Is Keir Starmer Really Going To Arrest...
News0 min ago
...of crimes similar to those Trump was convicted of what would be the range of punishments they faced?
No best answer has yet been selected by sandyRoe. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Apparently each of those 34 convictions carries a maximum 4 year prison sentence; but commentators have said that as a first offence (and a white collar, non-violent crime), plus Trump’s age – someone else might get away without jail time.
If I were the judge, I’d jail Trump for 4 years (with all running concurrently).
I think he will be jailed (at sentencing on 11 July), due to his total contempt for the entire legal system/process [breaking the gag-orders (10 times), attacking the judge and prosecutors – claiming the whole thing is a witch-hunt, and those prosecuting him are very bad people, and that he has done nothing wrong].
Normally a judge would be looking for contrition from a convicted criminal (not total defiance).
My money is on a fine - no way is Trump going to be jailed. The logistics are a brain-scrambler...as ex-President, he has a Secret Service detail so they would have to spend time in jail too. And it's unlikely they would give up their arms (and firearms aren't allowed in jail).
But if he *did* get a custodial sentence, there are a number of closed prisons which could re-open - just for Trump.
But the logistics of a President who is also a convicted felon are a real brain-scrambler. Let's assume he wins in November...will he be free to travel to countries who ban convicted felons from entering?
I think a fine is the most likely sentence.
Not because it's Trump, but because the nature of the crime does not merit a custodial sentence.
This was originally a 'misdemeaour' until it got hiked up to a 'felony' in order to batter Trump with it.
He will pay the fine, and continue to bleat about how wrong it all was, until he is elected, and then he will pardon himself.
sandyRoe, an ordinalry citizen would not have had the trial in the first palce, it would have been deemed not in the Public interest.
It was a felony, and who knows what would have happened in the 2016 United States presidential election if that information had not been suppressed in that way. It was a very tight election already.
https:/
To convict Trump, the jury had to be certain he falsified his business records, and that he did so intending to conceal or commit a second crime.
The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office’s case went like this: With Trump’s approval, his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, paid adult film star Stormy Daniels $130,000 to stay silent about an alleged sexual encounter so as not to derail Trump’s 2016 campaign. Trump then approved a fraudulent scheme to disguise the reimbursement to Cohen as legal expenses to hide the hush money.
In doing so, he ran afoul of election rules, prosecutors said, which amounted to “election fraud, pure and simple.”
Andy
whilst for most felons it'd be unlikely that jail time would be the likely outcome, with Trump you have aggravating considerations - his constant breaking of gag orders and attacks on the judge. It's feasible (although very unlikely) that he could get jail time because he's shown disrespect for the legal process and is clearly unrepentant.
I think it won't matter the sentence. He has already appealed and because of the levels of appeal in the US he will get the lawyers to stretch the process out so far and for so long a time - by the time it is finalised he will have served another four years as President, retired and died. It is all academic, as he is well aware.
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