Squad member Pramila Jayapal and MSNBC host Joy Reid think it’s funny, a “problem,” and “fearmongering” that Fox News reported on a violent crime.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lUX0YNaufPI

June 21, 2024. Tags: , , , , , , . Media bias, Soft on crime, Violent crime. Leave a comment.

L.A. teen got a second chance from Gascón after killing. Now he is accused in a new homicide

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-06-21/la-da-george-gascon-denmonne-lee

L.A. teen got a second chance from Gascón after killing. Now he is accused in a new homicide

By Richard Winton and James Queally

June 21, 2024

Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George Gascón’s reform-minded outlook on juvenile justice seemed made for someone like Denmonne Lee.

When he was 16, Lee took part in an Antelope Valley gas station robbery that ended in the death of former Marine John Ruh. Lee, who was acquainted with the victim, had planned the 2018 robbery and provided a weapon to his co-defendant, according to court records. Although Lee wasn’t the shooter, he was charged with murder.

But when Gascón took office two years later, as Lee’s case was making its way through the court system, he barred prosecutors from trying juveniles as adults. Lee was convicted and ordered held at the county’s Secure Youth Treatment Facility in Sylmar until he turned 25.

Lee “responded very well” to programs in custody, authorities said. Within a year, probation officials moved him from the high-security Sylmar facility into a rehabilitation-focused setting in Malibu. After being released to a halfway house last June, Lee enrolled in community college and found work at a local nonprofit.

And then, in April, he was arrested and charged with playing a major role in another homicide.

(more…)

June 21, 2024. Tags: , , , , , . Soft on crime. 1 comment.

An 11-year-old girl named Maxi Park was repeatedly slashed, and almost killed, because New York City refused to lock up a violent serial criminal named Shaquan Cummings.

https://nypost.com/2024/05/11/us-news/mom-wants-justice-for-daughter-11-slashed-in-nyc-attack/

NYC mom demands justice after girl, 11, slashed by maniac career criminal and left ‘showered in blood’

By Georgett Roberts, Marie Pohl, and Rich Calder

May 11, 2024

Maxi Park

An 11-year-old girl slashed in the head by an apparently homeless maniac was left “showered in blood” by the attack and is “lucky to be alive,” her mother fumed to The Post — while demanding the career criminal who hurt her be put behind bars.

“I was thinking, ‘Oh my God! She is going to die right now,’ ” recalled Malgorzata Sladek, referring to her daughter, Maxi Park.

“Her lips were blue. She was losing color.”

“The cut was so big,” the mother of two added.

“Her clothes, her jacket was covered in blood. It looked like you poured red water on her, like she was showered in blood.”

The fiend — who has a lengthy rap sheet — knifed the youngster in the back of the head and cut her ear as she walked down the street holding her mom’s hand, authorities said.

“I turned around and saw her hair on the sidewalk,” said Sladek, “Her head was sliced from top to bottom. Blood was pouring out of her head. I was in shock.”

The child required multiple stitches and staples to fix the gash and was “doing a little better” Saturday while still recovering in the hospital, her mom said. Doctors won’t know if further procedures are needed to repair the wound until the bandages are removed, Sladek said.

Shaquan Cummings, 30, who has a lengthy rap sheet, knifed the youngster in the back of the head and cut her ear as she walked down the street holding her mom’s hand, authorities said.

Cummings, 30, allegedly preyed on the girl outside the 116th Street 6 subway station Friday and fled underground, moments after he’s accused of sucker punching an unsuspecting 43-year-old woman around the corner, according to sources.

“Bitch, get the f–k out of my way,” Cummings allegedly told the woman, prosecutors said at his Saturday arraignment in Manhattan Criminal Court.

The attack on Maxi, which left the girl with a seven-inch gash on the left side of her head, was caught on video and the box cutter was found near the scene, according to prosecutors.

Sladek tried to chase down Cummings, even hailing a conductor to stop a train from departing, but he managed to get away.

Cops ultimately tracked him down a block away.

The suspect was then cornered by a raging mob of Harlem locals seeking street justice, forcing a group of NYPD officers to protect him, video showed.

In the clip, a man appears to poke him with a cane as the alleged assailant cowers behind cops.

Manhattan Judge Laurie Peterson ordered Cummings, who lives in the Jerome Avenue Men’s Shelter, held without bail Saturday. He’s facing a minimum of 12 years in prison as a persistent violent felon, prosecutors said.

The suspect has health issues, claimed his lawyer, Seann Riley.

Cummings’ rap sheet covers more than 20 arrests for assault, criminal mischief and fare evasion, sources said.

He’s been convicted twice for violent felony crimes – including in 2019 for first-degree attempted assault – and has five misdemeanor convictions, according to prosecutors

“My daughter could have been dead — not with me anymore,” said Sladek, who also has a 9-year-old son.

“Why is this person walking the streets of New York? They need to change the laws.”

Residents who live near the Norwood shelter said its occupants notoriously harass people, but some pegged Cummings as among the more well-behaved temporary tenants.

“All of them, one day they are normal, the other they are acting up, but I never see him acting up,” said one Norwood resident.

