While I agree that the unmasking themselves were allowed under the law at the time, even the FISA Court found that up to 85% of 702 queries were improper. Just because you have the legal authority to do something doesn't mean you should.MouthBQ98 said:
I heard some jackass lawyer in TV say that the administration was following the unmasking law. I seriously doubt it was being used as intended and authorized by people that had a need to know the US Person Identity to understand the meaning of an intercept of a foreign person they were tasked with investigating for a specific reason. Yeah. I'm totally sure there was totally not a breakdown And change in approval Requirement standards that was totally exploited by the Obama administration for political reasons.
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.....Barr was within his constitutional authority to dismiss the case against Flynn. He would still be within his constitutional authority to dismiss all other cases that come within the principles that led to the Flynn dismissal. More importantly, generalizing the Flynn principle is the right thing to do.
Because Barack Obama revised EO# 12333, which was signed by Brennan on Dec 15, 2016, and Lorretta Lynch on Jan 3, 2017, which allowed Intel Agencies (all 17 -- yes, all 17 --) to shares raw intelligence from feeds.drcrinum said:
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1260779548960075777.htmlQuote:
...9. No record of the FBI unit requesting a transcript; and yet the FBI having, discussing, debating said transcript (January 4, 2017); would imply the FBI intercepted the call as part of ongoing surveillance by the FBI.
10. To avoid exposure of illegal Flynn surveillance (no warrant, and no FISA), the FBI is now claiming "incidental collection"....
Sundance makes a great point: There was no unmasking of Flynn between December 29, 2016 & January 4, 2017, yet they were scrutinizing his transcripts. How?
Because they didn't need to request an unmasking of an incidental capture. They had both ends of the call. Kislyak was under electronic surveillance by virtue of being a foreign national on U.S. soil. Flynn was also under a form of electronic surveillance, although without a warrant.Quote:
Sundance makes a great point: There was no unmasking of Flynn between December 29, 2016 & January 4, 2017, yet they were scrutinizing his transcripts. How?
Title III is a 'wiretap' .... used in criminal investigations.aggiehawg said:Quote:
Because they didn't need to request an unmasking of an incidental capture. They had both ends of the call. Kislyak was under electronic surveillance by virtue of being a foreign national on U.S. soil. Flynn was also under a form of electronic surveillance, although without a warrant.
There is no other explanation.
I have no idea what this about. Seems like a threat of exposure of some sort. "Rod" is a reference to Rod Rosenstein who was appointed by W. Bush to be the US Attorney for the District of Maryland in 2005. He was the only US Attorney to be held over by Obama.Secolobo said:Well done.jdavault said:
Parody....sarcasm....tongue in cheek.....something like thataggiehawg said:I have no idea what this about. Seems like a threat of exposure of some sort. "Rod" is a reference to Rod Rosenstein who was appointed by W. Bush to be the US Attorney for the District of Maryland in 2005. He was the only US Attorney to be held over by Obama.Secolobo said:Well done.jdavault said:
So it sounds like Sullivan's son got into a scrape with the law and Rod made it go away as a favor to Sullivan?
The Soros stuff is always interesting but suggesting a federal judge is on the take like that is...well...very dangerous for a licensed lawyer. You can get disbarred for denigrating a judge.
Still need probable cause. And a judicially approved wire tap would be on record somewhere. And that fact would also have to be specifically mentioned in the charge and plea deal, because such evidence was obtained pursuant to a judicially approved warrant.Quote:
(a)
there is probable cause for belief that an individual is committing, has committed, or is about to commit a particular offense enumerated in section 2516 of this chapter;
(b)
there is probable cause for belief that particular communications concerning that offense will be obtained through such interception;
(c)
normal investigative procedures have been tried and have failed or reasonably appear to be unlikely to succeed if tried or to be too dangerous;
(d)
except as provided in subsection (11), there is probable cause for belief that the facilities from which, or the place where, the wire, oral, or electronic communications are to be intercepted are being used, or are about to be used, in connection with the commission of such offense, or are leased to, listed in the name of, or commonly used by such person.
