Thank in advance for explanations on this confusing topic (made especially confusing by conflicting pundit conclusions).
Yeah, I just hope anyone who has donated to that nonsense gets their money back when its dismissed with prejudice, but I'm sure they won't and he'll try to raise more money appealing it to the Supreme Court.txags92 said:
He keeps trying to say the case has been "taken up" by the court, but there is no evidence that has happened. He has filed it with the court and it will almost certainly be tossed for lack of standing as soon as it is considered.
SwigAg11 said:
Something I've been wondering about, due to the disparity of conclusions reached between different news outlets, is what is the remedy if it is determined that inadmissible evidence (via presidential immunity) was introduced at trial? Some pundits were discussing about determining if the admitted evidence was probative in relation to reversing the verdict and removing the indictment. However, I had thought, and this probably because IANAL, that if evidence was introduced at trial that was inadmissible via immunity, then a mistrial should have been declared (or verdict tossed since the trial concluded).
Thank in advance for explanations on this confusing topic (made especially confusing by conflicting pundit conclusions).
SwigAg11 said:
Something I've been wondering about, due to the disparity of conclusions reached between different news outlets, is what is the remedy if it is determined that inadmissible evidence (via presidential immunity) was introduced at trial? Some pundits were discussing about determining if the admitted evidence was probative in relation to reversing the verdict and removing the indictment. However, I had thought, and this probably because IANAL, that if evidence was introduced at trial that was inadmissible via immunity, then a mistrial should have been declared (or verdict tossed since the trial concluded).
Thank in advance for explanations on this confusing topic (made especially confusing by conflicting pundit conclusions).
Since the immunity decision came in AFTER this trial, would they have been able to object on that basis?TXAggie2011 said:SwigAg11 said:
Something I've been wondering about, due to the disparity of conclusions reached between different news outlets, is what is the remedy if it is determined that inadmissible evidence (via presidential immunity) was introduced at trial? Some pundits were discussing about determining if the admitted evidence was probative in relation to reversing the verdict and removing the indictment. However, I had thought, and this probably because IANAL, that if evidence was introduced at trial that was inadmissible via immunity, then a mistrial should have been declared (or verdict tossed since the trial concluded).
Thank in advance for explanations on this confusing topic (made especially confusing by conflicting pundit conclusions).
Appeals courts use what's called the "harmless error" standard which means they only overturn a conviction if an error made during the trial reasonably may have prejudiced the defendant. They will look at any improperly admitted evidence and decide if the error was of sufficient magnitude.
There's a lot of nuance and detail to it, but that's the basic gist of it. The famous line is "defendants are entitled to a fair trial, not a perfect one."
The Hope Hicks testimony is where the action will be.
There will also be preliminary argument on whether that testimony was properly objected to by Trump's lawyers.
Trump's lawyers did bring it up but Merchan swatted it down as "untimely."Quote:
Since the immunity decision came in AFTER this trial, would they have been able to object on that basis?
The State's argument will be that they had filed a motion before trial asking for the evidence to be excluded due to immunity and they were actively litigating the issue in federal court in the D.C. case, so it's not like this came out of nowhere and it isn't unreasonable to expect their motion to have been timely and require that they object at trial.Ag with kids said:Since the immunity decision came in AFTER this trial, would they have been able to object on that basis?TXAggie2011 said:Appeals courts use what's called the "harmless error" standard which means they only overturn a conviction if an error made during the trial reasonably may have prejudiced the defendant. They will look at any improperly admitted evidence and decide if the error was of sufficient magnitude.SwigAg11 said:
Something I've been wondering about, due to the disparity of conclusions reached between different news outlets, is what is the remedy if it is determined that inadmissible evidence (via presidential immunity) was introduced at trial? Some pundits were discussing about determining if the admitted evidence was probative in relation to reversing the verdict and removing the indictment. However, I had thought, and this probably because IANAL, that if evidence was introduced at trial that was inadmissible via immunity, then a mistrial should have been declared (or verdict tossed since the trial concluded).
