CupidS Escorts

update - Fed'l judge blocks Nat'l Guard deployment to Illinois

The Oracle

Pronouns: Who/Cares
Mar 8, 2004
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On the slopes of Mount Parnassus, Greece
Trump was found to have raped E Jean Carol. That's why he lost the defamation suit. She said he raped her, he sued and lost.
He was found liable for sexual abuse and slander...Round and round the mulberry bush.

As for the other stuff...Charge him and bring him to court...Simple as that otherwise it's him just ''bragging'' I'll call it...Not what you should be saying for sure but he has zero filter.
 

The Oracle

Pronouns: Who/Cares
Mar 8, 2004
29,673
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On the slopes of Mount Parnassus, Greece
Let's fast forward this comment. In 5 or 10 years, you'll be excusing some clearly bad apple politician saying something like:

"Never convicted of a daylight rape while driving in 5 states."
  • Burden of proof: The prosecution is responsible for proving the crime, not the defense.
  • Standard of proof: The prosecution must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. If there is still reasonable doubt after all the evidence is presented, the accused must be acquitted.
  • Role of the accused: The accused does not have to prove their innocence. They are considered innocent unless the prosecution successfully meets the high standard of proof.
  • Right to a fair trial: This principle is a fundamental safeguard that protects individuals from wrongful conviction by ensuring a fair and public hearing by an impartial tribunal.
  • International recognition: The presumption of innocence is considered a fundamental human right and is protected under various international human rights documents, such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Free Skoob...
 
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Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
101,905
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Never tried for rape and never convicted of rape....That's not to hard to understand.
You've found your ground and you will not yield, I understand.

Doesn't matter how much evidence of trump's pedo history, the charges of rape with Epstein that were withdrawn after threats to the family, the charge of rape from a wife who later 'fell' down the stairs and was buried on his golf course. The adjudicated charge of sexual assault the judge says was rape...
You've got your high ground and you will stand there as the land floods around you.

Because you don't mind that he's a pedo as long as he can get away with it.
If trump can, them I expect MAGA hopes they can too.

Remember when you called the mods because I posted photos from Epstein's birthday book, cause you said it was pedophelia?
Even that admission isn't enough for you.

 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
101,905
28,795
113
  • Burden of proof: The prosecution is responsible for proving the crime, not the defense.
  • Standard of proof: The prosecution must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. If there is still reasonable doubt after all the evidence is presented, the accused must be acquitted.
  • Role of the accused: The accused does not have to prove their innocence. They are considered innocent unless the prosecution successfully meets the high standard of proof.
  • Right to a fair trial: This principle is a fundamental safeguard that protects individuals from wrongful conviction by ensuring a fair and public hearing by an impartial tribunal.
  • International recognition: The presumption of innocence is considered a fundamental human right and is protected under various international human rights documents, such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Free Skoob...
The committee for the defence of pedos has spoken.


 

WyattEarp

Well-known member
May 17, 2017
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court on Friday extended an order that allows President Donald Trump's administration to keep frozen nearly $5 billion in foreign aid, handing him another victory in a dispute over presidential power.

With the three liberal justices in dissent, the court's conservative majority granted the Republican administration’s emergency appeal in a case involving billions of dollars in congressionally approved aid. Trump said last month that he would not spend the money, invoking disputed authority that was last used by a president roughly 50 years ago.



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The Justice Department sought the high court's intervention after U.S. District Judge Amir Ali ruled that Trump's action was likely illegal and that Congress would have to approve the decision to withhold the funding.

The federal appeals court in Washington declined to put Ali's ruling on hold, but Chief Justice John Roberts temporarily blocked it on Sept. 9. The full court indefinitely extended Roberts' order.

The court has previously cleared the way for the Trump administration to strip legal protections from hundreds of thousands of migrants, fire thousands of federal employees, oust transgender members of the military and remove the heads of independent government agencies.

The legal victories, while not final rulings, all have come through emergency appeals, used sparingly under previous presidencies, to fast-track cases to the Supreme Court, where decisions are often handed down with no explanation.


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Trump told House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., in a letter Aug. 28 that he would not spend $4.9 billion in congressionally approved foreign aid, effectively cutting the budget without going through the legislative branch.

He used what’s known as a pocket rescission. That’s a rarely used maneuver when a president submits a request to Congress toward the end of a current budget year to not spend the approved money. The late notice essentially flips the script. Under federal law, Congress has to approve the rescission within 45 days or the money must be spent. But the budget year will end before the 45-day window closes, and in this situation the White House is asserting that congressional inaction allows it to not spend the money.

The majority wrote in an unsigned order that Trump’s authority over foreign affairs weighed heavily in its decision, while cautioning that it was not making a final ruling in the case.



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But that was cold comfort to the dissenters. “The effect is to prevent the funds from reaching their intended recipients — not just now but (because of their impending expiration) for all time,” Justice Elena Kagan wrote in her dissent, joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson.

