Israeli Consulate Behind Alleged $25M Extortion Scheme Targeting Matt Gaetz, Leaked Texts Suggest

"We only asked for $25 million as an estimate at first. We came way down."
Chris Menahan

InformationLiberation
Apr. 05, 2021

The alleged extortion scheme to shake down congressman Matt Gaetz' father of $25 million and fund a black op to free rogue CIA operative Robert Levinson from detention in Iran may have been run out of the Israeli consulate in New York, according to leaked texts obtained by The American Conservative.


From The American Conservative, "Leaked Texts From Israeli Consulate Employee Show More Details In Gaetz-Levinson Funding Scheme":
Three screenshots of texts between Scott Adams, creator of Dilbert, and Jake Novak, media director of the Israeli consulate in New York City were shared with TAC. The messages were authenticated by one of the parties to them.

In the first screenshot, Novak messaged Adams last Saturday to tell him about the investigation into Gaetz. The New York Times story on the Gaetz investigation was not published until Tuesday.
In the second, Novak appears to represent himself as deeply involved in the efforts to free Bob Levinson from Iran, telling Adams “this is screwing up my efforts to free Bob Levinson.”
"Gaetz's dad was secretly finding [sic] us," he continues. "So I'm very much wanting this to be untrue. I've got a commando team leader friend of mine nervously waiting for the wire transfers to clear."

In the third screenshot, Novak casts doubt on Gaetz's claims that he is being extorted. "The real documents do not extort," he writes, "And we only asked for $25 million as an estimate at first. We came way down."


Novak locked his Twitter account after the story came out.



Over the weekend, Gaetz retweeted the TAC story as shared by Raheem Kassam:


Gaetz may have been ensnared in a honey pot operation by Seminole County Tax Collector Joel Greenberg, an Epstein-esque figure on the outskirts of MAGA Inc. who is currently in jail awaiting charges for sex trafficking a minor between the age of 14 and 17, as well as fraud, identity theft and more.



Gaetz last week shared evidence and text messages with the Washington Examiner showing the alleged $25 million extortion demands his family received from former DOJ official David McGee and former Air Force intelligence officer Bob Kent.

One text Gaetz shared showed Kent saying he has "a plan that can make [Matt Gaetz's] future legal and political problems go away" which involved Gaetz's father funding a black op to rescue former FBI agent Robert Levinson, who went missing in Iran in 2007 while on a rogue mission for the CIA.

"McGee is the attorney for the Levinson family," The Washington Examiner reported. "Kent in December 2018 had planned a secret mission to try to rescue Levinson, but he was reportedly thwarted by the federal government."

"Despite the family members of Levinson saying in March 2020 that they presumed him to be dead based on information given by U.S. officials, the alleged message from Kent said he had located Levinson in Iran and has two 'proof of life videos,'" The Washington Examiner reported. "Kent also requested the Gaetz family’s help returning Levinson in exchange for giving Matt Gaetz credit for the operation and promising a presidential pardon for unnamed legal issues."



The Examiner continued:
The next day, on March 17, Don Gaetz purportedly met with Kent, and Kent handed him a three-page document outlining "Project Homecoming." That document detailed a plan to save Levinson at the cost of a $25 million loan.

The Project Homecoming document states that Gaetz is "under investigation by the FBI for various public corruption and public integrity issues" and alleges that the FBI is aware of photos depicting Gaetz in a "sexual orgy with underage prostitutes."

"In exchange for the funds being arranged, and upon the release of Mr. Levinson, the team that delivers Mr. Levinson to the President of The United States shall strongly advocate that President Biden issue a Presidential Pardon, or instruct the Department of Justice to terminate any and all investigations involving Congressman Gaetz," the document reads.


Gaetz's father contacted the FBI about the alleged extortion attempt and was going to wear a wire to blow the whole operation wide open while making his first $4.5 million payment but someone tipped the New York Times off before the sting could go through.



Gaetz "suspects that a leak to the New York Times story about the investigation into whether he had a relationship with a 17-year-old was timed to thwart the FBI investigation into the extortion," the Examiner reported.
"This former Department of Justice official tomorrow was supposed to be contacted by my father so that specific instructions could be given regarding the wiring of $4.5 million as a down payment on this bribe," Gaetz said. "I don't think it's a coincidence that tonight, somehow, the New York Times is leaking this information, smearing me, and ruining the investigation that would likely result in one of the former colleagues of the current DOJ being brought to justice for trying to extort me and my family."

The 17-year-old in question "doesn't exist," Gaetz said, adding that he has "not had a relationship with a 17-year-old. That is totally false."
Though Gaetz's story in the Examiner got a fair bit of coverage, the leaked texts from TAC showing the Israeli consulate may have been running the operation have been completely ignored.

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