philip haney dhs whistleblower shot dead

Philip Haney Shot Dead DHS Whistleblower Known For Exposing Obama Era Policies

Renowned For Exposing The Government’s ‘Submission To Jihad’

Former Department of Homeland Security whistleblower Philip Haney was found dead on February 20, 2020, of a gunshot wound to his chest near his residence outside of Sacramento, California. Mr. Haney is best known for exposing how political correctness compromised national security during the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations.

Haney, 66, was the co-author, along with Art Moore, of the bestseller “See Something, Say Nothing,” which chronicles his repeated conflict with the Department of Homeland Security over its policy of Countering Violent Extremism. The policy was shaped in large part by Islamic supremacists and political appointees who minimize or dismiss the relationship of Islam to terrorism. DHS’s response to Haney’s efforts to identify terror threats – including the networks that later were responsible for the Boston Marathon bombing and the San Bernardino massacre – was to eliminate his intelligence and shut down his cases.

Two officers of the Amador County Sheriff’s Office confirmed Haney’s death but had no further information. The circumstances of his death are still under investigation.

https://youtu.be/1xgV5geAJhw?t=651
Phil Haney Interview With Jan Markell

Philip Haney’s Whistleblower Status

Philip Haney remarkable story debuted on the Fox News Channel’s “The Kelly File” in December 2015, shortly after Syed Rizwan Farook and Tashfeen Malik fired automatic weapons at a holiday party in San Bernardino, California, killing 14 people and wounding 21.

Haney explained to Kelly how his case could have prevented the massacre if it had not been shut down.

In June 2016, Haney’s Senate testimony of his agency’s politically correct “purging” of intelligence on terrorist networks in the U.S. caused a stir on Capitol Hill. He told a subcommittee of the Senate Judiciary Committee chaired by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, that the Obama administration “modified” or eliminated more than 800 of his records related to the Muslim Brotherhood network in the U.S. because they were deemed to be an offense to Muslims.

In addition, Haney said, a highly successful case he helped develop as a member of one of the National Targeting Center’s advanced units was shut down by Hillary Clinton’s State Department and the DHS Office of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties out of concern for the “rights” of foreign Muslims. And after Haney retired honorably in 2015, he discovered that had his case continued, it might have prevented both the Orlando and the San Bernardino attacks.

Along with the quashing of the case in June 2012, the administration subsequently ordered the deletion of an additional 67 records concerning a related network.

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