• Defendant Trump Was Convicted of Rape, Bill Clinton Was Not Even Charge

    From Trump Is A Common Rapist - A Crimin@21:1/5 to All on Fri Sep 22 02:30:55 2023
    XPost: tx.politics, sac.politics, alt.politics.usa.republican
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.guns

    Judge clarifies: Yes, Trump was found to have raped E. Jean Carroll
    Analysis by Aaron Blake
    Staff writer
    July 19, 2023 at 1:15 p.m. EDT


    After Donald Trump was found liable for sexually abusing and defaming E.
    Jean Carroll, his legal team and his defenders lodged a frequent talking
    point.

    Despite Carroll’s claims that Trump had raped her, they noted, the jury
    stopped short of saying he committed that particular offense. Instead,
    jurors opted for a second option: sexual abuse.

    “This was a rape claim, this was a rape case all along, and the jury
    rejected that — made other findings,” his lawyer, Joe Tacopina, said
    outside the courthouse.

    A judge has now clarified that this is basically a legal distinction
    without a real-world difference. He says that what the jury found Trump
    did was in fact rape, as commonly understood.

    The filing from Judge Lewis A. Kaplan came as Trump’s attorneys have
    sought a new trial and have argued that the jury’s $5 million verdict
    against Trump in the civil suit was excessive. The reason, they argue, is
    that sexual abuse could be as limited as the “groping” of a victim’s
    breasts.

    Kaplan roundly rejected Trump’s motion Tuesday, calling that argument
    “entirely unpersuasive.”

    “The finding that Ms. Carroll failed to prove that she was ‘raped’ within
    the meaning of the New York Penal Law does not mean that she failed to
    prove that Mr. Trump ‘raped’ her as many people commonly understand the
    word ‘rape,’ ” Kaplan wrote.

    He added: “Indeed, as the evidence at trial recounted below makes clear,
    the jury found that Mr. Trump in fact did exactly that.”

    Kaplan said New York’s legal definition of “rape” is “far narrower” than
    the word is understood in “common modern parlance.”

    The former requires forcible, unconsented-to penetration with one’s penis.
    But he said that the conduct the jury effectively found Trump liable for — forced digital penetration — meets a more common definition of rape. He
    cited definitions offered by the American Psychological Association and
    the Justice Department, which in 2012 expanded its definition of rape to include penetration “with any body part or object.”

    Kaplan also flatly rejected the Trump team’s suggestion that the conduct
    Trump was found liable for might have been as limited as groping of the breasts.

    The reason? Trump was not accused of that, so the only alleged offense
    that would have qualified as “sexual abuse” was forced digital
    penetration. Beyond that, Trump was accused of putting his mouth on
    Carroll’s mouth and pulling down her tights, which Kaplan noted were not treated as alleged sexual abuse at trial.

    “The jury’s finding of sexual abuse therefore necessarily implies that it
    found that Mr. Trump forcibly penetrated her vagina,” Kaplan wrote,
    calling it the “only remaining conclusion.”

    Kaplan also noted that the verdict form did not ask the jury to decide
    exactly what conduct Trump had committed, and that neither prosecutors nor Trump’s lawyers had requested it to do so.

    “Mr. Trump’s attempt to minimize the sexual abuse finding as perhaps
    resting on nothing more than groping of Ms. Carroll’s breasts through her clothing is frivolous,” Kaplan wrote.

    He added that the jury clearly found that Trump had “ ‘raped’ her in the
    sense of that term broader than the New York Penal Law definition.”

    The motion was a part of Trump’s efforts to appeal the verdict against
    him. That’s an effort that will apparently continue as he faces a separate defamation lawsuit from Carroll, dealing with claims Trump made about her allegations while he was still president.

    But for now, Trump’s effort to push back has led to a rather remarkable clarification that severely undercuts his main talking point. By Aaron
    Blake Aaron Blake is senior political reporter, writing for The Fix. A Minnesota native, he has also written about politics for the Minneapolis
    Star Tribune and The Hill newspaper.

