DOJ Should Not Let Chief Justice Roberts Decide Anything Concerning the SDNY U.S. Attorney

For a generation, legal conservatives have waged a war on Morrison v. Olson. Justice Scalia’s dissent is part of our canon. The conventional wisdom was that all of the conservative Justices, if given the chance, would agree with Justice Scalia. Not now. Not during Blue June. Chief Justice has turned this term into a one-man mission: do everything he thinks necessary to save the Supreme Court.

The Department of Justice should tread very carefully with SDNY U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman. (Charlie Savage wrote a helpful explainer). The lower courts may rule that his removal–actual or de facto–by Barr is unconstitutional. The lower courts my also rule that Berman’s firing by Trump is unconstitutional. And the courts also may conclude that neither Barr nor Trump can appoint Berman’s replacement.

If so, the usual move would be to appeal the case to the Supreme Court. Savage writes:

But if potential litigation over the issue were to go all the way to the Supreme Court, a majority of the justices are Republican appointees steeped in a conservative ideology of White House power that includes a robust view of the president’s ability to remove officials.

No. Not now. Chief Justice Roberts would be willing to give up the chance of narrowing Morrison, for the sake of saving the Supreme Court. He’ll do the opposite, and limit presidential power. And in the process, he will no doubt adopt a cramped, ambiguous reading of Article II that will hamstring the executive branch for generations.

Alas, to use the phrase of the day, this horse may already be out of the barn. DOJ is headed on a kamikaze mission to the Chief. And Barr’s successor will have to pick up the pieces.

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COVID-19 ‘Conspiracy Theories’ Blaming US For Outbreak Proliferate On Chinese Social Media

COVID-19 ‘Conspiracy Theories’ Blaming US For Outbreak Proliferate On Chinese Social Media

Tyler Durden

Sat, 06/20/2020 – 14:25

Yesterday, we shared how American social media companies would rather punish President Trump for sharing “manipulated media” (aka memes) than hold Communist Party officials of spreading misinformation, including conspiracy theories about the origins of the coronavirus outbreak.

Well, the FT last night published a piece examining the recent surfeit of coronavirus-related conspiracy theories that are circulating on Chinese social media, particularly Weibo, a Chinese platform often compared to Twitter. Beijing has allowed conspiracy theories to proliferate, even occasionally stepping in to stir the pot, like it did this week when it first revealed that traces of the virus had been found on a cutting board in the Xinfadi wholesale market.

Hours later, the word was out: imported salmon from Europe was responsible for the latest outbreak in Beijing. Tens of thousands of stores across China tossed their salmon stocks, probably wasting millions of pounds of the pricey fish. And that’s not all.

Freemasons, Norwegian salmon and even Bill Gates have been blamed for the latest outbreak in Beijing, as the CCP encourages its own fever-swamp of disinformation in the dark recesses of the Chinese internet.

Of course, all of these conspiracies converge, like tributaries into the rollicking Mississippi, on the notion that the coronavirus may have been brought to China by agents of the West. That is to say, the original outbreak in Wuhan was a plant.

Many social media users even began speculating that the pandemic that began in the central Chinese city of Wuhan may have been imported from a foreign country. These theories support the government’s contention that the virus may have originated outside of China, and have helped push back against US president Donald Trump’s labelling of Covid-19 as the “China virus”. “Coronavirus found on salmon: is that to say, the first case in Wuhan was also not from wild meat but imported seafood? Who first accused the Chinese of eating wild animal meat?” asked a user called Mydad on Chinese microblogging site Weibo.

Sometimes, these conspiracy theories will leave unintended casualties, including stoking fears that the imported fish might be contaminated. Salmon has been cleared out from grocery stores and restaurants in Beijing, while the frozen fish was removed from several foreign grocers in Beijing on Thursday while many shops on China’s online marketplace Taobao have stopped selling salmon.

Interestingly considering the secret society is no longer in vogue in the West, Freemasons, long a target of organized hate groups in the US like the KKK, make frequent appearances in the nationalistic Chinese conspiracy theories about the coronavirus.

“In general this is increasing in China,” King-wa Fu, an associate professor at the University of Hong Kong’s Journalism and Media Studies Centre, said of the spread of conspiracy theories on Chinese social media. “But coronavirus is unprecedented and this type of information tends to circulate in times of uncertainty — not just in China but around the world.”  The latest outbreak has seen much of the online speculation take a staunch nationalistic tone, sometimes even latching on to conspiracies spread by rightwing activists in the US. One Weibo post shared on Sunday took aim at Mr Gates. The post, which has been deleted, alleged that the virus may have leaked from a Chinese laboratory backed by the Microsoft co-founder. Freemasons have also been attacked on Weibo. A number of posts over the past week blamed the secretive fraternal organisation as the source of the outbreak. Weibo user Gufengdumian said: “Both Wuhan and Beijing’s outbreak started out in food markets. The initiator took advantage of such crowded places and careless mindsets. These terrible American Freemasons are determined to wipe out the Chinese.”

Both Bill Gates and – get this – George Soros have frequently been blamed for introducing the virus to China, in a strange inversion of conspiracies popular in the US.

“Bill Gates has been criticised to death for coronavirus. Why doesn’t anyone suspect Soros?” Weibo user Chouniuba asked last week. Zhao Lijian, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman, has promoted the theory that the virus may have been intentionally transplanted to Wuhan by the US military. That led to fevered speculation on social media about the source of the virus. “Groundless speculation about the origins of the pandemic did not begin with Zhao, but the case of his eye-catching tweets reveals how China’s changing propaganda tactics have interacted with mangled news reporting, social media conspiracy theorising, and underlying US-China tensions — all resulting in high-profile misinformation about a public health crisis,” Stanford University researchers Vanessa Molter and Graham Webster wrote in a report this year.

