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good news mueller is hiring more prosecutors
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Jul 6, 2018 20:03:29   #
BigMike Loc: yerington nv
 
badbob85037 wrote:
If Americans did their duty the FBI would be dissolved. The cia would have ended in the 60, if Johnson hadn't murdered the last democrat, JFK. The only difference between a Repug and DemoRat is the length of their chain while one bitches the other cries and whines. If ya stand them on their heads 1. they are all the same and 2. they all pick up the nick name Tiny. If held to their oath we would have a serious shortage of hemp rope and strong limb trees. But anyone that cast a vote for that cheating, lying, treasonous, sea hag that would go right over their head.
If Americans did their duty the FBI would be disso... (show quote)


Wow!

Sea Hag!

I couldn't have said all that better.



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Jul 6, 2018 20:08:33   #
Hadenough
 
teabag09 wrote:
Mueller hiring more prosecutors??? Who is paying for these additional "prosecutors" all of which are anti-Trump demorats??? Mike


The commie soros!

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Jul 6, 2018 21:42:26   #
Carol Kelly
 
Blade_Runner wrote:
Robert Mueller's forgotten surveillance crime spree

When Robert Mueller was appointed last May as Special Counsel to investigate Trump, Politico Magazine gushed that “Mueller might just be America’s straightest arrow — a respected, nonpartisan and fiercely apolitical public servant whose only lifetime motivation has been the search for justice.” Most of the subsequent press coverage has shown nary a doubt about Mueller’s purity. But, during his 11 years as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Mueller’s agency routinely violated federal law and the Bill of Rights.

Mueller took over the FBI one week before the 9/11 attacks and he was worse than clueless after 9/11. On Sept. 14, 2011, Mueller declared, “The fact that there were a number of individuals that happened to have received training at flight schools here is news, quite obviously. If we had understood that to be the case, we would have — perhaps one could have averted this.” Three days later, Mueller announced: “There were no warning signs that I’m aware of that would indicate this type of operation in the country.” His protestations helped the Bush administration railroad the Patriot Act through Congress, vastly expanding the FBI’s prerogatives to vacuum up Americans’ personal information.

Deceit helped capture those intrusive new prerogatives. The Bush administration suppressed until the following May the news that FBI agents in Phoenix and Minneapolis had warned FBI headquarters of suspicious Arabs in flight training programs prior to 9/11. A House-Senate Joint Intelligence Committee analysis concluded that FBI incompetence and negligence “contributed to the United States becoming, in effect, a sanctuary for radical terrorists.” FBI blundering spurred the Wall Street Journal to call for Mueller’s resignation, while a New York Times headline warned: “Lawmakers Say Misstatements Cloud F.B.I. Chief's Credibility.”

But the FBI was off and running. Thanks to the Patriot act, the FBI increased by a hundredfold — up to 50,000 a year — the number of National Security Letters (NSLs) it issued to citizens, business, and nonprofit organizations, and recipients were prohibited from disclosing that their data had been raided. NSLs entitle the FBI to seize records that reveal “where a person makes and spends money, with whom he lives and lived before, how much he gambles, what he buys online, what he pawns and borrows, where he travels, how he invests, what he searches for and reads on the Web, and who telephones or e-mails him at home and at work,” the Washington Post noted. The FBI can lasso thousands of people’s records with a single NSL — regardless of the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition of unreasonable warrantless searches.

The FBI greatly understated the number of NSLs it was issuing and denied that abuses had occurred, thereby helping sway Congress to renew the Patriot Act in 2006. The following year, an Inspector General report revealed that FBI agents may have recklessly issued thousands of illegal NSLs. Shortly after that report was released, federal judge Victor Marrero denounced the NSL process as “the legislative equivalent of breaking and entering, with an ominous free pass to the hijacking of constitutional values."

Rather than arresting FBI agents who broke the law, Mueller created a new FBI Office of Integrity and Compliance. The Electronic Freedom Foundation, after winning lawsuits to garner FBI reports to a federal oversight board, concluded that the FBI may have committed “tens of thousands” of violations of federal law, regulations, or Executive Orders between 2001 and 2008.

Mueller was a front-and-center Bush cabinet member when the president, scorning a unanimous 1972 Supreme Court ruling, decided he was entitled to impose warrantless wiretaps on Americans. At an April 2005 Senate hearing, Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) asked Mueller: “Can the National Security Agency, the great electronic snooper, spy on the American people?" Mueller replied: "I would say generally, they are not allowed to spy or to gather information on American citizens."

Mueller presumably knew his answer was at least misleading if not blatantly deceptive. Nearly nine months later, the New York Times revealed that Bush had unleashed NSA to illegally wiretap up to 500 people within the U.S. at any given time and peruse millions of other Americans’ emails. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales responded to the uproar by asserting that “the president has the inherent authority” to order such wiretaps. Mueller had no trouble with that dictatorial doctrine — even though the same claim spurred one of the articles of impeachment crafted against President Nixon.

