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  1. #50051
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    mean judge doing judge things is corrupt.

  2. #50052
    non-essential Chris's Avatar
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    He was going to kidnap a cleric and sent him back to Turkey.

    Where you been?
    The allegations that got investigated by Mueller? What happened? You said he was doing all kinds of .

  3. #50053
    non-essential Chris's Avatar
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    All kinds of things. Look it up.
    lol

  4. #50054
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
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    The allegations that got investigated by Mueller? What happened? You said he was doing all kinds of .
    Mueller didn't investigate it in 2016.

    Do you know how time works, Qhris?

  5. #50055
    W4A1 143 43CK? Nbadan's Avatar
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    That interpretation was wrong, Mr. Priestap told the prosecutors reviewing the case. He said that F.B.I. officials were trying to do the right thing in questioning Mr. Flynn and that he knew of no effort to set him up. Media reports about his notes misconstrued them, he said, according to the people familiar with the investigation.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/13/u...EqeALrdwA1hT5M

  6. #50056
    wrong about pizzagate TSA's Avatar
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    That interpretation was wrong, Mr. Priestap told the prosecutors reviewing the case. He said that F.B.I. officials were trying to do the right thing in questioning Mr. Flynn and that he knew of no effort to set him up. Media reports about his notes misconstrued them, he said, according to the people familiar with the investigation.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/13/u...EqeALrdwA1hT5M
    “Priestap told investigators that he did not remember the cir stances surrounding the notes that he took, and that he was giving them his interpretation of the notes as he read them now, according to a person familiar with his interview”

    And here is where you leave the thread

  7. #50057
    non-essential Chris's Avatar
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  8. #50058
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    Cooking Up a Criminal Investigation, the Obama Way

    David HarsanyiMay 13, 2020 7:09 PM

    According to the standards now set by Obama-administration defenders, it would be no big deal if Donald Trump’s Department of Justice opened criminal investigations into high-profile Democrats such as John Kerry (now a member of Joe Biden’s campaign) who met with Iranians officials over the past four years in an effort to undermine the foreign-policy goals of the duly elected government of the United States. These are potential Logan Act violations, after all.

    It would be no big deal, either, if Trump’s DOJ opened up investigations into Democrats who have ever taken any money from foreign powers, because these are potential FARA violations. Sure, only six such convictions have been pursued by the DOJ since 1966, but no one says your pretext has to be solid.

    It would also fine if, three weeks before Election Day, the DOJ filled out surveillance warrant applications — applications that excluded vital exculpatory evidence — to spy on the Democratic Party’s presidential campaign.

    If Joe Biden were to win the presidency, it would be no big deal if Trump’s DOJ snooped on the incoming national-security adviser John Kerry, taped his completely legal calls with foreign dignitaries, simply because Trump suspected that Kerry would disagree with his administration’s stance on Iran, a nation that threatens the sanc y of our democracy and murders hundreds of soldiers.

    Then, once Kerry was spied on by the NSA, and unmasked by dozens of high-ranking partisan Trump officials — one of them a future presidential candidate — it would be no big deal if any of them illegally leaked Kerry’s name to the press. They would do this in an effort to smear Kerry and railroad him into a plea — not over any risible FARA or Logan Act abuses, but over an innocuous lie about a lawful call told during an ostensibly friendly conversation — so that the Trump administration could fortify a waning investigation into the Democratic Party.

    It would be no big deal if that waning investigation itself was predominately based on a fic ious do ent paid for by the Republican National Committee. It would be no big deal we if we found out that Trump allies within multiple law-enforcement agencies had referred to the investigation — an investigation based on fic ious evidence paid for by the RNC — as an “insurance policy” against the incoming president. It would be a no-big-deal investigation if the entire thing was propelled by fabricated evidence in FISA warrant applications — and if nearly all FISA warrant applications contained serious errors.

