Skip to content
Case File
d-15034House OversightOther

Fragmented chat mentions of Ken Starr, Henry Kissinger, Sean Hannity, and Rick Gates

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #025736
Pages
1
Persons
1

Summary

The passage consists of disjointed, informal messages with no concrete allegations, dates, transactions, or actionable details. It merely references several high‑profile names in a vague context, offe Mentions of former White House counsel Ken Starr and former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger Reference to media figure Sean Hannity Casual mention of ‘Rick Gates’, likely former Trump campaign aide

This document is from the House Oversight Committee Releases.

View Source Collection

Persons Referenced (1)

Tags

informal-communicationpolitical-figuresinfluence-speculationpotential-influencehouse-oversight
Share
PostReddit

Related Documents (6)

House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

List of high‑profile individuals allegedly recorded by unknown source

The passage merely names a roster of politicians, officials, and public figures claimed to have been “taped” without any details on content, dates, transactions, or wrongdoing. It offers no concrete l Names a broad set of senior U.S. officials (e.g., Bill Clinton, VP Biden, Elena Kagan). Includes foreign‑policy figures (e.g., Henry Kissinger, Samantha Power). Mentions non‑political elites (archite

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Kissinger's Views on China and U.S. Strategy Cited in House Oversight Document

The passage offers general commentary on Henry Kissinger's perspective on China and historical references to U.S. officials. It contains no specific allegations, transactions, dates, or actionable lea Kissinger warns China’s rise could re‑bipolarize international relations. References to nationalist Chinese writer Liu Mingfu and U.S. officials like Nixon. Suggests the Obama administration may favo

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Kushner reportedly received counsel from Henry Kissinger about ‘deep state’ threats to the Trump administration

The passage offers a vague narrative about Kushner hearing warnings from Kissinger regarding intelligence agencies, but provides no concrete names, dates, transactions, or actionable evidence. It repe Kushner allegedly consulted Henry Kissinger on potential ‘deep state’ opposition. Names of intelligence officials (Brennan, Clapper, Rice, Ben Rhodes) are listed as perceived adversa The text frames

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Historical Overview of 20th‑Century Conflicts and America's Role

The passage provides a broad, narrative summary of wars, economic thought, and strategic theory without naming specific contemporary actors, transactions, or actionable allegations. It lacks concrete References to Keynes, Herman Kahn, and Henry Kissinger as historical sources. General claim that the U.S. emerged richer and more powerful after WWI, WWII, and the Cold War. Anecdotal quote from an u

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Opinion piece linking nuclear disarmament stance to perceived lack of sanctions on Syria and North Korea

The document is an editorial commentary without concrete evidence, dates, transactions, or actionable leads. It mentions high‑profile officials (Richard Perle, George Shultz, Henry Kissinger, James Pe Criticizes perceived inaction on sanctions against Syria and North Korea after a destroyed clandesti Contrasts Obama’s global‑zero stance with Bush’s approach, claiming no observable policy differenc

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Kissinger’s Cultural Analysis of China and Historical Reflections on Tiananmen and Korean War

The passage offers general historical commentary and cultural observations by Henry Kissinger without specific actionable leads, names, dates, or financial details. It references well-known events and Kissinger contrasts Chinese elite’s millennia‑long historical perspective with the American elite’s He argues Western sanctions after Tiananmen were naive given cultural differences. Kissinger cites

1p

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.