Amanpour & Company: Stephen Vladek: ‘How Will SCOTUS Rule on Donald Trump’s Jan. 6. Legal Case?’

Amanpour & Company: How Will SCOTUS Rule on Donald Trump’s Jan. 6. Legal Case?Source:Amanpour & Company interviewing Professor of Law Stephen Vladek.

Source:The New Democrat

“The U.S. Supreme Court is facing several landmark cases while their approval ratings remain at a record low. Professor of law Stephen Vladek joins Hari Sreenivasan to discuss the cases attracting attention — from the trials awaiting Donald Trump to a vital reproductive rights decision — and whether we are witnessing a constitutional crisis in the nation’s highest court.”

From Amanpour & Company

“The double jeopardy protection applies in both state and federal courts. It only applies in criminal cases and criminal law. Thus, the protection does not apply in civil lawsuits.

The double jeopardy rule also bars multiple punishments for lesser included offenses. A lesser included offense is an offense that the government must necessarily prove to convict someone for a greater offense. Suppose the federal government charges a criminal defendant with burglary and trespass. The government attorney must prove the defendant trespassed to prove they committed burglary. Thus, the court cannot impose additional punishment on the defendant for both the trespass and the burglary.

When Does Double Jeopardy Attach?
Double jeopardy attaches at different times depending on the type of criminal trial. In a jury trial, it typically attaches when the court swears in the jurors. In a bench trial, it attaches when the court swears in the first witness to testify.

Once double jeopardy attaches, the government typically cannot call for a second prosecution of a criminal defendant for the same criminal offense. However, there are some exceptions to the general rule.”

From Find Law

As I wrote yesterday on The New Democrat :

“I think the question in Donald Trump’s immunity case is where do any former U.S. President has presidential immunity from prosecution in criminal cases, even for actions that they committed while they were President.

I think the answer to this presidential immunity question is obviously no, for the simple fact that we are a constitutional, federal republic and we have a liberal democratic, federal form of government. And a big part our our constitutional system is that no one is above the law, no one is below the law, including the most powerful people in the country, including the most powerful person in the country, the President of the United States.

And I’ll give you another prediction as a non-lawyer. The Supreme Court will rule against Donald Trump’s immunity claim, but as Joan Biskupic said in the CNN video, they’ll allow for Donald Trump’s lawyers to ,make other defenses in his Washington trial.

The reason why I believe the U.S. Supreme Court will rule against Donald Trump’s immunity claim and I don’t think it will be close, perhaps just Clarence Thomas rules in favor of Trump, if he doesn’t recuse himself from the case, but the reason why I believe this, is I have a hard time believing that there are 5 Republicans on the Supreme Court, who believe that Joe Biden, or any other future Democratic President, should have presidential immunity from criminal prosecution, which is exactly what will happen if DJT wins this.

The other reason why I believe SCOTUS will rule against DJT is a practical one. If DJT were to get immunity here, the President and future President’s would just be able to order his cabinet members and other executive officials to take actions that he knows are illegal and unconstitutional, knowing that he can’t be prosecuted and telling his people essentially, don’t worry about it, he’ll pardon them, even if they’re caught. ”

I put in the quote having to do with double jeopardy because that’s one of the claims the Donald Trump’s Washington lawyers are making for why the former President shouldn’t even be tried at all for his role in the January 6, 2021 insurrection. They’re arguing that President Trump was already impeached, tried, and acquitted in Congress. The House of Representatives impeached President Trump and then the Senate acquitted him.

But once again I’m not a lawyer. And if you are taking the time to count how many times I’ve said that in just the last 6 months, I suggest you get a life. But double jeopardy only apples to civil and criminal cases, not Congressional. After DJT loses on presidential immunity, (and I believe he will for reasons I’ve already given) he’ll lose on double jeopardy as well and will head to trial in Washington in the spring of 2024.

Posted in Amanpour & Company, The New Democrat | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Michael Popok: ‘Supreme Court Delivers MAJOR HINT To Jack Smith in Donald Trump Case’

Michael Popok: Supreme Court Delivers MAJOR HINT To Jack Smith in Donald Trump CaseSource:Meidas Touch– left to right: U.S. Department of Justice Special Counsel Jack Smith & U.S. Chief Justice John Roberts.

Source:The New Democrat

“Has the Supreme Court sent a message to the Special Counsel Jack Smith by agreeing in the same 48 period to 1) review quickly whether they will decide directly whether Trump has immunity from prosecution; and 2) decide if the DOJ is properly using the main criminal count against Trump—obstruction of an official proceeding? Michael Popok of Legal AF explains that the Supremes don’t do anything by accident as they decide in the same term whether to set Jan6 defendants AND Trump free.”

From the Meidas Touch

I agree with Michael Popok, that there are at least 5-9 U.S. Supreme Court Justices who think we as a country need to know whether or not Donald J. Trump is an insurrectionist, before the 2024 presidential election and that alone is why they’ll take Special Counsel Jack Smith’s direct appeal on the presidential immunity question or not.

Of course Donald Trump and his legal team will hate that, because they’ll probably lose that decision and then would ultimately be convicted simply because of the evidence against DJT and the fact this trial will be in Washington, but only because that’s where these crimes were convicted.

I think DJT will lose at the Supreme Court, again because of the evidence against him, the fact that he’s running for President again in 2024. But I don’t see 5 votes up there to give not just this former President, but future former President’s, or President Joe Biden for the remainder of his presidency, or future current President’s, presidential immunity, when it comes to criminal prosecution.

What we know about at least 7, if not 8 of the current U.S. Supreme Court Justices, including the 3 that then President Donald Trump appointed, is that they’re not there to save Donald Trump’s neck. (To put it mildly) They are there to interpret the law and rule of the constitutionality of current laws.

We know that the current SCOTUS is not there to save DJT’s neck, because of all the rulings against then President Trump back in 2020, when he was trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election and just automatically get himself declared the winner of that election, regardless of the final vote tallies in the Electoral College.

I’m thinking even Justice Sam Alito will rule against DJT because all the power it would give future Democratic President’s and not just DJT. And perhaps just Clarence Thomas rules in favor of DJT, or doesn’t make any ruling at all, because he doesn’t want to lose 8-1 on a case this important.

