> The documents that have been provided so far are a fraction of those requested by Waters, whose committee has also sent subpoenas to Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, Royal Bank of Canada, Bank of America and JP Morgan Chase. The Royal Bank of Canada is in the process of complying with the subpoena, according to a source. The other banks have missed the subpoena deadline of May 6.
I'm taking this to mean that these aren't duplicates, they're records of Trump's dealings with different banks, which would all be different
@TimStone Wow, that's been a long time coming. The details were pretty shocking in its brazen corruption when they first came out; kind of surprised it took as long as it did
...something something... wheels of justice grinding slowly...
It is very simple, even your proletariat brain should be able to understand. If a business is going well it is the work of the CEO and Board of Directors and they should be rewarded. If a business is doing poorly then it's the fault of people for not buying the products and the CEO and Board of Directors should be incentivized to do their best!
well this guy said "wait that's communism" and his company did a series of competing departments to the detriment of the whole
for example they had like a mother's day issue of the catalog one time and instead of saying "hmm, what would work best for this" and deciding "literally anything but hardware", hardware stole that cover
My understanding is that the ad firm was tied to North so I guess this is fairly predictable and I'm unclear how "unfairly maligning Oliver North" is a legal matter, BUT NEVERTHELESS
This raises the question of whether they couldn't get computer crime charges without Manning's testimony, and if that's the case, pushing the 1st Amendment envelope because of a protest to the grand jury process does…not seem like a win :/