Donald Trump Private Citizen

printer

Well-Known Member
Iowa federal judge apologizes for comments about Trump pardons
U.S. District Judge Robert Pratt came under fire in December after telling The Associated Press in an interview that “it’s not surprising that criminals like Trump pardon other criminals.”

“Apparently to get a pardon, one has to be either a Republican, a convicted child murderer or a turkey,” Pratt said at the time.

The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Iowa posted a letter from Pratt on Monday addressing the comments. In the letter dated April 16, the judge said he accepts that his comments constituted “cognizable misconduct,” adding they could be construed as “inappropriate partisan statements.”

“I acknowledge the wrongfulness of the comments, and I regret the embarrassment they have caused to my court and the judiciary in general,” Pratt wrote. “I am truly sorry for the remarks and apologize for having made them."
At least his heart is in the right place.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Trump says he's made decision on 2024
Former President Trump told Fox News host Sean Hannity that he has made a decision on whether he will run for president again in 2024.

"You are not going to answer, but I have to ask, where are you in the process," Hannity said to Trump on Wednesday, regarding his decision on whether to mount another White House bid. "Let me ask you this, without giving the answer, what the answer is, have you made up your mind?"

“Yes,” Trump responded.

Trump’s answer comes days after he held his first post-presidential rally in Ohio, where he talked about the “catastrophe” of the Biden administration.

"If you move forward, you know how difficult it is, but you seem ready to reengage in that battle,” Hannity said later in the interview.

"It's not that I want to," Trump said. "The country needs it. We have to take care of this country. I don't want to, is this fun? Fighting constantly? Fighting always? I mean, the country, what we have done is so important."

In other words, if I can get the people below me to hang on, they can't put me in jail if I win.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Former DOJ IG On Trump Org. Indictment: It’s A Bad Day For Trump

Michael Bromwich, former Inspector General for the Justice Department, reacts to the breaking news that the Manhattan DA has charged the Trump Organization and its CFO, Allen Weisselberg, on financial crimes ranging from grand larceny to tax fraud
 

topcat

Well-Known Member
I wonder how many pardons are out there, one for Weaselberg and one for Individual 1. Here's a little tune for him. He makes his gut decisions, but he hasn't the guts. Suicide is Painless, Mr. one term, unpopular prezydint.

 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Trump Organization and CFO Allen Weisselberg Indicted for 16-Year-Long Criminal Fraud Scheme

In a remarkable indictment, a New York grand jury indicted the Trump Organization and its Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg of a criminally fraudulent scheme over the course of 16 years, totaling more that $1.7 million in off-the-books compensation designed to evade hundreds of thousands of dollars of city, state and federal taxes.

Here is a review of the highlights of the indictment and a discussion of where things might go from here.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Charges Against Trump Org Are Serious. But Are They Serious Enough?
was the Insurrection serious enough?

i hate when media write shit that way..$1.7M in back taxes is a serious number to owe and evade upon + he lied to NYC that he didn't live there so he didn't have to pay city- you expect this shit from Donald; next claim will be a sex addiction like all the other accountants defer to when they get caught but they still get jail.

i wonder which defense Weisselburgs attorney goes with?
 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Tax Scheme In Weisselberg Indictment Echoes NYT Reporting On Ivanka Trump Payouts

Rachel Maddow compares the tax scheme described in the Allen Weisselberg indictment as involving "certain Trump Organization executives, including but not limited to Weisselberg," to reporting in the New York Times about payments made by Trump Org to Ivanka Trump, and talks with Susanne Craig, investigative reporter for the New York Times, and Mary Trump, the niece of Donald Trump, for insights.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
This bunch ain't the sharpest knives in the drawer. Only the "best" people...
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Prosecutors Say Trump Org Kept Records Of Tax Dodge Scheme

Rachel Maddow reminds viewers of the scene from HBO's The Wire in which the drug-dealing character Stringer Bell admonishes a colleague for taking notes on the crime they're arranging, and shares a passage of the indictment of Allen Weisselberg that describes "internal spreadsheets" that tracked how Trump Org paid Weisselberg's expenses.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Trump's Business Was Just Labeled A 'Criminal Organization'

Calling the charges against the Trump Org. something like a 'million-dollar heist,' MSNBC Legal Analyst Neal Katyal explains how New York prosecutors are effectively alleging that the former president's business is a 'criminal organization.'
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Tax Policy Expert: Trump Org. & CFO Indictments Detail ‘Straight Up Fraud’

NYU Law Professor Daniel Shaviro and author Tim O’Brien join Lawrence O’Donnell to discuss the alleged tax fraud scheme revealed in indictments against Trump Org. & CFO Allen Weisselberg and what other “possible crimes” prosecutors may still be investigating.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
What Trump Didn’t Say About Today’s Indictment - The Atlantic

Trump Is Preparing for the Worst
Watch for early indications that the legal process may end badly for the former president.

“How did you go bankrupt?” Bill asked.
“Two ways,” Mike said. “Gradually and then suddenly.”
“What brought it on?”
“Friends,” said Mike. “I had a lot of friends.”

— Ernest Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises

Like Hemingway’s Mike Campbell, the Trump Organization is confronting troubles that accumulated gradually and have coalesced suddenly. And once again, friends are at the bottom of it.

A grand-jury indictment of Donald Trump’s business and its chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, unsealed this afternoon in New York, alleges tax evasion arising from an attempt to pay Weisselberg and other Trump Organization executives extra money “off the books.” Prosecutors charge that Weisselberg and others received rent payments and other benefits without paying the appropriate taxes on them. Weisselberg and the Trump Organization have said they will plead not guilty.

