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To: bobbdobbs
I would say that lack of "damage" is irrelevant. I mean, in an attempted murder where the victim is completely unharmed, it is still a crime.

A total disingenuous statement. Perjury to a Grand Jury has to be material to a crime. No crime ... No perjury.

45 posted on 02/02/2006 5:49:17 PM PST by fedupjohn (If we try to fight the war on terror with eyes shut + ears packed with wax, innocent people will die)
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To: fedupjohn
A total disingenuous statement. Perjury to a Grand Jury has to be material to a crime. No crime ... No perjury.

Lying about a crime, the accusation against President William Jefferson Clinton, has itself been a crime since the time of Hammurabi.

Then, it was punishable by death. Today, perjury is punishable in federal courts by a fine and up to five years of prison for each count.

Then and now, the theory has been essentially the same: If people are allowed to lie during the investigation of a crime, the crime cannot be proven. It may go unpunished or an innocent person might be wrongly punished.

That is why perjury has never required proof of an underlying crime. Without access to the truth, there may be no way to show the underlying crime. (A perjury indictment unaccompanied by a charge of an underlying crime remains, nonetheless, controversial because critics sometimes see it as the product of a failed probe.)

Perjury, the Supreme Court has said, is "an obvious and flagrant affront to the basic concepts" of justice.

http://www.hypocritae.com/?ART=179
Fred Barbash | Washington Post | August 16, 1998


83 posted on 02/03/2006 5:54:32 AM PST by Cboldt
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