This IRS employee might be the type of guy that could really squeal on some people once his nads are in the vise.
Hopefully more heads will roll!
Hopefully more heads will roll!
Is that in relation to the Mueller report?scottimus said:
"If you think this will just be a book report, you are going to be sorely mistaken," -Jake Gibson, Fox News Justice Department Producer
Quote:
The best that Manafort can do seems to be getting worse by the day. New York politicians and prosecutors have been pursuing state charges to blunt any possible presidential pardon of the onetime Trump campaign chairman.
Various accounts describe state prosecutors, who previously stepped aside so that Mueller could investigate unimpeded, as laying the groundwork for new crimes that would avoid constitutional barriers but still send Manafort behind bars for the rest of his life.
The effort to pursue Manafort is wildly popular in New York and widely celebrated in the media as clever "insurance policy" fashioned by Democratic Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance and New York Attorney General Letitia James.
The public discussion of finding state charges against Manafort as insurance against a pardon by President Trump is becoming increasingly troubling and untoward. State prosecutors have campaigned for office on the promise to find ways to guarantee incarceration for one person. To do so, they are willing to remove constitutional protections for all New Yorkers. It is like removing all of the life preservers from an ocean liner to guarantee that one passenger does not survive a sinking.
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The problem could be the bar on double jeopardy, the guarantee that people are not punished twice for the same conduct. Such guarantees originated in ancient Rome and were made part of our Constitution under the Fifth Amendment unless, it now seems, you are Paul Manafort. While civil libertarians have long warned of the erosion of this guarantee, New York, along with a handful of other states, has been the gold standard on this issue with a more protective provision barring redundant or related state prosecutions after federal convictions.
Then Donald Trump became president. Manafort was found guilty on eight counts related to financial fraud by a federal jury in Virginia last year and then pleaded guilty to separate charges in Washington. During this period, speculation has been rampant that Trump may pardon Manafort, particularly after a series of supportive or sympathetic tweets. As a result, New York legislators called for clearing away rights that might be used by Manafort to protect himself.
James actually campaigned for office on that issue. That is right, a state attorney general was elected by campaigning to remove constitutional protections from all citizens. James was not alone. Former Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, before being forced out of office over sexual assault allegations, pushed the legislature to change the constitution and his successor, Barbara Underwood, then picked up the popular cause to thwart Trump by removing reducing double jeopardy protections.
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State prosecutors have campaigned for office on the promise to find ways to guarantee incarceration for one person.
Isn't it? Eliminating one of the few laws that New York had that was following the Constitution.BMX Bandit said:Quote:
State prosecutors have campaigned for office on the promise to find ways to guarantee incarceration for one person.
Running in a "I'm going to prosecute this specific person" platform is very unsettling.
Quote:
EXCLUSIVE: Theresa May in cover-up row as it emerges GCHQ spy chief who 'was allowed to resign for family reasons' actually quit after he helped a paedophile Catholic priest avoid jail
- Robert Hannigan helped a paedophile priest avoid jail, Mail on Sunday reveals
- He stunned Whitehall with his exit after just two years in charge of GCHQ
- The MoS learned he stepped down after the NCA discovered he helped a family friend avoid a custodial sentence for possessing 174 child pornography images
- Mr Hannigan provided a reference for Father Edmund Higgins at his 2013 trial
aggiehawg said:
Hmmm.
https://www.scribd.com/document/400336657/Manafort-Sentencing-Memo#from_embed
Quote:
...Director Comey, was the president's statement that Obama had his wires tapped in Trump Tower a true statement?
COMEY: With respect to the president's tweets about alleged wiretapping directed at him by the prior administration, I have no information that supports those tweets and we have looked carefully inside the FBI. The Department of Justice has asked me to share with you that the answer is the same for the Department of Justice and all its components. The department has no information that supports those tweets.
blindey said:
When movies capture exactly what lawyers really want to say:
I disappeared from this thread since just after the election, you know, depression and all. However, it was worth being woke again just to see the quote above. Well done.aggiehawg said:
When lawyers say, "my esteemed colleague..." we really don't hold them in any esteem. It's a lawyery way of saying, "Judge, he's FOS."