Today kicks off a new feature I’m calling Gruber’s Most Wanted—a running dossier on the worst of the worst in Washington, D.C. We’re talking about the career crooks, the political lifers who’ve lined their pockets, ignored the people, and trashed the country. There’s no set number yet, but I can promise you it’ll be far more than ten. The order will be random, but every name will earn its spot.
First up? Freshman California Senator and veteran dirtbag Adam “Shifty” Schiff—a man who’s built a career on lies, leaks, and self-interest. According to a memo released by former FBI Director Kash Patel—broken first by John Solomon—Schiff’s misconduct goes all the way back to 2017. A Democrat whistleblower repeatedly warned the FBI that Schiff was leaking classified information to smear President Trump and damage his presidency. And what did the FBI do? Absolutely nothing. Predictable. But maybe not for long.
The memo describes an all-staff meeting where Schiff allegedly told his team they would leak derogatory classified info about President Trump to help indict him. When the whistleblower objected that this would be illegal, Schiff’s crew allegedly brushed it off, assuring him they simply wouldn’t get caught. This wasn’t a misunderstanding—this was calculated criminal behavior.
Leaking classified information is a violation of the Espionage Act, not to mention House rules and the oath of office. Yet the FBI ignored it, apparently preferring to cook up the Russian collusion hoax. Congressman Eric Swalwell is also tied to the scheme. Schiff, for his part, practically lived on TV selling the Russia narrative.
His hatred for Trump is so deep he’s willing to break the law to feed it—something he showed again during a childish performance on Stephen Colbert’s soon-to-be-canceled show.
Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt says the Trump administration is watching closely.
And Schiff’s crimes don’t end with Trump. On the January 6th committee, he leaked personal phone records—3,500 pages of them—targeting Americans he didn’t agree with. Congressman Steve Scalise called him out on it years ago.
No wonder Joe Biden rushed to cover him with a pardon for his time on the committee. But given recent questions about the legality of “autopen” pardons, those protections might not hold.
Schiff is also facing a federal investigation for a suspected mortgage fraud scheme stretching from 2003 to 2019. The FHFA says he lied on multiple Fannie Mae applications, claiming a Maryland home as his primary residence while also getting California tax breaks on another property. This “sustained pattern of misrepresentation” could mean wire fraud, bank fraud, and steep penalties. Trump says this case should be a slam dunk.
For a man who loves the spotlight, Schiff isn’t rushing to answer questions.
Stephen Miller put it bluntly, delivering a scorching takedown of the Senator’s long record of dishonesty.
Adam Schiff’s day is coming. The evidence is piling up, the public is paying attention, and justice—though often slow—can’t be dodged forever.
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