robert132 wrote:I strongly suspect that if there were ANY evidence of collusion between Trump and the Russians the Democrats during the campaign would have produced something more realistic than that "Hookers pizzing on a bed" thing, or that at least ONE of the 15 Republicans running against him for the nomination would have pulled out of their skivvies before Trump locked the nomination up.
As I recall, it was reported that Obama was considering whether to release details of the investigation (such as the fact it existed) prior to the election - at which point McConnell raised doubts about the reports and threatened to publicly attack the administration for using intelligence for political gain if he went public.
As for the "hooker pee" thing...you do realize that the dossier contained a bunch of reports; that the "peeing hookers" allegation was listed in the dossier itself as being low confidence (i.e. unlikely to be true)? And that other reports in the dossier have been proven correct? The only reasons the pee accusations are getting such prominence are
A) it makes for a sensational story
B) Republicans are stressing it to discredit the dossier as a whole.
Has Trump done anything that is impeachable? Other than not being liked that is.
Well, for starters, something impeachable is ultimately whatever Congress says is impeachable. In principle, they could impeach him for having a name starting with "T".
And what Annachie said (as well as e.g. apparent violations of the emoluments clause)
Funny you should bring this up. I worked in the intelligence community for a good portion of my adult life as a security manager and have a better than passing understanding of the laws and the department regulations governing the handling of classified material.
Director Comey laid out, point for point an excellent case against the former Secretary of State, detailing both the gross negligence AND what I would call the intent to circumvent both the federal and State Department regs AND to avoid Congressional Oversight of her activities as Secretary of State through the use of that unsecure “home brew” email server of hers.
When Comey announced his decision not to recommend prosecution he overstepped his authority as Director FBI, that authority lies with the Attorney General, not the FBI. AND he had no business stating blatantly that the US Code doesn’t recognize “gross negligence” in the handling of classified material as an offense because it specifically DOES. As a former prosecutor he knew that, and he lied about it.
Hillary should be sitting in a jail cell as a flight risk right now as her case moves to trial.
You are correct that the statue includes "gross negligence". However:
A) Comey did not, as you say, state that the statue did not include "gross negligence" - quite the opposite, he explicitly stated it did.
B) However, Comey did not actually accuse Clinton of "gross negligence". What he said was that "
Clinton or her colleagues" were "extremely careless" - which is not the same thing, legally speaking.
C) In the US justice system, precedence plays a significant role. Comey stated they were not recommending charges as they could not find any investigation in which similar actions resulted in criminal charges.
D) Furthermore, as I understand the grosss negligence part of the statute is kind of iffy. In the ~100 years the statute has existed, it's been used exactly once - and that case had a lot more intent involved than anything here. Furthermore, there are apparently doubts on whether it's even constitutional and court precedent requires a level of intent for any violations of the statute.
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