EXCLUSIVE: Attorney General Jeff
Sessions is launching a review of a law enforcement initiative called
Project Cassandra after an investigative report was published this week
claiming the Obama administration gave a free pass to Hezbollah’s
drug-trafficking and money-laundering operations to help ensure the Iran
nuclear deal would stay on track.
The Justice Department said in a statement to Fox News that Sessions on
Friday directed a review of prior Drug Enforcement Administration
investigations “to evaluate allegations that certain matters were not
properly prosecuted and to ensure all matters are appropriately
handled.”
“While I am hopeful that there were no barriers constructed by the last
administration to allowing DEA agents to fully bring all appropriate
cases under Project Cassandra, this is a significant issue for the
protection of Americans,” Sessions said in a written statement. “We will
review these matters and give full support to investigations of violent
drug trafficking organizations.”
According to a bombshell exposé in Politico on Sunday, an elaborate
campaign led by the Drug Enforcement Administration, known as Project
Cassandra, targeted the Lebanese militant group’s criminal activities.
"We will review these matters and give
full support to investigations of violent drug trafficking
organizations"
- Attorney General Jeff Sessions
But when Project Cassandra leaders, who were working out of a DEA
facility in Chantilly, Virginia, sought approval for some significant
investigations, prosecutions, arrests and financial sanctions, Obama
Justice and Treasury Department officials delayed, hindered or rejected
their requests, according to Politico.
“Protecting our citizens from terrorist organizations and combatting the
devastating drug crisis gripping our nation are two of the Justice
Department’s top priorities,” Sessions said. “Operations designed to
investigate and prosecute terrorist organizations that are also fueling
that drug crisis must be paramount in this administration.”
DOJ officials told Fox News the review could lead to new prosecutions of
people affiliated with Hezbollah. It could also lead to an Inspector
General investigation of personnel matters relating to the project.
“The DEA has worked tirelessly on this front,” Sessions said. “I am
committed to giving our hard working and dedicated DEA agents all the
tools that they need to allow them to shut down these drug rings.”
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Sessions added, “The Department of Justice is absolutely committed to
investigating and prosecuting international drug trafficking
organizations and with the assistance of our DEA and FBI agents we will
leave no stone unturned as we work to making America safer.”
Since the report surfaced, a number of Republican lawmakers have
demanded answers about the allegations. Meanwhile, former Obama
administration officials have broadly dismissed the allegations as
false.
“There are many reasonable critiques of Obama's foreign policy,” former
Obama official Tommy Vietor tweeted. “The idea that he was soft on
Hezbollah is not one of them. The story is so manufactured out of thin
air that it's hard to push back except to say that it's a figment of the
imagination of two very flawed sources.”
Fox News’ Frank Miles contributed to this report. |
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