DIRTY TRICK SQUAD

 


                    DIRTY TRICK SQUAD                           - DATE OF RECORDING - JANUARY 2021

   INTERVIEWER: All right. So, I'm gonna ask you if we could get into some more of the details with the Dirty Trick Squad and how Rosenstein was a part of that group and if Roberts had any type of interaction with the group as well.

  INTERVIEWEE: "Dirty Trick Squad" was just a nickname. It certainly wasn't anything official. This was a group of people that were either dirty or they controlled. I was one that was controlled. There was Rod, Sean Henry he was FBI, Shaun Bridges, Secret Service, Joseph Rosati, who was with the DEA. Alan Boroshok was ATF, Gregory Utz, who was the TFO with the DEA, but he was formerly Baltimore County police. That was the basis of the Dirty Trick Squad. You had the computer experts, you had the muscle, you had the tactical experts, and that's what they were doing. And then there was another group in Fort Washington. He was running one down there. This was the satellite location in Baltimore just for the really illegal stuff, illegal communications, hacking, phone tapping, you name it. They concentrated their main focus, all the time, Title III judges, and federal judges. But they would go after anyone political rivals, sitting politicians, anybody they needed to go after, anybody they were pointed at. They went after family members of judges and compromised people as much as they possibly could. They had no problem hacking computers and planting information to compromise people. This is something they had done numerous times. Rod had done this for years and years so had Shaun Bridges where they would finagle a case that they had before the Court where for instance, they would arrest a gentleman and he had money, he had property, and he had the resources to fight them. They didn't like that, so Shaun would go in, plant child porn on their computer, and what do you know? Oh! The examination. Now you got this on there.· "I don't know anything about it." "Well, it's on there. We're gonna charge ya." And then he would he didn't want that to ruin his life, didn't wanna go to prison as a pedophile you know what happens and things and they would use this as leverage in hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of cases and then he would plead the person they charged would plead to a lesser charge that would not show up on the record, but he would have to forfeit property, money, things like that, and they would skim their percentage off. Shaun Bridges was particularly good at it, it was his specialty and he had done this at the county and state levels and got in trouble a couple times, which is why he came under the sight of Rod Rosenstein, who got him up to federal. Shaun did not like Obama, didn't like Hillary. He had access to the White House, the Air Force One, the CIA. He had those kind of clearances as the number-one expert on forensic study of the computers for the Secret Service, then for most of the government.

  INTERVIEWER: Now, was he a government employee? Was he a contractor? What was he

  INTERVIEWEE: He was Secret Service. He was a Secret Service agent.

  INTERVIEWER: Okay.

  INTERVIEWEE:  A full Secret Service agent. So, he had access to all these things. Because of his clearances, because of his expertise, he could go anywhere. He was often in the White House, texting the location of the president and Obama and what they were doing.  He hacked into Obama's Blackberry just for fun, things like that, and shared messages with people, hacked the girls' phones. I mean, it was nothing (inaudible). He had a list of people that he would just call up and watch them do their daily stuff. He's just truly gifted with the computers. I'm good at the computers, I can do any of it you need but he's just one of those people born to do it. He can do it, like breathing. He's a violent person, which belies his size. He's only about 5'9", 5'8" and he's maybe 120 pounds when he's not drinking, but he is a violent person, and arrogant, and he's all about the money. This was the core group of the Dirty Trick Squad. And that's all they did, was hack people, steal information, alter emails, manipulate things, and sell intelligence, launder  Shaun Wesley Bridges, the Secret Service agent, was the foremost expert on e-commerce and bitcoin; that's what he's actually in prison for and their illegal profits that they would skim off, or they would target people with cash or different bank accounts. Anything they could skim, they would run it through Bitcoin. He'd launder it for them. And he still holds millions of dollars online in various accounts. He also holds several passports and will disappear as soon as he's released.

  INTERVIEWER: Do you know where he'll disappear to?

  INTERVIEWEE: Central or South America. He's discussed Argentina and Columbia as possibilities because his wife's family is from there, they have family there. He was able to purchase illegitimate passports and documents from governments in South America. And he has the money to do so. He's all about the money.

  INTERVIEWER: Can you tell me about Alan Boroshok?  

