Judge dismisses James Comey and Letitia James cases, finding prosecutor's appointment invalid
- By JSRG
- American Politics
- 35 Replies
I agree with Keith Gross and Mike Davis.
It looks so far in this topic that you just agree with anyone who happens to say the dismissal is wrong, regardless of whether their arguments make any sense or whether they have any argument at all. Thus you previously as evidence cited Leavitt, who offers no argument as to why it's wrong, isn't a lawyer, and whose job as White House Press Secretary more or less entails just saying everything that the White House does is correct and thus is one of the most biased sources possible. Your new citations from the article you cite fare little better.
Keith Gross offers no argument against the judge's reading of the law involved, but instead claims the law is unconstitutional (an argument it does not appear anyone involved in the case made, for the record). The problem is, even if that's the case, that's the law they used to try to appoint Halligan, which the judge--in a rather straightforward reading of the law--ruled was not allowed by the law. However, if that law is unconstitutional, that would still mean her appointment was unlawful. Gross's opinion, at least as presented in the article, would appear to actually strengthen the argument for Halligan being unlawfully appointed.
Mike Davis similarly offers no real argument against the dismissal. The closest thing he offers is claiming that the evidence against Comey is "overwhelming". Even if we accept that claim (which seems rather questionable), that does not mean anything at all in regards to this dismissal, which was regarding whether Halligan was lawfully appointed. It does not matter how strong the evidence in a case is if the prosecutor was not lawfully appointed.
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