Anonymous ID: b36929 Jan. 25, 2018, 7:07 a.m. No.157273   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Re: White House Service

 

From:john.podesta@gmail.com

To: btozzi1@cox.net

Date: 2014-10-09 19:00

Subject: Re: White House Service

 

Grazie.

On Oct 8, 2014 10:36 AM, "Jim Tozzi" <btozzi1@cox.netwrote:

 

> John:

>

> All Italian Americans who serve in the government should be taught the

> meaning of the term silenzio before they put pen to paper.

>

> Ciao,

>

> jim

 

Subject: Re: White House Service

2014-10-09 21:00

2016-11-09

john.podesta@gmail.com

btozzi1@cox.net

Subject: RE: White House Service

2014-10-09 21:32

2016-11-05

DMCOS@who.eop.gov

john.podesta@gmail.com

Subject: Fwd: White House Service

2014-10-09 21:01

2016-11-02

john.podesta@gmail.com

DMCOS@who.eop.gov

Subject: White House Service

2014-10-08 14:36

2016-10-17

btozzi1@cox.net

podesta@law.georgetown.edu

 

 

Jim Tozzi (born 1938) is a former regulatory official of the United States Office of Management and Budget (OMB).[1] He currently is the head of the Center for Regulatory Effectiveness, an industry-supported organization that describes itself as a "regulatory watchdog."[2]

Jim Tozzi got his Ph.D. in Economics and Business Administration from the University of Florida. After some time playing jazz as a self-described “bottom-tier” musician in New Orleans, Tozzi began working in Washington in 1964 at the Department of Defense, Office of the Secretary of the Army, where he worked on budget and strategic response issues. Tozzi served as an officer in the US Army Corps of Engineers.

Personal life[edit]

Today Tozzi resides in Alexandria, Virginia with his main office in Dupont Circle in Washington, DC. He is currently working on many projects, including nationwide medical marijuana legalization and the proposed DEA ban of the botanical plant Kratom. [7]

 

 

 

 

10/08/14

14A358

North Carolina v. League of Women Voters of North Carolina

G

The American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of North Carolina Legal Foundation, and the Southern Coalition for Social Justice filed a lawsuit challenging North Carolina's voter suppression law the very day it was signed by Gov. Pat McCrory in August 2013. The suit targets provisions of the law that eliminate a week of early voting, end same-day registration, and prohibit "out-of-precinct" voting. It seeks to stop North Carolina from applying these provisions, arguing that they unduly burden the right to vote and discriminate against African-American voters, in violation of the U.S. Constitution's equal protection clause and Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

 

On August 8, 2014 the district court denied plaintiffs application to enjoin these provisions before the 2014 election, but on October 1, 2014, the Fourth Circuit appellate court reversed the ruling.  On October 8, 2014 the U.S. Supreme Court temporarily stayed the Fourth Circuit decision

574/1

 

 

Syngenta