Examples of GOP Leadership

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Ray Epps, a target of Jan. 6 conspiracy theories, gets a year of probation for his Capitol riot role
A man targeted by right-wing conspiracy theories about the U.S. Capitol riot was sentenced on Tuesday to a year of probation for joining the Jan. 6, 2021, attack by a mob of fellow Donald Trump supporters.

Ray Epps, a former Arizona resident who was driven into hiding by death threats, pleaded guilty in September to a misdemeanor charge. He received no jail time, and there were no restrictions placed on his travel during his probation, but he will have to serve 100 hours of community service.

He appeared remotely by video conference and wasn't in the Washington, D.C., courtroom when Chief Judge James Boasberg sentenced him. Prosecutors had recommended a six-month term of imprisonment for Epps.

Epps' sentencing took place in the same building where Trump was attending an appeals court hearing as the Republican former president's lawyers argued he's immune from prosecution on charges he plotted to overturn the results of the 2020 election he lost.

Fox News Channel and other right-wing media outlets amplified conspiracy theories that Epps, 62, was an undercover government agent who helped incite the Capitol attack to entrap Trump supporters. Epps filed a defamation lawsuit against Fox News last year, saying the network was to blame for spreading baseless claims about him.

Epps told the judge that he now knows that he never should have believed the lies about a stolen election that Trump and his allies told and that Fox News broadcast.

“I have learned that truth is not always found in the places that I used to trust,” said Epps, who asked for mercy before learning his sentence.

The judge noted that many conspiracy theorists still refuse to believe that the Capitol riot was an insurrection carried out by Trump supporters. The judge said he hopes that the threats against Epps and his wife subside so they can move on with their lives.

“You were hounded out of your home," the judge said. “You were hounded out of your town.”

Federal prosecutors have backed up Epps’ vehement denials that he was a government plant or FBI operative. They say Epps has never been a government employee or agent beyond serving in the U.S. Marines from 1979 to 1983.

The ordeal has forced Epps and his wife to sell their property and businesses and flee their home in Queen Creek, Arizona, according to his lawyer.

“He enjoys no golf, tennis, travel, or other trappings of retirement. They live in a trailer in the woods, away from their family, friends, and community,” attorney Edward Ungvarsky wrote in a court filing.

The internet-fueled accusations that upended Epps' life have persisted even after the Justice Department charged him with participating in the Jan. 6 siege.

“Fear of demented extremists has no apparent end in sight so long as those who spread hate and lies about Mr. Epps don’t speak loudly and publicly to correct the messaging they delivered,” Epps' lawyer wrote.

Epps pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct on restricted grounds, a charge punishable by a maximum of one year behind bars.

A prosecutor, Michael Gordon, said Epps doesn't deserve to be inundated with death threats but should serve jail time for his conduct on Jan. 6.

“He didn't start the riot. He made it worse.” Gordon told the judge.

Epps' lawyer sought six months of probation without any jail time. Ungvarsky says his client went to Washington on Jan. 6 to peacefully protest the certification of the Electoral College vote for Joe Biden, a Democrat, over Trump, a Republican.

“You're never going to see Mr. Epps commit a crime again,” the defense attorney said.

Prosecutors say Epps encouraged the mob to storm the Capitol, helped other rioters push a large metal-framed sign into a group of officers and participated in “a rugby scrum-like group effort” to push past a line of police officers.

“Even if Epps did not physically touch law enforcement officers or go inside of the building, he undoubtedly engaged in collective aggressive conduct,” Gordon, an assistant U.S. attorney, wrote in a court filing.

Epps surrendered to the FBI two days after the riot after learning that agents were trying to identify him. He agreed to be interviewed by FBI agents as well as by the House committee that investigated the Jan. 6 insurrection.

The government initially declined to prosecute Epps in 2021 after the FBI investigated his conduct on Jan. 6 and found insufficient evidence to charge him with a crime, according to Ungvarsky. Epps isn't accused of entering the Capitol or engaging in any violence or destruction on Jan. 6.

