Schiff Comments On Allegations In Report
Senator Adam Schiff is known for theatrics in front of a camera, but this time, the drama unfolding around him is not of his own making—and it’s not going away. On Meet the Press, Schiff attempted to frame the ongoing mortgage fraud investigation against him as another example of political retaliation, casting himself as the latest target of a weaponized government. But moments later, that narrative collided with hard evidence: legal documents—specifically a “Deed of Trust”—that raise serious questions about the truthfulness of Schiff’s statements regarding his residency.
The key issue? A paper trail that appears to contradict Schiff’s public claims. Multiple legal documents filed over more than a decade reportedly list his Maryland property—not his California home—as his primary residence. That’s a critical distinction when it comes to mortgage and refinancing terms. And if the allegations hold, it could amount to nothing less than mortgage fraud—a felony offense.
NBC News’ Kristen Welker: “Are these allegations of [mortgage fraud] true?”
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA): “They’re patently false, and the president knows it… [Director of U.S. Federal Housing FHFA William Pulte] knows it he’s essentially doing the president’s bidding against me,… pic.twitter.com/xw2z7p5Gu6
— RedWave Press (@RedWave_Press) August 24, 2025
Schiff’s defense rests heavily on denial. “They’re patently false,” he insisted during the NBC interview. “There’s no ‘there’ there.” But that assertion is already being challenged, not by political enemies or anonymous sources, but by notarized documents and sworn property filings that tell a different story.
Christine Bish, the California-based activist and congressional candidate who originally unearthed the issue, is not backing down. Armed with hundreds of pages of tax forms, refinancing documents, and Deeds of Trust from 2009, 2011, and 2013, Bish says the facts are clear—and they show a deliberate misrepresentation of primary residence status to secure more favorable loan terms. And crucially, Bish’s claims are bolstered by a resurfaced video of Schiff himself insisting, unequivocally, that his California residence has always been his primary home.
They are absolutely true. Over 300 pages of documents, including notarized property records and tax forms. I will put my facts against Schiff’s lies any day. https://t.co/2NwIGDbPpq pic.twitter.com/lfQMNP6liY
— Christine Bish (@BishForCongress) August 24, 2025
That’s where the investigation begins to sharpen. According to RedState and other sources, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Maryland is now formally investigating Schiff for alleged mortgage fraud. In a letter sent by FHFA Director William Pulte to Attorney General Pam Bondi and Deputy AG Todd Blanche, the case is laid out in stark terms: multiple instances of alleged occupancy misrepresentation, falsified documentation, and misleading declarations made under penalty of perjury.
President Trump, for his part, hasn’t held back. Calling Schiff a “scam artist” on Truth Social, Trump has gone so far as to say Schiff should face prison time if the allegations are proven. That’s not just rhetoric—it reflects the seriousness of the charges now circling the senator.
Damning video evidence adds to Adam Schiff’s legal woes.
Credit: @LarryOConnor pic.twitter.com/t8vxgbja8x— Big Fish (@BigFish3000) July 18, 2025
At the moment, Schiff has not been formally charged, and the presumption of innocence must be upheld. But the documents are public. The video is on record. The denials are growing weaker. And Schiff has already begun assembling a legal defense fund—an ominous signal that he may be preparing for a protracted legal battle ahead.
