Nunes: Criminal Referrals Coming
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I'm not saying there wasn't poor conduct on the part of the FBI. The notes that were leaked are not a good look.
But I think it's easy to imagine but hard to actually concretely connect the dots on a broader conspiracy.
That was the exact same situation with Russia-collusion. There were some obviously bad moves on the part of the Trump campaign. It was easy to imagine a conspiracy based on those, but hard to concretely demonstrate one.
What I'm saying is - the Trump administration said Flynn didn't talk to Kislyak about sanctions. The Trump administration did not think that was appropriate at the time. Pence said as much, and Flynn lying about this is what got him fired by the Trump administration.
Now - Barr's argument is that it's completely normal to start signaling foreign policy to counterparts during the transition.
I'm no expert, nor have I looked into whether or not that is true. But the Trump administration didn't act like that was good process and didn't circle the wagons around Flynn. They fired him.
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On things like missing 302s. I don't even quite know what that means.
But this reminds me of the bad FISA warrants (was it Page or Papadopolous). The IG found that there were shoddy.
That might sound like there's a conspiracy. But when they looked broader and sampled a bunch of unrelated FISA requests - and most showed the same level of sloppiness.
Perhaps the FBI is a sloppy agency.
Just like with the Russia collusion thing. There were kernels of bad and the left-leaning media took that and presumed too much too fast. This Flynn things feels similar and the right-leaning media is taking it too far.
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@xenon said in Nunes: Criminal Referrals Coming:
On things like missing 302s. I don't even quite know what that means.
But this reminds me of the bad FISA warrants (was it Page or Papadopolous). The IG found that there were shoddy.
That might sound like there's a conspiracy. But when they looked broader and sampled a bunch of unrelated FISA requests - and most showed the same level of sloppiness.
Perhaps the FBI is a sloppy agency.
Sloppy is not a legal defense.
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Sure.
Release Flynn because of bad process. I can completely accept that.
Guilty people walk everyday because of process errors or bad prosecuting (as they perhaps should).
What I'm saying is - the Trump administration fired this guy. They fired him. For lying to Pence. For lying about his activities during transition. He's no saint.
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@xenon said in Nunes: Criminal Referrals Coming:
Sure.
Release Flynn because of bad process. I can completely accept that.
Guilty people walk everyday because of process errors or bad prosecuting (as they perhaps should).
What I'm saying is - the Trump administration fired this guy. They fired him. For lying to Pence. For lying about his activities during transition. He's no saint.
He's not pure as the driven snow, but neither is he as guilty as portrayed. Backing up and taking a broader view, nobody should be treated this way. Nobody.
Somebody needs to go to jail. A message needs to be sent that Administrations do not do this to people. They should not try to influence elections by nefarious means.
I find these actions taken by the Obama Administration to be equally as disgusting as those which happened in the Nixon Administration.
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I don't disagree with you on the bad process part. Any hints of unfairness in the process should void prosecutions.
That said - abuses of power seem to be rampant in law enforcement from the lowest rungs of society to the highest (like these).
The fairness of law will always be limited by the integrity of the individuals administering it.
It's what separates corrupt countries from less corrupt countries. It's a civic value, it's part of culture. It transcends party affiliation.
In the global sense - the U.S. is a relatively low-corruption country. For me the broader question is - are we trending in the right direction here as a nation? How do we get better?
Put another way - I think our institutions depend on an expectation of integrity in individuals. And conspiracies are dangerous because any one minor individual can tear down the whole house of cards. Part of the reason why I'm always wary that a group as large as an "administration" is trying to run conspiracies.
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@xenon said in Nunes: Criminal Referrals Coming:
I don't disagree with you on the bad process part. Any hints of unfairness in the process should void prosecutions.
You mean like this prosecutor withholding exculpatory evidence and lying to the judge?
Click through the thread.
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So that thread brings up the grey area here.
The first part of the thread asserts the following:
Van Grack told Judge Sullivan that the Flynn “lies” "impeded" and "had a material impact on" the Trump/Russia investigation.
Flynn was already under investigation on the whole counterintelligence thing. They were going to close up the investigation, because they found nothing material.
