Tuesday AM ~ TheFrontPageCover

TheFrontPageCover
~ Featuring ~
JUDGE NAPOLITANO: Troublesome 
questions for President Trump 
by conservativeinstitute.org  
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Nunes Moving Quickly 
This Week to Hold AG Sessions in Contempt
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{ rickwells.us } ~ Intelligence Committee chairman Devin Nunes (R-CA) mentions the recent actions by Judge TS Ellis in rebuking the Mueller Inquisition attorneys... saying that it looks like the whole investigation has gone off the rails. That’s an understatement but Nunes knows he and the American people are best served when he chooses his words carefully. He’s moves on to the issue of the FISA investigation, which Nunes explains is conducted in a secret manner with only a very few people’s knowledge. He says the abuse of that process is a component of what brought us to where we are today and reveals, “Two weeks ago we sent a letter to Attorney General Jeff Sessions, a classified letter. Per usual it was ignored and not acknowledged, just completely ignored.” AG “AWOL General” Sessions is running out of time and won’t be able to simply ignore the next action that will follow. Nunes continued, “So last week we sent a subpoena, and then on Thursday we discovered that they’re not going to comply with our subpoena on very important information that we need.” Asked what he’s going to do now, Nunes replies, “The only thing left that we can do is we have to move quickly to hold the Attorney General of the United States in contempt and that’s what I’m going to press for this week.”...
The FBI Shouldn’t Be Above the Law Either
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by David Harsanyi
{ dailysignal.com } ~ These days, a number of people seem to be under the impression that investigating President Donald Trump is the most vital project undertaken by this nation since its founding... Perhaps. But their feelings shouldn’t override the Constitution, because for all the principles allegedly being whittled away by this administration, its antagonists seem to be doing everything they can to keep pace. For instance, while it might come as a surprise to many, the Justice Department is not an “independent” entity. Presumably, those who work for the DOJ have fealty to law and justice first, yes. But they are ultimately subordinates of the president of the United States, who was elected legally and has powers identical to those of former Presidents Barack liar-nObama or George W. Bush. In other words, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein doesn’t work for CNN personalities or Vox explainer writers. He works for Trump...   https://www.dailysignal.com/2018/05/04/the-fbi-shouldnt-be-above-the-law-either/?utm_source=TDS_Email&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=MorningBell&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTVdJM056ZGtOVEZpTm1JeiIsInQiOiJYbjZtTU4zUnZrSFF3N0lCaEU3UFwvanZMNGI5UHlveXFRNlRjaGVYUEdjUWkzeitlS1h5WHJ6SHVQemU5VFFHRFlVWVZZOTBveXZLcFF5KytwdXFTVjZCaDRXcnFyR012Nm51d3NOMU5ReFJqaGp2WFRXYnJjejB1OWtLb0JkQXQifQ%3D%3D 
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Minister warns Israel could 
kill Assad if he lets Iran attack from Syria 
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by MICHAEL BACHNER 
{ timesofisrael.com } ~ An Israeli minister on Monday threatened that the Jewish state could kill Syrian President Bashar Assad... if his regime doesn’t prevent Iranian forces from launching attacks against Israel from his territory. The warning came amid reports that Tehran is planning a revenge missile strike against Israel. Officials in the Islamic Republic have vowed to respond to several alleged Israeli attacks in Syria that targeted Iranian facilities and killed at least seven members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. Israeli defense officials warned on Sunday that Iran was planning to retaliate by having its proxies fire missiles at military targets in northern Israel in the near future...   https://www.timesofisrael.com/minister-warns-israel-could-kill-assad-if-he-lets-iran-attack-from-syria/?utm_source=The+Times+of+Israel+Daily+Edition&utm_campaign=44894e5033-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2018_05_07&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_adb46cec92-44894e5033-54638825 
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Walt Disney: American Dreamer
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by Glenn Beck
{ prageru.com } ~ Like Benjamin Franklin in the 1700s or Elon Musk today, Walt Disney was the twentieth century’s prime example of American ingenuity... Raised on a small family farm in Missouri, he arrived in Hollywood in 1923 with little more than a suitcase, a pencil, and an idea. But his story is testament that in America, that’s more than enough. In this video, Glenn Beck, best-selling author and host of The Glenn Beck Program, explains how Disney became a household name, and how he proved that in America, the only limit to your ambition is your own imagination.
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Mike Pompeo brings his reset button to the State Department
by Joel Gehrke

{ washingtonexaminer.com } ~ Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is moving immediately to fill vacant senior positions at the State Department... a task so large it has the feel of a “presidential transition” as opposed to a hand-off from one member of President Trump’s Cabinet to another, according to Republican foreign policy experts. “That is true in the sense that there's so many vacancies,” Council on Foreign Relations senior fellow Elliot Abrams told the  Washington Examiner. “It’s really incredible how many vacancies there are. It’s more like starting fresh.” Five of the nine most senior positions at Foggy Bottom are vacant; the number was six, but Pompeo already has filled the role of counselor of the department. Dozens of ambassadorships are empty, while there are just five Senate-confirmed assistant secretaries of state....
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JUDGE NAPOLITANO: Troublesome 
questions for President Trump 
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by conservativeinstitute.org 
{ conservativeinstitute.org } ~ In a startling revelation earlier this week, The New York Times published what it claims are 49 questions that special counsel Robert Mueller sent to lawyers for President Donald Trump. The questions are apparently a road map of inquiry that Mueller and his prosecutors and FBI agents plan to put to the president if the president agrees to sit down for an interview with them.

