Anonymous wrote:Bove sent an EIGHT PAGE letter in response to Sassoon's resignation - get a life, dude.
After her office refused to drop the charges, Justice Department officials sought to move the case to the agency's Public Integrity Section in Washington, which oversees all federal public corruption cases, multiple sources said.
John Keller, the acting head of the Public Integrity Section, then resigned after also refusing to drop the Adams case, two sources said.
Kevin Driscoll, the acting head of the department's criminal division, which oversees federal criminal cases nationwide, also refused to drop the charges and resigned.
After Sassoon informed Bove of her resignation, Bove sent her a blistering 8-page letter in which he blasted her refusal to immediately drop the case. Bove also placed at least two other New York federal prosecutors who worked on the case on leave, according to a copy of the letter obtained by NBC News.
"The Justice Department will not tolerate the insubordination and apparent misconduct reflected in the approach that you and your office have taken in this matter," Bove wrote. "Your office’s insubordination is little more than a preference to avoid a duty that you regard as unpleasant and politically inconvenient."
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/justice-department/top-federal-prosecutor-ny-resigns-told-drop-adams-charges-rcna192030
After her office refused to drop the charges, Justice Department officials sought to move the case to the agency's Public Integrity Section in Washington, which oversees all federal public corruption cases, multiple sources said.
John Keller, the acting head of the Public Integrity Section, then resigned after also refusing to drop the Adams case, two sources said.
Kevin Driscoll, the acting head of the department's criminal division, which oversees federal criminal cases nationwide, also refused to drop the charges and resigned.
After Sassoon informed Bove of her resignation, Bove sent her a blistering 8-page letter in which he blasted her refusal to immediately drop the case. Bove also placed at least two other New York federal prosecutors who worked on the case on leave, according to a copy of the letter obtained by NBC News.
"The Justice Department will not tolerate the insubordination and apparent misconduct reflected in the approach that you and your office have taken in this matter," Bove wrote. "Your office’s insubordination is little more than a preference to avoid a duty that you regard as unpleasant and politically inconvenient."
Anonymous wrote:So many resignations!
#WINNING
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wish members of Congress would take a lesson from Sassoon. That is what it looks like to have a spine and moral conviction.
This.
Scalia would be proud and that’s not a bad thing at all. All patriotic Americans should applaud this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Glad someone is willing to stand up to Bondis corruption!
Which dictionary did you use for "Corruption"?
Anonymous wrote:I wish members of Congress would take a lesson from Sassoon. That is what it looks like to have a spine and moral conviction.
Anonymous wrote:Glad someone is willing to stand up to Bondis corruption!
Emil Bove (DOJ #2), in accepting Ms. Sassoon’s resignation, informed her that the prosecutors who worked on the case were being placed on administrative leave, and would be investigated by the attorney general and the Justice Department’s internal investigative arm. He told Ms. Sassoon both bodies would also evaluate her conduct.