Posted on 04/01/2018 4:54:21 AM PDT by Freedomlibertyjustice
WASHINGTON, DC Professor Jonathan Turley, a top national legal expert on government investigations, commented on Thursday about Attorney General Jeff Sessions decision to bring in U.S. Attorney John Huber. Turley called it brilliantto combine all the powers of the U.S. Department of Justices inspector general with a prosecutor who can bring charges, seek indictments, and get results for President Trump far more quickly than a second special counsel.
Turley is a law professor at George Washington University, who attained national fame during the 1998 impeachment of President Bill Clinton as a top legal authority on special counsels and congressional investigations of government wrongdoing, including criminal wrongdoing. His reputation has only grown during the intervening 20 years, as he has weighed in on scandals and investigations of public officials from both political parties.
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
Trust session? Is turly Q?
Sessions is about to blow the top off the Russia Russia Russia distraction. It will be fun to watch.
Wake up from your drunken stupors and get the Sessions photoshops ready.
Andrew McCarthy made the case for exactly what Sessions is doing in an article in early March. The way he lays it out, it makes a lot of sense .... no out-of-control special prosecutor ranging far afield, blowing millions, having to hire a team & get up to speed, then feeling like they have to get somebody on something to justify the appointment.
No New Special Counsel
https://www.nationalreview.com/2018/03/second-special-counsel-fisa-not-necessary/
Link excerpt:
Clearly, there needs to be an investigation. Goodlatte and Gowdy are entirely right about that. Regardless of whether there is a solid basis for a criminal investigation, the Justice Department is always responsible for ensuring the integrity and lawfulness of its own operations it must investigate credible allegations of misconduct by its component agencies, including the FBI. Goodlatte and Gowdy are also right to suggest (as I believe they have) that the contemplated investigation should scrutinize the handling of the Clinton-emails probe how it comported, or failed to, with Justice Department practices and policies. The chairmen are right yet again that the jurisdictional limitations on Michael Horowitz, the Justice Departments very able inspector general, make it impossible for him to conduct the investigation that is needed.
Neither, however, should that investigation be conducted by a special counsel.
The special counsel is a pernicious institution that operates outside the procedures and discipline of a normal U.S. attorneys office where the merits of every case must be weighed against those of every other in the competition for limited investigative and prosecutorial resources. Special-counsel appointments should be resisted whenever possible. Indeed, with Robert Mueller already and inevitably straying far afield from his original collusion inquiry, we should be discussing how that investigation can be limited and brought to a just conclusion; we should not be encouraging the launch of yet another special-counsel extravaganza. Never again should a special-counsel investigation be commenced in the absence of concrete evidence that a crime has been committed a crime that serves to cabin the special counsels investigation lest it become a fishing expedition without end.
Here is what should be done. Attorney General Sessions should assign a U.S. attorney from outside Washington to conduct a probe of how the Clinton-emails and Trump-Russia investigations were handled by the Justice Department and FBI.
Under my proposal, the designated U.S. attorney would handle this investigation along with the rest of the work of his or her office this would not be a prosecutor whose only assignment is to pursue a single target or set of targets, and who thus faces great pressure to file charges, no matter how far afield from the original focus of the investigation, in order to justify the appointment. Unlike the inspector general, the U.S. attorney would have full jurisdiction to convene a grand jury; investigate any crimes attendant to the Clinton-emails and Trump-Russia probes; issue subpoenas and seek other court process (such as search warrants) to secure evidence; and prosecute any violations of law by persons inside or outside of government.
Doesnt it also have the effect of putting the jury outside Washington?
Sessions is hanging everything on the release of the IG Report. It should come out in the next two weeks, about the time that Comey is on his ‘book’ tour. Had it not done it this way, then it would have been deemed another ‘witch hunt’ by the Republicans and it would have been even more difficult to get to the truth with a stacked media. I agree with McCarthy’s assessment. However, Sessions will lose his position if he does nothing after the release of the Report. He has held off the Prosecutor until the IG Report is released, but after that, things will have to happen rapidly. Everyone has lost their patience with Sessions and the slowness of the process, but with the whole Deep State entrenched and dug in, it makes it much harder.
why was Paul Ryan making a trip to the Czech Rep over this guy?
30 Mar: Radio Free Europe: Alleged Russian Hacker Nikulin Pleads Not Guilty After Extradition To U.S.
A Russian hacker who allegedly stole data and is wanted by both Washington and Moscow has pleaded not guilty to the charges at a court in San Francisco after being extradited to the United States from the Czech Republic...
