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« Thomas Cooley Law Review | Main | Unsealed court files in Jay Dobyn's case full of bombshells »

NBC, David Gregory, and why he wasn't prosecuted

Posted by David Hardy · 22 January 2015 02:26 PM

Legal Insurrection has the inside scoop. DC police referred the case for prosecution, noting that they'd told NBC that possessing the 30 round magazine would be illegal, and NBC went ahead anyway. The police even swore out an affidavit for an arrest warrant. But DC's "Attorney General" wrote "declined" on it and refused to proceed.

UPDATE: I checked a while back, and the DC statute of limitations on misdemeanors is three years, rather long. Not that Gregory is in any risk, mind you...

5 Comments | Leave a comment

Roger | January 22, 2015 6:18 PM | Reply

Things are DIFFERENT when you are a dimocrat.

Jim D. | January 22, 2015 9:05 PM | Reply

I ask again, what is the statute of limitations on this crime? It would be too convenient if D.C. stalled long enough that actual guilt or innocence were moot.

Rich | January 23, 2015 8:47 AM | Reply

It is moot already in that there is no way a DC prosecutor is going to do anything about it

10 years for " wrecking " | January 25, 2015 11:38 AM | Reply

The people of DC are not being represented by the hack persecutor. Go AROUND him. Citizens arrest , civil and criminal suit should be brought against BOTH the District , its agents and Gregory.
Otherwise why pretend we have laws at all ?

Anon | February 1, 2015 1:29 AM | Reply

Remember what happened to Theo Van Gogh? What would be the result if Gregory suffered a similar fate (except in his case the note read Sic Semper Tyrannus)?

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