MontyPython
It's Just a Flesh Wound!
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2019
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You've been whining and crying for months that he's a criminal and has committed offenses in the US. Now that he's going to go through our criminal what passes for justice system suddenly you want him to get off without facing punishment for his crimes. You just can't please some people.We don’t need a trial nor these additional criminal charges to do so. He could go in front of an immigration judge is my understanding and depending on the judge’s, he should be able to be immediately deported again
You've been whining and crying for months that he's a criminal and has committed offenses in the US. Now that he's going to go through our criminal what passes for justice system suddenly you want him to get off without facing punishment for his crimes. You just can't please some people.
You insisted that he was a criminal. Criminals go to court regardless of whether the victim or some dude on a message board want them prosecuted. It looks like you're getting what you wanted.His wife insisted he beat her. She made such accusations on two different occasions. But to the best of my knowledge she doesn’t want to press charges.
Why would I want him sent to trial for that if his wife doesn’t want to press charges?
You insisted that he was a criminal. Criminals go to court regardless of whether the victim or some dude on a message board want them prosecuted. It looks like you're getting what you wanted.
Fair enough. My view is that if someone commits a significant crime here then they need to face justice here. I'd say human trafficking is a significant enough crime for charges here.You seem to be intentionally changing the terms here. Yes, he is a criminal (illegal immigration). Yes, he should go to a court. I’ve never disputed that.
I’ve stated we should not be charging him with additional crimes And he does not need a trial. He does need an immigration hearing and should be deported again immediately after.
Fair enough. My view is that if someone commits a significant crime here then they need to face justice here. I'd say human trafficking is a significant enough crime for charges here.
An understandable view. I would tend to agree with some on here that if he can be deported, why spend our money on a trial?Fair enough. My view is that if someone commits a significant crime here then they need to face justice here. I'd say human trafficking is a significant enough crime for charges here.
Or maybe he just found out he has cancer.Many here have already judged Garcia to be guilty of various crimes. Curious timing of the following event, though, don't you think?
I suspect this dude resigned in protest.
However, days after Abrego Garcia was indicted by a federal grand jury in Nashville, Tennessee, Ben Schrader, the head of criminal division in the U.S. attorney’s office in Nashville, resigned.
“Earlier today, after nearly 15 years as an Assistant United States Attorney, I resigned as Chief of the Criminal Division at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Tennessee,” Schrader posted on LinkedIn. “It has been an incredible privilege to serve as a prosecutor with the Department of Justice, where the only job description I’ve ever known is to do the right thing, in the right way, for the right reasons. I wish all of my colleagues at the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Nashville and across the Department the best as they seek to do justice on behalf of the American people.”
Asked about Schrader’s resignation by NBC News, a spokesperson for the Justice Department said it does not comment on personnel changes. Schrader, reached via text on his cellphone, sent a two-word reply when asked why he had resigned: “No comment.”