Posted in Meidas Touch, The New Democrat | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

The Situation Room: George Conway Predicts How Supreme Court May Rule On Donald Trump’s Presidential Immunity Filing

CNN: George Conway Predicts How Supreme Court May Rule On Donald Trump’s Presidential Immunity FilingSource:CNN legal analyst George Conway.

Source:The New Democrat

“Conservative lawyer George Conway, Supreme Court reporter Joan Biskupic and senior political commentator Gloria Borger join CNN’s Wolf Blitzer to discuss former President Donald Trump’s ongoing legal battles.”

From CNN

For the 100th time, perhaps just in 2023 alone, I’m not a lawyer, but I agree with George Conway who is a longtime Washington lawyer in the Republican Party. The Supreme Court will take Donald Trump’s immunity case and perhaps rule on it in February.

I think the question in Donald Trump’s immunity case is where do any former U.S. President has presidential immunity from prosecution in criminal cases, even for actions that they committed while they were President.

I think the answer to this presidential immunity question is obviously no, for the simple fact that we are a constitutional, federal republic and we have a liberal democratic, federal form of government. And a big part our our constitutional system is that no one is above the law, no one is below the law, including the most powerful people in the country, including the most powerful person in the country, the President of the United States.

And I’ll give you another prediction as a non-lawyer. The Supreme Court will rule against Donald Trump’s immunity claim, but as Joan Biskupic said in the CNN video, they’ll allow for Donald Trump’s lawyers to ,make other defenses in his Washington trial.

The reason why I believe the U.S. Supreme Court will rule against Donald Trump’s immunity claim and I don’t think it will be close, perhaps just Clarence Thomas rules in favor of Trump, if he doesn’t recuse himself from the case, but the reason why I believe this, is I have a hard time believing that there are 5 Republicans on the Supreme Court, who believe that Joe Biden, or any other future Democratic President, should have presidential immunity from criminal prosecution, which is exactly what will happen if DJT wins this.

The other reason why I believe SCOTUS will rule against DJT is a practical one. If DJT were to get immunity here, the President and future President’s would just be able to order his cabinet members and other executive officials to take actions that he knows are illegal and unconstitutional, knowing that he can’t be prosecuted and telling his people essentially, don’t worry about it, he’ll pardon them, even if they’re caught.

Posted in CNN, The New Democrat | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Ben Meiselas: ‘Donald Trump’s Horrible Lawyer BLOWS IT Again’

Trump’s Horrible Lawyer BLOWS IT AgainSource:Meidas Touch– Donald J. Trump’s civil propagandist, Alina Habba.

Source:The New Democrat

“MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas on the horrible Donald Trump lawyer Alina Habba making a fool of out of herself during an interview with Don Jr’s girlfriend Kimberly Guilfoyle.”

From the Meidas Touch

“In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.”

From Congress.GOV

“Civil cases usually involve disputes between people or organizations while criminal cases allege a violation of a criminal law.”

From U.S. Courts

Just for the record: Alina Habba is Donald J. Trump’s New York County civil attorney, not criminal attorney.

As I wrote on The New Democrat  back in November about Alina Habba:

“Alina Habba is not really a trial lawyer. She can barely afford to do whatever she does as a lawyer right now. She’s more of a public relations lawyer, if anything at all, who makes her living trying her client’s cases on TV and on social media. But she’s officially Donald Trump’s civil lawyer right now because she’s about the best of what’s left to try to defend him, because of his own financial situation and all the evidence that’s against him right now, in multiple cases.

Perhaps one of the reasons right now that Alina Habba owes millions of dollars, is because her own client is not paying her. But she’s trying to work for him anyway, perhaps banking on the fact that defending a former President of the United States, would lead to clients who can and would pay her very well for her legal advice and actions in the future. But that career strategy is obviously not working out for her right now.”

As I wrote last week on The New Democrat  about Alina Habba:

“My post about DJT’s lawyer Alina Habba from back in November still stands here. She’s not up to the task, doesn’t have the experience, the knowledge, the professionalism, to defend a client at the level of Donald Trump, when you are talking about a former President of the United States and now serial criminal defendant.

DJT needs much better legal representation. But Alina Habba might be the best of what’s left to even consider representing a man who not only commits felonies on a regular basis, but who leaves incriminating evidence against him all over the place, either thinking he’ll never get caught, or convicted, or he’s simply above the law and has some constitutional right that no other American citizen has.”

As I wrote last week on The New Democrat  about Alina Habba:

“So to put this in American English: President’s (current & former) can’t be held personally libel for official acts that they commit while President of the United States. Running for President and campaigning for President, challenging or illegally challenging, like with election interference, aren’t official acts as President. So Alina Habba (winner of Amateur Night at the American Bar Association for he 2nd day in a row) was referencing a case to help her client, that she apparently didn’t even bother to read.”

As I wrote yesterday on The New Democrat  about Alina Habba:

“It’s one thing to either go o national TV as a lawyer, speaking for your client and either lying, or simply not knowing what you are talking about. It’s another thing to do that in court. But in Alina Habba’s case (who really needs to be back in law school as a student, if any law school would accept her) she has the unique talent to quite frankly bullshit both national TV audiences, as well as U.S. Federal courts and act as if she’s in moot court back in law school and was too busy partying or drinking the night before, to prepare for her case and to do her homework.”

OK, to try to explain Alina Habba and what she’s up too or why she does and says the things that she does, especially on national TV, where she’ll never be able to run away from her garbage statements, or in court, where again everything piece of trash that she tried to present in court on behalf of her client Donald J. Trump, I can only come up with a few possibilities for why she does this and puts herself through, as someone whose never even met her.

I guess one possibility is that she’s a total moron. But then how the hell she get out of high school, let alone through college and then law school, and then pass the bar exam. So I don’t think just labeling her as a total moron makes much sense here.

I guess another possibility is that Alina Habba is a pathological liar who simply can’t help herself and perhaps she’s corrupt as well, which would along with her being a compulsive liar, would explain all of her garbage statements as a freakin lawyer, whose supposed to be a member of the American Bar Association. Along with being a pathological liar, she also just happens to be President of the Compulsive Liars of America, (not saying such organization exists) which seems to be a position unlike being a civil defense attorney, that she would be well-qualified for.