It’s just the latest example of how the CCP is using its penchant for spreading propaganda and misinformation to hoodwink its people.

And if US social media companies aren’t careful, China could accomplish the same subtle yet effective manipulations in the US.

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3hMwoDr Tyler Durden

Media Hysterical Over Trump Rally COVID Danger; Ignores Brooklyn Protests

Media Hysterical Over Trump Rally COVID Danger; Ignores Brooklyn Protests

Tyler Durden

Sat, 06/20/2020 – 14:00

Authored by Alex Nitzberg via JustTheNews.com,

During the run-up to President Trump’s first campaign rally in months, media coverage has often focused on the coronavirus-related health risks of such an event, but when thousands of people recently gathered in Brooklyn, several reports never even mentioned COVID-19.

“Thousands of marchers dressed in white flooded several blocks around the Brooklyn Museum to support human rights for black transgender people Sunday afternoon,” an Associated Press story declares – but the story never once mentions coronavirus.

Similarly, an article published by CBS News starts this way: “Thousands participated in a rally and silent march for black trans lives in Brooklyn Sunday.” That article contains zero references to coronavirus or the potential danger of its spread.

Rally for Black trans lives draws enormous crowd in Brooklyn,” the title of a piece on NBC News’ LGBT section NBC OUT reads — the piece does not contain even one reference to COVID-19, though it does note that “a swarm of attendees covered the plaza in front of the museum and took over the road on Eastern Parkway, likely in the thousands.”

Thousands show up for black trans people in nationwide protests,” a CNN headline declares. The article mentions gatherings in New York and elsewhere but never discusses the coronavirus.

report from the New York Times did include a paragraph mentioning the virus issue: “The vast majority of the protesters wore masks, and safety teams stationed along the route gave out hand sanitizer. But the crowd was so large that six-feet social distancing was often not possible. Officials have expressed concerns that the Floyd protests could lead to the spread of the coronavirus, though there is no evidence of that so far in New York.”

But while multiple reports about last weekend’s large crowd in New York never once mentioned coronavirus, much of the media coverage surrounding President Trump’s upcoming Tulsa, Oklahoma campaign rally has included the issue.

Here are several recent headlines:

“Despite an uptick of coronavirus cases in the area and fears the event could be a COVID-19 ‘super-spreader,’ many attendees chose to forgo masks and social distancing while in line, where people waited on lawn chairs and with tents,” an NBC News story noted.

“Adding to the anxiety in Tulsa are heightened fears about the risks of the coronavirus,” a New York Times article declared.

“On Wednesday the top health official said he was worried the rally could become a ‘super spreader’ event and recommended it be postponed.”

The president’s rally will take place indoors at a massive BOK Center this Saturday and the registration page for the event includes a warning/disclaimer for attendees about potential COVID-19 exposure. 

An Associated Press story titledTrump rally called ‘dangerous move’ in age of coronavirus warned:

“Scientists believe the virus spreads far more easily in crowded enclosed spaces than it does outdoors, where circulating air has a better chance of dispersing virus particles.”

Juxtaposing the coverage of the large transgender-related gathering, which in several cases completely ignored issues of coronavirus, with the coverage regarding the upcoming Trump rally, which often highlights issues of coronavirus, leaves the media vulnerable to charges of bias.

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Trust In America Wanes Amid “Defeated Party”-Fomented Social Unrest, Says Putin 

Trust In America Wanes Amid “Defeated Party”-Fomented Social Unrest, Says Putin 

Tyler Durden

Sat, 06/20/2020 – 13:35

The death of George Floyd ignited nationwide unrest for weeks as social justice warriors combated police, while others looted stores, torched police cars and building structures. The unrest was fueled by extreme wealth inequality and economic collapse – combine the two, and the country is experiencing one of the worst socio-economic implosions in its existence.

At the moment, there are no signs this unraveling of society, and or even the pandemic is decreasing – the image of the country has been tarnished, and now, there’s a credibility issue emerging with America on the world stage. 

Russian news agency TASS quoted Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Saturday as saying President Vladimir Putin is very concerned about how much he can trust agreements with President Trump amid ongoing social unrest, reported Reuters

Peskov also said there is an increasing unpredictability in actions by Washington, and this is bothering world leaders. 

Putin was interviewed last Sunday (June 14), where he said social unrest across the US reveals a deep internal crisis in the country.

 “What has happened [in the US] is the manifestation of some deep domestic crises,” he said, noting that this crisis was festering well before President Trump took office.

“When he won, and his victory was absolutely obvious and democratic, the defeated party invented all sorts of bogus stories just to call into question his legitimacy,” he added.

Putin pointed out the biggest problem of the US political system is the parties and their special interest of people behind the scenes. 

“It seems to me that the problem is that group party interests, in this case, are placed above the interests of the entire society and the interests of people,” Putin said.

While commenting on domestic issues, Putin said his government has been combating the virus with minimal losses. He said that was not the case in the US, adding the failures of the US’ “management system” led to inadequate response and widespread destruction.

To sum up, the American hegemon is on shaky ground as it has been paralyzed by the pandemic and ongoing social unrest in major metros – now world leaders are starting to recognize the empire is in decline.

