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'I Was in a State of Shock': James O'Keefe Describes the Bone-Chilling FBI Raid on His Home

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Conservative journalist James O’Keefe spoke out Monday about a reported FBI raid on his home last week, saying it left him “in a state of shock.”

In an interview with Fox News host Sean Hannity, O’Keefe accused the federal government of showing up in force with raids on his own home and those of others associated with Project Veritas.

That was following reports that he had previously been in possession of a copy of a diary that reportedly belonged to President Joe Biden’s daughter, Ashley, but was allegedly stolen.

Despite the fact that O’Keefe had surrendered the reported diary, he told “Hannity” that federal agents showed up at his home with a battering ram and detained him.

“I woke up to a pre-dawn raid,” he said. ”Banging on my door. I went to my door to answer the door and there were 10 FBI agents with a battering ram, white blinding lights. They turned me around, handcuffed me and threw me against the hallway. I was partially clothed in front of my neighbors.”

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O’Keefe then suggested that his sources for other Project Veritas investigations might have been compromised as the FBI seized his phone.

“They confiscated my phone. They raided my apartment. On my phone were many of my reporters’ notes. A lot of my sources unrelated to this story and a lot of confidential donor information to our news organization,” he said.

“I’ve heard ‘the process is the punishment.’ I didn’t really understand what that meant until this weekend. And Sean, I wouldn’t wish this on any journalist,” a shaken O’Keefe said.

Do you think the FBI acted improperly by raiding these homes?

In all, two of his phones were taken by the FBI, he said.

Paul Calli, an attorney for O’Keefe who sat next to him during the interview, said the diary in question was purchased from a source but never published by Project Veritas.

O’Keefe later voluntarily gave the diary to the police. With regard to whether it was stolen, Cali said, “Nobody knows if that’s the case.”

But no matter the source of the diary or its authenticity, O’Keefe said the raid should be a call for other journalists to stand up to federal agents, who he said had violated the Constitution.

“This is an attack on the First Amendment by the Department of Justice,” O’Keefe told Fox News. “I’m calling upon all journalists to take a stand against this. A source comes to us with information, I didn’t even decide to publish it.”

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“If they can do this to me, if they can do it to this journalist and raid my home and take my reporter notes, they’ll do it to any journalist,” he added. “This is about something very fundamental in this country. I don’t know which direction this country is going in, but journalists everywhere have to rise up because we broke no laws here.”

“If they can do it to me, they’ll do it to anybody,” he said.

O’Keefe first commented on the FBI’s raids of journalists’ homes last week in a statement posted on the Project Veritas website.

“The FBI took materials of current and former Veritas journalists despite the fact that our legal team previously contacted the Department of Justice and voluntarily conveyed unassailable facts that demonstrate Project Veritas’ lack of involvement in criminal activity and/or criminal intent,” he said.

As far as the source of the raid, the diary in question, O’Keefe said he could not authenticate it.

“At the end of the day,” he said, “we made the ethical decision that because, in part, we could not determine if the diary was real, if the diary in fact belonged to Ashley Biden, or if the contents of the diary occurred, we could not publish the diary and any part thereof. …

“Project Veritas gave the diary to law enforcement to ensure it could be returned to its rightful owner. We never published it,” he said.

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Johnathan Jones has worked as a reporter, an editor, and producer in radio, television and digital media.
Johnathan "Kipp" Jones has worked as an editor and producer in radio and television. He is a proud husband and father.




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