backintexas2013 said:
Well tell CNN because they say former intelligence agent but I guess they are wrong And you are right.
It's a joke, dude.
backintexas2013 said:
Well tell CNN because they say former intelligence agent but I guess they are wrong And you are right.
Which means they have been for months already and the word was fixing to get out anyway.Tailgate88 said:
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2018/03/28/doj-inspector-general-reviews-alleged-fisa-abuses-by-doj-fbi.htmlQuote:
Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz announced Wednesday he will review potential Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) abuses by both the Justice Department and the FBI, following requests from Congress and Attorney General Jeff Sessions.
The Office of the Inspector General released a statement Wednesday outlining the initiation of a review.
"The OIG will initiate a review that will examine the Justice Department's and the Federal Bureau of Investigation's compliance with legal requirements, and with applicable DOJ and FBI policies and procedures, in applications filed with the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) relating to a certain U.S. person," the statement obtained by Fox News read. "As part of this examination, the OIG also will review information that was known to the DOJ and the FBI at the time the applications were filed from or about an alleged FBI confidential source."
The OIG statement added that Horowitz will also "review the DOJ's and FBI's relationship and communications with the alleged source as they relate to the FISC applications."
I bet they text each other.Rapier108 said:
You can always tell when the latest talking points have been sent out, because the same three libs show up here to try to scream "GOTCHA!"
Quote:
Lavinsky noted that the investigation was prompted by requests from several members of Congress and Attorney General Jeff Sessions. House Republicans recently released a memo claiming widespread abuse of the FISA process on the part of the DOJ and FBI in order to obtain a surveillance warrant on former Trump campaign associate Carter Page.
The timing of the investigation and the reference to members of Congress point to Page as the U.S. person. The statement's reference to a confidential source similarly floats concerns found in the Republican memo which found that the FBI and the DOJ did not disclose the political origins of the Steele dossier in its FISA application and revealed previously undisclosed testimony from former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe that an investigation into Page would not have occurred without Steele's dossier.
The nature of contacts between DOJ officials and Steele during the opening of an investigation into the 2016 Trump campaign has been the nature of some controversy. The Republican memo especially expressed concern over the nature of meetings between Steele and DOJ official Bruce Ohr, whose wife worked for Steele for some time.
Cody Hiland's officedrcrinum said:
(click on link below)
http://www.are.uscourts.gov/sites/ared/files/2018%20GJ%20public%20notice.pdf
Wray had to prove himself to his employees and to do that he had to meticulously follow procedures with McCabe. Now his people know what to expect and that they won't be fired willy-nilly. Had to get his street cred.hbtheduce said:
Having Wray cooperate will def speed things up. He stalled there for a bit on some issues. To look impartial? To consolidate power? To see which side was winning?
Either way I just want everyone who broke the law brought to justice. R or D. Let's get this crap cleaned up.
Not really, think about it. Eight years of Holder and Lynch at DOJ constraining the rank and file FBI agents. Of course they would cast a jaundiced eye towards Wray and Sessions. Eight years is a long time.BQ78 said:
Hawg:
But that seems to fly in the face of the FBI rank and file were angry about all the shenanigans going on at the bureau and they wanted to see some people pay for ruining the integrity of the FBI. It seems those guys based on reports a year ago would be clamoring to spill all at this point but I sure don't see it.
I can't believe they continue to let him come to work every day. I think it's a big mistake.fasthorses05 said:
I would agree, except for Rosenstein.
I've vacillated back in forth on the color of his hat, but have come to the conclusion he HAD to be aware of some of this crap. Some how, some way, he's guilty, I just don't know if he would be bold enough to keep obstructing the way it appears he has been.
My take on Rosenstein still having a job teeters on the fact that any move on him right now and up to this point we give the appearance that POTUS is going after Mueller. Rosenstein hired Mueller and is the only one that can fire him, unless Session un-recuses himself. Rosenstein has deep ties to Mueller going back years as a former US Attorney. Rosenstein is a black hat without a doubt. There are a thousand eyes on Rosenstein since it became aware that he signed off on these FISA warrants on Page. With the heat being turned up on the entire FISC investigation, and it becoming more public, Rosenstein has no wiggle room to be covert in any way anymore. What damage he has done is done, now he is contained as DAG, and fully under the scrutiny of the OIG. Fire him and not only out of the scrutiny of the OIG he's then the martyr for the obstruction of justice crowd, and it's been made very plain that's all Mueller has left to go after. Russia Russia Russia is a dead soldier, regardless of how many reaching attempts the left lobs back into the investigation to revive that narrative. So in a sense Rosenstein is neutered.Rockdoc said:I can't believe they continue to let him come to work every day. I think it's a big mistake.fasthorses05 said:
I would agree, except for Rosenstein.
I've vacillated back in forth on the color of his hat, but have come to the conclusion he HAD to be aware of some of this crap. Some how, some way, he's guilty, I just don't know if he would be bold enough to keep obstructing the way it appears he has been.
Solid summary. Reading the tea leaves, Hiland's GJ is a recent development ... meaning indictments aren't likely soon. Also, we can only spectulate what Hiland is investigating ... CF pay to play, Clinton Emails, FBI misdeeds, etc?RoscoePColtrane said:
.... Cody Hiland has teeth, he has the GJ and prosecutorial powers. I patiently await what becomes of his work in all of this.
Bulldog73 said:
I guess this is the place for this-https://lawandcrime.com/opinion/constitution-jeff-sessions-dismiss-robert-mueller-non-campaign-cases/.
Makes the case that Sessions is REQUIRED to divest Mueller of all prosecutorial functions except those pertaining to the campaign/collusion claims.That would seem like a pretty nifty way of splitting the baby on firing Mueller (a political land mine) and letting him run roughshod over the Constitution and justice with his unending search for impeachible offenses. Haven't really studied the arguments but they seem valid on a supeficial examination.
I read this opinion article by Barnes via twitter yesterday; it correlates with the thread written by Techno_Fog posted back on Page 231:Bulldog73 said:
I guess this is the place for this-https://lawandcrime.com/opinion/constitution-jeff-sessions-dismiss-robert-mueller-non-campaign-cases/.
Makes the case that Sessions is REQUIRED to divest Mueller of all prosecutorial functions except those pertaining to the campaign/collusion claims.That would seem like a pretty nifty way of splitting the baby on firing Mueller (a political land mine) and letting him run roughshod over the Constitution and justice with his unending search for impeachible offenses. Haven't really studied the arguments but they seem valid on a supeficial examination.