In electoral college adjusted polls, former president Trump either leads, or threatens electoral win in November's election.
Trump's appointees / buddies in the judicial have tried to run interference for the most criminal president in history.
Trump v. United States seemed to offer Trump some cover for his own manifold misdeeds. Despite that Supreme Court ruling special counsel Jack Smith
has opted to proceed against Trump:
Special Counsel Says Trump Committed ‘Private Crimes’ in Bid to Stay in Power
A legal expert breaks down the Supreme Court’s decision granting sweeping immunity to former presidents for acts while in office, and what it means for Donald Trump’s 2020 election interference case.
Special counsel Jack Smith, seeking to kick-start the federal prosecution of Donald Trump on election-interference charges, laid out a 165-page road map for allegations that the former president “resorted to crimes” to remain in power after losing the 2020 election.
The filing, unsealed Wednesday in a Washington, D.C., trial court, amounted to a defense of the case even after a recent Supreme Court ruling that conferred broad immunity on presidents for official acts at the core of their constitutional powers. Smith’s team asserts that Trump’s “scheme was fundamentally a private one,” leaving him open for prosecution.
Trump's appointees / buddies in the judicial have tried to run interference for the most criminal president in history.
Trump v. United States seemed to offer Trump some cover for his own manifold misdeeds. Despite that Supreme Court ruling special counsel Jack Smith
has opted to proceed against Trump:
Special Counsel Says Trump Committed ‘Private Crimes’ in Bid to Stay in Power
Prosecutors’ submission of evidence says Trump was unconcerned about Vice President Pence’s safety on Jan. 6, 2021
By C. Ryan Barber and Sadie Gurman / Updated Oct. 2, 2024 8:04 pm ETA legal expert breaks down the Supreme Court’s decision granting sweeping immunity to former presidents for acts while in office, and what it means for Donald Trump’s 2020 election interference case.
Special counsel Jack Smith, seeking to kick-start the federal prosecution of Donald Trump on election-interference charges, laid out a 165-page road map for allegations that the former president “resorted to crimes” to remain in power after losing the 2020 election.
The filing, unsealed Wednesday in a Washington, D.C., trial court, amounted to a defense of the case even after a recent Supreme Court ruling that conferred broad immunity on presidents for official acts at the core of their constitutional powers. Smith’s team asserts that Trump’s “scheme was fundamentally a private one,” leaving him open for prosecution.