I'm curious to know what you believe happens to those documents after they've been admitted into evidence. Do you think no one ever looks at them again?
The fact is that those photographs of the files went public. Evidence should not be disclosed to the public during an ongoing investigation. It is the FIB's responsibility to protect classified material, and evidence from being made public.
Putting a sheet with big letters that read "CLASSIFIED" on top of evidence, and then taking pictures of it, and having those pics shown to the public is not acting in good faith to protect classified evidence. It was done as a dirty political stunt to influence public opinion of a political candidate, and the FIB is gonna get their asses busted for doing it.
I don't think the photos going public is good, either. But it was inevitable that they would. There's always some POS that will sell out information for money.
Which is exactly why they put cover sheets on the documents before photographing them.
Frankly, I think this entire thing is just people looking for something to be outraged over.
I'm sure that will hurt some people's feelings, and they'll start smashing that deport button, but that's what I see.
If they hadn't put cover sheets on them, then people would say how corrupt they are in letting the entire world see classified information. It's a "damned if you do, damned if you don't"
I understand your position, but you are not considering the more likely reason for the cover sheets.
There's always some POS that will sell out information for money.
Which is exactly why they put cover sheets on the documents before photographing them.
No. That claim cannot be proven based on factual legal standards. Sure, the FIB can make that claim, and conveniently gain a status of plausible deniability by asserting that the coversheets were placed for purely benign reasons.
BUT, the fact that those photos were indeed used to taint public opinion changes everything. Because of that, the question now becomes- was it (placing cover sheets, and photos going public) really just a benign FIB action, or was the FIB deliberately engaging in helping to create malicious propaganda for political reasons?
Knowing what we know about the integrity of the FIB, we can reasonably make the claim that the cover sheets were placed, photographed; and released to the public for malicious political purposes.
Naturally, the FIB will gasp, and emphatically deny such a claim, and call it something like a "baseless conspiracy theory," But, when the principle of "pattern of behavior" is applied, Occam's Razor cuts towards the cover sheets and, their public release being a malicious action committed with intent to harm the defendant, Trump.
Expect Trump's lawyers to attack this. The FIB did it to harm Trump, believing that "plausible deniability" will save their asses. Let's see what Trump's lawyers, and the courts are going to do with this.
I understand your position, but you are not considering the more likely reason for the cover sheets.
No, I believe the likely reason for the cover sheets is due to it being standard practice when securing evidence. That and preventing the release of classified information to the whole world.
It's certainly plausible and likely probable that they were hoping to hurt Trump by releasing the photos. There's no reason to try to squeeze in more dirty deeds on what they have already done. #
I'm curious to know what you believe happens to those documents after they've been admitted into evidence. Do you think no one ever looks at them again?
The fact is that those photographs of the files went public. Evidence should not be disclosed to the public during an ongoing investigation. It is the FIB's responsibility to protect classified material, and evidence from being made public.
Putting a sheet with big letters that read "CLASSIFIED" on top of evidence, and then taking pictures of it, and having those pics shown to the public is not acting in good faith to protect classified evidence. It was done as a dirty political stunt to influence public opinion of a political candidate, and the FIB is gonna get their asses busted for doing it.
I don't think the photos going public is good, either. But it was inevitable that they would. There's always some POS that will sell out information for money.
Which is exactly why they put cover sheets on the documents before photographing them.
Frankly, I think this entire thing is just people looking for something to be outraged over.
I'm sure that will hurt some people's feelings, and they'll start smashing that deport button, but that's what I see.
If they hadn't put cover sheets on them, then people would say how corrupt they are in letting the entire world see classified information. It's a "damned if you do, damned if you don't"
I understand your position, but you are not considering the more likely reason for the cover sheets.
No. That claim cannot be proven based on factual legal standards. Sure, the FIB can make that claim, and conveniently gain a status of plausible deniability by asserting that the coversheets were placed for purely benign reasons.
BUT, the fact that those photos were indeed used to taint public opinion changes everything. Because of that, the question now becomes- was it (placing cover sheets, and photos going public) really just a benign FIB action, or was the FIB deliberately engaging in helping to create malicious propaganda for political reasons?
Knowing what we know about the integrity of the FIB, we can reasonably make the claim that the cover sheets were placed, photographed; and released to the public for malicious political purposes.
Naturally, the FIB will gasp, and emphatically deny such a claim, and call it something like a "baseless conspiracy theory," But, when the principle of "pattern of behavior" is applied, Occam's Razor cuts towards the cover sheets and, their public release being a malicious action committed with intent to harm the defendant, Trump.
Expect Trump's lawyers to attack this. The FIB did it to harm Trump, believing that "plausible deniability" will save their asses. Let's see what Trump's lawyers, and the courts are going to do with this.
No, I believe the likely reason for the cover sheets is due to it being standard practice when securing evidence. That and preventing the release of classified information to the whole world.
It's certainly plausible and likely probable that they were hoping to hurt Trump by releasing the photos. There's no reason to try to squeeze in more dirty deeds on what they have already done. #