The Trump administration has made deep reductions to foreign aid one of its hallmark policies, despite the relatively meager savings relative to the deficit and possible damage to America’s reputation abroad as people lose access to food supplies and development programs.

The high court's decision “further erodes separation of powers principles that are fundamental to our constitutional order," said Nick Sansone, an attorney with Public Citizen Litigation Group who represented the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition in the case. “It will also have a grave humanitarian impact on vulnerable communities throughout the world.”



President Donald Trump speaks to reporters before departing the White House, Friday, Sept. 26, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)© The Associated Press
Justice Department lawyers told a federal judge last month that another $6.5 billion in aid that had been subject to the freeze would be spent before the end of the fiscal year next Tuesday.

The case has been winding its way through the courts for months, and Ali said he understood that his ruling would not be the last word on the matter.


“This case raises questions of immense legal and practical importance, including whether there is any avenue to test the executive branch’s decision not to spend congressionally appropriated funds,” he wrote.

In August, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit threw out an earlier injunction Ali had issued to require that the money be spent. But the three-judge panel did not shut down the lawsuit.

After Trump issued his rescission notice, the plaintiffs returned to Ali’s court and the judge issued the order that’s now being challenged.

___

Follow the AP's coverage of the U.S. Supreme Court at https://apnews.com/hub/us-supreme-court.

Mark Sherman, The Associated Press

Supreme Court keeps in place Trump funding freeze that threatens billions of dollars in foreign aid
Sorry to interrupt your blog mandy.
This outrage didn't age well over the last week or so.

It has many elements that upsets many progressive ideals. Obviously, the headline is the violation of immigration law. Not far behind that, the Des Moines School Board was interested in a DEI hire. They clearly didn't ask the right questions and have been greatly embarrassed. Then the illegal gun charges are icing on the cake.

But you know what Des Moines, keep paying this guy until all this is resolved.

This story highlights the problem with supporting fundamentally bad positions. They can bite you in the ass exponentially more than anyone can expect.
 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
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I think for the most part you're right. However, there have been cracks in the base. Look at Marjorie Taylor Greene. She's been a staunch Trump supporter since day one, defending him and lying for him. But the Epstein stuff has seemed to have loosened his grip on her. She hasn't come out and slammed Trump (yet? maybe never...), but she also recently slammed the GOP for the government lockdown and called out the fact that healthcare costs for her constituents are skyrocketing...

So, while that might not ever lead to MAGA revolt against Trump....there are things showing that he isn't as all powerful as he likes to project.
My God, just thinking how bad it has gotten with the 🤡 and chief that we have to rely on MTG to save the day. LOL

I honestly believe the only thing that will stop him from continuing to do irreparable damage to the US is taking a shit kicking in the midterms.
 
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The Oracle

Pronouns: Who/Cares
Mar 8, 2004
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mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
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A judge Tuesday blocked President Donald Trump's administration from requiring recipients of federal teen pregnancy prevention grants to comply with Trump's orders aimed at curtailing “radical indoctrination” and “gender ideology."

The ruling is a victory for three Planned Parenthood affiliates — in California, Iowa and New York — that sued to try to block enforcement of a U.S. Department of Human Services policy document issued in July that they contend contradict the requirements of the grants as established by Congress.



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U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell, who was appointed to the bench by former President Barack Obama, blasted the administration's policy change in her written ruling, saying it was “motivated solely by political concerns, devoid of any considered process or analysis, and ignorant of the statutory emphasis on evidence-based programming.”



FILE - A title sign sits outside a Planned Parenthood branch, May 16, 2023, in Pasadena, Calif. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, File)© The Associated Press
The policy requiring changes to the pregnancy prevention program was part of the fallout from a series of executive orders Trump signed starting in his first day back in the White House aimed at rolling back recognition of LGBTQ+ people and diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.



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In the policy, the administration objected to teaching that promotes same-sex marriage and that “normalizes, or promotes sexual activity for minors.”

The Planned Parenthood affiliates argued that the new directives were at odds with requirements of the program — and that they were so vague it wasn't clear what needed to be done to follow them.

Howell agreed.

The decision applies not only to the handful of Planned Parenthood groups among the dozens of recipients of the funding, but also nonprofit groups, city and county health departments, Native American tribes and universities that received grants.

DHS, which oversees the program, declined to comment on Tuesday’s ruling. It previously said the guidance for the program “ensures that taxpayer dollars no longer support content that undermines parental rights, promotes radical gender ideology, or exposes children to sexually explicit material under the banner of public health.”

Geoff Mulvihill, The Associated Press

A judge has blocked a Trump administration effort to change teen pregnancy prevention programs
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
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ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Two men last weekend were wrongly charged under a far-reaching Florida immigration law that’s currently suspended by a judicial order, according to a Monday report from the state attorney general’s office.