“I feel really bad — slashing women, slashing children. That’s big. I thought he was one of the best ones over there.”

“[The shelter residents] harass women. They attack people, especially if they beg you for money and you don’t give them,” another resident added.

“I live around here and that’s the worst thing they could have put there. It’s not safe. They can go off at any time.”

June 19, 2024. Tags: , , , , , , , . Social justice warriors, Soft on crime, Violent crime. Leave a comment.

Woman of Color Was Hit Hard With Reality Now That She’s a Conservative

https://rumble.com/v4cjdye-woman-of-color-was-hit-hard-with-reality-now-that-shes-a-conservative.html

June 17, 2024. Tags: , . Donald Trump, Racism. Leave a comment.

Ethiopia has chosen to greatly increase its use of technology and its standard of living.

By Daniel Alman (aka Dan from Squirrel Hill)

June 16, 2024

Ethiopia has chosen to greatly increase its use of technology and its standard of living.

The Ethiopia of today is absolutely nothing like the Ethiopia that people my age (I’m 53) saw on TV when we were growing up.

Back then, the news blamed Ethiopia’s famines on drought.

Now, this video says that during several recent droughts, there was no famine, and that was because of the choices that they made regarding irrigation, modern farming methods, and other advances in technology.

The same video also shows Ethiopians manufacturing clothing for export to rich countries, and they pointed out that Ethiopia is currently at the approximate level of development than China was at one generation ago.

I totally support these tremendous improvements.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7qI711c03W8

June 16, 2024. Tags: , , , . Economics, Sweatshops, Technology. Leave a comment.

I support equal rights for people who are LGBTQIAD. I added the “D”myself, which stands for Detransitioner. Please help make this new acronym go viral.

By Daniel Alman (aka Dan from Squirrel Hill)

June 15, 2024

I support equal rights for people who are LGBTQIAD.

I added the “D”myself, which stands for Detransitioner.

Please help make this new acronym go viral.

June 15, 2024. Tags: , , , , , , , , , . LGBT. Leave a comment.

“California’s Democratic leaders clash with businesses over curbing retail theft…. With retail theft increasing, California’s Democratic leadership… wants to keep the tough-on-crime measure off the November ballot… they said they fear… law enforcement would… send more people to jails”

https://www.yahoo.com/news/californias-democratic-leaders-clash-businesses-040546547.html

California’s Democratic leaders clash with businesses over curbing retail theft. Here’s what to know

By TRÂN NGUYỄN

June 15, 2024

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — With retail theft increasing, California Democratic leadership is clashing with a coalition of law enforcement and business groups in a fierce political fight over how to crack down on the problem. State lawmakers are trying to preserve progressive policies and stay away from putting more people behind bars.

The two most likely paths under consideration this year are a ballot initiative to create harsher penalties for repeat offenders, and a legislative package aimed at making it easier to go after professional crime rings.

Leaders behind the two efforts have accused one another of misleading voters and being unwilling to work toward a compromise.

How did we get here?

Both sides agree on the need to crack down, especially on large-scale thefts in which groups of people brazenly rush into stores and take goods in plain sight.

At the center of the escalating political fight is Proposition 47, a progressive ballot measure passed by voters in 2014 that reduced certain theft and drug possession offenses from felonies to misdemeanors — in part to mitigate overcrowding in jails and prisons. That includes nonviolent property crimes such as thefts under $950.

It has made it harder to arrest and punish people who shoplift, law enforcement said. Researchers told lawmakers there’s no evidence linking the proposition to increased violent crime rates.

How are the two solutions different?

A coalition of district attorneys and businesses, mostly funded by big box retailers, is pushing for an initiative to bring harsh penalties for shoplifting and drug offenses. It would make theft of any amount a felony if the person already has two theft convictions.

Possession of fentanyl would also become a felony, and those with multiple drug charges would be ordered to get treatment.

The ballot measure would still need to be certified by the Secretary of State before it could be placed on the ballot later this month.

California’s Democratic leadership, backed by Gov. Gavin Newsom, wants to keep the tough-on-crime measure off the November ballot. They worry the ballot measure’s proposal would disproportionately criminalize low-income people and those with substance use issues rather than target ringleaders who hire large groups of people to steal goods for them to resell online.

Instead, lawmakers are fast-tracking a legislative package of 14 bills that would go after organized online reseller schemes and auto thieves, and provide funding for drug addiction counselors. These proposals could become laws as early as this month.

Do the efforts conflict?

If voters approve the tough-on-crime ballot initiative, Democratic leaders plan to void most measures in their own legislative package, citing potential conflicts.

Lawmakers were short on details about how the two paths conflict earlier this week. Later, they said they fear if both efforts succeed, law enforcement would be able to stack penalties and send more people to jails, leading to mass incarceration and overcrowded jails.

About a third of the measures in the package pose possible legal conflicts with the proposals in the ballot initiative, according to lawmakers.

The ballot initiative campaign accused lawmakers of holding the proposals hostage to break up the coalition. Local district attorneys who backed the ballot campaign said both efforts could work together, with the ballot measure overriding the legislative package in case of legal conflicts.