    For four years, Trump allies within the Biden administration would illegally leak misleading bits and pieces of their investigation to a compliant media, which then would dutifully smear Kerry and the Democratic Party as seditious operatives, fueling a massive faux scandal and creating enough pressure for an independent investigation that would paralyze the Biden presidency and convince half the nation that the election was stolen.

    And when all the skullduggery is finally exposed, and prosecutors have not found enough evidence to indict a single person in the Biden campaign for any wrongdoing that’s related to the stated reason for the investigation, Republicans can demand that everyone just move on. No big deal.

    https://www.nationalreview.com/corne...mpression=true

    That is a lot of tap-dancing and juggling and super backflips - all to defend the indefensible.

    Here is the answer to all of that garbage:

    Obama, HRC, BIden, BUsh, REagan - DOES NOT MATTER-

    ALL OF THEM

    would have immediately REFUSED RUSSIA’S ADVANCES - and gone straight to the FBI.

    All of them prior 44 presidents would have done the exact same thing Bernie Sanders did- when told that Putin might want to also help his campaign: HE TOLD PUTIN TO GO HIMSELF-



    ONLY TRUMP


    is unable to do this - even after 3 years.

    TRUMP has people like TSA doing backflips and posting russian propaganda of how “tough” trump has been - because

    TRUMP HIMSELF - cannot/willnot denounce PUTIN and RUSSIA.


    Anything else is bull and pretense - ONLY TRUMP TEAM WELCOMED RUSSIA-period.

  9. #50059
    Got Woke? DMC's Avatar
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    That is a lot of tap-dancing and juggling and super backflips - all to defend the indefensible.

    Here is the answer to all of that garbage:

    Obama, HRC, BIden, BUsh, REagan - DOES NOT MATTER-

    ALL OF THEM

    would have immediately REFUSED RUSSIA’S ADVANCES - and gone straight to the FBI.

    All of them prior 44 presidents would have done the exact same thing Bernie Sanders did- when told that Putin might want to also help his campaign: HE TOLD PUTIN TO GO HIMSELF-



    ONLY TRUMP


    is unable to do this - even after 3 years.

    TRUMP has people like TSA doing backflips and posting russian propaganda of how “tough” trump has been - because

    TRUMP HIMSELF - cannot/willnot denounce PUTIN and RUSSIA.


    Anything else is bull and pretense - ONLY TRUMP TEAM WELCOMED RUSSIA-period.

  10. #50060
    wrong about pizzagate TSA's Avatar
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    Judge Sullivan Disregards Two Controlling Precedents By Appointing Amicus In Flynn Case

    U.S. District Court Judge Emmet Sullivan disregarded two controlling precedents from higher courts with his decision to appoint John Gleeson as amicus curiae in the U.S. v. Michael Flynn case this week. Judicial conduct similar to J. Sullivan’s in these prior, far less politically charged cases was roundly and unanimously condemned by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, D.C. Circuit Judge Sri Srinivasan, and their colleagues across the ideological spectrum. So, whether or not one agrees with the Department of Justice’s call to drop its charges against President Trump’s former National Security Advisor, Gen. Michael Flynn, there should be widespread agreement that J. Sullivan has veered way out of line.

    One week ago, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a 9-0 decision, authored by Justice Ginsburg, that took judges to task for similar amicus antics. Her opinion for the Court in U.S. v. Sineneng-Smith upbraided the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit for violating a basic aspect of legal proceedings called the “party presentation principle.” In a nuts , this concept dictates that judges must decide the case as presented by the parties before them. They are not to go out questing for dragons to slay (or issues to tackle) that the parties have not brought before them. As J. Ginsburg put it: “[C]ourts are essentially passive instruments of government … They ‘do not, or should not, sally forth each day looking for wrongs to right. [They] wait for cases to come to [them], and when [cases arise, courts] normally decide only questions presented by the parties.”

