There are so many bad legal takes from both sides on Twitter, even from supposed attorneys, that it is astounding. Unfortunately, it is not surprising in the least.
Who is the decider of what is or isn't a bad legal take?Joseydog said:
There are so many bad legal takes from both sides on Twitter, even from supposed attorneys, that it is astounding. Unfortunately, it is not surprising in the least.
Im Gipper said:Quote:
he does make it easier than most for there to be something that will stick on the wall.
Try again! Nothing has stuck. Everything starts loud, then whimpers away.
(Only later to find out Biden did it(
Not someone who thinks Trump should just file something directly with SCOTUS.Stat Monitor Repairman said:Who is the decider of what is or isn't a bad legal take?Joseydog said:
There are so many bad legal takes from both sides on Twitter, even from supposed attorneys, that it is astounding. Unfortunately, it is not surprising in the least.
100%Charpie said:
Do you think there are more indictments to come?
the_batman26 said:
You gotta admit; it's pretty creepy to have this line of thinking.
What is the downside of filing something directly with SCOTUS and the 11th circuit when the worst that could happen is that they say no?Joseydog said:Not someone who thinks Trump should just file something directly with SCOTUS.Stat Monitor Repairman said:Who is the decider of what is or isn't a bad legal take?Joseydog said:
There are so many bad legal takes from both sides on Twitter, even from supposed attorneys, that it is astounding. Unfortunately, it is not surprising in the least.
According to reports and speculation due to empaneled grand juries, the DOJ is looking at J6 and possibly further charges related to documents at Bedminster.ThunderCougarFalconBird said:100%Charpie said:
Do you think there are more indictments to come?
Any notion of any pretense that this is anything besides hyper-partisan went out the window with the first indictment. Gates are open. Flood to come.
Stat Monitor Repairman said:What is the downside of filing something directly with SCOTUS and the 11th circuit when the worst that could happen is that they say no?Joseydog said:Not someone who thinks Trump should just file something directly with SCOTUS.Stat Monitor Repairman said:Who is the decider of what is or isn't a bad legal take?Joseydog said:
There are so many bad legal takes from both sides on Twitter, even from supposed attorneys, that it is astounding. Unfortunately, it is not surprising in the least.
Sanctions that can hurt not only the lawyers but their clients.Quote:
What is the downside of filing something directly with SCOTUS and the 11th circuit when the worst that could happen is that they say no?
Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Why does the suggestion of Trump seeking immediate relief in the appellate courts scare people?
Folks seem terrified of the suggestion.
Someone go get themselves a nice soy latte and sexplain that to all us layperson non-legal scholars.
Would the DOJ and the judiciary collaborate to seek and enforce sanctions against a federal criminal defendant seeking interlocutory relief from the appellate courts in an unprecedented case that already has a half-dozen known constitutional issues?aggiehawg said:Sanctions that can hurt not only the lawyers but their clients.Quote:
What is the downside of filing something directly with SCOTUS and the 11th circuit when the worst that could happen is that they say no?
They hide these answers in books. Very difficult for you.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Why does the suggestion of Trump seeking immediate relief in the appellate courts scare people?
Folks seem terrified of the suggestion.
Someone go get themselves a nice soy latte and sexplain that to all us layperson non-legal scholars.
You need a ruling and usually permission to file for interlocutory relief after a motion for rehearing, first.Stat Monitor Repairman said:Would the DOJ and the judiciary collaborate to seek and enforce sanctions against a federal criminal defendant seeking interlocutory relief from the appellate courts in an unprecedented case that already has a half-dozen known constitutional issues?aggiehawg said:Sanctions that can hurt not only the lawyers but their clients.Quote:
What is the downside of filing something directly with SCOTUS and the 11th circuit when the worst that could happen is that they say no?
Running list of constitutional issues in US v. Trump:Joseydog said:Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Why does the suggestion of Trump seeking immediate relief in the appellate courts scare people?
Folks seem terrified of the suggestion.
Someone go get themselves a nice soy latte and sexplain that to all us layperson non-legal scholars.
doesn't really matter what the basis might be. The point here is that this is no longer about "justice being done" but "trump being gotten."Joseydog said:According to reports and speculation due to empaneled grand juries, the DOJ is looking at J6 and possibly further charges related to documents at Bedminster.ThunderCougarFalconBird said:100%Charpie said:
Do you think there are more indictments to come?
Any notion of any pretense that this is anything besides hyper-partisan went out the window with the first indictment. Gates are open. Flood to come.
It is not being a turtle. I just don't have the time or the patience to explain federal procedure to you.Stat Monitor Repairman said:Running list of constitutional issues in US v. Trump:Joseydog said:Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Why does the suggestion of Trump seeking immediate relief in the appellate courts scare people?
Folks seem terrified of the suggestion.
