Love-fifteen.Strong opening by Trump's legal team.
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Love-fifteen.Strong opening by Trump's legal team.
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In Trump trial, Manhattan DA Bragg's hocus-pocus case exposed on first dayIt sounds more like cook-the-books accounting jargon to pay a 'hatchet' man. To make the entry on that tiny line clearer Trump should have written: Hatchet fee/legal.
No worse than your constant barrage of twitter post.my goodness.
That's quite the cut and paste job there. Basically everything on the page without the HTML stuff!
https://media.tenor.com/KLwoE6_9WMcAAAAM/anxiety-spongebob.gif
No, Twitter posts are short bites that link you to more or other related fare.No worse than your constant barrage of twitter post.
I presented it as an informational read. It's targeted to objective readers not Trump haters. You have the option to gloss over it, ignore it or read it for a different angle and formulate your own opinion. If it's a TOS violation it was not my intention.No, Twitter posts are short bites that link you to more or other related fare.
You literally jacked and dumped the whole damn page to read. Pretty sure it's a TOS violation, too.
Kinda feel sorry for Gregg Jarrett, he's not getting any residuals outta that aggregate!![]()
Waste of taxpayers money!I just thought this criminal trial, regarding Trump's illegal (allegedly, but c'mon) hush money payments, accounting, and reporting, should have its own thread. I'm sure next Monday, there will be a tsunami of news, and if not before then. Feel free to post any relevant stories or videos (on BOTH sides) here.
I have no doubt that Ol' Babydoll Hands isn't done filing frivolous motions and lawsuits. And I wouldn't be shocked if his cronies on the Supreme Court step in at some point. But as of this post, it's full steam ahead on the first criminal trial of a former president in United States history.
It's targeted alright, and you occupy the bullseye of said target.It's targeted to objective readers not Trump haters.
Explosive testimony from the David Pecker, the former CEO of the National Enquirer today about his criminal conspiracy with Donald Trump to commit election fraud. He ran a "catch and kill" operation, buying up the exclusive rights to any news story that would be damaging to Trump and making sure it never saw the light of day. This provides context for Trump's use of election funds to bribe Stormy Daniels.
https://www.npr.org/2024/04/22/1246321962/trump-hush-money
Exactly! They should just declare Trump an enemy combatant and send him to GITMO.Waste of taxpayers money!
https://th.bing.com/th?id=ODLS.1b1ae8de-6359-4fb6-a0d3-49fb4419967e&w=32&h=32&qlt=90&pcl=fffffa&o=6&pid=1.2
Web3 days ago · Overall, we rate Judicial Watch Questionable based on extreme right-wing bias, promotion of conspiracy theories, and an abysmal fact-check record. Detailed Report Reasoning: Conspiracy, Propaganda, Numerous Failed Fact Checks
https://adfontesmedia.com/judicial-watch-bias-and-reliability/
Bias: Hyper-Partisan Right
Reliability: Unreliable, Problematic
Reliability scores for articles and shows are on a scale of 0-64. Scores above 40 are generally good; scores below 24 are generally problematic. Scores between 24-40 indicate a range of possibilities, with some sources falling there because they are heavy in opinion and analysis, and some because they have a high variation in reliability between articles.
Bias scores for articles and shows are on a scale of -42 to +42, with higher negative scores being more left, higher positive scores being more right, and scores closer to zero being minimally biased, equally balanced, or exhibiting a centrist bias.
The organization has filed lawsuits against government climate scientists. JW has made numerous false and unsubstantiated claims that have been picked up by right-wing news outlets and promoted by conservative figures. Former U.S. President Donald Trump has repeatedly cited false claims by Judicial Watch about voter fraud. Various courts have dismissed the vast majority of its lawsuits.[3]
Fox News?In Trump trial, Manhattan DA Bragg's hocus-pocus case exposed on first day
Like a skilled magician, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg hopes his pretense and bag of legal tricks will fool jurors in the Trump hush money trial
By Gregg Jarrett Fox News
Published April 23, 2024 3:00am EDT | Updated April 23, 2024 4:18am EDT
“• FacebookGregg Jarrett: If your last name is Trump, the standard of justice is turned on its head
Fox News legal analyst Gregg Jarrett on jury selection beginning in the Trump hush money trial, which he argues is a double standard of justice for the former president.
