Legal Random, Random

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dryrunguy
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Re: Legal Random, Random

#871

Post by dryrunguy »

ti-amie wrote: Thu Dec 11, 2025 4:08 am This is a really high level over view but the President doesn't get involved in whether the font being used in official government publications is Times New Roman or some other font. It's not his or her job.
Absolutely correct. That's the job of the U.S. Secretary of State! Always has been! Oh, wait... :shock: :shock: :shock:

(The laughs we had at the office this morning over bagging Calibri for TNR were exceptionally robust... Until the conversation shifted to the why behind it, which is cruel and incredibly sobering.)
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Re: Legal Random, Random

#872

Post by ponchi101 »

Because an independent economic branch is able to stop the president from ruining the country.
In Venezuela, there is no independent central bank; the president of the central bank is now under the power of the president. In the same way, the president of PDVSA (our oil company) is now under the same yoke.
So, when your president imposes policy, he may be actually hurting the country, because he does so based on political gains.
In Colombia, the president of the Central bank (their reserve) is independent. When the president announces insane policies, the president of the central bank may decide they are not in the interest of the country, and stop that. The independency of the central bank is one final check and balance. Nothing stops the president of the bank to talk to the president of the country, but having the final say may stop financial catastrophe if the latest is insane (like Chavez was, and Petro in Colombia is). If the idea by the country's president is sound, nothing stops that from being implemented.
But better have the opinion of other professionals.
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Re: Legal Random, Random

#873

Post by dave g »

ashkor87 wrote: Thu Dec 11, 2025 3:54 am
dave g wrote: Wed Dec 10, 2025 3:25 pm
ashkor87 wrote: Wed Dec 10, 2025 5:22 am
the larger question is, taking the Fed as an example - why should the President NOT control the Fed? Why is it better for some unelected person like the Governor of the Fed to determine something as critical to the economy as monetary policy?
Because the President is not necessarily an expert in economics. And also, because the person elected president might be morally impaired or insane.
why did we elect him then? by the same argument, why give the President control of the military? an insane President could destroy the whole world.. but we dont think twice about that!
Some of us do think twice about that, especially in this case.
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Re: Legal Random, Random

#874

Post by ti-amie »

Commander in Chief in the US has until now been mostly a ceremonial title. I think President Carter was the last US President who actually served in the military. What's going on now is...exceptional.
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Re: Legal Random, Random

#875

Post by ti-amie »



She's just gathering evidence of harassment at this point.
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Re: Legal Random, Random

#876

Post by ti-amie »

Aaron Reichlin-Melnick‬
‪@reichlinmelnick.bsky.social‬
· 11h
HUGE. Judge Xinis grants the writ of habeas corpus and orders that the government "SHALL release [Kilmar] Abrego Garcia from ICE custody immediately."

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Re: Legal Random, Random

#877

Post by ti-amie »

Jon Cooper‬
‪@joncooper-us.bsky.social‬
· 6m
Kilmar Abrego Garcia was freed from immigration detention on a judge’s order today while he fights to stay in the U.S., handing a major victory to the immigrant whose wrongful deportation to a notorious prison in El Salvador made him a flashpoint of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.

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Kilmar Abrego Garcia freed from federal immigration detention on judge’s order and returns home

https://apnews.com/article/abrego-garci ... b1143edd55
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Re: Legal Random, Random

#878

Post by ashkor87 »

ti-amie wrote: Thu Dec 11, 2025 11:42 pm Commander in Chief in the US has until now been mostly a ceremonial title. I think President Carter was the last US President who actually served in the military. What's going on now is...exceptional.
i dont see why commander-in-chief has to serve in the military.. the whole idea is to maintain civilian control of the military.
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Re: Legal Random, Random

#879

Post by ponchi101 »

Since we are a tennis forum.
This reminds me, tangentially, to all the rules and changes that wanted to be implemented about tie breaks and serving, during the 2010´s. The changes in TB's at the slams and such.
And it was only because John Isner could not be broken on grass. And it was dumb because it was only one player that had that issue (not even Ivo had it; he could be broken).
So, Trump wants to make all these changes just because he wants to remain in power until his death. But you don't make crazy changes just because of one man's lunacy.
I know. The politics of the USA need a lot of changes, but they are actually in the opposite direction. Put more control on the executive branch. But that is a different story.
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Re: Legal Random, Random

#880

Post by ti-amie »

Delaware’s acting U.S. attorney resigns amid fight over Trump’s appointees

Julianne Murray, the state’s former Republican Party chair, is the latest Trump-appointed federal prosecutor whose appointment has drawn scrutiny.
Updated
December 12, 2025 at 5:24 p.m. EST today at 5:24 p.m. EST

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Julianne Murray, center, in 2024 at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

By Jeremy Roebuck

President Donald Trump’s U.S. attorney in Delaware abruptly resigned Friday amid a growing standoff over the administration’s authority to install loyalists in powerful prosecutorial roles while bypassing Senate confirmation and the courts.

