Coronavirus and the Killing of the U.S.
Economy
As I said in my recent video
update segment on the Coronavirus, you can’t cure or end the
pandemic by killing our economy – pure and simple.
When it comes to the coronavirus, the best way to get people on their feet
is to get them back to work. While the “giant” stimulus package will
help many with immediate cash, the economic impact of the country’s being
shut down could leave us facing 20-30 million unemployed, a very dangerous
consequence of the panicked reactions by governors across the
country.
I have been critical of the almost nationwide lockdown from the beginning.
There’s got to be a way of moving forward while taking care of people’s
health. Shutting down the country cannot be the solution, and as I have
alluded to throughout the crisis, it will be a huge detriment to the
long-term public health of our communities.
To date, there’s nothing in the White House or CDC guidelines that says
shut down everything in your state. On the contrary, we’ve got to care
for the sick and make sure our economy is able to function. Ultimately, we
need to get America moving again, and not depend on the CDC/FDA timeline,
which left to their own devices would only figure out the needed drugs
months from now.
What’s more, with the FBI’s shutting
down all Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests, there will be
little transparency during this key part of our country’s history.
We’ve also just learned from the State Department that they’ve shut
down their FOIA operation indefinitely as well. Instituting the indefinite
moratorium on FOIA processing, the FBI and State Department are delaying
Judicial Watch’s investigations into the Bidens, Spygate and Hillary
Clinton, to mention a few, making these agencies virtually unaccountable by
any practical means. The Deep State, unsurprisingly, doesn’t consider
following transparency law to be “essential” government business.
You can be sure that Judicial Watch is investigating and monitoring the
responses of our government to the coronavirus threat. In the meantime,
please be sure to call your state and federal elected officials to them
know what you think about the shutdowns that are destroying our economies
and suppressing our liberties.
Department of State/Justice Department Tells Appeals Court it
Should Reject Clinton Effort to Avoid Testimony
Hillary Clinton’s desperate appeal to avoid testifying in Judicial
Watch’s lawsuit is even too much for her defenders at the Department
of State and the Justice Department, which represents the State
Department in court. This week, State/Justice sided with us in opposing
Clinton’s appeal for special privileges and singular treatment to avoid
having to testify in person and under oath to our legal team.
Here’s the backstory. On March 2, a federal
district court rejected Clinton’s and the Deep State’s attempts to
shut down our inquiry into her emails and agreed
with us – that it’s time to hear from Hillary Clinton. Clinton and
her former Chief of Staff Cheryl Mills then filed an emergency appeal.
This week, our lawyers at Judicial Watch and the State Department, through
Justice Department lawyers, filed separate responses in opposition to
Clinton’s and Mills’ Writ
of Mandamus request to overturn that U.S. District
Court order requiring
their testimony under oath before Judicial Watch regarding Clinton’s
emails and Benghazi attack records. At the same time, the government argued
in its response that it did not engage in “bad faith” in failing to
disclose the Clinton non-government email system to Judicial Watch and the
court. The briefs were filed on April 3 with the U.S. Appeals Court for the
District of Columbia Circuit.
The filings come in the appeals court’s proceedings concerning our lawsuit seeking
records concerning “talking points or updates on the Benghazi attack”
( Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:14-cv-01242)).
In our response, we argue that Clinton and Mills “must demonstrate that
they have no other adequate means of relief,” which they failed to show.
Also, Clinton and Mills do not demonstrate “that the District Court’s
order was a judicial usurpation of power or a clear abuse of discretion, or
that [Clinton and Mills] have a clear and indisputable right to a writ.”
In fact, “the District Court reasonably concluded that Clinton’s
previous explanations for using a personal email server are cursory,
incomplete, and seemingly at odds with what discovery has yielded to
date.”
We argue further that Clinton and Mills are trying to avoid their
deposition testimony by relying on, “their status
as former high-level government officials.” Clinton and Mills,
“do not offer a single case from this Court or any other, holding
that former high-level government officials should not be
required to follow regular appellate channels to challenge a discovery
order.” Particularly in Mills’ case, Judicial Watch notes that they,
“identify no case in which a court entertained a mandamus petition to
stop the deposition of even a sitting cabinet member’s chief of
staff.” [Emphasis in original]
We also argue against Clinton’s claim that she held the server under
“claim of right,” when it contained thousands of federal records.
