D.C. Rally

Discussion in 'Politics' started by gwb-trading, Jan 6, 2021.

  1. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    #251     Jan 11, 2021
  2. I remember reading that elsewhere. If that doesn't nail down culpability, I don't know what does.
     
    #252     Jan 11, 2021
  3. Ricter

    Ricter

    A difference that really matters to Capital, but so far as it matters to the so-called left and right in this country, to that degree it's just a distraction.
     
    #253     Jan 11, 2021
  4. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    #254     Jan 11, 2021
  5. Except that it was a Republican senator who referred to the source. And if the source were disclosed, the only thing that would be certain are the death threats that would follow.
     
    #255     Jan 11, 2021
  6. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    You don't have to convince me, just the trumptards on here that give Donnie plausible deniability with every fuck up
     
    #256     Jan 11, 2021
    Frederick Foresight likes this.
  7. Oh, I know you know. I'm just connecting the dots for Larry, his brother Darryl, and his other brother Darryl.

    upload_2021-1-11_11-58-22.jpeg
     
    #257     Jan 11, 2021
  8. So typical of government....we needed them last week. Now it's overkill.
    How much is this going to cost ?
    Oh wait, this is for Biden so cost is never a consideration. Expect much of more of this wastefulness in the upcoming administration.
    We are going to be so bankrupt by 2024.
     
    #258     Jan 11, 2021
    WeToddDid2 likes this.
  9. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    Here come the COVID cases from the insurrection...

     
    #259     Jan 11, 2021
  10. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading


    Time for the murder charges for the insurrectionists...


    Prosecutors weigh ‘heavy hammer’ — felony murder — for rioters in Capitol officer’s death
    https://wtop.com/dc/2021/01/prosecu...murder-for-rioters-in-capitol-officers-death/

    As federal prosecutors file charges against rioters who took part in last Wednesday’s violent takeover of the U.S. Capitol, investigators continue to gather evidence in the death of Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick, who died from injuries sustained during the attack.

    While most murder investigations focus on the person or persons who caused the fatal injury, former federal prosecutor Tim Heaphy said prosecutors could charge many rioters with felony murder, even if they were nowhere near Sicknick.

    Heaphy led the monthslong investigation into the law enforcement performance before, during, and after the deadly 2017 white nationalist rally, in Charlottesville, Virginia. Heaphy was the U.S. Attorney for Western District of Virginia from December 2009 through January 2015, appointed by President Barack Obama.

    Under the doctrine of felony murder, which applies in the District of Columbia, any murder that occurs during the commission of one of several underlying felonies is chargeable as felony murder.

    “The classic example is if three guys go to rob a convenience store, and one guy is the getaway driver. If in the commission of the robbery, the clerk was shot and killed, all three of the participants in the robbery of the store are potentially guilty of felony murder,” said Heaphy.

    On Jan. 6, hundreds of supporters of President Donald Trump broke through barricades and into the U.S. Capitol, as Congress worked to count the electoral votes to affirm President-Elect Joe Biden’s victory.

    In the federal murder code, 11 underlying felonies which can be part of a felony murder charge are listed — one which could be applicable to the Jan. 6 takeover is burglary.

    “You could look at the storming of the doors of the Capitol by that riotous mob as burglary. If they went in with the intent to steal, disrupt proceedings, to commit other offenses, they committed burglary. And, therefore, a murder that occurred during the course of a burglary could be potentially charged as felony murder,” Heaphy said.

    The mere act of breaking into the Capitol doesn’t constitute burglary, Heaphy said. Prosecutors would need to prove that they intended to do something criminal, once they were inside.

    “Let’s say somebody storms the Capitol with the intent to disrupt Congress, or steal the sign outside of Speaker Pelosi’s door, and there’s a murder that occurs in the midst of that, he could be charged with felony murder,” Heaphy said.

    As with any crime, federal or state, prosecutors have to weigh whether charges can be sustained in court.

    In this case, with the crimes committed on federal property, and in the death of a federal employee, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia — which prosecutes cases in both federal and local courts — would have the felony murder count at its disposal.

    “That’s why it is such a friend to the prosecutor,” Heaphy said.

    “It’s a pretty heavy hammer to charge accomplices, to charge aiders and abettors, who don’t necessarily intend to murder — if they’re going to engage in felonious conduct, they are potentially responsible for the consequences of that conduct, if death ensues.”

    Asked whether Acting U.S. Attorney Michael Sherwin and Acting Principal U.S. Attorney Ken Kohl had ruled out filing felony murder charges in connections with Sicknick’s death, spokeswoman Shelia Miller said: “Since this is a pending death investigation, we cannot comment at this time.”

    Prosecutors have not named any suspects in connection with the physical altercation that led to Sicknick’s death. A federal conviction for first-degree murder in the District of Columbia, unlike in D.C. Superior Court, is eligible for the death penalty.
     
    #260     Jan 11, 2021
    Atlantic likes this.