“Mr. Epps was one of many who trespassed outside the Capitol building. Through the exercise of prosecutorial discretion, most of those persons will never be charged,” the defense lawyer wrote.

More than 1,200 defendants have been charged with Capitol riot-related federal crimes. Over 900 of them have pleaded guilty or been convicted after trials decided by a judge or jury. Approximately 750 rioters have been sentenced, with nearly two-thirds getting some term of imprisonment.

Epps once served as an Arizona chapter leader for the Oath Keepers, but he parted ways with the anti-government extremist group a few years before the Jan. 6 attack.

Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes and other members were convicted of seditious conspiracy for plotting to stop the peaceful transfer of presidential power from Trump to Biden after the 2020 election. Rhodes was sentenced last year to 18 years in prison.

Fox News hasn't responded to messages from The Associated Press seeking comment on Epps' lawsuit.
 

Giggsy70

Well-Known Member
Hearing a lawyer trying to justify a president ordering Seal Team 6 to assassinate a political opponent as not criminally prosecutable says it all. Absolutely ludacris argument. How does it go "Lock him up, Lock him up"
 

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GOP effort to impeach official who removed Trump from Maine ballot voted down
The Democrat-controlled Maine Legislature voted down a Republican effort to impeach the state’s chief election official for kicking former President Trump off the ballot for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol attack.

In an 80-60 party-line vote, the state House struck down the impeachment resolution going after Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows (D). She slammed the GOP effort last week as “political theater” while also promising to comply with any legal development connected to her historical decision to remove Trump from Maine’s March 5 primary.

Bellows became the first secretary of state in history to remove a candidate running for president after referencing the U.S. Constitution’s insurrection clause. The decision was swiftly appealed by Trump’s team and is currently in Maine’s Superior Court.

Maine’s GOP members slammed Bellows’s ruling as “election interference,” arguing that people feel “absolutely disenfranchised.”

State Rep. James Thorne, a Republican representing Carmel, said Bellows’s decision “does nothing but further divide the political banner between the parties, and indeed the people of the state of Maine, according to The Associated Press. State Rep. Michael Soboleski, of Phillips, called it “election interference of the highest order.”

“There has been no conviction in a court of law. She is not a judge. She is not a jury. And I believe that the people feel absolutely disenfranchised,” said state Rep. Katrina Smith, a Republican from Palermo.

Despite the outrage, Maine’s Republican impeachment effort was a long shot, considering both chambers are controlled by Democrats.

Colorado is the only other state that removed Trump from the ballot. Its decision is currently under appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Maine could play a key role in the 2024 presidential election; it carries four electoral votes and is one of the two states to split them. Trump, the current GOP front-runner, won one of Maine’s electoral vote in both of his White House runs.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
GOP effort to impeach official who removed Trump from Maine ballot voted down
The Democrat-controlled Maine Legislature voted down a Republican effort to impeach the state’s chief election official for kicking former President Trump off the ballot for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol attack.

In an 80-60 party-line vote, the state House struck down the impeachment resolution going after Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows (D). She slammed the GOP effort last week as “political theater” while also promising to comply with any legal development connected to her historical decision to remove Trump from Maine’s March 5 primary.

Bellows became the first secretary of state in history to remove a candidate running for president after referencing the U.S. Constitution’s insurrection clause. The decision was swiftly appealed by Trump’s team and is currently in Maine’s Superior Court.

Maine’s GOP members slammed Bellows’s ruling as “election interference,” arguing that people feel “absolutely disenfranchised.”

State Rep. James Thorne, a Republican representing Carmel, said Bellows’s decision “does nothing but further divide the political banner between the parties, and indeed the people of the state of Maine, according to The Associated Press. State Rep. Michael Soboleski, of Phillips, called it “election interference of the highest order.”

