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Mueller Subpoenas Trump Organization, Demanding Documents About Russia


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1 minute ago, Mileage Psycho said:

I'm not the dope who at a campaign rally tells the world that on Monday he will have big news on Hillary, and then several months later the world finds out that the announcement at the campaign rally coincided with the "Jumos" visiting Trump Tower :lol: 

Trump could skate on this whole thing, as far as the boys are concerned it wouldn't surprise me if Trump gave them a pardon.

some of the potential charges are not pardonable. like money laundering in NY state.

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3 minutes ago, Mileage Psycho said:

I'm not the dope who at a campaign rally tells the world that on Monday he will have big news on Hillary, and then several months later the world finds out that the announcement at the campaign rally coincided with the "Jumos" visiting Trump Tower :lol: 

Trump could skate on this whole thing, as far as the boys are concerned it wouldn't surprise me if Trump gave them a pardon.

Trump can’t pardon indictments brought by AG Schniederman

:bc:

 

2 minutes ago, Rod Johnson said:

I like how the cult left here has the boys convicted of something when there aren’t even any charges pending :lol: 

poor wince 

Right?

”Lock her up!  Lock her up!”

Oops

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2 minutes ago, Rod Johnson said:

Goodness sakes you guys need to stay away from DU. It makes you even more retarded 

Whats the funniest is...that they hang on every word Trump says....he leads them around like puppy dogs. :lol:

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2 minutes ago, ICEMAN! said:

Trump can’t pardon indictments brought by AG Schniederman

:bc:

 

Right?

”Lock her up!  Lock her up!”

Oops

Hillary isn’t and won’t be president. Let it go man 

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Just now, DAVE said:

Whats the funniest is...that they hang on every word Trump says....he leads them around like puppy dogs. :lol:

Yeah he’s a master at that. He understands how to manipulate people of lower intellect and he makes them so mad :lol: 

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2 hours ago, Mileage Psycho said:

A draft dodger is a draft dodger, during the time of the Vietnam War I lived in a blue collar working class neighborhood, if you got drafted you went, end of story.

so you did not vote for bill you are saying 

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4 hours ago, Rod Johnson said:

I like how the cult left here has the boys convicted of something when there aren’t even any charges pending :lol: 

poor wince 

 They are sure that everyone is guilty.  Of what,  no one knows mind you, but they’re just so sure everyone is guilty and going to jail for the rest of their lives. I’ve never seen so many people get led around like sheep in my life.    Slinger throwing out the money laundering accusation ....I spit up my seltzer after reading that. Hillary Clinton wrote the book on money laundering and that’s fine apparently. :lol:  

Edited by DriftBusta
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6 minutes ago, DriftBusta said:

 They are sure that everyone is guilty.  Of what,  no one knows mind you, but they’re just so sure everyone is guilty and going to jail for the rest of their lives. I’ve never seen so many people get led around like sheep in my life.    Slinger throwing out the money laundering accusation ....I spit up my seltzer after reading that. Hillary Clinton wrote the book on money laundering and that’s fine apparently. :lol:  

Exactly....the corruption was so blantantly obvious on the dem side....but lets give up investigations after a couple months.....yet there is nothing on the right and lets continue for a yr plus. :lmao:

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10 minutes ago, Momorider said:

:bullshit: Clinton pardoned his buddy money launderer

FALN Commutation of 1999[edit]

On August 11, 1999, Clinton commuted the sentences of 16 members of FALN, which is a Puerto Rican paramilitary organization that set off 120 bombs in the United States, mostly in New York City and Chicago. There were convictions for conspiracy to commit robbery, bomb-making, and sedition, as well as firearms and explosives violations.[5]The 16 were convicted of conspiracy and sedition and sentenced with terms ranging from 35 to 105 years in prison. Congress, however, recognizes that the FALN is responsible for "6 deaths and the permanent maiming of dozens of others, including law enforcement officials." Clinton offered clemency on the condition that the prisoners renounce violence, seeing as none of the 16 had been convicted of harming anyone and they had already served 19 years in prison. This action was lobbied for by ten Nobel Laureates and the Archbishop of Puerto Rico.[6] The commutation was opposed by the U.S. Attorney's Office, the FBI, and the Federal Bureau of Prisons and was criticized by many, including former victims of FALN terrorist activities and the Fraternal Order of Police.[7] Hillary Clinton, then campaigning for her first term in the Senate, initially supported the commutation,[8] but later withdrew her support.[9]

Congress condemned this action by President Clinton, with votes of 95–2 in the Senate and 311–41 in the House.[10][11] The U.S. House Committee on Government Reformheld an investigation on the matter, but the Justice Department prevented FBI officials from testifying.[12] President Clinton cited executive privilege for his refusal to turn over some documents to Congress related to his decision to offer clemency to members of the FALN terrorist group.

Among those who accepted clemency are:

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Pardons and commutations signed on President Clinton's final day in office[edit]

Clinton issued 140 pardons as well as several commutations on his last day of office, January 20, 2001.[17][18] When a sentence is commuted, the conviction remains intact; however, the sentence can be altered in a number of ways.

