From:
slider@anashram.com
To live outside the law, Bob Dylan sang, you must be honest. It also
helps, apparently, to stay as clear as possible from Donald Trump, whose
inner circle of advisers has suffered steady attrition since 2017, through
a series of encounters with the criminal justice system.
On Thursday, the former White House strategist Steve Bannon became the
latest Trump intimate to be taken into custody, when the Chinese-owned
yacht on which he was sunburning was boarded by agents of the US Postal Service.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/aug/21/donald-trump-law-crime-steve-bannon
Bannon was accused of defrauding people who gave tens of millions to a
private fund which existed, Bannon claimed, to finance the construction of
a wall on the border with Mexico. The real purpose of that fund and
others, federal prosecutors say, was to cover the “luxury” lifestyle expenses of Bannon and his fellow defendants.
“This entire fiasco is to stop people who want to build the wall,” Bannon declared outside a Manhattan courthouse, proclaiming his innocence.
Depending on how – and whom – you count, Bannon was the seventh former close Trump adviser to be arrested, face charges, plead guilty or to be convicted of a crime since the 45th president took office.
Former campaign chairman Paul Manafort (convicted: tax fraud, bank fraud)
is in home confinement due to Covid-19; former adviser Roger Stone
(convicted: obstruction, false statements) received a presidential
commutation; former adviser Michael Cohen (guilty plea: campaign finance crimes, lying to Congress) is in home confinement; former national
security adviser Michael Flynn (guilty plea: lying to the FBI) is awaiting
a ruling on a request to dismiss charges; former adviser Rick Gates
(guilty plea: lying to investigators) has completed a prison term; and
former adviser George Papadopoulos (guilty plea: lying) has completed a
prison term.
“I believe it unprecedented in any US administration for so many of the closest circle of persons around the president to have been shown to be
conmen, grifters and base criminals,” said Patrick Cotter, a former
federal prosecutor who was part of the team that convicted the Gambino
family boss John Gotti, in an email.
“While previous administrations had their share of those trying to
personally profit and those willing to break the law to serve the
political interests of the president, what is unique about the Trump administration is the large number of people in direct contact with the president, often for years, who are revealed to be out-and-out fraudsters
for whom crime is apparently part of their lifestyle and character.”
As his re-election campaign enters full swing, Trump has made an effort to brand himself as the president of “law and order”. But Trump himself has
at times appeared to sail within dangerous distance of criminal legal
hazards.
During impeachment proceedings that straddled the turn of this year,
Democrats and the Republican senator Mitt Romney voted to remove Trump for abuse of power.
Robert Mueller detailed nearly a dozen potential instances of obstruction
of justice by Trump during the Russia investigation, though the special
counsel did not propose criminal charges.
Before that, Trump paid $2m in fines and closed his family’s “charity” foundation, admitting it had used donations to pay campaign and business expenses.
The prosecutors in that case, in the New York state attorney general’s office, are currently investigating Trump’s banking and tax conduct, while federal prosecutors in New York – the ones bringing charges against Bannon – are also looking at alleged graft by Trump’s inauguration committee.
The Manhattan district attorney is investigating Trump’s tax records, as
are multiple congressional committees.
Trump says he is a victim of a witch-hunt by politically motivated
prosecutors. His critics say that in fact the full scope of Trump’s
alleged criminal conduct is unknown because he is using the power of the presidency to block details from coming to light.
Continued arrests of former associates could at some stage pose a threat
to Trump himself, if one decided to cooperate with prosecutors against
Trump, legal analysts have said. But past speculation about the dangers of
such a “flipped” witness have not been borne out – in part perhaps because
Trump has demonstrated a willingness to pardon his friends for their wrongdoing, decreasing any incentive to “flip”.
Consider Trump’s clemency for Stone; the justice department’s efforts to drop the case against Flynn, which the courts have not yet granted;
attorney general William Barr’s sudden removal of prosecutors seen as threatening to Trump; and Trump’s deployment of the might of the justice department to stop his tax records being handed to state authorities and Congress, in a case that reached the supreme court.
Barr and Trump have denied using the levers of American justice to
prosecute the president’s enemies and protect his friends. But
evidence-heavy charging documents against figures in Trump’s orbit keep stacking up.
“Why this unprecedented situation?” said Cotter, now a Chicago-based officer with the Greensfelder law firm.
“My almost 40 years working in criminal law has taught me that criminals
of a particular type tend to associate with other criminals of the same
type. There is a comfort level and mutual understanding in such
associations.
“So when I see a swarm of conmen buzzing around one particular man, in
this case Trump, my experience suggests that it is because they recognize
one of their own. And in selecting them to be his confidants, the
president also recognized kindred spirits.”
It just keeps happening. But it has not happened to Trump, yet.
### - pure gangster-shit innit heh + tax evasion is how they finally got
capone too?
the truth always comes out in the end though huh, lies & deceit don't
stand the test of time!
and because "by their fruits shall you know them!" (for a bunch of crooks
lol)
and sooo openly that trumpy has prolly now damaged the republican party &
their rep for decades to come!
gud :)))
(imho, they should all be fined every last cent they have and all that
money given back to the people they stole if from: the 80%)
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: www.darkrealms.ca (1:229/2)