Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #grandjury

Most recents (12)

1/2

Je bent voor de gek houden door #HugoDeJonge.
En nu door #ErnstKuipers
Het aantal #covid19-doden was lager dan bij de normale #griep-soorten.
De ziekenhuisbezetting werd dus ook niet groter door covid-patienten. ImageImageImageImage
2/2

Prof. #JohnIoannidis #IFR paper
accepted and published.

The median IFR was
0.0003% at 0–19 years,
0.002% at 20–29 years,
0.011% at 30–39 years,
0.035% at 40–49 years,
0.123% at 50–59 years, and
0.506% at 60–69 years.

sciencedirect.com/science/articl… ImageImage
#WOBdocumenten ⬇️

#HugoDeJonge kon ‘op bestelling’ cijfers bij #RIVM manipuleren

web.archive.org/web/2022110521…

Voor afdwingen
#CoronaToegangsBewijs #CTB

En straks voor afdwingen
#Coronapas #CovidID ImageImageImage
Read 7 tweets
1. today,I'm able to watch and cover the Julian #Assange hearing again. The videolink access has been made available to me last afternoon,after the US counsel agreed my witness statement will be read with no need for cross-examination. Though I'm a witness of fact,I can cover it
2. Mark Summers(JA defence) starts reading the witness statement of British journalist Patrick Cockburn, a well-respected Middle East correspondent, on the #WikiLeaks War Logs’impact
3. Patrick Cockburn’s witness statement: without WikiLeaks’ #CollateralMurder and #WarLogs impossible to prove many incidents
Read 43 tweets
THREAD re @AWeissmann_'s op-ed in the @nytimes this morning and the backlash against the idea of putting #RogerStone in the #GrandJury. /1
nytimes.com/2020/07/14/opi…
Stone, of course, was convicted of lying to Congress and tampering with witnesses. These are very serious crimes for which people are prosecuted regularly by the Justice Department. /2
Weissmann points out that the federal judge who sentence Stone said he had been prosecuted for “covering up for the president." The obvious questions that he suggests a prosecutor or Congress ask if they subpoena him are "Why did you lie to Congress? And many others." /3
Read 25 tweets
Year in Review📅20 Notable Spygate Developments of 2019

by @IvanPentchoukov (Thread👇) theepochtimes.com/year-in-review…
In the saga of “#Spygate,” 2019 has shaped up to be the year the tables turned.

In the first days of January 2019, a federal judge extended the term of the #GrandJury in the #SpecialCounsel investigation by #RobertMueller.
Later that month, the @FBI raided the home of veteran Republican strategist #RogerStone in front of @CNN cameras.

The raid and indictment of Stone were symbolic of the spectacle that was the #RussiaInvestigation.
Read 44 tweets
@SenateRules: Anticipating the House adopting Articles of Impeachment, why shouldn't the Senate, by amendment of its Rules if necessary, entertain a motion to dismiss the Articles?

After all, Rule 12 of the Fed.R.Crim.P. permits a motion to dismiss an indictment.
Much ballyhooing has been made of the unseemly nature of the conduct of the House's proceedings: the bias of the Intel Cmte Chair, his obvious need to testify as to material facts, abandonment of established practices, etc.
Why should the time of the Senate be occupied in the conduct of the trial of so suspect origins and purposes?

True enough, grand jury proceedings are secret. That character of them, of course, is why @DNC apologists are analogizing the present proceedings to such.
Read 15 tweets
Here's @ManhattanDA at @ColumbiaCAPI public policy conference: "We won't reach the point where we all look proudly at the state of NY law in terms of #anticorruption unless we address some serious and systemic challenges" in justice system.
DA Vance: "Reliance on federal authorities to safeguard the integrity of state & local govt is inherently risky public policy . . . in tension with federal system of sovereign states." #anticorruption
Also: "NYS is the lone state to employ an utterly nonsensical automatic transactional immunity requirement that every witness before a NY #grandjury automatically receives full immunity for anything they testify about and anything related."
Read 3 tweets
News Analysis 🔎 | Over the past month, there has been an inversion of people’s opinions of #RodRosenstein.

Those who praised him are now claiming he has been running interference for President Trump, while his critics have begun to reassess his actions. theepochtimes.com/as-rosenstein-…
#Rosenstein submitted his resignation letter to the president on April 29, with an effective date of May 11.

Rosenstein had previously discussed his intent to resign from his post when a new #AttorneyGeneral was confirmed, following the resignation of @JeffSessions
…After the appointment of #WilliamBarr as #AttorneyGeneral in February, however, #Rosenstein stayed on to assist #Barr in guiding him through the #MuellerReport.

Rosenstein had knowledge of the more intimate details of the case and its underlying focus.
Read 29 tweets
Equador: Swedish national #OlaBini arrested for connections to #wikileaks.

Johannes Wahlström:

#JulianAssange's "human rights are violated on a daily basis"

"#JulianAssange is imprisoned for #journalism."

#MikePompeo on lying:

"When I was a cadet, what was the cadet motto at West Point? 'You will not lie, cheat or steal, or tolerate those who do'? I was the CIA Director. We lied, we cheated, we stole. It was like - we had entire training courses!"
Read 311 tweets
Positive development re: #MuellerReport. Four categories to be redacted:
1. #GrandJury material
2. Sensitive sources & methods
3. Ongoing investigations
4. Matters infringing on personal privacy of peripheral 3d-parties.
AG Barr slightly misstates GJ secrecy rule - 6(e) - by saying "by law [it] cannot be made public." He's correct that *he* cannot make it public. But very narrow exceptions in rule allow a *court* to allow disclosure. Not saying it will happen, just that the rule is not absolute.
Will try to comment further on 6(e) exceptions when I have more time.
Read 3 tweets
Short thread re: Chelsea Manning: Very big mistake to defy a #grandjury. My not-so-far-out prediction: she will lose. /1
politi.co/2H55Wpu via @politico
"Manning said she invoked her fourth, fifth and sixth amendment rights Wednesday while appearing before a grand jury." Doesn't work that way - 5th went away when she was granted immunity, and the others *don't* apply. /2
"Manning railed against the closed-door proceedings, claiming the secrecy makes those testifying susceptible to abuse." The reality is exactly the opposite: secrecy is (in part) to protect witnesses from harassment. She turns that on its head. /3
Read 4 tweets

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