What happens next?

Backers of the ballot initiative said they’re still open to working with Democratic leadership but will only consider any solutions that involve rolling back Proposition 47.

“We still stand ready to sit down with anybody in leadership to talk about the measure, but I don’t want to compromise,” Greg Totten, a retired district attorney and a leader of the ballot initiative campaign, said during a news conference this week.

Newsom and Democratic leaders have until June 27 to negotiate to get the initiative off the ballot. Meanwhile, lawmakers have plans to deliver the legislative package to Newsom’s desk by next week for signing, despite growing concerns from moderate Democrats.

“When you look at the package that we put together, it’s very comprehensive and it addresses a number of details in the existing framework of the law,” Assemblymember Rick Zbur, author of a retail theft bill, told reporters. “It was never intended to be something that was stacked on to a ballot measure that removed the underpinnings of the basic law that we were trying to reform.”

June 15, 2024. Tags: , , , , . Social justice warriors, Soft on crime. Leave a comment.

By not arresting anyone, Karen Bass, George Gascón, and Gavin Newsom are sending a message that it’s OK to trap people inside a building, assault people, and damage property.

https://x.com/DanielAlmanPGH/status/1801656676132466723

June 14, 2024. Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Islamic terrorism, Islamization, Social justice warriors, Soft on crime. Leave a comment.

At California State University, Los Angeles, pro-Palestinian protesters who blocked the exists when employees were inside a building said, “This is not a hostage situation.” Uh, yes, that’s exactly what it is.

By Daniel Alman (aka Dan from Squirrel Hill)

June 13, 2024

In an age when people can self identify as something other than what they actually are, protestors who trapped employees inside a building are claiming, “This is not a hostage situation.”

Uh, yes, that’s exactly what it is.

CNN just reported: (the bolding is mine)

After weeks on campus, pro-Palestinian protesters entered and barricaded the Student Services Building at California State University, Los Angeles, Wednesday, video from CNN affiliate KABC showed.

A group of 50 to 100 protesters barricaded the exits on the first floor and blocked off areas around the building, university spokesperson Erik Frost Hollins told the Los Angeles Times. The university asked employees on the upper floors to shelter in place, Hollins said.

A small group of staff members were staying Wedneday night “to handle the situation,” the Times reported.

Demonstrators “don’t want folks inside the building,” a protester told KABC, saying, “This is not a hostage situation.”

This most definitely is a hostage situation.

I hope the federal government sends 1,000 armed law enforcement officers, arrests every single one of these hostage takers, and prosecutes them to the full extent of the law. I hope they all get put in prison for as many years as the law allows.

June 13, 2024. Tags: , , , , , , , , , , . Islamic terrorism, Islamization, Social justice warriors. Leave a comment.

Liberal hypocrites who usually defend vandalism now want 5 years in prison for vandals who vandalized a pride mural. I support this punishment, but I also support it for anyone who deliberately breaks a window or sprays graffiti.

https://x.com/DanielAlmanPGH/status/1800566626477355136

 

June 11, 2024. Tags: , , , , , . LGBT, Social justice warriors, Soft on crime. Leave a comment.

Chicago alderwoman Leni Manaa-Hoppenworth cited “antiracism” as one of the reasons why she has stopped posting crime alerts.

https://foxnews.com/us/blue-city-leader-stop-sharing-crime-alerts-constituents-because-create-bad-perception

Blue city leader to stop sharing crime alerts with constituents because they create bad ‘perception’

Alderwoman Leni Manaa-Hoppenworth cited research that states the over-reporting of crime negatively impacts the marginalized and underserved

June 3, 2024

A Chicago alderwoman will no longer post crime alerts on social media or send alerts to her constituents unless they specifically opt in for the notifications, saying the over-reporting of crime leads to an inaccurate public perception.

The announcement by Alderwoman Leni Manaa-Hoppenworth came as robberies and sex crimes are at their highest levels in years while thefts and robberies are also up.

In a blog post, Manaa-Hoppenworth, who represents the city’s 48th Ward, said only subscribers to her newsletter who have opted in to receive crime alerts will receive them.

The decision was based on feedback from the community and her “commitment to our values of empowerment, antiracism, and community,” she said.

June 6, 2024. Tags: , , , , , . Racism, Social justice warriors, Soft on crime. Leave a comment.

A pro-Palestinian protestor wearing a pride dress is shocked to find out that homosexuality is illegal in Palestine.

https://x.com/DanielAlmanPGH/status/1798594670400049430

June 6, 2024. Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , . LGBT, Social justice warriors. Leave a comment.

In December 2014, in Berkeley, Missouri, Alvin Henry Jones Jr., 62, died two days after Black Lives Matter protestors blocked an ambulance that was carrying him

By Daniel Alman (aka Dan from Squirrel Hill)

June 4, 2024

In December 2014, in Berkeley, Missouri, Alvin Henry Jones Jr., 62, died two days after Black Lives Matter protestors blocked an ambulance that was carrying him.

