They are citing a general legal principle: common sense if you will. If fraud gets proven in court, the next order of business, criminal or civil, is restitution, and the legal code is full of ways to do that.
But what we have with the 2020 election is conspiracy via Dominion Voting. None of that fraud language is big enough to handle what this really is: conspiracy, sedition, and treason.
For public welfare, I can see them calling fraud, allowing Biden to step down for the good of the country and admitting he didn't win.
Stuff is continuing to happen to prove fraud in these battleground states and the legal proclivity of fraud vitiating everything fraud touches is going to be on front of the minds of everyone involved.
Agree about military. Like the Battle of Athens, some people won't back down unless physically made to do so.
I will throw out this out there from the go-to encyclopedia of US Law:
37 American Juriprudence 2d at section 8 states: "Fraud vitiates every transaction and all contracts. Indeed, the principle is often stated, in broad and sweeping language, that fraud destroys the validity of everything into which it enters, and that it vitiates the most solemn Contracts, Documents, and even Judgments."
United States vs. Throckmorton, 1878
They are citing a general legal principle: common sense if you will. If fraud gets proven in court, the next order of business, criminal or civil, is restitution, and the legal code is full of ways to do that.
But what we have with the 2020 election is conspiracy via Dominion Voting. None of that fraud language is big enough to handle what this really is: conspiracy, sedition, and treason.
For public welfare, I can see them calling fraud, allowing Biden to step down for the good of the country and admitting he didn't win.
Stuff is continuing to happen to prove fraud in these battleground states and the legal proclivity of fraud vitiating everything fraud touches is going to be on front of the minds of everyone involved.
Agree about military. Like the Battle of Athens, some people won't back down unless physically made to do so.
I will throw out this out there from the go-to encyclopedia of US Law:
37 American Juriprudence 2d at section 8 states: "Fraud vitiates every transaction and all contracts. Indeed, the principle is often stated, in broad and sweeping language, that fraud destroys the validity of everything into which it enters, and that it vitiates the most solemn Contracts, Documents, and even Judgments."