Knowingly Entering or Remaining in any Restricted Building or Grounds without Lawful Authority Setenced on 11/23 to 36 months probation with two months home confinement 60 hours of community service, $500 restitution. Arraigned on 2/22 and pleaded not guilty to all counts. Initial appearance held 1/25/21.Ĭharged via criminal information 1/28. Sentenced to two years of probation, including 200 hours of community service, $1,000 fine, $500 restitution.Īrrested 1/19. Plea agreement entered 9/30/21 and pleaded guilty to count 4. Charged via criminal information on 3/11/21.Īrraignment and status conference held 5/4 and pleaded not guilty to all counts.ĭefendant remains on personal recognizance bond.ĪLVEAR GONZALEZ, Eduardo Nicolas (aka, Alvear Gonzalez Eduardo Nicolas aka, Nicolas Alvear)Ĭharged via information on 2/11/21. Arraigned 3/24/21 and pleaded not guilty to counts 1-4. Republican appropriators said any provisions forcing Barr’s hand would not survive the Senate, particularly when Barr made clear that he is bound by law to withhold some parts of the Mueller report.Arrested. “What happens, and what the next step is, we’ll see,” Lowey said. House Democrats have demanded to see the full, unredacted report. And she noted that Congress hasn’t seen yet what Barr will release.īarr on Tuesday told lawmakers on the Commerce-Justice-Science Appropriations Subcommittee that he will be in a position to release a version of the special counsel report on Russian interference in the 2016 election “within a week,” with color-coded notes explaining why he redacted any information. Lowey said the Judiciary Committee has the responsibility and right to subpoena the full report and fight to see any redacted information. “But I would hope my budget is there to protect the people of the United States, and protect the Affordable Care Act, and protect the rights of citizens who worry about how they’re going to be treated in the courts.” “Oh, I can put in all kinds of language there,” the New York Democrat told reporters. Lowey took a more cautious approach Tuesday, saying she had to balance the report with the important law enforcement and other priorities in the DOJ budget. “This report is too important for all of us, including you people behind the cameras.”Ī subpoena fight could wind up in the courts for years, and a Congressional Research Service report noted that Congress could use other powers such as withholding appropriations to encourage disclosure of the Mueller report. “I would consider whatever it takes to get people to see this report,” the New York Democrat said after a Justice Department budget hearing Tuesday. Serrano, chairman of the subcommittee that oversees the DOJ budget, told reporters that appropriators could prescribe that no dollars be used to block Mueller’s full report from being released - not that he’s saying that would happen. Mueller III - but they aren’t ruling it out either. Top Democrats on the House Appropriations Committee aren’t ready to wield their power over Justice Department funding to pressure Attorney General William Barr to provide the full special counsel report from Robert S.
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