Thank in advance for explanations on this confusing topic (made especially confusing by conflicting pundit conclusions).
There's a lot of nuance and detail to it, but that's the basic gist of it. The famous line is "defendants are entitled to a fair trial, not a perfect one."
The Hope Hicks testimony is where the action will be.
There will also be preliminary argument on whether that testimony was properly objected to by Trump's lawyers.
It's just possible that hiring "the best people" is not actually one of Trump's strengthsTXAggie2011 said:
It escapes me why they would not renew their objections at trial. It also escapes me why they waited 2 and half weeks after their motions in limine were due to file their motion to exclude evidence based on immunity.
Did they not bring this objection up at trial? Do you have a link to the transcript (I have no idea how to find that)?TXAggie2011 said:The State's argument will be that they had filed a motion before trial asking for the evidence to be excluded due to immunity and they were actively litigating the issue in federal court in the D.C. case, so it's not like this came out of nowhere and it isn't unreasonable to expect that they would have objected at trial.Ag with kids said:Since the immunity decision came in AFTER this trial, would they have been able to object on that basis?TXAggie2011 said:Appeals courts use what's called the "harmless error" standard which means they only overturn a conviction if an error made during the trial reasonably may have prejudiced the defendant. They will look at any improperly admitted evidence and decide if the error was of sufficient magnitude.SwigAg11 said:
Something I've been wondering about, due to the disparity of conclusions reached between different news outlets, is what is the remedy if it is determined that inadmissible evidence (via presidential immunity) was introduced at trial? Some pundits were discussing about determining if the admitted evidence was probative in relation to reversing the verdict and removing the indictment. However, I had thought, and this probably because IANAL, that if evidence was introduced at trial that was inadmissible via immunity, then a mistrial should have been declared (or verdict tossed since the trial concluded).
Thank in advance for explanations on this confusing topic (made especially confusing by conflicting pundit conclusions).
There's a lot of nuance and detail to it, but that's the basic gist of it. The famous line is "defendants are entitled to a fair trial, not a perfect one."
The Hope Hicks testimony is where the action will be.
There will also be preliminary argument on whether that testimony was properly objected to by Trump's lawyers.
It escapes me why they would not renew their objections at trial. It also escapes me why they waited 2 and half weeks after their motions in limine were due to file their motion to exclude evidence based on immunity.
I don't know how a New York court will handle this. I'm just identifying the issue.
TXAggie2011 said:The State's argument will be that they had filed a motion before trial asking for the evidence to be excluded due to immunity and they were actively litigating the issue in federal court in the D.C. case, so it's not like this came out of nowhere and it isn't unreasonable to expect and require that they object at trial.Ag with kids said:Since the immunity decision came in AFTER this trial, would they have been able to object on that basis?TXAggie2011 said:Appeals courts use what's called the "harmless error" standard which means they only overturn a conviction if an error made during the trial reasonably may have prejudiced the defendant. They will look at any improperly admitted evidence and decide if the error was of sufficient magnitude.SwigAg11 said:
Something I've been wondering about, due to the disparity of conclusions reached between different news outlets, is what is the remedy if it is determined that inadmissible evidence (via presidential immunity) was introduced at trial? Some pundits were discussing about determining if the admitted evidence was probative in relation to reversing the verdict and removing the indictment. However, I had thought, and this probably because IANAL, that if evidence was introduced at trial that was inadmissible via immunity, then a mistrial should have been declared (or verdict tossed since the trial concluded).
Thank in advance for explanations on this confusing topic (made especially confusing by conflicting pundit conclusions).
There's a lot of nuance and detail to it, but that's the basic gist of it. The famous line is "defendants are entitled to a fair trial, not a perfect one."
The Hope Hicks testimony is where the action will be.
There will also be preliminary argument on whether that testimony was properly objected to by Trump's lawyers.
It escapes me why they would not renew their objections at trial. They failed to renew several other objections that hurt them. It also escapes me why they waited 2 and half weeks after their motions in limine were due to file their motion to exclude evidence based on immunity.
