Truck driver Jesse Morgan told a news conference about an unusual series of events he experienced firsthand on Oct. 21.
A U.S. Postal Service whistleblower said Tuesday (Dec. 8) that he was questioned by federal agents and described the process as an interrogation.
Jesse Morgan, a truck driver for a postal service subcontractor, exposed the meeting between FBI agents and U.S. Postal Service law enforcement officials on “War Room: Pandemic” on Dec. 8.
Morgan said he was essentially being “interrogated.
“I understood that they were doing their job, so I told them what I saw, what happened to me, and what I did. But that’s not what they wanted to do, not focus on the (cheating) picture, they wanted to focus on here and try to find out how I came to be on TV. It’s really sad, honestly.” He said.
Morgan previously testified that after he drove a truck filled with as many as 288,000 ballots from New York state to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on Oct. 21, he parked the car and the ballots at a USPS warehouse, where the ballots, along with the truck that delivered them, unexpectedly disappeared.
The FBI did not respond to a request for comment, nor did the USPS. A spokesman for the U.S. Postal Inspector General’s Office, one of the postal service’s law enforcement arms, has declined to comment.
During questioning, Morgan said, one of the agents “muddled my words or didn’t understand what I was saying.”
“I made it very clear. I mean, obviously, you probably watched the press conference that day, and what I told him was no different than what I told everybody else that day,” Morgan said.
“I provided that information, and then what they wanted to do, instead of investigating the information I provided, was to go and start harassing my family and start asking questions about my family, how I got here, or something else.”
Morgan said he felt the FBI didn’t seem interested in getting to the bottom of what happened to the truck and the ballot. He tweeted, “I gave the FBI information about my trailer full of ballots and then what they were going to do but instead of investigating that information, they went and started harassing my family!”
Morgan said earlier that his wife had an argument with him about his reporting and that he could lose his job because of what he did. Morgan said he did not vote in this election.
“At the very least, I believe in an honest election, and I think the American people deserve an honest election,” Morgan said in a video released by the Thomas More Society, Amistad Project, a legal society.
His affidavit was filed in Pennsylvania court this week.
On the GoFundMe fundraising site, money is already being raised for Morgan and another USPS whistleblower, Ethan Pease of Wisconsin, both of whom organizers say are serving America by sharing their personal experiences and shedding light on election fraud in the 2020 presidential election.
Recently, Richard Hopkins, one of the U.S. Postal Service’s whistleblowers and mail carriers, had a similar experience, and Hopkins later released a recording of the interview.
Mark Ruskin, a 27-year veteran of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and former assistant district attorney in Brooklyn, New York, told the Epoch Times that the way Hopkins was questioned showed that the agency was trying to “damage control” in order to minimize the impact of the incident.
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