Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Tell us what Greg's "takes" are in this post.
He posted a factual statement.
Are you saying what he posted is not accurate?
Were 6 counts not quashed?
He blasts headlines that usually never go anywhere. They always just piddle away…
So, I'll ask again.....
Tell us what Greg's "takes" are in this post.
He posted a factual statement.
Are you saying what he posted is not accurate?
Were 6 counts not quashed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the phone call?! Why did they throw that out??
They didn't. It is still part of the RICO charges.
Interesting. Not what the Daily Mail says:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13192477/judge-dismisses-charges-trump-georgia-election-interference-fani-willis.html
Also the headline on the main page claims it was thrown out.
WaPo says it as well.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2024/03/13/trump-georgia-election-case-charges-dropped/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Tell us what Greg's "takes" are in this post.
He posted a factual statement.
Are you saying what he posted is not accurate?
Were 6 counts not quashed?
He blasts headlines that usually never go anywhere. They always just piddle away…
Anonymous wrote:
Tell us what Greg's "takes" are in this post.
He posted a factual statement.
Are you saying what he posted is not accurate?
Were 6 counts not quashed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the phone call?! Why did they throw that out??
They didn't. It is still part of the RICO charges.
Interesting. Not what the Daily Mail says:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13192477/judge-dismisses-charges-trump-georgia-election-interference-fani-willis.html
Also the headline on the main page claims it was thrown out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why the phone call?! Why did they throw that out??
They didn't. It is still part of the RICO charges.
Anonymous wrote:Why the phone call?! Why did they throw that out??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nathan also billed for 24 hours for a single day at $250.00 per hour on multiple occasions.
I guess you missed it when this was brought up during the hearing. Wade was shown the document and given a chance to explain. He filled out a form to be paid where he named the task he performed, listed how many hours of work the task required and had to give a date for when the task was completed. He was submitting paperwork to be paid for 24 hours’ worth of work, but only a single date was listed because he was only asked for the date he completed the work. He did not bill for 24 hours’ worth of work all performed on the same date.
Sounds like he is not only an unqualified attorney for this case, but is also a poor record keeper.
Would this fly with an attorney billing a client? I don't know..... maybe some attorney here could weigh in.
I have to wonder about Merchant's acumen when she apparently couldn't tell the difference between an invoice date versus when the work was actually done.
Once again.... is this type of billing notation acceptable when an attorney is billing a private client?
Does this DA's office not expect a better level of detail for billing?
This would never fly at my law firm in DC. No client would pay it.
Anonymous wrote:Why, after hearing about a few charges being thrown out (which can be recharged), do you think Fani has a good chance of staying? I just don’t understand the connection. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nathan also billed for 24 hours for a single day at $250.00 per hour on multiple occasions.
I guess you missed it when this was brought up during the hearing. Wade was shown the document and given a chance to explain. He filled out a form to be paid where he named the task he performed, listed how many hours of work the task required and had to give a date for when the task was completed. He was submitting paperwork to be paid for 24 hours’ worth of work, but only a single date was listed because he was only asked for the date he completed the work. He did not bill for 24 hours’ worth of work all performed on the same date.
Sounds like he is not only an unqualified attorney for this case, but is also a poor record keeper.
Would this fly with an attorney billing a client? I don't know..... maybe some attorney here could weigh in.
I have to wonder about Merchant's acumen when she apparently couldn't tell the difference between an invoice date versus when the work was actually done.
Once again.... is this type of billing notation acceptable when an attorney is billing a private client?
Does this DA's office not expect a better level of detail for billing?
This would never fly at my law firm in DC. No client would pay it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nathan also billed for 24 hours for a single day at $250.00 per hour on multiple occasions.
I guess you missed it when this was brought up during the hearing. Wade was shown the document and given a chance to explain. He filled out a form to be paid where he named the task he performed, listed how many hours of work the task required and had to give a date for when the task was completed. He was submitting paperwork to be paid for 24 hours’ worth of work, but only a single date was listed because he was only asked for the date he completed the work. He did not bill for 24 hours’ worth of work all performed on the same date.
Sounds like he is not only an unqualified attorney for this case, but is also a poor record keeper.
Would this fly with an attorney billing a client? I don't know..... maybe some attorney here could weigh in.
I have to wonder about Merchant's acumen when she apparently couldn't tell the difference between an invoice date versus when the work was actually done.
Once again.... is this type of billing notation acceptable when an attorney is billing a private client?
Does this DA's office not expect a better level of detail for billing?