There's also precedent for prosecutors who withhold exculpatory evidence to be disbarred, but I don't see you championing for that to happen here.
What's a rain delay in judicial terms? He knew the government would ultimately appeal the decision if he ruled to deny the motion, so the steps here were fairly clear.
There's also precedent for prosecutors who withhold exculpatory evidence to be disbarred, but I don't see you championing for that to happen here.
Why would I? The DOJ itself didn't even fire the prosecutor in this case, much less seeking any legal remedies. That's precisely what's really weird with this move.
It was ass clownery either way.
Let's not do it cossomeone give me reasons
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So you really didn't read it, and still made the claim. No amount of emoticons is going to deflect from that fact.
I haven't read anything new today. This is an old story. Judge was a total bag. FBI were bags. That's who you're sperm shielding for.
Cherp with more nothing w's.
It was new evidence uncovered by Jensen. The lead prosecutor was sitting on and hiding evidence from Flynn and the court. Not sure why this is so hard for you to grasp.
Which is exactly what I said, after all, the lead prosecutor was working for the DOJ, was he not? And Jensen was the third party hired by Barr specifically to undermine that same lead prosecutor (who won the case, BTW).
Was this lead prosecutor fired? reprimanded? Oh wait, no, 9 days ago the DOJ sent a court filing defending him (https://www.politico.com/news/2020/0...artment-326240) and unequivocally stating there was no wrongdoing.
No, it's not exactly what you said.
And no, they didn't unequivocally state there was no wrong doing.
"While the Justice Department submission indicates that the Flynn legal team’s numerous accusations of misconduct against Van Grack and other prosecutors are unwarranted, the filing gives no similar pass to the FBI. Indeed, the government’s brief is replete with suggestions of impropriety on the part of various senior FBI officials and agents." https://www.politico.com/news/2020/0...artment-326240
Yes it is. I said this evidence was apparently not new to the DOJ. You just said the DOJ prosecutor was sitting on it. So yeah, it's exactly what I said.
From the prosecutors? What do you think the bolded says?. You accused the DOJ lead prosecutor of wrongdoing, yet the DOJ doesn't agree with you. The DOJ 'suggestions of impropriety' from the FBI simply ring hollow considering they took no action whatsoever against those FBI officials and agents, which is why it's a flimsy excuse.
You keep repeating the evidence was not new and you keep getting it wrong.
"In its motion, the government explains that in light of newly discovered evidence of misconduct by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the prosecution can no longer prove beyond a reasonable doubt that any false statements made by Flynn were material to a legitimate investigation—an element the government contends is necessary under Section 1001. See United States v. Gaudin, 515 U.S. 506, 509 (1995)."
I didn’t just accuse the lead prosecutor of wrongdoing I showed what wrongdoing took place. Feel free to dig up my posts in this thread on Van Grack lying to the court. And lol at “took no action”...there are multiple investigations being run by multiple US Attorneys into the actions of these FBI officials and agents. And Im sure you were one of the ones saying these investigations take time during the Mueller investigation.From the prosecutors? What do you think the bolded says?. You accused the DOJ lead prosecutor of wrongdoing, yet the DOJ doesn't agree with you. The DOJ 'suggestions of impropriety' from the FBI simply ring hollow considering they took no action whatsoever against those FBI officials and agents, which is why it's a flimsy excuse.
You keep plastering the same quote I already addressed. See post #50778. You simply cannot claim this is new evidence AND that the lead prosecutor was sitting on it. The lead prosecutor always worked for the DOJ. So pick a lane.
So you agree Barr's own DOJ completely shat on any of your arguments about prosecutor wrongdoing with that filing?
And yes lol at took no action. Either you have evidence of wrongdoing and thus the reason to move to dismiss a case, or you do not. If you do, then there's nothing stopping the DOJ from indicting these people. Happened with the Mueller investigation too. As soon as they had evidence on Cohen, Stone, etc they filed the cases and got the bad actors indicted, even if the investigation didn't conclude. Same happened with Flynn.
I think this is what TSA doesn't understand. The issue here is that due to the extraordinary nature of the DOJ move to close the case after it won it already, it's the DOJ that's suspect and cannot be taken at it's word.
So your claim is the DOJ already had the evidence of FBI misconduct?
When the DOJ won the case did the DOJ know that the Flynn interview was tied to an FBI investigation that was not legally predicated? yes or no
Technically it wasn't evidence if it wasn't presented to the court. No evidence is new if you use the concept of it existed already.
There's no proven FBI misconduct so far, that's merely an allegation. I do think when they had to prove materiality to the judge, they did have to review that evidence, and the judge (a third party) concluded it was material.
The DOJ knew it's case throughout. You don't prosecute a case for 2 years and don't know the details of it. According to the same DOJ, this year, it was legally predicated.
So, again, it's the DOJ that suddenly changed tune here, not the judge or the FBI, and the motion wasn't even presented by the lead prosecutor who has been handling the case.
Which is why the move is extraordinary in itself, and the judge correctly interpreted it as something exceptionally fishy.
We're talking whether the DOJ had that evidence (and was sitting on it, according to TSA) at any point while the case was ongoing. We already established neither the court or the defense had it.
The problem here is that the lead prosecutor (who the DOJ itself claims did nothing wrong) disagrees with the DOJ as far as the legality of the interview, and thus the motion to dismiss.
See how this is all a DOJ problem?
Again, you’re wrong. That evidence wasn’t presented when Sullivan ruled on materiality. And the DOJ did prosecute the case for 2 years and didn’t know the details of it as they admitted in their motion to dismiss.
So the lead prosecutor didn't "sit" on it?
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