My point remains. That guy better not be a lawyer.Quote:
Parody....sarcasm....tongue in cheek.....something like that
Wouldn't rule it out looking at how they handled their FISA warrants. 'Common' wiretaps are a fairly low bar when combined with judge shopping.aggiehawg said:
Still need probable cause. And a judicially approved wire tap would be on record somewhere. And that fact would also have to be specifically mentioned in the charge and plea deal, because such evidence was obtained pursuant to a judicially approved warrant.
It wasn't, ergo there was no Title III warrant, is my position.
Plus Flynn already knew Kislyak and had a preexisting relationship with him close enough where Flynn called to offer condolences when a relative of Kislyak's died. (Or it may have been the other way around. I just remember that in describing his contacts with Kislyak there was a condolence call in there somewhere.)MouthBQ98 said:
It is an interesting theory that it would have been very easy for someone at state to mention to Kislyak that he should drop a line to Flynn to establish communications with the incoming administration. That may not have been necessary however as it was inevitable Kislyak would call the new cabinet as they were announced. That was his job after all, so pretty much those listening had only to wait. Now, pushing a topic of conversation is something else. It is arguable that the sanctions were made knowing that the Russians would inevitably inquire about them with their opposites in both the outgoing and incoming administrations.
It wouldn't make sense to go to the FISA court for Page on the basis of the dossier, in which Flynn was also named I might add, but use a Title III warrant on Flynn. Although both require probable cause, in practice the FISA court's is much lower in practice.benchmark said:Wouldn't rule it out looking at how they handled their FISA warrants. 'Common' wiretaps are a fairly low bar when combined with judge shopping.aggiehawg said:
Still need probable cause. And a judicially approved wire tap would be on record somewhere. And that fact would also have to be specifically mentioned in the charge and plea deal, because such evidence was obtained pursuant to a judicially approved warrant.
It wasn't, ergo there was no Title III warrant, is my position.
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...........But in the final paragraph he will say that, notwithstanding everything he has found to be true as reflected in his opinion, he has no choice under the law but to grant DOJ's motion and dismiss the case.
He'll order that his opinion be published in the Federal Supplement, with the goal being that his account will be the definitive historical account of the Gen. Flynn saga.
He'll do what the law commands him to do, but he'll do it in such a way that he's a hero to all his left-wing legal cronies.
If he wants out of this case that badly, here's a thought...he can recuse himself. he has lost his objectivity and allowed his personal animus towards Flynn, instead of the applicable law, to cloud his judgment. He can admit something similar to that and simply withdraw.pagerman @ work said:
So could Sullivan be doing this in order to prompt his removal from the case?
He seems to be hell bent on doing what he is expressly required by law to do, which is to allow the dismissal.
Assuming he (for whatever reason) just doesn't want to be the guy that does that, could he be doing crazy, blatantly improper things in order to force it out of his court/hands?
That seems like a reasonable guess. Let's hope they mandamus the fool and prevent it from happening.drcrinum said:Quote:
He'll do what the law commands him to do, but he'll do it in such a way that he's a hero to all his left-wing legal cronies.
Very long legal read by Shipwreckedcrew. Conclusion above.
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The government has absolute discretion to decide not to prosecute. ICC v. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, 482 U.S. 270, 283 (1987) ("t is entirely clear that the refusal to prosecute cannot be the subject of judicial review."). Even a formal, written agreement to that effect, which is often referred to as a "non-prosecution agreement," is not the business of the courts.6 In addition, the government has near-absolute power under Fed. R. Crim. P. 48(a) to extinguish a case that it has brought. See United States v. Pimentel, 932 F.2d 1029, 1033 n.5 (2d Cir. 1991) ("Rule 48(a) provides that prosecutors may, 'by leave of court,' file a dismissal of an indictment, information or complaint. A court is generally required to grant a prosecutor's Rule 48(a) motion unless dismissal is 'clearly contrary to manifest public interest.'"). In my view, if the government were now moving to dismiss this case, it would be an abuse of discretion to deny that motion.
Judging from Sullivan's untethered screed against Flynn at the very first hearing, he either had formed his opinion from reading news reports or had multiple ex parte communications with the prosecutors. Both are bad looks for a federal judge as he is taking into consideration "evidence" that is not properly before him and largely hearsay evidence at that.Wildcat said:
What is your take on Sullivan's hostility to Flynn?