Scumbag twittler commutes the sentence of scumbag stone

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I'd LOVE to hear a Cult 45er explain this away. Wait, don't tell me, I'm way ahead of you: Stone is innocent. Why? Well, because Twittler SAYS he's innocent, right?

Trump commutes Roger Stone's sentence


By Kaitlan Collins, Katelyn Polantz and Sara Murray, CNN
Updated 7:59 PM ET, Fri July 10, 2020


(CNN)President Donald Trump on Friday commuted the prison sentence of his friend and former political adviser, Roger Stone, days before Stone was set to report to a federal prison in Georgia, according to the White House.

Trump and Stone spoke on Friday, according to two sources.
The clock for Stone was ticking. The Justice Department said this week it supports Stone going to prison Tuesday, and he's all but conceded the courts won't grant him a reprieve. The DOJ, which has been criticized for going easy on Stone, said the report date of July 14 that was set by his trial judge is "a reasonable exercise of that court's discretion based on the totality of the factual and legal circumstances."
Stone's criminal case has drawn intense political reactions since the beginning and a pardon could set off another round of Trump's attacks on the Russia investigation, as well as criticism that Stone benefited after he was found guilty because he's a friend of the President.
On Friday morning in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, a Stone associate visiting him confirmed Stone was at home, saying, "He has to be."
"We have not received any confirmation," if Stone will be pardoned, the man, who identified himself as Enrique Alejandro and said he works with Stone, said. "He is praying."
Trump has faced immense pressure from some of his political allies to pardon Stone after he was sentenced to more than three years in prison, in part for lying to Congress about his effort to set up a backchannel between the Trump campaign and WikiLeaks during the 2016 election. Stone was also convicted of witness tampering and obstruction related to Congress' inquiry into Russian meddling.
After requesting a 60-day delay in his reporting date citing the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, a federal judge delayed Stone's sentence by two weeks last month, according to court filings, ordering him to spend that time at home essentially in quarantine. He's slated to report to prison Tuesday. The DC Circuit Court of Appeals denied an emergency request from Stone to delay his prison sentence.
Several of Trump's advisers have voiced concern in recent months about the possible political repercussions of him clearing his former adviser. But Stone's allies have lobbied Trump for months to clear him, telling him Stone was facing devastating legal fees.
Not all the lobbying has been done behind closed doors. Some of Stone's closest confidantes, including his daughter and friend Michael Caputo, who now works in the administration, have advocated for a pardon on Fox News on Tucker Carlson's program, which Trump watches religiously.
Stone himself has circulated a petition on his website asking for Trump to grant him a full pardon. "It's time to stop the Deep State from working against our President," it says. "He stood with you against the hate directed at your campaign, and now he needs your help."
At times Trump has seemed reluctant to pardon Stone, fuming and bad-mouthing him to others. But the President sees his former confidant through the lens of himself, several people close to him say, viewing an attack on Stone as an attack on him.
Stone's conviction also came as part of the Mueller investigation, which Trump loathes, and Justice Department prosecutors explained in court Stone had lied to protect Trump. Trump's knowledge of Stone's efforts to get leaked Democratic documents in 2016 was a major question in the Mueller investigation, that Democrats on Capitol Hill still want to investigate.
Trump and Stone have been friends -- and sometimes frenemies -- for four decades. And while sources close to Stone are hopeful the President will intervene, they haven't received word that a pardon is imminent.
Stone, 67, was indicted in January 2019 when armed FBI agents arrested him at his Florida home. He had covered up records that would have revealed he sought to reach WikiLeaks in 2016 to help Trump, lied about the effort when he testified to a Republican-led congressional committee, then threatened another congressional witness, according to the charges brought by special counsel Robert Mueller and the DC US Attorney's Office.
Trump and Stone have tried to cast his prosecution and conviction as a politically motivated witch hunt. But prosecutors argued to a jury that Stone threatened a witness and lied in part to protect the President. The jury agreed, finding Stone guilty of all seven counts he faced.
Judge Amy Berman Jackson of the DC District Court sentenced him to 40 months in prison in February.
A gag order that was on his case and kept him essentially silent lifted soon after, and in recent weeks, Stone has railed against prosecutors, the judge and the media in persistent attempts to appeal to Trump. He's publicly appealed for a pardon, claiming he was treated unfairly by the justice system and that coronavirus is a death sentence if he is to surrender to prison.
In late June, when he was set to report to prison, Jackson ordered Stone to home confinement for two weeks before July 14, effectively placing him in quarantine.
Stone points out the Jesup, Georgia, prison now has 20 inmates who've tested positive for coronavirus. Two weeks ago, that prison had no confirmed cases.
"The number doubled since yesterday," Stone wrote on Friday.
Friday's filing also included an email sent by a DC US Attorney's prosecutor from late June. The DOJ now says it believes Stone should have to go to prison on Tuesday, following a judge's order.
"Your client has received at least as much if not more than the full and fair consideration which he is due under the circumstances," prosecutor JP Cooney wrote to Stone's lawyer on June 22.
Stone has been bearish that the appeals court would allow for another delay. On Instagram, he's written that his request for a delay is a "Hail Mary appeal" that the appeals court "may or may not grant."
"I want the President to know that I have exhausted all my legal remedies and that only an act of clemency will provide justice in my case and save my life!" Stone wrote late Monday.
40 years of friendship


