Post hoc expansion of Mueller's jurisdiction after Mueller raided Manafort's home and storage unit does not cure the original lack of jurisdiction. Particularly so since Ukraine was not in Rosenstein's purview, that remained with Sessions.MouthBQ98 said:
The supplemental memo just highlights that they knew that Mueller andnhis team had gone rogue and exceeded their already questionable scope and mandate, and Rosenstein tried to help them cover it up clumsily.
That's easy. The posts don't make sense.Rapier108 said:
Just remember everyone, don't respond to Lot Troll's attempt to derail the thread so it gets locked.
Not an issueRapier108 said:
Just remember everyone, don't respond to Lot Troll's attempt to derail the thread so it gets locked.
If our mutual suspicions (and some reporting) are correct and there was a FISA warrant on Manafort during the time he was on the Trump campaign, all holy hell will break loose.RoscoePColtrane said:
Not sure where Mueller goes from here, because he knows damn good and well that if those redactions are removed, it will expose Mueller using a preexisting FISA Title-1 Warrant against Manafort Instead of Title 3 authority he should have done and thus had to show probable cause if the judge is straight, and that was the tip of the spear that drove this thing. The fruit may be ruled rotten.
Here's the other thing that pops into mind regarding Article III judges.RoscoePColtrane said:
It's the only thing I can think of that would justify Mueller stonewalling an Article 3 Judge's request to see it. If Rosey was bold/stupid enough to spell it out to expand to reaching back on a FISA warrant, after the fact, they may be toast.
I don't hear anything.Safe at Home said:
As I've been trying to keep up with the intelligent discussion on this thread this afternoon, I keep hearing this faint, annoying background noise. Kind of high pitched and whiney. Anyone else hear it?
True. But if they don't actually have the unredacted version with them in court, the lawyers present will be sent to jail. Who will take one for the team?'blindey said:Here's the other thing that pops into mind regarding Article III judges.RoscoePColtrane said:
It's the only thing I can think of that would justify Mueller stonewalling an Article 3 Judge's request to see it. If Rosey was bold/stupid enough to spell it out to expand to reaching back on a FISA warrant, after the fact, they may be toast.
They may prefer to outright dismiss the entire case above giving up the unredacted memo. But the judge has the authority to tell them to go **** in their collective hats and give me the memo anyways.
If nothing else because they have the authority to control their own courts and the conduct of counsel that appear in their courts. Especially when counsel appears purporting to have the power of the United States government.
RoscoePColtrane said:
My knees knock when Dixie breaks out the latin
Quote:
...Two House sources confirm for me that the Justice Department was recently delivered first a classified House Intelligence Committee letter and then a subpoena (which arrived Monday) demanding documents related to a new line of inquiry about the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Trump investigation. The deadline for complying with the subpoena was Thursday afternoon, and the Justice Department flouted it. As the White House is undoubtedly monitoring any new congressional demands for information, it is likely that President Trump's tweet Wednesday ripping the department for not turning over documents was in part a reference to this latest demand.
The Justice Department rejected the latest subpoena request in a letter delivered to the Intelligence Committee after our Thursday deadline. The letter divulged that the committee had been asking for information about a "specific individual," and stated it would not be complying on grounds that to do so risked "potential loss of human lives, damage to relationships with valued international partners, compromise of ongoing criminal investigations, and interference with intelligence activities." The letter noted this decision had been made after consultation with the White House, though my reporting suggests the White House wants the Justice Department to find a way to comply....
UK intel via their Russian source(s)?drcrinum said:
.... on grounds that to do so risked "potential loss of human lives, damage to relationships with valued international partners, compromise of ongoing criminal investigations, and interference with intelligence activities."
LOL.RoscoePColtrane said:
My knees knock when Dixie breaks out the latin