The government argued that Stone was a related case to one she was already working. Typical motion practice the encourages efficiency of the courts. That is not how it usually works out however, just another type of forum shopping.Rapier108 said:
How it is every damn case is given to Amy Berman Jackson?
The two bolded portions are critical. An unintentionally false FARA filing is an administrative issue requiring an amended filing and potentially a small fine. Without the knowledge and intent, it is not a crime and Brandon Van Grack who has been on the Flynn case since the start, knows that.Quote:
Powell countered that nothing in the Statement of Offense says "willfully/knowingly re FARA." In what McKasson called "very heated," Van Grack barked, "without willfully/knowingly it doesn't make this an offense," referring to the FARA false statements. This is the "first time your client or counsel has made any statement like what you are saying." "I want to be clear," Van Grack sneered, "You are saying that he did not provide any false/misleading statements to Covington?"
Powell countered, "You are asking my client to lie. Everything I have seen is consistentif you have seen something, show us." Van Grack retorted, "No one is asking your client to lie. Be careful about what you say."
One of the Virginia prosecutors interjected then, saying "Let's go back to having a factual discussion. What he believes to be true," adding "it is difficult for us to believe" that Flynn did not know the statements were false when he signed the FARA statements. But tagging off of Van Grack's question, he asked Powell to "clarify that your position is that he [Flynn] never gave false information to any lawyers at Covington whether orally or through documents." Powell replied, "We have seen nothing to indicate that."
Quote:
When the first batch of Michael Cohen search-warrant materials became public, the files disclosed evidence that President Trump's former fixer secretly worked for a foreign government.
The new materials released on Thursday proved no less significant, detailing the actions Cohen took after the release of the "Access Hollywood" video threatened to derail Trump's campaign. Within days of the release, according to the warrants, Cohen exchanged a "series of calls, text messages and emails" with Trump; his then-press secretary Hope Hicks; the National Enquirer's David Pecker; and Stormy Daniels' lawyer Keith Davidson.
Detailing Cohen's illegal hush-money payments to two women, the unsealed pages dispensed with the veiling of "Individual-1."
"As set forth below, there is probable cause to believe that Cohen made an excessive in-kind contribution to the presidential election campaign of then-candidate Donald Trump in the form of a $130,000 payment to Stephanie Clifford, an individual who was rumored to have had an extramarital affair with Trump, in exchange for her agreement not to disclose the alleged affair," the document states.
U.S. District Judge William H. Pauley III ordered the release of the information a day earlier, rejecting the government's request to protect the privacy interests of third parties.
"The campaign finance violations discussed in the materials are a matter of national importance," Pauley wrote. "Now that the government's investigation into those violations has concluded, it is time that every American has an opportunity to scrutinize the materials."
In March, the government released a trove of hundreds of meticulously documented pages of search warrant materials used to justify the judicially authorized raids of Cohen's home, office and hotel suite in April 2018.
A lawyer I clerked for said "assume your client is lying until proven otherwise".aggiehawg said:
(That is fairly common for lawyers to point their fingers back on their clients because, let's face it clients often do lie to their lawyers.)
Me: "Run background checks and criminal histories."VegasAg86 said:A lawyer I clerked for said "assume your client is lying until proven otherwise".aggiehawg said:
(That is fairly common for lawyers to point their fingers back on their clients because, let's face it clients often do lie to their lawyers.)
lolSarge 91 said:Me: "Run background checks and criminal histories."VegasAg86 said:A lawyer I clerked for said "assume your client is lying until proven otherwise".aggiehawg said:
(That is fairly common for lawyers to point their fingers back on their clients because, let's face it clients often do lie to their lawyers.)
Legal Assistant: "On the Plaintiff?"
Me: "Yes, and on our client."
Quote:
.....
While defense lawyers for Rafiekian asked Trenga to dismiss the entire case, they were most focused on the conspiracy charge and capitalizing on a pre-trial ruling the judge made that evidence appeared to be lacking that Rafiekian agreed with others to violate U.S. law.
Trenga expressed the same skepticism during a hearing on the issue, but following a 45-minute recess, he returned to the courtroom to say he was taking the issue under advisement and would allow the trial to proceed.
"There are very substantial issues with respect to the sufficiency of the evidence," Trenga said. He called the government's proof "all very circumstantial," adding: "Most of it's speculative."
However, the judge noted that court rules at this stage call for him to assess the evidence in the light most favorable to the government. Then, he announced he was planning to "reserve" on the issue......