Julianne Murray, a former chair of the Delaware Republican Party whom the Justice Department had appointed as interim U.S. attorney in the state this summer, announced her departure in a statement posted to social media. She said a recent ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit disqualifying Trump’s U.S. attorney in New Jersey, Alina Habba, had made it clear to her she could no longer stay in her role.

Habba resigned from her post on Monday after the court ruled she had been unlawfully appointed through a process that administration officials had also used to keep Murray in her role. The Philadelphia-based 3rd Circuit handles appeals arising from Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware and the U.S. Virgin Islands, and its rulings extend throughout that jurisdiction.


“I naively believed that I would be judged on my performance and not politics,” Murray said in her statement. “Unfortunately that was not the case.”

Murray said she will continue to work for the Justice Department in a different capacity but did not indicate what her new job might be. Her former office will now be overseen by her first assistant U.S. attorney, Ben Wallace, who has worked as a prosecutor in the office since 2023.

Murray’s initial appointment in July drew controversy given her lack of prosecutorial experience and the fact that she was still serving as head of the Delaware Republican Party when she was named interim U.S. attorney. She resigned from that role shortly afterward.

Her statement Friday saying she would step down as U.S. attorney used many of the same turns of phrase as the resignation letter she submitted to the state party five months earlier. In both, she said she refused to allow her office “to be used as a political football.”

While the nation’s 93 U.S. attorneys are appointed through a political process and are often affiliated with the president’s party, their jobs have traditionally been viewed as largely apolitical. Most come from traditional legal backgrounds, not openly partisan roles.

Since Trump’s return to the White House, his administration has made installing loyalists in these position a priority.

In addition to Murray and Habba, his former personal lawyer, the Justice Department has appointed other controversial allies to U.S. attorney roles on an interim basis. They included Bill Essayli, a former GOP state assemblyman named U.S. attorney in Los Angeles; Sigal Chattah, a former GOP committeewoman in Nevada; and Lindsey Halligan, another former Trump lawyer, in Eastern Virginia.

Federal law limited each of their interim appointments to a period of 120 days and empowered the federal courts to appoint a replacement if there was no Senate-confirmed nominee by that deadline. But when the terms of Murray, Habba and the others expired, the Justice Department sought to keep Trump’s picks in their roles through complex maneuvers that the 3rd Circuit has ruled were illegal.

In Murray’s case, Delaware’s chief U.S. district judge, Colm Connolly, a Trump appointee, began soliciting applications for her replacement weeks before her 120 days were up. The move drew a sharp rebuke from Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, another former Trump attorney who now serves in the Justice Department’s No. 2 position.

When Murray’s interim term expired in November, Delaware’s judges declined to reappoint her but did not immediately name a replacement. The Justice Department responded by changing Murray’s title to “acting” U.S. attorney and maintained that the president had the authority to keep her in her job indefinitely.

Within hours of Murray’s resignation, the judges on Friday posted notice that they were appointing Wallace as acting U.S. attorney.

Unlike Habba, Chattah, Essayli and Halligan, whose appointments federal courts have all ruled to be unlawful, Murray had not drawn a legal challenge questioning her legitimacy. In her statement Friday, she blamed Delaware’s U.S. senators — Chris Coons and Lisa Blunt Rochester, both Democrats — of sinking her prospects in the job.

Normally, the president must formally nominate his U.S. attorney picks, and they must be approved in a Senate vote. In the case of Murray and the others, their home-state senators — all Democrats — had said they would withhold their support should Trump formally nominate them to the role.

That decision effectively killed any chance of their nominations moving forward under a Senate custom known as the “blue slip,” which allows senators to veto judicial and U.S. attorney nominees for their states.


Trump has railed against the blue slip tradition, saying it interferes with his ability to install his chosen candidates. Sen. Chuck Grassley — the Iowa Republican who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee — has resisted pressure from the president to abandon the custom, saying it gives senators of both parties an important voice in deciding who will fill powerful law enforcement roles in their states.

Coons and Blunt Rochester said they had concluded Murray “was not the right person” for the job after interviewing her and a number of other potential candidates.

“I look forward to working with the District Court’s appointed U.S. Attorney, Ben Wallace, and remain willing to work with the Trump administration to identify and confirm a mutually agreeable candidate,” Coons said in a statement.

Murray called the blue slip process “highly politicized” and “incredibly flawed,” saying it cost Delaware a U.S. attorney.

“The people that think they have chased me away will soon find out that they are mistaken,” she wrote. “I did not get here by being a shrinking violet.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national ... gns-trump/
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Re: Legal Random, Random

#881

Post by ti-amie »

‪emptywheel‬
‪@emptywheel.bsky.social‬
· 30m
WSJ explains how FBI was able to solve Pipe Bomber case after so many years: an Agent wrote code to access T-Mobile data FBI HAD thought was corrupted.

Story confirms Cole is a Trump supporter and describes Agents are pissed bc Kash and Bongino are claiming credit.

www.wsj.com/politics/nat...

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Re: Legal Random, Random

#882

Post by ti-amie »

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