LOL. Touche.Retired FBI Agent said:Indeed. But to be fair, Trump likely had no way to test that theory before nominating Milley.aggiehawg said:
Milley has difficulty finding his ass without both hands and a spotter. LOL.
LOL. Touche.Retired FBI Agent said:Indeed. But to be fair, Trump likely had no way to test that theory before nominating Milley.aggiehawg said:
Milley has difficulty finding his ass without both hands and a spotter. LOL.
I read that elsewhere. Also, that the NARA people were there to give advice on how to determine how to decide which records were personal and which which weren't, but not to help go through them.aggiehawg said:Guess you missed the part where NARA had their counterpart in the White House.Quote:
If they were marked as "Classified" or "Presidential Documents", then you might have something.
What do you think they do? White House Office of Record Management? Organize his LPs and 45s?
No starting with the date he was officially out of office is an artifice. Part of the "willfull" element, I suppose.. At least in their minds.Quote:
Seems like they held Trump to a standard he could never meet. Maybe I am thinking about it too much, but the start date of the crime strikes me as odd. Or are those dates just bookends which makes only slightly more sense.
Trump legal team already screwing up by not getting the co-conspirator's legal representation sorted out right off the bat.Quote:
Walt Nauta, Trump's bodyman and co-defendant in the case, had not secured a local attorney to sponsor the appearance of his DC-based attorney by Tuesday's hearing, and thus was not able to enter his plea.
The proceeding for Nauta to enter his plea is scheduled for June 27.
Opportunity to obtain an expedited security clearance is a windfall for any private attorney associated with this case.Quote:
CNN
US District Judge Aileen Cannon issued her first order since former President Donald Trump pleaded not guilty to charges brought by special counsel Jack Smith for allegedly mishandling classified information, instructing the parties to get the ball rolling to obtain security clearances for the lawyers who will need them.
In a Thursday order, Cannon gave "all attorneys of record and forthcoming attorneys of record" a Friday deadline for getting in touch with the Justice Department's litigation security group so that they can expedite "the necessary clearance process." By June 20, she wants the lawyers to file a notice confirming they have complied with her instructions.
LOL.Quote:
Trump legal team already screwing up by not getting the co-conspirator's legal representation sorted out right off the bat.
Bryanisbest said:
PDA and sock drawer case kills this whole prosecution.
Whistle Pig said:Bryanisbest said:
PDA and sock drawer case kills this whole prosecution.
Trump didn't defy the subpoena to hide his personal journal. People are gonna be surprised when their pet legal theories they read about on some right wing blog or Twitter account aren't tried even by Trump's counsel.
Prior to 1978, it didn't matter whether it was a journal, Area 51 docs, Manhattan Project docs, (see what I did there?) or a blue dress. All of those items would belong to the President.Whistle Pig said:Trump didn't defy the subpoena to hide his personal journal. People are gonna be surprised when their pet legal theories they read about on some right wing blog or Twitter account aren't tried even by Trump's counsel.Bryanisbest said:
PDA and sock drawer case kills this whole prosecution.
Words together in a an order not shown to be sensical agency regarding currents of such an administration, makes sense of no with no facts withstanding to overwhelm those being incapable of the written word. The evidence whelms not a thing accept the gullible.Bill Clinternet said:
The Justice Department has moral and legal agency notwithstanding the make up of the current administration. The evidence is overwhelming.
However, in the interest of saving our Republic from another right wing insurrection and further division, President Biden should pardon Mr. Trump and let him disappear back into whatever slime infested ****hole he chooses to slither back towards.
Your failure to understand what I wrote isn't my problem=)fka ftc said:Words together in a an order not shown to be sensical agency regarding currents of such an administration, makes sense of no with no facts withstanding to overwhelm those being incapable of the written word. The evidence whelms not a thing accept the gullible.Bill Clinternet said:
The Justice Department has moral and legal agency notwithstanding the make up of the current administration. The evidence is overwhelming.
However, in the interest of saving our Republic from another right wing insurrection and further division, President Biden should pardon Mr. Trump and let him disappear back into whatever slime infested ****hole he chooses to slither back towards.
Yes, it does. But:Bill Clinternet said:
The Justice Department has moral and legal agency notwithstanding the make up of the current administration. The evidence is overwhelming.
However, in the interest of saving our Republic from another right wing insurrection and further division, President Biden should pardon Mr. Trump and let him disappear back into whatever slime infested ****hole he chooses to slither back towards.
A large part of criminal statutory construction, as I have stated before. Which makes sense when one considers the basic 6th Amendment requirement for all criminal statutes, that they be drawn narrowly enough to provide the public notice of what exactly is the conduct being prohibited. That's a big problem with the indictment Bragg has brought against Trump in Manhattan. He bootstrapped up to a felony charge on the basis of another as yet unknown charge. No notice of what that potential charge is.Quote:
Granted, it's an opinion piece, but I do think an important point is the concept of General Statute vs. Specific Statute.
Bill Clinternet said:
The Justice Department has moral and legal agency notwithstanding the make up of the current administration. The evidence is overwhelming.
