• The Orange Goon Is Worried

    From kmiller@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 17 18:39:48 2022
    When Donald Trump formally declares his 2024 candidacy, he won’t just be running for another term in the White House. He’ll be running away from
    legal troubles, possible criminal charges, and even the specter of
    prison time.

    In recent months, Trump has made clear to associates that the legal
    protections of occupying the Oval Office are front-of-mind for him, four
    people with knowledge of the situation tell Rolling Stone.

    Trump has “spoken about how when you are the president of the United
    States, it is tough for politically motivated prosecutors to ‘get to
    you,” says one of the sources, who has discussed the issue with Trump
    this summer. “He says when [not if] he is president again, a new
    Republican administration will put a stop to the [Justice Department] investigation that he views as the Biden administration working to hit
    him with criminal charges — or even put him and his people in prison.”

    Presidential immunity and picking his own attorney general aren’t
    Trump’s only reasons for running again. And as he works on another run,
    Trump is in a tug-of-war with leaders and operatives of his own party
    about when to announce, according to multiple people with knowledge of
    the matter.

    The former president is motivated to announce early — even before
    Election Day 2022 — in the hopes of clearing the field of primary
    rivals. But GOP leaders, including some of Trump’s closest advisors,
    don’t want him to declare his intentions until after the midterm
    elections. The GOP wants to keep voters focused on President Joe Biden,
    rather than transforming the contest into a referendum on Trump. In
    recent months, Trump has reluctantly agreed to hold off, only to return
    shortly thereafter with threats to make an early announcement, either
    out of self-interest, spite, or some combination of the two.

    But as Trump talks about running, the four sources say, he’s leaving confidants with the impression that, as his criminal exposure has
    increased, so has his focus on the legal protections of the executive
    branch.

    It’s not just liberal wish-casters or Trump critics who are
    acknowledging the former president’s legal jeopardy. Trump’s teams of lawyers and former senior administration officials speak about it
    commonly. “I do think criminal prosecutions are possible…for Trump and [former White House chief of staff Mark] Meadows certainly,” Ty Cobb, a former top lawyer in Trump’s White House, bluntly told Rolling Stone
    late last month.

    Trump himself seems to acknowledge potential problems. He “said
    something like, ‘[prosecutors] couldn’t get away with this while I was president,’” another one of the four sources recalls. “It was during a larger discussion about the investigations, other possible 2024
    [primary] candidates, and what people were saying about the Jan. 6
    hearings … He went on for a couple minutes about how ‘some very corrupt’ people want to ‘put me in jail.’”

    The powers of the presidency would offer a welcome pause to the various
    civil suits and criminal investigations now hanging over Trump. It’s
    unclear whether the Justice Department will charge Trump in connection
    with fomenting the January 6 insurrection, but winning the White House
    would be extremely helpful to him. Department policy forbids the
    prosecution of a sitting president, effectively insulating Trump from
    any federal charges for another four years.

    https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/trump-2024-criminal-probes-jan6-1384379/

    Lock him up! Lock him up! HawHawHaw!

    --
    Liz Cheney for President!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From George.Anthony@21:1/5 to kmiller on Mon Jul 18 14:05:23 2022
    On 7/17/2022 8:39 PM, kmiller wrote:

    When Donald Trump formally declares his 2024 candidacy, he won’t just be running for another term in the White House. He’ll be running away from legal troubles, possible criminal charges, and even the specter of
    prison time.

    In recent months, Trump has made clear to associates that the legal protections of occupying the Oval Office are front-of-mind for him, four people with knowledge of the situation tell Rolling Stone.

    Trump has “spoken about how when you are the president of the United States, it is tough for politically motivated prosecutors to ‘get to you,” says one of the sources, who has discussed the issue with Trump
    this summer. “He says when [not if] he is president again, a new
    Republican administration will put a stop to the [Justice Department] investigation that he views as the Biden administration working to hit
    him with criminal charges — or even put him and his people in prison.”

    Presidential immunity and picking his own attorney general aren’t
    Trump’s only reasons for running again. And as he works on another run, Trump is in a tug-of-war with leaders and operatives of his own party
    about when to announce, according to multiple people with knowledge of
    the matter.

    The former president is motivated to announce early — even before
    Election Day 2022 — in the hopes of clearing the field of primary
    rivals. But GOP leaders, including some of Trump’s closest advisors, don’t want him to declare his intentions until after the midterm
    elections. The GOP wants to keep voters focused on President Joe Biden, rather than transforming the contest into a referendum on Trump. In
    recent months, Trump has reluctantly agreed to hold off, only to return shortly thereafter with threats to make an early announcement, either
    out of self-interest, spite, or some combination of the two.

    But as Trump talks about running, the four sources say, he’s leaving confidants with the impression that, as his criminal exposure has
    increased, so has his focus on the legal protections of the executive
    branch.

    It’s not just liberal wish-casters or Trump critics who are
    acknowledging the former president’s legal jeopardy. Trump’s teams of lawyers and former senior administration officials speak about it
    commonly. “I do think criminal prosecutions are possible…for Trump and [former White House chief of staff Mark] Meadows certainly,” Ty Cobb, a former top lawyer in Trump’s White House, bluntly told Rolling Stone
    late last month.

    Trump himself seems to acknowledge potential problems. He “said
    something like, ‘[prosecutors] couldn’t get away with this while I was president,’” another one of the four sources recalls. “It was during a larger discussion about the investigations, other possible 2024
    [primary] candidates, and what people were saying about the Jan. 6
    hearings … He went on for a couple minutes about how ‘some very corrupt’
    people want to ‘put me in jail.’”

    The powers of the presidency would offer a welcome pause to the various
    civil suits and criminal investigations now hanging over Trump. It’s unclear whether the Justice Department will charge Trump in connection
    with fomenting the January 6 insurrection, but winning the White House
    would be extremely helpful to him. Department policy forbids the
    prosecution of a sitting president, effectively insulating Trump from
    any federal charges for another four years.

    https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/trump-2024-criminal-probes-jan6-1384379/


    Lock him up! Lock him up! HawHawHaw!

    --
    Liz Cheney for President!

    I might be worried too if I thought this show trial would have on the
    mid term elections. By the way, your "girl" friend"Cheney is down by 20
    points.

    --
    ----------
    "It used to be easier, but of course I voted for Biden, so I screwed
    myself,"

    - Mikaela Stekly, homeless mother since 2021

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)