Someone go get themselves a nice soy latte and sexplain that to all us layperson non-legal scholars.
1st
4th
5th
6th
14th (substantive and procedural);
and;
Article 1 Section 9
So I'd respond that that's not how any of this works either. But nobody want's to talk about that because their TDS is turtle heading.
If I'm Trump I'm looking at a motion to stay and for interlocutory relief filed in all three courts concurrently.aggiehawg said:You need a ruling and usually permission to file for interlocutory relief after a motion for rehearing, first.Stat Monitor Repairman said:Would the DOJ and the judiciary collaborate to seek and enforce sanctions against a federal criminal defendant seeking interlocutory relief from the appellate courts in an unprecedented case that already has a half-dozen known constitutional issues?aggiehawg said:Sanctions that can hurt not only the lawyers but their clients.Quote:
What is the downside of filing something directly with SCOTUS and the 11th circuit when the worst that could happen is that they say no?
Federal rules are more precise and unforgiving.
Are the federal rules being used to deny Trump's substantive rights?Joseydog said:It is not being a turtle. I just don't have the time or the patience to explain federal procedure to you.Stat Monitor Repairman said:Running list of constitutional issues in US v. Trump:Joseydog said:Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Why does the suggestion of Trump seeking immediate relief in the appellate courts scare people?
Folks seem terrified of the suggestion.
Someone go get themselves a nice soy latte and sexplain that to all us layperson non-legal scholars.
1st
4th
5th
6th
14th (substantive and procedural);
and;
Article 1 Section 9
So I'd respond that that's not how any of this works either. But nobody want's to talk about that because their TDS is turtle heading.
My snooty arrogant lawyer reader is now permanently broken when if slammed into the maximum peg reading this.Joseydog said:It is not being a turtle. I just don't have the time or the patience to explain federal procedure to you.Stat Monitor Repairman said:Running list of constitutional issues in US v. Trump:Joseydog said:Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Why does the suggestion of Trump seeking immediate relief in the appellate courts scare people?
Folks seem terrified of the suggestion.
Someone go get themselves a nice soy latte and sexplain that to all us layperson non-legal scholars.
1st
4th
5th
6th
14th (substantive and procedural);
and;
Article 1 Section 9
So I'd respond that that's not how any of this works either. But nobody want's to talk about that because their TDS is turtle heading.
I think more and more people will begin to understand this... hopefully.ThunderCougarFalconBird said:
doesn't really matter what the basis might be. The point here is that this is no longer about "justice being done" but "trump being gotten."
It's like I've said about this all along: they got so caught up in whether they could that they never stopped to ask whether they should.
But they've created a new normal. Biden will be indicted. His successor is guaranteed to be indicted and so on.
Exactly.Quote:
But they've created a new normal. Biden will be indicted. His successor is guaranteed to be indicted and so on.
What is the process again for sitting POTUS to have the DOJ indict the opposition candidate?ThunderCougarFalconBird said:
I get it that this really is a unique case that could only happen with a handful of people and a first in American history, but there's a process in place for all of this. Making extraordinary filings like you suggest puts the attorneys' reputations in peril.
I get that.ThunderCougarFalconBird said:
I get it that this really is a unique case that could only happen with a handful of people and a first in American history, but there's a process in place for all of this. Making extraordinary filings like you suggest puts the attorneys' reputations in peril.
Raises hand.Quote:
Who here thinks that the application of procedural rules outweighs a criminal defendant's fundamental constitutional rights?
Do the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure cover sitting POTUS using DOJ to silence and imprison their other candidates during re-election campaign? Amazing if so.aggiehawg said:Raises hand.Quote:
Who here thinks that the application of procedural rules outweighs a criminal defendant's fundamental constitutional rights?
The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure didn't just suddenly appear out of nowhere and without massive considerantion of both constitutional substantive and procedural due process. They were drafted and later interpreted with the protections of due process foremost in mind.
Other than the right to a speedy trial, due process does not have temporal or time element. The saying justice delayed is justice denied but that's dicta, not precedent.
That's the funny thing about fair trials, only defendants are entitled to a fair trial. The state is not and never has been. But when prosecutors go rogue, it is up to the courts to police them, if the DOJ won't self police their own.Quote:
Do the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure cover sitting POTUS using DOJ to silence and imprison their other candidates during re-election campaign? Amazing if so.
aggiehawg said:Raises hand.Quote:
Who here thinks that the application of procedural rules outweighs a criminal defendant's fundamental constitutional rights?
The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure didn't just suddenly appear out of nowhere and without massive considerantion of both constitutional substantive and procedural due process. They were drafted and later interpreted with the protections of due process foremost in mind.
Other than the right to a speedy trial, due process does not have temporal or time element. The saying justice delayed is justice denied but that's dicta, not precedent.