The friendship between Trump and Stone stretches back roughly 40 years, albeit with some rocky periods along the way. They were first introduced in the 1970s through a man they both admired: Roy Cohn, the lawyer who served as Sen. Joseph McCarthy's counsel during his communism investigation and who was later in life disbarred for unethical conduct.
"Roy thought Roger was a very tough guy. Roy knew some very tough guys, I will tell you that. But Roy always felt that Roger was not only tough, but a smart guy and very political," Trump said in the 2017 Netflix documentary "Get Me Roger Stone."
In the years that followed, Stone befriended the Trump family, attended two of Trump's three weddings, went to the funerals for both of Trump's parents and spent years agitating for his friend to run for president, Stone said in interviews.
"I was like a jockey looking for a horse. You can't win the race if you don't have a horse. And he is a prime piece of political horse flesh, in my view," Stone said in the Netflix documentary about one of his efforts in the late 1980s to convince Trump to run for president.
In the same documentary, Trump confirmed that Stone had pressed him over and over again to make a bid for the Oval Office.
"Roger always wanted me to run for president. And over the years, every time a presidential race came up, he always wanted me to run," Trump said. "And I just didn't have interest at that time. And nor was the country in trouble like it is today."
There were periods where the two men barely spoke. In a 2008 interview in The New Yorker, Trump said, "Roger is a stone-cold loser. ... He always tries taking credit for things he never did."
But they always reconciled.
The 2016 campaign proved to be Trump's big moment. And Stone was at his side, at least at the beginning.
Trump announced his presidential bid in June 2015, with Stone serving as a senior adviser. Just two months later, Stone was out. Trump said he fired Stone. Stone said he quit.
Stone remained a staunch supporter of Trump's campaign anyway. He did television appearances cheerleading Trump, called then-candidate Trump to give him advice and made recommendations when he believed the campaign was in crisis.
Ahead of the Republican convention, some of Trump's allies worried he could lose the GOP nomination in a delegate fight. Stone and other Trump allies convinced Trump to bring Paul Manafort into the campaign to manage the convention.
While Trump won the nomination, Manafort ended up being convicted of financial and foreign lobbying crimes as a result of Mueller's investigation and is currently serving out his prison sentence.
Around the same time, the Trump campaign was eager to know what WikiLeaks had coming. At Stone's trial, former Trump deputy campaign manager Rick Gates testified that he was with Trump when Trump received a call from Stone about the planned release of hacked Democratic emails.
"After Mr. Trump got off the phone with Mr. Stone, what did Mr. Trump say?" the prosecutor asked Gates.
"He indicated more information would be coming," Gates responded.
In the following months, Stone bragged publicly about being in touch with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and appeared to predict that new document dumps would be coming.
The Mueller report also raised the possibility that Trump had lied to investigators in sworn answers about his communications with Stone regarding WikiLeaks.
Stone has long embraced no-holds-barred politicking and sports a tattoo of former President Richard Nixon on his back, as a tribute to his idol. Over his career, Stone earned a reputation as a dirty trickster and did little to try to water down the image.
"Roger has a really rough reputation. They talk about dirty trickster and lots of other things," Trump said in the documentary about Stone. "But I've known him for a long time and he's actually a quality guy."

