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originally posted by: Boomer1947
originally posted by: CarlLaFong
a reply to: network dude
Forgive my ignorance, but how does an official WH record saying Willis went to the WH...juxtaposed with Willis' SWORN testimony that she NEVER went to the WH...not PROVE Willis is guilty of PERJURY?
Seems like there's no doubt Willis lied under oath.
I don’t know all the facts in this case, but I will point out that the Vice President does not reside in the White House. She resides in the Vice President’s mansion located on the grounds of the Naval Observatory across town. She also has a ceremonial office in the Executive Office Building. The office of VP is not part of the Presidency and has none of the decision making powers the POTUS has over, the DOJ, for example. It’s entirely possible that Willis met with Harris and never went to the White House.
originally posted by: Boomer1947
originally posted by: CarlLaFong
a reply to: network dude
Forgive my ignorance, but how does an official WH record saying Willis went to the WH...juxtaposed with Willis' SWORN testimony that she NEVER went to the WH...not PROVE Willis is guilty of PERJURY?
Seems like there's no doubt Willis lied under oath.
I don’t know all the facts in this case, but I will point out that the Vice President does not reside in the White House. She resides in the Vice President’s mansion located on the grounds of the Naval Observatory across town. She also has a ceremonial office in the Executive Office Building. The office of VP is not part of the Presidency and has none of the decision making powers the POTUS has over, the DOJ, for example. It’s entirely possible that Willis met with Harris and never went to the White House.
originally posted by: Boomer1947
originally posted by: CarlLaFong
a reply to: network dude
Forgive my ignorance, but how does an official WH record saying Willis went to the WH...juxtaposed with Willis' SWORN testimony that she NEVER went to the WH...not PROVE Willis is guilty of PERJURY?
Seems like there's no doubt Willis lied under oath.
I don’t know all the facts in this case, but I will point out that the Vice President does not reside in the White House. She resides in the Vice President’s mansion located on the grounds of the Naval Observatory across town. She also has a ceremonial office in the Executive Office Building. The office of VP is not part of the Presidency and has none of the decision making powers the POTUS has over, the DOJ, for example. It’s entirely possible that Willis met with Harris and never went to the White House.
originally posted by: Boomer1947
originally posted by: CarlLaFong
a reply to: network dude
Forgive my ignorance, but how does an official WH record saying Willis went to the WH...juxtaposed with Willis' SWORN testimony that she NEVER went to the WH...not PROVE Willis is guilty of PERJURY?
Seems like there's no doubt Willis lied under oath.
I don’t know all the facts in this case, but I will point out that the Vice President does not reside in the White House. She resides in the Vice President’s mansion located on the grounds of the Naval Observatory across town. She also has a ceremonial office in the Executive Office Building. It’s entirely possible that Willis met with Harris and never went to the White House.
originally posted by: network dude
a reply to: CarlLaFong
wow, when you say it like that, it sounds so definitive.
and frankly, a little mean.
originally posted by: network dude
originally posted by: xuenchen
Obvious conspiring and colluding to interfere with a National Election. 😃
But it's not a crime (D)epending on who's doing it.
Democrat Fani Willis’ legal troubles extend beyond recent revelations that she deceptively hired her otherwise under-qualified, secret, married lover to run the political prosecution of former President Donald Trump and other Republicans in Georgia. A new book from Mike Isikoff and Daniel Klaidman admits that a widely misunderstood phone call, on which Willis’ political prosecution rests, was illegally recorded. That means the entire prosecution could crumble with defendants having a new avenue to challenge Democrat lawfare.
Nevertheless, the book shares interesting details about Willis’ father, John C. Floyd, and his radical past. Described as a “onetime radical activist” who considered the police to be the “enemy” and an “occupying army,” Floyd founded the Black Panther Political Party of Los Angeles and said of it, “Our political philosophy is black nationalism.” He took former Communist Party vice presidential nominee Angela Davis as a lover and lived with her prior to her being placed on the FBI’s Most Wanted list for purchasing the gun used to murder a Marin County, California judge.
Willis, who was raised by her father, worked for Beverly Hills attorney Howard Schmuckler before he was disbarred and also before he was imprisoned for running a fraudulent mortgage rescue company. She worked for another lawyer in Atlanta who was disbarred for tipping off a drug dealer to an impending DEA raid. At that firm, she represented a crack dealer who “turned out to be the male stripper at her bachelorette party” and worked with Keisha Lance Bottoms, a former Atlanta mayor and now a top domestic policy adviser to President Joe Biden.
originally posted by: DBCowboy
a reply to: network dude
They just spoke about the weather and their grandchildren.
And yoga.
www.newsweek.com...
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis paid the chief prosecutor in former President Donald Trump's election fraud trial out of her seized property fund for the first three months he was hired, a defense lawyer has claimed in court documents and before a Georgia Senate committee.
originally posted by: WeMustCare
Nathan Wade was paid for 90 days with dirty money?
www.newsweek.com...
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis paid the chief prosecutor in former President Donald Trump's election fraud trial out of her seized property fund for the first three months he was hired, a defense lawyer has claimed in court documents and before a Georgia Senate committee.
More at: abcnews.go.com...
The Fulton County judge overseeing Donald Trump's Georgia election interference case on Thursday tossed out three more counts in the indictment, two of which the former president was facing.
The judge, Scott McAfee, previously threw out six counts in the indictment, three of which were against Trump.
"President Trump and his legal team in Georgia have prevailed once again," Trump attorney Steve Sadow said in a statement following Thursday's order. The trial court has decided that counts 15 and 27 in the indictment must be quashed/dismissed."