Esenberg holds forth.
In the wake of the Wisconsin Supreme Court's decision on the John Doe
investigation, SpeciaL Prosecutor Fran Schmitz issued a strident
statement criticizing the Court's decision. Losing an important case is
always disappointing and a lawyer is certainly free to publicly differ
with the outcome. But Schmitz' statement is revealing.
He says the Court's ruling "defies common sense" because now someone who
contributes $ 25 to a candidate will have his or her name disclosed
while someone who gives $ 100,000 to a group who closely coordinates
with a candidate will not. That may be so and it may not be desirable,
but it is a function of Wisconsin's outdated campaign finance law and
not some distortion of that law by the court....
Yes. Legislatures, at all levels, write unclear or half-finished laws so that regulators can fill in the blanks damn near any way they want. To a legislator, that's a feature, not a bug, by the way.
And--whether Schmitz was the brains behind this, or whether he was led down a garden-path by the clearly malevolent D.A. Chisholm (also featured in the below post),-- he was dead wrong on his interpretation of the law.
But that's not the part which inspires revulsion over the matter.
This is:
...Schmitz objects to the Court's characterization of the details of the
raids. It doesn't matter. Let's step back and consider what happened
here. At the instigation of the Democratic prosecutor of Milwaukee
County, a five year long investigation into one side of the political
spectrum was conducted. In it's initial iteration, it found almost
nothing that it set out to find. That Democratic District Attorney
doubled down and launched a new probe. In aid of this latter
investigation, prosecutors blanketed Wisconsin's conservative
infrastructure with astonishingly broad subpoenas and launched pre-dawn
raids on the homes of certain activists. They told the targets that they
could tell no one what was being done to them.
There is no dispute about any of that and, quite frankly, other details
about the raids don't matter. If true, they merely aggravate the
offense. Treating political activists like drug traffickers is highly
unusual and sends a clear message to others. Get involved in politics
and you may be treated like a criminal....
Let's take this a step further. "Justice" Kennedy has invited the Obozo Administration to prosecute those who object to queer "marriage" as "Haters." "Hate speech" is a prosecutable offense in this country, you know. While AG Lynch may not have the time or the resources to pursue "haters," the gate is wide open for similar raids on conscientious objectors.
Don't believe that? Then watch the DOJ and California's AG prosecute the makers of the "Chop Shop" tapes.
This is the stuff about which Codevilla wrote, as mentioned below.
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