Trump Has Screwed The Pooch!

Where is the paperwork, MAGAt-sucker?
boy are you fucked up big time ... you have no idea what you are talking about ... you just spew what your handlers tell you to think ... its sad one person can be so ignorant ... but it seems to be running ramped in the republican party their ignorants out shines them all ...
 
Actuall there is
(A) a description of the file series;

(B) an explanation of why the information within the file series is almost invariably exempt from automatic declassification and why the information must remain classified for a longer period of time; and

(C) except when the information within the file series almost invariably identifies a confidential human source or a human intelligence source or key design concepts of weapons of mass destruction, a specific date or event for declassification of the information, not to exceed December 31 of the year that is 50 years from the date of origin of the records.

(3) The Panel may direct the agency not to exempt a designated file series or to declassify the information within that series at an earlier date than recommended. The agency head may appeal such a decision to the President through the National Security Advisor.

(4) File series exemptions approved by the President prior to December 31, 2008, shall remain valid without any additional agency action pending Panel review by the later of December 31, 2010, or December 31 of the year that is 10 years from the date of previous approval.

(d) The following provisions shall apply to the onset of automatic declassification:

(1) Classified records within an integral file block, as defined in this order, that are otherwise subject to automatic declassification under this section shall not be automatically declassified until December 31 of the year that is 25 years from the date of the most recent record within the file block.

(2) After consultation with the Director of the National Declassification Center (the Center) established by section 3.7 of this order and before the records are subject to automatic declassification, an agency head or senior agency official may delay automatic declassification for up to five additional years for classified information contained in media that make a review for possible declassification exemptions more difficult or costly.

(3) Other than for records that are properly exempted from automatic declassification, records containing classified information that originated with other agencies or the disclosure of which would affect the interests or activities of other agencies with respect to the classified information and could reasonably be expected to fall under one or more of the exemptions in paragraph (b) of this section shall be identified prior to the onset of automatic declassification for later referral to those agencies.

(A) The information of concern shall be referred by the Center established by section 3.7 of this order, or by the centralized facilities referred to in section 3.7(e) of this order, in a prioritized and scheduled manner determined by the Center.

(B) If an agency fails to provide a final determination on a referral made by the Center within 1 year of referral, or by the centralized facilities referred to in section 3.7(e) of this order within 3 years of referral, its equities in the referred records shall be automatically declassified.

(C) If any disagreement arises between affected agencies and the Center regarding the referral review period, the Director of the Information Security Oversight Office shall determine the appropriate period of review of referred records.

(D) Referrals identified prior to the establishment of the Center by section 3.7 of this order shall be subject to automatic declassification only in accordance with subparagraphs (d)(3)(A)–(C) of this section.

(4) After consultation with the Director of the Information Security Oversight Office, an agency head may delay automatic declassification for up to 3 years from the date of discovery of classified records that were inadvertently not reviewed prior to the effective date of automatic declassification.

(e) Information exempted from automatic declassification under this section shall remain subject to the mandatory and systematic declassification review provisions of this order.

(f) The Secretary of State shall determine when the United States should commence negotiations with the appropriate officials of a foreign government or international organization of governments to modify any treaty or international agreement that requires the classification of information contained in records affected by this section for a period longer than 25 years from the date of its creation, unless the treaty or international agreement pertains to information that may otherwise remain classified beyond 25 years under this section.

(g) The Secretary of Energy shall determine when information concerning foreign nuclear programs that was removed from the Restricted Data category in order to carry out provisions of the National Security Act of 1947, as amended, may be declassified. Unless otherwise determined, such information shall be declassified when comparable information concerning the United States nuclear program is declassified.

(h) Not later than 3 years from the effective date of this order, all records exempted from automatic declassification under paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section shall be automatically declassified on December 31 of a year that is no more than 50 years from the date of origin, subject to the following:

(1) Records that contain information the release of which should clearly and demonstrably be expected to reveal the following are exempt from automatic declassification at 50 years:

(A) the identity of a confidential human source or a human intelligence source; or

(B) key design concepts of weapons of mass destruction.

