RBN Clips | Israel, Ritchie Torres, Yemen, Biden Polls, Marianne Williamson, Humanist Report, 3rd Parties, Piers Morgan, Glenn Greenwald
Real Ones: Yemen are about that life | Danny Haiphong: Modern Day Rome Burning
Israel's Loudest Genocidal Supporters | The Gleeful Sellout: Ritchie Torres Bleeds Israeli Blue
Coverup: January 6th Case Falls Apart | Vivek Ramswamy Gets Censored Live on CNN
Montage of Mass Trump Hysteria | MSNBC is Clueless To Why Progressive Support for Biden Has Fallen
Glenn Greenwald Says Calling Out Conservatives is His Duty | Piers Morgan Flips On Israel
When RFK, Cornel West, & Jill Stein Included, Biden Gets Killed | 3rd Party Candidates are Enemy #1
There is no Innocent Civilians in Gaza | Chris Hayes and Joy Reid Call Out Murderous Zionists
The Humanist Report Brings on Genocide Sympathizer Marianne Williamson
š„Hereās Another GEMš„
āļøRUNAWAY U.S. CRIMEāļø ~ but itās NOT Street Crime
U.S. DEPARTMENT Of JUSTICE COMPLICIT In RAMPANT CORPORATE CRIME
AS Davos Darling, LARRY SUMMERS WHINES To Bloomberg TV THAT ANTI-TRUST ENFORCEMENT IS A āWar On Businessā FAILURE TO PROSECUTE CORPORATE CRIME~ even repeat criminals~ PROVES OBAMA, TRUMP, BIDEN ABDICATE FIDUCIARY DUTY To PUBLIC;
DUTY of CARE To Protect The Public,
DUTY Of ACCOUNTABILITY and
DUTY To MAINTAIN PUBLIC TRUST in GOVERNMENT
š„The annual cost of corporate and white-collar crime to Americans is estimated at between $300 and $800 billion a year, while low-level street crime costs about $16 billion. . . .
š„ the Biden administrationās DOJās second year is tied with the Trump administration DOJās second year for having the fifth-lowest number of corporate prosecutions on record. The number of federal corporate prosecutions has been declining since 2000, when the DOJ prosecuted triple the number of corporations that it does today (304).[6]
š„The DOJ has in recent years increasingly gone out of its way to AVOID criminally charging large corporations. Prosecutors [instead] use leniency agreements ā which the DOJ refers to as deferred prosecution agreements (DPAs) and non-prosecution agreements (NPAs) ā to resolve criminal cases in a way that avoids filing charges against defendants. . . .
š„ the federal government concluded 110 criminal cases against corporations in fiscal year 2022 ā fewer than any previous year since 1994, when it concluded 106.
https://www.citizen.org/article/testimony-for-senate-judiciary-committee-hearing-on-corporate-crime/