  • Peter MacDonald had been sentenced to 14 years at a Federal Prison in Texas for fraud, extortion, inciting riots, bribery, and corruption stemming from the Navajo purchase of the Big Boquillas Ranch in Northwestern Arizona. On the day before President Clinton left office, U.S. Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy lobbied the White House to commute the sentence of the former leader of the Navajo Nation. MacDonald's sentence was commuted after he served 10 years.
  • Carlos Vignali had his sentence for cocaine trafficking commuted, after serving 6 of 15 years in federal prison.
  • Almon Glenn Braswell was pardoned of his 1983 mail fraud and perjury convictions.[19] In 1998 he was under federal investigation for money laundering and tax evasion charges.[20] Braswell and Carlos Vignali each paid approximately $200,000 to Hillary Clinton's brother, Hugh Rodham, to represent their respective cases for clemency. Hugh Rodham returned the payments after they were disclosed to the public.[21][22] Braswell would later invoke the Fifth Amendment at a Senate Committee hearing in 2001, when questioned about allegations of his having systematically defrauded senior citizens of millions of dollars.[23]
  • Linda Evans and Susan Rosenberg, members of the radical Weather Underground organization, both had sentences for weapons and explosives charges commuted: Evans served 16 years of her 40-year sentence, and Rosenberg served 16 of her 58 years.[24][25]
  • Marc Rich, a fugitive who had fled the U.S. during his prosecution, was residing in Switzerland. Rich owed $48 million in taxes and was charged with 51 counts of tax fraud, was pardoned of tax evasion. He was required to pay a $1 million fine and waive any use of the pardon as a defense against any future civil charges that were filed against him in the same case. Critics complained that Denise Eisenberg Rich, his former wife, had made substantial donations to both the Clinton library and to Mrs. Clinton's senate campaign. According to Paul Volcker's independent investigation of Iraqi Oil-for-Food kickback schemes, Marc Rich was a middleman for several suspect Iraqi oil deals involving over 4 million barrels (640,000 m3) of oil.[26] Longtime Clinton supporters and Democratic leaders such as former President Jimmy CarterJames Carville and Terry McAuliffe, were all critical of the Clinton pardon. Carter said the pardons were "disgraceful."[27]
  • Susan McDougal, who had already completed her sentence, was pardoned for her role in the Whitewater scandal. McDougal had served the maximum possible 18 months, including eight in solitary confinement, on contempt charges for refusing to testify about Clinton's role.
  • Dan Rostenkowski, a former Democratic Congressman from Illinois and Chairman of House Ways and Means Committee, was pardoned for his role in the Congressional Post Office scandal. Rostenkowski had served 13 months of a 17-month sentence before being released in 1997.[28] After his release from prison, Clinton granted him a pardon in December 2000.[29][30]
  • Mel Reynolds, a Democratic Congressman from Illinois, was convicted of bank fraud, 12 counts of sexual assault of a child, obstruction of justice, and solicitation of child pornography. His sentence was commuted on the bank fraud charge and he was allowed to serve the final months under the auspices of a halfway house. Reynolds had served his entire sentence on child sex abuse charges before the commutation of the later convictions.
  • Patty Hearst, who was kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army in 1974. After being isolated and threatened with death, she became supportive of their cause, making propaganda announcements for them and taking part in illegal activities. After her arrest in 1975, she was found guilty of bank robbery. Her conviction and long prison sentence were widely seen as unjust, but the procedural correctness of her trial was upheld by the courts. Hearst's sentence was commuted by President Jimmy Carter, and she was pardoned by President Bill Clinton.[31]
  • Roger Clinton, the president's brother, was pardoned for drug charges after having served the entire sentence more than a decade earlier. Roger Clinton would be charged with drunk driving and disorderly conduct in an unrelated incident within a year of the pardon.[32] He was also briefly alleged to have been utilized in lobbying for the Braswell pardon, among others. However, no wrongdoing was uncovered.
  • Harvey Weinig, a former Manhattan lawyer who was sentenced in 1996 to 11 years in prison for facilitating an extortion-kidnapping scheme and helping launder at least $19 million for the Cali cocaine cartel.[33][34]
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1 minute ago, ICEMAN! said:

Do either of you have a point momo and highmomo?

:dunno:

 

Oh man you got me there.  :lol:  You are so clever man.   

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3 minutes ago, ICEMAN! said:

So no point then?

Hmmmm

You are so cool.   Can you teach me to be more like you?  

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Just now, Highmark said:

You are so cool.   Can you teach me to be more like you?  

Okay, step one

Stop posting irrelevant bullshit that has nothing to do with the discussion at hand.  

Once you’ve got that mastered, I’ll give you your next lesson.

:bc:

 

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2 minutes ago, ICEMAN! said:

Okay, step one

Stop posting irrelevant bullshit that has nothing to do with the discussion at hand.  

Once you’ve got that mastered, I’ll give you your next lesson.

:bc:

 

How how about overunity generators?   Any advice on those?  :lol:  

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4 minutes ago, Snoslinger said:

:lol: fucking skidmark. ask for an apple and he gives you an orange, then tries to convince you they're the same. have you no dignity dude? meh, never mind. you proved you didn't when you welched on that bet.

No collusion yet...so far looks like youve lost.

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