"The brief due Thursday (9/26) ā€“ which is expected to exceed 200 pages, including exhibits, and is meant to convince courts Trump should be prosecuted for alleged obstruction and conspiracy criminal activity ā€” is a rare avenue for evidence to be aired in court before a trial.

Chutkan of the DC District Court, in a six-page opinion, said she would allowĀ such an outsized briefingĀ because the Supreme Court, in its recent decision to give Trumpā€™sĀ actions whileĀ president immunity from prosecution, has directed her as the trial judge to look closely at facts in the case to decide ifĀ some allegationsĀ could moveĀ forward to trial."

  • frezik@midwest.social
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    2 months ago

    If you follow court cases, this kind of time is normal. The other actions are not nothingburgers, not at all.

    Take the Sarah Palin email hack. Happened in Sept 2008, they zero in on him almost immediately, and heā€™s charged in Oct. The trial doesnā€™t even happen until April 2010, and then sentenced that November. That was a relatively straightforward case against a nobody.

    Or Kevin Mitnick, who was arrested for computer hacking in Feb 1995, charged in 1998, and pleads guilty in 1999.

    If Trump doesnā€™t win the election, heā€™s fucked. Only death will keep him out of jail. If he wins, itā€™s still quite possible Merchan sentences him to jail (on state charges that quite clearly have nothing where he can claim immunity), and then things will be a little too interesting. What happens when a state sentences someone who is the President-elect? Iā€™m a curious person by nature, but lets leave that question unanswered if we can avoid it.