You have said multiple things in multiple posts, and none of it is particularly coherent.
Then I suggest you take a reading comprehension course instead of lashing out in a knee jerk insult reaction.
If the recommendation has no power to affect what sentence Jackson imposes, then why does it even matter what the recommendation was? Why does it even matter if the recommendation is changed?
Again, you are not comprehending what I actually wrote:
However, the prosecutors submit a sentencing recommendation. Notice that word. It is up to the judge to decide on the sentence. Therefore, the DOJ had no power to affect what sentence Jackson would impose...and they knew that.
Notice that I said it was a
recommendation. The judge uses it as a GUIDE
but they are not bound by it. The DOJ has no legal power to tell the judge what sentence to impose nor do they have the power to change it except in very rare cases.
There also is very little the Justice Department can do to change a sentence after its imposition by a judge. Technically, the Justice Department could make a motion to re-sentence Stone, but such motions are rare, and almost never succeed, largely because the moving party must show not merely that the sentence was too high but that the judge made an "arithmetical, technical, or other clear error."
http://lite.cnn.io/en/article/h_9ec11dcb41e4fa6e7af57bf3d7100801
The entire premise of having a recommendation is that it CAN affect the sentence a judge imposes. The judge is not bound by the recommendation, but that doesn't mean it has no effect. And that's the only justification for anyone getting upset over this as well
I didn't say a recommendation CAN'T AFFECT the sentence. I said the DOJ doesn't have the POWER to affect it. I don't think it's me who isn't understanding here.
Can the DOJ attempt to
influence the judge? Yes. Which is exactly what Shea was trying to do. But
power? No.
And now we get into the ad hominem. Why am I not surprised.
You shouldn't be surprised at all that I hold The Federalist in distrust.
Overall, we rate The Federalist a borderline Questionable and far Right Biased based on story selection and editorial positions that always favor the right. We also rate them Mixed for factual reporting due to the promotion pseudoscience and three failed fact checks.
https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/the-federalist/
You really need to pay better attention. The screenshot shows 24 lines of a spreadsheet, not 24 people. And not all of them match. You might be tempted to think that this means there's less than 24 matches out of 2000, but again, you need to pay better attention. This is merely the top of an alphabetical list. If you think that this list is going to have a bunch of matches at the top but then no more matches throughout the rest of it, well, that's a pretty remarkable claim. If alphabetical position of last names is uncorrelated with whether or not a name appears on both partitions (and that should be the default assumption unless demonstrated otherwise), then similar levels of correlation should be present throughout the rest of the list, which means that it's a hell of a lot more than 24 people appearing on both petitions.
I would suggest you need to pay better attention as you conveniently left out the rest of my post:
The list comparing those who signed the Barr letter and the Mueller Report totaled 24. Out of over 2,000. I’m not claiming there weren’t more, but their ‘proof’ that they are ‘partisan hacks’ is sadly lacking. Nor am denying that there are probably more Democrats than Republicans who signed the Barr letter; there likely are.
Anyone can see that list only covered the A-AN surnames so it would be ridiculous to assume that I thought that was the entire list. And because it only covers A-AN it is useless as evidence that the majority were "partisan hacks". Why? Because we don't know what the rest of the list showed.
I have yet to see any evidence that there are any Republicans who signed the Barr letter. I don't discount the possibility, but so far none have been provided.
Perhaps that's because it's the far right that are trying to prove it's a partisan hack job by screaming they're all Democrats and searching through voter registrations and the Federal Elections Commission in that effort.
Nobody has shown the Republicans who signed the letter.
And certainly not Margot Cleveland. Do you think she didn't come across any Republicans while perusing the voter registration records? But publishing those wouldn't exactly help her accusation that they're all Dem. political hacks now, would it?
But that's not the timing that really matters. What matters (to the extent that it matters at all) is when the decision was made. A DOJ announcement before the Trump tweet would prove the decision was made before the tweet, but an announcement after the tweet doesn't prove the decision was made after the tweet. Do you have any actual evidence the decision was made after the tweet?
As I said earlier, the tweet wasn't necessary. Trump had been publicly defending his old buddy from the time the investigation started right through the trial, the sentencing and after. He'd made his feelings very clear.
How is the decision of whether or not to prosecute less sacrosanct than sentencing recommendations? You have that completely backwards.
Once again, I never said anything about decisions on prosecuting. I do wish you'd stop putting words in my mouth.
Your assertion was " After all, Obama was vocal in his support for Hillary, and I'm sure Comey knew that too." My reply was:
Originally Posted by Stacyhs
Speaking of goalpost moves...had Hillary been arrested or indicted for any crime? No. Was she put on trial? No. On the other hand, Trump commented on the Stone trial both before, and during, Stone's trial. That is the difference you don't seem to recognize.
Obama did not comment on Comey's investigation of HRC except to express his displeasure of Comey's public announcement of reopening the investigation just days before the election. That is hardly in the same league as what Trump did.
By your own admission, judges don't need to follow sentencing recommendations, they can easily discard them. If the prosecution gets the recommendation wrong, the judge has the power to remedy it. But if a prosecutor declines to prosecute when they should, a judge can do nothing to remedy that. That makes political interference with the decision to prosecute far more problematic than sentencing recommendations.
I agree...but your accusation that Obama interfered in Comey's decision to prosecute is false. Can you provide a single instance of Obama doing this during the investigation? He commented on the finding not to prosecute only AFTER the investigation was completed in July.