I'll believe those investigators and prosecutors, but until we hear from them, you're just boasting about your self-proclaimed knowledge. Gotta actually demonstrate and apply that knowledge first, if you want credit for it in every post.
Rather than a courtroom choice — learned you, or that clown on the other side — I'll continue to offer my own logic and reason, which you're welcome to try to disprove. But you'll need something more persuasive than merely citing your own authority.
There's some problematic reasoning above.
I believe you said you spent years working in the news business. If someone tried to persuade you that the news business operated a certain way, because according to their "logic" it should operate that way, but you knew from experience that it doesn't (and you also know why), would you be persuaded by their logic? I doubt it. Should that person be persuaded by your insight? He should be.
I suppose you might really be saying that you don't believe I really know what I'm talking about. That might be a fair point, given that this is an internet forum, if I hadn't already demonstrated that I do (most recently in the Ghomeshi threads). I also pointed you to
the most compelling legal precedent and analysis regarding impeachment in the course of our discussions about this election. Do you think that's consistent with the idea I'm just a poser?
If nothing other than presentation of credentials would make an impression on you, you won't be getting that from me. Winning an argument on an internet forum like TERB does not matter as much as anonymity.
If, as an alternative to presenting credentials, I have to be proven right (as I was in the Ghomeshi trial), how many times do I have to be right before you accept my comments about this type of topic as insight? 10? 100?
If nothing less would dissuade you of your perspective, that's a pretty sure way to stay locked onto a misconception. You may have trapped yourself in a cage of your own logic.
p.s. I wouldn't urge you to simply accept what the investigators and prosecutors ultimately say publicly about the process. Recall what I've said about the strategic nature of their communications. You'll have to wait for memoirs (or an investigation into their conduct - unlikely) to get the truth.