  INTERVIEWEE: Boroshok, he's ATF. He's retired now. He's a nasty piece of work. He gets involved in his official capacity with the illegal gunrunning for Fast and Furious. He was the one that made sure the paperwork stayed clean and things came back in the country. They were spying [sic] guns supposedly that would be tracked.· Then he made sure things stayed clean as far as serial numbers, things like that. He's been dealing guns his entire career as far as I know he has lots of disposable money at his disposal he has lots of cash at his disposal and things like that. He lives very well. When Rod started falling out of favor as the DAG, they felt that their there was already thoughts Boroshok they felt that their protection was leaving, so Boroshok and Rosati both divorced their wives, no contest, put everything in her name, paid off their existing house with I think Rosati it was over $300,000 and Boroshok was  even more in cash, bought another house with like 250,000 in cash down payment, lived there Rosati lived with his wife that he just divorced

  INTERVIEWER: (Interposing) Now, when you say "cash," you mean by transfer or by hard cash?

  INTERVIEWEE: They actually had cash to pay all things

  INTERVIEWER: Okay.

  INTERVIEWEE: and were able to come up with large checks as well. But, yeah, actually he lived with his wife. He's always had cash. Now, if you look at him on the surface, he's a barely-getting-by DEA agent who owes money to several people

  INTERVIEWER: (Interposing) Is this Rosati or

  INTERVIEWEE: Rosati.

  INTERVIEWER: Oh, it is. Okay. Could you do Boroshok? We'll get to Rosati in a second.

  INTERVIEWEE: (Mumbles)

  INTERVIEWER: To keep it all keep it straight.

  INTERVIEWEE: Boroshok, gotcha. Boroshok divorced his wife the same time as Rosati, paid off the house, gave her about $600,000 as part of the settlement, put everything in her name after paying off the house in cash, bought a large condo on the Potomac for himself, has a custom van filled with road race bikes that he likes to bicycle. These are all 10-, 12-, 15-thousand-dollar bikes that are custom made for him, his size they're measured and everything.  This is just one of his hobbies. He's got watercraft and cars and all kinds of stuff, never has a problem finding cash because he's dealing guns and helps people clear up stuff that is out there. He helped buy the firearm for Seth Rich.

  INTERVIEWER: Okay.· Very good.· So, now on to Rosati, Joseph Rosati.

  INTERVIEWEE: Uh-huh.

  INTERVIEWER: Let's discuss, I know you've got a little bit more information on him than some of the others, so …

  INTERVIEWEE: Rosati's a DEA steroid freak. He's like 6'2" or so, a big body builder. He's a violent, nasty, lying person. He always has been. It's not just me saying it, this is other people that he's worked with. Other agents have complained about the same thing. There are dozens of those, dozens of cases where he has added drugs to stings. There's an instance where there's one drug case, there was agents involved, and the only complaints in the case from the people being arrested were about Rosati, and the exact same complaints from the agents. He always had to be the one to swoop he never did any work, he's always the cowboy, had to be out on his own. He's always the one to swoop in with the big bust, you know, agents would find 30 pounds of marijuana and he would swoop in all by himself out of nowhere and "Oh, I got a kilo of coke," you know, and make the big bust, and they complained.· Agents on numerous cases and in numerous locations would complain about him doing this. He's also been sued many times by people who’ve people who flat-out said, "I'm a drug dealer.· I sell marijuana. I've never touched the other stuff. It's all I've ever sold. I don't believe in it," but he added it to it, I mean, the exact same complaints over and over again from not only, you know, defendants but agents working with him, and when things would get too bad, they would just move him off into another region, another district.  But he's a nasty, violent person that I've personally had to deal with.

  INTERVIEWER: Now, you've mentioned in a previous tape that he and Boroshok were involved with the Seth Rich murder. Are there any other murders that you know of or have heard that he may be associated with, and, if so, how were those perpetrated?

  INTERVIEWEE: Boroshok was involved. He supplied the firearm and made it disappear after, or he got it destroyed. Rosati was involved with the Seth Rich. He was there, He's the one that picked up the MS-13 people outside the city and brought them in (inaudible) got them out of the city. He brought Kevin Doherty with him. Kevin Doherty was kind of a hang-around wannabe federal agent, you know, sucked up to them continuously hoping to get an appointment. He's a big wannabe, always had a different story about his background. He's apparently did almost a year in the Marine Corps many, many years ago. But they use him as kind of a gopher, and he was there that night. Kevin Doherty's actually the one who attempted to kill Jack Burkman later on because he was being exposed in the crime, and he's in prison for that now. So, they've been involved in other murders this is Boroshok and Rosati. They're very tight. They would do things where they would they would of course, selling  guns to gang members later, you know, resulted in murders, deaths. And they would call it "fishing." They would sell them off sometimes they'd even leave them there. They would come up it's very easy for them to come up with firearms. They would sell them off, and then Boroshok would, you know, trace the serial numbers and see if it was related later on down the road to any shootings or deaths it was fishing; that's what they called it  "fishing" and see if they got one. Because to them it was great fun.