    Instead, in Sineneng-Smith, a Ninth Circuit panel comprised of JJ. Stephen Reinhardt, Wallace Tashima and Marsha Berzon took highly irregular steps in an appeal of a criminal immigration case. The defendant was found guilty at trial of bilking Filipino home health care workers out of more than $3.3 million by promising to file immigration paperwork for them (at nearly $6k a pop) that had no chance of succeeding because the relevant program under which they could become lawful U.S. residents had expired. Undaunted by this conduct, and apparently in search of a rationale to overturn her conviction, the panel ordered up a new round of amicus briefs after party briefing and oral argument concluded. The panel sought briefs from a few court-selected pro-immigration sources, including the Federal Defender Organizations of the Ninth Circuit, the Immigrant Defense Project, and the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild. Further, the court directed these amici to brief three specific points, including “whether the statute of conviction is overbroad or likely overbroad under the First Amendment[.]”

    The Ninth Circuit allowed the parties to file briefs responding to the new amici. The court also scheduled new oral argument, giving amici twice as much argument time as Sineneng-Smith’s counsel. She, in turn, latched onto the First Amendment overbreadth argument suggested by the Court and articulated in the court-solicited amicus briefs. As J. Ginsburg wisely noted, “How could she do otherwise? Understandably, she rode with an argument suggested by the panel.” Although J. Reinhardt died about six weeks after the second oral argument, a recons uted panel (adding J. Andrew Hurwitz) held that the facially overbroad statute violated the First Amendment and was not subject to a limiting construction.

    Justice Ginsburg’s decision castigated the Ninth Circuit’s conduct as “depart[ing] so drastically from the principle of party presentation as to cons ute an abuse of discretion” and “remand[ed] the case for an adjudication of the appeal attuned to the case shaped by the parties rather than the case designed by the appeals panel.” J. Ginsburg faulted the panel’s “redirection” and “takeover” of the appeal and chastised that “the Ninth Circuit’s radical transformation of this case goes well beyond the pale.”

    Judge Sullivan’s actions this week raise serious doubt whether he paid attention to this recent, unanimous decision. Let’s rehearse. First, the Ninth Circuit solicited specific amici. So too, J. Sullivan has now appointed former prosecutor and judge John Gleeson to oppose DOJ’s effort to drop the case and essentially represent DOJ’s former view of the case. And he has opened the door to a flood of amicus curiae briefs from special-interest groups hostile to Flynn. Second, the Ninth Circuit suggested particular arguments for amici to make. Likewise, J. Sullivan has instructed Mr. Gleason to explore a possible perjury charge. Last, the Sineneng-Smith panel decided the case on an issue not presented by the parties. J. Sullivan has not issued a ruling yet, but if he does anything other than accept dismissal of the charges, he will duplicate the Ninth Circuit’s violation of the party presentation principle. Hence, he is coming perilously close to completing the very trifecta that drew the Supreme Court’s wrath against the Ninth Circuit.

    Arguably, J. Sullivan has one-upped the Ninth Circuit’s antics. They intervened on the side of the criminal defendant, but he has asked amicus to intervene against the criminal defendant. It’s bad enough for any judge to presume to take over the Attorney General’s responsibility to decide whether to bring charges against a federal criminal defendant (or what charges to bring). Such behavior is a clear-cut violation of the separation of powers. But by abusing his Article III perch to second-guess decision-making the Cons ution exclusively reserves to Article II—and to do so to the defendant’s disadvantage—J. Sullivan’s conduct implicates Flynn’s cons utional right to the due process of law.

    Four years ago, in a precedent even more squarely on point, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (per J. Srinivasan) granted mandamus against a different D.C. district court judge for refusing a government charging decision. J. Sullivan seems poised to ignore the lessons from that higher court ruling, too.

    In U.S. v. Fokker Servs. B.V., which I first wrote about for Forbes.com here, the district judge was overturned via an extraordinary writ of mandamus. That means that the government (and Fokker) went directly to the court of appeals and persuaded it to intervene and put a stop to the unlawful conduct of the trial judge. Oddly, J. Sullivan’s Minute Order on amicus briefs in Flynn cites the Fokker precedent to support appointing amicus curiae in a criminal case. But he neglects to mention that mandamus was granted against the district court judge in that case! Moreover, appointing amicus to represent a lower court’s view that neither party will defend (as happened on appeal in Fokker) is far different from appointing amicus in trial court to represent an alternative prosecutor’s view of the case.