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  • From Blowjob Czar Kamala Harris@21:1/5 to All on Fri Sep 22 23:03:26 2023
    XPost: nj.politics, alt.politics.democrats, alt.society.liberalism
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.crime, sac.politics

    In article <ueiu8u$3pbnq$50@dont-email.me>

    Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., and his wife have been charged with
    bribery over their alleged acceptance of “hundreds of thousands of
    dollars” in return for the use of the senator's influence to enrich
    three New Jersey businessmen and benefit the Egyptian government,
    according to an indictment filed in Manhattan federal court that was
    made public Friday.

    The charges include conspiracy to commit bribery, conspiracy to
    commit honest services fraud and conspiracy to commit extortion
    under color of official right. The bribes the couple received
    included “cash, gold bars, payments toward a home mortgage,
    compensation for a low-or-no-show job, a luxury vehicle and other
    items of value,” the indictment alleges.

    Federal agents said they discovered many of the items when they
    executed search warrants in the couple’s home in Englewood Cliffs,
    New Jersey, in June 2022. They found more than $480,000 in cash,
    “much of it stuffed into envelopes and hidden in clothing, closets,
    and a safe,” including jackets bearing the senator’s name that were
    hanging in his closet, as well as more than $70,000 in Nadine
    Menendez’s safe deposit box, the indictment alleges.

    Agents also allegedly discovered a Mercedes-Benz convertible worth
    more than $60,000 that New Jersey businessmen Wael Hana and Jose
    Uribe gave to Menendez's wife in exchange for the senator’s
    interference in a state prosecution of Uribe’s associate and
    investigation into an employee whom Uribe referred to as a relative.
    Federal agents also found gold bars worth hundreds of thousands of
    dollars in the senator's home that were provided by Hana and another businessman, Fred Daibes. All three businessmen were also charged in
    the indictment.

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer confirmed in a statement on
    Friday afternoon that Menendez "has rightly decided to step down
    temporarily" as chair of the Foreign Relations Committee until the
    matter is resolved. A source close to Menendez had told NBC News
    earlier in the day that he would step down from his position on the
    panel while the case proceeds.

    He dismissed the allegations against him in a statement, saying
    prosecutors have “misrepresented the normal work of a Congressional office.”

    “I remain focused on continuing this important work and will not be distracted by baseless allegations,” he said.

    The senator is already facing resignation calls, from fellow
    Democrats. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy and some congressional
    Democrats, including some from Menendez's home state, said Friday
    that he should resign.

    Menendez rebuffed those calls Friday night, saying in a statement
    that some people were “rushing to judge a Latino and push him out of
    his seat."

    "I am not going anywhere,” he said.

    Nadine Menendez’s lawyer, David Schertler, said in a statement that
    she “denies any wrongdoing and will defend vigorously against these allegations in court.”

    The senator and his co-defendants are expected to appear in the U.S.
    District Court for the Southern District of New York, in lower
    Manhattan, at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, and will be arraigned later that
    day.

    The U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, Damian
    Williams, announced the charges at a news conference Friday.
    Williams noted that Menendez's Senate website says he can't compel
    an agency to act in someone's favor, influence matters involving a
    private business or get involved in criminal matters. "But we allege
    that behind the scenes, Sen. Menendez was doing those things for
    certain people — the people who were bribing him and his wife," he
    said.

    The investigation in the case is ongoing, Williams said, asking that
    anyone with knowledge of the matter call the FBI's tip line.

    Among the allegations in the indictment is that Menendez "provided
    sensitive U.S. Government information and took other steps that
    secretly aided the Government of Egypt." It also says the senator
    pressured an official at the U.S. Agriculture Department for the
    purpose of protecting a business monopoly granted by Egypt to Hana,
    who is an Egyptian American.

    According to the indictment, Hana and Nadine Menendez "were friends
    for many years" before she started dating the senator. In early
    2018, she informed Hana that she was dating Menendez and "in the
    following months and years," they worked to introduce Egyptian
    intelligence and military officials to the senator "for the purpose
    of establishing and solidifying a corrupt agreement" in which Hana,
    with assistance from the two other businessmen, "provided hundreds
    of thousands of dollars of bribes" to the senator and his wife "in
    exchange for Menendez's acts and breaches of duty to benefit the
    Government of Egypt, Hana, and others, including with respect to
    foreign military sales and foreign military financing," the filing
    alleges.

