Judicial Watch Sues for Records of Pelosi
Call with Pentagon Chief
In psychology, the term projection describes the act of
attributing your own negative trait to someone else. Nobody does this
better than Nancy Pelosi. If you’ve read her January
8 letter attacking then-President Trump to her colleagues you would
agree. In it, she talked about her anti-Trump phone call to the nation’s
top military chief.
We want to know more, so we filed a FOIA suit against the U.S.
Department of Defense for records of Pelosi’s January 8, 2021, telephone
call with Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley ( Judicial
Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Department of Defense (No
1:21-cv-00593)).
Pelosi acknowledged the call in her January 8 letter to her
fellow Democrats. In the letter, Pelosi described her purported discussion
with Milley earlier that same day:
“This morning, I spoke to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark
Milley to discuss available precautions for preventing an unstable
president from initiating military hostilities or accessing the launch
codes and ordering a nuclear strike. The situation of this unhinged
President could not be more dangerous, and we must do everything that we
can to protect the American people from his unbalanced assault on our
country and our democracy.”
We sued in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia after the
Defense Department failed to respond to a January 11, 2021, Freedom of
Information (FOIA) request for:
- Any and all records regarding, concerning, or related to the telephone
call between House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and General Mark Milley on or about
January 8, 2021. This request includes, but is not limited to, any and all
transcripts, recordings, and/or summaries of the call, as well as any other
records produced in preparation for, during, and/or pursuant to the
call.
- Any and all additional records of communication between Gen. Milley
and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi between November 1, 2020 and the
present.
In a section of the letter headed “Removing the President From
Office,” Pelosi also told her colleagues:
“As you know, there is growing momentum around the invocation of the 25th
Amendment, which would allow the Vice President and a majority of the
Cabinet to remove the President for his incitement of insurrection and the
danger he still poses. Yesterday, Leader Schumer and I placed a call with
Vice President Pence, and we still hope to hear from him as soon as
possible with a positive answer as to whether he and the Cabinet will honor
their oath to the Constitution and the American people.”
If Speaker Pelosi’s description of her conversation with General Milley
is true, it sets a dangerous precedent that could undermine the
president’s role as commander in chief and the separation of powers. Our
lawsuit aims to uncover truth about the call.
The Wall Street Journal editorial page called her call “ A
Coup of Pelosi’s Own”:
Mrs. Pelosi’s call to Gen. Milley is itself a violation of the separation
of powers by seeking to inject herself into an executive-branch military
decision. She can offer advice all she wants, but this call at this time
has the sound of an order. It might even be construed by some as its own
little coup—conniving with the military to relieve of command the person
who remains the elected President.
It is remarkable, but par for the course, that it is up to Judicial Watch
is doing the heavy lifting to get more details about this dangerous Pelosi
call as Congress and a corrupted partisan media sit on their thumbs in the
face of yet another attack on constitutional governance.
Did the CDC Communicate with Big Tech about COVID-19?
Big Tech has taken upon itself the role of Ministry of Health Truth,
censoring users and even doctors with which it disagrees. To what extent
has the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) been involved in this?
To find out, we filed a FOIA suit against the Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) seeking records of communications between the CDC and
Big Tech about COVID-19.
We sued in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia after HHS
failed to reply to a September 15, 2020, FOIA request ( Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of Health of Human Services (No.
1:21-cv-00625)). Judicial Watch requested:
Any and all records of communication
between CDC officials and/or employees and employees, agents, and/or
representatives of Google, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, and
YouTube concerning, regarding, or relating to COVID-19 related content on
company platforms. Such records include, but are not limited to, any advice
or instructions issued on disinformation re COVID-19.
The CDC was required to respond to Judicial Watch’s request by October
29, 2020, but failed to do so.
The public has the right to know about CDC’s involvement in Big Tech’s
outrageous censorship of Americans, including doctors, who raise questions
about the COVID-19 response. The Biden administration should stop
stonewalling and release the records about the CDC’s role in suppressing
the free speech of Americans.