Another possibility and I think one that has real possibility, just based on her statements and behavior, she got her law degree from Trump University, which would explain horrible statements and positions as a lawyer. For any of you that is not familiar with Trump University:

“Trump University (also known as the Trump Wealth Institute and Trump Entrepreneur Initiative LLC) was an American company that ran a real estate training program from 2005 to 2010. It was owned and operated by The Trump Organization. A separate organization, Trump Institute, was licensed by Trump University but not owned by The Trump Organization. In 2011, amid multiple investigations, lawsuits and student complaints, it ceased operations.[2] It was founded in 2004 by Donald Trump and his associates Michael Sexton and Jonathan Spitalny. The company offered courses in real estate, asset management, entrepreneurship, and wealth creation.[3]

Despite its name, the organization was not an accredited university or college. It conducted three- and five-day seminars (often called “retreats”) and used high-pressure tactics to sell them to its customers.[4] It did not confer college credit, grant degrees, or grade its students.[5] In 2011, the company became the subject of an inquiry by the New York Attorney General’s office for illegal business practices, which resulted in a lawsuit filed in August 2013.[6] An article in the National Review called the organization a “massive scam”.[7]

Trump University was also the subject of two class actions in federal court. The lawsuits centered around allegations that Trump University defrauded its students by using misleading marketing practices and engaging in aggressive sales tactics. The company and the lawsuits against it received renewed interest due to Trump’s candidacy in the 2016 presidential election. Despite repeatedly insisting he would not settle, Trump settled all three lawsuits in November 2016 for a total of $25 million after being elected president.”

From Wikipedia

I think crook and pathological liar, are the best possibilities for why Alina Habba does the things that she does and says the things that she does. But you are welcome to weigh in on this as well and tell me what you think about this and her.

Posted in Meidas Touch, The New Democrat | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Harry Litman: ‘Mark Meadows Removal Decision Spells Trouble. FOR DONALD TRUMP!’

Harry Litman: Mark Meadows Removal Decision Spells Trouble. FOR DONALD TRUMP!Source:Harry Litman– left to right: Defendant Don & Defendant Mark. Also known as the Chief & Deputy Chief of the Keystone Kops of American politics.

Source:The New Democrat

“The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision to reject Mark Meadows’s bid to have his case moved to federal court hints at a potential outcome in Trump’s effort to have his case tossed out on grounds of presidential immunity. Opinion…

From Harry Litman

“Meadows cannot point to any authority for influencing state officials with allegations of election fraud,” Pryor wrote. “At bottom, whatever the chief of staff’s role with respect to state election administration, that role does not include altering valid election results in favor of a particular candidate.”

“Meadows cannot have it both ways,” Pryor wrote. “He cannot shelter behind testimony about the breadth of his official responsibilities, while disclaiming his admissions that he understood electioneering activity to be out of bounds. That he repeatedly denied having any role in, or speaking on behalf of, the Trump campaign, reflects his recognition that such activities were forbidden to him as chief of staff.”

From POLITICO

“​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​The Hatch Act, a federal law passed in 1939, limits certain political activities of federal employees, as well as some state, D.C., and local government employees who work in connection with federally funded programs. ​The law’s purposes are to ensure that federal programs are administered in a nonpartisan fashion, to protect federal employees from political coercion in the workplace, and to ensure that federal employees are advanced based on merit and not based on political affiliation.​​​​ ​”

From U.S. Office of Special Counsel

From I wrote about the Mark Meadows case on The New Democrat  back in August:

“George Conway already explained in this video (that’s linked on this post) about the Hatch Act. If Meadows is making a free speech argument by saying that he was advocating for the President of the United States in Georgia, when he was trying to convince the Secretary of State to overturn the election there and declare President Trump the winner, he would be in violation of the Hatch Act, which is a Federal felony.

Under Federal law, Federal officials, who are not elected officials, meaning they don’t serve in Congress or are not President or Vice President, are barred from weighing in on and contributing to political campaigns and elections. Legally, they’re supposed to be above politics. So which felony does Mr. Meadows want to plead guilty to: the Federal Hatch Act, or the Georgia RICO ACT?”

From what I wrote on the Mark Meadows case on The New Democrat  back in September:

“It’s clear that what Mark Meadows was doing post-2020 election day, after President Donald Trump had already lost to Joe Biden, (and that’s according to the 50 United States, including Georgia, Arizona, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Michigan) he was working on behalf of his de-facto client Donald J. Trump, to overturn that presidential election and just automatically declare President Trump the winner of that state. Even though it was clear that the President lost that election by 12,000 votes. Mr. Meadows wasn’t acting as White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, on behalf of the U.S. Federal Government, which is why he lost today.”

What I wrote yesterday on The New Democrat :

“The term slam dunk, especially since the days of the Iraq War back in the early 2000s, gets thrown around a lot. Sort of like the football in the modern NFL, (to use a modern sports reference) but slam sunk is appropriate in the Mark Meadows case and I’ll explain why.

I guess it’s legal to be both a campaign official and a U.S. Government official at the same time. (But you might want to consult a lawyer on that) You just can’t do both jobs at the same time.

There’s no statue or law in the U.S. Government that allows for one of their government official to interfere in democratic elections, especially to try to benefit one particular candidate or another. Which is what then White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows was trying to do back in late 2020 in Georgia, to get that presidential election thrown out and just automatically declare Donald Trump the winner of the Georgia election.

Mark Meadows wasn’t acting as White House Chief of Staff when he was trying to get Georgia state officials to reverse the election there and just automatically declare President Trump the winner there. He was acting on behalf of his de-facto client Donald Trump, as a campaign employee for the Donald Trump presidential campaign. Which is why he lost back in October and lost yesterday and will keep losing, as long as keeps fighting the charges against him.”

I would ask what were Mark Meadows and company thinking when they went through this whole overturn the 2020 presidential election scheme, just because their candidate Donald Trump lost. But it’s obvious they weren’t thinking at all.

I mean to try to corrupt state elections officials, that you don’t even know, at lost not well, who are literally in the business to supervise state elections, like in Georgia, but Arizona, and other states as well, thinking that of course they would do that for them, is not thinking at all. It’s like being in debt for over a million dollars, when you only make 30 thousand-dollars a year, thinking that you can pay off your debt by winning the lottery or robbing a string of convenient stores, or something.

