Posted on 09/26/2020 5:05:47 AM PDT by MtnClimber
Very sharp observation! It makes sense. You can’t set your home on fire then run to buy fire insurance. The FBI agents who bought personal insurance knew or should have known they were not fully disclosing the severity of their risk when they purchased their policy. I doubt if insurance companies will pay on these fraudulent policies.
TUESDAY-—
MORE fodder for voters just before the first ‘debate’.
Sullivan is still going to hammer Flynn. Look for about a 3 year sentence just because Sullivan has the power to do whatever he wishes.
Which ins company was involved?......GEICO, of course.
Not Progressive?
DECEMBER 17, 2015 : (RUSSIA : RUSSIA TODAY DINNER IN MOSCOW ATTENDED BY FLYNN, MIFSUD)
https://thefederalist.com/2019/09/12/sidney-powells-latest-motion-michael-flynns-case-russiagate-bombshell/
This why Flynns legal team wants the phones. From the article:
Some of the evidence Powell seeks is already presumed by many to exist, such as FISA applications pertaining to Flynn and the original 302 written shortly after FBI agents interviewed Flynn about his conversations with the Russian ambassador. But other evidence Powell identifies reveals that she has skinned all the snakes involved in SpyGate and knows exactly what went down. For instance, Powell requested any information, including recordings or 302s, about Joseph Mifsuds presence and involvement in engaging or reporting on Mr. Flynn and Mifsuds presence at the Russia Today dinner in Moscow on December 17, 2015.
13 posted on 10/16/2019, 11:29:01 AM by EVO X
“We’ll know how deep the swamp is when we learn the insurance company is ok with being defrauded.”
It might end up being like all the detritus being hired by Netflix. Just another way to launder campaign contributions/bribes.
That's certainly an interesting question and it could go in a number of different directions. If the intentional acts were performed prior to the coverage period of the policy, then there would be no coverage for them.
If this were a commercial liability case where higher ups in a corporation directed the misconduct, then civil (and if applicable, criminal) liability would extend up to those giving the order and possibly to the business itself.
What complicates this case is these are government employees, and to an extent they would have qualified immunity from civil liability, unless it could be demonstrated that their actions were not merely poor decisions, or deviations from protocol, but also had bad-faith motives.
Let's suppose Flynn sued some of these employees for their actions. The employees would turn it over to their insurance companies. If the insurer accepted that the employees were in fact professionally liable, they would try to settle the claim. If, on the other hand, the insurer would deny coverage (based on the gov't employee's fraud on the application, excluded loss, etc.) Flynn would sue them personally, during which the employees may try to use the "just following orders," defense, or invoking qualified immunity. I don't think there is a clear answer to your question that would not be answered short of litigation, and I would suspect such a suit would likely establish some pretty weighty case law for future actions.
What about teaching FBI Agents that if asked to do something illegal, that they can say, "NO". An FBI department called "Nuremberg Trials" could be set up so agents concerned about the ethics of doing something 'wrong' would have a group to go to...who would stand with them.
If Sullivan sentences Flynn, it will get deleted on appeal.
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