Tag: prosecutions
Trump’s Cases Against James Comey And Letitia James Dropped
The post Trump’s Cases Against James Comey And Letitia James Dropped appeared com. Topline A federal judge dropped criminal charges against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James on Monday, ending two of the Trump administration’s most high-profile prosecutions against the president’s political enemies as the court ruled that the prosecutor overseeing the case U. S. Attorney Lindsey Halligan was unlawfully appointed. James Comey onstage at 92NY on May 30, 2023 in New York City. Getty Images Key Facts U. S. District Judge Cameron McGowan Currie ordered the criminal charges against Comey and James to be dropped in two orders that were released simultaneously on Monday, after the judge had considered the two cases together. Comey and James were indicted-for allegedly lying to Congress and mortgage fraud, respectively-by Halligan, who was appointed as U. S. Attorney in the Eastern District of Virginia after the previous U. S. attorney Erik Siebert was ousted, reportedly for declining to prosecute the Trump enemies’ cases. The defendants had argued their cases should be thrown out because Halligan was improperly appointed, alleging the Trump administration did not follow the proper protocols for appointing a new interim U. S. attorney and that under federal law, only district court judges could name Siebert’s replacement. Currie agreed, ruling “Halligan had no lawful authority to present the indictment” against either Comey or James and that Attorney General Pam Bondi did not have the power to appoint Halligan after Siebert was fired. Both cases were dismissed “without prejudice,” which means the government could still try again to bring the charges in the future-though the statute of limitations for Comey’s case may have already expired. The Justice Department has not yet responded to a request for comment, while James said in a statement she was “heartened” by the court’s ruling and “remain[s] fearless in the face of these baseless charges.” What To.
Trump just sent a sinister message with ‘appalling’ ballroom design: Nobel laureate
Economist Paul Krugman said President Donald Trump’s removal of a whole White House wing is typical Trumpian style: an “act of vandalism” being paid for by large corporate donors mostly tech and crypto companies seeking to buy Trump’s favor.“I am sure there will be a Trump meme-coin dispenser installed on every table,” Krugman said. But the vandalism is a symbol of an even bigger destruction, warned the Nobel laureate. Trump’s demolition of the White House “isn’t a remodeling or building an addition, it’s a teardown.” And he added it’s a “highly visual metaphor for the way MAGA is tearing down almost everything good about our country.”“Masked government agents are snatching people off the street. The National Guard has been sent into major cities on the obviously false pretext that these cities are in chaos. The U. S. military is essentially murdering people on the high seas. Huge tariffs are, in addition to their economic costs, undermining a system of alliances former presidents spent generations building,” Krugman said. “Green energy is being eviscerated, vindictive prosecutions are the norm, and many millions are on course to lose their health insurance.”So why does Krugman talk about Trump’s “appalling design sense”?“.[B]ecause tackiness and tyranny go hand in hand,” he said. “Yes, Trump has terrible taste and probably would even if he didn’t have power and, thanks to that power, wealth. But the grotesqueness of his White House renovations is structural as well as personal. For the excess and ugliness serve a political purpose: to humiliate and intimidate. The tawdry grandiosity serves not only to glorify Trump’s fragile ego, but also to send the message that resistance is futile.”“. And that ballroom’s hideousness is an equally good metaphor for all the political ugliness that lies in our future,” Krugman said. “. The ballroom is a sign, not just of Trump’s personal vulgarity, but of the collapse of small-r republican norms. Trump is turning the people’s house into a palace fit for a despot partly because that’s his taste, but also to show everyone that he can. L’etat, c’est moi (I am the state).”Spying Trump’s handiwork, Krugman said he now finds himself “frequently thinking of how the Roman Republic degenerated into a dictatorship.”“What happened? Modern historians of the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire mostly agree upon one explanation for the Republic’s collapse namely that the enormous loot from Rome’s conquests created a class of incredibly wealthy oligarchs who were too wealthy and powerful to be constrained by republican norms, institutions and laws.”“The modern parallels are obvious,” said Krugman, who posted a photo of Jeff Bezos’s $250 million yacht, with its large pool, jacuzzi and personal “beach club.”Read Krugman’s full essay on his Substack here.
The New York Times
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