Source: https://www.sfgate.com/crime/article/Medics-were-delayed-by-Berkeley-protest-6065429.php

In January 2015, in Milton, Massachusetts, Black Lives Matter protestors blocked an ambulance that was carrying Richard McGrath, 82. The protestors chained themselves to barrels full of concrete to make especially sure that no vehicles could get by.

In February 2016, after 10 of these protestors pled guilty to “willfully impending an emergency vehicle,” and were sentenced to six months of probation and 60 hours of community service, their spokesperson said that they were NOT sorry for what they had done.

Source: https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2016/02/04/black-lives-matter-protestors-who-shut-down-southeast-expressway-milton-plead-guilty/gXNsm73kX59wjqyNhqFJTI/story.html

In July 2016, in Memphis, Tennessee, Black Lives Matter protestors blocked an ambulance that was trying to get to a child, after the same Black Lives Matter protestors had blocked the same child’s parents’ car from taking him to the hospital.

Source: https://web.archive.org/web/20160713164543/https://www.wistv.com/story/32421175/family-with-sick-child-was-stuck-on-bridge-during-rally/

In March 2016, in Chicago, Illinois, Black Lives Matter protestors blocked an ambulance that had its emergency sirens blaring. In this video, you can see that many of the protestors deliberately repositioned themselves so they were standing specifically, directly in front of the ambulance, even though its emergency sirens had already been blaring for quite some time:

Source:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gvCdAuBBh0U

In February 2017, in Hew Haven, Connecticut, anti-Trump protestors blocked an ambulance that was carrying a critically ill patient. Because of this, the EMTs had to perform an emergency medical procedure on the patient in the ambulance, instead of it being performed by doctors at the hospital.

The lawyer for these protestors said that it was NOT their fault that they blocked the ambulance.

Sources:

https://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/local/marchers-protesting-president-trumps-immigration-policies-block-streets-in-new-haven/25900/

https://www.masslive.com/news/2017/02/connecticut_police_arrest_prot.html

http://web.archive.org/web/20170207003440/https://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/lawyer-police-responsible-ambulance-problems-protest-45302582

In June 2021, in Oakland, California, people who were celebrating Juneteenth blocked an ambulance as it tried to get to gunshot victims.

Sources:

https://www.bitchute.com/video/D2QQWfHY1NyV/

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9711161/Female-mob-TWERK-ambulance-crowd-celebrating-Juneteenth-scene-shooting.html

June 4, 2024. Tags: , , . Black lives matter, Idiots blocking traffic, Social justice warriors. 1 comment.

Just a reminder to everyone so no one ever forgets or pretends that it didn’t happen: Barack Obama broke the exact same law that Martha Stewart went to prison for breaking.

By Daniel Alman (aka Dan from Squirrel Hill)

June 4, 2024

In 2009 the Obama administration gave $535 million to Solyndra, claiming that it would create 4,000 new jobs. However, instead of creating those 4,000 new jobs, the company went bankrupt. It was later revealed that the company’s shareholders and executives had made substantial donations to Obama’s campaign, that the company had spent a large sum of money on lobbying, and that Solyndra executives had had many meetings with White House officials.

It was also revealed that the Obama administration had already been aware of Solyndra’s financial troubles. For example, according to the company’s security filings in 2009, the company had been selling its product for less than the cost of production. In 2010, Obama visited the Solyndra factory and cited it as a role model for his stimulus program, saying “It’s here that companies like Solyndra are leading the way toward a brighter and more prosperous future.” The Washington Post wrote of this, “Administration officials and outside advisers warned that President Obama should consider dropping plans to visit a solar startup company in 2010 because its mounting financial problems might ultimately embarrass the White House.” Solyndra was a private company, but had been planning to use its government loans as a means of going public – so when Obama knowingly overstated the company’s condition in order to help his friends at Solyndra, he broke the same law that Martha Stewart had been sent to prison for breaking.

In September 2011, federal agents visited the homes of Brian Harrison, the company’s CEO, and Chris Gronet, the company’s founder, to examine computer files and documents.  Also in September 2011, the U.S. Treasury Department launched an investigation.

On September 13, 2011, the Washington Post reported on emails which showed that the Obama administration had tried to rush federal reviewers to approve the loan so Vice President Joe Biden could announce it at a September 2009 groundbreaking for the company’s factory. The company was a hallmark of President Obama’s plan to support clean energy technologies.

The New York Times reported that government auditors and industry analysts had faulted the Obama administration for failing to properly evaluate the company’s business proposals, as well as for failing to take note of troubling signs which were already evident. In addition, Frank Rusco, a program director at the Government Accountability Office, had found that the preliminary loan approval had been granted before officials had completed the legally mandated evaluations of the company.

The New York Times quoted Shyam Mehta, a senior analyst at GTM Research, as saying “There was just too much misplaced zeal at the Department of Energy for this company.” Among 143 companies that had expressed an interest in getting a loan guarantee, Solyndra was the first one to get approval. During the period when Solyndra’s loan guarantee was under review, the company had spent nearly $1.8 million on lobbying. Tim Harris, the CEO of Solopower, a different solar panel company which had obtained a $197 million loan guarantee, told the New York Times that his company had never considered spending any money on lobbying, and that “It was made clear to us early in the process that that was clearly verboten… We were told that it was not only not helpful but it was not acceptable.”

