Biden’s DOJ Went Full Coup: Feds Secretly Spied On Jim Jordan For Two Years
Description
The Biden Justice Department secretly subpoenaed two years of Rep. Jim Jordan’s personal phone records during the early phase of the “Arctic Frost” investigation—the probe that later became Special Counsel Jack Smith’s January 6 case against President Trump.
Where’s the arrests of Adam Schiff and everyone involved with RussiaGate, Artic Frost, 2020 stolen election and J6?
It is an absolute abuse of power aimed at political opponents — a soft coup.
The subpoena, issued in 2022 before Smith formally took over, demanded Verizon hand over Jordan’s toll records dating back to Jan. 1, 2020, including details of who he called or messaged and when—though not the contents.
The order was hidden behind a one-year gag order, preventing disclosure. Jordan was, at the time, the top Republican on the Judiciary Committee, actively overseeing the DOJ—making the request a direct intrusion into congressional oversight territory.
Jordan is now one of several GOP lawmakers—including Kevin McCarthy, Lindsey Graham, Ted Cruz, Ron Johnson, and others—who recently discovered the DOJ secretly sought their records. Republicans say the subpoenas violated separation of powers and weaponized federal law enforcement against elected officials.
They spied on President Trump.
They spied on Senators.
Now, we just learned, they spied on me.
If they can do it to us, they can do it to you. https://t.co/e0z5zJO9G3 pic.twitter.com/jGb2VKIIPN
— Rep. Jim Jordan (@Jim_Jordan) November 21, 2025
Yet another exhibit in the disturbing overreach of the Biden administration. Fox News: The Department of Justice subpoenaed the personal phone records of House Judiciary Committee chairman Jim Jordan in 2022, seeking the Ohio Republican’s phone data covering a more than two-year period. The subpoena, obtained by Fox News Digital, shows a federal prosecutor who later worked on special counsel Jack Smith’s Jan. 6 investigation ordered Verizon to hand over the phone data, also known as toll records, reaching back to Jan. 1, 2020. The request appears to be the most expansive yet of the publicly known subpoenas targeting senators and current and former House members during Arctic Frost, the investigation that led to Smith bringing election-related charges against President Donald Trump (Fox News).