So far, the danger is to Trump’s friends and his business, not the former president himself. But the danger could spiral, because Trump knew only so many tricks. If Trump’s company was bypassing relatively moderate amounts of tax on the income flows to Trump’s friends, what was it doing with the much larger income flows to Trump and his own family? Even without personal testimony, finances leave a trail. There is always a debit and a credit, and a check issued to the IRS or not.

An early indication that things may end badly for Trump is the statement released today from the Trump Organization. “Allen Weisselberg is a loving and devoted husband, father and grandfather who has worked for the Trump Organization for 48 years. He is now being used by the Manhattan District Attorney as a pawn in a scorched earth attempt to harm the former President. The District Attorney is bringing a case involving employee benefits that neither the IRS nor any other District Attorney would ever think of bringing. This is not justice; this is politics.”

Here is what is missing from that statement: “I’m 100 percent confident that every investigation will always end up in the same conclusion, which is that I follow all rules, procedures, and, most importantly, the law.” That’s the language used by former Trump Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke when he was facing ethics charges in 2018. Likewise, when Virginia Governor Terry McAuliffe was accused of violating campaign-finance laws in 2016, he too was “very confident” that “there was no wrongdoing.” Plug the phrases very confident and no wrongdoing into a search engine and you will pull up statement after statement by politicians and business leaders under fire. For some, their matter worked out favorably; for others, not so much. Either way, everybody expects you to say that you’re confident you didn’t do anything wrong. It’s the thing an innocent person would want to say. So it’s kind of a tell when it goes unsaid.

An earlier statement from Trump himself likewise omitted an affirmative defense of his company and its employees, and instead attacked the professional prosecutors as “radical Left” (not to mention “rude, nasty, and totally biased”). The key line in Trump’s own statement is an anticipation of the possibility that one or another of his friends might flip: “They”—the prosecutors—continue to be “in search of a crime; and will do anything to frighten people into making up the stories or lies that they want.”

One of Trump’s skills as a politician is preparing the battlefield in advance. In the case of his first impeachment, he chose to argue outright innocence—“it was a perfect call”—and no matter how mountainous the evidence of wrongdoing, that was the line he maintained to the end.

This time, though, Trump is not claiming that “all taxes were paid” or that “it was a perfect tax return.” He’s readying his supporters for bad revelations about his company’s taxes and directing them to a fallback line that singling him out as a tax scofflaw is politically unfair.

That line of defense may well rally Trump’s supporters. It will not do him much good in court. It’s impossible for tax collectors to scrutinize every return. Selecting high-profile evaders and holding them to account is how tax laws are enforced. And if a former president numbers among those high-profile evaders, that makes the case for targeting him stronger, not weaker. It sends the message that the tax authorities most want to send: Everybody has to pay, especially powerful politicians. In 1974, former President Richard Nixon faced a review of his taxes that ultimately presented him with a bill equal to half his net worth at the time. Members of Congress have faced indictment for tax evasion, as have high-profile state and local officials.

Trump and his team already appear to expect that the law will be against him. They are counting on that fact not to matter very much—not enough to overcome the political hullabaloo they hope to raise in Trump’s defense.

Trump worked all his life on the theory that law can be subordinated to political favors and political pressures. That theory has carried him this far—and it’s pretty far, all things considered. We are now about to see a mighty test, before the country and the world, of whether that theory will carry him the rest of the way home.
 
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Kush Inc.

Well-Known Member
I keep hoping of course but seeing what he's already been getting away with his whole life, I don't see Trump or any of his despicable kids end up in prison.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Nothing like seeing your partner in crime for decades getting purp walked in cuffs, to get a fellow wondering...
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Trump fumed 'I can't believe it' as he watched Weisselberg being arraigned in handcuffs: ABC News reporter - Raw Story - Celebrating 17 Years of Independent Journalism

Trump fumed 'I can't believe it' as he watched Weisselberg being arraigned in handcuffs: ABC News reporter

President Donald Trump was distraught as he watched Trump Organization Allen Weisselberg walk into Manhattan court in handcuffs, according to ABC News reporter John Santucci, who said the former president called the 15-count indictment a "disgrace."

"I just spoke to former president Trump, who is reacting to this in real-time," Santucci said. "He repeatedly said it was a shame."

Santucci asked Trump about the "perp walk" videos of Weisselberg in handcuffs.

"The [former] president was unaware of that," he explained. "He actually paused for a moment, while we were on the phone, Terry, looked up at cable news coverage and said to me, 'John, I can't believe it, it's a disgrace. He's a tremendous person.'"

Watch:
BREAKING: Former Pres. Trump responds to charges against Trump Organization and its longtime CFO, speaking to @ABC… https://t.co/MWVzpnnM7T
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Legal experts weigh in on Trump Org and Allen Weisselberg indictments: 'The jury isn't going to like these guys' - Raw Story - Celebrating 17 Years of Independent Journalism
This is already starting to put heat on Garland and the IRS to indict Trump federally on the tax and obstruction of justice charges at least. He would owe the feds more taxes than NY state and the penalties are more severe.
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Legal experts weigh in on Trump Org and Allen Weisselberg indictments: 'The jury isn't going to like these guys'

Legal experts took to Twitter in wake of the release of the indictments against Allen Weisselberg and the Trump Organization Wednesday with questions and shocking excerpts.

Among the top questions included pieces in the indictment that implied that Weisselberg and the Trump Organization destroyed evidence, which would be an obstruction of justice. That would involve the Justice Department.

Others noticed "unindicted co-conspirator #1" speculating on whether that was former President Donald Trump, but NBC News reporter Tom Winter said from what they have been told, it is not Trump.

You can see other comments from legal experts below:
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