Most Fed employees are democrats.Im Gipper said:Quote:
No way! Two entrenched democrats quit?!
Why wouid Cannon hire "extended democrats" as clerks?
(Btw, I'll wait for better sourcing before believing this story is true)
Most Fed employees are democrats.Im Gipper said:Quote:
No way! Two entrenched democrats quit?!
Why wouid Cannon hire "extended democrats" as clerks?
(Btw, I'll wait for better sourcing before believing this story is true)
Good. The only way this **** will stop is if republicans start pushing back against blatant lawfare.TXAggie2011 said:ThunderCougarFalconBird said:maybe. I'm honestly surprised that she hasn't just done the usual article III judge thing, taken it all under advisement, and then sat on it until the case no longer has political value (I.e. issue orders/opinions after the election).aggiehawg said:Hmm. Maybe Cannon is leaning towards granting at least in part a motion to dismiss?Quote:
She's currently got her 2 usual clerks plus 2 extra temp clerks - almost assuredly specifically because of this case.
There are 7 motions that were filed in February that still aren't even docketed a month later because of the special redaction process she put in place for this case.
Oh, she's certainly sitting on things.
Trump has spent his entire life embracing lawfare.Ellis Wyatt said:Good. The only way this **** will stop is if republicans start pushing back against blatant lawfare.TXAggie2011 said:ThunderCougarFalconBird said:maybe. I'm honestly surprised that she hasn't just done the usual article III judge thing, taken it all under advisement, and then sat on it until the case no longer has political value (I.e. issue orders/opinions after the election).aggiehawg said:Hmm. Maybe Cannon is leaning towards granting at least in part a motion to dismiss?Quote:
She's currently got her 2 usual clerks plus 2 extra temp clerks - almost assuredly specifically because of this case.
There are 7 motions that were filed in February that still aren't even docketed a month later because of the special redaction process she put in place for this case.
Oh, she's certainly sitting on things.
I already said Fed employees are overwhelmingly democrats. If not, good.Im Gipper said:
So why did Cannon hire entrenched democrats? No republicans want to love in Fort Pierce?
(Hint: these weren't entrenched democrats)
Your "point" is utter nonsense.eric76 said:Trump has spent his entire life embracing lawfare.Ellis Wyatt said:Good. The only way this **** will stop is if republicans start pushing back against blatant lawfare.TXAggie2011 said:ThunderCougarFalconBird said:maybe. I'm honestly surprised that she hasn't just done the usual article III judge thing, taken it all under advisement, and then sat on it until the case no longer has political value (I.e. issue orders/opinions after the election).aggiehawg said:Hmm. Maybe Cannon is leaning towards granting at least in part a motion to dismiss?Quote:
She's currently got her 2 usual clerks plus 2 extra temp clerks - almost assuredly specifically because of this case.
There are 7 motions that were filed in February that still aren't even docketed a month later because of the special redaction process she put in place for this case.
Oh, she's certainly sitting on things.
That's no revelationEllis Wyatt said:Your "point" is utter nonsense.eric76 said:Trump has spent his entire life embracing lawfare.Ellis Wyatt said:Good. The only way this **** will stop is if republicans start pushing back against blatant lawfare.TXAggie2011 said:ThunderCougarFalconBird said:maybe. I'm honestly surprised that she hasn't just done the usual article III judge thing, taken it all under advisement, and then sat on it until the case no longer has political value (I.e. issue orders/opinions after the election).aggiehawg said:Hmm. Maybe Cannon is leaning towards granting at least in part a motion to dismiss?Quote:
She's currently got her 2 usual clerks plus 2 extra temp clerks - almost assuredly specifically because of this case.
There are 7 motions that were filed in February that still aren't even docketed a month later because of the special redaction process she put in place for this case.
Oh, she's certainly sitting on things.
As a private citizen.Quote:
Trump has spent his entire life embracing lawfare.
aggiehawg said:That would be a NO. Defense having to sleuth to find Brady material. Plus, EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THE EXECUTIVE AGENCIES ARE PART OF THE ARTICLE II CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITIES OF THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH.Quote:
Not sure if this an issue. The documents he was charged with are vaguely described in the indictment. You'll have to do a little sleuthing to put together what you can about who created each document and who owns the information contained in it.
Let's go back over that pesky separation of powers issue, shall we?
On which planet does any Executive Branch agency is authorized to become POTUS? With all of the powers afforded thereto?
No where. Either POTUS has plenary power or that office does not.
Sometimes a wealthy individual will have even more legal resources available to him than the state.Stat Monitor Repairman said:As a private citizen.Quote:
Trump has spent his entire life embracing lawfare.
Here you got the State itself being used to conduct a politically motivated prosecution of its chief political rival.
Quote:
Accordingly, in turn, the Court observes that Armstrong II does not necessarily foreclose judicial review of a decision to denominate certain materials "personal records" of a former President. Such judicial review may be available to ensure that Presidential records are not disposed of as personal records at the end of an Administration and that, instead, all Presidential records fall subject to the Archivist's " affirmative duty to make such records available to the public." 44 U.S.C. 2203(f)(1) (emphasis added).
