- Aug 10, 2010
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flicker said:This bogus charge against Armstrong will be dropped.
There is no charge. If there is no charge, then no charge can be dropped. Wait and see.
flicker said:This bogus charge against Armstrong will be dropped.
MarkvW said:There is no charge. If there is no charge, then no charge can be dropped. Wait and see.
StyrbjornSterki said:You don't know he hasn't been.
Everyone knows the statute of limitations was looming on everything USPS-related. But sealed indictments stop the statutes running, and the public wouldn't know.
veganrob said:Bonds case is much more difficult to prosecute because of the charges. Perjury. Armstrong case is different. His case would seem to be a slam dunk not only because of the charges but I believe everybody is turning on him. He has no friends to protect him like Bonds does with Anderson.
flicker said:Many charges and convictions against Armstrong in the clinic. Heavily biased against Armstrong. If I write anything against an Armstrong detractor it is either attacked, poo pooed delated and or I am banned. Oh well, let us just continue fighting the good fight against the axis of evil, shall we. In the meantime I will muzzle my7 terretz.....
MarkvW said:You can extend the civil SOL for fraudulent concealment, but the criminal law does not permit that.
flicker said:Many charges and convictions against Armstrong in the clinic. Heavily biased against Armstrong. If I write anything against an Armstrong detractor it is either attacked, poo pooed delated and or I am banned. Oh well, let us just continue fighting the good fight against the axis of evil, shall we. In the meantime I will muzzle my7 terretz.....
Race Radio said:Tolling is not allowed in Criminal cases?
MarkvW said:Nope. My experience is state court, but when I was debating the "feds are out to get" Armstrong guy, I did some research on the federal statutes.
MarkvW said:“Absent a showing of intentional inducement or trickery by the defendant, a statute of limitations should be tolled only in the ‘rare situation where equitable tolling is demanded by sound legal principles as well as the interest of justice.’ "
Digger said:Official - tape can't be used. Blow for government.
MacRoadie said:Isn't this where the RICO statutes are brought to play? Does "intentional inducement or trickery" translate into an ongoing concealment of fraud?
In other words, if it can be shown that actions taken by Armstrong and his associates to conceal whatever criminal activity may have been committed, with the intended purpose of avoiding detection and prosecution by law enforcement, would that then toll the statute?
D-Queued said:Not entirely:
The judge, however, told defense lawyers they cannot argue to the jury that there was no tape recording of a conversation between Hoskins and Arthur Ting
Yes, there was a smoking gun.
Dave.
D-Queued said:Not entirely:
The judge, however, told defense lawyers they cannot argue to the jury that there was no tape recording of a conversation between Hoskins and Arthur Ting
Yes, there was a smoking gun.
Dave.
MarkvW said:If Lance snuck into the DOJ offices and changed all the calendars, that would probably do it. Or, if Lance brainwashed all the federal prosecutors into believing it was ten years earlier! Ordinary criminal cover-up is not going to cut it. The Court is talking about intentional acts directed at the government.
MacRoadie said:Ok, I'll bite.
The two examples you give suggest nothing short of a trip into the realm of the impossible will amount to "intentional inducement", yet the courts still left a very clear caveat for allowing tolling.
You then suggest that the Court "is talking about intentional acts directed at the government" (your quote, not theirs). Can you provide a cite or link to the Court's definition of "intentional acts"?
As an aside, you seem pretty resolute on your interpretation of what would appear to be a rather complex legal argument, one that I would guess would require any number of motions before the Court, yet in your next post you ask if Ting can be recalled (which would seem a rather pedestrian legal question).
Don't get me wrong, I don't have a dog in this fight. Just curious as to your legal credentials (within the cionfines of anonymity).
MarkvW said:No. Not even close. If Lance snuck into the DOJ offices and changed all the calendars, that would probably do it. Or, if Lance brainwashed all the federal prosecutors into believing it was ten years earlier! Ordinary criminal cover-up is not going to cut it. The Court is talking about intentional acts directed at the government. Note that they state that they have NEVER saved a late-filed case with equitable tolling. They're telling you that it is ultra-rare.
RICO has been discussed before. IIRC the last predicate act must be within the SOL.
MarkvW said:If you want to argue about something that is not fairly arguable, count me out.
Digger said:But if they can't say anything about its content, what's the point?
D-Queued said:There is conflicting testimony between two witnesses.
That there is a tape in existince helps corroborate one witnesses testimony. He claimed he had conversation(s) and taped at least one. Now we have the confirmation of a tape of said conversation.
The other witness has denied everything.
The existence of the tape supports the prosecution's case. Whether ruled admissable, or not, the existence of the tape is disclosable evidence.
Dave.
Digger said:No I;m aware of the contents of the tape. My point centres around whether the prosecution are allowed state in their closing arguments that there is conflicting versions of events. Are they allowed reference specifically what's on the tape?
D-Queued said:The tape has been barred, but its existence has not.
I am not sure how the rules of evidence work, but defense cannot argue that there was no tape recording by Hoskins of the conversation. Thus, an educated guess would be that the prosecution can disclose that:
1. There is a tape
2. Of a conversation between Hoskins and Ting
3. Confirming Hoskins' testimony that he
3a. Had at least one such conversation
3b. Did in fact tape at least one conversation
The existence is evidence, if the contents are not.
Not sure on the extent of detail that the prosecution can reveal on the 'subject' of the conversation. But, they can likely say that it was consistent with Hoskins' testimony.
The defense is not allowed to argue that the tape does not exist. They can probably try and allude to why it was not allowed, however.
Dave.
MacRoadie said:Ok, I'll bite.
The two examples you give suggest nothing short of a trip into the realm of the impossible will amount to "intentional inducement", yet the courts still left a very clear caveat for allowing tolling.
You then suggest that the Court "is talking about intentional acts directed at the government" (your quote, not theirs). Can you provide a cite or link to the Court's definition of "intentional acts"?
As an aside, you seem pretty resolute on your interpretation of what would appear to be a rather complex legal argument, one that I would guess would require any number of motions before the Court, yet in your next post you ask if Ting can be recalled (which would seem a rather pedestrian legal question).
Don't get me wrong, I don't have a dog in this fight. Just curious as to your legal credentials (within the confines of anonymity).
MacRoadie said:No, I simply asked you to provide an independent definition of what the Court referred to as "intentional acts". You seem at first to be quite confident in your analysis, yet equally defensive when asked a simple question as to additional precedent.
You honestly, with the benefit of all the time in the world (no one had a stop watch on you), are going to submit that the ridiculous hypotheticals you proffered were the ONLY (your emphasis) ones you could think of? Yet you're surprised (or indignant) that your argument isn't given the merit you feel it deserves?
If you want to play the "If you don't like my rules, I'm taking my toys to another sandbox" game. that's fine by me too.