Also known as “crimes“.Process crimes?
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Also known as “crimes“.Process crimes?
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The Empty Wheel has this concise summary of the quid pro quo between Trump Org and Moscow:I'll bite, what exactly is this evidence and where is it?The massive amount of evidence of conspiracy between Trump's campaign and Russia is there if one simply opens their eyes.
Be specific please.
The Empty Wheel has this concise summary of the quid pro quo between Trump Org and Moscow:
- January 20, 2016, when Michael Cohen told Dmitry Peskov’s personal assistant that Trump would be willing to work with a GRU-tied broker and (soft and hard) sanctioned banks in pursuit of a $300 million Trump Tower deal in Russia.
- June 9, 2016, when Don Jr, knowing that currying favor with Russia could mean $300 million to the family, took a meeting offering dirt on Hillary Clinton as “part of Russia and its government’s support for Mr. Trump.” At the end of the meeting, per the testimony of at least four attendees, Don Jr said they’d revisit Magnitsky sanctions if his dad won.
- August 2, 2016, when Paul Manafort and Rick Gates had a clandestine meeting with Konstantin Kilimnik at which Trump’s campaign manager walked Kilimnik through highly detailed poll data and the two discussed a “peace” plan for Ukraine understood to amount to sanctions relief.
- December 29, 2016, when (working on instructions relayed by KT McFarland, who was at Mar-a-Lago with Trump) Mike Flynn said something to Sergey Kislyak that led Putin not to respond to Obama’s election-related sanctions
- January 11, 2017, when Erik Prince, acting as a back channel for Trump, met with sanctioned sovereign wealth fund Russian Direct Investment Fund CEO Kirill Dmitriev.
Here are some very insightful comments from Rod Rosenstein, that should dampen the ardor of people in anticipation of the Mueller report, and throw a wet blanket over Schiff's grandstanding
https://twitter.com/mattzap/status/1100102220257857536
I have added, in boldface, the part of that statement about the Senate investigation which TBD seems to consistently leave out.
I'm sure it is completely inadvertent.
(Direct evidence being much harder to come by when it is so studiously avoided.)
I'll bite, what exactly is this evidence and where is it?
Be specific please.
Rosenstein: "...if we aren't prepared to prove our case beyond a reasonable doubt in court, then we have no business making allegations against American citizens."
Which suggests evidence of wrong-doing.
Why Trumpers keep repeating this denial is beyond comprehension.
It's not denial, it's willful ignorance.Why Trumpers keep repeating this denial is beyond comprehension.
It's not denial, it's willful ignorance.
As I recall, the Senate investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election was (and is) explicitly restricted to Russian activities. Perhaps someone has a link to its actual remit?Not just didn't find direct evidence, purposefully didn't look where it might have been found.
That's very strange wording. Prosecutors don't decide what is resaonable doubt : jury members do that. Prosecutors present a case, the jury decides if it passes the "beyond a reasonable doubt" test. Clearly, prosecutors should not present entirely spurious cases, but it's not for them to decide what is "beyond reasonable doubt". What they should judge is whether there's a case to present which can reasonably be expected to convince a jury.Rosenstein: "...if we aren't prepared to prove our case beyond a reasonable doubt in court, then we have no business making allegations against American citizens."
That still fits under 'denial beyond comprehension'.It's not denial, it's willful ignorance.
That's very strange wording. Prosecutors don't decide what is resaonable doubt : jury members do that. Prosecutors present a case, the jury decides if it passes the "beyond a reasonable doubt" test. Clearly, prosecutors should not present entirely spurious cases, but it's not for them to decide what is "beyond reasonable doubt". What they should judge is whether there's a case to present which can reasonably be expected to convince a jury.
If prosecutors can decide what is reasonable doubt they might well set the bar unreasonably high for questionable reasons in certain cases.
It's not denial, it's willful ignorance.
Let's not leave out sheer stupidity.
That still fits under 'denial beyond comprehension'.![]()
No, actually it does not, it literally states the opposite.
That's very strange wording. Prosecutors don't decide what is resaonable doubt : jury members do that. Prosecutors present a case, the jury decides if it passes the "beyond a reasonable doubt" test. Clearly, prosecutors should not present entirely spurious cases, but it's not for them to decide what is "beyond reasonable doubt". What they should judge is whether there's a case to present which can reasonably be expected to convince a jury.
If prosecutors can decide what is reasonable doubt they might well set the bar unreasonably high for questionable reasons in certain cases.