Posted in Harry Litman, The New Democrat | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ben Meiselas: ‘Appeals Court Sends POWERFUL Message That Has Donald Trump PANICKED’

Appeals Court Sends POWERFUL Message that has Trump PANICKEDSource:Meidas Touch– left to right: U.S. Federal Judge William Pryor & Defendant Don.

“MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas reports on how a new ruling by the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals affirming a lower courts ruling against Donald Trump’s former Chief of Staff Mark Meadows has serious implications against Donald Trump for his immunity claims.”

From Meidas Touch

“A federal appeals court has rejected former Trump White House chief of staff Mark Meadows’ attempt to move his Georgia election interference criminal case to federal court.

The opinion of the three-judge panel of the 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals, delivered by a conservative jurist appointed to the court by former President George W. Bush, is a resounding blow to arguments raised by Meadows that his case should be moved because the allegations in the indictment were connected to his official duties in the Trump White House.

“At bottom, whatever the chief of staff’s role with respect to state election administration, that role does not include altering valid election results in favor of a particular candidate,” wrote Chief Judge William Pryor.

“So there is no ‘casual connection’ between Meadows’s ‘official authority’ and his alleged participation in the conspiracy,” Pryor added.

Pryor said that the federal removal statute at issue “does not apply to former federal officers,” but that even if it did, “the events giving rise to this criminal action were not related Meadows’s official duties.”

Pryor was joined in his opinion by Circuit Judges Robin Rosenbaum, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, and Nancy Abudu, an appointee of President Joe Biden.

Moving the case to federal court could let Meadows get the charges dismissed altogether by invoking federal immunity extended to certain individuals who are prosecuted or sued for conduct tied to their US government roles.

Meadows has the option of appealing the decision to the Supreme Court or asking the full appeals court to hear the case.

Meadows was the first of five defendants to file motions to move the case to federal court, and the appeals court’s decision in his case will likely make it difficult for his co-defendants to successfully move their cases to federal court.”

From CNN

“In Blassingame v. Trump, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia considered whether former President Donald Trump is entitled to absolute presidential immunity from damages liability for allegedly inciting a riot at the U.S. Capitol.

On January 6, 2021, a crowd of supporters of then-President Donald Trump marched on the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to forcibly prevent Congress from certifying the results of the 2020 presidential election. Trump allegedly incited that action by, among other things, encouraging attendance at the January 6 protest and urging the crowd to “fight like hell” and “take back [the] country with . . . strength.” The plaintiffs in this case, U.S. Capitol Police officers James Blassingame and Sidney Hemby, sued Trump for damages for the harm these actions caused them. Among other things, the officers allege that Trump’s unlawful conduct caused them to suffer both physical and emotional injuries.

Trump filed a motion to dismiss, arguing in part that he is entitled to absolute presidential immunity and therefore cannot be held liable for the events on and leading up to January 6. CAC filed an amici curiae brief in the D.C. District Court in support of the plaintiffs on behalf of law professors who are experts in constitutional law, executive immunity, and separation of powers principles. Our brief argued that Trump is not entitled to absolute presidential immunity.

Our brief made two key points. First, it explained that absolute presidential immunity does not shield a former president sued in his personal capacity from damages liability for unofficial conduct. The Supreme Court has determined that absolute presidential immunity protects a president from private suits for damages challenging official acts, and it has held that that immunity extends to the “outer perimeter” of a president’s official responsibility. But the Court has made clear that such immunity does not extend beyond the “outer perimeter” of a president’s official duties. In other words, there is no absolute immunity for a president’s unofficial acts. Our brief argued that Trump’s conduct in allegedly inciting a riot at the Capitol to forcibly disrupt a session of Congress fell far outside the outer perimeter of his official responsibility and therefore does not warrant immunity.

Second, our brief argued that the separation of powers concerns and public policy considerations underlying the Supreme Court’s immunity precedent further compel the denial of Trump’s claim for absolute immunity. The Supreme Court has explained that under separation of powers principles, courts must refrain from reviewing a president’s official actions in private suits for damages, as the threat of such litigation could inhibit the performance of his official functions. Trump, however, sought to invoke the immunity doctrine as a shield from damages liability for private conduct that allegedly sought to preserve his own private interests by forcibly interfering with Congress’s official functions. To apply the doctrine of presidential immunity in this case would therefore been a perversion of the separation of powers. And the public interest rationale for presidential immunity lies in ensuring that an official may act without fear of personal liability in fulfilling the responsibilities of his public office. That rationale is inapplicable when an official is pursuing his own personal agenda. Thus, our brief argued that neither of the rationales underlying absolute presidential immunity justifies application of that doctrine in this case.

On February 18, 2022, the District Court for the District of Columbia issued its decision.

Echoing arguments we made in our brief, the court rejected former president Trump’s claim that he is absolutely immune from all claims in the litigation.”

From The Constitution

Alina Habba: “The Supreme Court is looking at presidential immunity, which is a protection for President’s so they operate without being prosecuted or persecuted and attacked when they come out of office. But what has happened is that he (meaning Donald Trump) is being prosecuted, persecuted, and attacked and they’re ignoring presidential immunity. So finally on January 16, the Supreme Court is going to take it up and going to look at it real hard and going to say, look, we have no business attacking someone who was in his scope of the presidency, was doing his job, was protecting the election, was doing the things that a President should do. Instead they call him an insurrectionist, they can’t beat him in the polls.”

This latest statement from Alina Habba, is in the 1st minute of this Medias Touch video, that I copied word for word for anyone who reads this post. I went into her (so to speak) last week on The New Democrat  as far as why she has no business representing a high profile politician Donald Trump, especially in criminal, as well as civil cases:

“My post about DJT’s lawyer Alina Habba from back in November still stands here. She’s not up to the task, doesn’t have the experience, the knowledge, the professionalism, to defend a client at the level of Donald Trump, when you are talking about a former President of the United States and now serial criminal defendant.

DJT needs much better legal representation. But Alina Habba might be the best of what’s left to even consider representing a man who not only commits felonies on a regular basis, but who leaves incriminating evidence against him all over the place, either thinking he’ll never get caught, or convicted, or he’s simply above the law and has some constitutional right that no other American citizen has.”

