FTA:

“The court denied without comment special counsel Jack Smith’s request asking the justices to circumvent the normal appeals court process and quickly decide the question, which looms large in Trump’s prosecution in Washington over allegations of election interference.”

  • Funderpants
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    961 year ago

    Nothing to see here, certainly not a Conservative court helping delay the outcome as much as possible to help the man that gave them this power.

  • @Rapidcreek
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    301 year ago

    My sense is the Supremes are looking for a way to avoid this ruling, and pass it off to the DC Circuit. So the stay is lifted, the trial goes on while trump pursues his district level appeals.

     

    • Nougat
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      101 year ago

      I believe the stay remains in place pending all appeals.

      • @Rapidcreek
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        61 year ago

        The DC court is only a cou0le of weeks away. January 9th I believe. If they rule against Trmp, they’ll also probably lift the stay.

        • Nougat
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          1 year ago

          Yes, that’s when they begin to hear oral arguments. The DC Circuit Court of Appeals is notoriously slow with their rulings. They took a year to rule that Trump could be sued for damages related to Jan 6. Not that he was liable, mind you, but that he wasn’t immune from civil suit.

          How long it will take the court to rule is an unknown, but the pace at which they are moving the case forward to a hearing indicates they intend to move quickly on ruling as well.

          Judge Chutkan issued the stay, which is essentially automatic and procedural. Once the appeals court rules on the case, the stay is lifted.

    • @Dippy
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      21 year ago

      Or tired of all the trump shit being flooded their way like the rest of the US.

      I know they are a majority conservative and want their candidate, but even if elected it’s not going to stop cases about him having to go to them and loading them up with more and more work. I’d be annoyed.

      • Neato
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        71 year ago

        I’m confused. I’m sure SCOTUS is annoyed at having to deal with so many cases from just 1 person. I’m annoyed at my job when 1 customer makes a lot of extra work for us. That’s like, every damn day at most jobs, though.

        They can decline to take cases which means that they are agreeing with the lower court rulings. The only other option is for law enforcement to not pursue charges against a felonious former president.

        • @Dippy
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          41 year ago

          Yea that’s the point. At some point could just be lazy and not take it and divert responsibility by agreeing with the lower courts, a lot easier then actually hearing it.

          At work I do a lot to avoid having more work come my way. If I can push it off. 9 times out of 10 I’m pushing it somewhere else.

  • @2piradians
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    281 year ago

    None of the Justices dissented on this decision. Does that suggest they all agree that Trump should exhaust the appeals before they make the final ruling?

    • @jordanlundOPM
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      191 year ago

      I’m of two lines of thought…

      1. It could mean they’re in the tank for Trump and are intent on delay, delay, delay.

      2. It could mean that they feel a process this important shouldn’t skip steps and they want to see what the appeals court has to say.

      I keep flipping back and forth. :( I wish they had commented.

      • @NounsAndWords
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        61 year ago

        I think there is historically low trust in the Supreme Court and the entire institution’s power is based on trust (as opposed to the executives’s that’s based on an enormous military) and anything that vaguely looks like taking a side on this could too the balance.

        Roberts has seemed extremely aware of this issue for a long time on more political cases.

    • @[email protected]
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      121 year ago

      That’s kind of my take. Too many people want to paint SCOTUS as a single (and usually corrupt) entity but there’s a much wider diversity of opinions expressed across SCOTUS which often gets left out when we talk about their rulings. A complete lack of dissent from all justices signals that there is indeed some rationale here beyond partisan politics. Given the importance of the matter and the many many consequences of any given ruling on it, it makes sense to me that they would hold off and let the appellate courts chew on it for a while. By holding off they are allowing a wider array of judge’s opinions to be heard which can only enrich the arguments they’ll hear when and if they do ultimately take the case.

      • @someguy3
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        101 year ago

        The workers in this case, who drive concrete mixers, went out on strike. Drivers allowed Glacier to load their trucks with concrete. At the appointed hour for the strike, several drivers drove their trucks back to Glacier’s headquarters and walked off the job. The company was unable to deliver the concrete and some of it hardened, requiring the company to scramble to find a way to safely dump the concrete, destroy it, and cart it away.

        Glacier sued the union in state court for “tortious destruction” of its property – the spoiled concrete. The Washington Supreme Court dismissed the case…

        The National Labor Relations Board – the federal agency responsible for enforcing labor law — has long held that unions that fail to take “reasonable precautions” may not be protected by the NLRA when strikes lead to damage to perishable goods or property. The court’s decision on Thursday relied on Glacier’s allegations that the Teamsters purposely timed the strike to ensure that the concrete would harden by choosing to strike only after Glacier had “batched” the wet concrete into the trucks.

        Fascinating but I don’t see how that applies here.

  • @reddig33
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    131 year ago

    Ridiculous. Do your fucking jobs.

