I just took a look on youtube for right wing types, had to click on dumb content before the algorithm started to offer me up mindless stuff rather than my usual fair. Came across some conspiracy promoters on the Russian theater attack. One Hindu was saying that it was obviously Ukraine, a US guy that reasoned things out, "If all the media is saying it was the work of ISIS you have to ask yourself, why everyone is saying the same message, it must be a coverup." Not, "All the media outlets believe in reporting facts, at least this time."Raskin lays it out. Fantastic.
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lol Kid Rock is such a dumb ass punk bitch. I wonder if it is something that the right wing propagandists have on him or if he is just brainwashed from growing up out in whitelandia far far from the city of Detroit that he pretended to be from to build up Cred.
I find myself having to reset my YouTube page every couple days myself. That rabbit hole goes down deep fast.I just took a look on youtube for right wing types, had to click on dumb content before the algorithm started to offer me up mindless stuff rather than my usual fair. Came across some conspiracy promoters on the Russian theater attack. One Hindu was saying that it was obviously Ukraine, a US guy that reasoned things out, "If all the media is saying it was the work of ISIS you have to ask yourself, why everyone is saying the same message, it must be a coverup." Not, "All the media outlets believe in reporting facts, at least this time."
I have avoided clicking on anything that will muck up the links displayed even if I am curious about clay ovens in the 1400's. I did use my TV watching laptop in the living room to see the stupid shit. I keep this computer relatively 'clean' of dumb stuff.I find myself having to reset my YouTube page every couple days myself. That rabbit hole goes down deep fast.
lol at another special counsel outing themselves as GQP trying to mislead Trump's cult with out of context cherry picked edits.
Prosecutors have submitted their motions in limine in the Delaware case. Those include:
Most of these are pretty standard and uncontroversial — though Abbe Lowell made it clear that he reserves the right to contest whether Hunter’s iCloud and laptop had been tampered with before the government obtained them.
- Prohibiting Hunter from arguing that prosecutors have to prove he used drugs on the day of the gun purchase (no position from Hunter noted)
- Admittingmisleading portions of Hunter’s book
- Findingelectronic evidence (including both the iCloud data and the laptop) self-authenticating
- Prohibitingmention of declination decision in Delaware
- Excluding defects in prosecution
- Excluding evidence about later sobriety
- Excluding claim gun charges unconstitutional
- Excluding discussion of plea negotiations
Where David Weiss has doubled down on past error comes in his choice of book excerpts he wants to use.
He wants to exclude everything from the book except the excerpts he has chosen.
The government intends to admit into evidence only the excerpts of the book and audiobook that are in Exhibit 1. Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(2) provides the statement must be “a statement . . . offered against an opposing party.” Thus, a defendant cannot elicit his own self-serving statements without taking the stand and submitting to cross-examination. United States v. Willis, 759 F.2d 1486, 1501 (11th Cir. 1985); United States v. Wilkerson, 84 F.3d 692, 696 (4th Cir. 1996).
A defendant cannot sidestep the prohibition against hearsay by invoking the so-called “rule of completeness,” contained in Federal Rule of Evidence 106. This rule is designed to prevent “misunderstanding or distortion” caused by the introduction of only part of a statement that could only be cured by admission of the full record. Beech Aircraft Corp. v. Rainey, 488 U.S. 153, 172 (198. It does not allow adverse parties to introduce any unedited statement merely because the proponent party has offered an edited version. Indeed, “it is often perfectly proper to admit segments of prior testimony without including everything, and adverse parties are not entitled to offer additional segments just because they are there and the proponent has not offered them.” United States v. Collicott, 92 F.3d 973, 983 (9th Cir. 1996). The defendant has not identified for the government any portions of the excerpts that are misleading without additional surrounding context. The other portions of the book are therefore inadmissible hearsay.
