Peter Navarro on 60 minutes, and the damning memo from January

skyking

Lifer
Nov 21, 2001
22,021
4,791
146

kage69

Lifer
Jul 17, 2003
27,299
36,448
136
Looks like another touche' for the 'social scientist.'

In his case the PhD really does stand for Piled Higher, Deeper. What a corrupt piece of shit. Like every other worthless asshat in that admin, he could do with a keel hauling. On a carrier.
 

ShookKnight

Senior member
Dec 12, 2019
646
658
96
Guys, cut the bullshit already, OK?

But, her e-mails.

Buffoonery aside, everyone called it; Trump would royally fuck this country, 1,000 times over... he is up to 998 as of this minute.
 

hal2kilo

Lifer
Feb 24, 2009
23,437
10,330
136
Speaking of emails, guess who has to turn over a bunch of them. Hey Petee.

Judge: Trump trade adviser Navarro must surrender White House-related emails - POLITICO

Navarro argued in the lawsuit that he should not have to turn over the disputed emails because the government might seek to use them against him in the criminal case, but the judge also saw no merit in that position.

“Producing these pre-existing records in no way implicates a compelled testimonial communication that is incriminating,” Kollar-Kotelly wrote. She ordered Navarro to turn over “forthwith” about 200 to 250 messages his lawyers have already deemed likely presidential records. She gave the two sides 30 days to sort out a protocol to find other official records in Navarro’s personal account.

The Justice Department is set to make a key filing in Navarro’s criminal case next week, explaining why the department concluded that Navarro is not immune from a congressional subpoena even though he was serving as a top adviser to Trump in the White House in the weeks before and after Jan. 6, 2021.
 

UNCjigga

Lifer
Dec 12, 2000
24,817
9,027
136
His argument was that he shouldn’t have to produce emails because they might be evidence of a crime? LOL

“Hey, it’s not fair that my work product is official government records—how am I supposed to hide my criming while working???”
 

woolfe9998

Lifer
Apr 8, 2013
16,188
14,092
136
Speaking of emails, guess who has to turn over a bunch of them. Hey Petee.

Judge: Trump trade adviser Navarro must surrender White House-related emails - POLITICO

Navarro argued in the lawsuit that he should not have to turn over the disputed emails because the government might seek to use them against him in the criminal case, but the judge also saw no merit in that position.

“Producing these pre-existing records in no way implicates a compelled testimonial communication that is incriminating,” Kollar-Kotelly wrote. She ordered Navarro to turn over “forthwith” about 200 to 250 messages his lawyers have already deemed likely presidential records. She gave the two sides 30 days to sort out a protocol to find other official records in Navarro’s personal account.

The Justice Department is set to make a key filing in Navarro’s criminal case next week, explaining why the department concluded that Navarro is not immune from a congressional subpoena even though he was serving as a top adviser to Trump in the White House in the weeks before and after Jan. 6, 2021.

LOL he tried to argue that having to produce the e-mails would violate his 5A privilege against self-incrimination? He knows, and his lawyers know, that this is not how 5A works. What a sleezebag.

Navarro has fought awfully hard to prevent their disclosure. I hope these emails go public once produced.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
72,433
6,090
126
It must be nice to be a criminal and have the power to threaten the government with a cult takeover if charges are brought. I'm sure glad we had caring people like Bob Barr to save us from any such violence breaking out. The cure is worse than the disease, right. Not fully convinced the DOJ doesn't still think like that.
 

hal2kilo

Lifer
Feb 24, 2009
23,437
10,330
136
Been wondering why this is taking so damn long.

DOJ: Trump cannot save Navarro from contempt of Congress prosecution - POLITICO

[N]o assertion by former President Trump could have covered most of the information that the Committee asked the Defendant to produce in documents or at his deposition,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Elizabeth Aloi wrote in the 26-page brief.

The brief is a bid by the Justice Department to convince U.S. District Court Judge Amit Mehta to keep Navarro’s criminal contempt of Congress trial on track. Navarro had been slated to go to trial in January, but Mehta put it on hold amid a tangle of legal issues related to Navarro’s claim that Trump — more than a year after leaving office — had privately asserted executive privilege. Navarro claims that the purported assertion prevented him from responding to the select committee’s subpoena.