Judicial Watch states that unlike other Secretaries of State, like Henry
Kissinger, Clinton did not obtain an opinion from State’s Legal Adviser
on whether she could take the federal records prior to her departure from
State. Clinton’s “claim of right” argument over her server would be
like a bank robbery:
A bank robber who stuffs bills into a duffle bag during a robbery may
own the bag, but has no “claim of right” to the stolen cash. Is Clinton
claiming a legal right to the agency records stored on the server? If so,
Petitioners [Clinton/Mills] offer no factual or legal support for such a
claim. While the server may have been Clinton’s property, the agency
records on the server plainly were not.
Although they repeatedly sought in earlier lower-court proceedings to
shut down any further inquiry into Clinton emails, the State and Justice
Departments also argued this week against Clinton and Mills’ appeal to
overturn the order for their depositions:
The government did not seek and thus does not support the
extraordinary relief of mandamus due to the unique circumstances of this
case.
***
This is the rare situation in which discovery of a former Cabinet
Secretary was not authorized for the impermissible purpose of probing
internal government decision-making regarding official policy, but rather
to focus on the impact on FOIA compliance of a former official’s unusual
decision to use a private email server to systematically conduct large
volumes of official business.
Our Judicial Watch lawyers went further:
It is not even clear that Clinton’s decision to use a “personal
email server” and the subsequent routing of her emails out of the agency
when she left office can fairly be characterized as “official action”
… It was more likely a violation of law.
The agencies again defend their alleged misconduct despite a federal
court finding that discovery can take place because of the strong evidence
of their bad faith. The lower court rejected their efforts to end
discovery and protect Clinton:
[T]here is still more to learn. Even though many important questions
remain unanswered, the Justice Department inexplicably still takes the
position that the Court should close discovery and rule on dispositive
motions. The Court is especially troubled by this. To argue that the Court
now has enough information to determine whether State conducted an adequate
search is preposterous, especially when considering State’s deficient
representations regarding the existence of additional Clinton emails.
Instead, the Court will authorize a new round of discovery.
Your Judicial Watch famously uncovered in 2014 that the “talking
points” that provided the basis for Susan Rice’s false statements
were created
by the Obama White House. This FOIA lawsuit led
directly to the disclosure of the Clinton email system in 2015.
On March 2, 2020, Judge Lamberth granted Judicial
Watch’s request to
depose Clinton about her emails and Benghazi attack documents. The
court also ordered the deposition of Mills and two other State Department
officials. Additionally, the court granted Judicial Watch’s request to
subpoena Google for relevant documents and records associated with
Clinton’s emails during her tenure at the State Department.
In December 2018, Judge Lamberth first ordered
discovery into whether Secretary Clinton’s use of a private
email server was intended to stymie FOIA; whether the State Department’s
intent to settle this case in late 2014 and early 2015 amounted to bad
faith; and whether the State Department has adequately searched for records
responsive to Judicial Watch’s request. The court also authorized
discovery into whether the Benghazi controversy motivated the cover-up of
Clinton’s email. The court ruled that
the Clinton email system was “one of the gravest modern offenses to
government transparency.” The State and Justice Departments continued to
defend Clinton’s and the agency’s email conduct.
In his order allowing the testimony under oath of Clinton and others,
Federal District Court Judge Lamberth noted:
Discovery up until this point has brought to light a noteworthy amount
of relevant information, but Judicial Watch requests an additional round of
discovery, and understandably so. With each passing round of discovery, the
Court is left with more questions than answers.
With respect to Clinton, Judge Lamberth found that her prior
testimony, mostly through written sworn answers, was not sufficient:
The Court has considered the numerous times in which Secretary Clinton
said she could not recall or remember certain details in her prior
interrogatory answers. In a deposition, it is more likely that
plaintiff’s counsel could use documents and other testimony to attempt to
refresh her recollection. And so, to avoid the unsatisfying and inefficient
outcome of multiple rounds of fruitless interrogatories and move this
almost six-year-old case closer to its conclusion, Judicial Watch will be
permitted to clarify and further explore Secretary Clinton’s answers in
person and immediately after she gives them. The Court agrees with
Judicial Watch – it is time to hear directly from Secretary Clinton.
[Emphasis added.]
The appellate court should quickly reject Clinton’s latest gambit to
avoid testifying. We’ll be sure to keep you apprised as circumstances
warrant.
Judicial Watch Sues to Force North Carolina to Clean Its Voter
Rolls
After months of investigating and trying to bring to the attention of North
Carolina officials their non-compliance with the law, your Judicial Watch
finally had to file a lawsuit against North Carolina and two of its
counties for failing to clean their voter rolls and denying the public its
right to obtain information about voter registration list maintenance.
