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Will Trump’s Barbs Land Him Behind Bars?
  + stars: | 2023-11-03 | by ( Susan Milligan | ) www.usnews.com   time to read: +9 min
It was a historic and jarring event when FBI agents searched former President Donald Trump's home last year to look for classified documents he was accused of hoarding. "Courts and prosecutors have to become normalized to the idea of detaining Trump – if he continues to violate gag orders and/or if he is convicted at trial," Signorelli says. Less-powerful defendants have been punished with time behind bars for being in contempt of court (including violating gag orders) or threatening authorities. Sam Bankman-Fried, the former billionaire crypto trader, was put behind bars in August weeks before his fraud trial after giving a media outlet private writings by a witness. While courts are sensitive to First Amendment protections – especially for someone running for president – Trump is pushing the legal envelope, Eisen says.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Trump, , Richard Signorelli, Signorelli, Tanya Chutkan, Alvin Bragg, Neama Rahmani, Vitali GossJankowski, Sam Bankman, Mark Meadows, Meadows, Jack Smith, Smith, Chutkan, Bill Barr, Norm Eisen, Trump's, – Trump, Eisen, Arthur F, Engoron, Fani Willis, Bernarda Villalona, William, Widge, Devaney, Baker McKenzie, it's, they're, Rahmani, You've Organizations: FBI, Trump, Capitol, New York, ABC, United Democracy Center, Philadelphia Locations: New York City, California, Georgia, New York, An Alabama, Fulton County, Trump, A Texas, Houston, Kings County, Brooklyn, New Jersey
Unlike federal prosecutors – who kept their indictments carefully restricted to easily understood and more provable infractions, with few co-defendants – Willis went big. Under the agreement, Powell entered a guilty plea in six misdemeanor counts of conspiracy to intentionally interfere with the election in Georgia, a state that President Joe Biden won narrowly. And it's bad for Trump," O'Brien says. Trump once considered appointing Powell as a special counsel investigating election fraud in late 2020, after he lost the election. Her guilty plea, entered in a Fulton County courthouse Thursday, means Powell is formally acknowledging her role in attempting to subvert the election Trump lost.
Persons: Fani Willis, Donald Trump, , – Willis, Rudy Giuliani, Scott McAfee, Willis, Sidney Powell, Trump, Scott Hall, Hall, Kevin O'Brien, Ford O'Brien Landy, O'Brien, Powell, Joe Biden, it's, Mai Ratakonda, Ratakonda, Giuliani, It's, Neal Katyal, Barack Obama Organizations: Fulton, Trump, United Democracy Center, of Locations: Fulton County, Coffee County, New York City, Georgia, of Georgia
Mark Meadows wants his criminal case moved to federal court, under an Obama-appointed judge. A federal judge may be more sympathetic to arguments that he's immune from the case, experts say. Meadows, Clark, and several other defendants have asked to have their cases removed to federal court. "A federal court judge might be more sympathetic to some of their federal constitutional defenses that they might want to raise," Ratakonda told Insider. A state court proceeding would also take in jurors from Fulton County, which voted overwhelmingly for Biden in 2020.
Persons: Mark Meadows, Obama, Trump, Mark Meadows —, Donald Trump's, , Barack Obama, Fani Willis, Jeffrey Clark, Joe Biden's, Meadows, Ronald Carlson, it'll, Mai Ratakonda, Ratakonda, Steve C, Jones, Clark, David Shafer, Cathleen Latham, Biden, Donald Trump, Sarah Silbiger, Norm Eisen, Brad Raffensperger, they're, Eisen, Azmi Haroun Organizations: Service, Meadows, Justice, Trump, University of Georgia School of Law, United Democracy Center, White, Prosecutors, Georgia, States United Democracy Center Locations: Wall, Silicon, Fulton County, Trump, Georgia, Joe Biden's Georgia, Meadows, Clark
"I think a gag order is likely, I'm just not sure if it will be enforced," former federal prosecutor Neama Rahmani told CNBC. "A lot of the judges that I've seen cover these types of political cases, they've been all bark, no bite," he said. Indeed, Trump's political operation has heavily featured the indictments in its fundraising pitches and in other campaign messages. "Maybe, but you have to be willing to enforce that gag order." "However, the need to protect that information does not require a blanket gag order over all documents produced by the government."
