...hehe... Guess who resigned from the FBI today??? And is testifying on Capitol Hill tomorrow?!!! --Is this all true?!!

Vice Presidents and senators can not keep documents at their homes... they can view them in scif's but can not keep them at their homes under any circumstances.... Presidents can declassify so its deferent for presidents...
Only following established procedures, and they do not have the authority to declassify nuke secrets.
 
AGAIN, read the indictment.
We have never been told what were in the documents... if some news agency told you they know they are lying... and the only procedure for a president to declassify a document is to say its declassified....
 
As the case stands now we will be into late summer or fall by the time a trial is set... that would be in the 3 month window of where the prosecution of a candidate for office usually gets delayed until after the election... Garland will decide it too hot to go forward...
Great deflection.
 



"Trump has argued many times before that his communications related to Jan. 6 are privileged. Those claims have not always been successful.

The issue arose repeatedly during the House committee's investigation of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. The committee subpoenaed numerous Trump aides and advisers, several of whom refused to testify on the basis of executive privilege. (The DOJ brought criminal charges for two of those advisers: One, Steve Bannon, was found guilty of contempt of Congress after his refusal to testify. The contempt case against another, Peter Navarro, is expected sometime this year.)

Trump also tried to sue the heads of the House select committee and the National Archives to block the release of Jan. 6-related documents, but a court ruled against him last year.

The former president has also tried to use executive privilege to block testimony to a federal grand jury, but those efforts have been less successful, the New York Times has reported."
 


"Trump has argued many times before that his communications related to Jan. 6 are privileged. Those claims have not always been successful.

The issue arose repeatedly during the House committee's investigation of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. The committee subpoenaed numerous Trump aides and advisers, several of whom refused to testify on the basis of executive privilege. (The DOJ brought criminal charges for two of those advisers: One, Steve Bannon, was found guilty of contempt of Congress after his refusal to testify. The contempt case against another, Peter Navarro, is expected sometime this year.)

Trump also tried to sue the heads of the House select committee and the National Archives to block the release of Jan. 6-related documents, but a court ruled against him last year.

The former president has also tried to use executive privilege to block testimony to a federal grand jury, but those efforts have been less successful, the New York Times has reported."

Are you ready Einstein? If Trump was denied the use of EP how did he use it?
 

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