I have been arguing for months that the president should not agree to an interview with Mueller. My reasons are fairly boilerplate: It is nearly impossible to talk prosecutors who are determined to seek an indictment into changing their minds.

As well, the person being interviewed cannot possibly know as much about the case as the team doing the interview, and he will be prone to error.

In the interview environment, one small lie can result in one big headache of an indictment, even if the lie is about an extraneous matter. When federal prosecutors question a potential defendant, who appears voluntarily and is not under oath, the questioners can lie to the person being interviewed, but he cannot lie to them without risk of indictment.

Just ask Martha Stewart. This is exquisitely unfair, but it has been federal law for generations.

The Supreme Court has ruled that federal prosecutors and FBI agents can use trickery, deceptions and outright falsehoods — even disguises, verbal traps and fraud — to help them extract information from a witness or person they are investigating.

Given the president’s well-known propensity to talk at length on many disjointed matters and to think both aloud and unfiltered — witness his 30-minute unannounced telephone interview on live cable television with my colleagues on Fox & Friends last week — there is a very serious danger that he would contradict himself and even contradict facts for which the special counsel has hard evidence.

Donald Trump is the subject of a criminal investigation. When prosecutors interview a person they are investigating, it is to help the investigation, not the subject of it.

As if all of this were not enough to dissuade a self-confident Trump from sitting down with an all-knowing Mueller and his crew, now come the 49 questions Mueller has told Trump’s lawyers he wants to ask the president.

Though many of these at first blush appear not to challenge the president’s memory or command of facts, consider a deeper analysis.

There are two species of questions here. One set of questions is intended to get the president off on a disjointed monologue to see whether he — as he did on Fox & Friends — will admit to something without actually being accused or even asked about it.

The others are questions to which Mueller already knows the answers and for which he has irrefutable hard evidence — and the quest is to see whether the president will be truthful.

As well, both types of questions are mere starting points — intended to lull Trump into a comfortable but false sense of security — which would then be followed with curveballs he would have great difficulty trying to hit.

One of Mueller’s questions is profound, and I have not seen anything like it in all the literature and legal arguments preceding the Times‘ revelation this week: “What knowledge did you have of any outreach by your campaign, including by Paul Manafort, to Russia about potential assistance to the campaign?”

Prosecutors need a factual or good-faith basis to trigger their questions. This question goes to the heart of the so-called collusion issue.

I say “so-called” because “collusion” is a media and a political word; it does not describe anything in the law. What Mueller is looking for is a conspiracy, which is the easiest crime for prosecutors to prove because the crime need not have been successful.

The late Justice Robert Jackson, himself a former U.S. attorney general, famously called conspiracy prosecutors’ favorite crime.

The essence of conspiracy is an agreement — here, an agreement to accept campaign assistance from a foreign person, entity or government, which is illegal, even if the assistance never arrived. The essence of the crime is the agreement, not the receipt of something of value.

The conspirators need not have met together or even be known to each other, providing at least one of them took at least one material step — such as a phone call or a meeting with Russians offering help — in furtherance of the agreement.

If there is truth underlying this question — if Mueller has hard evidence that the true answer is “yes” — it could only have come to Mueller from Rick Gates, Manafort’s former business partner and co-defendant and now Mueller’s star witness.

Gates could have told Mueller in return for Mueller’s dropping charges against him that Manafort reached out to the Russians, in which case Mueller would want to test Trump’s knowledge, understanding and truthfulness on this white-hot issue.

If Trump were to answer “no” and Gates told the grand jury that Trump did know of this, Mueller could claim Trump lied and ask the same grand jury to indict Trump for that.

If Trump were to answer “yes,” that would be the end of his presidency. If he were to give a rambling non-answer, Mueller would make the most of it.

Are prosecutors fair? Many are, but their common view is that they need not always be fair because they are after bad guys who don’t play by the rules. To the prosecutorial mind, it is for judges and juries to be fair.

What should Trump do? He should go about the business of being president. He should do what is most difficult for him: stay silent.

Don’t trust a man who owns a grand jury. Don’t help him undo your presidency.

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Comments

  • Bonnie

    Oh-so true...

  • 1. yes the pres is head of the exec branch he can fire them too

    2. mueller; knows a sitting pres cannot be subpoened or indicted he does not care

    he is out to impeach him and by any means possible.   

This reply was deleted.