rmnka447, on 2019-September-13, 16:02, said:
The charges pending that may be pursued against McCabe are the result of criminal referrals from the DOJ's Inspector General Horowitz pursuant to his investigations. The Inspector General has been seen as fair and impartial throughout his investigations of possible misconduct at the DOJ and FBI. So portraying the refusal of the DOJ not to charge McCabe with criminal misconduct as partisan is absurd. There's still a process that needs to be gone through -- Grand Jury, etc. -- before he's indicted. And, of course, there must be a presumption of innocence until a persuasive case is made to the contrary.
If you'd read the scathing commentary by the IG about McCabe's conduct then maybe you'd be less inclined to portray the pending prosecution as political. Remember the IG give the FBI a pass on their conduct of the Hillary Clinton e-mail server investigation which most conservatives viewed as a whitewash.
Also, note that the DOJ has chosen not to pursue some other criminal referrals form the IG against McCabe and Comey recently.
Of course, if you view the world through a particular lens you'll point everything back toward being purely political. It's probably a case of transference - projecting into others one's own behavior. But you'd never admit that the Obama administration weaponized the government for political purposes like it did.
Don't be a twit. Barr has the final authority in the Justice Department. Justice is part of the executive branch. Trump is the head of the executive branch, hence he is Barr's boss. Barr believes the executive has virtually unlimited powers to start and stop investigation and the only restraint there is against the executive is impeachment.
There is no way that McCabe is being prosecuted without Barr's ( and thus Trump's) approval. He is actually not being prosecuted but persecuted.
Here's what the Lawfare article to which Richard linked had to say: (One paragraph separated for enphasis)
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The possibility of a criminal case against McCabe has smelled bad for a while. As one of us has spelled out in detail, this is not the kind of case that normally ends up as a criminal matter. While the Justice Department inspector general report that led to McCabe’s dismissal from the bureau is sharply critical of his conduct, indictments for false statements in internal Justice Department investigations, without some exacerbating factor, are exceedingly rare. This sort of misconduct is normally handled in internal disciplinary proceedings—and McCabe was already fired. Indeed, there’s nothing about the inspector general’s findings about McCabe that seem to make his case a likely candidate for a criminal disposition.
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What makes McCabe’s situation distinctive, rather, is the public campaign against him by the president of the United States, who has tweeted and spoken repeatedly about McCabe and publicly called for his prosecution.
It's hard to see how this is not a partisan persecution led by the president, aided by the AG.
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Harry Litman
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@harrylitman
A Grand Jury's refusal to return an indictment is something that happens maybe once every five years in a given office. If it occurred here, given the magnitude and visibility of the McCabe case, it is a stunning and humiliating rebuke for overreaching and playing politics.
Personally, I have no trouble with people who have conservative values. I disagree a lot but that is OK. What you are doing, though, with this continued rabid support of Trump is to swallow whole a reality created by gaslighting.
I strongly, strongly recommend a book titled: How Democracies Die to see how democratic republics have been taken down a little at a time from the inside out. An important weapon for the autocrat is to take over the departments - Justice being a critical one.