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2YXlVfX Tyler Durden

Judge Royce Lamberth Condemns John Bolton’s Conduct, But Declines to Block Publication of Bolton’s Memoir

From Judge Royce Lamberth’s opinion this morning in United States v. Bolton:

{Defendant [former National Security Advisor John] Bolton has gambled with the national security of the United States. He has exposed his country to harm and himself to civil (and potentially criminal) liability. But these facts do not control the motion before the Court. The government has failed to establish that an injunction [against Bolton’s publishing his memoir] will prevent irreparable harm. Its motion is accordingly DENIED.}

Bolton disputes that his book contains any … classified information and emphasizes his months-long compliance with the prepublication review process. He bristles at the mixed messages sent by prepublication review personnel and questions the motives of intelligence officers.

Bolton could have sued the government and sought relief in court. Instead, he opted out of the review process before its conclusion. Unilateral fast-tracking carried the benefit of publicity and sales, and the cost of substantial risk exposure. This was Bolton’s bet: If he is right and the book does not contain classified information, he keeps the upside mentioned above; but if he is wrong, he stands to lose his profits from the book deal, exposes himself to criminal liability, and imperils national security. Bolton was wrong.

The government submitted classified declarations for the Court’s ex parte review in camera. On June 19, 2020, the Court held a sealed ex parte hearing for further in camera review with the government. Upon reviewing the classified materials, as well as the declarations filed on the public docket, the Court is persuaded that Defendant Bolton likely jeopardized national security by disclosing classified information in violation of his nondisclosure agreement obligations.

Bolton was the National Security Advisor to the President. He was entrusted with countless national secrets and privy to countless sensitive dealings. To Bolton, this is a selling point: His book is entitled The Room Where It Happened. He rushed to write an account of his behind-closed-doors experiences and produced over 500 pages of manuscript for review. Not four months later, Bolton pulled the plug on the process and sent the still-under-review manuscript to the publisher for printing.

Many Americans are unable to renew their passports within four months, but Bolton complains that reviewing hundreds of pages of a National Security Advisor’s tell-all deserves a swifter timetable. Access to sensitive intelligence is rarely consolidated in individuals, and it comes as no surprise to the Court that the government requested several iterations of review headed by multiple officers. But what is reasonable to the Court was intolerable to Bolton, and he proceeded to publication without so much as an email notifying the government.

The court noted that the First Amendment doesn’t forbid the requirement of prepublication review, for people who have been given access to classified material:

This Circuit upheld the Central Intelligence Agency’s prepublication review scheme in McGehee v. Casey (D.C. Cir. 1983). There, the Circuit held that “the government has a substantial interest in assuring secrecy in the conduct of foreign intelligence operations.” First Amendment rights are preserved so long as restrictions “protect a substantial government interest unrelated to the suppression of free speech,” and “the restriction [is] narrowly drawn to ‘restrict speech no more than is necessary to protect the substantial government interest.'” The Supreme Court agrees: “[T]his Court’s cases make clear that—even in the absence of an express agreement—the CIA [can] act[] to protect substantial government interests by imposing reasonable restrictions on employee activities that in other contexts might be protected by the First Amendment.” Snepp v. United States (1980). For the purposes of resolving this motion, the Court is satisfied that the government’s prepublication review of Bolton’s book fell within these bounds.

The NDAs barred publication of classified materials. Bolton likely published classified materials. The government is likely to succeed on the merits….

But the court declined to issue an injunction, because:

According to Simon & Schuster Chief Executive Jonathan Karp’s affidavit, “[m]ore than 200,000 copies of the Book have already been shipped domestically … to retail booksellers large and small, from large national chains and online entities to a host of small, independent, booksellers.” Indeed, “thousands of copies of the Book [have been shipped] to booksellers around the world, including in Continental Europe, India and the Middle East.” Reviews of and excerpts from the book are widely available online. As noted at the hearing, a CBS News reporter clutched a copy of the book while questioning the White House press secretary. By the looks of it, the horse is not just out of the barn—it is out of the country.

Counsel for the government still press for an injunction. In its motion, the government asks this Court to order Bolton “to instruct his publisher to take any and all available steps to retrieve and destroy any copies of the book that may be in the possession of any third party.” For reasons that hardly need to be stated, the Court will not order a nationwide seizure and destruction of a political memoir.

If nothing else, the government argues, an injunction today would at least prevent any further spread of the book, such as limiting its audiobook release. The argument is unavailing. In taking it upon himself to publish his book without securing final approval from national intelligence authorities, Bolton may indeed have caused the country irreparable harm. But in the Internet age, even a handful of copies in circulation could irrevocably destroy confidentiality. A single dedicated individual with a book in hand could publish its contents far and wide from his local coffee shop. With hundreds of thousands of copies around the globe—many in newsrooms—the damage is done. There is no restoring the status quo….

Here’s the court’s longer summary of the facts:

[Bolton’s] book, a political memoir reflecting on Bolton’s tenure as National Security Advisor, has been printed, bound, and shipped across the country. It is due for national release on Tuesday, June 23, 2020. The government insists that the book contains sensitive information that could compromise national security and alleges that Bolton prematurely halted his prepublication review process in order to proceed to publication. Defendant Bolton characterizes his actions differently—he emphasizes his substantial and extensive compliance with the review process and dismisses the government’s recent objections to his manuscripts as pretextual and politically motivated.

While Bolton’s unilateral conduct raises grave national security concerns, the government has not established that an injunction is an appropriate remedy….

The government anticipates that public officials will seek to publish accounts of their experiences. When those officials have access to sensitive information that implicates national security, the government guards that information by conditioning employment on a guarantee of nondisclosure. Bolton accepted this condition of employment and executed multiple nondisclosure agreements with the government. In one agreement, Standard Form 312, Bolton agreed that he would “never divulge classified information to anyone unless: (a) [he has] officially verified that the recipient has been properly authorized by the United States Government to receive it; or (b) [he has] been given prior written notice of authorization from the United States Government … that such disclosure is permitted.”

