Results 1 to 11 of 11
-
Roger Stone takes Georgia, and the Senate, hostage
As far as I know, virtually no one else has accurately reported on the significance of this footnote in the Mueller Report, liberated by BuzzFeed hours before election day.
1279 Some of the factual uncertainties are the subject of ongoing investigations that have been referred by this Office to the D.C. U.S. Attorney’s Office.
While there are signs that Bill Barr effectively shut down that ongoing investigation by forcing the four Stone prosecutors to withdraw from the case, an investigation into whether Stone conspired with Russia would neither be tolled nor precluded on double jeopardy grounds. Nor would such crimes be covered by Trump’s commutation of Stone’s sentence for covering up who his go-between with WikiLeaks was, which appears to have been an effort to distract from his ties directly to the Russian operation. They are entirely different crimes. To pardon Stone for conspiring with Russia, Trump might well have to specify that Stone did conspire with Russia, something that would not only create legal jeopardy for himself, but would require admitting what he has tried to deny for four straight years, that his campaign “colluded” — conspired even! — with Russia to win.
It would be uncontroversial for Joe Biden’s Attorney General to reopen a case against Roger Stone for conspiring with Russia.
That may be useful background to the news that, after remaining relatively quiet for much of the 2020 election (or at least fronted by Steve Bannon), Stone is now threatening to hold Georgia’s Senate seats — and with it, GOP control of the Senate — hostage.
Conservative operatives and a super PAC with ties to infamous GOP dirty trickster Roger Stone are calling for Trump supporters to punish Republicans by sitting out Georgia’s crucial Senate runoffs or writing in Trump’s name instead. And though their efforts remains on the party’s fringes, the trajectory of the movement has Republicans fearful that it could cost the GOP control of the Senate.
The most aggressive call to boycott or cast protest ballots in the two runoff races has, so far, come from a dormant pro-Trump super PAC with ties to Stone, which unveiled a new initiative to retaliate against the Republican Party’s supposed turncoats by handing Democrats control of the U.S. Senate.
The group, dubbed the Committee for American Sovereignty, unveiled a new website encouraging Georgia Republicans to write in Trump’s name in both of the upcoming Senate runoff elections, which could determine the party that controls the upper chamber during President-elect Joe Biden’s first two years in office. The PAC argued that doing so will show support for the president in addition to forcing Republicans to address the wild election-fraud conspiracy theories floated by Trump supporters and members of his own legal team.
The Committee for American Sovereignty and a sister nonprofit group were set up in 2016 as vehicles for prominent pro-Trump operatives—most notably Stone and former Blackwater chief Erik Prince—to attempt to suppress the Black vote by amplifying claims that Bill Clinton had an illegitimate biracial son. It’s been mostly quiet since then. The PAC’s recent filings with the Federal Election Commission disclose nothing but outstanding federal and state tax liabilities, and its new effort in Georgia doesn’t appear to have received much pickup yet.
A request for comment sent to the Committee for American Sovereignty email address on file with the FEC was not returned. Efforts to reach Pamela Jensen, a California political activist who leads the group, were not successful. Her husband, an attorney named Paul Jensen who describes Stone as a “long time client,” told The Daily Beast in an email his wife “has no comment, and nor do I.” Stone did not respond to inquiries about his present involvement with the group.
But Stone has proven in the past he’s willing to take reckless actions when he is cornered.
It would be hysterical if Stone ends up giving the Senate to the Democrats and then gets charged by Biden's DOJ because Trump didn't pardon him for fear he'd get tainted.
-
11-25-2020, 06:43 PM #2Pro Bowl Poster
- Join Date
- Dec 2007
- Posts
- 2,152
Re: Roger Stone takes Georgia, and the Senate, hostage
It would be hysterical. It would fall under "Martha...there is a God".
-
-
11-25-2020, 07:56 PM #4Pro Bowl Poster
- Join Date
- Dec 2007
- Posts
- 2,152
-
11-25-2020, 08:16 PM #5
-
Re: Roger Stone takes Georgia, and the Senate, hostage
There is time, yes. It's going to be interesting to see what happens down the road. As Empty Wheel noted, if Trump pardons Stone for his collusion with Guccifer 2.0, he could open himself up to criminal liability. That's also a possibility with Flynn: Flynn lied to the FBI to conceal his communications with Trump during the period he was talking with Kislyak, not to conceal his conversations with Kislyak. He was also in violation of his plea agreement pretty much the whole time. I'd love to know why Mueller went so light on Flynn.
-
-
-
Re: Roger Stone takes Georgia, and the Senate, hostage
Flynn did a lot wrong, and not just lie to the FBI. He was an unregistered agent for at least one foreign Power (Turkey). He was part of a kidnapping plot against a Turkish national living in the U.S. He lied on the security questionnaire he filled out as part of becoming National Security Advisor. Flynn allocuted to these things twice under oath. If Trump's pardon doesn't cover all of his conduct, he could still be prosecuted for any unpardoned actions and his testimony in court used against him.
-
-
Re: Roger Stone takes Georgia, and the Senate, hostage
I watch very little TV, and none of what I wrote is from television. That's from reading the sentencing reports and some independent journalists- such as Marci Wheeler- who have been tracking Flynn's legal travails.
First sentencing memo by DOJ
Second sentencing memo
Bookmarks