Persons: Donald Trump, Sam Wolfe, Neama Rahmani, I've, they've, Norm Eisen, Matthew Galluzzo, Galluzzo, Joshua Ritter, " Ritter, Ritter, Jack Smith, Fani Willis, Trump, Manhattan DA Alvin, Tanya Chutkan, Rahmani, Smith, , Koch, RINO, Trump's Organizations: U.S, Republican, Reuters, Trump, White, CNBC, United Democracy Center, Manhattan DA, Super, Name, Department of, DOJ, Manhattan Locations: Columbia , South Carolina, U.S, New York, Los Angeles, Fulton County, China, Miami
California legal authorities want to disbar John Eastman for trying to keep Donald Trump in power. Following Trump's loss in the 2020 election, Eastman, a former professor at the Chapman University School of Law, drafted legal memos that purported to offer avenues to keep him in office. The former law professor is one of many lawyers allied with Trump who has faced professional consequences for pursuing false conspiracy theories about the 2020 election. Giuliani has also been sued by election technology companies he implicated in false conspiracy theories about the election results, and has lost his ability to practice law in New York. Jeffrey Clark, a former Trump Administration Justice Department official who tried to overturn the election results, is also facing charges from the DC bar.
Alabama's top elections official is withdrawing the state from a nonprofit known as ERIC. Founded in 2012, ERIC began as a collaboration by election officials in seven states, four of them Republican. A powerful outlierOfficials, including Republicans, have credited the organization with helping clean up their voter lists and prevent fraudulent votes. A former state legislator, Allen was dubbed an "election denier" by the States United Democracy Center, a bipartisan group that promotes election integrity, over his support for overturning the results of the 2020 election. With or without Alabama, he said, ERIC will continue to focus on "improving the accuracy of America's voter rolls and increasing access to voter registration for all eligible citizens."
Republicans who stated without evidence that the 2020 presidential election was rigged lost secretary-of-state elections in two key battleground states and remained in tight races with Democrats in two other swing states Wednesday. Candidates who said the election was stolen from former President Donald Trump ran for secretary of state in 12 of 27 states this year, according to an analysis by States United Democracy Center, a bipartisan nonprofit group, turning normally low-key races for offices that oversee elections into closely watched contests.
Election deniers are running in key battleground states during the 2022 midterms. Kari Lake and Mark Finchem are going for two positions that could influence election procedures in Arizona. Experts told the NYT that election deniers could refuse election results in the 2024 presidential race. As secretary of state, Finchem could revise election procedures that would alter rules that deal with everything from voter registration to election certification procedures. In one of these introduced laws, proposed in Arizona in January, state legislators would have the power to change the election results.
If election deniers in those races win, their ability to affect future elections could be made more robust by having cooperative election deniers in their state houses to help push legislation remaking certain election laws in those states. The group’s analysis found that election deniers were most prevalent in Arizona state legislative races, where they made up 87% of all Republican nominees in those races. In both Pennsylvania and Michigan, 62% of all Republican state legislative nominees in each state were election deniers, the group found. In Minnesota, 42% of all Republican nominees in state legislative races were election deniers, while in Nevada, 31% were. That included several incumbents and candidates in Minnesota who'd who had questioned or challenged the results of the 2020 election.
Oct 24 (Reuters) - Challenges to election results are not new in the United States. That has raised fears among election experts that 2022 will see a wave of baseless rejections of vote tallies. There are multiple points where a rogue official could disrupt the process – by refusing to certify results, for instance. THE FUTURESeveral election experts said they are more concerned about the 2024 election than 2022, given how many Trump-inspired election deniers are running for key positions this year. A Washington Post analysis found more than half of Republican candidates for Congress and key statewide offices have questioned the 2020 results.
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