ICE Arrested 60% Fewer Illegal Immigrants in February
As I noted in my recent CPAC
speech,
Joe Biden “has launched the most significant attack on immigration law in
American history.” And the consequences are a humanitarian,
national security, and public health disaster on the border.
Here, from our Corruption Chronicles blog, are details
of “Biden’s Border Crisis”:
Predictably, the Biden administration’s disastrous immigration policies
are having a detrimental impact on the U.S. even though they have only been
in place for weeks. In that short time, the nation has seen an overwhelming
flood of illegal alien minors slam Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and
a huge drop in adult fugitives arrested by Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE). Last month the administration restricted ICE
from making arrests by reducing agents’ enforcement priorities and
forcing them to seek written permission from senior supervisors before
arresting fugitives. Not surprisingly, it has resulted in a huge decrease
in illegal immigrant arrests. ICE data reviewed by a mainstream newspaper
reveals that the number of illegal aliens arrested by ICE dropped more
than 60% in February compared with the last three months of the Trump
administration. Deportations fell by nearly the same amount, according to
the figures.
In the meantime, more
than 7,000 illegal immigrant minors were placed in U.S. shelters
in February alone, according to government data published by a separate
national news outlet days earlier. “The numbers in March indicate the
steady rise has continued,” the story reads. “During the first four
days of the month, more than 1,500 unaccompanied migrant minors were taken
into custody.” The Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), a well-funded
branch of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), is charged
with providing care for illegal aliens under the age of 18 which are
classified as Unaccompanied Alien Children (UAC) by the government. ORR has
been receiving an average of 337 UAC a day. “The figure for the first
full month of the Biden administration is the most migrant children the
refugee office has ever received in a February,” the news article
states.
Just a few weeks ago, Judicial Watch reported that the UAC influx
is prompting a health emergency on the southern border and surrounding
communities. The increasing number of UAC illegally crossing the border
will soon overwhelm facilities in the middle of a global pandemic,
according to a congressional delegation’s letter to
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. “This surge also has the
capability to cause a COVID-19 outbreak at ports of entry and other CBP
facilities, which threatens the health of CBP personnel and could result in
the temporary closures of ports of entry,” the legislators who sit on
various House committees—including civil rights, national security, and
the environment—write. “Such closures would greatly impact commerce and
hamper the United States’ economic recovery,” the lawmakers continue.
“The increase in illegal immigration at the southern border presents a
risk not only to Border Patrol agents apprehending migrants who illegally
cross the border, but also to those communities into which those
individuals will relocate—likely leading to widespread COVID-19 infection
and fatalities.”
Concerns associated with the new onslaught in illegal immigration are not
limited to health issues. The attorney general in Montana points out
that methamphetamine
trafficked by Mexican drug cartels has wracked his state. “The
problem will only be made worse if the Biden administration continues to
allow criminals to stay in the country,” according to Montana Attorney
General Austin Knudsen. This month Knudsen and his counterpart in Arizona,
sued the Biden administration to block the outrageous directive restricting
ICE from arresting illegal immigrants. “Blindly releasing thousands of
people, including convicted criminals and those that may be spreading
COVID-19 into our state, is both unconscionable and a violation of federal
law,” said Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich. “This must be
stopped now to avoid a dangerous humanitarian crisis for the immigrants and
the people of Arizona.”
Their lawsuit asserts that Biden’s new policy will lead to an
increase in criminals and drugs as well as COVID-19 in Montana and Arizona.
It will also cause a hike in healthcare and law enforcement costs,
according to the complaint, which lists a multitude of government agencies
among defendants, including the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
“The Removal Moratorium will directly increase the number of aliens with
final orders of removal who remain in Arizona because they will not have
been removed by DHS,” the complaint says. “Additionally, knowledge that
DHS has issued a blanket moratorium on removals will encourage additional
unauthorized immigration to Arizona, and this increase in population will
increase Arizona’s incurred law enforcement and healthcare services costs
related to them.” Embedded in the court document are statements from law
enforcement officials who claim the states will be hurt by the new
initiatives.
