But in the end, as long as we have a jury system, our citizens will continue to rebuke the DOJ through speedy acquittals.
Guys, don’t give them hints!
But in the end, as long as we have a jury system, our citizens will continue to rebuke the DOJ through speedy acquittals.
Guys, don’t give them hints!
Remember the debate here whether it was inappropriate or necessary for Biden to pardon people who they suspected Trump would unjustly prosecute?
I liked when our chats had moral grey areas.
DHS continues to issue media that happens to pander to neo Nazis.
It’s so interesting to see Infowars become an official mouthpiece of the federal government the moment they had the opportunity.
If by interesting you mean predictable sure
There is a large Hispanic population in these areas. Given that brown US citizens can be detained solely for being brown per the “Kavanaugh stop”, this could be ugly.
Jokes on them, Soros already stuffed the mail with yes on 50 ballots.
In OK schools, it’s not permissible to describe the Tulsa Race Riots using any language about racists/racism as it might hurt the feelings of white supremacists
Per the article: She is currently No. 461 in the AJGA Girls ranking
Does she also get to play the course unseen the day before, then claim she already won first place?
Whatcha gonna doaboutit? I think maybe youse should settle down and relax.
DOJ has submitted their new sentencing memo. They deleted the sentence saying that Trump posted Obama’s address shortly before Taranto showed up to Obama’s house.
Nearly two dozen Michigan House Republicans have signed on to a resolution calling for Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson to share the state’s complete voter rolls with the Trump administration, without redactions of potentially sensitive identifying information.
“It is inconceivable, in fact unconscionable, that the chief election officer in Michigan refuses to comply with our nation’s top law enforcement official,” Rep. Joe Fox, a Republican from Fremont and the sponsor of the resolution, said at the hearing. “Who does she think she is?”
When questioned by Rep. Stephen Wooden, D-Grand Rapids, Fox appeared unaware that the state had already submitted a redacted voter roll to the Justice Department, saying he was “maybe one of the most confused.” After Wooden provided the date that the file was submitted, Fox said he’d look into it.
“Why do they want access to your personal information?” Benson asks. “Well, I’ve asked them that. Other secretaries of state, both Democrats and Republicans, have asked them that. They won’t tell us. Nobody — not the president, the DOJ or any other federal agency — has the right to your sensitive, private voter information.”
Other states have also refused the Trump administration’s requests for complete, unredacted voter rolls, and have been sued by the Justice Department. Al Schmidt, Pennsylvania’s secretary of the commonwealth, called the request “a concerning attempt to expand the federal government’s role in our country’s electoral process.” In Maine, the state’s secretary of state told the administration to “go jump in the Gulf of Maine,” an allusion to a similar rebuff years earlier by Mississippi’s then-secretary of state.
Federal Bureau of Investigation spokesperson Sandra Yi Barker told the Idaho Capital Sun in a written statement that “Reports suggesting children were zip-tied or hit with rubber bullets during the October 19 FBI-led operation in Wilder are completely false.”*
But less than an hour after denying any kids were zip-tied or hit with rubber bullets at the raid, the FBI clarified that no “young” children were zip-tied or hit with rubber bullets.
KIVI-TV first reported on the FBI’s modified statement, saying the FBI’s update came after the news outlet sent the FBI a photo reportedly of a 14-year-old U.S. citizen in zip ties.
Advocates who were at the scene of the raid have denounced aggressive tactics they say they saw used, including law enforcement detaining everyone at the venue, children being zip-tied, and people being struck with rubber bullets.
DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin told the Idaho Capital Sun in a statement Wednesday that “ICE didn’t zip tie, restrain or arrest any children.”