In the event Bolton was “uncertain about the classification status of information, [he was] required to confirm from an authorized official that the information is unclassified before [he] may disclose it.” Violation could result in “assign[ing] to the United States Government all royalties, remunerations, and emoluments that have resulted, will result or may result from any disclosure, publication, or revelation of classified information not consistent with the terms of [SF 312].” Bolton agreed to abide by the restrictions in SF 312 “[u]nless and until [he is] released in writing by an authorized representative of the United States Government.”

Another agreement, Form 4414, detailed conditions Bolton must follow to gain access to highly classified sensitive compartmented information (“SCI”). Here, Bolton agreed to “submit for security review … any writing or other preparation in any form … that contains or purports to contain any SCI or description of activities that produce or relate to SCI or that [he has] reason to believe are derived from SCI, that [he] contemplate[s] disclosing to any person not authorized to have access to SCI or that [he has] prepared for public disclosure.” Bolton promised “not [to] disclose the contents of such preparation with, or show[] it to, anyone who is not authorized to have access to SCI until [he had] received written authorization … that such disclosure is permitted.”

In December 2019, Bolton submitted a draft manuscript to the NSC for prepublication review. Over the following four months, Bolton worked to incorporate the edits he received from the Senior Director for Records Access and Information Security Management at the NSC, Ellen Knight. These edits were iterative and extensive, and on April 27, 2020, Knight communicated to Bolton that she no longer considered the manuscript to contain classified material. Bolton claims that he and Knight discussed the possibility that the final written authorization might be ready as early as that afternoon.

The written authorization did not issue, and Knight soon clarified that the process was ongoing. Weeks passed without further communication between Bolton and the government. On June 8, 2020, John Eisenberg, Deputy White House Counsel and Legal Advisor to the NSC, issued a letter to Bolton that claimed the manuscript still contained classified information. By that point, Bolton had already delivered a final manuscript to his publisher for printing and shipping, without written authorization and without notice to the government….

And here are the terms of the injunction that the government sought:

[1.] Enjoin Bolton from “proceeding with the publication of his book in any form or media without first obtaining written authorization from the United States through the prepublication review process;”

[2.] Require Bolton to “ensure that his publisher and resellers receive notice that the book contains classified information that he was not authorized to disclose;”

[3.] Require Bolton to “instruct his publisher to delay the release date of the book pending the completion of the prepublication review process and authorization from the United States that no classified information remains in the book;”

[4.] Require Bolton to “instruct his publisher to take any and all available steps to retrieve and destroy any copies of the book that may be in the possession of any third party;”

[5.] Enjoin Bolton from “taking any additional steps toward[s] public[ly] disclosing classified information without first obtaining authorization from the United States through the prepublication review process;” and

[6.] Require Bolton to “ensure that his publisher and resellers receive notice of [the injunction].”

The government does not name Simon & Schuster as a defendant in the case. Instead, the government seeks to secure Simon & Schuster’s compliance by way of enjoining Bolton. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(d)(2) instructs that an injunction or TRO binds not only the parties, but also “the parties’ officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys,” and “all other persons who are in active concert or participation with” the parties, if they receive actual notice of the order.

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Judge Royce Lamberth Condemns John Bolton’s Conduct, But Declines to Block Publication of Bolton’s Memoir

From Judge Royce Lamberth’s opinion this morning in United States v. Bolton:

{Defendant [former National Security Advisor John] Bolton has gambled with the national security of the United States. He has exposed his country to harm and himself to civil (and potentially criminal) liability. But these facts do not control the motion before the Court. The government has failed to establish that an injunction [against Bolton’s publishing his memoir] will prevent irreparable harm. Its motion is accordingly DENIED.}

Bolton disputes that his book contains any … classified information and emphasizes his months-long compliance with the prepublication review process. He bristles at the mixed messages sent by prepublication review personnel and questions the motives of intelligence officers.

Bolton could have sued the government and sought relief in court. Instead, he opted out of the review process before its conclusion. Unilateral fast-tracking carried the benefit of publicity and sales, and the cost of substantial risk exposure. This was Bolton’s bet: If he is right and the book does not contain classified information, he keeps the upside mentioned above; but if he is wrong, he stands to lose his profits from the book deal, exposes himself to criminal liability, and imperils national security. Bolton was wrong.

The government submitted classified declarations for the Court’s ex parte review in camera. On June 19, 2020, the Court held a sealed ex parte hearing for further in camera review with the government. Upon reviewing the classified materials, as well as the declarations filed on the public docket, the Court is persuaded that Defendant Bolton likely jeopardized national security by disclosing classified information in violation of his nondisclosure agreement obligations.

Bolton was the National Security Advisor to the President. He was entrusted with countless national secrets and privy to countless sensitive dealings. To Bolton, this is a selling point: His book is entitled The Room Where It Happened. He rushed to write an account of his behind-closed-doors experiences and produced over 500 pages of manuscript for review. Not four months later, Bolton pulled the plug on the process and sent the still-under-review manuscript to the publisher for printing.

Many Americans are unable to renew their passports within four months, but Bolton complains that reviewing hundreds of pages of a National Security Advisor’s tell-all deserves a swifter timetable. Access to sensitive intelligence is rarely consolidated in individuals, and it comes as no surprise to the Court that the government requested several iterations of review headed by multiple officers. But what is reasonable to the Court was intolerable to Bolton, and he proceeded to publication without so much as an email notifying the government.

