>Where We Go Juan, We Go All
>San Jose police fire rubber bullets at own racial bias trainer during protest, maiming his testicle
Derrick Sanderlin, a 27-year-old community organizer, suffered potentially permanent injuries by a rubber bullet at a May 29 protest demonstration, the mayor’s office said in a press release Monday.
Sanderlin, who knows San Jose Police Chief Eddie Garcia personally, said he was disheartened to see how officers were treating protesters. Video captured by KABC-TV’s news helicopter overhead purportedly showed the moments an officer fired a riot gun at Sanderlin, who had approached with his hands up.
https://www.sanjoseca.gov/Home/Components/News/News/1409/4959
>https://www.foxnews.com/politics/susan-rice-dc-statehood-oped
welcome home
>https://twitter.com/mariaisa
Another attempt of United States Forces in Syira to cut the Russia patrol
https://twitter.com/aldin_ww/status/1270808386112815104
>How long were you locked up for?
>https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1270842639903006720
https://s3.amazonaws.com/lifesite/Open_Letter_President_Donald_Trump.pdf
The company behind the expedition, Atlanta-based salvage firm RMS Titanic Inc., anticipates that it will begin before the end of August. The mission would involve recovering the radio equipment from a deck house near the Titanic's grand staircase. However, a submersible vehicle may have to cut into the rapidly deteriorating roof of the house if the underwater vehicle is unable to enter via a skylight.
https://apnews.com/d15d5490c084574acb45cb6794bc937e
https://apnews.com/2347ff4db147a286b8a62ef704aed692
Ex-judge says push to dismiss Flynn case is abuse of power
Officials have said they sought to dismiss the case in the interest of justice, upon the recommendation of a U.S. attorney who had been appointed by Attorney General William Barr to review the handling of the Flynn investigation.
Gleeson slammed the Justice Department’s motion to dismiss the case, saying the arguments from prosecutors were “riddled” with legal errors.
“The Government’s ostensible grounds for seeking dismissal are conclusively disproven by its own briefs filed earlier in this very proceeding,” Gleeson wrote. “They contradict and ignore this Court’s prior orders, which constitute law of the case. They are riddled with inexplicable and elementary errors of law and fact. And they depart from positions that the Government has taken in other cases.”
Sullivan also asked Gleeson to explore whether he should hold Flynn in “criminal contempt for perjury.”
As part of his plea, Flynn had to admit in court, under oath, that he lied to the FBI and violated federal law. It is a crime to lie under oath in court.
In the filing, Gleeson said it was clear that Flynn had committed perjury and should be punished but that it should be a factor considered at his sentencing, as opposed to additional charges being brought against him.
“This approach — rather than a separate prosecution for perjury or contempt — aligns with the Court’s intent to treat this case, and this Defendant, in the same way it would any other,” Gleeson wrote.
Gleeson was a federal judge in New York for more than two decades. Before becoming a judge, he had been a federal prosecutor and handled numerous high-profile cases, including the case against late Gambino crime family boss John Gotti. He’s been in private practice since 2016.
A federal appeals court is set to hear arguments Friday about Sullivan’s refusal to immediately dismiss the case. Flynn’s attorneys have asked the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit to step in and force Sullivan to end to the case. They have also accused the judge of being biased, arguing he overstepped his authority when he did not immediately grant the Justice Department’s request to dismiss the case.
Sullivan has separately scheduled arguments on the dismissal motion for July 16.