Mayor Eric Adams Dropped Case | Case dismissed with prejudice

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This is Saturday Night Massacre level story being obscured in an avalanche of news (including the Trump Admin basically announcing the USA has gone over to the Dark Side now):

DOJ engaging in a public quid pro quo to drop charges against an indicted public official in exchange for him supporting the Administration’s immigration policies. The SDNY attorneys quit instead of doing so. DOJ official, the former personal criminal lawyer of POTUS, threatens line attorneys in SDNY if one of them doesn’t sign the filing to drop the charges (but won’t do so himself) or risk them all being fired.
 


  • It ended with Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove pulling the DOJ's remaining public integrity prosecutors into a room and warning them that if one didn't agree to file the motion dismissing the charges within an hour, they could all be fired, Reuters reports.
  • One prosecutor finally agreed to do so under duress, per Reuters.
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“… Acting Deputy U.S. Attorney General Emil Bove and lawyers from the department’s public integrity section and criminal division in Washington filed paperwork seeking to end the case. A judge still has to sign off on the request.

The formal move to end the prosecution came after days of turmoil in the Justice Department. At least seven prosecutors in New York and Washington quit rather than carry out a directive to halt the case.

The Justice Department’s three-page motion sought to dismiss the case without prejudice, meaning the charges could be revived in the future. …”

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Keep Adams under pressure and in line with Trump demands.
 
Is there any possibility the attorneys involved in crafting this quid pro quo could face sanctions or even disbarment?
 
Given the disclosures in the case, and Sassoon's letter, I have trouble believing that the judge will grant the motion.
 
Given the disclosures in the case, and Sassoon's letter, I have trouble believing that the judge will grant the motion.
The judge can't force the prosecutors to prosecute, so if the case isn't dismissed, the judge doesn't have a lot of remedies. If he holds the prosecutors in contempt, Trump will just pardon.

It was a little different in the Flynn case because Flynn had already pled guilty. It was ultimately mooted by Trump pardoning Flynn.
 
Everybody involved in this fiasco deserves no less than public lynching by a mob. I don't care what anyone thinks of me for saying so. This shit is so brazenly beyond the pale of ANYTHING acceptable in even a banana republic.
 
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