Appendix to a Report in the Matter of Representative John W. Jenrette, JrU.S. Government Printing Office, 1980 - 591 lappuses |
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30. lappuse
... Weinberg , the informal .. of the Weinbergtowe conversa- 8 9 10 11 tion admitted and played to the jury and the trial . I believe there is a transcript Exhibit 81 which was admitted into evidence - it is in the bound volume . Mr ...
... Weinberg , the informal .. of the Weinbergtowe conversa- 8 9 10 11 tion admitted and played to the jury and the trial . I believe there is a transcript Exhibit 81 which was admitted into evidence - it is in the bound volume . Mr ...
131. lappuse
... Weinberg said he dressed like Mafia figures . Weinberg talks like a Mafioso guy . 12 They deliberately used organized crime . FBI agents , knowing that it is much more difficult for an alcoholic 13 as weak as he may be , and it is clear ...
... Weinberg said he dressed like Mafia figures . Weinberg talks like a Mafioso guy . 12 They deliberately used organized crime . FBI agents , knowing that it is much more difficult for an alcoholic 13 as weak as he may be , and it is clear ...
141. lappuse
... Weinberg , Amoroso , Burch , every witness who testified on anything of merit from the government's case denied that there is any written record anywhere other than an eighth of an inch of documents that were given to Judge Penn . We ...
... Weinberg , Amoroso , Burch , every witness who testified on anything of merit from the government's case denied that there is any written record anywhere other than an eighth of an inch of documents that were given to Judge Penn . We ...
233. lappuse
... Weinberg , and it deals with some major contradictions we feel in the transcript of what testimony was offered by Amoroso and Weinberg at trial . So , I guess what I am asking So I guess what I am asking is would the committee give me ...
... Weinberg , and it deals with some major contradictions we feel in the transcript of what testimony was offered by Amoroso and Weinberg at trial . So , I guess what I am asking So I guess what I am asking is would the committee give me ...
241. lappuse
... Weinberg's name . He met Mr. Weinberg there . Mr. 23 24 Weinberg acted as an informant , a con man who had been engaged 25 in various nefarious practices dating back to his childhood . 1 On April 18 , 1979 , Weinberg and Stowe 241 68.
... Weinberg's name . He met Mr. Weinberg there . Mr. 23 24 Weinberg acted as an informant , a con man who had been engaged 25 in various nefarious practices dating back to his childhood . 1 On April 18 , 1979 , Weinberg and Stowe 241 68.
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25 volumes ABSCAM agent alcoholism American Gear Amoroso asked attorney Barrett Prettyman bribe Chairman Committee on Standards Committee's Congress Congressman Jenrette conversation conviction criminal deal December defense DeVito documents due process entrapment evidence executive session fact Federal Fifth Amendment Gear and Pinion going guilty Herman Weiss House of Representatives investigation Janus Jenrette Hearing Exhibit Jenrette's Jim Neal John Jenrette John Stowe Judge Penn jury knew Kotelly letter Livingston matter meeting Mel Weinberg Michael Robinson motion Myers November 17 November 21 October Official Conduct problem proceeding proffer pursuant relevant Representative Jenrette Rita Jenrette Robinson Rule 14 sanction Senator Thurmond Sensenbrenner South Carolina Special Counsel Standards of Official statement Stokes Stowe's Strom Thurmond submit subpoena Swanner talk tape recording tell testify testimony thing told Tony DeVito townhouse transcript trying verdict violation vote Washington witnesses
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179. lappuse - The chairman may punish breaches of order and decorum, and of professional ethics on the part of counsel, by censure and exclusion from the hearings ; and the committee may cite the offender to the House for contempt.
48. lappuse - The process of disciplining a Member in the Congress is not without countervailing risks of abuse since it is not surrounded with the panoply of protective shields that are present in a criminal case.
403. lappuse - Member, officer, or employee of the House for an advisory opinion with respect to the general propriety of any current or proposed conduct of such Member, officer, or employee...
449. lappuse - They set him up, encouraged him, provided the essential supplies and technical expertise, and when he and Kubica encountered difficulties in consummating the crime, they assisted in finding solutions. This egregious conduct on the part of government agents generated new crimes by the defendant merely for the sake of pressing criminal charges against him when, as far as the record reveals, he was lawfully and peacefully minding his own affairs. Fundamental fairness does not permit us to countenance...
40. lappuse - ... statute for guidance in the application of a policy not remotely within the contemplation of Congress at the time of its enactment is to distort analysis. It is to run the risk, furthermore, that the court will shirk the responsibility that is necessarily in its keeping, if Congress is truly silent, to accommodate the dangers of overzealous law enforcement and civilized methods adequate to counter the ingenuity of modern criminals.
402. lappuse - ... (B) to investigate, subject to subparagraph (2) of this paragraph, any alleged violation, by a Member, officer, or employee of the House, of the Code of Official Conduct or of any law, rule, regulation, or other standard of conduct applicable to the conduct of such Member, officer, or employee in the performance of his duties or the discharge of his responsibilities, and after notice and hearing...
44. lappuse - Evidence of a final judgment, entered after a trial or upon a plea of guilty (but not upon a plea of nolo contendere) , adjudging a person guilty of a crime punishable by death or imprisonment in excess of one year, to prove any fact essential to sustain the judgment...
433. lappuse - ... minimal value' for its employees to be less than the value established under this paragraph; and " (6) 'employing agency' means — "(A) the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct of the House of Representatives, for Members and employees of the House of Representatives, except that those responsibilities specified in...
48. lappuse - Member is judged by no specifically articulated standards, and is at the mercy of an almost unbridled discretion of the charging body that functions at once as accuser, prosecutor, judge, and jury from whose decision there is no established right of review. In short, a Member would be compelled to defend in what would be comparable to a criminal prosecution without the safeguards provided by the Constitution. Moreover, it would be somewhat naive to assume that the triers would be wholly objective...
53. lappuse - United States possesses over the conduct of its members, let us assume, as the test of their application, either the dictates of unfettered reason, the letter and spirit of the Constitution, or precedents, domestic or foreign, and your committee believe that the result will be the same ; that the power of expelling a member must, in its nature, be discretionary, and in its exercise always more summary than the tardy process of judicial tribunals.