The trial proceedings have renewed extraordinarily complex issues surrounding the immunity presidential advisers enjoy from being forced to testify to Congress, as well as the relatively untested puzzle of what courts should do when a current and former president disagree on assertions of executive privilege. While the Nixon-era Supreme Court has ruled that the incumbent president’s determination carries far more weight, courts have never drawn precise lines — and the issue has remained dormant until Trump’s post-presidential efforts to stymie investigations of his bid to overturn the election.
The issues were similarly prominent during the contempt of Congress trial for Trump ally Steve Bannon, also for defying the Jan. 6 committee. In that case, U.S. District Court Judge Carl Nichols largely rejected Bannon’s arguments that he believed he was immune from testifying to Congress. Bannon was convicted by a jury in July. He’s currently appealing the verdict.
Navarro, unlike Bannon, was a sitting presidential adviser at the time of Jan. 6, which has added additional complexities to his case
But DOJ said there’s no need for Mehta to resolve those thorny issues. Navarro, Aloi noted, hasn’t shown any evidence that Trump actually did assert privilege over his response to the committee’s subpoena. A Jan. 23 letter from Trump’s lawyer — a belated effort by Trump to suggest Navarro was correct to defy the select committee — failed to make the case, she said. That’s because the majority of the select committee’s questions for Navarro had little to do with his role as Trump’s trade adviser, or indeed with Trump at all.
 

hal2kilo

Lifer
Feb 24, 2009
23,437
10,330
136
Speaking of emails, guess who has to turn over a bunch of them. Hey Petee.

Judge: Trump trade adviser Navarro must surrender White House-related emails - POLITICO

Navarro argued in the lawsuit that he should not have to turn over the disputed emails because the government might seek to use them against him in the criminal case, but the judge also saw no merit in that position.

“Producing these pre-existing records in no way implicates a compelled testimonial communication that is incriminating,” Kollar-Kotelly wrote. She ordered Navarro to turn over “forthwith” about 200 to 250 messages his lawyers have already deemed likely presidential records. She gave the two sides 30 days to sort out a protocol to find other official records in Navarro’s personal account.

The Justice Department is set to make a key filing in Navarro’s criminal case next week, explaining why the department concluded that Navarro is not immune from a congressional subpoena even though he was serving as a top adviser to Trump in the White House in the weeks before and after Jan. 6, 2021.
Well, as usual with the Trump clan, things get delayed, court says he does have to turn them over but, once again, as usual, he will probably appeal. I guess Navarro is personally wealthy to be able to spend all this money on lawyers, unless SOMEONE ELSE is funding his legal bills.

 
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skyking

Lifer
Nov 21, 2001
22,021
4,791
146
Somebody else? Oh no, he's on his own. They are all on their own after Trump tosses them aside like a snotty tissue.
 

outriding

Diamond Member
Feb 20, 2002
3,109
2,177
136
Pete was supposed to use official email only. He has no defense not to turn over the emails

The way I look at it is Pete should be charged with a least with

Using personal email to bypass the records act

Obstruction

Whatever comes up from the content of the emails
 
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fskimospy

Elite Member
Mar 10, 2006
84,055
48,055
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Pete was supposed to use official email only. He has no defense not to turn over the emails

The way I look at it is Pete should be charged with a least with

Using personal email to bypass the records act

Obstruction

Whatever comes up from the content of the emails
I think it would also be helpful if the courts started punishing the lawyers who engage in this nonsense more severely.
 

woolfe9998

Lifer
Apr 8, 2013
16,188
14,092
136
Well, as usual with the Trump clan, things get delayed, court says he does have to turn them over but, once again, as usual, he will probably appeal. I guess Navarro is personally wealthy to be able to spend all this money on lawyers, unless SOMEONE ELSE is funding his legal bills.


Well that was his first appeal, and it took like a month to get shot down. I guess it would go to SCOTUS from there.
 
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