BobTheCoward
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 12, 2010
- Messages
- 22,789
I'm thinking it would look like a group of adults having a rational and open discussion. And seriously, where would be the fun in that?
I have no side. People can't stand my discussion.
I'm thinking it would look like a group of adults having a rational and open discussion. And seriously, where would be the fun in that?
I won't defend his tone, but the point seems pretty valid to me. We probably shouldn't get our hopes up on some racketeering charge just because some RICO legalese is included in a boilerplate plea agreement.
Mueller can be frustrating in his competence. In a political world of backbiting sycophants spreading rumors and dirt left and right, Mueller's crew doesn't leak. We'll just have to wait for the hammer blows on the Trump org as they come. Chasing after some RICO boilerplate is wishful thinking.
You are rejecting a former federal prosecutor/present criminal defense attorney's opinion
say, you didn't happen to get the idea from actual nitwit Maddow did you (tee hee!!)
You are claiming to be a former federal prosecutor/present criminal defense attorney?
Now why would you ask that?[
The person you referred to as a "dimwit on twitter" was the former federal prosecutor, etc I was referring to...?
At this point, you could google popehat a lot faster that this nonsense you’re engaged with.
Yeah, I've found it pretty limited in usefulness myself, due to the character limit. It'd be fine if it had any grounding to it, however the signal to noise ratio combined with the tiny info funnel makes it mainly a playground for content-free sound bites, zingers, and unfiltered tiny turdlets. To use it as a serious reference vs. original sources is, well, not being seriousYou claimed you were giving a "pro" tip. I read that as you claiming you are a "pro".
I had no idea who that was. Perhaps if you were to say something like... "Read this link. The user here is a former federal prosecutor" instead of your smart-alec "pro tip" BS, perhaps we'd all get somewhere.
As regards twitter, I never go there. I have said so before so that's nothing new, or unusual. Lots of people don't like those limited media platforms. As I said, I consider them to be overwhelmingly inhabited by idiots with the occasional intelligent person, but I'm not prepared to waste my time sorting through the chaff to find the occasional grain of wheat.
You claimed you were giving a "pro" tip. I read that as you claiming you are a "pro".
I had no idea who that was. Perhaps if you were to say something like... "Read this link. The user here is a former federal prosecutor" instead of your smart-alec "pro tip" BS, perhaps we'd all get somewhere.
As regards twitter, I never go there. I have said so before so that's nothing new, or unusual. Lots of people don't like those limited media platforms. As I said, I consider them to be overwhelmingly inhabited by idiots with the occasional intelligent person, but I'm not prepared to waste my time sorting through the chaff to find the occasional grain of wheat.
You claimed you were giving a "pro" tip. I read that as you claiming you are a "pro".
Did you look up to see whether that is stock language that the SDNY uses in other plea agreements??
protip: it is.
protip: https://twitter.com/[HILITE]Popehat[/HILITE]/status/1034254235435593728
TBD never mentioned popehat, so I had no reason to google it
Yeah, I've found it pretty limited in usefulness myself, due to the character limit. It'd be fine if it had any grounding to it, however the signal to noise ratio combined with the tiny info funnel makes it mainly a playground for content-free sound bites, zingers, and unfiltered tiny turdlets. To use it as a serious reference vs. original sources is, well, not being serious
Plea agreements use boilerplate text all the time; it doesn't mean that the same wording is used in every plea agreement, so my question is still a valid one.
You're no legal "pro".
A legal professional would refer people to an actual legal source such as Findlaw, not some dimwit on twitter.
Popehat isn't a nitwit, so in this case I think we invoke the stopped clock.
Who?
Keep in mind, I don't have a Twitter account (and I will never have one). I have as little to do with Twitter as possible.. I consider that whole "realm" to be inhabited by a very large number of idiots, for which the very few intelligent ones do not compensate.
O'Rly.
Or ya know, y'all could have just clicked the link before declaring that the person linked was a "nitwit.
Cool tho that you selectively deleted my questions whether you had done any research to determine whether there was any substance to your claim, and now we can say with great, indeed overwhelming confidence that you did not.
O'Rly.
Or ya know, y'all could have just clicked the link before declaring that the person linked was a "nitwit."
Cool tho that you selectively deleted my questions whether you had done any research to determine whether there was any substance to your claim, and now we can say with great, indeed overwhelming confidence that you did not.
I clicked the link. I see nothing in that link that tells me pophat is a lawyer.
Sorry, by why would I? I took the wording in the agreement at face value?
And as I stated later (and you ignored) it makes no difference if the wording is "boilerplate". This type of "prefab" wording is used frequently in legal documents, BUT NOT ALWAYS. Every plea agreement ever does no have this same wording. Why has it been used here?
I mean, @maddow, if you just seized on some stock language from an agreement you didn't understand, without asking anyone who did understand, and used it to go on national TV to promote a fatuous "HEY LOOK RICO" narrative -- well, that's some ******* of the deepest dye.
From wikiWho?
Keep in mind, I don't have a Twitter account (and I will never have one). I have as little to do with Twitter as possible.. I consider that whole "realm" to be inhabited by a very large number of idiots, for which the very few intelligent ones do not compensate.
Popehat is a law-oriented internet blog.[1] According to its tagline, Popehat is a "group complaint about law, liberty, and leisure". Its primary blogger, American attorney Ken White, writes about law, scams, and freedom of expression on the internet.[2]
From wiki
Well, as Popehat explained in the link I gave you which mentioned his name and contained actual links to actual examples of actual plea bargains that contain the same or similar actual language and after you "clicked' it concluded he was a dimwit on twitter based on....?????....
Why is a law not a mathematical truth?
Why didn't he pay her in 2011 then? Answer, because back then, he didn't much care whether she said anything.
Why did he pay her in 2016? Answer, because he was running for president and he knew if her story came out it would affect his chances at the polls.
If statements made as part of a plea deal don't mean much, why do prosecutors go to so much trouble to get them.
No, I have explained my position crystal clearly on several occasions.
The prosecutors had him (and his wife) dead to rights on the tax claims. However, if Cohen wanted a deal, the prosecutors required him to plead to all their charges, given the fact that they have bigger fish in mind.
The judge did not rule on the merits of the charges.