CNN's John Couwels, Shimon Prokupecz and Marshall Cohen contributed to this story.
 

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WINNING

Something deadbeats and stiffs know nothing about
 
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Nothing like having friends in high places when the snakes are hissing at your toes.

F off snakes.
 

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Something deadbeats and stiffs know nothing about

Winning WHAT? He's still a convicted felon, and there may be state-as in, NOT pardonable-charges in his future. I thought you ignored my threads, you hypocritical, lying sack of shit?
 

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Nothing like having friends in high places when the snakes are hissing at your toes.

F off snakes.

So, you're perfectly ok with somebody convicted of 7 crimes possibly skating, as long you like them and/or their politics, huh? I've long thought you were a dishonest scumbag, thanks for completely confirming that.
 

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[h=1]‘This Was a Mistake’: Not All of Trump World Is Pleased With the President Commuting Roger Stone’s Sentence[/h]Pilar Melendez, Asawin Suebsaeng
July 10, 2020, 5:04 PM


https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-commutes-roger-stone-sentence-000422382.html#


https://www.tumblr.com/widgets/shar...he President Commuting Roger Stone’s Sentencehttps://www.facebook.com/dialog/fee...s-roger-stone-sentence-000422382.html&tsrc=fbhttps://twitter.com/intent/tweet?te...roger-stone-sentence-000422382.html&tsrc=twtr
bc581b471ada30a1dafbc7b6c80a85dc

