‘Gender-Fluid’ Biden Admin Official Placed On Leave After Being Charged With Felony

Sam Brinton, the “gender-fluid” Biden administration official who reportedly stole a woman’s luggage at an airport, has been placed on leave over the incident.

Brinton, deputy assistant secretary of the Office of Spent Fuel and Waste Disposition in the U.S. Department of Energy, allegedly removed a luggage tag from a navy blue Vera Bradley suitcase bag, dropped it into his handbag, and “then left the area at a quick pace” on September 16, 2022, according to a criminal complaint reported by Alpha News.

“Sam Brinton is on leave from DOE, and Dr. Kim Petry is performing the duties of Deputy Assistant Secretary of Spent Fuel and Waste Disposition,” an Energy Department spokesperson told The Hill.

Minneapolis-St. Paul (MSP) International Airport authorities confirmed to The Daily Wire an investigation involving Sam Brinton is underway.

Brinton, who has caused a stir among Americans for his role in the federal government for dressing in drag and boasting online about his puppy role-play fetish, reportedly flew into MSP with American Airlines just before 4:30 p.m. from Washington, D.C., According to the complaint, Brinton traveled without a checked bag, indicating he had no purpose to claim a bag after landing.

The complaint alleges Brinton left the airport in an Uber and checked into the InterContinental St. Paul Riverfront hotel with the blue bag.

Briton returned to MSP two days later, on September 18, and flew back to Washington, D.C., with the same bag.

Records and video surveillance showed the suitcase belonged to a female passenger who flew into the MSP on a Delta flight from New Orleans. According to a report, she notified law enforcement that her bag and the contents inside — valued at around $2,325 — had gone missing in the baggage claim area on the same day Brinton allegedly took the luggage.

Nearly three weeks later, the criminal complaint alleges, video surveillance footage from Dulles International Airport in Virginia captured Brinton returning from Europe with the bag on October 9.

Authorities contacted Brinton that same day, asking if he “took anything that did not belong” to him.

“Not that I know of,” Brinton allegedly responded, but later admitted he took the bag.

“If I had taken the wrong bag, I am happy to return it, but I don’t have any clothes for another individual. That was my clothes when I opened the bag,” he told police, according to the complaint.

He allegedly called authorities two hours later and apologized for not being “completely honest,” adding he took the bag thinking it was his in a state of exhaustion. The complaint also alleges Brinton realized it wasn’t his bag after opening it up at the hotel, at which point he “got nervous” and “didn’t know what to do.”

Briton allegedly told authorities he removed the clothes from the suitcase in the hotel room and returned to D.C. with the bag because it would have been “weirder” if he had left the bag at the hotel. However, authorities said no clothing was recovered from the hotel room.

Related: Top GOP Senator Demands Biden Admin Fire, Revoke Clearance Of ‘Gender-Fluid’ Official Charged With Stealing Luggage

Senator Graham: Apple Is Making A Big ‘Mistake’ By Caving To The Chinese Communist Party

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) said during a Fox News interview Wednesday that Apple is making a big “mistake” when it comes to siding with the Chinese Communist Party and their crackdowns on protests throughout China.

“Corporate appeasement of the Chinese Communist Party is pretty rampant,” Graham told Fox News. “I like Apple. They’re a great American company. But the Chinese Communist Party writes the rules of the road. And to do business in China, you either leave the customer base or you follow their lead.”

“The NBA has appeased China. The movie industry appeases China, now Apple. And I think this is a — this is a mistake,” he continued. “So, you have got Apple threatening to take Twitter out of the Apple Store and at the same time doing the bidding of the Communist Party, restricting sharing of information to people who are trying to protest.”

“I think we have got it backwards here,” he added. “And I think what drives this is just money and market share.”

On Wednesday, Twitter CEO Elon Musk met with Apple CEO Tim Cook, after which Musk tweeted regarding the notion that Twitter would be removed from the App Store: “Among other things, we resolved the misunderstanding about Twitter potentially being removed from the App Store. Tim was clear that Apple never considered doing so.”

