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Faith continues to drive long-suspended FBI Special Agent Garret O’Boyle as he waits for justice

Garrett O'Boyle, a longtime special agent of the FBI – he still awaits justice for obvious retaliation against him for being a whistleblower, but his Christian faith continues to drive him as his good name recovers after 30 months of hardship.

Sent one week after Empower monitoring
History of his incident Oboil told the FBI in a request to reconsider the revocation of the station's security clearance, while suffering from painful delays, he would use his experience to speak to people about Jesus Christ and the faith that supports him and his family.

“I have thought about Joseph's Bible accounting many times.”

“That's where I'm leaning more and more, I'm just trying to tell you the truth about Christ,” O'Boyle said in an interview with Blaze News. “So, if that's the purpose, and I think it already exists – and then I think so.

“If Christ can win some souls, who cares about what happens on earth, because I had to face, or my family had to face?” Oboyle said. “It's worth it for a large group.”

30 months and numbers

Oboyle, 38, of Waukesha County, Wisconsin, continues to share much of his story of becoming a weaponized FBI and the Department of Justice target. He observed a 30-month anniversary of suspension by the bureau, based on false accusations that he leaked information to project Veritas. His security clearance was revoked in July 2024.

O'Boyle lost his unborn baby due to a dream promotion, income, his home, medical benefits, his peace of mind, and ultimately a miscarriage in March 2024. Such a journey atrophys many, if not most, and beats many, but Oboyle leaps hard on his faith and regularly shares why Christ is the answer to everything.

“The Lord uses this, whatever his purpose is, even though we don't always understand,” O'Boyle said. “Who knows what the future holds? This will definitely be a linchpin moment for all of us. And we would be happy if we could continue to deny ourselves and point to the cross and say, “It's okay, I'm happy, Lord. Use me, even if it's difficult.” And this was certainly difficult. ”

Garrett O'Boyle, a suspended FBI special agent, regularly shares his Christian faith when discussing the whistleblower case.Photo by Chris Duzynski from Blaze News

O'Boyle co-hosts with former FBI special agent Steve Friend of “The”
American Radicals podcast,“I share my favourite biblical references in every episode. He cited advice from the poem sal, Genesis, the Old Testament prophet, St. Paul's letter. He does the same when he appeared in other media before a House Committee on Judicial Judicial hearing in May 2023.

“I have thought about Joseph's Bible accounting many times over the past 30 months,” he said. “Genesis 50 and 20.”

“Who can carry the flag of Christ?”

Jacob's 11th son and Rachel's firstborn, Joseph, was a father's favorite, as evidenced by the multicolored coat given to him. His envious brother planned to kill him, but instead took his clothes, sold him to slavery, and sent his coat back to Jacob, who was soaked in animal blood. After Jacob's death, the brothers come to Joseph, a respected Egyptian official, and ask for forgiveness.

And his brothers came to him. And worship the prostration on the ground they said: We are your servants. And he answered them: Don't be afraid: Can we resist the will of God? You thought of evil against me: But God has turned it into good, he may appreciate me.

O'Boyle said he draws a strong lesson from Joseph.

“He told them, 'What did you mean for evil, God means good,'” Oboil said. “And I'm resting a lot in it. Most of the time, I don't see good, so I don't feel good, I don't hear about good.”

O'Boyle said he's heard of it from people who openly talk about his faith on social media and on broadcasts. The experience is humble.

“There were already a few people reach out to me and said, “I am currently studying the Bible. I cannot believe in your faith. I have opened the Bible again for you.” And he said, “Well, that's not my fault.”

“It's the Holy Spirit in the workplace. That's not what Garrett O'Boyle does,” he said. “Why does God bother someone like me, why is I trying to carry the flag of Christ and move forward with that message? I'm no one there.

Former FBI Special Agent Kyle Seraphin (left) Interview On April 26, 2024, Special Agent Garrett O'Boyle was suspended on an episode of “Kyle Seraphin Show.” Both men are FBI whistleblowers.

Kyle Seraphine/Rumble, used with permission

O'Boyle, his wife, Heidi and their four daughters have been on a long, nightmare path since September 26, 2022, since he stepped into the FBI office in Virginia to start a new job. He was instead disqualified from his guns and qualifications, and poses as an unpaid suspension he went to Congress following the disclosure of a legally protected whistleblower.

The 22-page Empower Surveillance provides painfully detailed breakdowns in Oboyle's case, and he and his lawyers say they were visited by him for tracking vaccine mandates, joint trials without religious accommodation, tracking the activities of local school board members, targeting pro-life activists as potential terrorists, and targeting domestic terrorist inflation/padding. Empower surveillance represents Oboil in his case.

“It was soon revealed that no one within FBI management or leadership took his well-intentioned, protected disclosures of FBI misconduct seriously. “Therefore, starting from the second half of 2021, Sa O'Boyle began to launch Congress-protected disclosures on the FBI politicization and weaponization.”

“Wow, they really screwed that guy.”

O'Boyle said he believes that President Donald J. Trump's election and confirmation of Kash Patel as FBI director will have his case resolved by now. Patel was deeply familiar with the cases of Oboyle and other FBI whistleblowers. His foundation helped O'Boyle and others with funds for Christmas just before O'Boyle's FBI salary was cut off.

“I didn't think it would take this long,” he said. “To be honest, I didn't think I had to submit this letter… I go back and forth between hope and disappointment, and now I say I'm just indifferent. I'm not holding my breath.

O'Boyle said before confirmation that Patel had expressed his desire to return him and other FBI weaponization victims to the bureau.

“There's no clarity.”

“We thought that would provide some clarity after Trump was elected, but that's not,” O'Boyle said. “And once the cash was confirmed, we thought it would become even more clear, and that seemed like the direction we were heading.

“But there's no clarity yet. We must remove this monkey from our back before we can do what we can before we know what we should do in other lives.”

Even taking into account his personal bias in the case, O'Boyle said that anyone reading Empower's surveillance should understand the injustice of his and his family's circumstances.

“I don't know how to read it and then walk away and say, 'That guy was wrong.'

On March 20th, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), chairman of the Judicial Senate Committee;
I wrote it in Patel And Attorney General Pam Bondi urges him to “turn the ship right.”

“My office was told in many of these cases that my office had caused a quick and indefinite suspension while the FBI had inappropriately and intentionally delayed the process of dissenting unfavourable and deliberately delayed and deficient behavior,” Grassley wrote. “This act of tyrannical government has caused serious economic hardships.”

Garrett O'Boyle holds his wife Heidi and his youngest of four daughters at his home in Waukesha County, Wisconsin.Photo by Chris Duzynski from Blaze News

O'Boyle said he was trying to remain optimistic, but the continued delay makes it difficult to see justice dominate in his case.

“It seems so close, and it seems like it's a very easy right for them to do it,” he said. “I can almost taste it.

The FBI National Press Office told Blaze News that the department had not commented on the O'Boyle incident.

Despite hell, he and his family pass through him and his family, and O'Boyle says he does not regret his decision to fight to recover his name and his career.

“It's going to take years to get it back.”

“I remember vividly coming out of that FBI building. “I don't care what it needs. I'm going to fight this as long as I have to do this. “And thankfully, Heidi agreed to it and bought it. Certainly it comes with a struggle for both of us, but we're consistent with that belief.”

Oboyle acknowledges that Patel faces Hercules' challenges in reforming the FBI after years of political targeting of conservatives who support the rule of law.

“Think about the cultural corruption that took place in the FBI,” he said. “We got a new manager and a new assistant manager a few weeks later, so that won't change in weeks. It'll take years to get back.”

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