Puppet Masters
Last Saturday, former President Donald Trump signaled that he could be arrested on March 21 in connection with an ongoing investigation by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg concerning Trump's alleged 2016 payment of $130,000 in hush money to adult movie star Stormy Daniels.
Trump's announcement triggered a lively debate, with US conservatives lambasting Bragg for pushing what they called a heavily politicized case.
The potential indictment, mentioned by Trump, should have followed a series of testimonies by former Trump attorney Michael Cohen, a disbarred lawyer and convicted felon who turned against his former client.
While many saw Cohen as Bragg's future "star witness" in a possible trial against Donald Trump, Cohen's former legal adviser Robert Costello came forward on March 20 to testify before the Manhattan grand jury with more than 300 emails contradicting his former client's statements. In addition, another letter on behalf of Cohen to the Federal Election Commission was unveiled shredding Cohen's claims.
Nobody came for Trump on March 21, while on March 22 the Manhattan grand jury hearing evidence against Trump didn't reconvene as scheduled. The testimony did not take place on March 23, either. While Bragg's office declined to comment on the delay, the US press cited sources as saying that dissent is growing among the jury over the case, which is increasingly considered "weak."
Indeed, several prominent US lawyers who usually share their legal opinions on curious nationwide cases, subjected Bragg to ridicule, suggesting that his case against Trump is dead in the water.
Bragg is allegedly trying to accuse Trump of the falsification of business records in reference to the $130,000 payment. According to the lawyers, this chargeable misdemeanor has already expired. Even if it were still relevant, it is nothing but a mere misdemeanor that could be brushed off by Trump's defense. They turned attention to the fact that the federal authorities have repeatedly rejected the "hush money" case: first, when Trump was still in the Oval Office; second, after he left the White House.
Bragg's other reported plan to invoke a violation of federal campaign-finance law to turn the misdemeanor into a felony with a prison term of up to four years prompted a mixture of criticism and jokes from US legal experts, who recommended that the Manhattan DA focus on New York City's soaring crime rates instead.
Other legal commentators did not rule out that Trump could be indicted and convicted in New York, because the jury pool woulld be very much against him, but highlighted that the former president would ultimately win on appeal.
To complicate matters further, Bragg has a long record of politically biased rhetoric against the former president. For example, he bragged about his experience of suing Trump while serving as the state's chief deputy attorney general from 2017 to 2018. This led to the shutdown of the Donald J. Trump Foundation and the payment of $2 million to eight charities by Trump under a settlement. Bragg particularly told a December 2020 Democratic candidates forum: "It is a fact that I have sued Trump more than a hundred times." He later told the US press while running to become the next Manhattan district attorney: "I certainly have more experience with [Trump] than most people in the world."
Even though on March 17, the US mainstream media quoted Bragg's effort as challenging and bold, by the end of the past week, it appears that they have largely lost their appetite for the "hush money," case as even Trump's longstanding rival, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, refused to say that he has confidence in the DA's probe.
For his part, Senator Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) told the press on Thursday: "There's many reasons not to support Donald Trump. There's many reasons why Donald Trump should not be president again in the United States. But you should not allow the court system to be perceived as basically a political pawn as you will. I think it would basically have the reverse effect as some people would think — not for the good."
According to the US media, Democrats and some legal experts fear that the GOP could get involved into a tit-for-tat game and kick off similarly flimsy cases against top Democrats, fanning a vicious cycle of politicization. This political strife could erode the American people's trust in the nation's justice system, they say.
Still, the emerging concerns don't mean that the case is over: US legal experts expect that Bragg will push ahead with the case next week. His major challenge is to convince a grand jury that the case does hold water, American lawyers say.
Comment: See also:
- 'This is a flawed case': Legal expert pours cold water on NY DA's rumored plan to indict Trump as he explains why prosecution would likely fail
- Trump indictment delayed, "surprise witness" to testify on Monday
- NewsReal: Trump Under Arrest? Putin Wanted by ICC? Globalists Gunning For Nationalist Leaders
Reader Comments
This political strife could erode the American people's trust in the nation's justice system, they say."They say", lol
People v. Filis, 87 Misc. 2d 1067 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1976)
Whether intended or not Trump has brought a great deal out into the open… the deep state for starters… and now he is airing our rotten justice system for all to see.
Whatever you might think about the fellow there is value in that…
he is airing our rotten justice system for all to see.Boy did I just see that. An acquaintance who got arrested for refusing to wear a mask in the grocery store during the height of the madness (yes - handcuffs, the whole magilla), got her case dropped because she played her cards right, and an authoritarian POS of a judge (who loves masks, of course) had his nose out of joint about it. He called her in for a mysterious 'hearing', and she brought 4-5 elderly women with her as a support team as she tried to find out what the hearing was about. That judge evidently concocted a non-existent 'security breach' and had 10 cops file out of an adjacent room (presumably with nothing to do except play poker) to start grabbing, pushing, and aggressively demanding that everyone leave because "there was a security breach" (everybody had gone through security with no problems.) An 88 (!) year old women swatted a cop's hand away who had grabbed her breast and was then arrested for 'harrassment' and 'trespassing.' Her trial, which I attended, was an absolute travesty. The public defenders did not demand that the jury be able to see the whole security tape, the prosecution played cherry-picked 3-second clips of the chaos with the women yelling requests for explanation and demanding that the cops take their hands off of them, and the judge (a different one who was at the bottom of the totem pole - we were told that this was her first criminal trial) disallowed defense requests to show video proof of the so-called security breach. This was all about payback by that other judge. It's a pathetic, broken system for sure when a situation like this is so easy for an asshole judge to set up. Chilling.
Anyone expecting Trump to be arrested and convicted should see a mental health consultant and get themselves on a SRI. There will be NO convicting a former president, for any reason, period. There will be NO precedent setting. If Trump were to be prosecuted and convicted, there would be a train of politicians headed for Israel. Trump has evaded prosecution for more than 50 years and on the one time he went to criminal court (with his business (fraud) partner/friend, Soros) they got the right judge (ala Roy Cohn). There is a plethora of crimes Trump is guilty of, just like 90% of all politicians (or they wouldn't there). Like the old saying goes money talks and BS walks. In the legal system, it's written in stone.
Who will watch the watchers? [Link] scroll down for part II.
Maybe then all this political fighting can stop and we can take care of the people instead