Presented in the way it is, jurors will be wildly misled that Hunter’s New Haven exploits are what happened immediately after he relapsed in August 2018. They will be misled into believing the description of the New Haven depravity represent Hunter’s state in October 2018. They don’t.
Here’s what the language in the book describing his return to Delaware in fall 2018 looks like.
Prosecutors were perfectly willing to use the transition into this passage in their response to Hunter’s MTD.I had returned that fall of 2018, after my most recent relapse in California, with the hope of getting clean through a new therapy and reconciling with Hallie.
Neither happened.
For all the obvious reasons—my extended disappearances, my inability to stay sober, her need to stabilize and reorder her own life and family—Hallie and I called it quits. The relationship no longer helped either of us. Our attempt to reanimate Beau remained as doomed as it was from the start. The fallout piled up. I tried to explain things to my daughters, but how could I expect them to comprehend a situation I hardly understood myself?
Next on my agenda was getting clean. I drove up to Newburyport, Massachusetts, an old New England shipbuilding-turned-tourist town thirty-five miles north of Boston. A therapist ran a wellness center where he practiced a drug addiction therapy known as ketamine infusion. I would make two trips up there, staying for about six weeks on the first visit, returning to Maryland, then heading back for a couple weeks of follow-up in February of the new year.
Perhaps now they’ve discovered that the book says nothing about Hunter’s state of mind when he was in Delaware, when he owned the gun.He wrote in Chapter 10 of his memoir, “I returned [to the East Coast] that fall of 2018, after my most recent relapse in California, with the hope of getting clean through a new therapy . . . Neither happened.” Id. at 203.
More importantly, David Weiss repeats what might have been just another stupid error when he made it in response to Hunter’s motion to dismiss:
David Weiss misrepresented this passage to Judge Noreika (and has not alerted her to the error). The scene in the Super 8 took place in February 2019.For example, the defendant admitted that he was experiencing “full blown addiction” to crack cocaine and by the fall of 2018 he had gotten to the point that:
It was me and a crack pipe in a Super 8, not knowing which the fuck way was up. All my energy revolved around smoking drugs and making arrangements to buy drugs—feeding the beast. To facilitate it, I resurrected the same sleep schedule I’d kept in L.A.: never. There was hardly any mistaking me now for a so-called respectable citizen. Crack is a great leveler.
Which means it took place after Keith Ablow’s treatment made Hunter Biden’s addiction worse.
Weiss wants to exclude this critical context, imagining that Hunter included the Keith Ablow description because he knew that right wingers would demand he be prosecuted for the gun when he wrote it (Weiss emphasizes that Hunter started writing this in 2019, before he even knew of the investigation), and so said that the Ketamine treatment made his addiction worse for the moment he would be prosecuted.The therapy’s results were disastrous. I was in no way ready to process the feelings it unloosed or prompted by reliving past physical and emotional traumas. So I backslid. I did exactly what I’d come to Massachusetts to stop doing. I’d stay clean for a week, break away from the center to meet a connection I found in Rhode Island, smoke up, then return. One thing I did remarkably well during that time was fool people about whether or not I was using. Between trips up there, I even bought clean urine from a dealer in New York to pass drug tests.
Of course, that made all that time and effort ineffective. I didn’t necessarily blame the treatment: I doubt much good comes from doing ketamine while you’re on crack. [my emphasis]
I get what self-serving hearsay is. This is not it (though Judge Noreika has thus far been wildly favorable to Weiss’ misrepresentations).
This is basic facts of timeline — or more specifically, Weiss’ continued effort to misrepresent events that clearly happened in February 2019 as if they’re his smoking gun about 2018.
Too funny that her facial and body expressions show she thinks what they are doing is clever.Speaking of Russian Propaganda....guess who is number 1 on the list, and actually outlines it in this interview.....
keep in mind she is wanted in the Hague as well....
Rep. James Comer (R-KY), who has been leading House Republicans' impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden, does not seem to particularly care about whether his final report on the inquiry ever gets published.