(2) In extraordinary cases, agency heads may, within 5 years of the onset of automatic declassification, propose to exempt additional specific information from declassification at 50 years.

(3) Records exempted from automatic declassification under this paragraph shall be automatically declassified on December 31 of a year that is no more than 75 years from the date of origin unless an agency head, within 5 years of that date, proposes to exempt specific information from declassification at 75 years and the proposal is formally approved by the Panel.

(i) Specific records exempted from automatic declassification prior to the establishment of the Center described in section 3.7 of this order shall be subject to the provisions of paragraph (h) of this section in a scheduled and prioritized manner determined by the Center.

(j) At least 1 year before information is subject to automatic declassification under this section, an agency head or senior agency official shall notify the Director of the Information Security Oversight Office, serving as Executive Secretary of the Panel, of any specific information that the agency proposes to exempt from automatic declassification under paragraphs (b) and (h) of this section.

(1) The notification shall include:

(A) a detailed description of the information, either by reference to information in specific records or in the form of a declassification guide;

(B) an explanation of why the information should be exempt from automatic declassification and must remain classified for a longer period of time; and

(C) a specific date or a specific and independently verifiable event for automatic declassification of specific records that contain the information proposed for exemption.
where is the part that if this isn't followed you get arrested?
 
seems ther more to it
(A) a description of the file series;

(B) an explanation of why the information within the file series is almost invariably exempt from automatic declassification and why the information must remain classified for a longer period of time; and

(C) except when the information within the file series almost invariably identifies a confidential human source or a human intelligence source or key design concepts of weapons of mass destruction, a specific date or event for declassification of the information, not to exceed December 31 of the year that is 50 years from the date of origin of the records.

(3) The Panel may direct the agency not to exempt a designated file series or to declassify the information within that series at an earlier date than recommended. The agency head may appeal such a decision to the President through the National Security Advisor.

(4) File series exemptions approved by the President prior to December 31, 2008, shall remain valid without any additional agency action pending Panel review by the later of December 31, 2010, or December 31 of the year that is 10 years from the date of previous approval.

(d) The following provisions shall apply to the onset of automatic declassification:

(1) Classified records within an integral file block, as defined in this order, that are otherwise subject to automatic declassification under this section shall not be automatically declassified until December 31 of the year that is 25 years from the date of the most recent record within the file block.

(2) After consultation with the Director of the National Declassification Center (the Center) established by section 3.7 of this order and before the records are subject to automatic declassification, an agency head or senior agency official may delay automatic declassification for up to five additional years for classified information contained in media that make a review for possible declassification exemptions more difficult or costly.

(3) Other than for records that are properly exempted from automatic declassification, records containing classified information that originated with other agencies or the disclosure of which would affect the interests or activities of other agencies with respect to the classified information and could reasonably be expected to fall under one or more of the exemptions in paragraph (b) of this section shall be identified prior to the onset of automatic declassification for later referral to those agencies.

(A) The information of concern shall be referred by the Center established by section 3.7 of this order, or by the centralized facilities referred to in section 3.7(e) of this order, in a prioritized and scheduled manner determined by the Center.

(B) If an agency fails to provide a final determination on a referral made by the Center within 1 year of referral, or by the centralized facilities referred to in section 3.7(e) of this order within 3 years of referral, its equities in the referred records shall be automatically declassified.

(C) If any disagreement arises between affected agencies and the Center regarding the referral review period, the Director of the Information Security Oversight Office shall determine the appropriate period of review of referred records.

(D) Referrals identified prior to the establishment of the Center by section 3.7 of this order shall be subject to automatic declassification only in accordance with subparagraphs (d)(3)(A)–(C) of this section.

(4) After consultation with the Director of the Information Security Oversight Office, an agency head may delay automatic declassification for up to 3 years from the date of discovery of classified records that were inadvertently not reviewed prior to the effective date of automatic declassification.