According to an analysis of voter registration data by our Judicial Watch
investigators, many of North Carolina’s 100 counties have large numbers
of ineligible voters on their rolls. We also allege in our lawsuit that the
States’ own data shows that North Carolina has nearly one million
inactive voters on its rolls ( Judicial
Watch v. North Carolina and North Carolina State Board of Elections, et
al. (No. 3:20-cv- 211)).
Our lawsuit argues that North Carolina, Mecklenburg County and Guilford
County failed to make reasonable efforts to remove ineligible voters from
their registration rolls as required by the federal National Voter
Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA). The lawsuit also claims these
jurisdictions violated the NVRA by failing to make available to Judicial
Watch public records concerning efforts to comply with the law.
The NVRA provides for the removal of the names of registrants who have
failed to respond to an address confirmation notice and then failed to vote
in the next two general federal elections. Federal law makes these removals
mandatory.
In June 2019, the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC)
released data showing
that voter registration rates in a significant proportion of North
Carolina’s 100 counties are close to, at or above 100% of their
age-eligible citizenry – statistics considered by the courts to be a
strong indication that a jurisdiction is not taking the steps required by
law to remove ineligible registrants. Judicial Watch’s analysis also
showed that at the time of the EAC report the entire State of North
Carolina had a registration rate close to 100% of its age-eligible
citizenry.
In our complaint, Judicial Watch lawyers also point out that North
Carolina’s abnormally high number of inactive registrations shows that it
is not removing these registrations after two general federal elections, as
the NVRA requires. According to data the State certified to the EAC in
2019:
- About 17% of North Carolina’s registrations were inactive, which was
the fifth worst (highest) of the 40 states for which data were
available
- By way of comparison, the median state inactive rate was 9.6%
- In 19 North Carolina counties, 20% or more of the registrations were
inactive, and in three counties 25% or more were inactive North
Carolina’s inactive registrations remain high to this day
- As of March 2020, North Carolina’s own data shows it has nearly one
million inactive registrations
- A large proportion of these registrations have shown no voting
activity for more than five years – that is, since prior to November
2014
Dirty voting rolls can mean dirty elections, and we at Judicial Watch
must insist that North Carolina follows federal law to clean up its voting
rolls. We want cleaner elections, as the law requires, and we expect this
lawsuit will cause North Carolina to take the simple steps necessary to
clean from its rolls the names of voters who have moved away or died.
Your Judicial Watch is the national leader in enforcing the NVRA. In
December 2019, we provided
notice to 19 large counties in five states that it intended to sue
unless they take steps to comply with the NVRA by removing ineligible
registrations from their rolls. In addition to North Carolina, we sent
letters to counties in California,
Pennsylvania,
Virginia
and Colorado.
In 2018, the Supreme Court upheld a
voter-roll cleanup program that resulted from our Judicial Watch settlement
of a federal lawsuit with Ohio. California settled an
NVRA lawsuit with us and last year began the process of removing up to 1.6
million inactive names from Los Angeles County’s voter rolls. Kentucky also
began a cleanup of hundreds of thousands of old registrations last year
after it entered into a consent decree to end another one of our Judicial
Watch lawsuits.
Despite our track record of successful litigation to bring counties and
states into compliance with the NVRA, voter registration lists across the
country remain significantly out of date. In a 2019 study, our Judicial
Watch investigators found 378 counties nationwide that had more voter
registrations than citizens old enough to vote, i.e.,
counties where registration rates exceed 100%. These 378 counties combined
had about 2.5 million registrations over the 100%-registered mark. This is
a drop of about one million from our previous
analysis of voter registration data in 2017.
We are most fortunate to have Attorney Robert Popper as our director of the
Judicial Watch Election Integrity initiative. We are also being assisted by
Mark A. Jones of Bell, Davis & Pitt in Charlotte, North Carolina; and by H.
Christopher Coates of the Law Office of H. Christopher Coates.
This is the first of what could be several additional lawsuits against
various states over this key issue of clean election rolls, so stay tuned
for more.
Happy Easter!
Christians around the world are celebrating the resurrection of the Christ
this week. There are no more powerful symbols of hope than the cross and
the empty tomb. From me and mine, I wish you and yours all the Joy of
Easter! Passover happily coincides with Easter this year – so, Happy
Passover, as well! Ironically, even though it will be a struggle this year
to celebrate these glorious holidays as we normally would, I expect the
absence of some traditions will make our hearts grower fonder for – and
to more deeply consider – these special days!
Until next week …
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