Clear Thinking on Elections from Clarence Thomas
The controversies of the 2020 election haven’t gotten much traction yet
in the courts. However, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas,
speaking for some of his colleagues, is unafraid to deal with the legal
issues of the 2020 election crisis. Our chief investigative reporter, Micah
Morrison, sets
forth Thomas’ thinking in his Investigative Bulletin.
The Supreme Court shut the door on the 2020 election late last month, but
Justice Clarence Thomas got the last word. In a dissent directed at the
court’s decision not to take up two cases involving the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court and mail-in ballots, Thomas encapsulated the world of
electoral woe surrounding the 2020 presidential contest.
“We failed to settle this dispute before the election,” Thomas wrote,
“and thus provide clear rules. Now we again fail to provide clear rules
for future elections. The decision to leave election law hidden beneath a
shroud of doubt is baffling. By doing nothing, we invite further confusion
and erosion of voter confidence.”
The Pennsylvania cases centered on which state bodies have the ultimate
authority to set election rules, the legislature or the judiciary?
The U.S. Constitution says that the “Times, Places and Manner of holding
Elections…shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature
thereof.” But state courts often intervene.
In the run-up to the presidential election, the Pennsylvania state
legislature gave all Pennsylvania voters the option of casting mail-in
ballots. But it left in place a November 3 deadline for ballots to be in.
Unhappy with the deadline, Democrats sued, arguing that in light of the
Covid-19 pandemic, the deadline violated a voting-rights clause in the
state constitution stating that elections “shall be free and equal.”
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court agreed, extending the deadline for mail-in
ballots by three days.
The U.S. Supreme Court declined petitions to intervene in the case before
the election. In February, with the election settled, petitioners tried
again. The high court again declined to hear the cases, prompting the
Thomas dissent.
It’s worth reading in
its entirety. Thomas zeroes in on two key issues: legislative versus
judicial power, and problems with mail-in voting.
Both “before and after the 2020 election,” Thomas notes,
“non-legislative officials in various States took it upon themselves to
set the rules,” resulting in “an unusually high number of petitions and
emergency applications” to the high court.
The Pennsylvania changes undermine confidence in the electoral system.
“Changing the rules in the middle of the game is bad enough,” Thomas
writes. “Such rule changes by officials who may lack the authority to do
so is even worse.”
Thomas is clear-sighted on the problems of mail-in voting. “Voting by
mail was traditionally limited to voters who had defined, well-documented
reasons to be absent,” he notes. But in recent years, “many States have
become more permissive, a trend greatly accelerated by Covid-19.”
The opportunity for cheating in mail-in or absentee balloting is
substantial, Thomas writes. He cites a 2012 New
York Times article that notes the “vastly more prevalent” risk
of fraud in mail-in balloting. He cites ballot fraud cases in Pennsylvania
and North Carolina. He reminds us that Heather Gerken—now dean of Yale
Law School—told the Times in the same article that absentee voting allows
for “simpler and more effective alternatives to commit fraud.”
At Judicial Watch, we’ve been tracking ballot fraud for years. We’ve
noted that as far back as 2005, the bi-partisan Carter-Baker Commission
warned that “absentee ballots remain the largest source of potential
voter fraud.” In July, we pointed to California Governor Gavin Newsom’s
rapid escalation of mail-in voting and reported on a New Jersey fraud case.
Read the JW bulletin here.
The thanks Justice Thomas got for his rigorous dissent was to be attacked
by Democrats and the progressive media. But the complex issues surrounding
election fraud aren’t going away. The country owes Clarence Thomas a debt
of gratitude for his clear thinking on the coming crisis.
Until next week,
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