Funny part is if Mueller was digging diligently in exactly the same way, but the target was Hillary Clinton, all the people currently calling him a rogue and shrieking about rights would be on their feet cheering.
And all the people currently cheering would be moaning that he's a fascist thug.
Because the tiny fraction who believe principles should apply to all equally is smaller than ever.
Quite clearly Mueller is out of control. He a rogue prosecutor, without limits, boundaries, duration or oversight. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. He has become the Grand Inquisitor, the Master of the Star Chamber.
This warrant is clearly a speculative and arbitrary instrument (on Trump Attorney Cohen). It had to be approved by Mueller's titular boss Rod Rosenstein which mean both these principles are involved in criminal conspiracy of political motives.
Mueller is stomping all over the checks and balances of the U.S. Federal Constitutional System. He has set himself up as a fourth branch of government beyond the checks of the others. He is driven by malice and ambition. He has turned his reputation as an aggressive, pit bull of a prosecutor into a rabid, mad dog of a persecutor.
It is time to kick Mueller's scrawney ass back into retirement; and Rod Rosenstein has proven himself to be incompetent as Deputy Attorney General. Both need to be fired to return some semblance of sanity and due process to the AGs Office. And the guy who should do that is Jeff Sessions, the Attorney General, by rescinding his recusal and taking hold of these hooligan elements, running roughshod through his Office, for the good of the country.
With them should go the facilitators and protectors of this corrupt process including those Republicans in the Senate.. Lindsay Graham and John McCain.. who have shamelessly supported it and threatened dire retribution if any action to remove Mueller is taken.
Well, I know you wouldn't listen to anything I have to say about it, you'd probably just give me another round of "you're not a real lawyer." So here's what Ken White, defense attorney with Brown White & Osborn, and a former Federal prosecutor, has to say about it. . .
"What does this tell us? First, it reflects that numerous officials — not just Mr. Mueller — concluded that there was probable cause to believe that Mr. Cohen’s law office, home and hotel room contained evidence of a federal crime. A search warrant for a lawyer’s office implicates the attorney-client privilege and core constitutional rights, so the Department of Justice requires unusual levels of approval to seek one. Prosecutors must seek the approval of the United States attorney of the district — in this case the office of Geoffrey Berman, the interim United States attorney appointed by President Trump.
Prosecutors must also consult with the criminal division of the Justice Department in Washington. Finally, prosecutors must convince a United States magistrate judge that there’s probable cause to support the search. Faced with a warrant application destined for immediate worldwide publicity, the judge surely took unusual pains to examine it. This search was not the result of Mr. Mueller or his staff “going rogue.”
Second, the search demonstrates that federal prosecutors and supervisors in the Justice Department concluded that Mr. Cohen could not be trusted to preserve and turn over documents voluntarily. The same regulations that require prosecutors to seek high-level approval for a warrant to search a law office also instruct them to use the least intrusive means to obtain evidence from a lawyer, and to consider requesting voluntary cooperation or serving a subpoena. Mr. Cohen’s lawyer has loudly protested that he had been cooperating. This search warrant means that prosecutors — including the United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, and the criminal division at the Justice Department — believed that Mr. Cohen could not be trusted to respond fully to a subpoena or might destroy documents.
Third, the search suggests that prosecutors most likely believe that Mr. Cohen’s clients used his legal services for the purpose of engaging in crime or fraud. Attorney-client communications are privileged, which is why it’s so unusual and difficult for prosecutors to get approval to search a law office. Justice Department regulations require federal prosecutors to set up a system to have a separate group — a so-called dirty team — review the files and separate out attorney-client communications so that the investigators and prosecutors won’t see anything protected by the privilege."
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/10/...d of non-whites and women.
I am truly sorry.