Trump’s New York case will begin in March

A New York judge ruled Thursday that Donald Trump will stand trial in March on charges related to the Stormy Daniels coverup. Assuming the case goes forward as scheduled, Trump will be the first former president ever to be criminally tried. It will also be the first criminal case to slot in place among the complicated judicial calendar Trump is facing in this election year, and it means Trump will almost certainly face a jury before Election Day. In three other jurisdictions—Georgia state court and federal courts in Florida, and Washington, D.C.—Trump has been indicted on charges related to the 2020 elections and his retention of classified documents, but the timetable for those cases remains unclear.

  • @quackers@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    79 months ago

    Prison is for poor people, not presidents. I think most people understand that not everyone is equal under the law at this point in time.

    • @AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Ulysses S. Grant set the precedent that a sitting president can be prosecuted in 1872 while he was president, and got pulled over, for the third time, for “speeding on a horse inside the city limits of Washington DC.” He told the officer that attempted to let him go, that Congress had literally passed article 1983 the previous year, and that even The POTUS doesn’t have immunity. Sure it was a speeding ticket, but that’s still precedent, with a statute to back it up.

      The statute in question needs to be reviewed by The SCOTUS, as they were provided incorrectly edited wording of that statute, ommiting 16 crucial words of the law, in the case of Harlow vs. Fitzgerald in 1982, and illegally set up the Qualified Immunity Doctrine.