Quote:
The special counsel's investigation was a sham controlled by the intelligence community. Evidence has long suggested as much, but testimony earlier this week from Michael Flynn's ex-lawyerthat Flynn's former legal team had not seen recently revealed information purporting to implicate Flynn in a conspiracy with a Turkish agentconfirms it.
Part of the Socratic method. Not all law schools follow it but yes, we are taught to think differently from before.Quote:
First of all, my brain doesn't think like Cleveland's, and apparently all attorneys. That's frickin' amazing she caught this information, or it is to me. Is there an investigatinve class they teach in law school that teaches extreme critical thinking? Or is it a pre-condition of living in DC in order to cover your ass?
This is true. My wife hates it. I think part of the way we are taught is to see issues from all angles, including from the perspective of an opponent. That allows you to anticipate their positions and cut them off at the knees (not my wife, of course).aggiehawg said:Part of the Socratic method. Not all law schools follow it but yes, we are taught to think differently from before.Quote:
First of all, my brain doesn't think like Cleveland's, and apparently all attorneys. That's frickin' amazing she caught this information, or it is to me. Is there an investigatinve class they teach in law school that teaches extreme critical thinking? Or is it a pre-condition of living in DC in order to cover your ass?
I remember at orientation before my first year we were told that if we were married, likely half of us would get divorced by our third year. Seemed kind of silly to me at the time but it was true. Largely a function of how we were retrained to actually argue a point, any point.
I have been married to The Hubs for over 20 years. Drives him crazy when we are having an argument and I go into what he calls "lawyer mode." Mostly drives him crazy because he knows he's about to lose the argument, however.
Which is funny, because we don't win that many to start with.aggiehawg said:Part of the Socratic method. Not all law schools follow it but yes, we are taught to think differently from before.Quote:
First of all, my brain doesn't think like Cleveland's, and apparently all attorneys. That's frickin' amazing she caught this information, or it is to me. Is there an investigatinve class they teach in law school that teaches extreme critical thinking? Or is it a pre-condition of living in DC in order to cover your ass?
I remember at orientation before my first year we were told that if we were married, likely half of us would get divorced by our third year. Seemed kind of silly to me at the time but it was true. Largely a function of how we were retrained to actually argue a point, any point.
I have been married to The Hubs for over 20 years. Drives him crazy when we are having an argument and I go into what he calls "lawyer mode." Mostly drives him crazy because he knows he's about to lose the argument, however.
Margot just didn't want to go "there." By "there" I mean calling out Team Mueller and the EDVa attorneys of malfeasance. Maybe the EDVa attorneys were never apprised but you can be damned certain nothing was withheld from Mueller and Weissmann. Brennan, Clapper and Comey considered Mueller and Weissmann as on the same team with them.drcrinum said:
That's a good read.
BRENNAN!
If Single - New Rule: Avoid marrying a lawyer.aggiehawg said:Part of the Socratic method. Not all law schools follow it but yes, we are taught to think differently from before.Quote:
First of all, my brain doesn't think like Cleveland's, and apparently all attorneys. That's frickin' amazing she caught this information, or it is to me. Is there an investigatinve class they teach in law school that teaches extreme critical thinking? Or is it a pre-condition of living in DC in order to cover your ass?
I remember at orientation before my first year we were told that if we were married, likely half of us would get divorced by our third year. Seemed kind of silly to me at the time but it was true. Largely a function of how we were retrained to actually argue a point, any point.
I have been married to The Hubs for over 20 years. Drives him crazy when we are having an argument and I go into what he calls "lawyer mode." Mostly drives him crazy because he knows he's about to lose the argument, however.
LeisureSuitLarry said:
The "lawyer mode" worked on my wife for a while but then she got tired of it. Now when she gets mad, she pouts for a couple of days. Either way, I consider it a win.
Or just restrict lawyers to only marrying each other.Quote:
If Single - New Rule: Avoid marrying a lawyer.
If Married (to a lawyer) - Hire a lawyer...for mental peace of mind.
Of course he is. We already saw from his press conference he will continue to take shots at Trump to give them cover for impeachment.Rockdoc said:
Word on the street is that mueller is rehearsing with the dems so he can give them a few sound bites to run with.
How can that be? Isn't he a Republican? Cause I've heard that over and over again.Rockdoc said:
Word on the street is that mueller is rehearsing with the dems so he can give them a few sound bites to run with.