Anonymous ID: e1676e Dec. 4, 2020, 11:57 p.m. No.11911365   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1545 >>1821 >>1981

>>11911335

>https://twitter.com/kylenabecker/status/1334989278661783556

 

GRAVE AND SERIOUS CONSQUENCES.

 

Hmm.. wonder if every official in that state is the illegitimate winner of races they had no business winning.. What Senators and Reps are in that area? We have been focused on POTUS.. but we need to look downstream, I believe.

Anonymous ID: e1676e Dec. 5, 2020, 12:29 a.m. No.11911530   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1536

‘Grandmaster Jay’ arrested… Black militia leader faces 20 years in prison on federal charges

 

John Fitzgerald Johnson, better known as ‘Grandmaster Jay,’ was arrested and charged with pointing a rifle at federal agents and Louisville, Kentucky police during a protest, which could land him in prison for 20 years.

 

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) – The leader of the "Not F***ing Around Coalition" (NFAC), a Black militia that demonstrated in Louisville during last summer's social unrest, was arrested Thursday on a federal charge. John Johnson, 57, commonly referred to as "Grandmaster Jay," was charged with "assaulting, resisting or impeding certain officers or employees," according to court documents. Johnson is accused of pointing a rifle at Louisville Metro Police officers, as well as federal officers, on Sept. 4, the night before the 2020 Kentucky Derby, according to a probable cause affidavit. The alleged incident took place just after 8:30 p.m. as officers were conducting surveillance over demonstrators at Jefferson Square in downtown Louisville.

 

At that time, an LMPD radio transmission went out notifying officers that a group of "six to eight heavily armed individuals" were parked on Armory Place, near a parking garage, according to court documents. Two federal officers and three LMPD officers then went to the top of the nearby Jefferson County Grand Jury Building to watch the group. When they got there and leaned over the roof, three of them were blinded by a flashlight, the affidavit claims. Investigators say that flashlight was on the end of a rifle that Johnson was pointing at them. All of the officers identified the suspect as Grandmaster Jay, according to court documents. "All officers advised they were concerned Johnson might intentionally, or even accidentally, discharge a round at them," the probable cause affidavit states. "All officers recognized that the distance between themselves and Johnson was well within the effective range of the AR platform style rifle." Two of the officers were wearing soft body armor, but were "aware that soft body armor would not stop a rifle round," the affidavit states.

 

Jessie Halladay, a spokeswoman for LMPD, met with Johnson and another member of the group about 30 seconds after the incident and later identified Johnson from surveillance video, according to the documents. Johnson was booked into the Oldham County Detention Center just before 1 p.m. Thursday, officials said. If Johnson is convicted of his charges, he faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in federal prison, according to a news release from United States Attorney Russell Coleman's office. "Here in Kentucky we revere our First and Second Amendment freedoms, not foolishness which puts police and protesters at grave risk," Coleman said in the news release. Roughly 200 members of the NFAC were in Louisville on Derby Day during protests over the death of Breonna Taylor, a Black woman who was shot and killed by white police officers during a March 13 raid of her apartment.

 

https://www.wdrb.com/news/grandmaster-jay-leader-of-nfac-militia-that-demonstrated-in-louisville-arrested-on-federal-charge/article_e2bab6a4-3599-11eb-83a1-ef7c2d3e33e5.html

Anonymous ID: e1676e Dec. 5, 2020, 12:48 a.m. No.11911623   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1627 >>1641 >>1646 >>1650

Judge Emmet Sullivan still refusing to dismiss Michael Flynn case

 

More than a week after Flynn was pardoned by President Trump, Judge Sullivan still won't dismiss the case

 

In a Freedom of Information case related to former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, District Judge Reggie Walton said on Friday that Judge Emmet Sullivan doesn’t have a lot of options in dealing with the fact that President Trump granted Flynn a full pardon, “unless he takes the position that the wording of the pardon is too broad, in that it provides protections beyond the date of the pardon.” “I don’t know what impact that would have, what decision he would make, if he makes that determination that the pardon of Mr. Flynn is for a period that the law does not permit,” said Walton, according to the National Law Journal. “I don’t know if that’s correct or not,” the judge continued. “Theoretically, the decision could be reached because the wording in the pardon seems to be very, very broad. It could be construed, I think, as extending protections against criminal prosecutions after the date the pardon was issued. I don’t know if Judge Sullivan will make that determination or not,” Walton added.

 

Flynn, a former Army Lt. General and the head of the Defense Intelligence Agency under Barack Obama, pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI even though originally they had determined that he did not lie to them, and that his conversations with the Russian ambassador to the U.S. during the period between Trump’s election in 2016 and his inauguration in January 2017 appeared legitimate. But he got caught up in the Trump Russia-collusion investigation and pleaded guilty in order to protect his son from prosecution and to avoid being bankrupted by the process. Flynn later changed lawyers, hiring Sidney Powell to represent him. She got the Justice Department to move to dismiss the charges against Flynn by convincing them that he had been improperly targeted by the FBI. But Emmet Sullivan, who was presiding over the case, refused to dismiss the charges even though there was no one attempting to prosecute the case. The legal process has dragged on through the appeals process, and finally President Trump issued a full pardon on November 25. On November 30, the DOJ notified Sullivan of the pardon, but he has still refused to drop the case. Judge Walton appears to have hinted at what Sullivan is thinking as he refuses to dismiss the case. Solomon Wisenberg, former deputy independent counsel, told Just the News that “It is disappointing but not surprising that Sullivan has yet to dismiss the case.”

https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/judge-emmet-sullivan-still-refusing-dismiss-michael-flynn-case