In an interview with Politico's Olivia Beavers, Comer indicated that the contents of the report may not matter so much now that President Joe Biden has dropped out of the 2024 presidential race.
"I feel like we’ve done our job," Comer told Beavers. "Our part of the report has been finished for a long time. They can publish it or not — I guess things change if [Biden is] not running again."
Rep. Max Miller (R-OH) expressed a similar ambivalence about the impeachment inquiry with Biden out of the running and with Vice President Kamala Harris looking like his likely replacement.
"I think that we can redirect our resources elsewhere into something that will be more fruitful," he said. "If we had anything to level against him, it already would have been exposed and we would have impeached him. That obviously hasn’t happened."
This is not the first time this week that Comer has expressed ambivalence about his own impeachment inquiry.
On Tuesday, for example, Comer acknowledged that former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) only decided to launch the impeachment inquiry so that Republicans would have an easier time arguing in court that they needed to access bank records related to Hunter Biden's overseas business dealings, among other documents.
"The reason that [former House Speaker Kevin] McCarthy (R-CA) went to the impeachment inquiry phase was to try to have better standing in court -- it didn't have anything to do with impeachment," said Comer.
The impeachment inquiry into Biden was launched last year after House Republicans had spent months probing Hunter Biden's business dealings.
In the end, Republicans failed to uncover any direct links between the current president and his son's business activities, which left House Republicans at something of an investigatory dead end.
The people on raw story comments pretty much nailed it.President Joe Biden's son Hunter tried to get assistance from the United States on a project in Italy by Burisma Energy, a Ukrainian company in which he had a financial stake, when his father was vice president, according to a New York Times report Tuesday.
Specifically, Burisma sought approval for a geothermal project in the Tuscany region, which led the then-vice president's son to ask around for favors from U.S. government officials.
According to records, only just released by the Biden administration, "Hunter Biden wrote at least one letter to the U.S. ambassador to Italy in 2016 seeking assistance for the Ukrainian gas company Burisma, where he was a board member. Embassy officials appear to have been uneasy with the request from the son of the sitting vice president on behalf of a foreign company."
One official reportedly said, “This is a Ukrainian company and, purely to protect ourselves, U.S.G. should not be actively advocating with the government of Italy without the company going through the D.O.C. Advocacy Center.”
ALSO READ: Trump's insatiable ego is destroying the former president
There is no evidence that Joe Biden was aware of his son's effort, or assisted in any way.
Conservative never-Trump lawyer George Conway dismissed the news as overhyped in a post on X.
"HUGE EARTH-SHATTERING BREAKING NEWS: In 2016 Obama administration officials properly took no action on a request from Hunter Biden to the U.S. embassy in Italy that his father knew absolutely nothing about. Now I’m *definitely* not voting for Hunter. And — just to be on the safe side — I’m definitely *also* not voting for Joe Biden even though there is no evidence or suggestion he did anything wrong. I’m just going to have to find another candid— … oh, wait!"
Hunter Biden and his international business dealings have been a years-long focus of investigation by House Republicans, who have tried to find evidence the elder Biden was involved in these schemes or laundered bribes through them. No such evidence has emerged, even though the GOP-controlled House pushed through an impeachment inquiry that appears to be headed nowhere.
As all this has been going on, Hunter Biden, who has suffered from substance abuse issues for much of his life, is facing prosecution for both tax offenses and unlawful efforts to obtain a firearm.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The legal saga surrounding Hunter Biden took an unexpected turn when he pleaded guilty to nine federal tax counts after prosecutors refused to budge in their opposition to a special plea that would have allowed him to maintain his innocence.
The twist that played out as jury selection was scheduled to start in the tax trial Thursday almost brings to a close a yearslong investigation of President Joe Biden’s son. The case has been punctuated by Republicans’ allegations of preferential treatment and accusations by his defense attorneys that prosecutors overcorrected and bowed to political pressure when two indictments were issued as a previous plea deal fell apart.
