yannyu
7 hours ago
In addition to everything that is terrifying about Kilmar Ábrego García's case, we have the VP and President of this country making clearly biased remarks on an active criminal case against a resident of the United States who is married to a US citizen. Is there a more clear case of violation of due process and civil rights?
yalogin
4 hours ago
Aren’t they lying when they know the truth? Calling them biased statements waters down the issue
yannyu
3 hours ago
You have a good point, they're lying. The sane-washing works even when we know it's happening.
nickff
6 hours ago
>" the VP and President of this country making clearly biased remarks on an active criminal case against a resident of the United States"
I am sorry to break it to you, but this happens all the time, and is not a violation of due process. You can find examples of many Presidents declaring opinions on the guilt or innocence of a variety of people before their trials. [1] It makes sense that this is allowed, as the Justice Department is a part of the Executive Branch, so all prosecutions are done with the tacit or explicit approval of the President. It would be more problematic if the judges in the case expressed views on guilt or innocence before hearing the case.
[1] https://www.commondreams.org/newswire/2011/04/25/obama-decla...
throwway120385
6 hours ago
Just because something is common, we shouldn't accept it if we believe it to be wrong. Slavery was once widely tolerated, as was marital rape. But people in those days decided that these things were wrong and should not be tolerated. Had they listened to arguments like yours we would still be living in those conditions.
There's also an argument to be made for holding our political officers to a much higher standard than the general populace.
nickff
6 hours ago
Do you think the Justice Department should prosecute people they believe to be innocent? If not, it seems that every prosecution is an expression of the view that the accused is guilty, and by allowing the JD to proceed, the President is expressing approval of the view. Can you please point out the error in this logic?
user
2 hours ago
Eddy_Viscosity2
5 hours ago
The error is this logic is that it precludes the possibility that the Justice Department thinks (know for a fact even) that he is innocent but is pursuing the case anyway because political pressure from the President preferring him to be punished rather than admit a mistake.
mecsred
6 hours ago
Belief is not binary and can change with new evidence. You may believe it is likely someone is innocent, but should still witness all the evidence to update your beliefs. In the rare case that there is concrete and infallible evidence that the accused IS innocent, they are typically not prosecuted, or it wraps up very quickly.
faut_reflechir
6 hours ago
The potential source of error is the assumption that the president has the authority to stop a prosecution (short of the pardon power). I say "potential" because a "unitary executive" advocate would claim this is true, and it is becoming more true during the second Trump administration, although it was notably false during the first one. [In prior administrations, including Trump I and Obama, the DOJ appointed independent counsel precisely to prosecute cases the president would have disagreed with prosecuting.]
mothballed
6 hours ago
That sounds nice, but US is mostly a democracy, and to the extent it is a constitutional republic those principles only hold to the extent people are willing to acknowledge them and assent to be ruled under them.
throwway120385
6 hours ago
So you're saying we shouldn't ask people to acknowledge them and to be ruled under them? If you keep arguing on those grounds then we're going to be saying "that's nice but we live in the real world" all the way to a failed state.
mothballed
6 hours ago
People are not acknowledging and ruled under the constitution as written and intended and the amendments thereafter, for a very long time.
For one very obvious example, observe that it is illegal to notice an opium poppy is growing in a forest, then take and smoke it, and somehow that magically being interstate commerce.
At this point the government as we know it would totally collapse were it not the people willfully and deliberately violate the tenants of the constitutional republic we live under. And most of them, seem to agree with that.
southernplaces7
6 hours ago
I don't see the comment's argument as being that this is okay because it's common. It's just pointing out that this is nothing completely new and that it's a shame that it gets pointed out in a selective way when it could have been called out even earlier under other administrations. That's completely fair if one genuinely cares about due process instead of just dogmatic sniping..
nabla9
6 hours ago
It was a throwaway line at the end of a fundraiser. Obama misspoke and was widely criticized widely, even internationally. It does not happen all the time. Obama's gaffe does not make it common.
voxic11
6 hours ago
Well aren't military judges part of the executive branch and members of the armed forces? So the president is in their chain of command which makes those remarks by Obama especially egregious.
nickff
6 hours ago
I think you're right, but the military has different rules about due process, which you may not find convincing. A good example of the difference is the Captain's Mast.
voxic11
6 hours ago
Read up on the concept of unlawful command influence https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unlawful_command_influence
southernplaces7
6 hours ago
Trump and his circus of hacks & morons might be one of the most egregious cases in years of an administration doing this, but what you say is true, many previous presidents have poked their political hands into stirring the judicial pot of trying to paint culpability where it hasn't been legally established yet. It's a shame the brainless hie mind decides to downvote this, as they do for all kinds of things they just don't want touching their sensitive little eyes.
user
6 hours ago