    The Fokker case arose in the context of a Deferred Prosecution Agreement (DPA) the Department of Justice entered into with a Dutch company that disclosed violating U.S. sanctions and export control laws. In such deals, defendants plead guilty to a charge, but the government does not prosecute the case right away. In exchange, for a certain agreed-to period of time, the defendant demonstrates that it has reformed its conduct and put more effective compliance protocols in place. If the government is satisfied at the end of the time period, it will dismiss the charge and the defendant will avert criminal punishment. District judges primarily have to approve these deals to ensure that DOJ is not using them to defeat a defendant’s right to a speedy trial. In Fokker, however, the district judge refused to enter the DPA because he felt that the company was getting off too easily and should have to pay a higher fine, hire an independent monitor, and that individuals at the company should have to face prosecution.

    As the Court of Appeals explained though, such considerations are outside the judge’s role: “The Cons ution allocates primacy in criminal charging decisions to the Executive Branch. The Executive’s charging authority embraces … whether to dismiss charges once brought. It has long been settled that the Judiciary generally lacks authority to second-guess those Executive determinations, much less to impose its own charging preferences.” Indeed, “[f]ew subjects are less adapted to judicial review than the exercise by the Executive of his discretion in deciding when and whether … to dismiss a proceeding once brought.” J. Srinivasan explained that the Cons ution’s delegation of “take Care” duties and the pardon power undergird the Executive’s primacy. As a result, “‘judicial authority is … at its most limited’ when reviewing the Executive’s exercise of discretion over charging determinations.”

    With specific regard to Rule 48(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which requires “leave of court” to dismiss criminal charges against a defendant, J. Srinivasan said, “[D]ecisions to dismiss pending criminal charges … lie squarely within the ken of prosecutorial discretion.” And the leave of court language “gives no power to a district court to deny a prosecutor’s Rule 48(a) motion to dismiss charges based on a disagreement with the prosecution’s exercise of charging authority. For instance, a court cannot deny leave of court because of a view that the defendant should stand trial notwithstanding the prosecution’s desire to dismiss the charges[.]”

    Judge Srinivasan concluded, “[A]uthority over criminal charging decisions resides fundamentally with the Executive, without the involvement of—and without oversight power in—the Judiciary.” “In vacating the district court order, we have no occasion to disagree (or agree) with that court’s concerns about the government’s charging decisions in this case. Rather, the fundamental point is that those determinations are for the Executive—not the courts—to make. We therefore grant the government’s pe ion for a writ of mandamus[.]” The Flynn case arose in a different context, but the issue whether a trial judge may refuse to dismiss charges is identical, and Fokker’s discussion of Rule 48(a) fully anticipated it—and answered it decisively.

    Combining the worst aspects of Sineneng-Smith with the worst aspects of the Fokker case is hardly a winning recipe for the administration of justice. Given the current posture of the case, DOJ and/or Flynn may well seek and receive a mandamus judgment against J. Sullivan from the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. Such a course of action will seem quite appropriate if J. Sullivan follows through, given how extreme and indefensible his actions will appear in light of the contrary Ginsburg and Srinivasan precedents. If J. Sullivan does not come to his senses (and mandamus does not happen for some reason), Gen. Flynn will have to incur additional, unjustified expense responding to a slew of amicus briefs making novel arguments against him—in a case DOJ has already asked to dismiss. Whatever else happened in Flynn’s case, this injustice is still entirely avoidable.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/markche.../#6897aace6f0a

  11. #50061
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    DOJ will file pe ion for writ of mandamus and seek reassignment on remand.
    OK, Margot.
    You stole her