Then this whole Kislyak thing happens and Stzrok comments that it was “serendipitously good” and “our utter incompetence actually helps us.” - because the investigation hadn't been close. McCabe reportedly acted with “surprise and relief"
Now the DOJ's argument is that Flynn can make false statements to the FBI, that's not a crime - but there was no investigative basis for it (I'm assuming that means the original probe). That's why it needs to be thrown out.
Now - let me say. I'm no lawyer. Feels like they should have closed one investigation and maybe opened up another.
But the basic fact remains that Flynn lied to the Trump administration and FBI.
That he deserves to get off for bad process may be 100% the right call. But he is a liar and not a blameless victim.
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@xenon said in Nunes: Criminal Referrals Coming:
So that thread brings up the grey area here.
The first part of the thread asserts the following:
Van Grack told Judge Sullivan that the Flynn “lies” "impeded" and "had a material impact on" the Trump/Russia investigation.
Flynn was already under investigation on the whole counterintelligence thing. They were going to close up the investigation, because they found nothing material.
Then this whole Kislyak thing happens and Stzrok comments that it was “serendipitously good” and “our utter incompetence actually helps us.” - because the investigation hadn't been close. McCabe reportedly acted with “surprise and relief"
Now the DOJ's argument is that Flynn can make false statements to the FBI, that's not a crime - but there was no investigative basis for it (I'm assuming that means the original probe). That's why it needs to be thrown out.
Now - let me say. I'm no lawyer. Feels like they should have closed one investigation and maybe opened up another.
But the basic fact remains that Flynn lied to the Trump administration and FBI.
That he deserves to get off for bad process may be 100% the right call. But he is a liar and not a blameless victim.
And another basic fact is that Pence has said he would like to see Flynn back in government.
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@xenon said in Nunes: Criminal Referrals Coming:
Now the DOJ's argument is that Flynn can make false statements to the FBI, that's not a crime - but there was no investigative basis for it
That's fundamentally correct. Lying to the FBI about a crime is prosecutable. Lying to the FBI about NO crime is not.
Flynn lied to the Trump administration and FBI.
And the FBI says it can't prove it. Charges dropped.
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Right, but guys - with all the legal technicalities out of the way (I don't necessarily disagree there).
Pence asked Flynn: did you talk to Kislyak about the sanctions. He presumably said no.
The FBI asked Flynn: did you talk to Kislyak about the sanctions. He presumably said no.
@Jolly - Pence comes across as a pretty amoral political actor if he wants Flynn back.
Flynn lying about the same thing that got him fired as the NSA indicates a pretty low-integrity guy.
So - can it be the case that both of these statements are true:
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The FBI lacked integrity in its pursuit of Flynn
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Flynn lacked integrity in his conduct as incoming NSA
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@xenon said in Nunes: Criminal Referrals Coming:
Right, but guys - with all the legal technicalities out of the way (I don't necessarily disagree there).
Pence asked Flynn: did you talk to Kislyak about the sanctions. He presumably said no.
The FBI asked Flynn: did you talk to Kislyak about the sanctions. He presumably said no.
@Jolly - Pence comes across as a pretty amoral political actor if he wants Flynn back.
Flynn lying about the same thing that got him fired as the NSA indicates a pretty low-integrity guy.
So - can it be the case that both of these statements are true:
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The FBI lacked integrity in its pursuit of Flynn
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Flynn lacked integrity in his conduct as incoming NSA
I'd put more emphasis on what Pence thinks, than what you do.
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Well - that’s likely not happening any time soon.
But here’s what he said about Flynn before his latest blurb that he thinks Flynn is great.
“What I can tell you is that I knew that he lied to me and I know the president made the right decision with regard to him.”
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@xenon said in Nunes: Criminal Referrals Coming:
Well - that’s likely not happening any time soon.
But here’s what he said about Flynn before his latest blurb that he thinks Flynn is great.
“What I can tell you is that I knew that he lied to me and I know the president made the right decision with regard to him.”
And the best thing Biden could say about Obama was that he was clean.
And your point is?