Former State Senate leader Dean Skelos got a split result Thursday in his bid to
subpoena damaging information about two key witnesses against him in his upcoming retrial on corruption charges in Manhattan federal court.
Not exact matches
Ever since he became Attorney General, he abused his power and his position to intimidate his opponents — abusing the
subpoena power against Wall Street banks, leaking
damaging but irrelevant personal
information about individual executives who didn't bend to his wishes, and threatening anybody who dared to stand up to him.
His experience includes leading internal investigations in response to government agency
subpoenas and requests for
information; persuading the Department of Justice to decline intervention in cases seeking hundreds of millions of dollars in False Claims Act
damages; defeating claims brought by the United States in government - intervened cases; and obtaining dismissals of qui tam suits prior to discovery.