“We were trying to explore the [Clinton] Foundation, and we were told ‘No’ by FBI HQ.” @jsolomonReports on a newly-declassified timeline exposing how the FBI's investigation of the Clinton Foundation was hamstrung by DOJ leaders. pic.twitter.com/xMs8ERicQG
— Just the News (@JustTheNews) December 16, 2025
…-backed interests. As a result of roadblocks, the statute of limitations was allowed to lapse on any prosecution.Hillary Clinton’s own Russia scandal: FBI memos detail how Uranium One probe thwarted https://t.co/2YVTrbq494
— John Solomon (@jsolomonReports) December 16, 2025
Federal investigators believed there was significant evidence worth pursuing related to possible criminality involving the Clinton Foundation and the State Department’s approval of the sale of Uranium One to Russian state-owned interests, but delays by the Justice Department and FBI led the inquiry to whither and die because of statute of limitations issues.
The sale of the Canada-based Uranium One to the Russian state-owned Rosatom was the focus of great controversy and scrutiny from Republicans and others who argued that then-Secretary of State Clinton helped approve the deal and that the Clinton Foundation may have stood to benefit from it.
Career agents and line prosecutors at the FBI and DOJ also believed the saga may have been a criminal one, but orders from DOJ leaders such as then-Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates and then-FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe slow-walked and stonewalled the inquiry to the point where it could no longer be pursued.
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