If I recall correctly, Bill had these in a sock drawer.
Yeah but which kind of "sock" drawer?the_batman26 said:
If I recall correctly, Bill had these in a sock drawer.
aggiehawg said:
And a response to a subpoena can be a motion to quash if overbroad. That might have been a mistake not to object to the scope of the subpoena way back when. But I doubt it would have been successful, ultimately.
Now the probable cause supporting the application for the search warrant at MAL? Harder to challenge unless an indictment ensues. Now we have an indictment and the legality of that search warrant can be challenged more directly.
And they do. Website went live at 12:01 PM on Jan 20th in 2021.Quote:
So because of computers and electronic records, there are far fewer paper records than with earlier Presidents. And NARA does have storage for Trump's Presidential records in the Washington, DC, area.
According to https://www.archives.gov/press/press-releases/2022/nr22-001fka ftc said:
They did move documents and archives to Florida. That seems pretty obvious. Did you make a typo?
Part of this whole thing is Biden just shipped **** before they had a chance to setup storage. Hence bathrooms and closets.
Trump was going through process of reviewing, having been told, presumably, that precedent dictated the incumbent POTUS has wide deference in determining what was personal v presidential in nature.
Quote:
How are documents in the White House determined to be an official Presidential record or a personal record?
The Presidential Records Act (PRA) defines what constitutes "Presidential records" and what are "personal records." 44 U.S.C. 2201. Personal records include "diaries, journals, or other personal notes serving as the functional equivalent of a diary or journal which are not prepared or utilized for, or circulated or communicated in the course of, transacting Government business."
The PRA also requires that all documentary materials "be categorized as Presidential records or personal records upon their creation or receipt and be filed separately." 44 U.S.C. 2203(b). The President does not have discretion to categorize a Presidential record as a personal record.
In a normal case yes. This is not a normal case. Too much politics, not enough law.Quote:
I've heard of cases of people challenging a subpoena and asking them to be quashed in other cases.
It would seem to me that the approaches should be to object to the subpoena and then if that doesn't work, to provide the materials in the subpoena and then argue in court for their return.
Would that be the usual approach?
aggiehawg said:
That was after, well after a federal judge ruled otherwise.
IOW, not truthful.
Quote:
The PRA does not bestow on the President the power to assert sweeping authority over whatever materials he chooses to designate as presidential records without any possibility of judicial review.
Id. at 1290. The court stated that Armstrong I only barred judicial review of "creation, management, and disposal decisions" of the President and not "the initial classification of existing materials
Ouch! That one hit hard. Go easy on them, Hawg. ;-)aggiehawg said:Okay.Quote:
It can't be said enough that none of this changes the fact that there isn't any apparent serious legal argument about whether the documents are presidential or not.
Before the PRA, those records belonged to the outgoing president. PRA changed the presumption in favor of none of them were personal in nature, until the Clinton audiotape sock drawer case. There is was declared that the POTUS solely had that authority. Remember some of those tapes included highly classified info in conversations Bill was having with foreign heads of state, during a war, in Kosovo. No problem there.
So I ask again, which bureaucrat, beady eyed, academic librarian, gets to make such determinations? Or is it a bearded scandal plagued Special Counsel and a prosecuting attorney who had to remove herself and resign because of illegal wiretapping of defense counsel's phones back in 2009?
WTF? You never read the Amy Berman Jackson (horrible federal judge BTW) opinion that said NARA has never and will never have that authority...only A POTUS, even a former one does under the PRA.Quote:
A federal judge did not say the POTUS has wide discretion (especially after he's out of office) to define what's a presidential and personal record.
aggiehawg said:WTF? You never read the Amy Berman Jackson (horrible federal judge BTW) opinion that said NARA has never and will never have that authority...only A POTUS, even a former one does undert the PRA.Quote:
A federal judge did not say the POTUS has wide discretion (especially after he's out of office) to define what's a presidential and personal record.
Quote:
The PRA does not bestow on the President the power to assert sweeping authority over whatever materials he chooses to designate as presidential records without any possibility of judicial review.
Then who has? Answer my original question under the PRA?TXAggie2011 said:aggiehawg said:WTF? You never read the Amy Berman Jackson (horrible federal judge BTW) opinion that said NARA has never and will never have that authority...only A POTUS, even a former one does undert the PRA.Quote:
A federal judge did not say the POTUS has wide discretion (especially after he's out of office) to define what's a presidential and personal record.
I have read the opinion. I quoted it in my post you just quoted.
And did I say NARA has that authority? No, no I did not.
aggiehawg said:Then who has? Answer my original question under the PRA?TXAggie2011 said:aggiehawg said:WTF? You never read the Amy Berman Jackson (horrible federal judge BTW) opinion that said NARA has never and will never have that authority...only A POTUS, even a former one does undert the PRA.Quote:
A federal judge did not say the POTUS has wide discretion (especially after he's out of office) to define what's a presidential and personal record.