The Washington Post reported that Solyndra had used some of the loan money to purchase new equipment which it never used, and then sold that new equipment, still in its plastic wrap, for pennies on the dollar. Former Solyndra engineer Lindsey Eastburn told the Washington Post, “After we got the loan guarantee, they were just spending money left and right… Because we were doing well, nobody cared. Because of that infusion of money, it made people sloppy.”

On September 29, 2011, the Washington Post reported that the Obama administration had continued to allow Solyndra to receive taxpayer money even after it had defaulted on its $535 million loan.

On October 7, 2011, The Washington Post reported that newly revealed emails showed that Energy Department officials had been warned that their plan to help Solyndra by restructuring the loan might be illegal, and should be cleared with the Justice Department first. However, Energy Department officials moved ahead with the restructuring anyway, with a new deal that would repay company investors before taxpayers if the company were to default. The emails showed concerns within the Obama administration about the legality of the Energy Department’s actions. In addition, an Energy Department stimulus adviser, Steve Spinner, had pushed for the loan, despite having recused himself because his wife’s law firm had done work for the company.

In January 2012, CBS News reported that Solyndra had thrown millions of dollars worth of brand new glass tubes into garbage dumpsters, where they ended up being shattered. Solyndra told CBS that it had conducted an exhaustive search for buyers of the glass tubes, and that no one had wanted them. However, CBS discovered that Solyndra had not offered the glass tubes for sale at either one of its two asset auctions that took place in 2011. In addition, David Lucky, a buyer and seller of such equipment, told CBS that he would have bought the tubes if he had had a chance to do so. Greg Smestad, a solar scientist who had consulted for the Department of Energy, also agreed that the tubes had value, and had asked Solyndra to donate any unwanted tubes to Santa Clara University. Smestad stated, “That really makes me sad… Those tubes represent intellectual investment. These could have had a better value to do public good. I think they owed the U.S. taxpayer that.”

In April 2012, CBS News reported that Solyndra had left a substantial amount of toxic waste at its abandoned facility in Milpitas, California.

Solyndra was not the only “green energy” company involved in this type of fraud. After Obama gave Raser Technologies $33 million to build a power plant, the company declared bankruptcy, and owed $1.5 million in back taxes. After Obama gave Abound Solar, Inc. a $400 million loan guarantee to build photovoltaic panel factories, the company halted production and laid off 180 employees. After Obama gave Beacon Power a $43 million loan guarantee to build green energy storage, the company filed for bankruptcy. After Obama approved $2.1 billion in loan guarantees for Solar Trust of America so it could build solar power plants, the company filed for bankruptcy.

Although Obama stated that all of the “green energy” companies that received taxpayer money were chosen “based solely on their merits,” the truth is that 71% of these grants and loans went to Obama donors and fundraisers, who raised $457,834 for his campaign, and were later approved for grants and loans totaling more than $11 billion. By November 2011, the Energy Department’s inspector general had begun more than 100 criminal investigations related to Obama’s stimulus. Although an “independent” review said that Obama had not done anything wrong, it was later reported that Herbert M. Allison Jr., the person who had conducted this “independent” review, donated $52,500 to Obama’s campaign.

June 4, 2024. Tags: , , , , , , , , , , . Barack Obama, Environmentalism. Leave a comment.

The gay pride parade in Philadelphia is a form of legal traffic, because they have a permit. The pro-Palestinian protesters, who don’t have a permit, are illegally blocking the parade. Skip to 1:59

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x1jOwb22tEQ

June 2, 2024. Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , . Idiots blocking traffic, Islamization, LGBT, Social justice warriors. Leave a comment.

Bill Maher tells college protestors that Israel is not an apartheid state because Muslims have equal rights, and calls the protestors hypocrites for ignoring the real, gender-based apartheid that exists in Muslim controlled countries.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uRzv0HgatRc

June 2, 2024. Tags: , , , , , , , , , , . Sexism, Social justice warriors. Leave a comment.

Multiple legal experts have cited multiple legal reasons why Trump’s guilty verdict is likely to be overturned on appeal.

By Daniel Alman (aka Dan from Squirrel Hill)

June 2, 2024

Multiple legal experts have cited multiple legal reasons why Trump’s guilty verdict is likely to be overturned on appeal.

I am listing some of their reasons here, but there are a lot more reasons at the links:

Judges are supposed to be chosen at random. But this judge was selected on purpose.

Judges aren’t supposed to make political donations. But this judge had donated to multiple anti-trump organizations.

The main crime that Trump was convicted of was a misdemeanor, and the statute of limitations had expired. However, the prosecutor updated it to a felony, and used some other crime to avoid the statute of limitations. However, the prosecutor never said what that other crime was. The judge gave the jury instructions that they did not have to vote unanimously when it came to this other crime. The judge gave the jury three separate crimes to choose from, and said they could split their vote, such as, for example, by 4-4-4.