The court noted that the First Amendment doesn’t forbid the requirement of prepublication review, for people who have been given access to classified material:

This Circuit upheld the Central Intelligence Agency’s prepublication review scheme in McGehee v. Casey (D.C. Cir. 1983). There, the Circuit held that “the government has a substantial interest in assuring secrecy in the conduct of foreign intelligence operations.” First Amendment rights are preserved so long as restrictions “protect a substantial government interest unrelated to the suppression of free speech,” and “the restriction [is] narrowly drawn to ‘restrict speech no more than is necessary to protect the substantial government interest.'” The Supreme Court agrees: “[T]his Court’s cases make clear that—even in the absence of an express agreement—the CIA [can] act[] to protect substantial government interests by imposing reasonable restrictions on employee activities that in other contexts might be protected by the First Amendment.” Snepp v. United States (1980). For the purposes of resolving this motion, the Court is satisfied that the government’s prepublication review of Bolton’s book fell within these bounds.

The NDAs barred publication of classified materials. Bolton likely published classified materials. The government is likely to succeed on the merits….

But the court declined to issue an injunction, because:

According to Simon & Schuster Chief Executive Jonathan Karp’s affidavit, “[m]ore than 200,000 copies of the Book have already been shipped domestically … to retail booksellers large and small, from large national chains and online entities to a host of small, independent, booksellers.” Indeed, “thousands of copies of the Book [have been shipped] to booksellers around the world, including in Continental Europe, India and the Middle East.” Reviews of and excerpts from the book are widely available online. As noted at the hearing, a CBS News reporter clutched a copy of the book while questioning the White House press secretary. By the looks of it, the horse is not just out of the barn—it is out of the country.

Counsel for the government still press for an injunction. In its motion, the government asks this Court to order Bolton “to instruct his publisher to take any and all available steps to retrieve and destroy any copies of the book that may be in the possession of any third party.” For reasons that hardly need to be stated, the Court will not order a nationwide seizure and destruction of a political memoir.

If nothing else, the government argues, an injunction today would at least prevent any further spread of the book, such as limiting its audiobook release. The argument is unavailing. In taking it upon himself to publish his book without securing final approval from national intelligence authorities, Bolton may indeed have caused the country irreparable harm. But in the Internet age, even a handful of copies in circulation could irrevocably destroy confidentiality. A single dedicated individual with a book in hand could publish its contents far and wide from his local coffee shop. With hundreds of thousands of copies around the globe—many in newsrooms—the damage is done. There is no restoring the status quo….

Here’s the court’s longer summary of the facts:

[Bolton’s] book, a political memoir reflecting on Bolton’s tenure as National Security Advisor, has been printed, bound, and shipped across the country. It is due for national release on Tuesday, June 23, 2020. The government insists that the book contains sensitive information that could compromise national security and alleges that Bolton prematurely halted his prepublication review process in order to proceed to publication. Defendant Bolton characterizes his actions differently—he emphasizes his substantial and extensive compliance with the review process and dismisses the government’s recent objections to his manuscripts as pretextual and politically motivated.

While Bolton’s unilateral conduct raises grave national security concerns, the government has not established that an injunction is an appropriate remedy….

The government anticipates that public officials will seek to publish accounts of their experiences. When those officials have access to sensitive information that implicates national security, the government guards that information by conditioning employment on a guarantee of nondisclosure. Bolton accepted this condition of employment and executed multiple nondisclosure agreements with the government. In one agreement, Standard Form 312, Bolton agreed that he would “never divulge classified information to anyone unless: (a) [he has] officially verified that the recipient has been properly authorized by the United States Government to receive it; or (b) [he has] been given prior written notice of authorization from the United States Government … that such disclosure is permitted.”

In the event Bolton was “uncertain about the classification status of information, [he was] required to confirm from an authorized official that the information is unclassified before [he] may disclose it.” Violation could result in “assign[ing] to the United States Government all royalties, remunerations, and emoluments that have resulted, will result or may result from any disclosure, publication, or revelation of classified information not consistent with the terms of [SF 312].” Bolton agreed to abide by the restrictions in SF 312 “[u]nless and until [he is] released in writing by an authorized representative of the United States Government.”

Another agreement, Form 4414, detailed conditions Bolton must follow to gain access to highly classified sensitive compartmented information (“SCI”). Here, Bolton agreed to “submit for security review … any writing or other preparation in any form … that contains or purports to contain any SCI or description of activities that produce or relate to SCI or that [he has] reason to believe are derived from SCI, that [he] contemplate[s] disclosing to any person not authorized to have access to SCI or that [he has] prepared for public disclosure.” Bolton promised “not [to] disclose the contents of such preparation with, or show[] it to, anyone who is not authorized to have access to SCI until [he had] received written authorization … that such disclosure is permitted.”

In December 2019, Bolton submitted a draft manuscript to the NSC for prepublication review. Over the following four months, Bolton worked to incorporate the edits he received from the Senior Director for Records Access and Information Security Management at the NSC, Ellen Knight. These edits were iterative and extensive, and on April 27, 2020, Knight communicated to Bolton that she no longer considered the manuscript to contain classified material. Bolton claims that he and Knight discussed the possibility that the final written authorization might be ready as early as that afternoon.

The written authorization did not issue, and Knight soon clarified that the process was ongoing. Weeks passed without further communication between Bolton and the government. On June 8, 2020, John Eisenberg, Deputy White House Counsel and Legal Advisor to the NSC, issued a letter to Bolton that claimed the manuscript still contained classified information. By that point, Bolton had already delivered a final manuscript to his publisher for printing and shipping, without written authorization and without notice to the government….