I have read the opinion. I quoted it in my post you just quoted.
And did I say NARA has that authority? No, no I did not.
Explain it to me like I'm five and know nothing about statuory construction, case law and precedent because I am very confused right now. If the PRA never applies, why is it even in existence?
Quote:
To the extent that there was a subsequent classification decision the Archivist purported to make, see supra note 2, or to be more accurate, a decision to decline to revisit the President's classification decision, any injury plaintiff claims it suffered as a result would not be redressable because there is nothing under the statute that the Court can compel the Archivist to do.
But they said they have no jurisdiction to second guess it either. Separations of powers.Quote:
The Court in that case does not say there is no possible judicial review at all of whether the President made the correct determination.
aggiehawg said:But they said they have no jurisdiction to second guess it either. Separations of powers.Quote:
The Court in that case does not say there is no possible judicial review at all of whether the President made the correct determination.
Tell me why that changed now?
Quote:
The PRA authorizes NARA to invoke the same enforcement mechanism embodied in the Federal Records Act, which begins with a request to the Attorney General to institute an action for the recovery of missing records. Compare44 U.S.C. 2112(c) with 44 U.S.C. 3106. The statute does not mandate that NARA invoke this enforcement scheme but rather vests complete discretion with the agency to utilize that mechanism. 44 U.S.C. 2112(c) ("When the Archivist considers it to be in the public interest, he may ...." (emphasis added)). The Archivist has chosen to invoke the mechanism in the past when it deemed such action appropriate. See, e.g., United States v. McElvenny, No. 023027, 2003 WL 1741422 (S.D.N.Y. April 1, 2003) (seeking recovery of a map of Cuba annotated by President John F. Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis).
Footnotes?TXAggie2011 said:
And really, more accurately, and importantly, let me clarify the Judicial Watch case said NARA cannot be compelled to second guess the President.Quote:
To the extent that there was a subsequent classification decision the Archivist purported to make, see supra note 2, or to be more accurate, a decision to decline to revisit the President's classification decision, any injury plaintiff claims it suffered as a result would not be redressable because there is nothing under the statute that the Court can compel the Archivist to do.
Got it.TXAggie2011 said:
Just want to point out one more time this is all pretty much irrelevant at this point and to this indictment
I am so confused as well. Does the Clinton decision apply or not?the_batman26 said:
So, again, who has power to assert sweeping authority? If not NARA? I'd like an answer this time instead of "well, idk but Judicial Watch holds NARA can't."
aggiehawg said:Got it.TXAggie2011 said:
Just want to point out one more time this is all pretty much irrelevant at this point and to this indictment
Political purely.
Law is not involved.
the_batman26 said:
So, again, who has power to assert sweeping authority? If not NARA? I'd like an answer this time instead of "well, idk but Judicial Watch holds NARA can't."
aggiehawg said:I am so confused as well. Does the Clinton decision apply or not?the_batman26 said:
So, again, who has power to assert sweeping authority? If not NARA? I'd like an answer this time instead of "well, idk but Judicial Watch holds NARA can't."
Switching jurisdictions between DC and South Florida also raises questions. Why?
aggiehawg said:
Gee.
Now I know I was a much better lawyer than you are.
That's pretty much out there. Was that a joke?
Ags77 said:aggiehawg said:I am so confused as well. Does the Clinton decision apply or not?the_batman26 said:
So, again, who has power to assert sweeping authority? If not NARA? I'd like an answer this time instead of "well, idk but Judicial Watch holds NARA can't."
Switching jurisdictions between DC and South Florida also raises questions. Why?
I heard a guy on tv say they put the trial in Florida because they thought if they put it in DC it would be an automatic throwing out of the case on the grounds of wrong venue ? He said that the special council thinks he has a strong case and was not risking that possible outcome ?
Quote:
Switching jurisdictions between DC and South Florida also raises questions. Why?
TXAggie2011 said:the_batman26 said:
So, again, who has power to assert sweeping authority? If not NARA? I'd like an answer this time instead of "well, idk but Judicial Watch holds NARA can't."
I don't know what you're talking about
Why would I agree that Trump was never a President and because of that the PRA never applied?TXAggie2011 said:aggiehawg said:
Gee.
Now I know I was a much better lawyer than you are.
That's pretty much out there. Was that a joke?
If you agree the PRA is pretty much irrelevant at this point, save us all some time and stop *****ing about it
TXAggie2011 said:aggiehawg said:
Gee.
Now I know I was a much better lawyer than you are.
That's pretty much out there. Was that a joke?
If you agree the PRA is pretty much irrelevant at this point, save us all some time and stop *****ing about it