hUTch2002
Wait til next year!
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Simple answer. The President has the Authority to declassify, to declassify the President WILL follow the prescribe procedures in accordance with Regulatory Guidance to declassify. Trump and staff failed to follow the procedures to do so. I hate that some do not get that this is the way that it is outlined. In simple terms, he failed to submit the paperwork and make it a matter of record regarding the Classified Documents found at MAR.
Ownership is the next issue. Even if he had properly done it the declassify documents remain with the government.
I really can't see what the problems with seeing that it is really this simple.
I read lawyer Bobb's certification letter from the document transfer in June and the DOJ's August warrant. I didn't find the May/June subpoena, but saw Solomon had reported the language in the subpoena and the raid warrant were identical. If they are, doesn't that make a charge of obstruction the primary offense? It could explain why DOJ didn't follow up on Trump's invitation to come back if they needed anything else, or subpoena again, if they had a lead that marked documents were still on premise after certifying they weren't.
I don't the special master is the final say on whether the documents were classified. If you were prosecution, would you rather litigate classification authority, possibly on appeal up to SCOTUS, along with obstruction (and enforcing the PRA) in this scenario? My understanding the PRA has no criminal penalty. A charge of obstruction seems to have real legs without muddying it with classification powers - and thus the classification status of the files - and potentially jeopardizing an obstruction case.
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It is procedurally prescribe and regulated. Witnessed great, recorded and past on in record to appropriate governing agencies, did not happen. Sorry but it had to done and the proper procedures were never followed.Yeah, not so simple.
That assumes the president's classification authority is predicated on procedure not constitutionally prescribed, which is the argument we've been having. My position has been stated. The classification system exists by executive order and executive orders do not bind successive presidents. No one who claims that predication upon process/procedure can state the constitutional premise for it. For instance, Trump clearly on Jan 19-20, 2021 authorized declassification of a host of Clinton email/Russia investigation docs. Even after accepting the redactions by FBI/DOJ, Garland's DOJ did not follow through on the authorization. So, not only do you claim executive classification is predicated on procedure without a constitutional premise, but that underlings or unelected agency staff or officials can nullify it. From a constitutional point, that's dangerously illogical.
Kash Patel states he was present when Trump declassified documents in those final days, that he had been doing so for months. Documents at Mar-a-Lago Marked 'Classified' Were Already Declassified and makes just that point; that because staff subordinate to the presidency do not perform their job does not nullify the president's classification authority. Until the minute an incoming president is sworn, the outgoing is the president.
The extent of executive classification has never been adjudicated because he is the constitutional authority vested with sole power. If a court - or congress - decides to declare limitation and it is not remedied prior to reaching SCOTUS, SCOTUS will be hearing that case. Who, finding no constitutional basis will read it broadly as the president's own inclination. The remedy is either amendment or the ballot box.
The raid warrant is based upon a 'lead' that docs marked classified were still at MAL after Trump lawyer Bobb certified otherwise.
NARA is able under the PRA to refer a collection action for records to DOJ as a civil action since the PRA has no criminal penalty. I think DOJ's raid is to establish an obstruction charge based on the faulty or illegitimate certification by Bobb, independent of whether records were classified. Classification is chattering media's firestorm lit by DOJ leaks, but I can't see that DOJ is concerned with it as a basis; they have sound makings for an obstruction case which I think was the raid's objective.
It is procedurally prescribe and regulated. Witnessed great, recorded and past on in record to appropriate governing agencies, did not happen. Sorry but it had to done and the proper procedures were never followed.
Document declassification must be recorded and because it is declassified does not mean it is not the government's property or that it can be taking home with someone. Call it whatever you desire, but if there is not a record of it then sorry.
Trump was advised and told, he was ask for the documents back and he refused to give them up. That is his mistake. It was a Rookie self serving egotistical mistake that he made. The had to send the FBI into his residence to retrieve them and rightfully so. It is so simple, but hard for many to see.
The rest you have stated is just deflections of the facts regarding the disposition of declassified documents and the handling of them after declassification. It is in the Regulatory Guidance not the Constitution. Ownership and safeguards does not change because of declassification as it is still based on a "need to know" basis.
In the case of Trump having these documents, he did not have a storage facility to support holding this documents regardless of their declassification status. In other words, it makes no difference because he would never have been allowed to hold on to any declassified document to begin with in the first place. They are not his personal property and their contents still affect National Security.
Regarding the warrant. Moot point. Enough legal experts and experienced lawyers laid eyes on it to ensure that the warrant was uncontestable. The charges and burdens of proof for each charge if indicted will be concrete. They didn't just throw crap up against the wall to see what sticks and what did not. The DOJ had the case made before the warrant was requested.
The Special Master and the 11th Circuit Court have addressed the issues and concluded that the documents found were declassified they were not the property of Trump. Makes this cut and dry. So even if the documents were declassified they belong to the Government in a secure location of which Trump would never be able to accomplish.
Another point is that Trump's legal team can't provide the documents or procedures followed to declassify information. They are competent enough to do do so if they could but there is no evidence to date upon request by the Special Master.
Some need to separate the legal agenda from the political agenda.
I feel I have to repeat this with you because you don't grasp this aspect of the case against him.
Reread your posts.For the last time, I have not argued that declassification power infers or grants post-presidency possession; quite the opposite, in fact. I've made no comment on the special master role, or team Trump's interaction with him because it is immaterial to whether Garland will indict or not.
Good grief, man; if you're to repeat yourself then address MY comments, not the construct of your imagination despite being told the inverse. 95% of this is that, the other 5% re: classification authority we've denuded.
You make this about one thing when you have stated all about others. You dug up case log. No you read your own posts and figure it out. I guess you admit now that he had to follow the processes and procedures President or Ex.No, you point out to me where I've argued the president can keep declass records upon leaving office, or stop yapping.
I will admit to mixing your conversations up with some others but I edited above and as I told you early on that Trump had to follow a step by step process and a procedural path to declassify material you continued to disagree. You fit the response to be a victim of the conversations vs admitting you were wrong. Completely changing the dialogue of the conversation to support yourself. Nice try.So you searched and found you assumed things that weren't said or implied.
S'okay, it happens to the best of you.
The simple answer is that they are held on a need to know basis with limited access. The more complicated answer is related to the content the document.I bet nobody here even knows the procedural issue of declassifying docs.
Just because there is pepper in the salt shaker doesn't make it pepper..as evidenced by the covers.
Like there are not thousands of actual paper copies that must be rubber stamped.
What happens when a doc is unclassified..The Feds pull all the copies and rubber stamp unclassified?
This is stupid.
?I will admit to mixing your conversations up with some others but I edited above and as I told you early on that Trump had to follow a step by step process and a procedural path to declassify material you continued to disagree. You fit the response to be a victim of the conversations vs admitting you were wrong. Completely changing the dialogue of the conversation to support yourself. Nice try.
I have the same question. What does that even mean? The Executive? Should I be reading in between the lines? Cryptic?What does that even mean? The Executive is the holder of all info.
Do you have any experience handling or managing classified documents? I have absolutely zero experience doing so. But I don't believe there are thousands of unaccounted-for copies of classified documents floating around. I also do not believe it is "stupid" to identify any declassified document as such, as well as all copies of said declassified document.I bet nobody here even knows the procedural issue of declassifying docs.
Just because there is pepper in the salt shaker doesn't make it pepper..as evidenced by the covers.
Like there are not thousands of actual paper copies that must be rubber stamped.
What happens when a doc is unclassified..The Feds pull all the copies and rubber stamp unclassified?
This is stupid.