CIA Denials and COVID “Coverup” Allegations Fuel Turbulent Week for U.S. Intelligence

CIA

Welcome to this edition of The Intelligence Brief… This week, a series of fast-moving controversies has placed the U.S. Intelligence Community under scrutiny, following viral (and contested) claims of an alleged CIA raid on the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and explosive testimony from a former intelligence officer alleging a federal coverup of COVID-19’s origins. In our analysis, we’ll be looking at 1) how prime time TV and social media-driven narratives about intelligence activity have quickly spread—and been challenged by officials, 2) the competing claims surrounding alleged CIA retaliation and oversight disputes raised during congressional testimony, 3) how the agency’s own shifting stance on COVID-19’s origins continues to fuel debate between policymakers and the scientific community, and 4) what this latest episode reveals about the growing intersection of intelligence, politics, and public trust in an era of fragmented information.

Quote of the Week

“As the CIA has already assessed, COVID-19 most likely originated from a lab leak, and efforts to undermine that conclusion are disingenuous.”

– Liz Lyons, CIA spokesperson

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U.S. Intelligence Community Pushes Back as Controversies Swirl Over CIA Claims

It’s been a bit of an odd week for the U.S. Intelligence Community.

Over the last 48 hours, renewed interest in the CIA’s Project MK-ULTRA has emerged amid claims of an alleged raid that targeted the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), as well as new allegations from a former intelligence officer who testified before lawmakers on Wednesday about an alleged federal cover-up involving the origins of COVID-19.

Now, senior officials within the Intelligence Community (IC) are pushing back, challenging narratives that have made their way into news feeds via social media and widely shared video clips.

So what are the recent claims at the heart of these new controversies, whose uniting thread involves a three-letter agency long linked to illegal and/or unethical covert operations, many of which remain partially hidden behind the veil of official secrecy? Read on, dear subscribers, as we attempt to make sense of the latest IC controversies that have erupted over the last few days.

A Raid at the ODNI?

This week, claims involving an alleged CIA raid on the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) surfaced on social media.

The supposed incident was initially reported in a post by Fox News host Jesse Watters, in a now-deleted posting on X. Shortly thereafter, news was widely circulated that the spy agency had seized several dozen boxes of files containing records related to JFK and Project MK-ULTRA, which were reportedly being processed by the ODNI in advance of their public release.

The alleged incident prompted Congressman Anna Paulina Luna to fire back with plans to subpoena the agency if the files weren’t returned. “The CIA has 24 hours to return the documents to Tulsi Gabbard’s office or else I will make a motion to issue a subpoena,” Luna wrote in a posting on X. “These documents have been requested by Congress.”

Later that evening, after the news had entered the prime-time news cycle, DNI spokesperson Olivia Coleman responded with her own post on X, challenging the claims.

“This is false,” Coleman wrote, adding “the CIA did not raid the DNI’s office.”

The claims seemed a bit odd from the outset, especially since the DNI has oversight authority above the CIA. This has been the case since the 2004 Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act, which outlined that the DNI leads the IC, and that the CIA Director, therefore, is required to report to the DNI.

That’s not to say that the CIA hasn’t been accused of operating outside of the law in the past. Nor was the situation involving the alleged seizure of JFK and MK-ULTRA files from the ODNI the only controversy America’s spy agency found itself embroiled in this week.

A CIA COVID-19 Coverup?

On Wednesday, a CIA whistleblower provided testimony before lawmakers claiming that there had been a federal cover-up involving the origins of COVID-19.

Speaking before the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, James Erdman III, a former intelligence officer, described himself during introductory statements as a “career CIA operations officer” who was “on joint-duty assignment at the ODNI Director’s Initiatives Group, or the DIG, between March 2025 and April 2026. I was responsible for leading the DIG’s investigation into COVID origins, anomalous health incidents, and unidentified anomalous phenomena.”

Erdman, in other words, had a pretty diverse and interesting assignment during his time at the ODNI’s DIG. However, his reasons for speaking before lawmakers on Wednesday were very specific: “I’m here today to discuss the COVID coverup,” he told members of the Senate this week, along with its national security implications and “CIA refusal to comply with lawful oversight, as well as how we remedy these problems.”

In addition to his background with the IC, Fox News recently described Erdman as a “military veteran who co-founded the grassroots advocacy group Feds For Freedom, an organization that emerged during the COVID-19 vaccine mandate battles involving federal workers and members of the military,” though conceding that “public information online about Erdman’s early life is sparse” and that much of what is available appears on the Feds For Freedom website.

“Intelligence community leaders and senior analysts downplayed the possibility that the COVID pandemic originated as a result of a lab incident,” Erdman told lawmakers on Wednesday, adding that analysts who presented evidence supporting a lab origin for the virus became the targets of retaliation by the spy agency.

“CIA managers retaliated against them for their refusal to agree with management’s middle-of-the-night anonymous rewrite of the analysis, which changed the assessment to a non-call judgment,” Erdman said in testimony he provided on Wednesday.

A major focus of Wednesday’s hearing had also been Dr. Anthony Fauci, of whom Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, the Committee’s Chairman, asked how the former Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases could “objectively comment on a discussion of COVID origins when he approved the very funding that may have caused the Pandemic Virus?”

The CIA Pushes Back

Following Wednesday’s hearing, Liz Lyons, a CIA spokesperson, pushed back on the claims presented during the hearing.

“The Committee acted in bad faith by subpoenaing an Agency officer for testimony today without notifying CIA, despite having already obtained closed-door testimony from the individual previously,” Lyons wrote in a posting on X.

Lyons further charged that Erdman was “not appearing as a whistleblower in pursuit of the truth, but instead in response to the subpoena issued by Chairman Paul.”

“This proceeding amounts to nothing more than dishonest political theater masquerading as a congressional hearing,” Lyons wrote in her statement. “As the CIA has already assessed, COVID-19 most likely originated from a lab leak, and efforts to undermine that conclusion are disingenuous.”

The debate over COVID-19’s origins is complex and remains highly controversial. As Lyons notes, the CIA had already shifted its position early last year, claiming that COVID-19 likely originated from a laboratory in Wuhan, China—a reversal from the agency’s past positions, which was made public shortly after current CIA Director John Ratcliffe was sworn into office.

Clashing with IC assessments are views from the scientific community, which continue to argue that there is little evidence that genetic engineering could be responsible for the virus, and that most reliable scientific evidence suggests the zoonotic transmission hypothesis remains most likely.

Despite the ongoing debate, it is noteworthy that, following the CIA’s apparent shift in its views regarding COVID’s origins in January 2025, an agency spokesperson conceded that “CIA continues to assess that both research-related and natural origin scenarios of the COVID-19 pandemic remain plausible.”

Altogether, this week’s developments underscore a few things, including how quickly the complexities of U.S. intelligence issues can become entangled with politics, public distrust, and the tangled web of fragmented information.

While the debate over issues like the origins of COVID-19 will no doubt continue, events over the last 48 hours at least serve as a reminder that transparency and accountability in intelligence matters are rarely straightforward—and that definitive answers often emerge only slowly, if at all.

That concludes this week’s installment of The Intelligence Brief. You can read past editions of our newsletter at our website, or if you found this installment online, don’t forget to subscribe and get future email editions from us here. Also, if you have a tip or other information you’d like to send along directly to me, you can email me at micah [@] thedebrief [dot] org, or reach me on X: @MicahHanks.

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