At 1:08 PM -0800 12/6/00, Tim May wrote:
At 3:52 PM -0500 12/6/00, Declan McCullagh wrote:
(Note about expenses: I had heard during the Parker trial that various witnesses called to travel to Washington were to "submit travel expense receipts." Is this true? What part of the Constitution says citizens must
Yes. It's a standard government form. They also paid something like $25 a day while you waited outside the courtroom before being called to the stand, and $40 a day you actually testified. Yay.
As I said, it's not my job to buy plane tickets, hotel rooms, etc. and then fill out a government form.
Actually, I remember someone saying during the Parker case that a government travel office would make all travel and lodging arrangements.
Not my job to lend money to the government.
I'm watching a lawyer on the stand in the Seminole County part of the rolling trial say that he charges $500 an hour to testify in court cases. Sounds like a good fee for me to charge.
I mis-spoke. He's not a lawyer...he's a statistics professor. Still, sounds like a good fee to charge for my "expert testimony" on Bell's scheme, should it come down to this. --Tim -- (This .sig file has not been significantly changed since 1992. As the election debacle unfolds, it is time to prepare a new one. Stay tuned.)