  INTERVIEWER: This is similar to the Fast and Furious idea.

  INTERVIEWEE: Yeah. It was just their version of it.

  INTERVIEWER: Just a local version or …

  INTERVIEWEE: It was their version, same time, you know, same time frame what they were doing. But they would track the serial numbers just to see if they got it that could've been used in a crime or in you know. At one point I thought they were even keeping score, but they would just they would just celebrate. They just thought it was funny that they'd made the money and they'd killed each other and ha, ha, ha, great fun.

  INTERVIEWER: I mean, Richard Rosati has been known to use poisons on people.

  INTERVIEWEE: He's been known to help people overdose, give them hot shots, pure drugs, to shoot them, to kill them, to overdose them. He's done this to informants, things like this, that he's used, and he's done it several times as far as I know that he's bragged about, informants, 'cause he'll have informants and then he'll start dealing with them, you know, start dealing drugs with them. He'll start moving products to them, especially pills, and then when they think they have enough leverage on him, they come back and have something, well, you know, they'll just set them up, they overdose and they're gone. So, yeah.

  INTERVIEWER: Okay. You mentioned that he's also involved in pharmaceutical

  INTERVIEWEE: Oh, yeah.

  INTERVIEWER: pharmacy fraud and

  INTERVIEWEE: Pharmacy, yeah. Pharmaceutical, I don’t think he's got the brain for it. He as a DEA agent, he uses authority to manipulate pharmacies and shipping and inspections. The DEA inspects pharmacies once a month, especially the narcotic shipments. Generally, the pharmacies are divided all the medications over here are narcotics and they're supposed to be inspected. Well, he would oversee the inspections, and he'd write them off if they had more, if they had less than he would move them through there. He could sign off on it and everything looked fine, you know, the numbers would match up, they accounted for everything, and yet they still they've got 30,000 more pills sitting there because they're selling it for him. And they did all kinds of stuff. They would short prescriptions. But it was just the pharmacies ordering these massive amounts of opioids that he was working with, and he would take them and sell them on the streets, sell them to another pharmacy, moving them through another pharmacy and getting paid for it, and he was manipulating their inspections, is what he was doing there. And then when, again, they became problematic or didn't wanna do it anymore or felt they were too exposed or local police had come to their door because they'd heard something, he would, boom, "I don't know, I'm DEA" and he would distance himself and shut them up, threaten them and go that way.

  INTERVIEWER: Now, you mentioned he had a cousin that looks similar to him.

  INTERVIEWEE: Oh, yeah. I mean, he'll do anything for money. He's crap. He's a large guy he's like 6'2" or so and a big body builder. He has a cousin that looks almost like him but he's skinny, just the face. The cousin this is the little stuff.  The cousin would go into banks and with his I.D., with his real I.D. He would give it to him and he'd go in and open up bank accounts, credit lines, things like this, and they'd max them out, just ruin bounce checks and credit cards, everything they could possibly get. Then when it finally hit the fan and, you know, the banks started collecting or the credit agencies started collecting, he would go into the bank as a DEA agent and say "Who opened this account?" It was like "Well, this is me. Here I am," it was like "Am I the one that opened it?"· "Well, no, you're enormous. Obviously I don't remember you," and then it goes away, it wasn't him. He's done this lots of times. He had another scam where he actually got other agents shot because of this one where he was calling as a phony DEA agent, calling people around the country randomly and telling them that "A package had been intercepted and it had your name on it, it's drugs" or "it's drug precursors," things like that, "It's not in the country yet, but it's coming. If it gets to the country I'm gonna charge you, but if you pay a fee, a fine, now," 1,200, 800, whatever, "it'll never get here," and he got lots of people to pay it. But a lot of people would con and a lot of people would be like "Oh, no, I'm not doing that" and they contacted the DEA, and it turned out he was actually the DEA's point man on those complaints. So, he was running he would run the scam that if anything came back it went to him anyway.  But he did eventually get caught on that because this is a nationwide scam, people all over the country doing this because the three numbers he used to do these calls went to the payphone outside of where he worked, the payphone at the gas station about a block and a half from his house, and to a burner phone he was known to use, so not so smart. And then a few of the people were able to record the conversation on the phone as evidence they had an app or something and then when they called they got switched around and everybody was like "It's the same guy," you know, they were like "Holy crap," you know, and it was like then (inaudible) didn't know what was happening. But because of that, because of the phony DEA people trying to make these phony arrests, there were actually real agents enacting a high-risk warrant in California who got shot. The guy just as soon as they knocked, said they had a warrant, they identified themselves, he just fired them up because he had heard about the phony agents, and it was because of him. He got his own agents shot and doesn't care.  So, that's how he is.