Leah Millis/ReutersRoger Stone, a longtime Trump confidant convicted of lying to Congress about his connection to WikiLeaks and intimidating another witness to do the same, had his sentence commuted by President Trump on Friday—just a few days before he was set to report to jail.
President Trump had raised the possibility of clemency almost immediately after Stone, 67, was convicted last November, often complaining—without evidence—that Stone had been treated poorly by law enforcement or targeted unfairly.
In a statement announcing Stone's clemency, the White House described Stone as “a victim of the Russia Hoax that the Left and its allies in the media perpetuated for years in an attempt to undermine the Trump Presidency.”
“Mr. Stone, like every American, deserves a fair trial and every opportunity to vindicate himself before the courts. The President does not wish to interfere with his efforts to do so,” the White House wrote. “At this time, however, and particularly in light of the egregious facts and circumstances surrounding his unfair prosecution, arrest, and trial, the President has determined to commute his sentence. Roger Stone has already suffered greatly. He was treated very unfairly, as were many others in this case. Roger Stone is now a free man!”
Ex-Roger Stone Prosecutor: DOJ Under ‘Heavy Pressure’ to Spare Trump’s Friend
Grant Smith, a lawyer representing Stone, told The New York Times his client was “incredibly honored that President Trump used his awesome and unique power under the Constitution of the United States for this act of mercy.”
Likewise, many in Trumpworld rejoiced.
Michael Caputo, a close Stone friend and former Trump adviser who now serves as a senior administration official, told The Daily Beast Friday evening, “I still cannot speak to Roger [Stone] due to an unconstitutional court order, but I’ve ordered the lobster.”
Rudy Giuliani, another Trump confidant who’s served as the president’s personal lawyer, told The Daily Beast, “Justice was done. The treatment of Stone and the sentence was purely political. It was a perversion of the system of justice.”
And yet, elsewhere within the president’s inner sanctum, others were less than jubilant.
“This was a mistake,” said a senior White House official who had advised Trump against pardoning or intervening in the Stone matter. “But the president had made clear [for months] that he was going to get involved.”
This official was very much not alone in the West Wing, where various aides had for several months told the president to just stay out of it. Some had personal animus toward Stone, who has his fair share of enemies among the Trump orbit, perhaps most prominently Corey Lewandowski, the president’s former 2016 campaign manager who now works as a senior adviser to Trump 2020.
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff was also quick to denounce the move, saying that by granting the commutation, “Trump makes clear that there are two systems of justice in America: one for his criminal friends, and one for everyone else.”
The Biden campaign called the commutation an abuse of power and said Trump had chosen to make the move on a Friday night because he was “hoping to yet again avoid scrutiny as he lays waste to the norms and the values that make our country a shining beacon to the rest of the world.”
The commutation capped a week of mixed fortunes for Stone. He’d taken to begging Trump for a presidential pardon on Instagram after he had a last-ditch appeal denied—and before he was booted off Facebook and Instagram on Wednesday for coordinated inauthentic behavior linked to the Proud Boys far-right organization.
Hours before the presidential clemency, which came after Stone’s final request to postpone his sentencing date was denied, the 67-year-0ld told journalist Howard Fineman the president “knows I was under enormous pressure to turn on him. It would have eased my situation considerably. But I didn’t.”
On Thursday, Stone also told SiriusXM he was hoping for the pardon so he could continue to fight the charges against him in court.
“I would still have to battle it out on appeal, which frankly I want to do, because I want an opportunity to clear my name,” he said.
Stone was convicted last year of several charges, including lying to congressional investigators, witness tampering, and obstructing justice. Prosecutors argued he knowingly lied to House Intelligence Committee investigators about his attempts to learn more about Democratic Party emails hacked by Russia to hurt Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign. In an attempt to cover his tracks, Stone then forced another witness to lie about his connections.
Stone was due to report to prison on Tuesday to serve a 40-month prison sentence after numerous attempts to appeal his sentence fell flat. Most recently, his sentence was delayed by two weeks due to coronavirus at the medium-security prison in Jesup, Georgia, where Stone was to report.
Prosecutors had initially recommended a sentence of seven to nine years for Stone but the Department of Justice headquarters stepped in to shorten it on Feb. 11, calling the prosecutor’s recommendation “extreme and excessive and grossly disproportionate to Stone’s offenses.”
Nevertheless, the department said in a Thursday court filing that they supported Stone going to prison on July 14 despite a complaint from Stone that he would be exposed to coronavirus.
Trump had called the seven to nine year prison recommendation “a horrible and very unfair situation.” “The real crimes were on the other side, as nothing happens to them. Cannot allow this miscarriage of justice!” he tweeted earlier this year.
Hours after the DOJ’s intervention, all four of the prosecutors handling Stone’s case—Aaron Zelinsky, Adam Jed, Jonathan Kravis, and Michael Marando—filed separate notices advising the judge they were withdrawing immediately.
The former Republican operative—who once worked on Nixon’s 1972 campaign—worked with Trump for decades before joining the president’s campaign just after he formally announced his bid in June 2015. Although he left just two months later, Stone was still involved behind the scenes, campaign officials said.
During his week-long trial in Washington federal court, several former members of Trump’s inner circle testified Stone was viewed at the campaign’s “access point” to WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange. The connection, they said, was crucial to learn information about the anti-secrecy group’s plans to publish hacked Democratic National Committee emails.
“Roger is an agent provocateur. He’s an expert in the tougher side of politics, when you’re this far behind you’re going to have to use every tool in the toolbox,” Steven Bannon, Trump’s former chief strategist, testified under subpoena during the trial.
Trump Ally Roger Stone Gets 40 Months for Lying, Witness-Tampering
Throughout the campaign, prosecutors said, Stone secretly passed information from WikiLeaks to the Trump team about the stolen emails—which were later released at crucial points throughout the 2016 election to help secure the Republican nomination. In September 2017, Stone then lied to congressional investigators about these communications in order to protect the president.
“Roger Stone lied to the House Intelligence Committee because the truth looked bad for the Trump campaign and the truth looked bad for Donald Trump," Zelinsky said in his opening statements.
To further cover his tracks, Stone used threats to force former stand-up comedian and radio talk-show host Randy Credico to stay silent and lie about acting as an intermediary to WikiLeaks during his congressional deposition.
“Roger Stone doesn’t get to choose which facts he thinks are important, and lie about the rest of them. The committee is entitled to the truth of facts under investigation, and wherever the truth takes them,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan Kravis said in his closing statement.
The night before his conviction, Stone allegedly asked for a presidential pardon through his most loyal ally and proxy—right-wing conspiracy theorist, Alex Jones. According to the Infowars host, Stone slipped him a message in court begging Trump for clemency because “only a miracle can save me now.”
The next day, jurors convicted the self-proclaimed “dirty trickster” after less than two days of deliberations. Before Stone could even leave the court, a White House presidential pardon petition was created. Trump attacked the guilty verdict in a tweet, calling it “a double standard.”
“So they now convict Roger Stone of lying and want to jail him for many years to come,” Trump tweeted. “Well, what about Crooked Hillary, Comey, Strzok, Page, McCabe, Brennan, Clapper, Shifty Schiff, Ohr & Nellie, Steele & all of the others, including even Mueller himself? Didn’t they lie? A double standard like never seen before in the history of our Country?”
 