    Not a trend setter

  12. #50062
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
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    Judge Sullivan Disregards Two Controlling Precedents By Appointing Amicus In Flynn Case

    U.S. District Court Judge Emmet Sullivan disregarded two controlling precedents from higher courts with his decision to appoint John Gleeson as amicus curiae in the U.S. v. Michael Flynn case this week. Judicial conduct similar to J. Sullivan’s in these prior, far less politically charged cases was roundly and unanimously condemned by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, D.C. Circuit Judge Sri Srinivasan, and their colleagues across the ideological spectrum. So, whether or not one agrees with the Department of Justice’s call to drop its charges against President Trump’s former National Security Advisor, Gen. Michael Flynn, there should be widespread agreement that J. Sullivan has veered way out of line.

    One week ago, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a 9-0 decision, authored by Justice Ginsburg, that took judges to task for similar amicus antics. Her opinion for the Court in U.S. v. Sineneng-Smith upbraided the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit for violating a basic aspect of legal proceedings called the “party presentation principle.” In a nuts , this concept dictates that judges must decide the case as presented by the parties before them. They are not to go out questing for dragons to slay (or issues to tackle) that the parties have not brought before them. As J. Ginsburg put it: “[C]ourts are essentially passive instruments of government … They ‘do not, or should not, sally forth each day looking for wrongs to right. [They] wait for cases to come to [them], and when [cases arise, courts] normally decide only questions presented by the parties.”

    Instead, in Sineneng-Smith, a Ninth Circuit panel comprised of JJ. Stephen Reinhardt, Wallace Tashima and Marsha Berzon took highly irregular steps in an appeal of a criminal immigration case. The defendant was found guilty at trial of bilking Filipino home health care workers out of more than $3.3 million by promising to file immigration paperwork for them (at nearly $6k a pop) that had no chance of succeeding because the relevant program under which they could become lawful U.S. residents had expired. Undaunted by this conduct, and apparently in search of a rationale to overturn her conviction, the panel ordered up a new round of amicus briefs after party briefing and oral argument concluded. The panel sought briefs from a few court-selected pro-immigration sources, including the Federal Defender Organizations of the Ninth Circuit, the Immigrant Defense Project, and the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers Guild. Further, the court directed these amici to brief three specific points, including “whether the statute of conviction is overbroad or likely overbroad under the First Amendment[.]”

    The Ninth Circuit allowed the parties to file briefs responding to the new amici. The court also scheduled new oral argument, giving amici twice as much argument time as Sineneng-Smith’s counsel. She, in turn, latched onto the First Amendment overbreadth argument suggested by the Court and articulated in the court-solicited amicus briefs. As J. Ginsburg wisely noted, “How could she do otherwise? Understandably, she rode with an argument suggested by the panel.” Although J. Reinhardt died about six weeks after the second oral argument, a recons uted panel (adding J. Andrew Hurwitz) held that the facially overbroad statute violated the First Amendment and was not subject to a limiting construction.

    Justice Ginsburg’s decision castigated the Ninth Circuit’s conduct as “depart[ing] so drastically from the principle of party presentation as to cons ute an abuse of discretion” and “remand[ed] the case for an adjudication of the appeal attuned to the case shaped by the parties rather than the case designed by the appeals panel.” J. Ginsburg faulted the panel’s “redirection” and “takeover” of the appeal and chastised that “the Ninth Circuit’s radical transformation of this case goes well beyond the pale.”

    Judge Sullivan’s actions this week raise serious doubt whether he paid attention to this recent, unanimous decision. Let’s rehearse. First, the Ninth Circuit solicited specific amici. So too, J. Sullivan has now appointed former prosecutor and judge John Gleeson to oppose DOJ’s effort to drop the case and essentially represent DOJ’s former view of the case. And he has opened the door to a flood of amicus curiae briefs from special-interest groups hostile to Flynn. Second, the Ninth Circuit suggested particular arguments for amici to make. Likewise, J. Sullivan has instructed Mr. Gleason to explore a possible perjury charge. Last, the Sineneng-Smith panel decided the case on an issue not presented by the parties. J. Sullivan has not issued a ruling yet, but if he does anything other than accept dismissal of the charges, he will duplicate the Ninth Circuit’s violation of the party presentation principle. Hence, he is coming perilously close to completing the very trifecta that drew the Supreme Court’s wrath against the Ninth Circuit.