“There has been no conviction in a court of law. She is not a judge. She is not a jury. And I believe that the people feel absolutely disenfranchised,” said state Rep. Katrina Smith, a Republican from Palermo.

Despite the outrage, Maine’s Republican impeachment effort was a long shot, considering both chambers are controlled by Democrats.

Colorado is the only other state that removed Trump from the ballot. Its decision is currently under appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Maine could play a key role in the 2024 presidential election; it carries four electoral votes and is one of the two states to split them. Trump, the current GOP front-runner, won one of Maine’s electoral vote in both of his White House runs.
A bold and rash move considering his upcoming pre-election court cases and possible conviction and imprisonment before the GOP convention, not to mention his possible disqualification by the SCOTUS. Usually, the rats jump off the sinking ship, but perhaps the cockroaches remain and go down with the Trumptanic...
 

Giggsy70

Well-Known Member
A bold and rash move considering his upcoming pre-election court cases and possible conviction and imprisonment before the GOP convention, not to mention his possible disqualification by the SCOTUS. Usually, the rats jump off the sinking ship, but perhaps the cockroaches remain and go down with the Trumptanic...
Oh no we're going to have a full village of Kool-aid drinking fools. They are all in on Stupid. Jonestown 2.0
 

Billy the Mountain

Well-Known Member
* Vomit Alert :spew:

Republican Evangelicals are fucking nuts.

A good start would be to tax the churches that blatantly flout existing law:

From the IRS (https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/charities-churches-and-politics)

In 1954, Congress approved an amendment by Sen. Lyndon Johnson to prohibit 501(c)(3) organizations, which includes charities and churches, from engaging in any political campaign activity. To the extent Congress has revisited the ban over the years, it has in fact strengthened the ban. The most recent change came in 1987 when Congress amended the language to clarify that the prohibition also applies to statements opposing candidates.

Currently, the law prohibits political campaign activity by charities and churches by defining a 501(c)(3) organization as one
"which does not participate in, or intervene in (including the publishing or distributing of statements), any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for public office."
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
GOP effort to impeach official who removed Trump from Maine ballot voted down
The Democrat-controlled Maine Legislature voted down a Republican effort to impeach the state’s chief election official for kicking former President Trump off the ballot for his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol attack.

In an 80-60 party-line vote, the state House struck down the impeachment resolution going after Maine Secretary of State Shenna Bellows (D). She slammed the GOP effort last week as “political theater” while also promising to comply with any legal development connected to her historical decision to remove Trump from Maine’s March 5 primary.

Bellows became the first secretary of state in history to remove a candidate running for president after referencing the U.S. Constitution’s insurrection clause. The decision was swiftly appealed by Trump’s team and is currently in Maine’s Superior Court.

Maine’s GOP members slammed Bellows’s ruling as “election interference,” arguing that people feel “absolutely disenfranchised.”

State Rep. James Thorne, a Republican representing Carmel, said Bellows’s decision “does nothing but further divide the political banner between the parties, and indeed the people of the state of Maine, according to The Associated Press. State Rep. Michael Soboleski, of Phillips, called it “election interference of the highest order.”

“There has been no conviction in a court of law. She is not a judge. She is not a jury. And I believe that the people feel absolutely disenfranchised,” said state Rep. Katrina Smith, a Republican from Palermo.

Despite the outrage, Maine’s Republican impeachment effort was a long shot, considering both chambers are controlled by Democrats.

Colorado is the only other state that removed Trump from the ballot. Its decision is currently under appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Maine could play a key role in the 2024 presidential election; it carries four electoral votes and is one of the two states to split them. Trump, the current GOP front-runner, won one of Maine’s electoral vote in both of his White House runs.
Once again the Grand Ole Party is upended by math.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
it’s that Critical Number Theory

The square of the lack of border security at our hypotenuse is equal to the sum of the squares (…) at all of our other sides combined!

Trigonometry is sin
All kidding aside, if they told Trump it was because they used Arabic numerals was the reason he lost, the next rally...
 
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