Breaking claims exploded across social media and alternative political circles late Wednesday night after reports surfaced alleging that personnel connected to the Central Intelligence Agency entered offices tied to Tulsi Gabbard and removed boxes of sensitive documents at gunpoint.
By Hans Wilder
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Breaking claims exploded across social media and alternative political circles late Wednesday night after reports surfaced alleging that personnel connected to the Central Intelligence Agency entered offices tied to Tulsi Gabbard and removed boxes of sensitive documents at gunpoint.
At the time of publication, there has been no official confirmation from the White House, the DNI, or the CIA itself. However, Congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna reportedly referenced the incident publicly, claiming files connected to Martin Luther King Jr. investigations and alleged MK-Ultra-style mind control programs were among the materials taken.
If true, the implications would be staggering.
The CIA is legally restricted from conducting domestic law enforcement operations on U.S. soil against American entities. That’s not a conspiracy theory — that’s basic post-Watergate intelligence law. So naturally, Americans are now asking a very uncomfortable question:
What exactly happened?
And perhaps even more importantly: who authorized it?
The timing has only fueled speculation. President Donald Trump is currently overseas, and online commentators are already using words like “shadow government,” “deep state,” and yes — “coup.”
Now before everybody starts reenacting spy movies in their basement while eating cold pizza and yelling at their television, it’s important to stress this story is still developing. Facts are limited. Claims are flying faster than a Pentagon budget increase. But if armed intelligence personnel truly entered the office of the nation’s intelligence director and removed materials without transparent legal authority, the situation would instantly become one of the biggest constitutional crises in modern American history.
And oddly enough, there’s a Watertown connection buried deep inside this story.
The modern CIA traces much of its early Cold War influence and structure to Allen Dulles and his brother John Foster Dulles — two towering figures of the postwar American intelligence empire. The Dulles family has deep roots in Watertown, something many locals either forget or never learned in school.
Allen Dulles oversaw some of the CIA’s most controversial operations during the Cold War era, including covert regime-change operations overseas and programs that later fueled decades of suspicion surrounding intelligence overreach. Critics have long accused the Dulles-era CIA of operating with virtually unchecked power during the height of anti-communist paranoia.
And now here we are in 2026, once again hearing allegations involving intelligence agencies, secret files, domestic operations, and mind control documents.
History doesn’t always repeat itself.
But sometimes it walks back into the room wearing sunglasses and carrying banker boxes.
The Watertown Post will continue monitoring this developing situation closely as more information becomes available.
