Except, the agents who interviewed him said he didn't.
Candidly, the Dems would scream Obstruction of Justice if Trump put the wrong kind of gas in his car!aggiehawg said:
Starr likely would have been successful had he pressed the subpoena, which is why Clinton folded, IMO. Jones was before he was President but Lewinsky was during his Presidency. And Clinton was facing witness tampering and subornation of perjury charges in relation to Starr's investigation. (Having his secretary, Betty Currie lie for instance.)
The only thing Mueller has while Trump has been in office is the firing of Comey being twisted to some type of obstruction of justice charge. One which SCOTUS will likely pooh-pooh, immediately.
Comey told the HPSCI under oath that the FBI agents who interviewed Flynn did not believe that Flynn had lied to them, or that any inaccuracies in his answers were intentional.MouthBQ98 said:
Except, the agents who interviewed him said he didn't.
Definitely feel for him.RoscoePColtrane said:
Did you read Michael Caputo's statement to Senate?
Tough to get through
Has it been determined the questions really are from the SC? Rather embarrassing legal work if they are.aggiehawg said:
Dershowitz just had a great idea. Trump should answer those questions in writing, publicly. (Very carefully, of course, asserting Executive Privilege and Article II Powers where appropriate.) Dare Mueller to get the grand jury to issue a subpoena, then move to quash.
He's already answered the questions to the extent he can, he has Article II powers to pardon and to fire whomever he so chooses. Moreover, Comey was fired on the recommendation of Mueller's boss, Rosenstein. Hammer that point.
I guess so. Mueller's spokesperson has not denied it, yet. The NYT has said the source was not Trump's legal team. So those were either made up by the Times or they got them from Mueller, I suppose.VegasAg86 said:Has it been determined the questions really are from the SC? Rather embarrassing legal work if they are.aggiehawg said:
Dershowitz just had a great idea. Trump should answer those questions in writing, publicly. (Very carefully, of course, asserting Executive Privilege and Article II Powers where appropriate.) Dare Mueller to get the grand jury to issue a subpoena, then move to quash.
He's already answered the questions to the extent he can, he has Article II powers to pardon and to fire whomever he so chooses. Moreover, Comey was fired on the recommendation of Mueller's boss, Rosenstein. Hammer that point.
At this point it doesn't matter. They are in the loop. Mueller hasn't denied they are. So treat them as such, answer them and release them publicly and that will check Mueller's oil. Had he come out and denied their veracity, that make's them worthless and no longer a talking point as far as content. Certainly the MSM will then pivot to conspiracies of who planted or leaked them, they are doing that anyway. WGAF. But as long as Mueller's stay's silent they have a degree of veracity so answer them and throw them in his face and say "your move Lurch"VegasAg86 said:Has it been determined the questions really are from the SC? Rather embarrassing legal work if they are.aggiehawg said:
Dershowitz just had a great idea. Trump should answer those questions in writing, publicly. (Very carefully, of course, asserting Executive Privilege and Article II Powers where appropriate.) Dare Mueller to get the grand jury to issue a subpoena, then move to quash.
He's already answered the questions to the extent he can, he has Article II powers to pardon and to fire whomever he so chooses. Moreover, Comey was fired on the recommendation of Mueller's boss, Rosenstein. Hammer that point.
Emmet Flood has worked with the Clintons for decades. Can he be trusted?RoscoePColtrane said:
Ty Cobb out Emmet Flood in
That kills the wish washy Ty Cobb stance on the POTUS being interviewed. Food is not going to et that happen period.
Decades? not even one decadeMeh_ said:Emmet Flood has worked with the Clintons for decades. Can he be trusted?RoscoePColtrane said:
Ty Cobb out Emmet Flood in
That kills the wish washy Ty Cobb stance on the POTUS being interviewed. Food is not going to et that happen period.
If you can't provide proper answers to your client for those lame ass poorly worded question, you need to turn in your bar card and burn your shingle.HTownAg98 said:
That is a terrible idea, unless you can avoid answering because of executive privilege or other methods. Those questions are a minefield of perjury traps, and any wrong answer has his ass in a heap of trouble. Plus, you have to assume that any question they are asking they already know what the answer to. So there's no point in answering them to begin with.
Just not surprisedfasthorses05 said:
Is that good?
Your emoticon doesn't suggest that.
Precisely. Those questions are so broad, easy to choose how to frame an answer, assert Executive Privilege and Article II powers to many of them.RoscoePColtrane said:If you can't provide proper answers to your client for those lame as poorly worded question, you need to turn in your bar card and burn your shingle.HTownAg98 said:
That is a terrible idea, unless you can avoid answering because of executive privilege or other methods. Those questions are a minefield of perjury traps, and any wrong answer has his ass in a heap of trouble. Plus, you have to assume that any question they are asking they already know what the answer to. So there's no point in answering them to begin with.
What were your thinking..... What were you feeling.......? laughable
It's really feeding the MRSA.RoscoePColtrane said:
Feeding the seagulls
aggiehawg said:
McCarthy sure is fired up today.
LINK
Quote:
Justice Department indifference
I am not a Trump fanboy. The administration's conflicting explanations for Comey's firing, which Mueller wants to inquire about, were an embarrassment and the president's badmouthing of the former director for the consumption of Kremlin emissaries was a disgrace. Trump's Twitter tirades demanding investigations inject politics into law enforcement and undermine the administration of justice. His conception of the loyalty he is entitled to demand from law-enforcement officials is skewed his citation of Eric Holder as a model attorney general (the only AG ever held in contempt of Congress) is repugnant. His orchestration of Donald Trump Jr.'s misleading statements to the Times (and thus to the public) regarding the Trump Tower meeting with a Kremlin-tied lawyer was unseemly.
None of this, however, is a basis for criminal prosecution. Being inconsolably upset about the outcome of the 2016 election does not entitle Democrats to an Oval Office minder with subpoena power. The actions and intentions Mueller seeks to probe are bases for political opposition to Trump, not prosecution. If you think his derelictions outweigh the positive policy outcomes of his presidency, then work to defeat him in the coming election cycles. But that is not prosecutor work.
When Republicans get upset they form the Tea Party...when Democrats get upset, well, you know the rest.Quote:
If you think his derelictions outweigh the positive policy outcomes of his presidency, then work to defeat him in the coming election cycles. But that is not prosecutor work.
Heh.RoscoePColtrane said:If you can't provide proper answers to your client for those lame ass poorly worded question, you need to turn in your bar card and burn your shingle.HTownAg98 said:
That is a terrible idea, unless you can avoid answering because of executive privilege or other methods. Those questions are a minefield of perjury traps, and any wrong answer has his ass in a heap of trouble. Plus, you have to assume that any question they are asking they already know what the answer to. So there's no point in answering them to begin with.
What were your thinking..... What were you feeling.......? laughable
If they actually managed to convict I think you'd have an honest revolt on your hands. For decades we have sat quietly watching Dems and the media push us around, cheat, lie, embezzle, line their pockets and in the process eroding the very pillars of what this country was built on.RoscoePColtrane said:
I really chuckle at those getting excited about this impeachment talk by the House. I mean as much as I would be in favor of them going after Rosey but let's be honest. Even if the House impeached Rosenstein, the closely divided Senate would never convict him, It takes a two-thirds majority to convict someone in a Senate impeachment trial. Republicans hold a slim 51-49 majority (actually 50 with McCain), and many of the Republicans would side with Democrats against conviction. I'm sure McConnell is rolling his eyes and looking at Ryan and saying, 'get your guys under control'.... This is an empty wagon making a lot of noise.