@NavarroThinker@ZacksJerryRig Okay so youâre a Russian bot. Lol.
And if youâre not a Russian bot, why are you expending so much energy yelling at Zack when you could be enjoying a nice Sunday afternoon? Geez.
Jessica Aberâs death feels like one of those stories thatâs meant to fade quietly into the background â a tragic headline that people are supposed to forget. But when a career prosecutor who spent her life chasing Russian cybercriminals, CIA leaks, and war criminals turns up dead just weeks after resigning, forgetting isnât an option.
Aber, the former U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, was found dead at her home in Alexandria on March 22. She was 43 years old. Police havenât said how she died, but the timing â and her unfinished business â makes it impossible to ignore.
THE PROSECUTOR WHO WOULDNâT BACK DOWN
Jessica Aber wasnât just a lawyer â she was the person you sent in when things got messy.
In January, just before her resignation, Aber helped put Asif Rahman, a former CIA analyst, behind bars for leaking top-secret information about Israeli military plans against Iran. The information ended up splashed across social media in October 2024.
Aber didnât mince words when Rahman pleaded guilty. She warned that his leak had âplaced lives at riskâ and âcompromised our ability to collect vital intelligence in the future.â Thatâs prosecutor-speak for this guy seriously screwed things up. Whatever Rahman leaked, it wasnât just embarrassing â it was dangerous.
BIG CASES, BIGGER ENEMIES
Aberâs cases didnât stop there. In November 2024, her office prosecuted a Virginia-based company accused of funneling sensitive U.S. technology to a Russian telecom firm with Kremlin ties. It wasnât exactly an accident â the company allegedly disguised shipments and played fast and loose with American tech that Russia wasnât supposed to have.
Then there was the war crimes indictment. Aberâs office charged four Russian-linked individuals with torturing and unlawfully detaining a U.S. national in Ukraine. She wasnât just making legal noise â she was putting serious pressure on powerful figures with deep connections.
Aberâs career was a parade of people you wouldnât want showing up at your funeral â oligarchs, cybercriminals, and corrupt players with resources to make problems disappear.
A SUSPICIOUS EXIT
Aber resigned in January 2025, just after Donald Trump returned to power. Nobodyâs said she was forced out, but resigning from one of the countryâs most powerful U.S. Attorneyâs offices weeks after jailing a rogue CIA analyst feels a little too clean.
Itâs not hard to imagine why someone like Aber might suddenly find herself in a tight spot. Trumpâs return came with a wave of loyalty tests and DOJ shakeups â and Aberâs aggressive pursuit of Russian networks and CIA leaks doesnât exactly scream âteam playerâ in this new political climate.
If she was pressured to resign, what cases got quietly buried when she left?
A SYSTEM THATâS GONE SOFT ON POWER
The Supreme Courtâs ruling in July 2024 handed Trump near-total immunity for âcore presidential powers,â including military command. Justice Sonia Sotomayor warned that this decision could allow a president to order an assassination â and face no legal consequences.
By the time Aber resigned, that ruling had already cast a long shadow over the Department of Justice. Prosecutors like Aber â the kind who took on powerful players with foreign connections â were now working in an environment where accountability had been gutted.
If Aberâs investigations had exposed something that threatened powerful interests, the courtâs ruling would have made it easier for those interests to apply pressure â or worse â without consequence.
Her resignation may have been voluntary. It may not have been. But by the time Aber walked away from her post, the guardrails protecting prosecutors like her were already crumbling.
WHAT DID ABER KNOW?
Jessica Aber knew things that mattered â things that powerful people wanted buried. She chased down Russian cybercriminals, locked up a CIA leaker who compromised military intelligence, and tangled with foreign operatives who wouldnât hesitate to make problems disappear.
Now sheâs gone, and the timing stinks.
Maybe her death was just an awful coincidence. Maybe it wasnât. But when the people investigating corruption start turning up dead, thereâs only one responsible thing to do:
Start asking louder questions. Via MSNBC{News Junkies}
Profiting off the office - by itself- is so corrupt.
But the buyers could be CEOs, Russian oligarchs, Saudi princes. We have no idea. Itâs all secret. That makes it the biggest corruption scandal in the history of the White House. And we all pretend like this is just normal!?
When you demonize and harm the immigrant, the poor, the sick and the marginalized with oppressive laws, you donât need to tell me about your religious beliefs.
You've already shown me what they are by how you're mistreating the immigrant, the poor, the sick and the marginalized.
Spot on.
@garyseconomics explaining that taxing the rich isnât going to be easy but you do it because the alternative is our kids living in poverty.
Look around. My govt needs to understand the window to act is closing. Oligarchs & big money are smashing democracy
Act now
This admin. is attempting to terrify immigrants because they don't want any here. None. That's simply what we're dealing with. And good old @SecRubio walks in lockstep with them all, letting Cubans who are in the position his family once was suffer from it all. Soulless.