Trump's attorneys file for a show cause order against Jack Smith for violating Chutkan's stay order.
Motion
Motion
He also reportedly took bribes while in that position.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
Heard an interview saying Jack Smith was a former prosecutor at the international criminal court for a while and his specialty was brow beating people and getting convictions based on laxxer rules and not having to deal with the pesky US constitution.
aggiehawg said:
Trump's attorneys file for a show cause order against Jack Smith for violating Chutkan's stay order.
Motion
Quote:
In response, the prosecutors agreed that "while the appeal is pending . . . the defendant will not be subjected to the 'burdens of litigation,'" but improperly suggested that the prosecution could somehow "continue to shoulder its own burden" and advance the case in President Trump's absence. Doc. 182 at 3. By this, the prosecutors meant that they would attempt to unconstitutionally try President Trump in absentia by continuing to submit filings "and other pleadings pertaining to the Government's trial presentation." Id. The prosecutors further invited error by suggesting, wrongly, that the Court could "make headway" on motions, despite its lack of jurisdiction. Id. at 2.
The Court rejected this unprecedented and unlawful approach, and instead stayed "any further proceedings that would move this case towards trial or impose additional burdens of litigation on Defendant." Doc. 186 at 2. "[F]or clarity," the Court expounded, this stay included all "deadlines and proceedings scheduled by its Pretrial Order, as amended." Id. at 2.
To ensure that the prosecutors did not incorrectly believe that the Court had tacitly endorsed its lawless request for in absentia proceedings, the Court provided twoand only two "limits on the stay," stating that: (1) "the stayed deadlines and proceedings are 'held in abeyance,' Motion at 1, rather than permanently vacated," and (2) "the court does not understand the required stay of further proceedings to divest it of jurisdiction to enforce the measures it has already imposed to safeguard the integrity of these Proceedings." Id.
Driving this point home, the Court distinguished the above exceptions, which it held do "not advance the case towards trial or impose burdens of litigation on Defendant beyond those he already carries," from "additional discovery or briefing," which do impose such burdens. Id. at 3
So, if the prosecution gives Trump all of this discovery now, then he will have the exact same amount of time to review it after the stay is lifted that he would have if they had given him all of the discovery right after the stay is lifted? And Smith would not request less time for review BECAUSE he's given the discovery early?TXAggie2011 said:aggiehawg said:
Trump's attorneys file for a show cause order against Jack Smith for violating Chutkan's stay order.
Motion
The order didn't tell the parties they are not to make any filings even though the government had already told the court they would continue to do so.
Maybe Chutkan tells the government to hold off on anything until the stay is lifted. But certainly there doesn't appear to be anything contemptuous here.
And I assume the practical result of that would just be that the government files a bunch of motions/discovery the day the stay is lifted.
NEW: FBI thugs fail to present their credentials and hunt down black Trump campaign aide Harrison Floyd at the direction of Jack Smith.
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) January 5, 2024
If only they treated Epstein’s associates like this.
In the video, Floyd, who called 911, tells Rockville officers that the agents, who didn’t… pic.twitter.com/7HBmW4MECV
New York AG James seeking additional $120 million from Trump, co-defendants in civil fraud trial | Just The News https://t.co/LpOra89UBR
— John Solomon (@jsolomonReports) January 5, 2024
***** is a fascist.nortex97 said:
NY AG: We need another $120 million from Trump in this civil trial, where no one lost money based on anything Trump allegedly did/said.New York AG James seeking additional $120 million from Trump, co-defendants in civil fraud trial | Just The News https://t.co/LpOra89UBR
— John Solomon (@jsolomonReports) January 5, 2024
Would assassinating a political rival be considered an official act?MiamiHopper said:
I think Trump's attorney is arguing that Trump could order Seal Team 6 to assassinate a political rival but could not be criminally prosecuted unless impeached and convicted first. Wow.
All women, Henderson, Childs and Pan.ThunderCougarFalconBird said:
Who was on the panel for this argument?
That isn't a valid official act, unlike ensuring a fair federal election was conducted. Seal Team Six should not follow that order.MiamiHopper said:
This was the exchange:
Pan: "Could a president order SEAL Team Six to assassinate a political rival? That's an official act an order to Seal Team Six."
Sauer: "He would have to be, and would speedily be, you know, impeached and convicted before the criminal prosecution."
Likely, judging from the hypotheticals posed.ThunderCougarFalconBird said:
Pan. Oof. Disaster of a judge. So 2-1 rubber stamp for the prosecution that is probably already 75%+ already written.
aggiehawg said:
This is why I think the double jeopardy argument is a weak one on the impeachment/judgment theory.
Impeachment is a political process not a criminal one.
Sort of. I was listening to the DC Circuit panel hearing for Michael Flynn (mandamus to get Judge Sullivan to dismiss after DOJ dropped the case) and one of the judges kept posing hypotheticals about racism. Which of course had nothing to do with the false statement case against Flynn.ThunderCougarFalconBird said:
So basically the two biden appointees on the panel were doing whatever they could by way of blocking and tackling for when this reaches a more hostile scotus?
Meh, put your weaker arguments in the middle, start and end with the strongest. One never knows when what they think is a weaker argument but it might hook an appellate court. Present it to preserve the issue for the next appeal is necessary else it is waived.TXAggie2011 said:aggiehawg said:
This is why I think the double jeopardy argument is a weak one on the impeachment/judgment theory.
Impeachment is a political process not a criminal one.
I believe Trump's lawyers will ultimately reflect that they pushed that theory too hard and too far, or perhaps will reflect they never should have tried it.
That theory bogged them down today and bites into their more plausible argument about absolute immunity for official acts. Judge Pan was all over the latter issue today.
Im Gipper said:
The Meese brief on Smith appointment being unconstitutional was not surprisingly a big nothingburger.
Team Trump said at the oral arguments they weren't even pursuing that theory.
I was late to the party so I really didn't hear that part but I thought he said someone else was going to address that?Im Gipper said:
The Meese brief on Smith appointment being unconstitutional was not surprisingly a big nothingburger.
Team Trump said at the oral arguments they weren't even pursuing that theory.