ImLawBoy wrote: ↑Tue Jun 04, 2024 10:01 am
Kurth wrote: ↑Sat Jun 01, 2024 12:19 am
ImLawBoy wrote: ↑Fri May 31, 2024 5:55 pm
Kurth wrote:It's only when we classify that hush money payment as a "campaign expense" that was funded by an undisclosed campaign contribution from Trump to his own campaign that we venture into any illegality. And that is really a technical campaign contribution disclosure issue considering that a candidate doesn't face any limits or caps on his or her own contributions to their campaign.
You say you don't have an issue with the law, but this is precisely what the law does. He's making illegal contributions to his campaign by funneling money from his business. You're right that he could have written a personal check and been done with it but he didn't. He went the illegal route instead.
I don’t know why we’re missing each other here: I say I don’t have issues with the law because I don’t. What Trump did is and should be a crime. Campaign finance disclosure laws are important, generally speaking, and so are laws against falsifications of business records. The statutory scheme seems to allow enough latitude to the sentencing judge to decide here between probation and up to 4 years in prison (assuming concurrent sentences on all counts).
No issue with the law. Objectively, I’d probably have an issue with the judge if he sentences Trump to jail time for this first offense. I’d be open to explanation and could be convinced, but my gut reaction would be that jail time here would be inappropriate.
But that wouldn’t mean I have an issue with the law. Only with its application in this case.
Been away from the forum for a few days, but wanted to come back to (hopefully) close the loop on this one. To the extent you think that, in the totality of the circumstances, convicted felon Donald Trump's crimes are not worthy of jail time, that's fine. It's a reasonable, justifiable position.
I think where we're missing each other is where you have a few times referred to the campaign finance violation as "technical". Something about that characterization sticks in my craw, as it seems to be an attempt to minimize the behavior which is a clear violation of the law as written and intended. It's similar in my mind to when people talk about a criminal defendant getting acquitted on a "technicality", when the reality may be that the police blatantly violated the defendant's civil rights to coerce a confession or to obtain evidence. Civil rights aren't technicalities, and laws that work as written and intended aren't technicalities, at least not in my mind.
Anyway, I don't mean to restart anything but I at least wanted to address your comments.
Welcome back, and thanks for the explanation.
But this doesn’t make any sense to me. There are more and less egregious violations of laws. They are still all violations and literally (technically), all are crimes which, if proven, should result in conviction and sentencing within the statutory framework.
This could not be any more different than a defendant escaping conviction because a cop blatantly violated his or her civil rights. Trump wasn’t acquitted. He’s a convicted felon and, barring an unlikely successful appeal, will remain so. And a cop violating someone’s civil rights - especially “blatantly” as in your example - should never be considered a “technicality.” That example is a more egregious violation of the law, and it’s action the law is specifically designed to prohibit.
And in any event, we’re talking about sentencing and whether Trump deserves a lighter sentence within the statutory framework or a harsher one.
Calling what Trump did a “technical” violation does not mean, in my mind, it’s a misapplication of the law. But it is, as has been explained by many legal experts and talking heads, a “novel” application of the law. Trump, as is his nature, was engaged in shady shit. But it’s really not the kind of shady shit the law was designed to get after.
That, combined with his lack of priors, no real victim impact statement, and age and poor (I mean, absolutely the best) health, and there’s a compelling case for probation.
All, well within the law, even if not the outcome I’d like to see in my heart of hearts.