It’s one thing to either go o national TV as a lawyer, speaking for your client and either lying, or simply not knowing what you are talking about. It’s another thing to do that in court. But in Alina Habba’s case (who really needs to be back in law school as a student, if any law school would accept her) she has the unique talent to quite frankly bullshit both national TV audiences, as well as U.S. Federal courts and act as if she’s in moot court back in law school and was too busy partying or drinking the night before, to prepare for her case and to do her homework.

You can also see this post on Blogger.

Posted in Meidas Touch, Originals | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

CNN: ‘Conservative Judge Delivers Major Setback To Key Donald Trump Ally’

CNN: Conservative Judge Delivers Major Setback To Key Donald Trump AllySource:CNN– former White House Chief of Staff & current Fulton County, Georgia defendant Mark Meadows, getting is mug shot taken back in August.

Source:The New Democrat

“A federal appeals court rejected Mark Meadows’ effort to move his Georgia election interference case to federal court. CNN’s Elie Honig discusses the impact of the ruling.”

From CNN

“We cannot rubberstamp Meadows’ legal opinion that the president’s chief of staff has unfettered authority,” Pryor wrote.

The panel found that Meadows’ efforts to contact Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger about possibly altering the outcome of the 2020 election fell squarely outside his official duties. His decision to join a call with Trump and Raffensperger on Jan. 2, 2021 — a now-infamous call that is at the heart of the state prosecution — “reflected a clear attempt to further Trump’s ‘private litigation interests,’” rather than any government function.

The panel characterized Meadows’ December 2020 visit to Georgia as an attempt to “infiltrate” an ongoing recount — an act, Pryor said, that was far outside his official duties.

“Meadows cannot point to any authority for influencing state officials with allegations of election fraud,” Pryor wrote. “At bottom, whatever the chief of staff’s role with respect to state election administration, that role does not include altering valid election results in favor of a particular candidate.”

Pryor, an appointee of President George W. Bush, dismissed much of Meadows’ legal position. The judge said Meadows was trying to simultaneously argue that his official duties encompassed some partisan political matters while also acknowledging he was not permitted while acting in his official job to get involved in election-related advocacy for any candidate.

“Meadows cannot have it both ways,” Pryor wrote. “He cannot shelter behind testimony about the breadth of his official responsibilities, while disclaiming his admissions that he understood electioneering activity to be out of bounds. That he repeatedly denied having any role in, or speaking on behalf of, the Trump campaign, reflects his recognition that such activities were forbidden to him as chief of staff.”

Though the ruling was unanimous, the two other judges — Obama appointee Robin Rosenbaum and Biden appointee Nancy Abudu — issued a stark warning that the court’s interpretation could produce a “nightmare scenario” and “cripple the federal government” by allowing state prosecutors to intimidate and interfere with federal officials by subjecting them to the threat of criminal action in state court.

The Democrat-appointed judges explicitly urged Congress to change the law, known as a “removal” statute, to make clear that former officials prosecuted over their official duties can move their cases to federal court even after those officials have left their posts.

“These types of actions can cripple government operations, discourage federal officers from faithfully performing their duties and dissuade talented people from entering public service,” Rosenbaum wrote, in a concurring opinion Abudu joined.

An attorney for Meadows, George Terwilliger III, did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the decision and to indicate whether Meadows plans to appeal to the full bench of the 11th Circuit or to the Supreme Court.”

From POLITICO

As I wrote on The New Democrat  back in August:

“Of course I’m not a lawyer (if you are just reading my blogging for the very first time) but here’s my argument for why Mark Meadows case shouldn’t be in the Federal court system and why it should say in Fulton County, Georgia.

The Meadows legal team is going to have to answer the question where is it in the interest of the United States and under Mark Meadows job description, for the White House Chief of Staff, to try to convince the Secretary of State of Georgia, to throw out enough legal votes, for then President Donald Trump to win that election in 2020. Which is what Meadows was trying to do on behalf of then candidate Trump in 2020, so the President could overturn the 2020 election and be declared the winner and be able to stay in office.

The Meadows legal team is not going to be able to do that because Meadows was clearly acting as a Trump campaign official, not as Federal Government official. And so was President in November or December of 2020, when he was trying to do the exact same thing, when he was talking to the Georgia Secretary of State as well.

George Conway already explained in this video (that’s linked on this post) about the Hatch Act. If Meadows is making a free speech argument by saying that he was advocating for the President of the United States in Georgia, when he was trying to convince the Secretary of State to overturn the election there and declare President Trump the winner, he would be in violation of the Hatch Act, which is a Federal felony.

Under Federal law, Federal officials, who are not elected officials, meaning they don’t serve in Congress or are not President or Vice President, are barred from weighing in on and contributing to political campaigns and elections. Legally, they’re supposed to be above politics. So which felony does Mr. Meadows want to plead guilty to: the Federal Hatch Act, or the Georgia RICO ACT?”

As I wrote on The New Democrat  back in September:

“The Meadows legal team is going to have to answer the question where is it in the interest of the United States and under Mark Meadows job description, for the White House Chief of Staff, to try to convince the Secretary of State of Georgia, to throw out enough legal votes, for then President Donald Trump to win that election in 2020. Which is what Meadows was trying to do on behalf of then candidate Trump in 2020, so the President could overturn the 2020 election and be declared the winner and be able to stay in office.

The Meadows legal team is not going to be able to do that because Meadows was clearly acting as a Trump campaign official, not as Federal Government official. And so was the President in November or December of 2020, when he was trying to do the exact same thing, when he was talking to the Georgia Secretary of State as well.

George Conway already explained in this video (that’s linked on this post) about the Hatch Act. If Meadows is making a free speech argument by saying that he was advocating for the President of the United States in Georgia, when he was trying to convince the Secretary of State to overturn the election there and declare President Trump the winner, he would be in violation of the Hatch Act, which is a Federal felony.

Under Federal law, Federal officials, who are not elected officials, meaning they don’t serve in Congress or are not President or Vice President, are barred from weighing in on and contributing to political campaigns and elections. Legally, they’re supposed to be above politics. So which felony does Mr. Meadows want to plead guilty to: the Federal Hatch Act, or the Georgia RICO ACT?”

I don’t want to sound like I’m kissing my own ass: (which would be impossible for me to day anyway, at least physically) but for anyone who predicted that Mark Meadows was actually going to win this, perhaps also believes in Santas Clause as well.

