By Sara Noble
There was a big story Thursday. Several whistleblowers came out to talk about the way they were aggressively prosecuted while they were working with journalists to expose government misconduct and they compared their treatment to politically connected and powerful people accused of the same or worst who received a slap on the wrist.
Based on the whistleblowers' stories, Hillary has to go to jail!

Hillary Clinton was mentioned during the press conference.
This is a woman in a high level position and one of the most targeted in the world using a private server.
She even had an apologist defend her from the White House itself, said the ethics advisor of an intel group.
One whistleblower, Jeffrey Sterling, a former CIA agent, was convicted on two charges but one was obstruction of justice for one missing email that wasn’t his fault.
Jeffrey Alexander Sterling, was a source in the James Risen case and was being investigated during the Bush administration. In 2010 he was indicted under the Espionage Act of 1917, one of the few people in US history whose alleged contact with a journalist was punished under espionage law.
Risen was subpoenaed in relation to the case in 2008. He fought the subpoena, and it expired in the summer of 2009. In what the New York Times called “a rare step,” the Obama administration renewed the subpoena in 2010. In 2011 Risen wrote a detailed response to the subpoena, describing his reasons for refusing to reveal his sources, the public impact of his work, and his experiences with the Bush administration.
In July 2013, the US Court of Appeals from the Fourth Circuit ruled that Risen must testify in the trial of Jeffrey Sterling. The court wrote “so long as the subpoena is issued in good faith and is based on a legitimate need of law enforcement, the government need not make any special showing to obtain evidence of criminal conduct from a reporter in a criminal proceeding."