Skip to main content

Comer rips 'paid disrupter' as briefing on Clinton contempt push devolves into chaos https://ift.tt/vIDiXuN

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer's press conference devolved into chaos Wednesday morning when an apparent activist repeatedly interrupted and confronted the Kentucky Republican about his plans to initiate contempt of Congress proceedings against the Clintons.

Comer addressed reporters after Hillary Clinton missed her scheduled deposition in the committee's Jeffrey Epstein probe. 

Minutes after he began talking, however, a man who identified himself as a "citizen reporter" started heckling him and the other Republicans present.

"No, I'm still talking. I'm still talking," Comer snapped at the man when he first began interrupting his comments.

OVERSIGHT DEMS DROP EPSTEIN IMAGES A DAY BEFORE TRUMP ADMIN'S RELEASE

The man can be heard shouting, "Congressman, did you enter their sworn statements into the record?" in reference to the Clintons.

"Hey, get him out of here. You're not even a reporter," Comer said.

A few minutes later, when announcing the committee would depose Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell, the man began again, prompting Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., to comment, "Hey, the Cartoon Network called, and they want you to take your job back."

CLINTON TEAM DEMANDS TRUMP DOJ RELEASE 'ANY REMAINING' DOCS RELATED TO FORMER PRESIDENT, EPSTEIN

"I'm trying to answer questions. We've got a paid disrupter here. So this is — I feel like the Clintons have initiated the war room," Comer said.

The protester shot back, "Sir, I'm not paid, you're paid by the people."

Comer called for security to come at one point as the protester appeared to shout he was "having a conversation."

He ended the event by telling the press, "It's unfortunate this disruptor was here. We'll be happy to answer questions throughout the day about this."

But the chaos did not end there, as the man approached Comer when he began walking away.

He walked close by Comer, even appearing to make physical contact at one point, which prompted Capitol Police officers to separate the man from the GOP lawmakers.

The man appeared to be let off with a warning after police took a photograph of his identification.



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A look at Temu, Shein, Meituan, and other Chinese companies' expansion plans in Brazil, as they face slowing domestic demand and hurdles in the US and Europe (Meaghan Tobin/New York Times) https://ift.tt/F1qzQUR

Meaghan Tobin / New York Times : A look at Temu, Shein, Meituan, and other Chinese companies' expansion plans in Brazil, as they face slowing domestic demand and hurdles in the US and Europe   —  Confronted with tariffs and scrutiny in the United States and Europe, Chinese consumer brands are betting that they can become household names …

Miami-based Pelico, which offers a supply chain orchestration platform, raised a $40M Series B led by General Catalyst, bringing its total funding to $72M (Colin Campbell/Axios) https://ift.tt/kfjRq7o

Colin Campbell / Axios : Miami-based Pelico, which offers a supply chain orchestration platform, raised a $40M Series B led by General Catalyst, bringing its total funding to $72M   —  Supply chain orchestration platform Pelico raised $40 million in strategic financing led by General Catalyst, co-founder Tarik Benabdallah tells Axios Pro.

Tesla's robotaxi service will launch in Austin with just ~10 cars that are geofenced to avoid complex intersections and monitored by backup teleoperators (Richard Waters/Financial Times) https://ift.tt/4Pt6rf8

Richard Waters / Financial Times : Tesla's robotaxi service will launch in Austin with just ~10 cars that are geofenced to avoid complex intersections and monitored by backup teleoperators   —  Autonomous ride-hailing service to make tentative debut in Austin, Texas, with only about 10 cars  —  For Elon Musk, tech's great showman …