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Originally posted by Mike View PostPerfect timing for the 2nd Trump administration!
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Essentially, it limits the power of federal agencies to create policy. That responsibility, of course, lies with Congress. It will be much harder for them to created a bunch of regulatory nonsense from a narrow statute as they do now. It is a win if you favor limiting the power of government bureaucrats.
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The Supreme Court narrowed the Justice Department's use of a federal obstruction statute leveled against scores of people who breached the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
There are 52 cases in which a defendant was convicted and sentenced on charges where the obstruction count was the sole felony, and of those, 27 are currently incarcerated, according to the Justice Department.Last edited by Mike; June 28, 2024, 10:05 AM.
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Need to read that decision closely but the difference between Roberts and ACB is interesting. Seems like another case where one side wants to read something literally (ACB), and the other is using context (Roberts) to say the law can't possibly mean that. Roberts concedes on page 16 that the law can be read literally to allow these prosecutions, but he doesn't believe Congress intended it to be read that way.
23-5572 Fischer v. United States (06/28/2024) (supremecourt.gov)
Convictions will be overturned. I don't think this will make it literally impossible to retry them, but the burden of proof (on the govt) is much higher now if I understand it correctly.
Ironically, the Fischer guy who brought this suit might not benefit a ton. He was convicted of six other charges, including assaulting an officer.
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