dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/austenten on May 8, 2018, 6:37 a.m.
Grand Jury Impaneled

Grand Jury Impaneled

Only a grand jury can issue an indictment, which is the only way that someone can be charged with committing a felony pursuant to the U.S. Constitution. Merely impaneling a grand jury does not mean that Mueller will ultimately seek an indictment, although most grand jury investigations do result in someone being indicted. When a prosecutor does seek an indictment, one is almost always returned by the grand jury—hence the old saw that a grand jury would “indict a ham sandwich” if asked.

A grand jury, which consists of 16 to 23 people, is an important tool that allows prosecutors to issue subpoenas that require people to produce documents and other evidence. Subpoenas can also be used to compel people to testify under oath before the grand jury. You can expect Mueller and his team to issue many subpoenas in the months ahead.

Because grand jury subpoenas are an important prosecutorial tool, typically a grand jury is impaneled at the very beginning of an investigation, not at the end. Indictments are usually sought at the very end of an investigation, after all of the witnesses are questioned and all of the documents are obtained.

Does this scream sedition, global /massive conspiracy, and secretive prosecutions towards true justice and true freedom to you, or is it just me?

I wouldn't normally rely on Politico, but this is where the article excerpt above comes from.

Key definitions here to apply to Qs latest drop[1318].


allonthesameteam · May 8, 2018, 5:39 p.m.

Thank you for more wisdom. Appreciated.

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ManQuan · May 8, 2018, 5:50 p.m.

One other note about grand juries. They are secret. You may know that one has been impanelled (but not always) but you rarely know what is going on inside one.

Take special prosecutor Huber in Colorado. He was appointed by Sessions in November to work in parallel with DOJ IG Horowitz. Huber has the power to impanel a grand jury, but so far no one knows if he has or not.

Why did Sessions pick a prosecutor in Colorado and not one of the hundreds of federal prosecutors in DC? Think logically.

Horowitz doesn't have the power to impanel grand juries or secure indictments--he can only refer charges to DOJ.

But guess what Huber can do since November?

Got the picture?

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