2012 Presidential Records Case Seeking to Obtain Tapes from Bill Clinton Ruling Points to the Illegality of the Mar-a-Lago Raid with Court Established Legal Precedent

Judicial Watch sought to obtain audio tapes from Bill Clinton that were made while he was in office in 2012. https://bit.ly/3pHygCG

The U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson, rejected the arguments stating that the tapes belonged to Mr. Clinton "even though they contained a broad range of presidential matters".

She asserted that:

- The National Archives and Records Administration had no power to “seize control of them” because Mr. Clinton had used his authority under the Presidential Records Act to declare the recordings part of his personal records.
Tom Fitton of Judicial Watch states:

- “What it highlights is that under the law, and the Justice Department’s prior legal positions, if Clinton had the tapes, they are presumably personal,”

Fitton also affirmed:

- The 2012 ruling against Judicial Watch involving the Clinton tapes establishes that the president, not the National Archives, has the authority to declare whether records are personal.

- The FBI never raided Hillary's residence to take possession of the server which she illegally had in her home.

Yet Trump, with the court affirmation of his liberty to establish possession of the records as personal under the Presidential Records Act as affirmed in the 2012 Judicial Watch case, was raided by the FBI for records they had no right to under the Presidential Records Act.

Judicial Watch is challenging this raid, as is Trump and by established precedent he has the legal capacity to successfully do so.

Unless, of course, the Justice System is as broken and corrupt as many believe it is. Then, only injustice reigns as many also believe does these days.

#mar-a-lago #trumpraid #biden #trump #judicialwatch #corruptcourts #fbi
2012 Presidential Records Case Seeking to Obtain Tapes from Bill Clinton Ruling Points to the Illegality of the Mar-a-Lago Raid with Court Established Legal Precedent Judicial Watch sought to obtain audio tapes from Bill Clinton that were made while he was in office in 2012. https://bit.ly/3pHygCG The U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson, rejected the arguments stating that the tapes belonged to Mr. Clinton "even though they contained a broad range of presidential matters". She asserted that: - The National Archives and Records Administration had no power to “seize control of them” because Mr. Clinton had used his authority under the Presidential Records Act to declare the recordings part of his personal records. Tom Fitton of Judicial Watch states: - “What it highlights is that under the law, and the Justice Department’s prior legal positions, if Clinton had the tapes, they are presumably personal,” Fitton also affirmed: - The 2012 ruling against Judicial Watch involving the Clinton tapes establishes that the president, not the National Archives, has the authority to declare whether records are personal. - The FBI never raided Hillary's residence to take possession of the server which she illegally had in her home. Yet Trump, with the court affirmation of his liberty to establish possession of the records as personal under the Presidential Records Act as affirmed in the 2012 Judicial Watch case, was raided by the FBI for records they had no right to under the Presidential Records Act. Judicial Watch is challenging this raid, as is Trump and by established precedent he has the legal capacity to successfully do so. Unless, of course, the Justice System is as broken and corrupt as many believe it is. Then, only injustice reigns as many also believe does these days. #mar-a-lago #trumpraid #biden #trump #judicialwatch #corruptcourts #fbi
BIT.LY
Presidential records found right in Clinton’s drawer
A 2012 court case denying access to White House audiotapes kept in former President Bill Clinton’s sock drawer after he left office could help the Trump legal team in its battle to retrieve records that the FBI seized from Mar-a-Lago this month.
0 Comments 1 Shares 908 Views
Sponsored

We are 100% funded for October.

Thanks to everyone who helped out. 🥰

Xephula monthly operating expenses for 2024 - Server: $143/month - Backup Software: $6/month - Object Storage: $6/month - SMTP Service: $10/month - Stripe Processing Fees: ~$10/month - Total: $175/month

Xephula Funding Meter

Please Donate Here