Julie Kelly
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senators, prohibiting two cell phone companies from notifying those senators that Jack Smith subpoenaed their phone records, that's when we saw some support in the U.S.
Senate to finally impeach Jeb Osberg.
Declassified with Julie Kelly is my sub stack.
I have a piece of about Bossberg right now.
Also on XJulie underscore Kelly too, where people can find a cover.
I covered that live today.
So people can go check out my posts and see what Jeff Bossberg said.
Well, because Jeb Bosberg entered nondisclosure orders.
So this is part of a subpoena.
And what the nondisclosure order does
is it prevents certain companies, and in this case telecommunications companies, from notifying their user, their client, of the existence of a subpoena.
So it prohibits, say Verizon or AT&T in these two instances, those companies from notifying, in this case, several sitting members of the U.S.
Senate and at least one member of the House.
Now, we'll get into the details of what a judge needs to determine before he can enter a nondisclosure order under the Stored Communications Act.
Now, this is the statute that protects Americans from precisely this, and that is the government getting their hands on your private data.
And in order to do so, a judge needs to determine one of five factors.
And we'll get into what Jeb Bosberg does.
But hang on a second.
Correct.
But in 2023, when Jeb Bosberg forced Representative Scott Perry to turn over hundreds of his communications with his own colleagues or staff or people in the executive branch, when Jeb Bosberg forced Scott Perry after his cell phone was snatched out of his hand the day after the Mar-a-Lago raid, I didn't hear Ted Cruz or John Cornyn or Marsha Blackburn