The James scandal just keeps on giving

The experts say you are full of shit.

I am curious if you bothered to actually read that article. It would appear you didn't since the entire thrust of this article is that intent to commit the other crime is all that is required.

Bragg must only prove A beyond a reasonable doubt, along with the intent to commit B, that potentially leaves prosecutors with more wiggle room to secure a conviction. Jurors might not buy with 99 percent certainty that the object crime was committed, but they could still vote to convict if they believe the intent was there.
[snip]
There’s no reference there to the other crime having actually been committed—just to the intent to carry it out or cover it up. “The way that I have always thought of this particular statute is that the element is intent to commit a crime,” Rebecca Roiphe, a professor at New York Law School and former assistant district attorney in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, explained.
[snip]
In fact, the New York Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court, considered this issue in People v. Taverasand found that only intent is required.

[snip]
As in the Trump case, in Thompson, the Manhattan district attorney charged § 175.10 without charging the underlying object offense. Here, the appeals court found that the district attorney was not required to prove that the object offense had been committed.
[snip]
Pointing to McCumiskey and Crane, the appeals court held that “the jury's not guilty verdict on the counts of insurance fraud did not necessarily negate an essential element of the falsifying business records in the first degree counts.”
[snip]
Do all the jurors have to agree on which option among the three grouped in box B? An overview of the relevant law suggests that no, the jury does not need to be unanimous as to the object offense.
[snip]

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit blessed this interpretation of the statute in De Vonish v. Keane, writing, "A specific intent to commit a particular crime upon entry is not a material element of the offense under New York law. ... Rather, the State need prove only a general criminal intent”



The article you linked to shows your position is completely bogus and not supported by the law. It seems you are so deep in the cult you can't even see reality. Not only have NY courts upheld that the underlying crime doesn't have to have been committed, the Federal appeals court agreed that criminal intent is all that is required.
 
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You may assume what you like. It’s not logical to assume someone who made errors in the past will always be erroneous.

IIRC, I've made 2 factual errors in good faith recently by relying on the results of a web search, which turned out to be incorrect.

If you believe that makes everything I post suspect, that's fair enough. It does not, however, follow that you can logically presume that I have the burden of proof if you accuse me of lying.
I didn't say I assumed they would always make errors. I said their burden is greater than someone that doesn't make errors. The burden is on you. You claimed you had provided links but the links clearly don't show what you claimed. At this point you have been asked for evidence to support your claim and been unable to provide any evidence. Instead you seem to think you can argue that you should be believed until someone shows you are wrong. That isn't the way it works in the real world. But then you are so deep in your cult you don't seem to understand how the real world works.
 
I didn't say I assumed they would always make errors. I said their burden is greater than someone that doesn't make errors. The burden is on you. You claimed you had provided links but the links clearly don't show what you claimed. At this point you have been asked for evidence to support your claim and been unable to provide any evidence. Instead you seem to think you can argue that you should be believed until someone shows you are wrong. That isn't the way it works in the real world. But then you are so deep in your cult you don't seem to understand how the real world works.

I posted this link 34 minutes ago. I suppose you didn't see it.

Here's the transcript:


VVerification of Criminal Record for Nakia Monique Thompson

Based on a thorough review of publicly available court records, correctional department data, and investigative reporting from multiple outlets, I can confirm that Nakia Monique Thompson (also referred to as Nikia Monique Thompson in some records, born February 1989, age 36) does have a felony criminal record in Virginia.

This includes at least one felony conviction for grand larceny, as well as an arrest and charge for possession of burglary tools (a Class 5 felony under Virginia Code §18.2-94). Below, I'll break down the key findings by state, focusing on verifiable proof from official or court-sourced documents referenced in reliable reports.

Note that while Virginia's statewide court database (Virginia Judiciary Online Case Information System) provides public access, full details often require in-person or paid requests from local clerks; the evidence here draws from aggregated court records cited in recent journalism tied to her relation to New York AG Letitia James.

Thompson does have a felony criminal record in Virginia

Key incidents stem from 2019–2020 in Portsmouth/Chesapeake area, escalating her overall record spanning 20+ years across states. While some sources describe a "lengthy rap sheet" with possible additional convictions (e.g., contributing to delinquency of a minor, abuse of a child, conspiracy to commit larceny), the verifiable felonies are:

  • 2019–2020 Convictions:
    • Grand Larceny (Felony, Virginia Code §18.2-95): Arrested August 11, 2019; pleaded guilty; sentenced to 2 years probation and $2,020 in costs/fees. This involved a theft spree (value over $1,000 qualifies as grand larceny in VA).
    • Petit Larceny (Misdemeanor, but bundled in plea): Pleaded guilty alongside grand larceny.
    • Possession of Burglary Tools (Class 5 Felony, Virginia Code §18.2-94): Arrested August 11, 2019, in Chesapeake; charged but dropped as part of plea deal on larceny counts.
Key Virginia Felony EventsDateChargeOutcomeSource Type
Possession of Burglary Tools (Class 5 Felony)Aug 11, 2019 (Arrest)§18.2-94Charged; Dropped in pleaCourt Docket (UniCourt/Chesapeake)
Grand Larceny (Felony)Aug 11, 2019 (Arrest)§18.2-95Guilty Plea; 2 yrs probation + $2,020 costsState Court Records/Reporting
 
I posted this link 34 minutes ago. I suppose you didn't see it.

Here's the transcript:


VVerification of Criminal Record for Nakia Monique Thompson

Based on a thorough review of publicly available court records, correctional department data, and investigative reporting from multiple outlets, I can confirm that Nakia Monique Thompson (also referred to as Nikia Monique Thompson in some records, born February 1989, age 36) does have a felony criminal record in Virginia.

