Reading Beryl Howell's opinion in the Perry case--which a panel of Karen Henderson, Neomi Rao, and Greg Katsas as considering. This paragraph is (thus far) one of the most interesting.
Howell, of course, had no idea that Henderson would be reviewing this decision.
But I felt like the actual subsequent facts of the William Jefferson case, about whom the Rayburn precedent pertained, were influencing this. In that case, trial showed he was a wildly corrupt.
Here's that earlier decision. One of the questions w/Perry is whether a personal cell phone is like a Congressional office.
So much of the discussion seemed to pertain to, "well, William Jefferson was obviously a crook, so how do we avoid giving someone like that immunity?"
Thing is, the Perry warrant -- FROM WHAT WE KNOW -- suggest the facts should be far closer to stuff that falls under Speech and Debate. So what's in the affidavit to get this treated like a bribe?
Here's an unsealed passage describing what the comms Perry is trying to withhold include.
Shorter Beryl Howell: How could Scott Perry have been engaged in "fact" finding when he was seeking a way to declare Joe BIden's election invalid without considering whether his own reelection was valid?
🤔
I think some of Howell's opinion really may overstep speech and debate. But this passage -- finding that Perry's comms WITH the Trump admin are not protected by Speech and Debate -- seems uncontroversial (and covers almost half the comms in question).
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Barry Loudermilk, page 18: Liz Cheney had too much authority.
@RepLoudermilk, page 12: @Liz_Cheney didn't have enough authority.
Loudermilk relied on Trump's Truth Social posts, rather than sworn testimony. I guess @RepLoudermilk is so stupid he believes everything Trump says on Truth Social?
A big part of @RepLoudermilk's attack on Cheney amounts to insinuation that @realJodyHunt acted unethically, which seems like something he might want to avoid.
Note that, contrary to common myths about the investigation into Trump, this subpoena PRECEDED Cassidy Hutchison's public testimony (and even Greg Jacob's, by a day).
The precedents were all set before Jack Smith was appointed.
Here's an interesting, almost entirely argument that bears on the immunity case. Trump was invoking Executive Privilege but (as Howell laid out) he was having such convos w/people outside of Exec, like Rudy.
Howell ordered second batch of witnesses to testify on November 19. Trump asked for a stay on December 7. In the interim, witnesses testified. That almost certainly means they are 2 Pats & likely Eric Herschmann (which is consistent w/public timeline).
Liz Cheney, Maria Shriver, and Kamala Harris sitting on a stage talking about bipartisanship.
One dynamic of this I've been tracking is this: Harris SHOULD NOT be talking nitty gritty abt Jan6 bc of the prosecution. Well, Cheney is the expert. And she speaks it well.
As she did, guy in back was nodding over and over.
Cheney: In this election, we need to elect the responsible adult.
We learned last week (from the NYT, among others!) that Trump is bypassing transition laws, meaning he--and his sons, the Saudi business partners and transition team members--could just get payments from the Saudis all the way until inauguration.
This is a legit question. First, gap arises from delays that were inevitable w/president and first attempt to prosecute one. That took 21 months at least.
Also, it's POSSIBLE Smith is avoiding indicting anyone else until he's sure Trump can't pardon them.
There are VERY subtle suggestions in the immunity filing that several people started cooperating after being exposed in state cases. But Mueller investigation is testament to why you can't cooperate your way up to Trump.
Or let me sum up delay better: 1) Trump conspired through lawyers. Each lawyer's phone/email took 9 months of privilege review. 2) Trump hid behind exec privilege: That took 10 months. 3) Immunity Q had to be decided. That has taken a year, so far.