This.MouthBQ98 said:
She is in the very tough position of having a client that already plead guilty and made a deal with a duplicitous previous legal team, and with a prosecution with a history of underhanded dirty trickery and gamesmanship. The odds were already long. Her best bet may to ensure that the public applies pressure to the DOJ to see if they can crack into any corruption or at least impropriety on the part of the investigation and prosecution of the case and see where that goes.
FriscoKid said:That's a big ****ing deal.Secolobo said:
ATMTWS said:
Hunter Biden said in his interview with ABC, or whoever, that he had "just as much O&G experience as anyone else on the board."
Who else was on the board!?!?!?
Wildcat said:
Why is Flynn's new defense attorney fighting this battle on Twitter?
stetson said:Wildcat said:
Why is Flynn's new defense attorney fighting this battle on Twitter?
For the same reason as Trump; she is not going to see the light of day or get a fair shake with the MSM.
Cofer Black, for one. I suspect there might be a name, or two, you'll recognize. I gurantee you Cofer Black is a hell of a lot more legit on that Board than Hunter Biden.ATMTWS said:
Hunter Biden said in his interview with ABC, or whoever, that he had "just as much O&G experience as anyone else on the board."
Who else was on the board!?!?!?
Quote:
...
Q Then immediately after President Zelensky mentions the Javelins, on the top of page 3, President Trump mentions CrowdStrike, and then he also says, The server, they say Ukraine has it.
A Yeah.
Q Do you have any understanding of what the President was talking about there?
A Well, I didn't at the time that I first read this summary, but obviously, there has been explanation in the news.
Q And what's your understanding?
A Well, that the server that was used to hack the DNC was somehow in Ukraine or moved to Ukraine, controlled by the Ukrainians. The Ukrainians then put out some sort of disinformation that it was Russia. And that this is what the President is referring to that it's important to get to the bottom of it.
Q In that same paragraph he continues, and I'm not starting at the beginning of the sentence, but he mentions Robert Mueller and he says: They say a lot of it started with Ukraine. Whatever you can do, it's very important that you do it if that's possible. Do you see that?
A Yes.
Q Do you have any understanding of what the President is referring to there?
A I think it's the belief that Ukraine was behind interference in our 2016 elections.....
dreyOO said:Secolobo said:
And why can't other Republicans do the job themselves? Why does Jordan need to come in?
I'm fine with the tactic, but this is pathetic. Every elected R needs to do their ****ing job.
I wonder if CNN will cross post that article on their site?drcrinum said:
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/the-michael-flynn-smoking-gun-fbi-headquarters-altered-interview-summary
Good read. CNN legal analyst & former FBI agent sees the light after reading Sidney Powell's memo in the Flynn case.
Quote:
First, Stone got up and asked his wife to join him as he left the courtroom. With the defendant absent, the packed room got quiet while the judge appeared confused.
Then a spectator sitting in the back row moaned loudly and collapsed. Jackson adjourned the proceedings and cleared the courtroom while medical personnel and Stone's daughter, a trauma nurse, attended to the sick man. After about 15 minutes, the man walked out of the courtroom on his own and the D.C. fire department took him out of the building on a stretcher.
Quote:
But Stone never made it through the day. After a lunch break, he went to the courtroom lectern and said he wanted the proceedings to continue without him.
"I have, apparently, some food poisoning," Stone told U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson. "I don't want to waste the court's time or the time of the jurors."
Jackson told him he wasn't obliged to explain further. "I don't need more details," the judge said.
After making sure he understood his "absolute constitutional right" to be present for all parts of his trial, Jackson agreed to continue with one-by-one-questioning of potential jurors, which seemed likely to continue through Tuesday and perhaps into Wednesday.
Quote:
Outside the courthouse Tuesday morning, protesters chanted "Roger Stone did nothing wrong!" as the longtime Trump associate entered the courthouse.
As the public lined up outside the courtroom, Bill Christensen, a local political activist who has been holding up signs at Mueller-related hearings for the last two-plus years (this guy needs a hobby) called out to Stone as he walked past: "Hey, you're going to get to see Manafort."
Stone supporters like Yiannopoulos and former Trump 2016 campaign adviser Michael Caputo attended the first day of jury selection, as well.
I agree, but this:hbtheduce said:
The only thing I hate in that article is his continued lie about the Clinton Email Scandal. It wrong that criminally exposing classified materials requires "gross negligence".
The statute has no intent barrier, and even then the FBI is not the one who determines intent. A prosecutor at DOJ would decide that. It was dirty non-prosecution by Loretta Lynch, who wanted to spike the investigation without getting her hands dirty.
is damning.Quote:
Here's me, acknowledging my mistake. I was dead wrong. It now seems there was a concerted effort, though isolated, within the upper-echelons of the FBI to influence the outcome of the Flynn investigation. By "dirtying up" Flynn, Comey's FBI headquarters team of callow sycophants shortcut the investigative process. Arm-twisting Flynn through the "tweaked" version of his interview afforded him criminal exposure. The cocksure Comey team felt supremely confident that would inspire him "flipping" and give them the desperately sought-after evidence of Trump-Russia collusion that the wholly unverified Steele dossier was never remotely capable of providing.