A former FBI agent who was employed by the Division of Justice after taking part within the 2021 rebel says he has resigned from the federal company as a consequence of his lack of ability to “absolutely expose” authorities abuses from the within.
Jared Lane Smart, who took a job as a counselor to Justice Division pardon lawyer Ed Martin Jr. final July, stated he handed in his resignation on Thursday.
“I returned to Washington to completely expose the abuses by the FBI and DOJ in opposition to J6 defendants, however it turned clear that this may solely occur from exterior of presidency,” he posted on X. “So I left and can accomplish that.”

Smart was charged with breaching the Capitol in the course of the violence and repeatedly shouted “kill ’em” as he watched rioters assault officers exterior the constructing, in line with an FBI agent’s affidavit. He was one in every of practically 1,600 members who have been finally pardoned by President Donald Trump final yr.
A DOJ spokesperson confirmed his resignation to JHB on Friday, saying it had been “lengthy deliberate.”
“We thank him for his service to this nation,” they stated in an e mail.
Smart had been employed as an adviser to Martin, who on the time was overseeing an investigation into Trump’s claims of anti-conservative bias inside the DOJ in the course of the Biden administration, The Related Press reported.

Pam Bondi, who was ousted from her position as lawyer common on the identical day as Smart’s resignation, had final yr known as for creating the so-called “weaponization working group” inside her workplace.
This group was meant to determine situations the place a federal division or company, inside the prior 4 years, tried to “obtain political targets or different improper goals slightly than pursuing justice or reliable governmental targets.”
The group was directed to supply the White Home with quarterly stories on its progress.
It wasn’t instantly clear the place the group stands right now, and what revelations it introduced to Trump, although Bondi had been publicly chastised by Trump for failing to efficiently prosecute his political foes.
Martin was quietly faraway from overseeing the investigative group in February. Although no motive was given, an individual conversant in the matter informed the AP that the group, beneath his management, was not making a lot progress.