WATCH:

Watch the latest video at foxnews.com

TRANSCRIPT:

SANDRA SMITH, FOX NEWS ANCHOR: The Chinese Communist Party cracking down on protesters as they rally against COVID lockdowns.

We are now learning America’s largest company, Apple, has restricted the use of its AirDrop feature in the communist nation. It allowed users to share content between Apple devices and dodge China’s censorship. And now Elon Musk says Apple’s threatening to boot Twitter from its App Store.

So, how did we get to a point where big tech companies consider 280 characters a bigger threat than the communist regime?

Let’s bring in South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham.

Senator, good to have you here today.

SEN. LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-SC): Thank you.

SMITH: Why are we here today? And why are we not going tougher on China for its behavior?

GRAHAM: Money. You got a billion people in China.

Corporate appeasement of the Chinese Communist Party is pretty rampant. I like Apple. They’re a great American company. But the Chinese Communist Party writes the rules of the road. And to do business in China, you either leave the customer base or you follow their lead.

The NBA has appeased China. The movie industry appeases China, now Apple. And I think this is a — this is a mistake. So, you have got Apple threatening to take Twitter out of the Apple Store and at the same time doing the bidding of the Communist Party, restricting sharing of information to people who are trying to protest.

I think we have got it backwards here. And I think what drives this is just money and market share.

JOHN ROBERTS, FOX NEWS ANCHOR: Yes, well, obviously too Apple has got a lot invested in this…

GRAHAM: Yes.

ROBERTS: … because of the protests against the COVID lockdowns at Foxconn factories. It looks like Apple is going to be short some six million iPhone Pros this year. So that’s definitely going to hurt their bottom line.

But it also gets into the idea of free speech when we pull back to 30,000 feet here, and we take a look at the idea that Apple, according to Elon Musk, may reexamine whether or not the Twitter app is available on the Apple Store.

And Musk also tweeted this — quote — “Apple has mostly stopped advertising on Twitter. Do they hate free speech in America?”

(LAUGHTER)

GRAHAM: Well, all I can say, that Apple is a private company and Twitter’s a private company. They have their differences.

I would hope that Apple would keep allowing Twitter to be part of the Apple Store. But, big tech, you can’t sue these people because of Section 230. And there’s no regulatory scheme that works.

So I’m going to unveil a Digital Regulatory Commission to deal with social media companies like Apple and Twitter and Google. We need some regulatory environment to control the abuses of power here. So, I’m going to do that with Elizabeth Warren. You look for something that can bring us together in Washington, social media is out of control. They need to be regulated in some fashion.

And I think that brings both parties together.

SMITH: OK, so then maybe you agree with Karine Jean-Pierre at the Biden White House, who said this. Listen.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

KARINE JEAN-PIERRE, WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY: We’re all keeping a close eye on this. We’re all monitoring what’s — what’s currently occurring. And we see — we see it with our own eyes of what you all are reporting and just for ourselves what’s happening on Twitter.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

SMITH: So, the White House says it’s keeping a close eye on what is happening at Twitter.

GRAHAM: Yes.

SMITH: Do you agree with — with that?

GRAHAM: No, I think somebody needs to regulate social media companies, who are the largest companies on the planet.

If they take down your content — I like Elon Musk. Well, there may be somebody in charge of Twitter tomorrow that I don’t like. So, what happens if you’re a consumer if Twitter or any other group takes your content down? You have to appeal to the company yourself — itself.

I want to create a process where a consumer can make their case that my rights were abused to somebody other than the company. I’m not asking the White House to watch Twitter. We have the commission for securities. We have a commission for about every activity in America to make sure the consumer is protected.

When it comes to social media, your privacy is at risk, your content can be taken down because somebody doesn’t like you or what you’re saying. We need to have a system to deal with those problems.

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