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Calls on DeLay's home phone subpoenaed
Associated Press ^
| October 13, 2005
Posted on 10/13/2005 1:08:49 PM PDT by Dog Gone
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I'd like to subpoena Ronnie Earle's home phone records.
1
posted on
10/13/2005 1:08:55 PM PDT
by
Dog Gone
To: Dog Gone
2
posted on
10/13/2005 1:10:20 PM PDT
by
Stellar Dendrite
( Mike Pence for President!!! http://acuf.org/issues/issue34/050415pol.asp)
To: Dog Gone
Ronnie's on the run.
He's flailing like a madman.
3
posted on
10/13/2005 1:11:06 PM PDT
by
E. Pluribus Unum
(Islam Factoid:After forcing young girls to watch his men execute their fathers, Muhammad raped them.)
To: Dog Gone
4
posted on
10/13/2005 1:11:49 PM PDT
by
golfisnr1
(Democrats are like roaches, hard to get rid of.>)
To: Dog Gone
Fishing expedition by the corrupt democrat party, an evil entity which must be utterly destroyed.
To: Dog Gone
Don't prosecutors do this before they get indictments?
6
posted on
10/13/2005 1:16:18 PM PDT
by
Tarpon
To: FormerACLUmember
The depostism of the left makes Sen. Joseph McCarthy look like an amateur.
And schools and the media will never address this shameful period in American politics.
7
posted on
10/13/2005 1:16:32 PM PDT
by
weegee
(The lesson from New Orleans? Smart Growth kills. You can't evacuate dense populations easily.)
To: Dog Gone
But the dumb-asses who watch the nightly news will fall right in line.
"Ooh, Delay MUST have done something wrong, now they're investigating his home phone records."
It's stunning how ill-informed people are. They have no idea how our justice system works and they have no idea how our government works. They assume Delay must be guilty of something becuase they don't realize the agenda of the prosecutor and they think Bush failed Katrina victims because they assume the federal government is supposed to take care of everything.
To: Dog Gone
This is extremely illegal. Earle should spend the next 20 years in prison for this.
To: Dog Gone
These phone records will prove, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that Tom DeLay spoke on the phone with people who ran the PAC which he was a board member of.
That is simply, damning, damning stuff.
The prosecution will also be able to demonstrate that Tom DeLay bought and consumed a Pepsi on the exact same day that Pepsi made a donation to the Texas GOP.
10
posted on
10/13/2005 1:23:41 PM PDT
by
wideawake
(God bless our brave troops and their Commander-in-Chief)
To: weegee
Exclusive photo of Ronnie Earle preparing for a fair show trial of Tom Delay.
To: Dog Gone
Why not also check his library card, and any X-rated videos he may have rented...grab the computer as well, perhaps DeLay surfed his way to FR?
Ole Ronnie is indeed getting desperate - so what would his phone records really prove one way or the other ?-
Last time I checked it was legal for DeLay to speak to anyone he so chose - regardless of their position or profession
12
posted on
10/13/2005 1:24:30 PM PDT
by
VRWCTexan
(History has a long memory - but still repeats itself)
To: Dog Gone
This biased p.o.s. gonna supoena DeLays Colonoscopy film too?
13
posted on
10/13/2005 1:24:52 PM PDT
by
Joe Boucher
(an enemy of islam)
To: wideawake
If all that you say turns true then that's it I will no longer support Delay, Bush the GOP, or conservatives. Yes I think I'm thru with them all.
Bush didn't consult me before selecting Harriet Miers or John Roberts and now you say Delay may have drunk a Pepsi, well I'm a committed Coke Cola guy.
Yup, I see no other choice but to throw my support behind Hillary in '08.
14
posted on
10/13/2005 1:29:43 PM PDT
by
marlon
To: VRWCTexan
grab the computer as well, perhaps DeLay surfed his way to FR?That would surely have him convicted (evidence of prior bad acts).
15
posted on
10/13/2005 1:30:51 PM PDT
by
umgud
(Comment removed by poster before moderator could get to it)
To: Dog Gone
It begins to look like we're going to have to witness a politician's visit to the proctologist.
16
posted on
10/13/2005 1:33:02 PM PDT
by
GretchenM
(Hooked on porn and hating it? Visit http://www.theophostic.com .)
To: Dog Gone
I'd like to make dueling legal again. Lots of crap would stop pronto.
17
posted on
10/13/2005 1:36:18 PM PDT
by
auboy
("Don't get stuck on whiny")
To: Dog Gone
Uh, this seems like a rational next step after you have secured an indictment. Phone records are not protected information, and are useful in collaberating other evidence of communications which are important in cases like this.
I'm guessing Earle needed the indictment to provide a judge with probably cause for the phone records.
I do agree that Earle has violated his office. This just doesn't seem like an issue to me.
I hope DeLay can subpoena his records as part of the suit which claimed Earle was working with the Democrats on this indictment.
To: Tarpon
Don't prosecutors do this before they get indictments?
Usually, yes. Unless a cooperating witness recently revealed something in particular that led the prosecutors here to the phone records.
19
posted on
10/13/2005 1:37:50 PM PDT
by
BikerNYC
(Modernman should not have been banned.)
To: thoughtomator
I don't think there is anything illegal about it. I think it does show that Earle obtained the indictment, and now he's trying to find some evidence to support it. However, that's not the way it is supposed to work.
20
posted on
10/13/2005 1:38:49 PM PDT
by
Dog Gone
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