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I predicted this would happen along with Flynn in my Rubber Room thread.

Yes, he, like Flynn, are innocent.

But let us not forget this:

President Obama’s Pardon for Oscar Lopez Rivera Trades a Terrorist for Votes

In 1999, a year before Hillary Clinton was elected to the Senate from New York and a decade and a half before emails helped destroy her presidential ambitions, an adviser to her husband’s administration sent an email about proposed pardons of imprisoned Puerto Rican terrorists.

The pardons would be “fairly easy to accomplish and will have a positive impact among strategic communities in the U.S. (read, voters),” wrote Mayra Martinez-Fernandez, an adviser to the White House Working Group for Puerto Rico, according Debra Burlingame in The Wall Street Journal. Get that? Voters. Clinton, to be sure, issued the pardons.

Communists celebrated the pardons then, just as they did yesterday from Canada to Colombia to Cuba when President Obama commuted yet another convicted Puerto Rican terrorist’s sentence.

https://www.heritage.org/crime-and-...don-oscar-lopez-rivera-trades-terrorist-votes


You and savage are on the wrong side of this.

You will need to face the truth soon.

I just posted more proofs in my Rubber Room thread of the take downs happening as we speak.

This includes Pedogate and some really bad news for Hillary.
 

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Hillary was supposed to been have been arrested, convicted and put to death three years ago according to the "Q"UACKAnons-

what happened to that prediction and for that matter zillions more hich failed to come to pass?


Perhaps this group ought to either have their QUACKAnon "crystal ball" repaired or to go to Amazon, Ebay,etc. to buy another

one with some kind of warranty. lol
 

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I'd LOVE to hear a Cult 45er explain this away. Wait, don't tell me, I'm way ahead of you: Stone is innocent. Why? Well, because Twittler SAYS he's innocent, right?

Trump commutes Roger Stone's sentence


By Kaitlan Collins, Katelyn Polantz and Sara Murray, CNN
Updated 7:59 PM ET, Fri July 10, 2020

Senator Mitt Romney Calls Trump's Decision
to Commute Roger Stone's Sentence
'Historic Corruption'


Madeleine Carlisle,Time•July 11, 2020


On Saturday morning, Utah Sen. Mitt Romney became the first
Congressional Republican so far to speak out against President
Donald Trump’s Friday night decision to commute the sentence
of his longtime associate Roger Stone.
Stone had been sentenced to 40 months in prison for multiple felonies
including lying to Congress and attempting to obstruct the Congressional
investigation into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election.

“Unprecedented, historic corruption: an American president
commutes the sentence of a person convicted by a jury
of lying to shield that very president
,”
Romney tweeted Saturday.


Last November, a jury found Stone guilty of all seven counts
brought against him, including lying to Congress about his attempts
to contact WikiLeaks during the 2016 presidential election.
He was also found guilty of witness tampering and
obstructing a Congressional investigation.
 

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Hmmmm, why don't you reel of how many of those involved somebody convicted on 7 out 7 charges, many of which involved protecting the scumbag who is doing the pardoning. Stone himself said he could've made things easier on himself had he talked, what do you suppose he meant by that?

Do you ever take a break from being a fucking moron? You gonna be at Twittler's NH rally so that you can overestimate the crowd by 200%, Jagoff?
 

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Quoted for truth

I like this guy, he's obviously bright

So, you're complimenting yourself. Probably just a dumb joke, but, you're so stupid and senile, I'm not sure. Btw, wanna take a shot at addressing the question in # 13, Witless Willie? And, what happened to scornfully ignoring my threads, bitch?
 

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I am very happy that Mr. Stone is not going to Prison! He is a good person and was being put

into prison CAZ DAT BE WHAT DESPICABLE DEMOCRATS DO WHEN YA DON'T AGREE WITH

THEIR CRAP, IMO! F THEM!
azzkick(&^azzkick(&^azzkick(&^azzkick(&^azzkick(&^azzkick(&^
 

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