Skylar
Diamond Member
- Jul 5, 2014
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Yea. That is the question.
It really isn't. The constitution requires it. And Chutkan has also noted a public interest in the resolution of the case.
Nor did I ever say it did. I said that the constitution requires a speedy trial AND that Judge Chutkan ALSO cited the public's interest in the resolution of the case.The “public interest” has nothing at all to do with a defendant’s right to a speedy trial.
But keep swinging at those strawmen.
It is the right of the person accused. It is NOT the “right” of the prosecutor, the court or any non party.
According to you. Again.
Thats nonsense. The you keep making that empty claim, but you have no way to support it. Which is why you don’t.
Due process, you ignorant chump, includes different things. If a defendant is facing very serious charges and (among other things) a need to review almost 13 MILLION documents, he has an urgent need to do so fully. A fair trial demands that he get nothing less.
And he has the means to review almost 13 million documents. And the time to do it in. These aren't paper stored in a warehouse. These are overwhelmingly digitized and searchable.
Says who? Says the presiding judge.
So where's the due process violation again? You saying 'uh-huh' doesn't establish a constitutional conflict or the violation of anyone's rights.
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