And here are the terms of the injunction that the government sought:

[1.] Enjoin Bolton from “proceeding with the publication of his book in any form or media without first obtaining written authorization from the United States through the prepublication review process;”

[2.] Require Bolton to “ensure that his publisher and resellers receive notice that the book contains classified information that he was not authorized to disclose;”

[3.] Require Bolton to “instruct his publisher to delay the release date of the book pending the completion of the prepublication review process and authorization from the United States that no classified information remains in the book;”

[4.] Require Bolton to “instruct his publisher to take any and all available steps to retrieve and destroy any copies of the book that may be in the possession of any third party;”

[5.] Enjoin Bolton from “taking any additional steps toward[s] public[ly] disclosing classified information without first obtaining authorization from the United States through the prepublication review process;” and

[6.] Require Bolton to “ensure that his publisher and resellers receive notice of [the injunction].”

The government does not name Simon & Schuster as a defendant in the case. Instead, the government seeks to secure Simon & Schuster’s compliance by way of enjoining Bolton. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65(d)(2) instructs that an injunction or TRO binds not only the parties, but also “the parties’ officers, agents, servants, employees, and attorneys,” and “all other persons who are in active concert or participation with” the parties, if they receive actual notice of the order.

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One Dead After Shooting In Seattle Autonomous Zone

One Dead After Shooting In Seattle Autonomous Zone

Tyler Durden

Sat, 06/20/2020 – 13:18

Following roughly 2 weeks of existence that have been characterized by an incessant stream of video showing beatdowns, brazen theft, armed robbery and myriad other crimes and/or ‘revolutionary’ acts, Seattle’s autonomous zone has finally sustained its first casualty since “declaring independence” from the US.

According to the Seattle PD twitter account, the shooting has been ruled a homicide.

At least one person is dead with another in critical condition after a shooting early Saturday morning in the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest, or CHOP (as they’re now calling it). The shooting comes after the mayor of Seattle decided to appease the group of mostly fringe leftists and anarchists by barring cops from using tear gas and other crowd control methods.

According to the city’s official statement, when officers arrived on scene while responding to the shooting (and to try and administer aid to the then-mortally wounded victim) a violent crowd of CHOP denizens prevented the police from reaching the individual, who soon succumbed to his wounds.

Read the full press release below:

Homicide detectives are investigating following a fatal shooting that occurred early Saturday morning at 10th Avenue and East Pine Street. One man was declared deceased at the hospital and another male is being treated for life-threatening injuries.

On June 20th, at approximately 2:30 AM, East Precinct officers responded to a report of shots fired in Cal Anderson Park. This is inside the area referred to as the Capitol Hill Organized Protest (CHOP). Officers attempted to locate a shooting victim but were met by a violent crowd that prevented officers safe access to the victims. Officers were later informed that the victims, both males, had been transported to Harborview Medical Center by CHOP medics.

Officers responded to Harborview and were informed that one of the victims, a 19-year-old male, had died from injuries. The other victim, also a male, unknown age, remains in the hospital with life-threatening injuries.

The suspect or suspect(s) fled and are still at large. There is no description at this time.

Homicide detectives responded and are conducting a thorough investigation, despite the challenges presented by the circumstances.
Anyone with information about this shooting, or who may have video, is asked to contact the Seattle Police Department’s Violent Crime tip line at (206) 233-5000.

This remains an active and on-going homicide investigation. This post will be updated as additional information becomes available.

Though according to Omari Salisbury, a resident CHOP “journalist”, the victims had already been transported to the hospital by car before police arrive. It’s not clear whether this is accurate or not. It’s also unclear how police plant to investigate the shooting.

According to a clip of the scene when the shots rang out, it appears 7 shots in total were fired.

Salisbury claims the shootings, which occurred “one block apart” were entirely separate incidents, which deviates from the statement given by the Seattle PD.

 

Just as we long suspected, this bizarre experiment in appeasing the intellectually bankrupt fringe left has resulted in bloodshed, despite its members purported commitment to peace, justice and equality.

 

 

 

 

 

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2V3QMWN Tyler Durden

Is Reality About To Knock On The Door Of These Liquidity-Soaked Markets?

Is Reality About To Knock On The Door Of These Liquidity-Soaked Markets?

Tyler Durden

Sat, 06/20/2020 – 13:00

Authored by Sven Henrich via NorthmanTrader.com,

Straight Talk

What I really like about our Straight Talk episodes is that it they are completely agenda free, there are no restrictions, it’s just the 3 of us talking and discussing the issues on our minds. What you see is what you get. Our honest opinions. You may not agree with us and that’s completely fine, but these discussions are meant to highlight fact based topics that we care about discussing them in a hopefully intelligently and digestible manner, make others think as well and hopefully educate in a setting that permits us to go into a bit more depth.

Many market discussions are agenda driven or constrained by time. Speaking for myself I also learn things during these discussions and I very much enjoy the banter we have going.

In this week’s episode of Straight Talk Guy Adami, Dan Nathan and I are diving into the debate of bubble vs mania, the difference between the two, we speak about the new retail phenomenon, the risks associated with it, we touch also the political influence on markets via headlines. Some people do not like us to touch upon the political and we get that, but one can’t deny the influence the political world has on markets and in our view it would be neglectful not to address their influence on markets and to highlight what’s real or not from our perspective. Again: Anyone is free to disagree with our views and we all have different ones, but as Guy said this week: Civility is a sign of strength not of weakness and Dan’s appeal for civility is a much needed in our age where people hate on each other for having different opinions.

