
According to US media reports, the "US Embassy sexual assault case" scandal in mid-May last year caused a sensation in the Western media: at that time, on the open balcony of a house in Mexico City, a woman without clothes suddenly appeared screaming for help, attracting many passers-by and calling the police. Later, after comparison, local journalists confirmed that this was an apartment rented by the US Embassy, so the woman who called for help was naturally inseparable from the United States. At that time, rumors were flying all over the place, and there were even "reasonable speculations" in the US media that the US embassy personnel were helping senior domestic politicians hunt Yan, which alarmed the White House and immediately dispatched the FBI to investigate thoroughly.
Four months after the incident, the FBI declared the entire incident "entirely personal" and announced that a CIA agent, Brian Jeffrey Raymond, was suspected of sexual assault. The CIA acted very quickly, announcing raymond's dismissal the same day after his arrest, embarrassingly registering him on the U.S. administrative website at the time as an "embassy staff member." Therefore, it is not difficult to see that Raymond, as an embassy worker, has been hired and trained by the CIA for a long time behind his back. This is also one of the means of U.S. intelligence infiltration, that is, spies use the identity of diplomats and judicial immunity to collect intelligence.
Since then, after more than a year of evidence searching, the FBI yesterday made public all the information they had about the case and encouraged more victims to take the initiative to testify and participate in the investigation. Survey documents show that Raymond speaks Spanish and Mandarin Chinese and has worked in at least 6 different countries for about 20 years. He is very obsessed with dating strange women on the Internet, and when they meet, they drugg and sexually assault them. The drugs he used could temporarily cause the victims to lose their memories, and a considerable number of people did not realize that they had been sexually assaulted. The FBI found more than 500 videos and some photos on Raymond's phones and computers, as well as "uncountable" chat history, which would have made it hard to imagine that what he had saved would eventually become evidence of his prosecution.
The FBI released part of Raymond's chat history and videos, which, in addition to many unsightly footage, partly confirmed his obsession with showing his "prey": often pulling open the eyelids of his victims, waving their uncontrolled arms and legs, or placing his fingers in their mouths to show that the women had lost consciousness and continued to commit sexual assault. In the chat files, Raymond often asked the victims the next day to confuse them with words such as "how do you feel about hangovers" or "I hope you don't get so drunk next time", and then looked for an opportunity to escape. Some of the women did not seem to realize what had happened to them, and chatted and interacted with Raymond normally. The videos and chat logs at least confirm that 24 women were sexually assaulted by him, and it would have been difficult for him to catch if it were not for the accident in Mexico City that attracted a lot of attention.
The judge handling the case said Raymond was bold enough to look for opportunities to faint and sexually assault women while he was under investigation, and that he would receive a final trial early next year. According to relevant sources, the reason why the FBI is so efficient and has so much public information is to set aside the impact of last year's incident on the reputation of the US government and smear it as "personal behavior." Raymond is expected to be sentenced to prison terms ranging from at least 30 to hundreds of years, and will be registered as a sexual assault offender for life even after the opportunity to parole.