Just a question, given your scenario how is Jack Smith going to demonstrate a legitimate entitlement to compel Cannon to hurry up. And if I read it correctly his mandamus must possess two essential characteristics, that being that it must be a duty of public in nature. So what would be his justification? He can't say it's the duty of the court to get this done before the election, that will never stand, and as you well know Smith isn't entitled to a speedy trial for any reason, and his political deadline was set by his own actions of dragging his feet for two years to try and get the trial in the middle of the primaries schedule and before the election. Now that crunch time is nearing, suddenly he wants to get in a hurry and mandamus her to act quickly? Just not seeing where he can reach the bar for mandamus. The 11th is a little heavy with Trump appointments and very heavy with republican appointments. Biden's stupidity in attacking the SCOTUS during the SOU might not set well with enough judges to tell Jack Smith to GF himself.TXAggie2011 said:The Judge is going to have to very carefully craft an order to try to get around what the 11th Circuit already said in 2022 when Trump sued after the Mar-A-Lago raid. Or, I guess she can just choose to ignore it.jt2hunt said:nonsensical?MiamiHopper said:
"On the right is Judge Cannon"
As other commenters have noted, imagine a judge asking the prosecution in a murder case to prepare jury instructions to assume that the murder took place during The Purge.
That's the nonsensical direction this is headed.
The judge or the original filing?
If she adopts one of those two theories in any kind of order, the government will probably mandamus her at the 11th Circuit faster than her clerk can post the order online.Quote:
We cannot discern why Trump would have an individual interest in...any of the...classified documents...Even if we assumed that Trump did declassify some or all of the documents, that would not explain why he has a personal interest in them.
Trump does not have a possessory interest in the documents at issue...he neither owns nor has a personal interest in the documents
No wealthy individual could spend what the government has spent trying to destroy Donald Trump. Stop with these unhinged posts.eric76 said:Sometimes a wealthy individual will have even more legal resources available to him than the state.Stat Monitor Repairman said:As a private citizen.Quote:
Trump has spent his entire life embracing lawfare.
Here you got the State itself being used to conduct a politically motivated prosecution of its chief political rival.
Ellis Wyatt said:No wealthy individual could spend what the government has spent trying to destroy Donald Trump. Stop with these unhinged posts.eric76 said:Sometimes a wealthy individual will have even more legal resources available to him than the state.Stat Monitor Repairman said:As a private citizen.Quote:
Trump has spent his entire life embracing lawfare.
Here you got the State itself being used to conduct a politically motivated prosecution of its chief political rival.
TXAggie2011 said:
The PRA only applies to documents actually for the person of the President, the person of the Vice President and the Executive Office of the President (not the Executice Branch)
Lots of documents, most documents, from executive branch agencies fall under the Federal Records Act. That's not what determines whether something would be a "federal record" or a "presidential record."
I don't think the government is arguing that these documents are not "presidential records" and rather "federal records", but the FRA applies to executive branch agencies if that's what you're trying to get at
BMX Bandit said:
So assume these are all personal records.
How does Trump get around the obstruction of justice charges? The allegation is he conspired to hide documents responsive to grand jury and caused the false certification to be made.
Which brings us back to the probable cause affidavit supporting the warrant. What does that say?BMX Bandit said:
So assume these are all personal records.
How does Trump get around the obstruction of justice charges? The allegation is he conspired to hide documents responsive to grand jury and caused the false certification to be made.
So fake newsThunderCougarFalconBird said:there are updates in the story. One quit because she had a baby. The other quit for reasons yet unknown. The author of the article solicited intel and the responses widely panned any suggestion of anything remotely nefarious going on with Judge Cannon.Im Gipper said:Quote:
No way! Two entrenched democrats quit?!
Why wouid Cannon hire "extended democrats" as clerks?
(Btw, I'll wait for better sourcing before believing this story is true)
LOLwut?eric76 said:Sometimes a wealthy individual will have even more legal resources available to him than the state.Stat Monitor Repairman said:As a private citizen.Quote:
Trump has spent his entire life embracing lawfare.
Here you got the State itself being used to conduct a politically motivated prosecution of its chief political rival.
How is obstructing an invalid search warrant a crime (even if he did that)?BMX Bandit said:
I assume they were not listed.
What dies that have to do with my question? If Trump did as alleged, the fbi grabbing passports etc is not a defense, is it?
ThunderCougarFalconBird said:
I've seen a lot of pundits on the left insisting that the case will almost assuredly be reassigned for just about any "misstep" (read: result they disagree with) by the judge. The only cases I've seen reassigned by force were some situations where the judge showed blatant open hostility to a litigant (culprit was Lynn Hughes, S.D. Tex. and more than once). Seems a little much at this point but who knows.
I think cannon just sort of rope-a-dopes this until it's impossible to try before the election. After that the political value is gone and no one will really care.
Gee, I don't know maybe because Jack Smith has a history of being an agenda driven hack? According to a unanimous decision of the Supreme Court. Using a grand jury in DC? Really?MiamiHopper said:
Why do you believe the search warrant was invalid?
aggiehawg said:Gee, I don't know maybe because Jack Smith has a history of being an agenda driven hack? According to a unanimous decision of the Supreme Court. Using a grand jury in DC? Really?MiamiHopper said:
Why do you believe the search warrant was invalid?
NEW: This matter was discussed during the March 14 hearing in Florida. Nearly all of the DOJ's classified documents investigation took place in Trump-hating DC--even though the alleged crime happened in FLA.
— Julie Kelly 🇺🇸 (@julie_kelly2) March 26, 2024
Materials remained under seal by DC chief judge and were not… pic.twitter.com/EbeLG9rE2F