    Around March 2018, Menendez met with Egyptian military officials "at
    a meeting arranged and attended by his then-girlfriend Nadine
    Menendez and her friend Hana" at the senator's office in Washington,
    D.C., the indictment says. The meeting did not involve professional
    staff from his Senate office or the Senate Foreign Relations
    Committee.

    In May 2018, the indictment alleges, the senator sought "non-public
    information regarding the number and nationality of persons serving
    at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo, Egypt" from the State Department,
    which was considered "highly sensitive" because it could "pose
    significant operational security concerns if disclosed to a foreign
    government or if made public." Without informing any of his staff on
    Capitol Hill or the State Department, he texted that information to
    his then-girlfriend, Nadine. She forwarded it to Hana, who then
    forwarded it to an Egyptian government official, the filing alleges.

    That same month, the indictment alleges that Nadine conveyed a
    request from an Egyptian official to Menendez seeking assistance in
    editing and drafting a letter lobbying other U.S. senators to
    support U.S. aid to Egypt.

    Prosecutors say Menendez "secretly edited and ghost-wrote the
    request letter on behalf of Egypt seeking to convince other U.S.
    Senators to release a hold on $300 million in aid to Egypt." He sent
    this ghost-written letter to her from his personal account and then
    she forwarded it to Hana, who then relayed the draft to Egyptian
    officials. The indictment says that the couple deleted the email in
    which Nadine asked Menendez to write the letter.

    In March 2020, Nadine Menendez texted an Egyptian official that
    "anytime you need anything you have my number and we will make
    everything happen," the indictment says. A few days later, she
    arranged for Sen. Menendez to meet with that official, whom she
    referred to as "the general" to discuss negotiations over a dam on
    the Nile River in the region of Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt.
    Eventually, the senator reached out to the secretaries of Treasury
    and State in a letter saying he was writing "to express my concern
    about the stalled negotiations."

    The indictment also alleges Menendez “promised to and did use his
    influence and power and breach his official duty to recommend that
    the President nominate an individual for U.S. Attorney for the
    District of New Jersey who Menendez believed" he could influence
    regarding the federal prosecution of New Jersey developer Daibes.

    A spokesperson for Hana said they are reviewing the charges, but
    "based upon our initial review, they have absolutely no merit."
    Daibes' lawyer said in a statement, "Based upon our review, we are
    confident that Mr. Daibes will be completely exonerated of all
    charges."

    If convicted, Menendez and his wife will have to forfeit "to the
    U.S. any and all property, real and personal, that constitutes or is
    derived from proceeds traceable to the commission of said offenses,"
    the indictment says, although forfeitures would need to be approved
    from a judge. That would include their home in Englewood Cliffs, New
    Jersey; the Mercedes-Benz convertible, more than $486,000 seized
    from the home, almost $80,000 seized from a safe deposit box, and
    several gold bars taken from their home.

    The indictment comes after a yearlong corruption probe led by
    Williams' office. Menendez has previously denied any wrongdoing,
    saying in May, "I am sure it is going to end up in absolutely
    nothing."

    The indictment is the second the senator has faced since he was
    elected to the Senate in 2006. He was charged in 2015 with illegally
    accepting favors from a Florida eye doctor, including flights on a
    private jet, three nights at a five-star hotel in Paris and more
    than $700,000 in political contributions for him and the Democratic
    Party.

    The case ended in a mistrial after jurors were unable to reach a
    unanimous verdict. Federal prosecutors decided not to retry him.

