republicans in a state where liberals were winning everything in sight. It also set off a flurry of recall elections for school boards across the country, even in liberal bastions in San Francisco, where all three board members facing recall were sent packing. There have been rumors that the FBI was spying on concerned parents and the corrupt Wray’s FBI were feeling the heat from those allegations.
The fourteen states involved in the litigation include Arkansas, Arizona, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Texas, and Utah.
Republican Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita said:
“We just want the facts. Rather than cooperate, the Biden administration has sought to conceal and downplay its culpability. What are they hiding? Why won’t they come clean? Hoosiers and all Americans deserve to know.”
The lawsuit takes aim at Biden, Attorney General Merrick Garland, and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona. They want the judge to order the Biden administration to comply with the law. Good luck with that. The White House has declined to answer questions, but any day now, I expect them to lay the blame on President Trump and unvaccinated people.
NSBA’s letter was followed by Garland directing the FBI in a memo to lead a task force addressing threats to school officials and report the threats. A spokesperson for the White House then claimed it was not involved in the DOJ memo and that the department “chose to take this approach on their own.”
Still, Garland testified in October 2021 that he was “sure that the communication from the National Association of School Boards was discussed between the White House and the Justice Department and that’s perfectly appropriate,” according to the lawsuit.
Soon after the memo was issued, Republican attorneys general wrote to the administration demanding its withdrawal. They asked the government to “cease any further actions designed to intimidate parents from expressing their opinions on the education of their children” and “respect their First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and to raise their children,” the lawsuit states.