A week ago, former President Donald Trump was arraigned in New York. District Attorney Alvin Bragg campaigned on the promise that he would take down Trump, bringing a political purpose to the indictment and arraignment. The actions do not bode well for a republic that is declining.
Much
has been written on the glaring legal deficiencies in the case. The basic crime
was falsifying business records in the first degree, a misdemeanor crime that
has a two-year statute of limitation under New York criminal law. Bragg elevated
the thirty-four identical business entries into felonies without indicating the
applicable reason, leaving everyone to guess that it has to do with the 2016 presidential
election and the payment of “hush money” to porn star Stormy Daniels. Josh Hammer wrote the following in an article at The Daily Signal.
Bragg’s theory appears to be that he can
somehow evade this, and simultaneously enhance the misdemeanor to a felony, by
proving – beyond a reasonable doubt, naturally – that Trump’s bookkeeping falsifications
were done in furtherance of another crime. But Bragg, remarkably, has not said
what that crime is.
It appears to be some amorphous
combination of skirting federal campaign law and/or New York state election law,
in the context of Trump’s successful 2016 presidential run. But the former has
a five-year statute of limitations (thus also tolled) and is also well outside
Bragg’s legitimate prosecutorial jurisdiction as a county district attorney,
and the latter should not properly apply to a U.S. presidential candidate.
Moreover, even ignoring the dispositive
statute of limitations and jurisdictional issues, the very thing Bragg would
need to prove to a jury “beyond a reasonable doubt” to secure the felony
enhancement – that Trump directed Cohen to make the payments with the specific
intent to benefit his 2016 presidential campaign – is rebutted by Cohen
himself, who has testified under oath that Trump requested the payments to be
made furtively to spare his family personal embarrassment.
Bragg
made a big mistake that may end his career. However, the deed has been done and
cannot be taken back. The case may be dismissed before a trial could take place
in late 2023 or early 2024. Nevertheless, other ambitious prosecutors are
investigating Trump in other areas of the nation. Hammer indicated that
indicting Trump – a former and defeated president of the opposite political
party – makes America look like a Third-World banana republic and brings
political ramifications to the 2024 Republican presidential primary.
With the precedent forever shattered, the
onus now falls on the “deplorables” of the American Right to sober up and
recognize that the United States is now at the point of no return when it comes
to weaponizing governmental powers and partisan prosecutorial apparatuses to
reward political friends and punish political enemies within the (sometimes
highly debatable, as is the case here) confines of the rule of law.
There is simply no choice but for the
Right, and for the Republican prosecutors in deep-red jurisdictions across the
country, to prudentially and reasonably respond in kind, upping the ante
further in the short-to-mid-term in an attempt to ultimately deescalate toward
a long-term “mutually assured destruction” footing.
Surely there is some creative and
ambitious right-wing prosecutor in the Oklahoma Panhandle or West Texas who
would like to summon Hunter Biden or Anthony Fauci out to “flyover country,”
right?
Sometimes, the only way out is through.
Bragg
fell victim to Trump Derangement Syndrome and let his hatred for Donald Trump
to override his good sense and legal training. However, he set a precedent that
should not have been set. We should not be surprised if conservative attorney
generals start indicting Democrats.
No comments:
Post a Comment