#4172 – JAG Convicts Former FBI Supervisor of Treason

The U.S. Navy Judge Advocate General’s Corps at Guantanamo Bay last week convicted former FBI supervisor agent Sally Moyer of treason and sedition, and imposed the most severe sentence—death.

As reported previously, JAG agents acting on a sealed indictment arrested Moyer at her home in early November, alleging she had been a key player in the debunked Russian collusion scandal that plagued Trump’s 2016 campaign.

Last Wednesday, the veteran agent, once considered a superstar in counterintelligence circles, was found guilty of participating in clandestine operations to topple Trump, betraying her oath of office, and undermining the Constitution of the United States. A 3-officer panel delivered the verdict, which highlights the administration’s tenacity for eradicating Deep State players guilty of subverting democracy.

The prosecution, led by JAG Special Trial Counsel Rear Adm. Jonathan T. Stephens, alleged that Moyer played a pivotal role in a shadowy cabal of “Never Trump” intelligence assets that, through manufactured evidence and specious lies, sought to ruin Trump’s presidency and assassinate his unsullied character.

“This was more than dissent,” Adm. Stephens said in opening statement. “This was a calculated betrayal of the highest order, aimed at the heart of our republic, with the defendant at its core.”

JAG’s evidence revealed a web of treacherous deceit that began before Trump crushed Clinton in the 2016 election. The admiral showed the panel a printout of an email Moyer had sent to a redacted recipient in November 2016. “The dossier’s been written,” part of the email read, “and it’s juicy.” The unidentified recipient responded to Moyer’s email a day later, writing, “Is it vetted?” to which Moyer replied, “What does that matter?”

The admiral told the panel the email chain clearly referred to the infamous Steele Dossier, a long-discredited opposition research paper, written by a disgraced MI-6 agent at the behest of the DNC, that accused Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin of orchestrating an “influence campaign” to harm Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign. It also made wild and absurd claims, such as accusing Trump of asking prostitutes to urinate on a Moscow hotel bed that the Obamas had slept on years earlier.

Moyer’s civilian attorney, Rebecca Klein, objected, saying the emails were inadmissible because they mentioned only the word “dossier” and not “Christopher Steele” or “Steele Dossier.”

“The prosecution is assuming facts where none exist,” Klein said, “the word ‘dossier’ could mean a million different things.”

But her objection was premature and overruled, as the admiral hadn’t finished showing the emails JAG had acquired. In another email, dated November 27, 2016, Moyer wrote to the same unnamed person, “Factual or not, what C.S. says will damage Trump’s credibility and engender public outrage.”

The initials, the admiral told the panel, had to refer to Christopher Steele. “Unless your client wishes to testify otherwise,” he said to Klein.

Moyer, seated at the defense table, remained silent.

Additional evidence showed that Moyer had funneled classified documents and fictitious imaginings to adversarial media outlets, painting Trump as a puppet of foreign powers while concealing her own ties to anti-Trump factions within the intelligence community. Witnesses, including whistleblowers from within the FBI, testified that Moyor coordinated with elements of the so-called “resistance” – a term used to describe bureaucrats who secretly despised Trump. One particularly incriminating piece of evidence was a series of encrypted emails uncovered during a forensic audit of Moyer’s personal devices. In them, she reportedly boasted to an unnamed co-conspirator about “taking down the orange tyrant from the inside.”

Klein painted her client as a patriot scapegoated for whistleblowing on alleged abuses of power within the Trump administration.

“Sally Moyer exposed corruption, not committed it,” Klein asserted in her closing remarks. “This tribunal is nothing more than a kangaroo court designed to silence dissent.”

However, the panel, comprised of seasoned military officers, dismissed these claims, citing overwhelming evidence of intent to overthrow lawful authority. Without hesitation, they found Moyer guilty and recommended that she be hanged to death.

According to a GITMO source, JAG had a wealth of additional evidence against Moyer, but the panel had heard and seen enough to deliver a fair verdict.

Admiral Stephens set a date of execution: January 5, 2026.

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