aggiejayrod said:
aggiehawg said:
You are not the only one confused here. When experienced attorneys like McCarthy, Turley, Dershowitz, John Yoo, even the CNN legal analyst, Honig, are confused by the state's theories (since there are multiple ones) of the case.
It's a mess.
But 2011 said this is well tested case law and happens all the time.
I really still don't understand how only intent to cover up uncharged crimes can be the predicate for misdemeanors that are past the statute of limitations.
1 Doesn't make sense. Not even a little bit. The crime there is cohen and pecker violating campaign finance laws. The payments from Trump to Cohen have zero to with Pecker violating campaign finance laws so that part is out. Payment from Trump to Cohen means that cohen didn't actually over contribute because he was repaid. I'm thinking of that kind of like a candidate receiving an illegal donation and returning it.
2 is the same damn thing. That he violated state election law by conspiring to violate FECA and intentionally mischaracterize repayments to avoid taxes. Ok….say trump called it payment for retainer but it's really repaying money cohen fronted for the nda payment. How does that change the tax status of the payment? Did cohen tell Trump that he wanted it sent as payment for a retainer so he can avoid taxes? Because money coming in from a client to pay an expense wouldn't be taxed. So this doesn't even make sense.
3 makes even less sense. It was grossed up to include taxes? That wouldn't need to be taxed because it's client money coming in to cohen's law firm to pay expenses it paid. Wasn't the $130k what cohen paid stormy's attorney so the $130k wouldn't actually be "grossed up." There's other money on those repayments for other things and they haven't really introduced evidence otherwise.
So (1) feels moot, (2) they haven't introduced evidence that Trump classified the repayment as money for a retainer agreement to help cohen avoid paying taxes, and (3) still no evidence that Trump added taxes to gross up the payment. The predicate crime fails here and you don't get to whether the 34 counts even matter.
Yeah, but the thing that 2011 keeps conveniently omitting (likely giggling as he does so) is the fact that none of these documents were official filings, public records, or responses to official inquiry.
They were internal financial records never meant for publishing.
So the question then becomes, "From whom was Trump intending to cover up these notations?". Himself? Absent a TARGETED subpoena for internal records, Bragg would never have had cause to "audit" the books.
In my mind, this is akin to prosecuting on a first draft of a manuscript. Never mind what the final product was, we got your first draft, and your notes prior to corrections were criminal.
I believe 2011 knows this, but the desire to "get Trump" supercedes good application of the law. So when Trump actually wins the election, and his DOJ goes after this whole bunch for ACTUAL election interference, he'll have my 100% support.
Wanna play lawfare? Then let's play lawfare.