The campaign finance law that Trump was convicted of breaking is a federal law, not a state law. The state has no jurisdiction in this matter.

Here are opinion columns from three different legal experts that explain why there are multiple legal reasons why the verdict is likely to be overturned on appeal:

Alan Dershowitz: “I was inside the court when the judge closed the Trump trial, and what I saw shocked me”

https://nypost.com/2024/05/21/opinion/i-was-inside-the-court-when-the-judge-closed-the-trump-trial-and-what-i-saw-shocked-me/

Jonathan Turley: “Bragg’s thrill kill in Manhattan could prove short-lived on appeal”

https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/4697118-braggs-thrill-kill-in-manhattan-could-prove-short-lived-on-appeal/

Elie Honig: “Prosecutors Got Trump — But They Contorted the Law”

https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/trump-was-convicted-but-prosecutors-contorted-the-law.html

June 2, 2024. Tags: , , , , , , , . Donald Trump. Leave a comment.

Elie Honig: Prosecutors Got Trump — But They Contorted the Law

https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/trump-was-convicted-but-prosecutors-contorted-the-law.html

Prosecutors Got Trump — But They Contorted the Law

By Elie Honig

May 31, 2024

The first time I ever took a jury verdict, I almost passed out. I was a brand-new prosecutor, 29 years old, and had just given my first closing argument a few days earlier. Since then, the trial team and I had been whiling away our time, interrupted only by the occasional note from the jury seeking testimony or legal instructions as they deliberated. All of a sudden, we got word from the court clerk: Come on up, we have a verdict.

Let me tell you, there’s little in life that causes a burst of uncut adrenaline quite like the arrival of a verdict. I managed (barely) to hold it together as we performed the arcane, dramatic ritual that concludes every criminal trial. The judge brings the lawyers and the defendant back into the courtroom, the security officers take their places, the jury files in solemnly, and the judge asks: Ladies and gentlemen, have you reached a verdict? (Ummm, yes, Your Honor, that’s why we’re all back out here.) As I stood at the prosecution table while the jury took their places back in the box, I felt dizzy and had to use my arms to brace myself.

Moments before the jury read the verdict, my supervisor — a grizzled trial buzzsaw known for his blistering closing arguments — leaned over and whispered to me: “Whatever they say, no reaction. Don’t move a muscle.” I don’t know what I would’ve done if not for that last-second command. Maybe I would’ve been sensible enough not to react either way, but I’m not sure. As the jury read out its findings — starting with a “not guilty” on count one, to my horror, but then moving along to a string of convictions — I didn’t budge, or breathe, or blink.

The lesson I learned that day and throughout my prosecutorial career, and have come to value even more ever since, is that the jury’s verdict is sacrosanct. If a conviction goes our way, we prosecutors don’t pump our fists and celebrate, even mildly. And when a verdict goes against us, we don’t sulk. When we lose, we stand in and take it. Any emotional reaction, either way, would disrespect the judge, the jury, and, most importantly, the person whose liberty was about to be stripped. Prosecutors get to go to dinner and then sleep at home, no matter what the jury says. The defendant might not.

By any reasonable measure, the jury of Manhattanites who yesterday found former president Donald Trump guilty on all 34 charges did its job, and did it well.

They took on a civic duty from which many others fled; during jury selection, when Judge Juan Merchan allowed potential jurors who did not want to serve essentially to walk out the door, over half the assembled pool headed straight for the exits. The jurors sat through six weeks of testimony, they were by all accounts attentive throughout the trial, and they asked precise, insightful questions of the judge during deliberations. Nobody’s truly in position to say if the jury got it right or wrong; they saw the evidence and we didn’t — most of us, that is, including those like me who followed every line of testimony as it happened; there’s no substitute for seeing it play out live. Reasonable minds could have come out either way, and this jury found that the prosecution carried its burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. The jury’s work, and their verdict, deserve respect.

But that doesn’t mean that every structural infirmity around the Manhattan district attorney’s case has evaporated. Both of these things can be true at once: The jury did its job, and this case was an ill-conceived, unjustified mess. Sure, victory is the great deodorant, but a guilty verdict doesn’t make it all pure and right. Plenty of prosecutors have won plenty of convictions in cases that shouldn’t have been brought in the first place. “But they won” is no defense to a strained, convoluted reach unless the goal is to “win,” now, by any means necessary and worry about the credibility of the case and the fallout later.

The following are all undeniable facts.

The judge donated money — a tiny amount, $35, but in plain violation of a rule prohibiting New York judges from making political donations of any kind — to a pro-Biden, anti-Trump political operation, including funds that the judge earmarked for “resisting the Republican Party and Donald Trump’s radical right-wing legacy.” Would folks have been just fine with the judge staying on the case if he had donated a couple bucks to “Re-elect Donald Trump, MAGA forever!”? Absolutely not.

District Attorney Alvin Bragg ran for office in an overwhelmingly Democratic county by touting his Trump-hunting prowess. He bizarrely (and falsely) boasted on the campaign trail, “It is a fact that I have sued Trump over 100 times.” (Disclosure: Both Bragg and Trump’s lead counsel, Todd Blanche, are friends and former colleagues of mine at the Southern District of New York.)

