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Biden Family’s Corruption Is Nothing New And Largely Legal
Townhall.com ^ | October 25, 2020 | Derek Hunter

Posted on 10/25/2020 4:28:02 AM PDT by Kaslin

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To: Kaslin

Below the asterisk line is an excerpt from the Hobbs Act.

Now, a good prosecutor could most likely get a conviction under the Hobbs Act IF he had an honest judge and if he (the prosecutor wasn’t intimidated by outside sources, particularly foreign threats).

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Extortion under color of law
Main article: Federal prosecution of public corruption in the United States
The Hobbs Act also reaches extortionate acts by public officials acting under the color of law. A public official commits extortion under the color of law when he obtains a payment to which he is not entitled knowing that it was made in exchange for official acts.[5] § 1951 therefore not only embraces the same conduct the federal bribery statute (18 U.S.C. § 201) prohibits, it goes further in two ways:

§ 1951 is not limited to federal public officials.
The government need only prove a public official agreed to take some official action in exchange for payment as opportunities arose to do so (i.e. a “stream of benefits” theory) to sustain a § 1951 charge whereas, under § 201, the government must prove an express quid pro quo (or something approaching one).[6]
It is important to note, however, that it is irrelevant whether the public official in fact intended to hold up his or her end of the bargain—it is enough that the official had knowledge of the payor’s intent to buy official acts. Notwithstanding its potentially broad reach, § 1951 is narrower than § 201 in at least one important respect: Under § 201, both the official receiving a bribe and the person bribing him have committed a federal crime, but, under § 1951, a payor of a bribe is most likely not guilty as an accomplice to extortion.[7]


41 posted on 10/25/2020 4:07:20 PM PDT by Cen-Tejas
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