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Spelling is so much more important than meaning, my goodness I’m thankful for the correction, what would this board be without the spelling police🤪
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
We help each other out.
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Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
He couldn't indict Trump
Here's Mueller's statement: “I want to add one correction to my testimony this morning," Mueller said. "I want to go back to one thing that was said this morning by Mr. Lieu, who said and I quote, ‘You didn’t charge the President because of the OLC opinion. That is not the correct way to say it. As we say in the report and as I said at the opening, we did not reach a determination as to whether the President committed a crime.” That is a portion of what he said in his opening statement: "Based on Justice Department policy and principles of fairness, we decided we would not make a determination as to whether the President committed a crime. That was our decision then and it remains our decision today." Mueller clarified that he did not intend to support Lieu’s implication that Mueller would have indicted Trump if not for the OLC opinion. That would have meant that Mueller determined that Trump committed a crime, but could not do anything about it. Mueller also said the President could be indicted for obstruction after he was out of office, he did not say he would or should be. |
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And the notion that he didn't make the determination on the basis of fairness is deceptive on its face. If fairness were the issue, then simply stating that there was not sufficient evidence to make that determination. Period. Case closed. The way Mueller did it was not, in any way, "fair." As Scott said, it was "crazy contortioneering." |
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But as far as your claim that the report failed to make a determination that Trump and his team acted improperly at best you are incorrect. Here is a list for you: https://www.lawfareblog.com/mueller-...d-said-or-knew I think your argument is with the rules the Special Counsel operates under. I assume that Rosenstein as the representative of the AG knew thru the required reporting about Mueller's teams reading of the regulations far prior to the issuance of the report. You could ask your Representative to put forth that question, or perhaps it is one of the ones Mueller took. After the hearings, committee chairpersons give their colleagues a deadline for submitting additional questions based on the witness’s testimony and Mueller might be asked to provide a more substantive response. The report Mueller prepared per the regulations was a confidential report and he presented it to the AG per the regulations. It was the AG's choice to release it in whole or part, if it was in the public interest. I believe Congress could also release it. This is the interesting testimony to Congress on Wednesday, September 15, 1999 after the new regulations were issued by the Attorney General on June 30 to replace procedures which expired with the sunset that day of the Independent Counsel Act. You can read the testimony here https://www.brookings.edu/testimonie...l-regulations/ I expect after this the Special Counsel regulations may yet again be revised or a new law enacted. |
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Perfect is all I can say and well worth the termination for the audio visual guy who pulled this off and the translation in spanish for the verbiage is 42 is a puppet.
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^^^^ did it make you feel better?...seems a bit childish
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You told me you don't watch my videos. I'm not going to read or look at anymore of your links, and videos, and long cut and pastes. They don't usually prove anything anyway. |
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