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IPFS News Link • Criminal Justice System

Yielding to Temptation: Why The Trump Case is a Test Not Just for the President but the Legal System

• http://www.ronpaulinstitute.org by jonathan turley

Here is the column:

Oscar Wilde once said "The only way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it. Resist it, and your soul grows sick with longing for the things it has forbidden to itself."

With the release of the indictment of former President Donald Trump, Manhattan District Alvin Bragg has revealed himself as a follower of the Wilde school of legal thought. Bragg knew that he had no criminal case against Trump. However, after running on bagging Trump for some crime (any crime), Bragg knew that many would not care if he had a basis for a criminal charge. He would be lionized to be the first person to ever indict a former president in the blind rage against Trump.

After charging Trump with 34 counts, Bragg insisted that he will convict Trump of the "crime to promote a [political] candidacy through unlawful means." He insists that he will prove "attempts to violate state and federal election laws."

For months, many have raised objections to the effort of Manhattan District Attorney to use a flawed legal theory to essentially litigate a federal election violation that the Justice Department opted not to charge. This bootstrap theory has been widely criticized, but many in the media sought to cut off that debate by suggesting that Bragg might be basing his prosecution on some unknown crime. Last week, Michael Cohen's attorney Lanny Davis went as far to "warn all the pundits and everyone speculating…that there are lots of facts, lots of documents, lots of evidence of multiple crimes."


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