Hocus-pocus is a meaningless distraction or illusion that is intended to fool. That neatly summarizes District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s case against Donald Trump. The DA hopes to snooker a Manhattan jury into convicting the former president with a bag of legal tricks.
In most courtrooms, the chicanery would never work. But in this Trump-hating venue the defendant’s jury of purported peers are likely predisposed to accept magic for magic’s sake. They may want to believe there’s no white rabbit behind Bragg’s back, despite the pink ears peaking around his coat.
The first sleight of hand happened the moment the lead prosecutor addressed jurors during opening statements on Monday. Assistant DA Matthew Colangelo (formerly Joe Biden’s number three official at the Justice Department) told the panel, "This case is about a criminal conspiracy." Really?
TRUMP TRIAL: FORMER PRESIDENT 'INNOCENT,' SAYS DEFENSE AS DA ALLEGES 'CRIMINAL CONSPIRACY'
Why, then, is Trump not charged with that? Even though Colangelo repeatedly accused the defendant of participating in a criminal conspiracy, the word "conspiracy" can be found nowhere in Bragg’s indictment. It’s not there because there was no criminal conspiracy. But that didn’t stop the prosecutor from deceiving the jury by arguing about an uncharged crime. Like a skilled magician, he hopes his pretense will fool them.
Undeterred, Colangelo used pejorative terms to portray the Daniels cash as a nefarious scheme without bothering to mention that such non-disclosure agreements are perfectly legal and routine. Also, lawful and quite common was the alleged "catch and kill" device used by the tabloid, National Enquirer. On Trump’s behalf, it bought the rights to Daniels’ story about her supposed relationship with him but declined to publish it. Contractually, it had every right to do that.
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None of this stopped the prosecutor from informing the jury that all of this constitutes "an illegal conspiracy to undermine a presidential election." Like most illusions, it seems plausible on the surface. But wait. Let’s check the indictment again. Every single one of the 34 charges against Trump took place in 2017. You’ll note that this is after the 2016 election. It’s quite the magic trick to have committed crimes before they allegedly occurred.
Colangelo must be new to politics or a neophyte reader of history. He’s under the mistaken impression that campaigns never try to bury negative stories or promote positive ones. In truth, it’s been going on for more than two centuries. This prompted the defense in its opening statement to warn the jury, "I have a spoiler alert, there is nothing wrong with trying to influence an election; it’s called democracy." Trump attorney Todd Blanche then added, "They put something sinister on it."
CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINION
Blanche offered a full-throated defense of his famous client when he declared to the jury, "President Trump is innocent." He described how Trump had nothing to do with the bookkeeping or the 34 invoices reflecting the same number of charged counts. He assigned his lawyer at the time, Michael Cohen, to resolve the demands for money, which he did. Cohen booked the cost as legal services and expenses, which they were.
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Why did Trump capitulate to what smacks of blackmail or extortion? Blanche offered this explanation: "Stormy was an attempt to try to embarrass Trump with all sorts of allegations damaging to him and damaging to his family. Trump fought back to protect his family, reputation, and brand…and that is not a crime." Indeed, it is not.
The defense contends that no crimes were committed at all, that Trump was targeted because he’s running for president, and that unscrupulous prosecutors motivated by politics built their case on clever deceptions, an abuse of the law, and liars who cannot be trusted. While much of this should be self-evident, Bragg is committed to employing a hocus-pocus strategy to fool the jury.
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Through his minion, Colangelo, the lefty DA accuses Trump of "conspiring to influence the 2016 presidential election" without recognizing the obvious hypocrisy. It is Bragg, himself, who is guilty of election interference in 2024 by bringing a legally absurd case designed to take Trump off the campaign trail while his opponent, Joe Biden, freely blankets key states in advance of the November balloting.
It’s a neat trick called "lawfare" — weaponizing the law to persecute a political enemy under the guise of a legitimate prosecution. It doesn’t matter that any conviction will surely be overturned on appeal. By then, the damage will be done.
For now, we are left to watch and wait, wondering whether Manhattan jurors will fall for the legal illusions and distractions conjured up by an unprincipled trickster called Alvin Bragg.”