I don't know how a New York court will handle this. I'm just identifying the issue.
Looking back at the transcript now, it looks like they made a general objection to Hope Hicks testifying before she took the stand, so maybe they can show they covered it.Ag with kids said:Did they not bring this objection up at trial? Do you have a link to the transcript (I have no idea how to find that)?TXAggie2011 said:The State's argument will be that they had filed a motion before trial asking for the evidence to be excluded due to immunity and they were actively litigating the issue in federal court in the D.C. case, so it's not like this came out of nowhere and it isn't unreasonable to expect that they would have objected at trial.Ag with kids said:Since the immunity decision came in AFTER this trial, would they have been able to object on that basis?TXAggie2011 said:Appeals courts use what's called the "harmless error" standard which means they only overturn a conviction if an error made during the trial reasonably may have prejudiced the defendant. They will look at any improperly admitted evidence and decide if the error was of sufficient magnitude.SwigAg11 said:
Something I've been wondering about, due to the disparity of conclusions reached between different news outlets, is what is the remedy if it is determined that inadmissible evidence (via presidential immunity) was introduced at trial? Some pundits were discussing about determining if the admitted evidence was probative in relation to reversing the verdict and removing the indictment. However, I had thought, and this probably because IANAL, that if evidence was introduced at trial that was inadmissible via immunity, then a mistrial should have been declared (or verdict tossed since the trial concluded).
Thank in advance for explanations on this confusing topic (made especially confusing by conflicting pundit conclusions).
There's a lot of nuance and detail to it, but that's the basic gist of it. The famous line is "defendants are entitled to a fair trial, not a perfect one."
The Hope Hicks testimony is where the action will be.
There will also be preliminary argument on whether that testimony was properly objected to by Trump's lawyers.
It escapes me why they would not renew their objections at trial. It also escapes me why they waited 2 and half weeks after their motions in limine were due to file their motion to exclude evidence based on immunity.
I don't know how a New York court will handle this. I'm just identifying the issue.
Quote:
In their appeal Monday, Trump's attorneys repeated arguments they brought up frequently during the more than two-month-long 2023 bench trial. They claimed allegations made by New York Attorney General Letitia James were from outside the statute of limitations and revolved around deals that had "no victims and no losses."
"This appeal seeks reversal of the trial court's legally bereft decisions which ignored the undisputed facts," said Trump attorney Christopher Kise in a statement to CBS News.
Kise added that Engoron "willingly allowed a reckless, politically motivated Attorney General to meddle in lawful, private, and mutually profitable transactions."
Trump's attorneys also made a claim they've been arguing since before the trial, writing that James' office lacked standing under New York law to bring the 2022 suit against Trump and his company that led to fraud finding.
jt2hunt said:
https://www.scotusblog.com/2024/08/supreme-court-rejects-missouris-request-to-block-trumps-new-york-gag-order-sentencing/
Because they didn't have a case. If they had a valid case, the court would have thrown them out on standing.GenericAggie said:jt2hunt said:
https://www.scotusblog.com/2024/08/supreme-court-rejects-missouris-request-to-block-trumps-new-york-gag-order-sentencing/
How does Missouri have standing? Serious question from someone who doesn't understand these things
NEW: NY prosecutors' decision to defer to Merchan ramps up pressure on the judge and makes it even likelier that Trump won't face sentencing — or indeed resolution in any of his four criminal cases — before voters cast their ballots.
— Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) August 19, 2024
w/ @joshgerstein https://t.co/x4RhdFNmpP pic.twitter.com/K8IURKkYio
My take? Bragg (or more likely Colangelo) had an off the record conversation with members of the appellate court that should judgment be entered and Trump sentenced, a swift appeal would cause the case to be tossed and vacated. Too much reversible error throughout the trial.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
69-days to go and Trump sentencing still hanging out there like Chekhov's Gun.
After punting on election cases and egregious use of the justice system to persecute political opponents for almost 4-years ...Quote:
Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson in a new interview said she is "prepared as anyone can be" for the possibility that this year's presidential election could end up before the high court.
