The US Navy Judge Advocate General’s Corps and Office of Military Commissions convicted former USDA Inspector General Phyllis Fong of treason Thursday afternoon, Real Raw News has learned.
As reported in January, JAG agents arrested Fong based on evidence she had ordered the culling of a million hens due to an alleged avian influenza outbreak. White Hats maintain the outbreak was fabricated mainly to inflate egg and poultry prices, and that Fong, while serving the Biden regime, helped orchestrate the H5N1 scare.
While we have no details about Fong’s time in captivity, we learned the tribunal took place at Camp Blaz Thursday and that Fong, who pleaded not guilty, represented herself instead of accepting JAG-appointed counsel. Rear Admiral Johnathon T. Stephens presided over the case, quickly exhibiting the prosecution’s first piece of evidence.
He showed the panel—three Marine Corps officers—text messages JAG had retrieved from Fong’s phone. The first, timestamped 2/2/2024, 10:03 a.m., had been sent from Fong to an unidentified recipient using a burner phone, which read, “Eggs are too cheap anyway, we’re fixing that.” The unknown respondent replied moments later with a smiley emoji and the words, “Good, very good.”
Admiral Stephens noted that Fong had invoked her Fifth Amendment right to remain silent when confronted with the text chain following her arrest.
“She told our investigators if they had questions, we should call Biden for answers,” the Admiral said to the panel. The defendant, Phyllis Fong, was uncooperative.”
Fong sent a second message to the same number on 4/6/2024, two days after USDA inspectors showed up at a Nebraska poultry farm and ordered its owner to immediately gas 75,000 hens because four birds tested positive for avian influenza. Fong’s text to the recipient: “It’s being done.”
Sitting handcuffed at the defense table flanked by two MPs, Fong sighed audibly as Admiral Stephens implored the panel to interpret Fong’s taciturnity as an admission of guilt.
As an aside, JAG has asked us to omit witnesses’ names from this article as they fear they can still face retaliation. Appearing via teleconference, the owner of the Nebraska farm testified under oath that 17 USDA employees had shown up at his farm and handed him paperwork, signed by Fong, ordering the extermination of 75% of his fowl. The documents stipulated that if he didn’t cull his flock within 72 hours, he’d face punitive action including being put out of business and possible prison time for “knowingly marketing avian influenza to the public.”
As Fong, showing signs of exasperation, sat silently at the defense table, the Admiral questioned the witness.
“After being given the order, what did you do?” Admiral Stephens asked.
“My veterinarian tested 15 birds from each of 18 coops for bird flu,” the witness answered.
“And the results?” asked the Admiral.
“All negative. Not one bird tested positive,” the witness said.
“And how did you reconcile that against what the USDA claimed?” the Admiral asked.
“Either they were incompetent or lying,” said the witness.
Admiral Stephens stared coldly at Fong, then asked the witness, “Did USDA provide proof that your birds were infected?”
“Nope,” the witness replied. “Not a shred of it. I was supposed to take them at their word.”
“And then what happened?” asked Admiral Stephens.
“Well, three days later, a dozen USDA people are back banging on my door wanting to know why my birds were still alive, and I showed them my vet’s report, and the tore it up in front of my face. They said if my employees didn’t kill the chickens right then, they’d do it and arrest me,” the witness said.
“And did you?” the Admiral asked.
“Yes, I was terrified. My birds weren’t sick; I’ve been in the industry for half a century and know hot spot-sick birds. But I feared for the safety of myself, my employees, and my family,” the witness said.
He explained that poultry and egg farmers in the United States are a tight-knit community who stay connected to one another to discuss ways of staying profitable in a harsh economy. His cohorts, he told the Admiral, had also been visited by the USDA and unnecessarily murdered foul on the Biden regime’s insistence.
“There was a common denominator,” the witness told Admiral Stephens. “All papers had Phyllis Fong’s signature.”
The highest-ranking panelist, a Marine Corps lieutenant colonel, told Admiral Stephens that he and his colleagues had already reached a verdict based on the text messages, the witness’s sworn testimony, and Fong’s refusal to take the stand.
“We find the defendant guilty and hope she’ll be hanged for treason,” he said.
“Phyllis Fong, you’ve been found guilty of treason and will be hanged on April 11,” the Admiral decreed.
RRN will post a follow-up once the hanging takes place.