ABC News98%
Gold bars worth $40 million seized from home of former CIA officer: Prosecutors 91%
5/29/2026, 1:00:01 AM
BS Summary: This video contains 22 faulty reasoning types, including Appeal to Authority, Confirmation Bias, and Burden of Proof, with Negativity Bias as the most egregious example at 49% saturation with 173 hits. Analysis detected 867 faulty-reasoning hits from 353 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 86% and a BS Rank of 91% (1,556 of 16,813 videos). This video is worse (more manipulative) than 90.80% of the video peer group.
To the former CIA officer accused of fraud.
Prosecutors say he had hundreds of gold bars worth more than $40 million
stashed in his home.
David Rush is also accused of lying about his military and academic credentials for nearly two decades.
Here's ABC's Stephanie Ramos.
>> Tonight, tough questions for the CIA
after a former officer with top secret security clearance was accused of stashing $40 million in gold bars in his house and lying about his credentials
for nearly two decades.
The FBI seized 300 gold bars along with $2 million in cash and 35 luxury watches from the Virginia home of David Rush.
Prosecutors say he had requested the gold for work-related expenses, but they did not identify the work project he allegedly claimed would require so much currency.
>> The agency has always used what we call alternative funding sources.
Finding out that someone was using gold bars to actually make payments which obfuscates
the CIA's role in it is not is not the disturbing part.
The disturbing part is that he was able to get away with it.
>> An affidavit alleges Rush lied about his background since joining the CIA around 2009 claiming he had a degree from Clemson University, a master's from Rensselaer Polytechnic, and had been a Navy pilot.
But an investigation found no record he attended either school or had been a pilot.
>> The whole idea that somebody can make up where they went to college, pretend to have a pilot's license, but they don't have a pilot's license.
I mean, those are just such obvious glaring holes.
>> Prosecutors say Rush served in the Navy until 2015, but then falsely claimed he was in the Navy Reserve and stole $77,000 in military pay he was not entitled to.
>> Rush was arrested after the CIA referred the case to the FBI for investigation.
He's been charged with the theft of public money and he has not yet entered a plea.
Whit.
>> Stephanie Ramos, our thanks to you tonight.
Analysis
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