Anonymous ID: a63916 Sept. 11, 2018, 4:48 p.m. No.2982040   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2053 >>2055 >>2099 >>2230 >>2603 >>2749

That bitch Sally Quillian Yates has hired her employer, King & Spalding.

Employee discount? Kek

 

Only one of all the freaks I've seen in person. Arrogant, condescending, snotty.

Extra justice for Sally.

 

https://www.ajc.com/news/local/former-attorney-general-sally-yates-has-new-job/9HNGvwQ3GF1RndVtHPq3KN/

 

Sally Yates is rejoining the Atlanta-based law firm where she began her career. The former U.S. Attorney General has been named a partner for King & Spalding’s government investigations team, the firm said Tuesday.

 

Yates, 57, is a 27-year veteran of the Department of Justice, including five years as the first female U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia. Yates was the acting attorney general for the first 10 days of the Trump administration, but Donald Trump fired her for refusing to defend his travel ban. Since then, she has served as a lecturer at Georgetown University.

 

“I’m excited to get back to practicing law with the firm where I started my career. Not only was K&S my first legal home, it has an unparalleled tradition of legal excellence, uncompromising ethics, and commitment to civic engagement and public service,” Yates said in an emailed statement. “I’m looking forward to building upon the firm’s independent investigations practice for public and private organizations and boards, and helping organizational leadership navigate complex and sensitive challenges.”

 

Yates becomes a partner in the firm’s Special Matters team and will head up an independent investigations group that includes several other former government enforcement lawyers, including five former U.S. Attorneys. Yates’s successor as U.S. Attorney in Atlanta, John Horn, joined King & Spalding in March.

 

Yates earned her bachelor’s and law degrees at the University of Georgia and joined King & Spalding in 1986 before her government career. She will work both in Atlanta and in Washington D.C. in her new role, the firm said.

 

Despite speculation, Yates recently told The Associated Press she has no plans to run for office.

 

"I think I've been really clear that that's just not something I'm interested in,” she said.

 

Yates previously tried numerous high-profile cases, including serving as the lead prosecutor in the trial for Olympic bomber Eric Rudolph.

Anonymous ID: a63916 Sept. 11, 2018, 4:58 p.m. No.2982221   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2507

>>2982073

>https://www.nytimes.com/2018/09/11/magazine/a-trail-of-bread-crumbs-leading-conspiracy-theorists-into-the-wilderness.html

 

That much effort put forth toward condescencion smacks of panic

Because that's exactly what it is

Anonymous ID: a63916 Sept. 11, 2018, 5:02 p.m. No.2982284   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>2982053

Even my wife said she wanted to trip her at the event where we saw her, "just to watch her go splat"

Women are MEAN and they remember shit FOREVER

There again, something we've been proving repeatedly for a long time here

Anonymous ID: a63916 Sept. 11, 2018, 5:32 p.m. No.2982777   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Suddenly the Office of Legal Counsel has entered the game!

 

Basic premise: OLC says presidents can be prosecuted

Liberals: but muh Trump

Q Team: Oh, you wish. Nope, Obama.

 

Ryan Goodman

‏Verified account @rgoodlaw

Aug 21

 

Ryan Goodman Retweeted Ryan Goodman

 

Re legal implications for Donald J. Trump:

 

Even if a sitting President is immune from criminal prosecution, the overwhelming consensus view on the law (including Dept of Justice's Office of Legal Counsel memo) concludes that the President can be prosecuted when he leaves office