"I think there are legal issues that arise out of the political process," Jackson said during an interview with CBS's Norah O'Donnell.
aggiehawg said:My take? Bragg (or more likely Colangelo) had an off the record conversation with members of the appellate court that should judgment be entered and Trump sentenced, a swift appeal would cause the case to be tossed and vacated. Too much reversible error throughout the trial.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
69-days to go and Trump sentencing still hanging out there like Chekhov's Gun.
But the case is not ripe for a full appeal until the judgment is entered as a final order. Holding it in limbo prevents such a reversal.
How often has Bragg's team just accepted what Trump requested (which they did)?TXAggie2011 said:aggiehawg said:My take? Bragg (or more likely Colangelo) had an off the record conversation with members of the appellate court that should judgment be entered and Trump sentenced, a swift appeal would cause the case to be tossed and vacated. Too much reversible error throughout the trial.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
69-days to go and Trump sentencing still hanging out there like Chekhov's Gun.
But the case is not ripe for a full appeal until the judgment is entered as a final order. Holding it in limbo prevents such a reversal.
Trump's team asked for a delay in sentencing and for the case to be adjourned until after the election. Trump's team wants this stuck in limbo
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25045300-20240814-letter-to-justice-merchan-re-sentencing-adjournment?responsive=1&title=1
Yes there is. But he won't. Leave it in limbo until after the election. Trump wins? It goes away. Trump loses? Riker's Island.SwigAg11 said:
I'm assuming there's the slimmest possibility (practically 0% chance) that Merchan could just vacate the conviction and indictment?
NEW: Trump has filed a second notice of removal of the Manhattan DA's hush money case to federal court in what reads like a bid to prevent any sentencing hearing from going forward. 1/
— Lisa Rubin (@lawofruby) August 30, 2024
SCOOP:
— Laura Loomer (@LauraLoomer) August 30, 2024
🚨🚨🚨
A Federal law enforcement agent has just told me that the New York State National Guard @NationalGuardNY has started staging guardsmen in hotels around the NYC courthouse where President Trump is going to be sentenced on September 18th, as they are expecting that…
Bragg's response didn't accept what Trump requested. Bragg's response was Trump's arguments have little to no merit and we defer to the Court to decide how to set a schedule.Ag with kids said:How often has Bragg's team just accepted what Trump requested (which they did)?TXAggie2011 said:aggiehawg said:My take? Bragg (or more likely Colangelo) had an off the record conversation with members of the appellate court that should judgment be entered and Trump sentenced, a swift appeal would cause the case to be tossed and vacated. Too much reversible error throughout the trial.Stat Monitor Repairman said:
69-days to go and Trump sentencing still hanging out there like Chekhov's Gun.
But the case is not ripe for a full appeal until the judgment is entered as a final order. Holding it in limbo prevents such a reversal.
Trump's team asked for a delay in sentencing and for the case to be adjourned until after the election. Trump's team wants this stuck in limbo
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/25045300-20240814-letter-to-justice-merchan-re-sentencing-adjournment?responsive=1&title=1
The prosecution has pushed back on pretty much every single request of Trump's...unless it was extremely trivial.
The judgement and sentencing is not trivial.
Judge Alvin Hellerstein first holds that federal courts' limited jurisdiction does not allow him to take over a case because of Merchan's alleged bias. 2/
— Lisa Rubin (@lawofruby) September 3, 2024
Then, he considers whether the Supreme Court's immunity ruling justifies removal. And he concludes, "Nothing in the Supreme Court's opinion affects my earlier conclusion that the hush money payments were private, unofficial acts, outside the bounds of executive authority." FIN.
— Lisa Rubin (@lawofruby) September 3, 2024
According to an 8/19/24 email just filed now in the 2d Cir., Justice Merchan is aiming to decide by TODAY whether to postpone Trump's NY sentencing till after the election. The People have taken no position on Trump's motion.
— Roger Parloff (@rparloff) September 5, 2024
/1 pic.twitter.com/6Ob3eJa10c