Trump indicted over classified documents
195,893 Views | 3260 Replies
...
Stat Monitor Repairman
10:50p, 5/9/24
1. Why was Trump's motion to dismiss concealed from the American public until now?

and;

2. Under what circumstances is it constitutional for a criminal defendant's motion alleging constitutional violations to be kept under seal?

Someone let me know.
aggiehawg
5:17p, 5/10/24
Quote:

Special Prosecutor Jack Smith has just admitted that he and other DOJ and FBI minions manipulated documentary evidence underlying the Mar-a-Lago case against Donald Trump. Everybody from Judge Aileen Cannon on down realizes this is bad. Still, I wonder how many people have noticed that Smith has admitted to doing what the J6 defendants are accused and have been convicted of doing: Violating 18 U.S.C. 1512(c)(2). The statutory charges against the J6 defendants are a specious abuse of the law but they perfectly fit Smith's admitted conduct.

One of the main tools in the DOJ arsenal against anyone near the Capitol on January 6, 2021, is 1512(c)(2), which the DOJ claims means imprisonment for a person who "corruptly...obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding..." That is what the DOJ claims happened when ordinary Americans (a) exercised their rights of free speech and (b) usually inadvertently, entered onto Capitol land after masked agitators had removed "no trespassing" signage and fencing and after the Capitol police had opened the building's doors. The penalty is fines and/or imprisonment, with the latter potentially as long as 20 years.
Quote:

But while the DOJ is focusing everyone's attention on subsection (2), they're ignoring subsection (1):
Quote:

(c) Whoever corruptly
(1) alters, destroys, mutilates, or conceals a record, document, or other object, or attempts to do so, with the intent to impair the object's integrity or availability for use in an official proceeding...



Does that remind you of anything? It certainly does me.

It reminds me of Smith's admission to Judge Aileen Cannon about his and his minions' handling of the documents seized from Mar-a-Lago, documents that then served as the basis for his decision to indict Donald Trump. (Ignore, for now, the fact that Trump, as president of the United States, had plenary power to do as he would with national security information, unhindered either by prior Executive Orders, administrative regulations, or legislation.
Quote:

As any litigator knows, maintaining documents in the order in which they're seized or produced is enormously important. That's because order itself provides important information about the chronology of events or a person's intent or innocence. It's also of particular concern in this case because these documents were apparently packed by the General Services Administration, which then told Trump to pick them up.

In addition, it's now beyond question that the DOJ doctored the crime scene photos it publicized to the world to "prove" that Donald Trump had allegedly violated national security laws. (See my disclaimer above about Trump's immunity from such a claim.)
Read the rest HERE
will25u
3:56p, 5/11/24



Stat Monitor Repairman
9:29p, 5/13/24
In reply to Stat Monitor Repairman
Stat Monitor Repairman said:

Stat Monitor Repairman said:




NPR running interference by launching investigation of Cannon over alleged undeclared trips to judicial conference in Montana.

Hijacks the narrative for the upcoming week and we'll hear demands for recusal.

How bad is it when you got to call in Mary Louise Kelly to get a lick in on Cannon?





Petition must've not moved the needle at all.

Now the judge is a threat to national security.
will25u
2:05p, 5/17/24
will25u
4:13p, 5/19/24

CLOSE
×
Cancel
Copy Topic Link to Clipboard
Back
Copy
Page 94 of 94
Post Reply
×
Verify your student status Register
See Membership Benefits >
CLOSE
×
Night mode
Off
Auto-detect device settings
Off