(e) Information exempted from automatic declassification under this section shall remain subject to the mandatory and systematic declassification review provisions of this order.

(f) The Secretary of State shall determine when the United States should commence negotiations with the appropriate officials of a foreign government or international organization of governments to modify any treaty or international agreement that requires the classification of information contained in records affected by this section for a period longer than 25 years from the date of its creation, unless the treaty or international agreement pertains to information that may otherwise remain classified beyond 25 years under this section.

(g) The Secretary of Energy shall determine when information concerning foreign nuclear programs that was removed from the Restricted Data category in order to carry out provisions of the National Security Act of 1947, as amended, may be declassified. Unless otherwise determined, such information shall be declassified when comparable information concerning the United States nuclear program is declassified.

(h) Not later than 3 years from the effective date of this order, all records exempted from automatic declassification under paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section shall be automatically declassified on December 31 of a year that is no more than 50 years from the date of origin, subject to the following:

(1) Records that contain information the release of which should clearly and demonstrably be expected to reveal the following are exempt from automatic declassification at 50 years:

(A) the identity of a confidential human source or a human intelligence source; or

(B) key design concepts of weapons of mass destruction.

(2) In extraordinary cases, agency heads may, within 5 years of the onset of automatic declassification, propose to exempt additional specific information from declassification at 50 years.

(3) Records exempted from automatic declassification under this paragraph shall be automatically declassified on December 31 of a year that is no more than 75 years from the date of origin unless an agency head, within 5 years of that date, proposes to exempt specific information from declassification at 75 years and the proposal is formally approved by the Panel.

(i) Specific records exempted from automatic declassification prior to the establishment of the Center described in section 3.7 of this order shall be subject to the provisions of paragraph (h) of this section in a scheduled and prioritized manner determined by the Center.

(j) At least 1 year before the information is subject to automatic declassification under this section, an agency head or senior agency official shall notify the Director of the Information Security Oversight Office, serving as Executive Secretary of the Panel, of any specific information that the agency proposes to exempt from automatic declassification under paragraphs (b) and (h) of this section.

(1) The notification shall include:

(A) a detailed description of the information, either by reference to information in specific records or in the form of a declassification guide;

(B) an explanation of why the information should be exempt from automatic declassification and must remain classified for a longer period of time; and

(C) a specific date or a specific and independently verifiable event for automatic declassification of specific records that contain the information proposed for exemption.
standing order! As executor of the country, the president has the ultimate power to declassify. Show me something that defeats this order.
 
This thread is still going??? its been dead since day one... Let's review.

The Biden Justice department has a pretty bad record in relation to Trump. They say Trump may have violated the espionage act, it’s impossible for a President to break that Law, they have ‘plenary power’ to declassify anything.

They say he stole or misused records, that’s not possible because of the Presidential Records Act. There’s a 2012 decision by a judge saying Presidents can take personal records with them, when they leave office. So, there goes the obstruction allegations. It’s legally impossible to obstruct non-crimes.

They leaked out that AG Merrick Garland didn’t personally approve the raid, that was a lie.

They leaked that Trump had nuclear documents, that was a lie.

They leaked out that Biden and the Whitehouse didn’t have a heads up about the raid, that was a lie.

President Biden had to wave Trumps executive privilege to get this investigation going. AG Garland said that he had to debate on whether to do this raid for weeks, that was a lie. 3 days after the DOJ/ FBI got this warrant, AG Garland approved the raid.

… the Crossfire Hurricane records terrifies the DOJ, and that’s what this is all about.
 
Last edited:
I think it's hilarious that Trump could go to jail for violating a law he signed, in the hopes of taking down Hillary Clinton with it. That just warms the cockles of my heart.
So Hillary should be able to get away with breaking the law?
 
Trump isn't going to have a legal team. They'll all be in jail or disbarred for doing what he tells them to do. He can't get anyone competent to act for him any more, and that's hardly surprising.

