
The FBI has ordered the reopening of three high-profile cases that Democrats hoped would disappear, including the mysterious cocaine found at the Biden White House in 2023.
A conservative powerhouse and former Secret Service agent is demanding answers to questions that Americans have been asking for years.
Recently, FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino announced that the agency would allocate additional resources to investigate the cocaine discovered at the White House during the Fourth of July weekend in 2023.
It would also investigate the leaked Supreme Court draft opinion that overturned Roe v. Wade, and the pipe bombs placed outside party headquarters before the January 6 Capitol riot.
“Shortly after swearing in, the Director and I evaluated a number of cases of potential public corruption that, understandably, have garnered public interest,” Bongino stated.
He added that he had decided “to either re-open, or push additional resources and investigative attention, to these cases.”
The cocaine case has been particularly troubling to conservatives since the incident occurred in 2023.
The illegal substance was found in a highly trafficked area of the White House, raising serious questions about security protocols under the Biden administration.
Despite the gravity of finding illegal drugs in people’s house, the Secret Service quickly closed the investigation, claiming they could not identify a suspect.
While the Biden family was conveniently away during the discovery, President Donald Trump and many Republicans have speculated about possible connections to Hunter Biden, whose documented struggles with drug addiction have been well-publicized.
The hasty closure of the case by Biden’s Secret Service raised immediate red flags about a potential cover-up.
“I receive requested briefings on these cases weekly and we are making progress,” Bongino stated, indicating that the investigations are already yielding new information that the American people deserve to know.
Alongside the cocaine investigation, the FBI is also reopening the case of the leaked Supreme Court draft opinion that ended the constitutional right to abortion.
Despite the enormous breach of Supreme Court protocols, an internal investigation failed to identify who leaked the document to Politico in May 2022.
House Republicans have consistently blamed liberals for the leak, which was likely designed to intimidate justices into changing their votes.
Representative Steve Scalise (R-LA) noted at the time, “Yesterday’s unprecedented leak is an attempt to severely damage the Supreme Court,” highlighting the political motivation behind the breach.
The third case being reopened involves the pipe bombs placed outside the Democrat and Republican National Committee offices in Washington, D.C., a day before the January 6 Capitol protest.
In spite of video evidence and a $500,000 reward, the FBI has made no progress in identifying suspects in four years.
This stunning failure has fed speculation about whether the agency was genuinely interested in solving the case.
Bongino and FBI Director Kash Patel represent a dramatic shift in the agency’s leadership, focusing on accountability and transparency rather than partisan interests.
The renewed investigations suggested that the politically motivated blindness that characterized the FBI during the Biden years is finally ending.
For patriotic Americans who have watched these cases go unsolved while the FBI targeted parents at school board meetings and peaceful pro-life activists, these reopened investigations signal that equal justice under the law might finally be possible again in America.






