    Menendez appears to be the first sitting senator in U.S. history to
    be indicted on two unrelated criminal allegations, according to data
    compiled by the Senate Historical Office. The senator, who was
    elected to a third term with 54% of the vote, is up for re-election
    next year.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/sen-bob-menendez- indicted-federal-charges-rcna111447

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  • From Blowjob Czar Kamala Harris@21:1/5 to All on Sun Nov 5 23:37:27 2023
    XPost: nj.politics, alt.politics.democrats, alt.society.liberalism
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.crime, sac.politics

    In article <ui9lbb$7qto$1@dont-email.me>

    Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., and his wife have been charged with
    bribery over their alleged acceptance of “hundreds of thousands of
    dollars” in return for the use of the senator's influence to enrich
    three New Jersey businessmen and benefit the Egyptian government,
    according to an indictment filed in Manhattan federal court that was
    made public Friday.

    The charges include conspiracy to commit bribery, conspiracy to
    commit honest services fraud and conspiracy to commit extortion
    under color of official right. The bribes the couple received
    included “cash, gold bars, payments toward a home mortgage,
    compensation for a low-or-no-show job, a luxury vehicle and other
    items of value,” the indictment alleges.

    Federal agents said they discovered many of the items when they
    executed search warrants in the couple’s home in Englewood Cliffs,
    New Jersey, in June 2022. They found more than $480,000 in cash,
    “much of it stuffed into envelopes and hidden in clothing, closets,
    and a safe,” including jackets bearing the senator’s name that were
    hanging in his closet, as well as more than $70,000 in Nadine
    Menendez’s safe deposit box, the indictment alleges.

    Agents also allegedly discovered a Mercedes-Benz convertible worth
    more than $60,000 that New Jersey businessmen Wael Hana and Jose
    Uribe gave to Menendez's wife in exchange for the senator’s
    interference in a state prosecution of Uribe’s associate and
    investigation into an employee whom Uribe referred to as a relative.
    Federal agents also found gold bars worth hundreds of thousands of
    dollars in the senator's home that were provided by Hana and another businessman, Fred Daibes. All three businessmen were also charged in
    the indictment.

    Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer confirmed in a statement on
    Friday afternoon that Menendez "has rightly decided to step down
    temporarily" as chair of the Foreign Relations Committee until the
    matter is resolved. A source close to Menendez had told NBC News
    earlier in the day that he would step down from his position on the
    panel while the case proceeds.

    He dismissed the allegations against him in a statement, saying
    prosecutors have “misrepresented the normal work of a Congressional office.”

    “I remain focused on continuing this important work and will not be distracted by baseless allegations,” he said.

    The senator is already facing resignation calls, from fellow
    Democrats. New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy and some congressional
    Democrats, including some from Menendez's home state, said Friday
    that he should resign.

    Menendez rebuffed those calls Friday night, saying in a statement
    that some people were “rushing to judge a Latino and push him out of
    his seat."

    "I am not going anywhere,” he said.

    Nadine Menendez’s lawyer, David Schertler, said in a statement that
    she “denies any wrongdoing and will defend vigorously against these allegations in court.”

    The senator and his co-defendants are expected to appear in the U.S.
    District Court for the Southern District of New York, in lower
    Manhattan, at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, and will be arraigned later that
    day.

    The U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, Damian
    Williams, announced the charges at a news conference Friday.
    Williams noted that Menendez's Senate website says he can't compel
    an agency to act in someone's favor, influence matters involving a
    private business or get involved in criminal matters. "But we allege
    that behind the scenes, Sen. Menendez was doing those things for
    certain people — the people who were bribing him and his wife," he
    said.

    The investigation in the case is ongoing, Williams said, asking that
    anyone with knowledge of the matter call the FBI's tip line.

    Among the allegations in the indictment is that Menendez "provided
    sensitive U.S. Government information and took other steps that
    secretly aided the Government of Egypt." It also says the senator
    pressured an official at the U.S. Agriculture Department for the
    purpose of protecting a business monopoly granted by Egypt to Hana,
    who is an Egyptian American.

    According to the indictment, Hana and Nadine Menendez "were friends
    for many years" before she started dating the senator. In early
    2018, she informed Hana that she was dating Menendez and "in the
    following months and years," they worked to introduce Egyptian
    intelligence and military officials to the senator "for the purpose
    of establishing and solidifying a corrupt agreement" in which Hana,
    with assistance from the two other businessmen, "provided hundreds
    of thousands of dollars of bribes" to the senator and his wife "in
    exchange for Menendez's acts and breaches of duty to benefit the
    Government of Egypt, Hana, and others, including with respect to
    foreign military sales and foreign military financing," the filing
    alleges.