Hunter Biden will now await sentencing in both his June jury conviction on charges that he lied about his drug use on a federal form to purchase a gun, which he possessed for 11 days, and the tax case he pleaded guilty to Thursday.
Here’s a look at the winding legal road that led to the surprise plea.
The plea deal that collapsed
Hunter Biden had initially agreed to plead guilty to a negotiated misdemeanor tax charge as part of a deal with the Justice Department. That deal would have seen the gun charges dismissed in a diversion agreement as long as he stayed out of trouble for two years and likely would have come with a recommendation for no prison time.
The agreement collapsed last year after a federal judge in Delaware questioned several unusual aspects, including how it was packaged.
Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed Delaware U.S. Attorney David Weiss as special counsel a month later, in August 2023, giving the prosecutor broad authority to investigate and report out his findings. Hunter Biden was subsequently indicted in two separate cases: the gun charges in Delaware and the tax charges in California.
Conviction on gun charges
Hunter Biden’s attorneys made several failed motions asking for the gun charges to be dropped — ranging from questioning their constitutionality to challenging the appointment of the special counsel — over the months between the indictment and trial in early June.
After not even six full days of testimony in June, a Delaware jury took less than three hours to convict Hunter Biden on the gun charges.
Prosecutors presented sometimes relentless personal details about his drug use, purchases and relationships — showing photos and texts from his ex-girlfriends and pressing his oldest daughter about her ability to tell if he was sober — all while family members including first lady Jill Biden watched from the gallery, some of them choking back tears.
After the conviction, prosecutors turned their focus to the California tax charges alleging that Hunter Biden had engaged in a four-year scheme to avoid paying more than $1.4 million in taxes for the years 2016 through 2019 while living a lavish lifestyle of top-tier hotels, payments to escorts and purchasing exotic cars.
Although the political stakes of the second trial largely evaporated when President Joe Biden dropped his reelection bid in July, weeks of arguments between prosecutors and defense attorneys over what evidence could be presented to jurors indicated California could be a repeat of the painful airing of personal details. It was unclear if Hunter Biden’s daughters would have been called as witnesses in the case, but both were listed in a glossary provided to court staff by prosecutors.
The latest plea
About a half-hour before the questioning of potential jurors was set to begin Thursday, Hunter Biden’s attorneys announced to a judge that they would like to enter into what’s known as an Alford plea. The maneuver, named after a U.S. Supreme Court case, allows a defendant to acknowledge that prosecutors have enough evidence to convince a jury of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt but also allows them to maintain their claim of innocence.
Prosecutors immediately balked at the idea. Lead prosecutor Leo Wise told U.S. District Judge Mark Scarsi that the government opposed an Alford plea saying, “Hunter Biden is not innocent. Hunter Biden is guilty.”
Prosecutors do not have to agree to an Alford plea, but Scarsi was prepared to give the government until the end of the day to file its objections before ruling on whether he would accept the plea, likely after reconvening Friday.
Instead, Hunter Biden changed his plea to guilty on all nine of the tax charges. There was no offer on the table from prosecutors to reduce those charges or to recommend a lesser sentence, and prosecutors read the charging documents aloud for more than an hour before he was asked to enter the plea.
Hunter Biden issued a written statement about his decision to plead guilty, saying: “I will not subject my family to more pain, more invasions of privacy and needless embarrassment. For all I have put them through over the years, I can spare them this.”
Hunter Biden will now face sentencing in both cases. He faces up to 25 years at his Nov. 13 sentencing hearing in Delaware, though as a first-time offender he would likely receive a lesser sentence. He faces up to 17 years and a fine of up to $1.3 million on the tax charges at a scheduled Dec. 16 sentencing.
A spokesperson for Joe Biden reiterated when asked Thursday that the president had no plans to pardon his son or commute his eventual sentence.