It’s clear that what Mark Meadows was doing post-2020 election day, after President Donald Trump had already lost to Joe Biden, (and that’s according to the 50 United States, including Georgia, Arizona, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Michigan) he was working on behalf of his de-facto client Donald J. Trump, to overturn that presidential election and just automatically declare President Trump the winner of that state. Even though it was clear that the President lost that election by 12,000 votes. Mr. Meadows wasn’t acting as White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, on behalf of the U.S. Federal Government, which is why he lost today.”

The term slam dunk, especially since the days of the Iraq War back in the early 2000s, gets thrown around a lot. Sort of like the football in the modern NFL, (to use a modern sports reference) but slam sunk is appropriate in the Mark Meadows case and I’ll explain why.

I guess it’s legal to be both a campaign official and a U.S. Government official at the same time. (But you might want to consult a lawyer on that) You just can’t do both jobs at the same time.

There’s no statue or law in the U.S. Government that allows for one of their government official to interfere in democratic elections, especially to try to benefit one particular candidate or another. Which is what then White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows was trying to do back in late 2020 in Georgia, to get that presidential election thrown out and just automatically declare Donald Trump the winner of the Georgia election.

Mark Meadows wasn’t acting as White House Chief of Staff when he was trying to get Georgia state officials to reverse the election there and just automatically declare President Trump the winner there. He was acting on behalf of his de-facto client Donald Trump, as a campaign employee for the Donald Trump presidential campaign. Which is why he lost back in October and lost yesterday and will keep losing, as long as keeps fighting the charges against him.

Posted in CNN, The New Democrat | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Vanity Fair: Cristian Farias: ‘Jack Smith May Have a Secret Weapon Against Donald Trump At The Supreme Court’

Jack Smith May Have a Secret Weapon Against Donald Trump at the Supreme Court _ Vanity FairSource:Vanity Fair– Donald J. Trump at a very familiar place for him, a courthouse.

Source:The New Democrat

“The former president has already lost many times before the justices. Whether he’s absolutely immune from prosecution is his latest Hail Mary. But there’s a twist.

When Watergate special prosecutor Leon Jaworski went to the Supreme Court on May 24, 1974, he took the unusual step of leapfrogging the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit. His office had already convinced a lower court judge to order the White House to turn over “certain tapes, memoranda, papers, transcripts, or other writings” implicating President Richard Nixon in a broader criminal conspiracy. Yet, Jaworski, in a rare maneuver, petitioned the Supreme Court to act because “the constitutional issues involved in this case are exceedingly important,” and a trial needed to proceed on schedule later that year. Jaworski’s move was extraordinary enough that The New York Times printed the full text of his request in the next day’s paper.

Borrowing from the Jaworski playbook, as well as the precedent set in the resulting landmark United States v. Nixon, special counsel Jack Smith has urged today’s Supreme Court to agree to resolve a vexing question of the Trump years and to do so as quickly as possible: Can a president stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue, shoot someone dead, and be immune from criminal prosecution because the shooting occurred while he was president?

No, Smith didn’t frame his request so colloquially. However, he might have been justified in invoking Nixon’s infamous line, “Well, when the president does it, that means it is not illegal.” Instead, he asked the justices to decide a question that he called “central to our democracy”: whether Trump is “absolutely immune from federal prosecution for crimes committed while in office.” Separately, the special counsel is seeking a resolution for a secondary question: whether Trump’s prior impeachment and acquittal over his failed attempt to remain in power after the events of January 6 insulates him from criminal prosecution.

Both claims were denied in short order earlier this month by Tanya Chutkan, the federal judge who is shepherding Smith’s charges alleging that Trump conspired to obstruct Congress from certifying the results of the 2020 election. Yet Smith, like Jaworski before him, took this favorable ruling and sought Supreme Court review in hopes of affirming Chutkan’s conclusions for a very pragmatic reason: The judge already scheduled the trial to start on March 4, 2024, and a prompt resolution is in everyone’s interest—the government, the voting public, and Trump himself, who no doubt would like his many trials to go away so that he and his campaign may be freed from the burden of litigation. Looking at the compressed timeline in the Nixon tapes case, Smith pressed for a similar timetable. “Precedent supports expeditious action,” his team wrote, pointing to the nearly 50-year-old precedent.

Notice I didn’t attribute those words to Smith himself. And that’s because they sound a lot like they were written by the special counsel’s secret weapon in this fast-track appeal: Michael Dreeben, a longtime former Justice Department official, served for decades in the Office for the Solicitor General, which is charged with representing the government before the Supreme Court. He’s the “counsel of record” in this case—the person who will most certainly argue this case if and when it’s officially added to the docket. His name caught me and many others by surprise—Dreeben is a person the justices pay close attention to, with more than 100 oral arguments under his belt for both Democratic and Republican administrations.

Dreeben is also a thorn in Trump’s side in a subtler way: As a member of Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation, he has been described as “the biggest brain in criminal law in the country”—whatever that means—and someone who can think several steps ahead. Indeed, Dreeben has most certainly already foreseen the practical effect of Trump continuing to insist presidents deserve king-like absolute immunity: On Wednesday, as a result of the former president’s own appeal of her rulings, Chutkan paused all upcoming deadlines in the congressional obstruction case, which means a March trial may not happen at all.

Yet she left the door open. “If jurisdiction is returned to this court, it will—consistent with its duty to ensure both a speedy trial and fairness for all parties—consider at that time whether to retain or continue the dates of any still-future deadlines and proceedings, including the trial scheduled for March 4, 2024,” Chutkan wrote.

As it happens, this flurry of activity in the courts, and that to come, isn’t the only development Smith and his office will have to play three-dimensional chess with. On the same day that Chutkan hit the pause button in the election subversion case, the Supreme Court agreed to hear a long-running dispute involving a trio of January 6 defendants who claim that the Justice Department overreached in prosecuting them for obstructing Congress. The reason these slow-moving cases matter, as Roger Parloff has written extensively over at Lawfare, is their overlap with two of Trump’s charges in DC—and because 300-plus people who were present at the Capitol siege have been charged under the same law.

