The Department of Justice aka Corruption

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The Department of Justice aka Corruption

Postby admin » Tue Mar 31, 2026 7:58 am



Hi folks, I'm Charles Carreon punk lawyer, here to dispense a little rough justice in matter of Pam Bondi. She is currently about to publish a Department of Justice rule that seeks to place Department of Justice prosecutors beyond the reach of state court discipline. And what's that mean? Well, as lawyers, we operate under what we call the Rules of Professional Conduct. It keeps us from doing a lot of

sneaky stuff that lawyers have the opportunity to do because of the confidence that their clients repose in them and the fact that we are generally said to be trusted custodians of the facts, people who express the law honestly and do their best to aid their clients without breaking the rules. So it's all

fair for everyone. What Ms. Bondi wants to do is to exempt her prosecutors at the Department of Justice from disciplinary prosecution that is intended to remove the bad apples from the profession. Bad apples, people who are willing to go court and lie. People who are willing to defy court orders on behalf of their criminal bosses.

people who will provide cover for dishonest behavior by the government itself and to prevent them from being caught out for this kind of misconduct and removed from the profession or sometimes suspended, sidelined for a period of time so that they can do things like study up on ethics, take a new test,

Maybe put in some pro bono hours to compensate the community for their abuses before they can return to their position as a lawyer. That's not a lot to ask that lawyers play the game honestly. And it has always been the situation with the Department of Justice is generally respected by lawyers on both sides.

prosecutors and defenders and the judges who sit in judgment of both of them generally been thought pretty honest. Not always. They violate rules. When they do, federal law says they can be disciplined. That law was adopted for circumstances that don't even approximate the misconduct that the DOJ is engaging in now. It's called the McDade Amendment and people are going to point to it as

the rule that says that DOJ must follow the law. And that law should be followed in the state courts and they should be subject to prosecution so that we can get those bad apples out of the DOJ. Unfortunately, there's that one big bad apple at the core that's probably gonna rot everything until finally just dump the whole damn barrel. Thanks for listening folks. That's rough justice.

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