'Crazy as a loon': Acosta rips Tucker Carlson for new Jan. 6 series
Video Credit: Bleacher Report AOL - Duration: 07:45s - Published
'Crazy as a loon': Acosta rips Tucker Carlson for new Jan. 6 series
CNN’s Jim Acosta responds to Tucker Carlson’s new series for Fox Nation about the January 6 Capitol riot, criticizing its message as a whitewashing of the insurrection.
Tucker Carlson made a triumphant return at the Republican convention, 15 months after his Fox News firing. His unscripted monologue echoed his former show's style, featuring off-color jokes and warnings of potential tyranny if Trump loses in November. Despite organizers' efforts to present a softer image of Trump, Carlson touched on controversial topics, including veiled remarks about Biden's age and allusions to election fraud theories.
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Supreme Court Rules That , Some Jan. 6 Defendants, Were Improperly Charged.
NPR reports that the United States Supreme Court voted to limit which defendants accused of taking part in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot can be charged by federal prosecutors.
The decision also casts doubt on two out of
the four felony counts in former President
Donald Trump's election subversion indictment.
According to conservative Chief Justice John Roberts,
the court ruled that the U.S. government must prove , “that the defendant impaired the availability or integrity
for use in an official proceeding of records, documents,
objects, or other things used in an official proceeding.”.
NPR reports that prosecutors relied
on a key criminal statute to prosecute
over 350 participants of the Capitol riot.
The statute makes it a crime to alter or
destroy official documents, or to otherwise
obstruct or impede official proceedings.
Roberts wrote that the statute was
not meant to broaden the meaning of
the law to make it a catchall provision. .
The decision will impact other cases related
to Jan. 6, many of which will have to be
resentenced, retried or defendants will be released. .
NYU law professor Ryan Goodman authored
a study that found only 346 of the 1,417 people
charged in connection with the Capitol riot
were charged under the obstruction statute.
The study also found that 71 people are still
awaiting trial on the obstruction charge, but over
half of them are also charged with another felony.
NPR points out that if found guilty of other felony charges,
the sentencing judge is still allowed to use the charge of
obstruction to determine the length of their sentence.
Credit: Wibbitz Top Stories Duration: 01:31Published
Tucker Carlson and Representative Liz Cheney engaged in a war of words over the Fox News personality’s upcoming mini-series examining the January 6th attack on the Capitol.
Former Fox News chief political correspondent Carl Cameron sounds the alarm on Tucker Carlson’s new series for Fox Nation about the January 6 Capitol riot.
Fox News host Tucker Carlson released a trailer announcing his new three part series about the January 6th insurrection and the “new” War on Terror. It’s full of lies and conspiracy theories.