However, in the interest of saving our Republic from another right wing insurrection and further division, President Biden should pardon Mr. Trump and let him disappear back into whatever slime infested ****hole he chooses to slither back towards.
I thought very lucidly about it before posting. No one is above the law. He is no longer POTUS so the Justice Department precedent concerning indictment of a sitting US President is not relevant.jrdaustin said:Yes, it does. But:Bill Clinternet said:
The Justice Department has moral and legal agency notwithstanding the make up of the current administration. The evidence is overwhelming.
However, in the interest of saving our Republic from another right wing insurrection and further division, President Biden should pardon Mr. Trump and let him disappear back into whatever slime infested ****hole he chooses to slither back towards.
A. It is not absolute. That's why they still have to appear before a court official.
B. It is questionable whether that agency automatically and summarily supersedes a FPOTUS, who the overwhelming evidence indicates is not just some random guy.
C. It does not give DOJ the authority to pick and choose what statutes to use - or more specifically disregard - in executing such agency.
If you think about it, your blanket statement could be the bedrock for the establishment of a true third world government placing unelected bureaucrats at the highest point in the food chain - enabling them to eliminate political opponents at will.
No thanks. But thank you for playing.
I agree with Greg Jarrett that the defense will likely argue under the definitions of the PRA that Trump has some personal interest in these documents such that he was allowed to have them at home. And the PRA absolutely applies to these documents if they fit within the PRA's definition of what it covers. They wouldn't, if they don't (e.g. a document(s) is an agency record.)jrdaustin said:
I've gone back and looked through a number of TxAggie2011's posts, starting with the second one that summarily negated PRA, and said it was dealt with and eliminated by the 11th Circuit. He went further to say that Trump's team would be stupid to even bring it up.
That statement confused me at the time and does so still. Because it appears to me that this case has to rely at its core on negating PRA.
See this article by Greg Jarrett - Specifically the section addressing PRA.
https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/trumps-indictment-slam-dunk-case-liberal-media-believes
Granted, it's an opinion piece, but I do think an important point is the concept of General Statute vs. Specific Statute. PRA is a law that was written 1978 specifically for Presidents. But by deliniating Presidential vs. Personal records and giving the Government a stake in the documents, it doesn't the negate the processes and procedures that must be gone throught to determine status of documents. It also doesn't eliminate the inherent protections that a President has in going through those determinations.
In other words, if the PRA doesn't apply in this case - a law that is so specific that it has applied to 7 people in its existence - then it doesn't apply for anyone. Time will tell, but I'm very curious, 2011, for you to expand on your rationale that the 11th Circuit decision has conclusively settled this issue and the point is now moot.
Thank you for the "reasoned rebuttal" and complete lack of blanket statements.jrdaustin said:
Sorry, but your argument is not convincing. You cannot refute a reasoned rebuttal with a blanket statement and get anywhere - no matter how much you hate the individual in question.
What amazes me is the lengths that people are willing going to to twist "the law" into something completely unprecedented in order to get the individual that they want to get. But I guess that's what happens when the desire to win outweighs prinicple.
Life moves pretty quicklyjrdaustin said:
Damn. Didn't even give me time to clarify.
It is highly unlikely Biden is involved in the Justice Department indictment. I do agree he will pardon him, however, and I am guessing he will do so prior to the election.rgag12 said:Bill Clinternet said:
The Justice Department has moral and legal agency notwithstanding the make up of the current administration. The evidence is overwhelming.
However, in the interest of saving our Republic from another right wing insurrection and further division, President Biden should pardon Mr. Trump and let him disappear back into whatever slime infested ****hole he chooses to slither back towards.
Trump will get a pardon from Biden, but after he and Dems have used this charge to their greatest political advantage. They are rushing to indict trump to get him nominated (let's face it, if they weren't propping up Trump he'd be in serious trouble right now. He had nothing to sell other than being a loser for multiple cycles).
Once the 2024 election is over and Biden crushes Trump, and the anti-trump sentiment helps other dems find success down the ballot, the long-awaited federal trial will spookily be about to begin. Then all of a sudden a Biden pardon will be issued.
You know why that is.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
This case is so hot that the people most qualified to defend Trump are sitting on the sidelines.
He's got to go check his left wing blog and twitter accounts to find them. Then he'll get back with you.fka ftc said:Whistle Pig said:Bryanisbest said:
PDA and sock drawer case kills this whole prosecution.
Trump didn't defy the subpoena to hide his personal journal. People are gonna be surprised when their pet legal theories they read about on some right wing blog or Twitter account aren't tried even by Trump's counsel.
Go ahead and let us know what legal theories they will work with. Or are you not wanting to ruin the surprise?>
Ugh. Barnes has had his moments. This is not one of them. He's making more how many angels on the head of a pin type spin. Overly convoluted. And if even I am saying that, queen of the nuances in law, you know it is too much.Im Gipper said:
Why doenst Trump hire Robert Barnes? That guy has to all figured out. 1st Amendment argument for sure a winner.