Most importantly, the DA’s charges against Trump push the outer boundaries of the law and due process. That’s not on the jury. That’s on the prosecutors who chose to bring the case and the judge who let it play out as it did.

The district attorney’s press office and its flaks often proclaim that falsification of business records charges are “commonplace” and, indeed, the office’s “bread and butter.” That’s true only if you draw definitional lines so broad as to render them meaningless. Of course the DA charges falsification quite frequently; virtually any fraud case involves some sort of fake documentation.

But when you impose meaningful search parameters, the truth emerges: The charges against Trump are obscure, and nearly entirely unprecedented. In fact, no state prosecutor — in New York, or Wyoming, or anywhere — has ever charged federal election laws as a direct or predicate state crime, against anyone, for anything. None. Ever. Even putting aside the specifics of election law, the Manhattan DA itself almost never brings any case in which falsification of business records is the only charge.

Standing alone, falsification charges would have been mere misdemeanors under New York law, which posed two problems for the DA. First, nobody cares about a misdemeanor, and it would be laughable to bring the first-ever charge against a former president for a trifling offense that falls within the same technical criminal classification as shoplifting a Snapple and a bag of Cheetos from a bodega. Second, the statute of limitations on a misdemeanor — two years — likely has long expired on Trump’s conduct, which dates to 2016 and 2017.

So, to inflate the charges up to the lowest-level felony (Class E, on a scale of Class A through E) — and to electroshock them back to life within the longer felony statute of limitations — the DA alleged that the falsification of business records was committed “with intent to commit another crime.” Here, according to prosecutors, the “another crime” is a New York State election-law violation, which in turn incorporates three separate “unlawful means”: federal campaign crimes, tax crimes, and falsification of still more documents. Inexcusably, the DA refused to specify what those unlawful means actually were — and the judge declined to force them to pony up — until right before closing arguments. So much for the constitutional obligation to provide notice to the defendant of the accusations against him in advance of trial. (This, folks, is what indictments are for.)

In these key respects, the charges against Trump aren’t just unusual. They’re bespoke, seemingly crafted individually for the former president and nobody else.

The Manhattan DA’s employees reportedly have called this the “Zombie Case” because of various legal infirmities, including its bizarre charging mechanism. But it’s better characterized as the Frankenstein Case, cobbled together with ill-fitting parts into an ugly, awkward, but more-or-less functioning contraption that just might ultimately turn on its creator.

Trump will appeal, as is his right, and he’s certain to contest the inventive charges constructed by the DA. I won’t go so far as to say an appeals court is likely to overturn a conviction — New York law is broad and hazy enough to (potentially) allow such machinations — but he’s going to have a decent shot at a reversal.

“No man is above the law.” It’s become cliché, but it’s an important point, and it’s worth pausing to reflect on the importance of this core principle. But it’s also meaningless pablum if we unquestioningly tolerate (or worse, celebrate) deviations from ordinary process and principle to get there. The jury’s word is indeed sacrosanct, as I learned long ago. But it can’t fix everything that preceded it. Here, prosecutors got their man, for now at least — but they also contorted the law in an unprecedented manner in their quest to snare their prey.

June 1, 2024. Tags: , , , , , . Donald Trump. Leave a comment.

Instead of picking a judge at random, the Trump trial deliberately selected a judge who had donated to anti-Trump organizations. Judges are supposed to be picked at random. Judges aren’t supposed to make political donations.

https://x.com/DanielAlmanPGH/status/1797073422763110825

 

 

June 1, 2024. Tags: , , , , . Donald Trump. Leave a comment.

Jonathan Turley: Bragg’s thrill kill in Manhattan could prove short-lived on appeal

https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/4697118-braggs-thrill-kill-in-manhattan-could-prove-short-lived-on-appeal/

Bragg’s thrill kill in Manhattan could prove short-lived on appeal

By Jonathan Turley

June 1, 2024

The conviction of former President Donald Trump in Manhattan of 34 felonies produced citywide celebrations. This thrill-kill environment extended to the media, where former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman told MSNBC’s Nicolle Wallace that it was “majestic day” and “a day to celebrate.” When I left the courthouse after watching the verdict come in, I was floored by the celebrations outside by both the public and some of the media.

The celebrants would be wise to think twice before mounting this trophy kill on the political wall. The Trump trial is a target-rich environment for an appeal, with multiple layers of reversible error, in my view.

I am less convinced by suggestions that the case could be challenged on the inability of Trump receiving a fair trial in a district that voted roughly 90 percent against him. The problem was not the jury, but the prosecutors and the judge.

Some of the most compelling problems can be divided into four groups.

The Judge

Acting Supreme Court justice Juan Merchan was handpicked for this case rather than randomly selected. This is only the latest in a litany of Trump cases where Merchan has meted out tough rulings against Trump and his organization. With any other defendant, there would likely be outrage over his selection. Merchan donated to President Biden. Even though the state bar cleared that violation based on the small size of the contribution, it later stressed that no such contributions were appropriate for a judge. We learned later that Merchan has contributed to a group to stop the GOP and Trump. Merchan’s daughter is also a Democratic organizer who has helped raise millions against Trump and the GOP and for the Democrats.