  • @JeeBaiChow
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    121 year ago

    So they now waste the country’s time and effort in the lower courts until the appeals process inevitsbly leads them right back to the SCOTUS for a ruling? How is this constructive?

    • @jordanlundOPM
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      It gives the Supreme Court more legal opinions on which to say “Yes, that’s correct” or “No, that’s not correct” and explain their reasoning.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    111 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    WASHINGTON — Steering clear of a political firestorm for now, the Supreme Court said Friday it would not immediately decide the key question of whether Donald Trump has broad immunity for actions he took as president challenging his 2020 election loss.

    The court denied without comment special counsel Jack Smith’s request asking the justices to circumvent the normal appeals court process and quickly decide the question, which looms large in Trump’s prosecution in Washington over allegations of election interference.

    In asking the court to step in on an expedited basis, Smith said the case “presents a fundamental question at the heart of our democracy: whether a former President is absolutely immune from federal prosecution for crimes committed while in office.”

    On Dec. 7, Washington-based U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan denied Trump’s motion to dismiss his indictment on presidential immunity and constitutional grounds.

    Trump’s lawyers argue that his role in questioning the result of the election was within the “outer perimeter” of his official responsibilities as president, citing a 1982 Supreme Court ruling about presidential immunity.

    They also say the Senate’s acquittal of Trump following impeachment proceedings over his role in events that led to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol means he cannot be separately prosecuted for the same actions.


    The original article contains 463 words, the summary contains 213 words. Saved 54%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • @jordanlundOPM
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    71 year ago

    Been a bit since I updated this one:

    If you’re trying to keep track of where we’re at in the Trump prosecutions:

    Updated 12/23/2023

    Georgia
    13 state felonies
    Election Interference
    Investigation
    Indictment
    Arrest <- You Are Here
    All 19 defendants have surrendered.
    Trial - A trial date of Aug. 5, 2024 has been requested, not approved yet.
    Three defendants, Kenneth Chesebro, Sidney Powell, and bail bondsman Scott Hall, have all pled guilty and have agreed to testify in other cases.
    The judge in the case has set a deadline of December 1st for all motions to be filed, expect a trial date at some point after that.
    Conviction
    Sentencing

    Washington, D.C.
    4 federal felonies
    January 6th Election Interference
    Investigation
    Indictment
    Arrest <- You Are Here
    Trial - March 4th, 2024, one day before Super Tuesday primaries.
    Jack Smith had requested that the Supreme Court immediately rule on Trump’s immunity defense, the Court rejected the request, requiring it to go through the usual appeals process first. Conviction
    Sentencing

    New York
    34 state felonies
    Stormy Daniels Payoff
    Investigation
    Indictment
    Arrest <- You Are Here
    Trial - March 25th, 2024
    Conviction
    Sentencing

    Florida
    40 federal felonies
    Top Secret Documents charges
    Investigation
    Indictment
    Original indictment was for 37 felonies.
    3 new felonies were added on July 27, 2023.
    Arrest <- You Are Here
    Trial - May 20, 2024
    Conviction
    Sentencing

    Other grand juries, such as for the documents at Bedminster, or the Arizona fake electors, have not been announced.

    The E. Jean Carroll trial for sexual assault and defamation where Trump was found liable and ordered to pay $5 million before immediately defaming her again resulting in a demand for $10 million is not listed as it’s a civil case and not a crimimal one. That trial date is currently set for January 15th, the same day as the Iowa caucus. and has now been determined to be for damages only as Trump was already found liable.

    As a function of the January 6th and Georgia trials, there are now lawsuits in two states to bar Trump from the primary ballot based on the insurrection clause of the 14th Amendment.

    Colorado: 12/19/23 - The Colorado Supreme Court has ruled that Trump is not eligible for the primary ballot due to being barred by the 14th Amendment as an insurrectionist.

    Minnesota: 9/12/2023 - Lawsuit filed.

    A long-shot write in candidate for President has also filed suits seeking to bar Trump from the ballot in Florida, Idaho, Kansas, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Utah, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

  • TimLovesTech (AuDHD)(he/him)
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    61 year ago

    All the more interested to see what they do with the 14th amendment issue before them. Will they kick that can down the road also until more states have removed him and it’s “too late” for them to do anything - thus making him intelligible through delaying and then just shrug off blame? Sounds like a great way to have an all out shitfest of an election they already know he is ineligible for, but love to watch the country burn.

  • HuddaBudda
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    31 year ago

    I would have thought they would want to get to the bottom of that ASAP now that Colorado basically banned Trump from the ballot.

    That being said, it sounds like they would rather have trump in Legal Limbo, then to get Colorado back.

  • Maeve
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    21 year ago

    I think Thomas probably has something to do with this. No logical reason why, other than they’re both dirty, greedy, and both probably have the goods on each other. Probably Roberts too?