We also discuss some technical charts and issues of valuations and for context see also my appearance on CNBC Fast Money this week:

Yes I know, old pic prior to quarantine buzzcut, one day we’ll update it perhaps 😉

One of the issues I mentioned on the show was the fact that in the past few years market moves have become ever more extreme, to the upside as well as to the downside. In the meantime volatility has moved from one compression pattern to the next and ultimately it breaks out. Same with the rallies, they extend higher and higher on ever tightening patterns and then at some point they snap violently:

We just had such a snap in the past 2 weeks and this week’s Fed driven (Corporate bond buying) rally could not repair that damage.

Underlying it all is the again a very pronounced lag in equal weight and, as you can see in the chart above ($XVG), equal weight is hovering around the December 2018 lows when $SPX was trading around 2350.

Hence we also discuss the banks, Wells Fargo, JPM, and the signals they may be sending about the larger economy.

And it may be an ominous one. Yes central banks, with never before seen liquidity injections that make 2009 look like child’s play, have managed to levitate asset prices to unseen valuations inside a recession. Yet there are major divergent issues going on in these markets including the over reliance on price gains coming from overnight gaps to the upside, many of them unfilled and we discuss these as well.

Hence let’s not lose sight of history which suggests what would/could happen if central banks lose control:

Control over the virus could prove to be an illusion as cases are increasing to ever higher levels and many states in the US are seeing record spikes, hence $AAPL again shut down its stores in key states. A “V” shaped recovery presumed by markets at these valuations may disappoint in size and scope and then what do we have besides a historically disconnected in asset bubble?

No, the risk factors may be currently ignored by liquidity soaked markets, but reality keeps knocking at the door and one day may suddenly open it.

Without further ado here’s this week’s episode of Straight Talk and we hope you enjoy it:

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Separately, for those interested, I’ll be posting a detailed rundown on the latest market technicals. If not already subscribed you can register here: Market Videos.

For the latest public analysis please visit NorthmanTrader. To subscribe to our market products please visit Services.

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/3hFlaR0 Tyler Durden

US Reports Biggest Jump In COVID-19 Cases Since May 1 As Florida Sees 3rd-Straight Record: Live Updates

US Reports Biggest Jump In COVID-19 Cases Since May 1 As Florida Sees 3rd-Straight Record: Live Updates

Tyler Durden

Sat, 06/20/2020 – 12:25

Summary:

  • US reports 30k new cases
  • India now 4th largest outbreak with ~400k cases
  • India reports another record jump
  • Florida reports 3rd straight record jump
  • Russia reports fewer than 8k new cases
  • South Korea reports 67 new cases, largest jump since May
  • China reports just 27 new cases

* * *

For the first time since May 1, the US reported more than 30,000 coronavirus cases in a single day as Texas, Florida, Arizona and a handful of other states reported their latest record totals for the 2nd or 3rd day in a row, for some cases. While NY, NJ and a handful of surrounding states see cases continue to decline to negligible levels, following a pattern seen in Europe, roughly 20 states have seen numbers continue to rise, and about half of those are seeing new cases hit record levels well above where they were during the US’s ‘peak’ back in April.

Even stocks are beginning to notice as the market sold off last week in recognition of the fact that even if states don’t go the shutdown route, as the White House has insisted won’t happen, the spike in infections, and the inevitable jump in deaths to follow, will ensure that the V-shaped recovery doesn’t happen.

The US tallied 31,630 new confirmed cases on Friday, according to data from the Washington Post. The last time new daily cases in the United States topped 30,000 was on May 1, when 33,263 new infections were reported. That was right as the US ‘peak’ was beginning to pass. Around the world, 177k new cases were reported yesterday. Ironically, the number of new cases reported in the city of Tulsa hit a new high on Friday, one day before Trump’s big campaign rally.

Thanks to the flurry of red states like Arizona, Florida, Texas etc. that lowered their guard too quickly, the US just can’t seem to bend that curve.

More than 2.1 million cases of the virus have been confirmed across the US as of Saturday morning. With 119,158 confirmed deaths, the US is on the cusp of passing 120k fatalities, while closely watched projections suggest that number could hit 200k by October.

As Brazil passed the 1 million-case mark, a major milestone in what has become Latin America’s biggest and most threatening outbreak, the WHO’s Dr. Tedros warned yesterday that the pandemic “was accelerating”.

In other US news, Florida on Saturday reported yet another record jump in new cases, its third in a row and fourth in the last 8 days. Florida health officials reported 4,049 new cases as well as 40 deaths across the state. Saturday’s numbers bring the total number of cases in the state to 93,797 and the death toll to 3,144.

US State Department said Saturday that COVID-19 infections have been reported at its embassy in the Afghan capital and the staff who are affected include diplomats, contractors and locally employed staff.

It didn’t say how many were impacted, though another source told AJ that as many as 20 could be impacted.

“The embassy is implementing all appropriate measures to mitigate the spread of COVID-19,” the US State department said. The infected staff are in isolation in the embassy while the remainder on the compound are being tested, said the embassy official, who also said the embassy staff have been told they can expect tighter isolation orders.

Russia reported 7,889 new cases of the virus, pushing its nationwide tally to 576,952 since the crisis began. The national coronavirus response center said 161 people had died in the last 24 hours, bringing the official death toll to 8,002.

India, meanwhile, recorded its highest single-day jump yet with 14,516, bringing its total to 395,048, according to health officials. Another 375 deaths brought the death toll to 12,948 as India registered over 10,000 cases for the ninth day in a row. This latest batch of cases put India over the top on Saturday, making it the world’s fourth largest outbreak behind the US, Brazil and Russia. Several countries and Hong Kong continued with plans to evacuate their citizens from India, amid concerns hospitals in major cities such as Delhi and Mumbai may be overwhelmed.

