PhantomWolf
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2007
- Messages
- 21,203
K. T. McFarland is the person that proves TBD wrong.
As Flynn's Deputy, she knew exactly what he was doing, and she went on to lie to both the FBI and the Senate about what he told her as to his dealings with Russia after the Election.
If TBD was correct in all this, the FBI would have pressed charges against her, they know she lied to them, she went back and "clarified" her answers to them after Flynn was charged (i.e. claimed that she has forgotten about it, you know like the rest of the administration that has such bad memories about things, and like how all of Reagan's administration had bad memories about Iran and weapons and Contras.)
Oh, and looking it up, the Barry Bonds case has zero to do with what is going on here, and there was never a "perjury trap" set for Bonds. He was given immunity to testify and when it came time to give a yes or no answer on if he'd been supplied steroids, he waffled on about growing up and various other things and refused to answer the question. The second Appeal Court determined that while the answer wasn't a response to the question, that because of its content, the answer given was not material to the case and so would not have caused the Grand Jury to have been sidetracked, and that it should have been up to the Prosecutor to answer more questions to clarify the situation, so it was not therefore enough to consider his response an obstruction of Justice.
As Flynn's Deputy, she knew exactly what he was doing, and she went on to lie to both the FBI and the Senate about what he told her as to his dealings with Russia after the Election.
If TBD was correct in all this, the FBI would have pressed charges against her, they know she lied to them, she went back and "clarified" her answers to them after Flynn was charged (i.e. claimed that she has forgotten about it, you know like the rest of the administration that has such bad memories about things, and like how all of Reagan's administration had bad memories about Iran and weapons and Contras.)
Oh, and looking it up, the Barry Bonds case has zero to do with what is going on here, and there was never a "perjury trap" set for Bonds. He was given immunity to testify and when it came time to give a yes or no answer on if he'd been supplied steroids, he waffled on about growing up and various other things and refused to answer the question. The second Appeal Court determined that while the answer wasn't a response to the question, that because of its content, the answer given was not material to the case and so would not have caused the Grand Jury to have been sidetracked, and that it should have been up to the Prosecutor to answer more questions to clarify the situation, so it was not therefore enough to consider his response an obstruction of Justice.
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