    Around March 2018, Menendez met with Egyptian military officials "at
    a meeting arranged and attended by his then-girlfriend Nadine
    Menendez and her friend Hana" at the senator's office in Washington,
    D.C., the indictment says. The meeting did not involve professional
    staff from his Senate office or the Senate Foreign Relations
    Committee.

    In May 2018, the indictment alleges, the senator sought "non-public
    information regarding the number and nationality of persons serving
    at the U.S. Embassy in Cairo, Egypt" from the State Department,
    which was considered "highly sensitive" because it could "pose
    significant operational security concerns if disclosed to a foreign
    government or if made public." Without informing any of his staff on
    Capitol Hill or the State Department, he texted that information to
    his then-girlfriend, Nadine. She forwarded it to Hana, who then
    forwarded it to an Egyptian government official, the filing alleges.

    That same month, the indictment alleges that Nadine conveyed a
    request from an Egyptian official to Menendez seeking assistance in
    editing and drafting a letter lobbying other U.S. senators to
    support U.S. aid to Egypt.

    Prosecutors say Menendez "secretly edited and ghost-wrote the
    request letter on behalf of Egypt seeking to convince other U.S.
    Senators to release a hold on $300 million in aid to Egypt." He sent
    this ghost-written letter to her from his personal account and then
    she forwarded it to Hana, who then relayed the draft to Egyptian
    officials. The indictment says that the couple deleted the email in
    which Nadine asked Menendez to write the letter.

    In March 2020, Nadine Menendez texted an Egyptian official that
    "anytime you need anything you have my number and we will make
    everything happen," the indictment says. A few days later, she
    arranged for Sen. Menendez to meet with that official, whom she
    referred to as "the general" to discuss negotiations over a dam on
    the Nile River in the region of Ethiopia, Sudan and Egypt.
    Eventually, the senator reached out to the secretaries of Treasury
    and State in a letter saying he was writing "to express my concern
    about the stalled negotiations."

    The indictment also alleges Menendez “promised to and did use his
    influence and power and breach his official duty to recommend that
    the President nominate an individual for U.S. Attorney for the
    District of New Jersey who Menendez believed" he could influence
    regarding the federal prosecution of New Jersey developer Daibes.

    A spokesperson for Hana said they are reviewing the charges, but
    "based upon our initial review, they have absolutely no merit."
    Daibes' lawyer said in a statement, "Based upon our review, we are
    confident that Mr. Daibes will be completely exonerated of all
    charges."

    If convicted, Menendez and his wife will have to forfeit "to the
    U.S. any and all property, real and personal, that constitutes or is
    derived from proceeds traceable to the commission of said offenses,"
    the indictment says, although forfeitures would need to be approved
    from a judge. That would include their home in Englewood Cliffs, New
    Jersey; the Mercedes-Benz convertible, more than $486,000 seized
    from the home, almost $80,000 seized from a safe deposit box, and
    several gold bars taken from their home.

    The indictment comes after a yearlong corruption probe led by
    Williams' office. Menendez has previously denied any wrongdoing,
    saying in May, "I am sure it is going to end up in absolutely
    nothing."

    The indictment is the second the senator has faced since he was
    elected to the Senate in 2006. He was charged in 2015 with illegally
    accepting favors from a Florida eye doctor, including flights on a
    private jet, three nights at a five-star hotel in Paris and more
    than $700,000 in political contributions for him and the Democratic
    Party.

    The case ended in a mistrial after jurors were unable to reach a
    unanimous verdict. Federal prosecutors decided not to retry him.

    Menendez appears to be the first sitting senator in U.S. history to
    be indicted on two unrelated criminal allegations, according to data
    compiled by the Senate Historical Office. The senator, who was
    elected to a third term with 54% of the vote, is up for re-election
    next year.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/sen-bob-menendez- indicted-federal-charges-rcna111447

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