  INTERVIEWER: Okay. The final thing on Rosati, you've mentioned before that he's worked with local mafia people in the Maryland area. Conowingo Pizza has been mentioned in the past. Can you give me more details about how that works?

  INTERVIEWEE: Okay. It's, you know, a whole new realm of stuff to worry about. Yeah. He protects certain people who can provide him with what he needs, more money. This is a relationship he's had for quite a while, and it's Conowingo Pizza on Route 1 in Cecil County, Maryland. It's a small place. I mean, Conowingo is not very big at all. But it's run by Little Tony Anthony. His father, Big Tony, who is connected to the mafia in New Jersey and New York, he runs the pizza place. But Little Tony owns everything up there. He owns stuff on Route 40 all the way out. He owns millions and millions of dollars in real estate that he gets rent and everything (inaudible). That all came from drugs. Rosati has worked with him for many years. So have the local police up there. And he's just not touchable. But he gets this is his steady supplier, his steady source. They bring in the drugs. Once a week they bring in dough from New Jersey, and one of their trucks it varies which one, but one of those is a drug shipment. Then it's brought in, broken down and taken out. It's only once a month. And there's a lot. You're talking hundreds of pounds of drugs broken down. Many of it a lot of the heroin that's brought in could be, you know, a couple hundred pounds of heroin is actually broken down and taken down into Baltimore and D.C.

  INTERVIEWER: Mostly heroin dealer, then?

  INTERVIEWEE: He is now. He used to be more coke, some pills, things like that, but the heroin has jumped way, way up, and it's predominantly heroin at this point.

  INTERVIEWER: Now, is Rosati just running protection for them?  Is he moving things for them, or what's his role in that specific operation? Do you know?

  INTERVIEWEE: He can give them intelligence.

  INTERVIEWER: Okay.

  INTERVIEWEE: That's the big thing. If somebody is talking in Baltimore or D.C., he can let them know or Maryland. He provides intelligence. He gets paid. He can provide him with whatever he needs. If he comes up on a bust or something because he's always skimming stuff then he can move it through them. They'll gladly take care of what he comes up with. They were helping previously when the big opioid crisis was going, he was coming up with 20, 30, 40 thousand pills opioid pills of one kind or another during a month, you know, one month. They helped him move it.· Because he was actually he had pharmacists that were working with him in Maryland, ones he was protecting. And they set up, you know, a softball thing.· They set up non-profit groups to launder all this money.· But when he was just getting so much 30, 40 thousand pills they had to move there  I mean, he needed their help to move that kind of stuff. But he provides intelligence to this day.

  INTERVIEWER: Now, has there with now, with this group you've just described, actually you mentioned one other "Shawn," an FBI guy, "Shawn."

  INTERVIEWEE: Henry. Shawn Henry. He's just nasty. He's involved up to his eyebrows. His Dirty Trick Squad, he was nasty. He's a lot like Strock, thinks he's a computer expert, had no problem sending information to any foreign government that would pay. He's all about money. He's CrowdStrike now. He's nasty. He's just a complete criminal with a badge, or previously. He's not FBI now, but he's still connected to them, still helps with certain things. But he is a flat-out criminal.

  INTERVIEWER: Okay.· Now, was there any specific tie-in with Roberts to this group with the things that they would do for Rosenstein?  Was this group involved in any of these plotted murders of the Supreme Court justices that you know of, or local judges?     

  INTERVIEWEE: They provided evidence not evidence. I won't say "evidence." They provided intelligence from illegal surveillance of one kind or another to the FBI people to Sean Henry, who would take it to these FBI insiders, these false-flag people who had infiltrated the groups, so they were getting it from both sides. Roberts certainly knew about it. He helped with FISA warrants, anything that was connected to it. He knew about that side, of course, because he wanted a say in who he would replace would be replaced. But they would he Roberts wasn't involved with the day-to-day nitty-gritty of the Dirty Trick Squad, because it was just day in and day out, constantly, non-stop. And they it wasn't just all (inaudible) and drive around and more driving, things like this when they had some really nasty stuff to do, like with Cheryl Acheson. They did that from an apartment complex. You drive around with a laptop until you find an open port and you go in through there. So, he was involved in the higher-level planning but not necessarily the nitty-gritty of getting the intelligence and getting it to the FBI people. That would be Henry who would get it to the FBI.

  INTERVIEWER: Okay. Well, I think that's all the questions we have for now.· We'll probably reach back out if we have some more specifics that we wanna get cleared up. Thank you for your time today, and we will be in contact.

  INTERVIEWEE: Thank you. I appreciate it

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