Trump To Reopen Biden-Era White House Cocaine Scandal

The FBI under Trump-appointed leadership has reopened three politically explosive investigations—each one carrying the potential to disrupt Washington’s power circles and rattle the Biden White House.

FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino dropped the bombshell on Sunday, revealing that the bureau is “pouring fresh resources” into the following:

The bag of cocaine found in the West Wing during the 2023 July 4th weekend is back in the spotlight. Bongino says “whistleblowers” suspect ties to people close to President Biden.

The bag was once written off due to lack of fingerprints or DNA, but now, the Trump-aligned FBI is digging in.

“This isn’t over,” Bongino posted. “We’re following new leads.”

The unprecedented leak of the Dobbs v. Jackson draft opinion—which led to the fall of Roe v. Wade—is back under the microscope. The original probe ended in failure, with no leaker named.

Trump, furious at the time, called for imprisoning the reporters who broke the story. Bongino now says the hunt has been revived with “weekly briefings” underway.

Bombs placed outside DNC and RNC HQs on the eve of the Capitol riot remain a mystery. The FBI claims it’s ramping up resources to unmask the individual caught on surveillance.

With January 6 still a political powder keg, this fresh push could ignite new debates—and possibly arrests.

The FBI’s new leadership duo—Director Kash Patel and Deputy Bongino—have vowed to clean house and restore “integrity.”

Patel, a longtime Trump loyalist, has largely stayed out of the press, but Bongino made it clear: the reform agenda is in motion and media theatrics are out.

“We’ve done one interview. That’s it. The rest of our work will speak for itself,” Bongino said, broadcasting directly to followers on X.

Critics are already accusing the Trump-aligned FBI of waging political warfare against institutions seen as liberal strongholds—Harvard, elite media, and the Supreme Court.

Supporters, however, hail the move as long-overdue accountability in a system riddled with selective justice.

The FBI is now actively seeking tips from the public for all three investigations. “If you know something, say something,” Bongino urged.