    Arguably, J. Sullivan has one-upped the Ninth Circuit’s antics. They intervened on the side of the criminal defendant, but he has asked amicus to intervene against the criminal defendant. It’s bad enough for any judge to presume to take over the Attorney General’s responsibility to decide whether to bring charges against a federal criminal defendant (or what charges to bring). Such behavior is a clear-cut violation of the separation of powers. But by abusing his Article III perch to second-guess decision-making the Cons ution exclusively reserves to Article II—and to do so to the defendant’s disadvantage—J. Sullivan’s conduct implicates Flynn’s cons utional right to the due process of law.

    Four years ago, in a precedent even more squarely on point, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (per J. Srinivasan) granted mandamus against a different D.C. district court judge for refusing a government charging decision. J. Sullivan seems poised to ignore the lessons from that higher court ruling, too.

    In U.S. v. Fokker Servs. B.V., which I first wrote about for Forbes.com here, the district judge was overturned via an extraordinary writ of mandamus. That means that the government (and Fokker) went directly to the court of appeals and persuaded it to intervene and put a stop to the unlawful conduct of the trial judge. Oddly, J. Sullivan’s Minute Order on amicus briefs in Flynn cites the Fokker precedent to support appointing amicus curiae in a criminal case. But he neglects to mention that mandamus was granted against the district court judge in that case! Moreover, appointing amicus to represent a lower court’s view that neither party will defend (as happened on appeal in Fokker) is far different from appointing amicus in trial court to represent an alternative prosecutor’s view of the case.

    The Fokker case arose in the context of a Deferred Prosecution Agreement (DPA) the Department of Justice entered into with a Dutch company that disclosed violating U.S. sanctions and export control laws. In such deals, defendants plead guilty to a charge, but the government does not prosecute the case right away. In exchange, for a certain agreed-to period of time, the defendant demonstrates that it has reformed its conduct and put more effective compliance protocols in place. If the government is satisfied at the end of the time period, it will dismiss the charge and the defendant will avert criminal punishment. District judges primarily have to approve these deals to ensure that DOJ is not using them to defeat a defendant’s right to a speedy trial. In Fokker, however, the district judge refused to enter the DPA because he felt that the company was getting off too easily and should have to pay a higher fine, hire an independent monitor, and that individuals at the company should have to face prosecution.

    As the Court of Appeals explained though, such considerations are outside the judge’s role: “The Cons ution allocates primacy in criminal charging decisions to the Executive Branch. The Executive’s charging authority embraces … whether to dismiss charges once brought. It has long been settled that the Judiciary generally lacks authority to second-guess those Executive determinations, much less to impose its own charging preferences.” Indeed, “[f]ew subjects are less adapted to judicial review than the exercise by the Executive of his discretion in deciding when and whether … to dismiss a proceeding once brought.” J. Srinivasan explained that the Cons ution’s delegation of “take Care” duties and the pardon power undergird the Executive’s primacy. As a result, “‘judicial authority is … at its most limited’ when reviewing the Executive’s exercise of discretion over charging determinations.”

    With specific regard to Rule 48(a) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which requires “leave of court” to dismiss criminal charges against a defendant, J. Srinivasan said, “[D]ecisions to dismiss pending criminal charges … lie squarely within the ken of prosecutorial discretion.” And the leave of court language “gives no power to a district court to deny a prosecutor’s Rule 48(a) motion to dismiss charges based on a disagreement with the prosecution’s exercise of charging authority. For instance, a court cannot deny leave of court because of a view that the defendant should stand trial notwithstanding the prosecution’s desire to dismiss the charges[.]”

