Jan. 6 Panel Now Receiving ‘Huge’ Tranches Of Secret Service Material, Members Say

Land of opportunity. Also, more rubes and shills.

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Obviously there’s a whole right wing cottage industry of seedy lawyers with more allegiance to the Federalist society than as officers of the court. These sorts of frivolous lawsuits (to put it kindly) should not be clogging our judicial system. Hopefully he’ll end up paying all court costs for both sides.

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Ok. Thanks for explanation. It sounds promising then.

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He claims he talked to his lawyer when the feebs confronted him with a search warrant for his phone. Lawyer said “Give them the phone.” I hope the attorney billed $500 for that.

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Burn.

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Because it works. If you know your adversary can only move in a straight line, then your strategy has to be to avoid a straight line at all costs. Swirl, squiggle, go all over the place and your adversary, plodding along in their straight line is absolutely confused and lost. He assumes because he’s moving in a straight line, you will too. It’s how we won the American Revolution and got our asses handed to us in Vietnam and Afghanistan.

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As much as I hope you’re right (and they should hang for such works), I am not at all confident any of this will take place in time to be effective.

That’s okay. There’s on big issue that dwarfs all the others. Amirite?

And may his lawyer continue to bill him $500 a month, for the rest of Mike’s life.

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1 / I trust this will prove that the SS acted as a Praetorian Guard for their TrumpCaesar.
2 / Notice how all of those Noisy SS cads who said Cassidy H was full pf beans did not have the stones to say so under oath? (Hint: It’s because they are liars and cowards.) This info could put that to rest.
3 / The J6 Committee is the best Fall drama we are likely to see on tv. Hope average voters are paying attention.

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Huge tranches.” Did somebody finally consult the info tech (IT) people??

Getting to the point where IT guys need their own version of 911. IT guys are the new forensic accountants.

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The most litigious countries in the world are the United States, Australia, Germany, and Sweden. The United States has the reputation of being the most litigious country in the world, and it is a safe assumption to make.

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The most litigious countries in the world are the United States, Australia, Germany, and Sweden.

The hell we are Ralph. I don’t like the way that feels. Lawsuit incoming.

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Like this crazy, crazy guy……

“Each year, the money we make after reinvesting in the business will be distributed as a dividend to help fight the crisis,” he wrote in an open letter on the company’s website Wednesday.

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Sounds like a Frenchy to me.

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Great story. This is, too.

ST. ANN, Mo. — A patrol officer spotted a white minivan with an expired license plate, flipped on his lights and siren, and when the driver failed to stop, gave chase. The driver fled in rush-hour traffic at speeds of up to 90 mph, as other officers joined in the pursuit. Ten miles later, the van slammed into a green Toyota Camry, leaving its 55-year-old driver, Brent Cox, permanently disabled.

That 2017 police chase was at the time the latest in a long line of questionable vehicle pursuits by officers of the St. Ann Police Department. Eleven people had been injured in 19 crashes during high-speed pursuits over the two prior years. Social justice activists and reporters were scrutinizing the department, and Cox and others were suing.

Undeterred, St. Ann Police Chief Aaron Jimenez stood behind the high-octane pursuits and doubled down on the department’s decades-old motto: “St. Ann will chase you until the wheels fall off."
Then, an otherwise silent stakeholder stepped in. The St. Louis Area Insurance Trust risk pool — which provided liability coverage to the city of St. Ann and the police department — threatened to cancel coverage if the department didn’t impose restrictions on its use of police chases. City officials shopped around for alternative coverage but soon learned that costs would nearly double if they did not agree to their insurer’s demands.

Jimenez’s attitude swiftly shifted: In 2019, 18 months after the chase that left Cox permanently disabled, the chief and his 48-member department agreed to ban high-speed pursuits for traffic infractions and minor, nonviolent crimes.

“I didn’t really have a choice,” Jimenez said in an interview. “If I didn’t do it, the insurance rates were going to go way up. I was going to have to lose 10 officers to pay for it.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/interactive/2022/police-misconduct-insurance-settlements-reform/

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Freedom, baby!

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George Carlin lives?!

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Maybe cuz here cray-cray doesn’t get you tossed from hi-rise windows?

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