During a visit to the Czech Republic, U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan said on March 27 in Prague that “we have every reason to believe and expect that Mr. Nikulin will be extradited to America.”...
Nikulin’s lawyer said his client claimed the FBI is trying to link him to the hacking of the Democratic Party’s servers during the 2016 U.S. presidential election campaign.
https://www.rferl.org/a/russia-us-czech-republic-accused-hacker-nikulin-extradited/29135397.html
11 Mar: Washington Times: Russian charged with breaching U.S. firms says FBI attempted to coerce confession over Clinton hack
By Andrew Blake
A Russian man wanted by the Justice Department on charges connected to hacking U.S. companies now claims the FBI offered him immunity in exchange for accepting responsibility for cyberattacks targeting former Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.
Yevgeny Nikulin, the alleged hacker, laid the claim to Russian media Thursday in a letter sent from a Czech Republic prison cell amid an international extradition battle currently underway between Washington and Moscow.
FBI agents promised Mr. Nikulin money, American citizenship and a free apartment for taking the fall over hacking Mrs. Clintons campaign, he alleged in a letter published Thursday by Nastoyashchoe Vremya, a Russian-language website...
FBI agents interviewed Mr. Nikulin twice since his arrest, he wrote, and each time asked him to confess to hacking American political targets. Mr. Nikulin said he refused their initial request last November, then received a second offer three months later...
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2017/may/11/yevgeny-nikulin-alleged-russian-hacker-claims-fbi-/
Time will tell whether Session’s choice was the better one for prospective prosecutions.
I am surprised we have not seen more recent analysis from McCarthy and others on Comey’s leaks from last year. This is from an McCarthy article early last summer:
“as Turley observes, Comey never sought a classification review of his memos by the White House or the Justice Department. It is possible that theyd disagree with Comeys conclusion that the memos are not classified. Going forward, it will be interesting to see what position the government takes regarding the memos: Their disclosure has already been demanded by Congress, and additional disclosure demands will be the subject of Freedom of Information Act litigation.
Im betting the memos are not classified. There is no doubt, though, that at least one of them has been leaked, and that the leak was, to say the least, improper.”
https://www.nationalreview.com/2017/06/comey-memos-leaking-improper/
Turley is right...it moves it out of the DC swamp
Yes it does.. Would freepers prefer a DC Jury or a Red State Utah jury?
If this actually happens, it will be brilliant.
I will believe it when I see it happen, and not one second before.
Does Jeff think UT has the least swamp?
Unless and until Comey, Clinton, Lynch, Holder, 0bama, McCabe, Rice, Jarrett, Huma, Weiner, Strozk, Page, and all the rest are in handcuffs, to be arraigned in Federal Court to answer for their myriad crimes against this Nation, it’s all just more kabuki theater, more crumbs to the masses, more of the swamp protecting its own.
And, the great mass that we know as the Silent Majority are getting more and more restless by the day.
“It should come out in the next two weeks”......
Seems to be an often, overused statement. The nation has been “waiting” for two YEARS, what’s another two WEEKS?
If Sessions, or any other politician is constantly aligning the players, the game will never get started.
“..get results for President Trump far more quickly than a second special counsel. ..”
I agree. When you appoint a Special Counsel they take time to hire a bloated staff, rent space, etc., etc. Then the slow walk the investigation and milk the US taxpayer for as long as possible.
Using the US Attorney is the most efficient and practical way to go, depending on the person selected to do the job.
<><> (A) bring charges,
<><> (B) seek indictments, and,
<><> (C) get results far more quickly than a DC-based 2nd special counsel.
Appears that move was well thought-out.....not some fly-by-night nowhere operation.
We will just have to wait and see what emerges.
Well, of course he is. That's where the criminal investigations are being done about the wrongdoing in the FBI and DOJ.
You can't prosecute without evidence from the investigation and a prosecutable cases to file.
The prosecutor has already empaneled a grand jury and I suspect some indictments are already sitting, sealed, waiting until the report is released.
Announcing early indictments to the public risks the still on-going investigation. The RATS would scatter and clam up after they lawyer-up if they realize they are in the prosecutors sights. Best to keep these things under wraps until the investigation is complete.
When the trap is sprung, Sessions or Huber will start announcing indictments of those caught in the IG investigation.
a Red State Utah jury?
_______________________
Isn’t Utah full of Never Trumpers just waiting to back Romney in 2020?
Yeah, I think UT has demonstrated recently they’re more coral pink. Mormons are as clannish as any group, and take marching orders far more easily. But here’s hopin’.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.