This includes at least one felony conviction for grand larceny, as well as an arrest and charge for possession of burglary tools (a Class 5 felony under Virginia Code §18.2-94). Below, I'll break down the key findings by state, focusing on verifiable proof from official or court-sourced documents referenced in reliable reports.

Note that while Virginia's statewide court database (Virginia Judiciary Online Case Information System) provides public access, full details often require in-person or paid requests from local clerks; the evidence here draws from aggregated court records cited in recent journalism tied to her relation to New York AG Letitia James.

Thompson does have a felony criminal record in Virginia

Key incidents stem from 2019–2020 in Portsmouth/Chesapeake area, escalating her overall record spanning 20+ years across states. While some sources describe a "lengthy rap sheet" with possible additional convictions (e.g., contributing to delinquency of a minor, abuse of a child, conspiracy to commit larceny), the verifiable felonies are:


  • 2019–2020 Convictions:
    • Grand Larceny (Felony, Virginia Code §18.2-95): Arrested August 11, 2019; pleaded guilty; sentenced to 2 years probation and $2,020 in costs/fees. This involved a theft spree (value over $1,000 qualifies as grand larceny in VA).
    • Petit Larceny (Misdemeanor, but bundled in plea): Pleaded guilty alongside grand larceny.
    • Possession of Burglary Tools (Class 5 Felony, Virginia Code §18.2-94): Arrested August 11, 2019, in Chesapeake; charged but dropped as part of plea deal on larceny counts.
Key Virginia Felony EventsDateChargeOutcomeSource Type
Possession of Burglary Tools (Class 5 Felony)Aug 11, 2019 (Arrest)§18.2-94Charged; Dropped in pleaCourt Docket (UniCourt/Chesapeake)
Grand Larceny (Felony)Aug 11, 2019 (Arrest)§18.2-95Guilty Plea; 2 yrs probation + $2,020 costsState Court Records/Reporting
The response of an AI isn't good enough at this point since you have posted several responses from AI that have proved false. You don't seem to get what evidence is. The links that Grok gives don't actually provide evidence. If you look at it Grok isn't relying on original sources. It uses Amgreatness as a source and they simply quote the Daily Mail and the AOL source is a story from the Daily Caller that includes no evidence.
 
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Yeah. Because they want to "get" Letitia, they plotted to get her to harbor a fugitive in a house that she owned but only pretended to live in. They also plotted to have her commit fraud, while she was prosecuting someone else for the same thing. Those sneaky bastiges, tricking her into committing crimes so that they could prosecute her for the crimes they tricked her into committing... You know, because she's above the law.... So... Stop it. Jerks.

At some point, as the crimes pile up, even you must realize that sometimes folks prosecute people for crimes because they committed the crimes.
And of course here is Damocles lying and spreading misinformation as always.
 
The response of an AI isn't good enough at this point since you have posted several responses from AI that have proved false. You don't seem to get what evidence is.

How else would I obtain information from the Virginia courts?

Search the database yourself.

1761006812137.png


There are media reports on the Internet, as well. I expect you'll reject them out of hand, too.

If you can prove the information is inaccurate, why don't you?
 
How else would I obtain information from the Virginia courts?

Search the database yourself.

View attachment 62795


There are media reports on the Internet, as well. I expect you'll reject them out of hand, too.

If you can prove the information is inaccurate, why don't you?
Congratulations for finally providing a source.
Now how many felonies on that list was she convicted of? This is a list of citations and arrests, not a list of convictions.
 
I am curious if you bothered to actually read that article. It would appear you didn't since the entire thrust of this article is that intent to commit the other crime is all that is required.

Bragg must only prove A beyond a reasonable doubt, along with the intent to commit B, that potentially leaves prosecutors with more wiggle room to secure a conviction. Jurors might not buy with 99 percent certainty that the object crime was committed, but they could still vote to convict if they believe the intent was there.
[snip]
There’s no reference there to the other crime having actually been committed—just to the intent to carry it out or cover it up. “The way that I have always thought of this particular statute is that the element is intent to commit a crime,” Rebecca Roiphe, a professor at New York Law School and former assistant district attorney in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, explained.
[snip]
In fact, the New York Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court, considered this issue in People v. Taverasand found that only intent is required.

[snip]
As in the Trump case, in Thompson, the Manhattan district attorney charged § 175.10 without charging the underlying object offense. Here, the appeals court found that the district attorney was not required to prove that the object offense had been committed.
[snip]
Pointing to McCumiskey and Crane, the appeals court held that “the jury's not guilty verdict on the counts of insurance fraud did not necessarily negate an essential element of the falsifying business records in the first degree counts.”
[snip]
Do all the jurors have to agree on which option among the three grouped in box B? An overview of the relevant law suggests that no, the jury does not need to be unanimous as to the object offense.
[snip]

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit blessed this interpretation of the statute in De Vonish v. Keane, writing, "A specific intent to commit a particular crime upon entry is not a material element of the offense under New York law. ... Rather, the State need prove only a general criminal intent”



The article you linked to shows your position is completely bogus and not supported by the law. It seems you are so deep in the cult you can't even see reality. Not only have NY courts upheld that the underlying crime doesn't have to have been committed, the Federal appeals court agreed that criminal intent is all that is required.
A thought crime. That's what your explanation boils down to.
 
Why would she do that when you have been clear prior 'NO VICTIM, NO CRIME'!

There have been no missed payments and the bank is being repaid.
The odds are with me there. 98% of all federal criminal cases end in a plea bargain.



If James goes to trial and wins, she loses. She'll be damn near bankrupted doing so. If she recognizes that she's likely to lose a trial too, all the more reason to plea out.
 
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