I'm guessing the defense will scour Cohen's recent social media (at least during the trial) to see if he's making statements that imply he's following along, even though he's not supposed to.
I guess we will see Monday if the judge was serious about putting Trump in jail if he ignored the gag order again.captkirk said:
They likely have been all along. Plus all of his interviews on cable news of which there have been many.Quote:
I'm guessing the defense will scour Cohen's recent social media (at least during the trial) to see if he's making statements that imply he's following along, even though he's not supposed to.
Quote:
As Donald Trump left court Friday, he lamented his gag order while others say "whatever they want."
"Everybody can say whatever they want," he said. "But I'm not allowed to say anything about anybody."
"It's a disgrace," he added.
He went on to show clips of stories criticizing the case, including from Jonathan Turley and Sean Hannity. Trump also repeatedly attacked President Joe Biden and took credit for the stock market going up, claiming it's a response to his leading in the polls.
During the trial on Friday, CNN's reporters saw Trump going through a large pile of clips.
dmart90 said:I guess we will see Monday if the judge was serious about putting Trump in jail if he ignored the gag order again.captkirk said:
Is that what they are calling pornstars these days?aggiehawg said:As a layperson, she can do that outside of court.Quote:
That does look like Stormy Daniels trying to infer something about a defendant's 5th amendment rights.
Will the defense be allowed to state that a federal judge called him a serial perjurer?aggiehawg said:They likely have been all along. Plus all of his interviews on cable news of which there have been many.Quote:
I'm guessing the defense will scour Cohen's recent social media (at least during the trial) to see if he's making statements that imply he's following along, even though he's not supposed to.
Much like Stormy, his story has changed over time which recently led to a federal court judge saying he's a serial perjurer in rejecting Cohen's fifth request to have his probation terminated. Cohen's reason has been that he has cooperated with authorities to hurt Trump.
Howard, the media content guy from National Enquirer, lives in Australia and thus unavailable. Weisselberg is in Riker's Island serving a sentence for perjury.chiphijason said:
I am only following casually but I'm amazed the Cohen thing took this long to surface and I also can't believe that Trump's counsel has not hit the ceiling with nonparty texts being introduced with any kind of authentication by either the sender or the recipient. Maybe their challenge questions on cross are not making the summaries.
They can ask him about it, assuming the judge even allows that.Quote:
Will the defense be allowed to state that a federal judge called him a serial perjurer?
He's still on probation, they can ask about that. Potential Giglio material there with Biden's DOJ being so closely involved with Bragg's prosecution.BMX Bandit said:
No, but the conviction will come in
Wait, does that mean the defense won't be able to bring up that he's a convicted perjurer? That seems to be very relevant to a jury trying to determine his credibility?aggiehawg said:He's still on probation, they can ask about that. Potential Giglio material there with Biden's DOJ being so closely involved with Bragg's prosecution.BMX Bandit said:
No, but the conviction will come in
But Merchan rejected the defense request to call Mark Pomerantz. Colangelo is protected since he's state counsel of record.
Sorry, I was unclear there. His guilty plea and conviction will come in. The question was what a federal judge said about him still being a perjurer will come in. That statement was made in the course of a hearing requested by Cohen regarding his probation. Getting that statement in would be hard but Cohen can be asked about his status on probation from the original conviction.SwigAg11 said:Wait, does that mean the defense won't be able to bring up that he's a convicted perjurer? That seems to be very relevant to a jury trying to determine his credibility?aggiehawg said:He's still on probation, they can ask about that. Potential Giglio material there with Biden's DOJ being so closely involved with Bragg's prosecution.BMX Bandit said:
No, but the conviction will come in
But Merchan rejected the defense request to call Mark Pomerantz. Colangelo is protected since he's state counsel of record.
Now I understand. Thank you!aggiehawg said:Sorry, I was unclear there. His guilty plea and conviction will come in. The question was what a federal judge said about him still being a perjurer will come in. That statement was made in the course of a hearing requested by Cohen regarding his probation. Getting that statement in would be hard but Cohen can be asked about his status on probation from the original conviction.SwigAg11 said:Wait, does that mean the defense won't be able to bring up that he's a convicted perjurer? That seems to be very relevant to a jury trying to determine his credibility?aggiehawg said:He's still on probation, they can ask about that. Potential Giglio material there with Biden's DOJ being so closely involved with Bragg's prosecution.BMX Bandit said:
No, but the conviction will come in
But Merchan rejected the defense request to call Mark Pomerantz. Colangelo is protected since he's state counsel of record.
At least in my view that would be fair game under Giglio wherein a witness can be asked if they have been promised anything in return for their testimony.
No problem. The prosecution's case in chief has been a pretty messy one to try to follow along, not to mention how sketchy many of the witnesses are. Stormy's lawyer Davidson, Stormy herself and on Monday, Cohen.Quote:
Now I understand. Thank you!
