“ ‘Essentially, the rules require lawyers to screen out junk from the court in order to protect judicial resources, which are limited. Lawyers have a gatekeeper function,’ said Stephen Gillers, a law professor at New York University.
“ ‘The abysmal failure rate of the campaign's claims, and the fact that claims were filed even after many losses, reveal almost certain violations of these rules.’ “
This article is dated December 24, 2020. Sadly, Professor Rhode passed away last week. She was my contracts professor. It was my first year of law school and her first year of teaching.
“[I]t’s relatively rare for public sanctions to be applied. According to Deborah Rhode, a law professor at Stanford Law School, fewer than 10 percent of all disciplinary complaints end with public sanctions.
But Rhode said it's possible that courts or disciplinary bodies could view Trump's post-election litigation in an especially harsh light given the weighty concerns at hand.
" ‘The conduct of these lawyers was so egregious and the stakes were so high, given the way that suits fed doubts about the legitimacy of the election and the reputation of lawyers, that perhaps some disciplinary authorities will be moved to act,’ she said.”
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Beto’s group is urging Americans to demand their senators to expel Cruz and Hawley. Sample script below.
“Call your Senators today at 202-224-3121 and ask them to vote to expel Cruz and Hawley from the U.S. Senate.
“Senators Ted Cruz and Josh Hawley, who led the charge with their hatred and fear mongering, should be expelled from the Senate. As Beto said yesterday, to allow their attempt at sedition to go unpunished is to become complicit in it.
“So far, only 7 Senators have said they will vote to expel Cruz and Hawley. We are grateful for their commitment to protecting our democracy, but now we need to put pressure on the others to make sure violence-inducing traitors are not sitting Senators.
“Most of the Republicans in the U.S. House voted to reject Joe Biden's election victory last week, even after the insurrectionist riot. Among them were 13 members of the House Armed Services Committee, who ostensibly focus on the nation's defenses.
“It led Jason Schmid, a senior Republican staffer on the House Armed Services Committee, to resign in disgust. Politico reported on what Schmid had to say on his way out the door.
“ ‘Anyone who watched those horrible hours unfold should have been galvanized to rebuke these insurrectionists in the strongest terms,’ Schmid wrote in a letter addressed to the committee's top Republican.
It’s simple: trump’s base believes white people should control.
“The Capitol Rioters Weren’t ‘Low Class’: The business owners, real-estate brokers, and service members who rioted acted not out of economic desperation, but out of their belief in their inviolable right to rule.”
“The mob that breached the Capitol last week at President Donald Trump’s exhortation, hoping to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, was full of what you might call ‘respectable people.’
trump is a two - time loser (at least). Impeached again. This Republican Congressman nails the need to impeach. nytimes.com/article/republ…
“Representative John Katko of New York was the first Republican to publicly announce that he would back the impeachment proceedings.
“A former federal prosecutor, Mr. Katko said he looked at the facts of the siege, which began as lawmakers were working to certify the presidential election results.
“The Trump Presidency has left America a domestic radicalization problem that is going to take years to address. But the role of post-Trump Republicans in this de-radicalization effort is going to be vital, essential.
“A first step will be to declare the election legitimate, and ask Trump’s supporters to stand down and go home. Our disputes in America are decided by debate and elections not bullets and violence.
“ ‘Examiners aren’t that good at catching people. The auditors have a knack for missing it. The whistleblowers are the last line of defense,’ Thomas said. ‘And now they’re disincentivizing their most valuable players from coming forward.’
“Over the past two decades, financial industry whistleblowing has gone from being a rogue act of moral rectitude to a formalized industry, …
“incentivizing insiders with the prospect of partaking in the financial penalties that an enforcement action might generate using their information.”