• 'Are you kidding me?': Biden-appointed judge torches DOJ for blowing of

    From Trump Was Right@21:1/5 to All on Sat Apr 6 13:45:14 2024
    XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh, alt.government.employees, alt.politics.usa
    XPost: alt.politics.republicans, alt.politics.guns

    A federal judge tore into the Justice Department on Friday for blowing
    off Hunter Biden-related subpoenas issued in the impeachment probe of
    his father, President Joe Biden, pointing out that a former aide to
    Donald Trump is sitting in prison for similar defiance of Congress.

    U.S. District Judge Ana Reyes, a Biden appointee on the federal District
    Court in Washington, spent nearly an hour accusing Justice Department
    attorneys of rank hypocrisy for instructing two other lawyers in the DOJ
    Tax Division not to comply with the House subpoenas.

    “There’s a person in jail right now because you all brought a criminal lawsuit against him because he did not appear for a House subpoena,”
    Reyes said, referring to the recent imprisonment of Peter Navarro, a
    former Trump trade adviser, for defying a subpoena from the Jan. 6
    select committee. “And now you guys are flouting those subpoenas. … And
    you don’t have to show up?”

    “I think it’s quite rich you guys pursue criminal investigations and put people in jail for not showing up,” but then direct current executive
    branch employees to take the same approach, the judge added. “You all
    are making a bunch of arguments that you would never accept from any
    other litigant.”

    It was a remarkable, frenetic thrashing in what was expected to be a
    relatively routine, introductory status conference after the House
    Judiciary Committee sued last month to enforce its subpoena of DOJ
    attorneys Mark Daly and Jack Morgan over their involvement in the
    investigation of Hunter Biden’s alleged tax crimes.

    Republicans are demanding the two attorneys testify and say it’s crucial
    for their ongoing impeachment probe of the elder Biden. But the Justice Department argues that subpoenaing two rank-and-file, or “line,”
    attorneys to seek details about an ongoing investigation would be a
    violation of the separation of powers.

    Reyes has been on the bench for just over a year. Rarely seeming to stop
    to catch her breath, she repeatedly dressed down DOJ attorney James
    Gilligan as he sought to explain the department’s position, scolding him
    at times for interrupting her before continuing a torrid tongue-lashing
    that DOJ rarely receives from the bench. She delved into great detail
    about the nuances of House procedure — like the chamber’s rule against allowing executive branch lawyers to attend depositions — and even asked whether the Judiciary Committee had followed internal rules requiring
    that the ranking Democrat on the panel be notified of the subpoena to
    the DOJ attorneys before it was issued.

    Yet, perhaps even more remarkably, Reyes seemed inclined to support
    DOJ’s central argument that the line attorneys cannot be compelled to
    answer substantive questions from Congress. They just need to show up
    and assert privileges on a question-by-question basis, she said — the
    type of thing, she said, that DOJ demands from others “seven days a week
    … and twice on Sunday.”

    Indeed, while Reyes was withering in her attacks on the DOJ’s position,
    she was similarly unflinching in her criticism of the House for its
    stance in the dispute — particularly its claim that line lawyers working
    on the Hunter Biden tax probe are not entitled to attorney-client
    privilege. She also said she thought it absurd for the House to argue
    that privilege was waived because it was obscuring some crime or fraud
    within the executive branch.

    “I don’t think you’re going to win that fight,” the judge told House Counsel Matthew Berry, saying at one point that she “can’t imagine” ruling for the House on that issue.

    At bottom, Reyes said she viewed it as unlikely that the two DOJ
    attorneys would ultimately be required to answer anything of substance
    from Congress, but that the department’s effort to prevent them from
    showing up at all was a brazen affront.

    “I imagine that there are hundreds, if not thousands of defense
    attorneys … who would be happy to hear that DOJ’s position is, if you don’t agree with a subpoena, if you believe it’s unconstitutional or unlawful, you can unilaterally not show up,” the judge said.

    Gilligan suggested that the employees subpoenaed in the dispute at issue
    are current employees, while Navarro and another Trump adviser who was convicted of similar charges, Steve Bannon, were no longer on the government’s payroll when their testimony was demanded.

    The judge didn’t seem impressed with that distinction and downplayed the significance of a Trump-era Office of Legal Counsel opinion contending
    that executive branch employees could defy such subpoenas if Justice
    Department lawyers were not allowed to be present.

    “Last time I checked, the Office of Legal Counsel was not the court,”
    she said.

    Reyes also sounded stunned when Gilligan refused to commit to
    instructing the two subpoenaed lawyers to show up if the House dropped
    its objection to allowing government counsel to sit in the room.

    “It would be a different situation,” Gilligan said. “I cannot answer
    that now.”

    “Are you kidding me?” the judge responded.

    Reyes ultimately ordered the Justice Department to send lawyers to the
    Capitol next week to confer with Berry and attempt to hammer out a
    workable agreement. And she said that if the two sides did not work out
    a deal, she planned to require them to estimate the total cost to the
    taxpayers of continuing the legal fight, which past precedent suggests
    could drag out for years.

    “I don’t think the taxpayers want to fund a grudge match between the executive and the legislative,” she said. “Bad cases make bad law. …
    This is a bad, bad case for both of you.”

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/are-you-kidding-me-biden- appointed-judge-torches-doj-for-blowing-off-hunter-biden-related- subpoenas-from-house-gop/ar-BB1l9mgD

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