Both men were charged in separate instances in Bradenton under a Florida law that outlaws people living in the U.S. illegally from entering the state, even though a federal judge earlier this year said the law could not be enforced while it’s challenged in court.



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Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier disclosed the latest arrests in a report he has been forced to file with the court twice a month ever since he was found to be in civil contempt for telling officers they could ignore the judge's order.

Those reports have shown that some Florida officers are continuing to wrongly charge people under the halted law, including two people in June in northeast Florida, two people in July in central Florida and two people in August along Florida's Gulf Coast.

In the most recent cases, a man was pulled over Saturday after a Bradenton officer saw loose branches and unsecured equipment in the back of the man's truck. The man told the officer he had an expired driver's license. A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement sergeant confirmed by phone that the man was in the U.S. illegally and issued an immigration detainer for him, the report said.



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In the second case, an officer responded on Sunday to a report of blocked traffic due to an engine block that had fallen out of a vehicle. The driver told the officer he didn't have a driver's license. The officer contacted ICE, and the man admitted to the ICE officer by phone that he was in the U.S. illegally, officials said. ICE then issued an immigration detainer for the man, according to the report.

Both men faced a state charge of illegal entry, but those will be dropped by prosecutors. The man from Saturday's arrest was also charged with driving with an expired driver's license, and the man from Sunday's arrest was charged with driving without a valid driver's license, the report said.

Florida's new immigration law made it a misdemeanor for people who are in the U.S. without legal permission to enter the state by eluding immigration officials. But U.S. District Judge Kathleen Williams in Miami issued a temporary restraining order and injunction in April, freezing the enforcement of the state statute.




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After Williams issued her original order, Uthmeier sent a memo to state and local law enforcement officers telling them to refrain from enforcing the law, even though he disagreed with the injunction. But five days later, he sent a memo saying the judge was legally wrong and that he couldn’t prevent police officers and deputies from enforcing the law.

As punishment for flouting her order and being found in civil contempt, the judge requires Uthmeier to file bimonthly reports about whether any arrests, detentions or law enforcement actions have been made under the law.

A footnote in Monday's report suggests both arrests over the weekend were made by the same officer. The footnote said local prosecutors would tell the Bradenton Police Department to remind the officer about the judge's injunction.

The state of Florida has asked an appellate court to vacate, or at the very least narrow, Williams' injunction, arguing in a court filing two weeks ago that the Florida law doesn't infringe on the federal government's authority to decide who may enter the U.S.


“Once the federal government has made that decision, an unlawfully present alien may not enter or remain in Florida,” attorneys for Florida wrote. “Who qualifies as an unauthorized alien, and what constitutes eluding or avoiding immigration inspection, remains a question of federal law.”

A judge halted a Florida immigration law months ago. Some officers are still enforcing it
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
84,612
124,267
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The threats and bullying that Donald Trump has successfully used against major law firms, educational institutions and media empires are increasingly falling flat when it comes to mayors of major cities, according to a report Tuesday.

According to a report from the Washington Post, no matter how the president blusters and menaces big city mayors, with a few exceptions, most of them are refusing to look the other way as ICE agents invade their communities and snatch suspected undocumented immigrants off the streets.



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Also Read: Ex-Green Beret suspected of leading armed militia mounts GOP run for Congress

As the report notes, officials of sanctuary cities that are being targeted by DHS Secretary Kristi Noem are pushing back with lawsuits and limiting law enforcement from giving the masked invading agents a helping hand.

The Post’s David Nakamura is reporting only two, Louisville and the state of Nevada, of the fourteen jurisdictions the Trump administration has menaced have complied and have dropped restrictions on assisting the federal government with immigrant round-ups.



“Leaders of sanctuary jurisdictions said the lawsuits in Chicago and Portland show Democratic leaders are overwhelmingly deciding to fight back,” the report notes before adding, “San Francisco City Attorney David Chiu was one of the first to launch a concerted effort against the administration’s campaign against sanctuary cities.”

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“Nearly three dozen other jurisdictions have since joined the lawsuit, prompting U.S. District Judge William H. Orrick in August to expand his temporary injunction to cover 50 localities,” Nakamura is reporting.

“Though there is no specific definition of a sanctuary jurisdiction, most have policies that prevent local police or sheriffs from asking about the immigration status of people in their custody and restrict their ability to detain inmates at the request of ICE, unless they are presented with a judicial warrant. Scores of cities, counties and states adopted or beefed up sanctuary laws during Trump’s first administration, arguing that assisting in his hard-line approach risked eroding trust between immigrant communities and local law enforcement.”

According to Chiu, the refusal to bend to the demands of the Trump administration has led the White House to seek other methods to gain compliance.



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“They are absolutely being more aggressive,” he said. “During the first Trump administration, they did what any party typically does after a ruling, which is respect the ruling. Now, we’ve seen them trying to do everything they can to get around the ruling.”

You can read more here.


Trump attempt to bully cities into working with ICE runs headfirst into wall: report
 
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