It looks like New York's District Attorney will give Donald Trump a Get Out Of Jail Free Card. But, in Atlanta, Trump faces another kind of district attorney. Norm Eisen and Donald Ayer write:
Ms. Willis, a Democrat, has a demonstrated record of courage and of conviction. She has taken on — and convicted — a politically powerful group, Atlanta’s teachers, as the lead prosecutor in the city’s teacher cheating scandal.
And she is playing with a strong hand in this investigation. The evidentiary record of Mr. Trump’s postelection efforts in Georgia is compelling. It is highlighted by a recording of Mr. Trump’s Jan. 2, 2021, call with Mr. Raffensperger, in which Mr. Trump exhorted Mr. Raffensperger to “find” those votes.
The tape also contains threats against the secretary and his staff that had an element of coercion, like Mr. Trump’s warning that failing to identify (nonexistent) fraud would be “a big risk” to Mr. Raffensperger and to his lawyer. The recording is backed by voluminous evidence that Mr. Trump likely knew full well he had lost, including acknowledgment from administration officials like his attorney general, William P. Barr, and an internal Trump campaign memo admitting that many fraud claims were unfounded. As a federal judge noted in finding that Mr. Trump’s efforts to overturn the election were likely criminal, the former president “likely knew the justification was baseless and therefore that the entire plan was unlawful.”
Ms.Willis has impaneled a grand jury and, in Georgia, grand juries are a little different than the grand jury in New York:
Under Georgia practice, special purpose grand juries are typically used for focused investigation of a matter and have the power to subpoena witnesses. Special grand juries develop expertise in a single case over a sustained period (here up to 12 months), as opposed to regular grand juries, which hear many matters over a shorter period. Unlike regular grand juries, the special grand jury cannot issue an indictment, but any charging recommendations are presented by a district attorney to a regular grand jury, which can then indict based on the special grand jury’s work.
The special grand jury will begin issuing subpoenas for some of the 30 or so witnesses who have refused requests for voluntary interviews. Those initial witnesses will then be served and will start appearing in June. Mr. Trump and those closest to him have a history of rushing to court to fight subpoenas, but they are unlikely to be given the opportunity in this first wave. Careful prosecutors usually start with less controversial witnesses, and Ms. Willis is a careful prosecutor. If Mr. Trump or those closest to him are served, that is when subpoenas are most likely to be challenged in court — but that is probably months away.
And then there is the investigation in the House of Representatives:
The case also in no way diminishes the importance of the House of Representatives’ Jan. 6 committee. In fact, the committee will most likely aid the Georgia prosecution while going about the business of its own investigation. (Ms. Willis and the committee have reportedly already been in contact.) For example, litigation with Mr. Meadows disclosed key details of the alleged plot to overturn the Georgia election. An email the committee filed from one of the lawyers helping Mr. Trump, Cleta Mitchell, included a detailed 11-point memo about overturning the election. Operating outside Washington, Ms. Willis might have taken years to obtain that email and other evidence like it.
Trump may meet his fate in Georgia.
Image: The New York Times
8 comments:
Yeah, and I may become prime minister. As long as Trump remains de facto head of the GOP, he will have virtually unlimited resources to fight this. And, frankly, I see no reason to believe that the US "justice system" is willing to hold a rich white man to account, let alone a former president.
Cap
Trump continues to prosper, Cap, because there are so many cowards who refuse to take him on.
I don't think we should get too arrogant here in Canada, Owen. After all, we let Brian off the hook with his "don't remember" defense on a couple of issues. I wasn't a huge fan of John Diefenbaker, but I don't think he ever pulled a number of "duck" and "dives' that some recent folks have pulled.
Lying is very common these days, Lulymay. But Trump is a pathological liar.
Blogger Owen Gray said...
Trump continues to prosper,
That says it all about Trump and his followers who's allegiance is to the greenback not the constitution.
I doubt Trump will fall on financial grounds as so many others of panama papers connections would become susceptible to the same fate.
Trump will, likely, fall to the daily whims of Fox news and Facebook when his ratings are surpassed by his many imitators.
TB
The boundlessness and blatancy of Trump's dishonesty have lowered standards in public expectations and acceptability. It's gone beyond standard political dissembling. Lying outright to the public has become so common in the Age of Trump that politicians don't expect to be punished for it, and they seldom are.
As long as there is a massively ignorant public, TB, Trump will rake in the dough.
I agree, John. Trump has made lying as natural as breathing.
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