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Grasswire2

Grasswire2's Journal
Grasswire2's Journal
January 19, 2019

I believe Mueller may have laid a trap for Trump with this statement.

I believe that Trump's response may be extremely important and telling.

January 15, 2019

Motion of Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press for leave to intervene...

....to file a motion to unseal.

[link:https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/5684876-Motion-of-Reporters-Committee-for-Freedom-of-the.html|

Motion of Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press for leave to intervene to file a motion to unseal. in In Re Grand Jury Subpoena, No. 18A669

Can't copy and paste from the cloud document. You'll have to read it at the link.

January 15, 2019

Barr: I could conceive of situations where reporters could be jailed for...

.....reporting something wrong that would hurt the country.


!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

January 14, 2019

"America's border is going to be MILITARIZED and defended."

Trump tweet tonight. Isn't that mission creep?

January 13, 2019

Excellent article Benjamin Wittes, Lawfare: "What If Obstruction Was Collusion?"

[link:https://www.lawfareblog.com/what-if-obstruction-was-collusion-new-york-timess-latest-bombshell|

Excerpt:

The analysis that follows is lengthy and takes a number of twists and turns before laying out what I think is the significance of the whole thing. Here’s the bottom line: I believe that between today’s New York Times story and some other earlier material I have been sifting through and thinking about, we might be in a position to revisit the relationship between the “collusion” and obstruction components of the Mueller investigation. Specifically, I now believe they are far more integrated with one another than I previously understood.

Because I am certain the disclosures in this story will give rise to questions of leaks, let me start by addressing at the outset the portions of Baker’s testimony which I discuss in this post. To be very clear, I did not receive information about this from Baker. I received it from the New York Times only. And while I don’t know who gave it to Schmidt and Adam Goldman, who share the byline on the story, I am very confident it was not Baker or anyone associated with him. My assumption is that this material reached the Times from congressional sources, since the overwhelming majority of leaks of material available to Congress come from Congress, but I don’t know that for sure. Exactly one thing in the material I discuss below did come to me from Baker, and was not until today a part of the public record—and I flag that very clearly. None of this material is classified. The reporting that Schmidt shared with me made clear that the FBI specifically permitted Baker to answer the questions he addressed.

The public understanding of and debate over the Mueller investigation rests on several discrete premises that I believe should be reexamined. The first is the sharp line between the investigation of “collusion” and the investigation of obstruction of justice. The second is the sharp line between the counter-intelligence components of the investigation and the criminal components. The third and most fundamental is the notion that the investigation was, in the first place, an investigation of the Trump campaign and figures associated with it.

These premises are deeply embedded throughout the public discussion. When Bill Barr challenges what he imagines to be the predicate for the obstruction investigation, he is reflecting one of them. When any number of commentators (including Mikhaila Fogel and me on Lawfare last month) describe separate investigative cones for obstruction and collusion, they are reflecting it. When the president’s lawyers agree to have their client answer questions on collusion but draw a line at obstruction, they are reflecting it too.

But I think, and the Times’s story certainly suggests, that the story may be more complicated than that, the lines fuzzier, and the internal understanding of the investigation very different along all three of these axes from the ones the public has imbibed.
January 13, 2019

I'm reading a FB thread where people say they don't speak up against Trump....

....in order to keep disharmony and stress from relationships and others.

What if there was a pin or emblem in support of the Constitution? Keep politics out of it but wear something that supports the Rule of Law, the Separation of Powers, the Free Press...

Would you wear something like that?

Wouldn't it be great if something like that took root across America?

January 13, 2019

When will we get to see the first draft of the letter written to fire Comey?

Mueller has it.

Reportedly, it was McGahn who buried it.

January 13, 2019

Is there any possibility that NSA has audio of Putin Trump mtg in Helsinki..

...with assistance from other intel from allies?

January 12, 2019

Important thread from Neal Katyal who wrote special counsel rules 20 years ago

Fomer acting Solicitor General, Supreme Court lawyer.


Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal

THREAD ON WHETHER MUELLER REPORT WILL BE PUBLIC, AND @washingtonpost STORY ABOUT TRUMP HIRING MANY NEW LAWYERS TO ASSERT EXEC PRIVILEGE.

Short Answer: It will be public.
7:28 PM - 9 Jan 2019

9,913 Retweets
25,492 Likes

New conversation
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

1.The special counsel rules, which I drafted at DOJ 20 years ago, contemplate 2 kinds of reports. One is a report from Mueller to the AG, at the close of his investigation: “a confidential report explaining the prosecution or declination decisions reached by the Special Counsel.”
27 replies 1,099 retweets 4,082 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

2. That document is to be confidential. But there is a second, separate reporting requirement, which forces the AG to notify Congress “with an explanation for each action…upon conclusion of the Special Counsel’s investigation, including…
13 replies 846 retweets 3,762 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

3. ... a description and explanation of instances (if any) in which the AG concluded that a proposed action by a Special Counsel was so inappropriate or unwarranted under established Departmental practices that it should not be pursued.”
7 replies 683 retweets 3,218 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

4.That report must explain why the investigation has concluded, and any instance in which the AG overruled the Special Counsel. The provision was designed to ensure “Congressional and public confidence in the integrity of the process.”
7 replies 755 retweets 3,783 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

5.Notably, we wrote the circumstances for an AG to overrule a Special Counsel very tightly—it has to violate “established Departmental practices.”
5 replies 659 retweets 3,287 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

6. So, to take one hypothetical example, generic DOJ opinions about whether a sitting President could be indicted do not create an “established Departmental practice” about whether an individual could be indicted for successfully cheating in a Presidential election.
13 replies 793 retweets 3,518 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

7.There is no DOJ established practice that says if a Presidential candidate cheats enough and wins the Presidency, that he gets a get-out-of-jail-free card.
26 replies 1,359 retweets 4,814 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

8.There is one other important aspect to the regulations. If a Special Counsel is worried that the AG may cover something up, the regs give him an important weapon.
8 replies 786 retweets 3,521 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

9.Because they require a mandatory report to Congress about any instance of the AG overruling a Special Counsel, they put the thumb on the scale of a Special Counsel telling the AG he will take a sensitive act and waiting for AG to say no. That triggers the reporting requirement.
19 replies 852 retweets 3,755 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

10. It is a safeguard to prevent a cover-up, it creates a mandatory report to a separate and coequal branch of govt. So that is why I believe Mueller has a move left to play if Whitaker or Barr (if confirmed) try to stymie him and his full report.
22 replies 945 retweets 4,358 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

11. Now the President can try to claim executive privilege. Nixon tried that, it didn’t turn out so well. He got crushed in the Supreme Court. Trump’s claim appears even weaker—much wont even concern presidential deliberations&the part that might (Comey) has been waived by Trump.
30 replies 795 retweets 3,603 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

12.And here, there is another problem: Trump’s legal team has been saying they don’t think a sitting President can be indicted.
18 replies 571 retweets 2,784 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

13. Leaving aside the point above in (6) and (7), the only way that claim makes any sense is if the President must be impeached first. Every real scholar who says a sitting President can’t be indicted couples that with a view that impeachment is the remedy.
11 replies 679 retweets 3,239 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

14. So if the President asserts the view he can’t be indicted, he has to allow the turnover of all investigative material to Congress. Otherwise he would be no different than King George III, literally above the law.
37 replies 1,137 retweets 4,581 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

15.This point is fleshed out in my NYT op-ed below. The key point is that even if you think Trump won't be indicted, his legal claims about his immunity from indictment set up&invite the launch of impeachment investigation+eviscerate his exec priv claims.
30 replies 1,505 retweets 4,919 likes
Neal Katyal
?Verified account @neal_katyal
Jan 9

16. Bottom line: the President can try to hide the Mueller Report. He will lose to the public’s right to know.
320 replies 2,020 retweets 9,037 likes

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Member since: Sun Jul 22, 2018, 03:20 PM
Number of posts: 13,569

About Grasswire2

Member 2002 - 2016, with 50,000+ posts. Re-upped for the fight ahead.
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