Are they just now figuring this stuff out? This has been presented in some fashion or another on TexAgs a couple of weeks ago.
Not when I'm done with it.
Bwahahahadrcrinum said:
"The Dems always travel in packs and that means they leave a lot of footprints everywhere."
Please tell me you didn't copy/paste that from an Agatha Christie novel. ;-)drcrinum said:
On the previous page (640), I posted the interview where Rep. Ratcliffe of Texas said that there was exculpatory evidence available to the FBI/DOJ which proved Papadopoulos did not tell the Australian Ambassador (Downer) that the Russians had dirt on Hillary. Well, Rex has a source. It true, boom.
English Please, English.HTownAg98 said:
He's also pro se. No domicile, pro se, and he did the RICO. He's hit the trifecta of stupid.
Trump has been spending a lot of time with Rosenstein lately in an effort for Rosey to keep his job. So who knows?scottimus said:
Who thinks the Mueller Probe is done, now, that Trump is all over the place with his balls?
Quote:
The Department of Justice (DOJ) Office of the Inspector General (OIG) initiated this investigation upon
the receipt of certain text messages from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) during the course of
the OIG's Review of Allegations Regarding Various Actions by the Department and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) in Advance of the 2016 Election (June 2018;https://www.justice.gov/file/1071991/download) (pre-election review).
The text messages indicated that a senior FBI official accepted two tickets to a professional sports game as a gift from a television news correspondent who regularly covered the FBI and DOJ, in violation of federal regulations.The OIG investigation substantiated, and the senior FBI official acknowledged, that the official accepted two tickets to a professional sports event from the TV correspondent without paying the correspondent for the tickets. The senior FBI official initially maintained to the OIG in an interview under oath that the official had paid for the tickets, but five days later admitted to the OIG that the official did not. The OIG
found that the senior FBI official lacked candor with the OIG in several respects about the tickets. In addition, the OIG found that the senior FBI official had previously accepted one ticket from the same correspondent to another professional sports event, and one ticket from a different news reporter to another sports event. Although the senior FBI official stated that the official had paid the correspondent and reporter for these tickets, the OIG found no evidence in the senior FBI official's communications with the correspondent or the reporter using FBI devices or systems to confirm that the official paid for the tickets, and the senior FBI official provided the OIG with no evidence to show that the official had paid for the tickets.
The senior FBI official's conduct violated federal regulations prohibiting federal employees from accepting gifts from prohibited sources, such as members of the media, where, for example, the source seeks official action by the employee's agency; the source does business or seeks to do business with the employee's agency; and the source has interests that may be substantially affected by the performance or nonperformance of the employee's official duties.
Criminal prosecution was declined. The senior FBI official retired from the FBI during the OIG's investigation.
This rings so hollow when the damn AG won't follow through. I've lost all respect I had for Jeff Sessions.drcrinum said:
https://www.oversight.gov/sites/default/files/oig-reports/f181016.pdfQuote:
The Department of Justice (DOJ) Office of the Inspector General (OIG) initiated this investigation upon
the receipt of certain text messages from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) during the course of
the OIG's Review of Allegations Regarding Various Actions by the Department and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) in Advance of the 2016 Election (June 2018;https://www.justice.gov/file/1071991/download) (pre-election review).
The text messages indicated that a senior FBI official accepted two tickets to a professional sports game as a gift from a television news correspondent who regularly covered the FBI and DOJ, in violation of federal regulations.The OIG investigation substantiated, and the senior FBI official acknowledged, that the official accepted two tickets to a professional sports event from the TV correspondent without paying the correspondent for the tickets. The senior FBI official initially maintained to the OIG in an interview under oath that the official had paid for the tickets, but five days later admitted to the OIG that the official did not. The OIG
found that the senior FBI official lacked candor with the OIG in several respects about the tickets. In addition, the OIG found that the senior FBI official had previously accepted one ticket from the same correspondent to another professional sports event, and one ticket from a different news reporter to another sports event. Although the senior FBI official stated that the official had paid the correspondent and reporter for these tickets, the OIG found no evidence in the senior FBI official's communications with the correspondent or the reporter using FBI devices or systems to confirm that the official paid for the tickets, and the senior FBI official provided the OIG with no evidence to show that the official had paid for the tickets.
The senior FBI official's conduct violated federal regulations prohibiting federal employees from accepting gifts from prohibited sources, such as members of the media, where, for example, the source seeks official action by the employee's agency; the source does business or seeks to do business with the employee's agency; and the source has interests that may be substantially affected by the performance or nonperformance of the employee's official duties.
Criminal prosecution was declined. The senior FBI official retired from the FBI during the OIG's investigation.
Quote:
"We have profound concerns about the volume and extent of unauthorized media contacts by FBI personnel that we have uncovered during our review." - IG Horowitz
Secolobo said:English Please, English.HTownAg98 said:
He's also pro se. No domicile, pro se, and he did the RICO. He's hit the trifecta of stupid.
MadDog73 said:
The penalties should be greater for DOJ officials including loss of pension.
tsuag10 said:
In theory, if Page didn't have anything to hide, couldn't he be trying to get evidence brought out through discovery?
Also, what would Page have to lose if this is complete BS? I'm guessing he would have to pay all their legal costs.
You basically have to assume he's a 100% certified fool, or that he is making a very calculated move here. There really isn't any in-between, right?
I'm not a lawyer, but my guess that said swatting will get a lot of coverage. cnn and what not will make the swatting front page, when the original suit would get zero coverage.aggiehawg said:
When I heard Page was suing, I naturally assumed he had counsel doing it on his behalf. He's no Ty Clevenger who is actually a lawyer thus Page's campaign here, no matter how justified, is not gonna fly far.
Jurisdictional issues mostly because of the lack of naming his Oklahoma corporate entity as a Plaintiff, which he cannot do since he's not a lawyer. (Corporations can't file pro se.) Since he refuses to name a domicile within Oklahoma he hasn't established the diversity of citizenship and his federal question jurisdiction is dicey as well. He'll never get past a RICO hearing without learned counsel.
Have to give a little bit of credit for creativity though. I would never have thought of crafting a trade secret and economic espionage claim out of a FISA warrant. LOL.
Perkins, Coie should be able to swat this complaint away pretty quickly. Unless he gets counsel and very quickly files an amended complaint. Better yet, withdraw that complaint and have counsel file suit in DC, if Page won't claim a domicile.
Sidenote: Always thought Page was an odd duck of a guy.