    Judge Srinivasan concluded, “[A]uthority over criminal charging decisions resides fundamentally with the Executive, without the involvement of—and without oversight power in—the Judiciary.” “In vacating the district court order, we have no occasion to disagree (or agree) with that court’s concerns about the government’s charging decisions in this case. Rather, the fundamental point is that those determinations are for the Executive—not the courts—to make. We therefore grant the government’s pe ion for a writ of mandamus[.]” The Flynn case arose in a different context, but the issue whether a trial judge may refuse to dismiss charges is identical, and Fokker’s discussion of Rule 48(a) fully anticipated it—and answered it decisively.

    Combining the worst aspects of Sineneng-Smith with the worst aspects of the Fokker case is hardly a winning recipe for the administration of justice. Given the current posture of the case, DOJ and/or Flynn may well seek and receive a mandamus judgment against J. Sullivan from the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. Such a course of action will seem quite appropriate if J. Sullivan follows through, given how extreme and indefensible his actions will appear in light of the contrary Ginsburg and Srinivasan precedents. If J. Sullivan does not come to his senses (and mandamus does not happen for some reason), Gen. Flynn will have to incur additional, unjustified expense responding to a slew of amicus briefs making novel arguments against him—in a case DOJ has already asked to dismiss. Whatever else happened in Flynn’s case, this injustice is still entirely avoidable.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/markche.../#6897aace6f0a
    Man, Sullivan must really be onto something if these guys are freaking out so badly.

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    Man, Sullivan must really be onto something if these guys are freaking out so badly.


    dude


    COPYPASTA is ok when Comrade TSA does the copypasta!

  14. #50064
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    Lol

    last night Hannity

    called for corrupt Sullivan to recuse!

  15. #50065
    Kang Trill Clinton's Avatar
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    OK, Margot.

    Got em

  16. #50066
    dangerous floater Winehole23's Avatar
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    Eric Holder broke Judge Sullivan, I believe.

    Sullivan will probably end up giving AG Barr what he wants, but not without having a hearing or creating a record.

  17. #50067
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    Eric Holder broke Judge Sullivan, I believe.

    Sullivan will probably end up giving AG Barr what he wants, but not without having a hearing or creating a record.

    Holder?

    how so?

  18. #50068
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    White House’s own counsel reviewed Mike Flynn’s conversations with Russian ambassador

    — and agreed he was lying


    The White House legal counsel reviewed transcripts of Michael Flynn’s calls to the Russian ambassador and

    concluded President Donald Trump’s first national security adviser was lying.

    Don McGahn and former White House chief of staff Reince Priebus agreed that the

    retired U.S. Army general had given misleading statements to FBI agents about the conversations,

    “McGahn and Priebus concluded that Flynn could not have forgotten the details of the discussions of sanctions and had instead been lying about what he discussed with Kislyak,”

    Flynn ... he denied discussing Kremlin sanctions even when presented with his own words from the highly classified transcripts.

    https://www.rawstory.com/2020/05/white-houses-own-counsel-reviewed-mike-flynns-conversations-with-russian-ambassador-and-agreed-he-was-lying/?utm_source=&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=4532



  19. #50069
    Savvy Veteran spurraider21's Avatar
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    Man, Sullivan must really be onto something if these guys are freaking out so badly.
    The Unraveling

  20. #50070
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    OK, Margot.

  21. #50071
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    Looks like the court might end up deciding the case after all... TSA should be happy, I guess...

  22. #50072
    Veteran
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    In other, but related news



  23. #50073
    non-essential Chris's Avatar
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    *post a tweet ="Chrisbot posting tweets! reeeeeeeeeeeee"

    *post without a tweet = "Chrisbot not posting the tweet reeeeeeeee"

    dumb gots

  24. #50074
    Alleged Michigander ChumpDumper's Avatar
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    Margt

  25. #50075
    non-essential Chris's Avatar
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    May 2005
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    39,908

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