If this was not bona fide official duty, they were misappropriating government property. The lifetime taxes of one or two normal taxpayers will be used to cover this.
They should be prosecuted as the criminals they are. They should both be on the hook for restitution in full to the US treasury (who morally should immediately pay for what their employees did. They would do it to any of us.
Next,, the people who refused to release the truth of what happened without a FOIA lawsuit should be in the next cell. Secrecy to coverup corruption is the mark of a totalitarian nation.
If this was not bona fide official duty, they were misappropriating government property. The lifetime taxes of one or two normal taxpayers will be used to cover this.
They should be prosecuted as the criminals they are. They should both be on the hook for restitution in full to the US treasury (who morally should immediately pay for what their employees did. They would do it to any of us.
Next,, the people who refused to release the truth of what happened without a FOIA lawsuit should be in the next cell. Secrecy to coverup corruption is the mark of a totalitarian nation.
I couldn’t agree more. It isn’t government that is inherently corrupt or unethical, it’s the unethical individuals that often work there. Double standards are anti-American, where people are treated differently because of what they are, or what they do, or how much money they have.
The Constitution states only one command twice. The Fifth Amendment says to the federal government that no one shall be “deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” The Fourteenth Amendment, ratified in 1868, uses the same eleven words, called the Due Process Clause, to describe a legal obligation of all states. These words have as their central promise an assurance that all levels of American government must operate within the law (”legality”) and provide fair procedures. Most of this essay concerns that promise. We should briefly note, however, three other uses these words have had in American constitutional law.http://topics.law.cornell.edu/wex/due_process