No. All the prosecution can do is present questions of facts for the jury to decide. And then the jury takes their jury instructions and apply the facts as they find them to the instructions on the law.AustinAg2K said:
Can the prosecution explain why all of this is a crime during their closing? Or do they have to bring up a witness to explain why it is a crime? Trying to figure out who the other witness could be next week (assuming Cohen is one of the two), and I am wondering if they will bring someone in to connect all of the dots and explain why all of this is a crime. Thus far, they have brought forth all sorts of information to show Stormy was paid money to stay quiet, but the two big parts they haven't done yet is to show that Trump directed the payment or explain how that's a crime. I assume Cohen will say that Trump told him to do it, but they still need to explain why that's illegal.
With how messy the prosecution's case in chief has been, do you think the defense will attempt to have at least one of the underlying election laws be dismissed as possible predicate crimes? Of course they will attempt a directed verdict and probably call for mistrial once again.aggiehawg said:No. All the prosecution can do is present questions of facts for the jury to decide. And then the jury takes their jury instructions and apply the facts as they find them to the instructions on the law.AustinAg2K said:
Can the prosecution explain why all of this is a crime during their closing? Or do they have to bring up a witness to explain why it is a crime? Trying to figure out who the other witness could be next week (assuming Cohen is one of the two), and I am wondering if they will bring someone in to connect all of the dots and explain why all of this is a crime. Thus far, they have brought forth all sorts of information to show Stormy was paid money to stay quiet, but the two big parts they haven't done yet is to show that Trump directed the payment or explain how that's a crime. I assume Cohen will say that Trump told him to do it, but they still need to explain why that's illegal.
The jury instructions here will be quite a battle between counsel and the judge with the still unknown predicate crime hanging out there to maybe be defined at some point? IDK.
That part is still the most mind numbing baffling part of all of this. Complete circus.aggiehawg said:No. All the prosecution can do is present questions of facts for the jury to decide. And then the jury takes their jury instructions and apply the facts as they find them to the instructions on the law.AustinAg2K said:
Can the prosecution explain why all of this is a crime during their closing? Or do they have to bring up a witness to explain why it is a crime? Trying to figure out who the other witness could be next week (assuming Cohen is one of the two), and I am wondering if they will bring someone in to connect all of the dots and explain why all of this is a crime. Thus far, they have brought forth all sorts of information to show Stormy was paid money to stay quiet, but the two big parts they haven't done yet is to show that Trump directed the payment or explain how that's a crime. I assume Cohen will say that Trump told him to do it, but they still need to explain why that's illegal.
The jury instructions here will be quite a battle between counsel and the judge with the still unknown predicate crime hanging out there to maybe be defined at some point? IDK.
The details around the bank activity have been widely reported, but many of the underlying financial documents haven’t surfaced. And since cameras aren’t allowed in the courtroom, the public largely hasn’t seen the evidence at the center of the trial
— Jason Leopold (@JasonLeopold) May 10, 2024
2/
A few things at play here procedurally and substantively.Quote:
With how messy the prosecution's case in chief has been, do you think the defense will attempt to have at least one of the underlying election laws be dismissed as possible predicate crimes? Of course they will attempt a directed verdict and probably call for mistrial once again.
Yep, and to use 18 year old accusations to smear him daily. This is a win-win for the prosecution. No matter what happens, they have dragged him through the mud. If they put him in jail, they'll be happier, but they can't lose with all of this.Max Stonetrail said:
I have followed this thread as best as my non legal mind can. I think I can summarize.
So, if the payments for hush money (not illegal) were misclassified, then per what the IRS generally does is require you to reclassify, pay the tax, pay a penalty and interest. Go you your merry way.
This trial is nothing more than a sham to make Trump look bad and keep him off the campaign trail. And get the liberal MSM some ratings eyeballs for advertising.
Only it is Biden and Garland doing this, in the form of Colangelo. And before him, Mark Pomerantz.Quote:
It may all be a huge tactical miscalculation, but they are doing to Trump what Biden would not be able to do to him.
Oh, I just mean one-on-one, in a debate setting or something like that.aggiehawg said:Only it is Biden and Garlnd doing this, in the form of Colangelo. And before him, Mark Pomerantz.Quote:
It may all be a huge tactical miscalculation, but they are doing to Trump what Biden would not be able to do to him.
You can call BS, but this would not be the first time someone paid someone off just to not get an accusation that is not true, but somewhat believable, out there. It's like settling to avoid the expense of a lawsuit. The existence of the docs doesn't necessarily prove sex one way or the other. DC is one big swap meet, so if infidelity is grounds for not being elected, that place would be almost empty.Pumpkinhead said:
So if docs show payoff then I am 100% sold they had sex and Trump paid her off through Cohen. Any right wing types trying to argue otherwise on those two points if the docs exist, I call B.S.
My opinion from the middle, who has mostly tired of both the left and right wing's antics.