To his credit, CNN legal analyst Elie Honig has previously said that this case was legally dubious, uniquely targeted Trump and could not succeed outside of an anti-Trump district.  On the judge, he recently challenged critics on the fairness of assigning a Biden donor who has earmarked donations for “resisting the Republican Party and Donald Trump’s radical right-wing legacy.” He asked “Would folks have been just fine with the judge staying on the case if he had donated a couple bucks to “Re-elect Donald Trump, MAGA forever!”? “Absolutely not.”

What is equally disturbing is the failure of Merchan to protect the rights of the defendant and what even critics admit were distinctly pro-prosecution rulings in the trial. It is not just the appearance of a conflict with Judge Merchan but a record of highly biased decisions. In watching Merchan in the courtroom, I was shocked by his rulings as at times incomprehensible and conflicted.

The Charges

A leading threshold issue will be the decision to allow Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg to effectively try Trump for violations of federal law. The Justice Department declined any criminal charges against Trump under federal election law over the alleged “hush money” payments. The Federal Election Commission likewise found no basis for a civil fine. With no federal prosecution, Bragg decided to use an unprecedented criminal theory not only to zap a dead misdemeanor into life (after the expiration of the statute of limitation) but to allow him to try violations of not only federal election law but also federal taxation violations. In other words, the Justice Department would not prosecute federal violations, so Bragg effectively did it in state court.

Even when closing arguments were given, analysts on various networks admitted that they were unclear about what Bragg was alleging. The indictment claimed a violation under New York’s election law 17-152 that the falsification of business records were committed to further another crime as an unlawful means to influence the election. However, in a maddeningly circular theory, that other crime could be the falsification of business records. It could also be violations of federal election and taxation laws, which Trump was never charged with, let alone convicted of.

The Evidence

Judge Merchan allowed a torrent of immaterial and prejudicial evidence to be introduced into the trial by the prosecution. That included testimony from porn actress Stormy Daniels that went into details about having sex with Trump. She included a clear suggestion that Trump raped her. After this utterly disgraceful testimony, Merchan expressed regret but actually blamed the defense counsel, despite their prior objections to the testimony. He had previously chastised counsel for making continued objections, but now he criticized them for not continuing to make objections.

Merchan was equally conflicted in his other orders. For example, he allowed the prosecutors to introduce the plea agreement of Michael Cohen to federal election violations as well as the non-prosecution agreement of David Pecker on such violations. However, it was allowed only for the purposes of credibility and context. He issued an instruction that the jury could not consider the plea or the agreement to establish or impute the guilt of Trump.

The prosecutors then proceeded to expressly state that it was “a fact” that federal election violations occurred in this case and that Trump ordered those violations. They also solicited such statements from witnesses like Cohen. Merchan overruled the objections that the prosecutors were eviscerating his instruction. Merchan also barred the use of a legal expert, former FEC Chair Brad Smith, who was prepared to testify that such payments cannot be viewed as federal election violations and would not affect the election even if they were considered contributions, since they would not even have had to be reported until after the election.

Merchan is likely to be upheld in denying the expert, since the court retains the authority to state what the law is to the jury. The problem is that Merchan failed to do so. Worse still, he allowed the jury to hear the opposite in the repeated false claim that these payments were campaign contributions.

The Instructions

Even with all of the reversible errors, some of us held out hope that there might be a hung jury. That hope was largely smashed by Merchan in his instructions to the jury. The court largely used standard instructions in a case that was anything but standard. However, the instruction also allowed for doubt as to what the jury would ultimately find. When the verdict came in, we were still unsure what Trump was convicted of.

Merchan allowed the jury to find that the secondary offense was any of the three vaguely defined options. Even on the jury form, they did not have to specify which of the crimes were found. Under Merchan’s instruction, the jury could have split 4-4-4 on what occurred in the case. They could have seen a conspiracy to conceal a federal election violation, falsification of business records or taxation violations. We will never know. Worse yet, Trump will never know.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized that the requirement of unanimity in criminal convictions is sacrosanct in our system. While there was unanimity that the business records were falsified to hide or further a second crime, there was no express finding of what that crime may have been. In some ways, Trump may have been fortunate by Merchan’s cavalier approach. Given that the jury convicted Trump across the board, they might have found all of three secondary crimes. The verdict form never asked for such specificity.

These are just a few of the appellate issues. There are other challenges, including but not limited to due process violations on the lack of specificity in the indictment, vagueness of the underlying state law and the lack of evidentiary foundation for key defenses like “the legitimate press function.” They are the reason why many of us view this case is likely to be reversed in either the state or federal systems. None of that is likely to dampen the thrill in this kill in Manhattan.

But if Biden wins the election before this conviction is overturned, history’s judgment will be deafening.

June 1, 2024. Tags: , , , , , . Donald Trump. Leave a comment.