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Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts issued a temporary administrative stay of contempt sanctions that have been brought against an unknown company in a mysterious grand jury subpoena fight thought to be linked to special counsel Robert Mueller.

The move is a fairly procedural one, and gives the federal government until Dec. 31 to respond. Roberts, or all of the Supreme Court, could easily decide to lift the stay even before then, depending on how soon as it hears from the federal government.

However, the stay is not relief against the grand jury subpoena, but rather a contempt citation brought by the federal government against the company, known only as “the Corporation.”

“The Corporation,” which is owned by a nation identified only as “Country A,” has thus far refused to comply with a grand jury subpoena issued in federal court in Washington in a case that has remained extremely secretive.

Continue reading:  Supreme Court halts fines against mystery company possibly linked to Mueller investigation

5 thoughts on “Supreme Court halts fines against mystery company possibly linked to Mueller investigation

  1. If we knew all the crap going on and all that Mueller knows and suspects, it would blow our minds, I’m sure. I wonder if we’ll ever know the whole truth. So much will be redacted from the public. And the Russian mafia along with US crime families is no easy matter to undo.

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