A campaign contribution from whom?TXAggie2011 said:Its almost exactly what happened if they determine the payment was actually, in fact a campaign contribution.Tramp96 said:Really bad analogy because this isn't remotely close to what happened.TXAggie2011 said:To add to this, let's take Trump or the specific facts of this case out of the equation for a minute.TXAggie2011 said:In that universe, yes. I'm sure folks have her words like aid, abet, accessory, perjury, obstruction, tampering, etc.Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:Is that like the get away driver even though he was never inside pulling the trigger or robbing the store?TXAggie2011 said:
And I think the conspiracy explanation above is pretty good. Lots of people get dinged for conspiracy to commit a crime even though they're not charged with that crime for some reason.
We have a whole universe of crimes that relate to the "cover up."
I own a business, and I donate $1 million bucks to a campaign, even though I know that's well above legal campaign limits. I do this, knowing I am breaking federal election law. My accountant hears about this, so he goes in makes up $1 million in business losses to explain where that $1 million went and hide that I broke campaign finance laws.
He's falsified business records to conceal my violation of law. If that case came down the pipe, this board wouldn't bat an eye if my accountant got dinged for a felony, I bet.
I think most would agree its a perfectly understandable and valid law if they take the emotion and politics out of it for a minute.
Whether the state can prove Trump himself intended to conceal something, that's another issue I've said I have questions about. But again, meeting the burden of proof is a whole different animal than the underlying legal elements of the crime.
Paying her to keep quiet isn't violating any campaign laws or any other laws for that matter. As Alan Derschowitz said...hush payments aren't against the law.
It got labeled legal fees. That's what they were. Now if it was labeled "campaign fee", then I think you would have a legitimate case, especially if it was paid using campaign dollars. But it wasn't.
But I don't any other way than how I said it above that I'm not talking about whether the facts in this case amount to a violation or not but rather the prudence of the law itself.
Trump paid the bill from Trump's bank account. There were no campaign funds involved.
And even if there were, which there weren't, the state has no jurisdiction on that.