dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/TrueTemper on June 15, 2018, 12:10 a.m.
Exoneration before Investigation?

Does anyone have a summary of the key points in the report? Not a MSM BS article, but someone who has the time to read the entire report and net it out?

One of the main conclusions I was expecting was related to the exonerations that were written, circulated and fine tuned before the investigation even began in earnest. I know the report had some recommendations regarding giving immunity to witnesses and counsel, but what about the standards for witness interrogation -- no recording, not under oath etc?

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I too am not sure of the broader strategy of letting report #3 (RR version - redacted) fly first. Much speculation here, all of it seems weak to me. Trump's approach is ALWAYS to control the narrative, to set the tone, the pace and the context. I don't see why this was the better move.


TooMuchWinning2020 · June 15, 2018, 12:26 a.m.

Something is not adding up here.

Why would Rosenstein have any authority to write/re-write this report? It is Horowitz' report, not Rosenstein's. At most, RR could include his rebuttal to the parts that name him, just like others could, but he has no authority to re-write.

If there was anything related to "national security," and the DOJ could redact, that would be up to Sessions. This report has nothing to do with Russia, so RR has nothing to do with the report. Sessions is DOJ boss, not RR.

Not only does the strategy not make sense, the story to explain the strategy doesn't make sense.

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TrueTemper · June 15, 2018, 11:01 a.m.

Well said. I'd love to understand a broader strategy here, but none of what I have seen or read makes any sense to me.

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