What would be the point in taking on a client who refuses to listen to your best advice. It's not going to end well for him, and every step he's taken in the search warrant matter has only proven that he was lying about everything he said about the matter at the outset.

You'd have to give up all of your PAYING clients, who do listen to your advice, stop committing further crimes, and try to dig themselves out of their messes. Trump just keeps digging himself in deeper, threatening the AG, and trying to intimidate witnesses. Sit down, shut up, and don't talk anyone connected with the case, fool.

The DOJ has an open and shut case, with witnesses. All of his excuses have been shot down in flames. Maybe he didn't pack the boxes but he did hang onto them for 18 months, lied about what he had, and refused to give it back, even after he received a subpoena. LOCK HIM UP!!!!

I think it's hilarious that Trump could go to jail for violating a law he signed, in the hopes of taking down Hillary Clinton with it. That just warms the cockles of my heart.
Huh? Tdsing isn’t healthy
 
Hillary didn't break the law. The whole purpose of the email witch hunt was to keep Clinton out of the White House. It worked.
Sure she did, comey said she had classified documents in her email system and they were sent out! That’s our country’s no no
 
you know this how?
fool there are documents everywhere ... Darth Traitor admitted just recently he took them because he felt they belong to him ... so your theory how do I know??? Darth traitor admitted he had them and he wants them back...
 
Thanks for the link.
Where did law say accidentally mishandling classified info is ok?
nowhere does it say mishandling classified info is ok ... the documents in question weren't clearly marked as being sensitive ... that was determined after the fact by the hearings and you can't be held responsible for laws that don't exist ... besides this post isn't about Hillary ... I sure there is a post on this website discussing Hillarys Emails ... take your words of wisdom there and defend your position their... right now we are talking about the orange Darth traitor ...
 
nowhere does it say mishandling classified info is ok ... the documents in question weren't clearly marked as being sensitive ... that was determined after the fact by the hearings and you can't be held responsible for laws that don't exist ... besides this post isn't about Hillary ... I sure there is a post on this website discussing Hillarys Emails ... take your words of wisdom there and defend your position their... right now we are talking about the orange Darth traitor ...

the documents in question weren't clearly marked as being sensitive ...

Was that because Hillary's staff was sending material after removing the markings?
Or because Hillary didn't understand what the classified markings were?
If she never sent or received classified material on her server, how did she ever send or recieve classified material?
 
the documents in question weren't clearly marked as being sensitive ...

Was that because Hillary's staff was sending material after removing the markings?
Or because Hillary didn't understand what the classified markings were?
If she never sent or received classified material on her server, how did she ever send or recieve classified material?
I see your trying to make blame … when sensitive documents are sent they are clearly marked from the sender it’s not the requirement of Hillary or her staff to determine what is sensitive or what isn’t considered sensitive … the sender is supposed to determine what is sensitive… now the documents in question were documents that had a meeting set up with a member of another country … that’s what made it sensitive … now there is no record of these documents being hacked … this has all been documented .. so your attempt to blame a democrat on her staff failed here big time … if you took time to read the senate hearings under classified documents in Hillary email and not some conspiracy nut telling you what he thinks is crap … one other thing her server was never in her basement … there is a colorado company who she had store her emails on the name of the company was Platte River Networks … it was some Fox News nut that claimed it was in her basement … it’s all in the transcript … when the FBI requested them Platte River Networks turn over those remaining EMails … in the pdf file you will see by the time the senate requested all of her emails she informed them that 30,000 emails had been destroyed … she didn’t get a subpoena for them then destroyed them she got the subpoena after they were destroyed … confirmed by the people who destroyed them for her by the government … all part of this is in the senator hearing under her emails in the pdf hearing … if you took time to go read them then you will see how moronic these republicans are when it concerns her emails …
 
when sensitive documents are sent they are clearly marked from the sender it’s not the requirement of Hillary or her staff to determine what is sensitive or what isn’t considered sensitive … the sender is supposed to determine what is sensitive…

Hillary's staff never removed markings and resent material?
 

Forum List

Back
Top