Since the early days of the Justice Department’s probe of the insurrection, federal prosecutors have turned to a subsection of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002—enacted in the wake of the Enron scandal—that makes it a crime to impede an official government proceeding. Hundreds have been charged under it. But to the defendants, that law is merely a document-tampering statute that doesn’t apply to obstructing the joint session of Congress on January 6. Yet a coterie of trial judges across the political spectrum have rejected that argument; the only exception has been Carl Nichols, a Trump appointee who last year agreed that a charge of obstruction was only appropriate if it concerned “a record, a document, or other object” associated with the Capitol breach.

I won’t attempt to parse the language of 18 U.S.C. 1512(c)(2), the law being challenged, which criminalizes anyone who “corruptly … otherwise obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts to do so.” But suffice it to say, a divided DC Circuit concluded that the language was unambiguous and covered the conduct of these three January 6 defendants. “Under the most natural reading of the statute, § 1512(c)(2) applies to all forms of corrupt obstruction of an official proceeding,” above and beyond simply document-tampering, wrote US Circuit Judge Florence Pan, a Joe Biden appointee.

If that weren’t head-spinning enough, Jack Smith isn’t the one overseeing these cases and the hundreds of other January 6 prosecutions that are similar to it—the Justice Department and the US Attorney’s Office in Washington are. As a result, in principle, he’s not directly involved with how Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar defends these prosecutions before the justices. As she put it in a brief urging the court to decline hearing these appeals: Even accepting that the law under attack is an evidence-tampering statute doesn’t help the defendants. “Preventing the Members of Congress from validating the state certificates thus constitutes evidence-focused obstruction,” Prelogar wrote.

Court observers are abuzz, if not outright skeptical, that a majority on the Supreme Court has any appetite for undermining hundreds of federal prosecutions, let alone ones against Trump. If there’s any comfort in this tangled web, it is that the justices have had very little tolerance for anything related to Trump’s disruption of the peaceful transfer of power after the 2020 election. From rejecting his and Texas’s long-shot bid to overturn the election results in the states Biden won to siding with the January 6 committee to declining his intervention in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents dispute, their patience appears to be wearing thin. If that pattern holds, there’s a reasonable chance that a majority won’t let him get away with subverting what remains of our democracy.”

From Vanity Fair

Imagine Donald Trump is innocent of the all the Federal and state charges that are against him, (and why you are at that, also imagine Planet Mars attacking Planet Venus in real life and it’s being shown on Planet Earth via pay-per-view) it would be in Donald J. Trump’s best interest to move to a speedy trial and get this mess behind him. Innocent people, who can defend their innocence, tend to want to move quickly, especially if for whatever reasons the prosecution doesn’t believe that they’re innocent.

But what the Trump team is doing here is trying to not get their client acquitted, but prevent him from even having to stand trial under some bogus (to be kind) argument that President’s are literally above the law, or at least Donald Trump is. And therefor can’t be held accountable for anything that they do, at least while they’re President. And that they’re also above the law that they can’t be prosecuted for anything that they did while they were President, even after they left The White House.

I’m willing to bet (perhaps not much) that Donald Trump’s lawyers are smart enough to know that they’re going to lose at the Supreme Court, even if Justice Clarence Thomas and perhaps Justice Samuel Alito want to rule in their favor. Just because of how awful a precedent this would create and that it would give future President’s, even a left-wing President, who becomes President of the United States, similar to how Donald Trump became President and now that far-left President has the same presidential immunity, that Donald Trump did, thanks to a Republican leaning Supreme Court.

But what Donald Trump’s lawyers are doing here, might just to either set up an appeal after they lose in Washington and their client is found guilty, or be able to file another motion for dismissal arguing that the U.S. Department of Justice is not committing election interference by prosecuting their client, who just happens to be the Republican nominee for President, so close the the 2024 presidential election. Forgetting the obvious fact that they’ve gone out-of-their-way to delay this trial for as long as possible, when it could’ve been over by the late spring of 2024, instead of the late summer, had they not attempted to delay the trial for as long as possible and they simply just got their client acquitted based on the evidence that they brought to the trial and their cross-examinations of DOJ’s witnesses.

Donald Trump, just like every other American citizen, just like every former President, just like the current President, Joe Biden is obviously not above the law. Vanity Fair has the Jaworski V Nixon case from 1974, that’s on this post. But there’s another one as well which is Fitzgerald V Nixon from 1982:

“Nixon v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 731 (1982), was a US Supreme Court case that dealt with immunity from prosecution of government officials performing discretionary functions when their actions did not violate clearly-established law.

Arthur Ernest Fitzgerald filed a lawsuit against government officials that he had lost his position as a contractor for the US Air Force because of testimony made before Congress in 1968.[2] Among the people listed in the lawsuit was ex-President Richard Nixon, who argued that a president cannot be sued for actions taken while he is in office.[3]

The trial court and the appellate court rejected Nixon’s claim of immunity. The case was then appealed to the Supreme Court.

In a 5–4 decision, the Court ruled that the President is entitled to absolute immunity from legal liability for civil damages based on his official acts. The Court, however, emphasized that the President is not immune from criminal charges stemming from his official or unofficial acts while he is in office.[5]

The Court noted that a grant of absolute immunity to the President would not leave him with unfettered power. It stated that there were formal and informal checks on presidential action that did not apply with equal force to other executive officials.[6]

The Court observed that the President was subjected to constant scrutiny by the press and noted that vigilant oversight by Congress would also serve to deter presidential abuses of office and to make the threat of impeachment credible. It determined that other incentives to avoid presidential misconduct existed, including the desire to earn re-election, the need to maintain prestige as an element of presidential influence, and the traditional concern for his historical stature.[7]

The decision was clarified by Clinton v. Jones, in which the Court held that a President is subject to civil suits for actions committed before he assumes the presidency.”

From Wikipedia

Posted in The Donald, The New Democrat | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Michael Smerconish: ‘Is Nikki Haley Gaining Enough Momentum To Catch Up To Donald Trump For President’

Michael Smerconish: Is Nikki Haley Gaining Enough Momentum To Catch Up To Donald Trump For PresidentSource:Michael Smerconish talking about Nikki Halley, Donald Trump, and Rudy Giuliani.

Source:The New Democrat

“Subscribe for daily news live streams every day at 8:00am ET. If you’re enjoying our content, please share our channel on social media!”

Listen daily on SiriusXM POTUS Channel 124 9am-12 ET daily, Encore 9pm-12 ET.”