Mueller’s biggest coup against privacy occurred with Section 215 of the Patriot Act, which entitles the FBI to demand “business records” that are “relevant” to a terrorism or espionage investigation. In 2011 testimony to the Senate Intelligence Committee, Mueller “suggested the FBI interpreted (Section 215) narrowly and used it sparingly,” the ACLU noted. But Mueller was the point man for the Bush administration’s bizarre 2006 decision (perpetuated by Obama) that all Americans’ telephone records were “relevant” to terrorism investigations. Several times a year, Mueller signed orders to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, swaying it to continually renew its order compelling telephone companies to deliver all their calling records (including time, duration, and location of calls) to the National Security Agency.

On June 5, 2013, leaks from former NSA contractor Edward Snowden blew the lid off this surveillance regime. Federal judge Richard Leon slammed that records roundup as “almost Orwellian... I cannot imagine a more indiscriminate and arbitrary invasion than this systematic and high-tech collection and retention of personal data on virtually every single citizen for purposes of querying and analyzing it without prior judicial approval.”

Mueller sought to dampen the Snowden uproar by testifying to Congress that the feds could not listen to Americans’ calls without a warrant for that “particular phone and that particular individual.” But NSA employees had broad discretion to vacuum up Americans’ info without warrants, and NSA's definition of terrorist suspect was so ludicrously broad that it includes "someone searching the web for suspicious stuff."

If Mueller’s team finds clear evidence that Trump colluded with Russia in his 2016 presidential campaign, any abuses Mueller sanctioned as FBI director will be irrelevant. But if Mueller’s case relies on his halo instead of smoking guns, then Americans should pay more heed to Mueller’s record than to his press clips. Gravitas is no substitute for fidelity to the Constitution.
url=http://thehill.com/opinion/criminal-justice/3... (show quote)


He has no (had no) halo. EVER,

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Jul 6, 2018 22:24:52   #
debeda
 
BigMike wrote:
They'll arrest his chauffer from 20 years ago who drinks white Russians.


LMAO!!!

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Jul 6, 2018 22:25:55   #
debeda
 
BigMike wrote:
They'll arrest his chauffer from 20 years ago who drinks white Russians.


Maybe they'll decide melania is "The spy who loved me". Twerps

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Jul 6, 2018 22:28:27   #
debeda
 
proud republican wrote:
Oh dont say White Russia,dont you know its racist nowdays to say the word"white"?


Lolololololololhahahahahaha

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Jul 6, 2018 22:31:10   #
debeda
 
BigMike wrote:
They have to...the Russians they indicted have lawyered up and there has to be discovery now. Mewler will have to put something on the table. Some have suggested he may plan on exiting at some point in the future.


Personally I would like to know how you could issue an indictment and NOT have the required discovery to produce to the defendants. Just what documentation was used to determine that an indictment was in order? This just gets smelliest and smellier.

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Jul 6, 2018 22:32:29   #
debeda
 
mwdegutis wrote:
And they'll prosecute the ones that drink Black Russians for being racist.


Lolol. Well, guess they can't be PRIVILEGED to drink white Russians lol

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Jul 6, 2018 22:35:52   #
debeda
 
EmilyD wrote:
So what do you think they are going to do? Get rid of Trump? And then how are they going to get rid of Pence? Because Pence will be an even more PITA than Trump is for Dems. I guess Hillary and Bill will try to waltz into the White House, claiming they should have been there in the first place? If this is a coup, it's the stupidest dumbass attempt at a coup I can ever imagine. But, hey, let's keep letting them try - it's fun to watch! And it's good for the GOP...it shows the silent majority Americans how ridiculous the Dem party is.

I've got my lounge chair and popcorn maker set up by the pool. Bring on the show in November!
So what do you think they are going to do? Get ri... (show quote)


Lol and they call president Trump a showman. The dems are comedians a la "who's on first".

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Jul 6, 2018 22:37:42   #
debeda
 
jimpack123 wrote:
does the fact that he is skirting the law by doing this He says this is for national security that he is raising tariffs otherwise only Congress and the Senate can raise Tariffs And I see no national security issue but the Gop lead Congress and the Gop lead Senate doesn't have the balls to stand up to him


Tariffs are about commerce NOT national security. Where in the world did you hear such a thing?

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Jul 6, 2018 22:39:14   #
debeda
 
BigMike wrote:
Mewler is prosecuting Russians and they are fighting him. Too funny!


Yeah he thought they'd be easy targets cuz they'd just ignore him.

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Jul 6, 2018 22:44:25   #
Mikeyavelli
 
debeda wrote:
Personally I would like to know how you could issue an indictment and NOT have the required discovery to produce to the defendants. Just what documentation was used to determine that an indictment was in order? This just gets smelliest and smellier.


It was a magazine article years ago that listed russian companies doing business with America.
How convenient to have that ready to indict.

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Jul 6, 2018 22:54:49   #
debeda
 
Mikeyavelli wrote:
It was a magazine article years ago that listed russian companies doing business with America.
How convenient to have that ready to indict.


Oh for Pete's sake....

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Jul 7, 2018 04:35:58   #
old marine Loc: America home of the brave
 
badbob85037 wrote:
I think you hit that nail right on the head.



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Jul 7, 2018 07:43:06   #
1ProudAmerican
 
"good news mueller is hiring more prosecutors"

LOL, LOL, LOL...when I read the headline I thought it said, "good news, mueller is hiring more PROSTITUTES" !!! LOL, LOL, LOL

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