A Lesson in Bash

“The firm sought to undermine our justice system by destroying evidence,” said Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson at an afternoon news conference, saying the firm has intentionally disposed of “tons” of evidence after a government inquiry began last October.
He added: “At the time, Andersen knew full well that these documents were relevant.”

The Bash*? Oh, that’s easy, $> ^Andersen^Clinton

6 Replies to “A Lesson in Bash”

  1. Most liberals still think that all crime should be hadled through counciling rather then realy punishing them

  2. Hillary: “At this point what does it matter..?..”*drops mic and walks out of hearing*

  3. “I have confirmed with the secretary’s IT support that no emails”
    Kendal
    It is a safe bet that IT support has no idea how to really erase
    the hard drives…50/50 odds of “full” recovery even if bulk degaussing was used. In any case deleting is an act of obstruction
    The obstruction of justice is a criminal offence. Grand jury time

  4. If you physically have the drive yes recovery tools exist to retrieve the data.
    Obstruction of justice…you bet!
    Cheers
    Hans Rupprecht, Commander in Chief
    1st Saint Nicolaas Army
    Army Group ‘True North’

  5. Solution – go get the server!
    The imagination boggles…
    What would a DOJ raid on a Secret Service-fortified position look like?
    Since those SS fellows are known to carry weapons the ATF might tag along.
    If the server has been transported over state lines the FBI might want in as well.
    Lingering animosity over Fast & Furious might see the DEA backing the SS…
    Sorry, daydreaming out loud again.

  6. “What would a DOJ raid on a Secret Service-fortified position look like?”
    A number of lawyers trying to drive a coupla tanks…..
    That’s how it’s done in the 3rd world…because it works….without the lawyers…

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