From Michael Smerconish

As far as Nikki Haley: I could just say: “Only time will tell. Back to you Bob in the studio” as far as whether she has any realistic shot at knocking off Donald Trump (you know, politically) before the Republican Party gets to Super Tuesday. But since I’m a blogger, I have to come up with something even more substantial then:”Only time will tell. Back to you Bob…”

Nikki Halley’s best shot here, is to do well in Iowa and that means finishing a strong second to Donald Trump and then perhaps Chris Christie gets the wakeup call that center-right (you know, normal Republicans) are waiting for and drops out of the Republican presidential race all together.

If Chris Christie drops out, then maybe Nikki can win New Hampshire. If she does that, we might see a real race in the Republican Party, at least for a few months. The problem that Nikki has, is she’s not really playing in Iowa. Here whole strategy right now is somehow winning New Hampshire, even in the current Republican field.

As far as Rudy Giuliani, I completely disagree with Michael Smerconish here, at least when it comes to free will. We all make our own decisions and are held accountable for them. Otherwise, we would just be human robots.

No one forced Rudy Giuliani to get into bed with a man like Donald Trump and become his personal propagandist. Rudy now lies for a living on behalf of DJT and perhaps other MAGA members and all those checks that he’s written with his mouth, at other people’s expense, the debts are now due and they’re going to ruin him professionally and financially, regardless of what the final penalty is going to be for him.

Posted in Michael Smerconish, The New Democrat | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ben Meiselas: ‘Donald Trump Lawyer Gets SMACKED DOWN in Oral Argument TO HER FACE by Judges’

Ben Meiselas: Donald Trump Lawyer Gets SMACKED DOWN in Oral Argument TO HER FACE by JudgesSource:Meidas Touch– left to right: Donald Trump’s New York County lawyer Alina Habba & Defendant Don.

Source:The New Democrat

“MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas reports on Donald Trump’s lawyer Alina Habba getting destroyed by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals panel of judges when she wasn’t aware of the basic cases on absolute presidential immunity involving Trump.”

From the Meidas Touch

So what what Ben Meiselas is talking about here (and I will get to the point faster) is that Donald Trump’s New York County lawyer, Alina Habba, is arguing to the appeals court, that her client Donald Trump has absolute immunity, period. And she referenced Nxon V Fitzgerald, a case that that US Air Force officer Arthur Ernest Fitzgerald made against President Richard Nixon in the early 1970s.

“Arthur Ernest Fitzgerald filed a lawsuit against government officials that he had lost his position as a contractor for the US Air Force because of testimony made before Congress in 1968.[2] Among the people listed in the lawsuit was ex-President Richard Nixon, who argued that a president cannot be sued for actions taken while he is in office.[3]

The trial court and the appellate court rejected Nixon’s claim of immunity. The case was then appealed to the Supreme Court.

In a 5–4 decision, the Court ruled that the President is entitled to absolute immunity from legal liability for civil damages based on his official acts. The Court, however, emphasized that the President is not immune from criminal charges stemming from his official or unofficial acts while he is in office.[5]

The Court noted that a grant of absolute immunity to the President would not leave him with unfettered power. It stated that there were formal and informal checks on presidential action that did not apply with equal force to other executive officials.[6]

The Court observed that the President was subjected to constant scrutiny by the press and noted that vigilant oversight by Congress would also serve to deter presidential abuses of office and to make the threat of impeachment credible. It determined that other incentives to avoid presidential misconduct existed, including the desire to earn re-election, the need to maintain prestige as an element of presidential influence, and the traditional concern for his historical stature.[7]

The decision was clarified by Clinton v. Jones, in which the Court held that a President is subject to civil suits for actions committed before he assumes the presidency.”

From Wikipedia

So to put this in American English: President’s (current & former) can’t be held personally libel for official acts that they commit while President of the United States. Running for President and campaigning for President, challenging or illegally challenging, like with election interference, aren’t official acts as President. So Alina Habba (winner of Amateur Night at the American Bar Association for he 2nd day in a row) was referencing a case to help her client, that she apparently didn’t even bother to read.

Like I said last month on The New Democrat  my opinion about Alina Habba as a lawyer still stands:

“When you are the President of the United States, regardless of the POTUS, you have access to be the best of legal profession in this country. Any lawyer just about would be honored to either work in your White House, or work as your personal attorney to address any personal legal issues that you might have when you are President. At least access to the best lawyers in your own party.

But when you leave The White House, especially in disgrace, when you’ve just lost reelection and only managed 46% of the popular vote and 232 out of 574 electoral votes, in a two-way race, you’ve been impeached twice in just 4 years, you have all the legal issues that are now in front of you because of your illegal conduct as President of the United States, you are very unpopular, at least outside of your own party, you have mounting financial debt in front of you because of all the money that you lost when you were President, you have access to whatever is left.

Alina Habba is not really a trial lawyer. She can barely afford to do whatever she does as a lawyer right now. She’s more of a public relations lawyer, if anything at all, who makes her living trying her client’s cases on TV and on social media. But she’s officially Donald Trump’s civil lawyer right now because she’s about the best of what’s left to try to defend him, because of his own financial situation and all the evidence that’s against him right now, in multiple cases.

Perhaps one of the reasons right now that Alina Habba owes millions of dollars, is because her own client is not paying her. But she’s trying to work for him anyway, perhaps banking on the fact that defending a former President of the United States, would lead to clients who can and would pay her very well for her legal advice and actions in the future. But that career strategy is obviously not working out for her right now.”

As well as what I wrote yesterday on The New Democrat:

“So to put all of this in English: (or perhaps broken American English) Donald Trump lost his civil immunity case in the E. Jeanne Carrol case, because his own damn lawyer Alina Habba, didn’t file her motion in time to win that appeal and give her client civil immunity here.

My post about DJT’s lawyer Alina Habba from back in November still stands here. She’s not up to the task, doesn’t have the experience, the knowledge, the professionalism, to defend a client at the level of Donald Trump, when you are talking about a former President of the United States and now serial criminal defendant.

DJT needs much better legal representation. But Alina Habba might be the best of what’s left to even consider representing a man who not only commits felonies on a regular basis, but who leaves incriminating evidence against him all over the place, either thinking he’ll never get caught, or convicted, or he’s simply above the law and has some constitutional right that no other American citizen has. “

Posted in Meidas Touch, The New Democrat | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments