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I'm going to try this step by step. Yeah, I know. No need for any rainbow icons.No such thing as accidental retention...
Sure there is. Papers get misfiled all the timeNo such thing as accidental retention,
Simple possession as a federal crime requires the possession to be knowingly or intentionally. If there is reasonable doubt you know the drugs were in your possession, then no crime was committed. Criminal law in the US , with some specific and limited exceptions, requires two things. Those are the actus rea, or "guilty act" and the men rea, the "guilty mind" or mental state. You need to have both elements for a crime to be committed. The relevant section of the Espionage Act consists of the actus rea of communicating or retaining unauthorized defense information and the men's rea of doing so willfully. Unknowingly possessing the information itself is not a crime. That's why the warrant on Mar A Lago was only issued after several attempts to recover the documents voluntarily.try telling that to a cop when he finds 1lb of cocaine in your vehicle, smiles!
I covered this in detail, my eyes saw Jacob Chansley being escorted and at one time in the presence of 10 armed capitol police, my eyes saw 2 armed capitol police open a door for Chansley and allowed him to enter
Will you claim this didn't happen, it was a staged event and those 10 armed humans weren't capitol police in the presence of Chansley?
Each time the republicans or Trump calls them hostages, they do a huge disservice to America's police and the United States justice system.Trump salutes the "J6 Hostages" at a campaign event over the weekend:
“Please rise,” booms the announcer, “for the horribly and unfairly treated January 6 hostages.” Then, as the speaker system plays a recorded mash-up of the national anthem sung by participants in the January 6th insurrection, Trump melodramatically salutes.
He salutes the insurrectionists.
Trump doubled down once he took the microphone. Those duly tried and convicted for rioting on January 6th, in prison for their violent effort to overturn a free and fair election, Trump described as “unbelievable patriots” and “hostages.” Once again, he indicated he’d pardon them.
-William Kristol of The Bulwark
Trump: J6 Convicts Are ’Unbelievable Patriots’
Plus: Unpacking the “bloodbath hoax“ sideshow.plus.thebulwark.com
Pining for the fjords!The last straw that broke the camel's back? The concept simply doesn't exist any more. The camel is lying under a few tonnes of straw and had the life crushed out of it a very long time ago. It's now just a bachtrian smear on the American flag. Point that out to a lot of people and they'll say 'Dead? Nah, mate. It's not dead. It's just resting'.
Shame on Mr. Kristol.Trump salutes the "J6 Hostages" at a campaign event over the weekend:
“Please rise,” booms the announcer, “for the horribly and unfairly treated January 6 hostages.” Then, as the speaker system plays a recorded mash-up of the national anthem sung by participants in the January 6th insurrection, Trump melodramatically salutes.
He salutes the insurrectionists.
Trump doubled down once he took the microphone. Those duly tried and convicted for rioting on January 6th, in prison for their violent effort to overturn a free and fair election, Trump described as “unbelievable patriots” and “hostages.” Once again, he indicated he’d pardon them.
-William Kristol of The Bulwark
Trump: J6 Convicts Are ’Unbelievable Patriots’
Plus: Unpacking the “bloodbath hoax“ sideshow.plus.thebulwark.com
Trump salutes the "J6 Hostages" at a campaign event over the weekend:
“Please rise,” booms the announcer, “for the horribly and unfairly treated January 6 hostages.” Then, as the speaker system plays a recorded mash-up of the national anthem sung by participants in the January 6th insurrection, Trump melodramatically salutes.
He salutes the insurrectionists.
Trump doubled down once he took the microphone. Those duly tried and convicted for rioting on January 6th, in prison for their violent effort to overturn a free and fair election, Trump described as “unbelievable patriots” and “hostages.” Once again, he indicated he’d pardon them.
-William Kristol of The Bulwark
Trump: J6 Convicts Are ’Unbelievable Patriots’
Plus: Unpacking the “bloodbath hoax“ sideshow.plus.thebulwark.com
This was not patriotism; it was the antithesis of patriotism"January 6, 2021, marked a tragic day in American history. The peaceful transfer of power—one of our most important and sacred democratic processes—came under a full-fledged assault. While the immediate threat may have subsided, the damage from January 6 persists. Rioters interrupted the certification of the 2020 Electoral College vote count, injured more than one hundred law enforcement officers, and caused more than a million dollars of property damage to the U.S. Capitol. Some of the rioters—now defendants in criminal cases—directly contributed to this violence by assaulting members of law enforcement or by planning, preparing, and facilitating this violence. Others, like Little here, did not directly assault officers. But even Little and those who engaged in this “lesser” criminal conduct were an essential component to the harm. Law-enforcement officers were overwhelmed by the sheer swath of criminality. And those who engaged in violence that day were able to do so because they found safety in numbers."
True, and they got sentences to match. Half of the misdemeanor sentences involve no jail time.The vast majority sentenced were mere attendees
The article is baloney. They actually interrupted the appeals of senators. Anyone who committed a violent act deserved prison time, including the police officer who gunned down an unarmed protestor. But to be there and walking by officers without them even saying you are not allowed to go in and then being put in prison is a travesty of justice. There should have been mo prison time for those who just technically trespassed."January 6, 2021, marked a tragic day in American history. The peaceful transfer of power—one of our most important and sacred democratic processes—came under a full-fledged assault. While the immediate threat may have subsided, the damage from January 6 persists. Rioters interrupted the certification of the 2020 Electoral College vote count, injured more than one hundred law enforcement officers, and caused more than a million dollars of property damage to the U.S. Capitol. Some of the rioters—now defendants in criminal cases—directly contributed to this violence by assaulting members of law enforcement or by planning, preparing, and facilitating this violence. Others, like Little here, did not directly assault officers. But even Little and those who engaged in this “lesser” criminal conduct were an essential component to the harm. Law-enforcement officers were overwhelmed by the sheer swath of criminality. And those who engaged in violence that day were able to do so because they found safety in numbers."
She was not a protestor. Once she illegally entered the Capitol, she became a person who was breaking and entering, and did a criminal act. The cop was defending the other cops and the politicians. The cop was a hero.Anyone who committed a violent act deserved prison time, including the police officer who gunned down an unarmed protestor.
The bold text above is not from the article quoted below. It says nothing about politically motivated sentencing. In fact the case isn't about sentencing at all. It is about whether the statute applies to anti-government insurrectionists or just to interference in court proceedings.The vast majority sentenced were mere attendees, and the US Supreme Court will soon rule on "Obstruction" that will effect hundreds of cases, sentencing was politically motivated
Law & Crime
Supreme Court set to hear Jan. 6 rioter’s appeal on obstruction charge that could upend Trump case, hundreds of others
BRANDI BUCHMANFeb 19th, 2024
The applicability of a federal criminal charge shared by Donald Trump and hundreds of accused and convicted Jan. 6 rioters will soon be argued before the U.S. Supreme Court and no matter how justices fall on the issue, the decision will have far-reaching consequences.
In a release of the high court’s calendar reviewed by Law&Crime on Monday, the justices have agreed to hear arguments in Fischer v. United States on April 16.
The fantasy that most of the insurrectionists were welcomed in is just that - fantasy. I asked you once for proof about protesters being welcomed in, and all you could produce was a weak, edited video that for all we know, the cop gave up or was one that ended up fired.The article is baloney. They actually interrupted the appeals of senators. Anyone who committed a violent act deserved prison time, including the police officer who gunned down an unarmed protestor. But to be there and walking by officers without them even saying you are not allowed to go in and then being put in prison is a travesty of justice. There should have been mo prison time for those who just technically trespassed.
The article is baloney. They actually interrupted the appeals of senators. Anyone who committed a violent act deserved prison time, including the police officer who gunned down an unarmed protestor. But to be there and walking by officers without them even saying you are not allowed to go in and then being put in prison is a travesty of justice. There should have been mo prison time for those who just technically trespassed.
“They were unbelievable patriots,” Trump said as the recording ended.Trump salutes the "J6 Hostages" at a campaign event over the weekend:
“Please rise,” booms the announcer, “for the horribly and unfairly treated January 6 hostages.” Then, as the speaker system plays a recorded mash-up of the national anthem sung by participants in the January 6th insurrection, Trump melodramatically salutes.
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