In its biggest daily increase in weeks, South Korea reported 67 new cases of coronavirus, 16 of which health authorities said were from Pakistan. And as Beijing continues to bring its latest flare up under control, China reported 27 new coronavirus cases in the last 24 hours, including 22 new cases in Beijing.

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2NlnGxL Tyler Durden

Fed’s Actions Have Obliterated True Price Discovery Mechanism

Fed’s Actions Have Obliterated True Price Discovery Mechanism

Tyler Durden

Sat, 06/20/2020 – 12:10

Authored by Bruce Wilds via Advancing Time blog,

The Federal Reserve continues to destroy true price discovery in this market by executing short squeeze after short squeeze. Moral hazard be damned, the Fed’s desire to support the market has overruled common sense. We have seen this time after time with well-timed announcements being made simply to fire up bullish enthusiasm and spark a rally. We recently observed this when a Fed announcement resulted in a dramatic intraday reversal causing the S&P500 to surge more than 100 points from session lows and closing above its 200-day moving average.

Fed’s Action Obliterates True Price Discovery

This time it was because the Fed announced it would start to buy corporate bonds the next day. A late Bloomberg report that Trump was seeking a $1 trillion infrastructure proposal to stimulate the economy also added fuel to the fire. Trump’s proposal focused on 5G and rural broadband. The report added it was still under discussion and would need the backing of Congress to move forward. Still, this is an indication the false economy continues to ramp up. Government stimulus has been a key feature of the global equities rally even as unemployment has soared and signs that a second wave of the virus has started to emerge.

Until now, the size and pace of Fed balance sheet expansion have put a floor under global equity markets and driven equities higher. Yet Powell is going out of his way to signal that more economic support is on the way. The problem with market manipulation is that once it starts, where does it end? This is an area of moral hazard that once breached is difficult to turn back. Another issue is that the Fed is not alone in playing this game, the Trump administration also has invested a great deal in keeping markets moving higher. In recent years we have witnessed more central banks and government intervention in markets. This supports the argument that true price discovery has been massively distorted.

The BOJ Buying ETFs Is Distorting Markets

In many ways, government entities investing in or buying stock, are transferring part of industry or commerce from the private-sector to state ownership or control. While the state may not choose to exercise control over various decisions a company makes the entity that owns the stocks can control perceived valuations by being the market maker that sets prices. True price discovery and properly pricing assets are the bedrock of free markets. The feedback loops between asset prices and input signals are critical in determining value, this is especially true when we focus on assets such as stocks, bonds, currencies, or paper promises that carry no utility value and can perform no useful task.

The Federal Reserve was intended to act as the “lender of last resort” but as Nomi Prins says, “As if the Fed hasn’t done enough to destroy honest markets, now it plans to start buying individual corporate bonds. It’s just another step closer to the Fed deciding the winners and losers in the market.” This has forced even the most bearish of us to finally concede that, for whatever reason you want to claim, the Fed under the leadership of its Chairman J. Powell has crossed the Rubicon and the point of no return. 

Crossing the Rubicon means the point of no return. This high-level idiom comes from an event in ancient Roman history. In 49 BC Julius Caesar’s army crossed the Rubicon River, this was forbidden. It was an event from which he knew  there is no way back. When Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon, he started a five-year Roman civil war. At the war’s end, Julius Caesar was declared dictator for life. Putting the Fed’s recent actions into context and what it means for investors, the miserable policies adopted by the Fed, which has allowed other central banks to do the same, has created a new environment redefining risk and value. This highlights the fact there is nothing normal about what is happening, this is far from normal.

Savers, investors, and a new wave of speculators as a result of Central banks expanding balance sheets while reducing interest rates are now embracing any investment that promises yield. This combined with rising government spending has disaster written all over it, not just in America but across the globe. This and a slew of other horrible moves have created a bubble in bond and equities. Only the claim that no inflation exists and this is the only way to halt deflation allows this reckless policy to continue, however, when people realize the fallacy of this assertion it will be to late too stop the economic and financial carnage it will create.

The Shrinking Private Sector

Unfortunately, the money flowing from the Government-Financial complex is not reaching the parts of the economy where it is most needed. For a small business, the economy remains a disaster. Investors should remember the true unemployment picture has yet to reveal itself. As the government grew larger it seems to have become oblivious to the importance and fragility of many small businesses or how much it cost a community when they close. Small business has been the big loser over the last several months and hundreds of thousands will soon have to close.  With so many tenants looking at foregoing rent small landlords that don’t have deep pockets also face huge problems.

The idea we are about to experience a “V-shaped recovery” is rubbish. Many people are afraid to fly, travel, or eat out at a restaurant. The government’s solution to give the masses just enough to silence their outrage is a bizarre extension of crony capitalism. It feeds large businesses with access to cheap capital are the winners and the big losers are the middle-class, small businesses, and social mobility. All those people that want a higher minimum wage can forget that ever happening as tens of millions remain out of work. It is difficult to argue true price discovery exists and risk is not being discounted when prices fail to reflect unemployment at around 20% and ignore news of a sharp escalation in Korean tensions or the deadly clashes between Indian and Chinese border troops.

Bubbles always pop, this time is not different. Exacerbating the current situation, many of those invested in paper promises have become over-leveraged putting themselves at great risk if a sudden decline in the value of these assets occurs. The disconnect that has taken place between Wall Street and the economy is not logical. We are in uncharted waters and should consider the possibility the destruction of true price discovery will only add to the demise of fiat currencies across the world. I contend this will fuel the desire of people to once again hold tangible assets rather than trusting the promises now being made. To say things are messed up is an understatement.

via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2NhL3IC Tyler Durden