Couple Ls for the fat man
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I watched an attorney (one who is licensed, if that's the word, to argue before SCOTUS) talk about this. He made some interesting points.
First of all, the decisions by the lower appellate courts gave no legal basis for denying the appeal. One of judgments was only one page long, with no cited law. The other, though longer, also cited no legal basis for denial. They just said "nope."
However, and I think this is where SCOTUS is coming from, he questioned whether SCOTUS actually has jurisdiction in this case. I forget his reasoning for this - I'll have to rewatch it - but it makes sense if that's the case.
On the bright side, just like the child-molester, Trump can effectively pardon himself.
wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 13:19 last edited by@George-K said in Couple Ls for the fat man:
However, and I think this is where SCOTUS is coming from, he questioned whether SCOTUS actually has jurisdiction in this case
His point is that there was no statement of jurisdiction in the appeal - IOW, why SCOTUS should hear this case. The "right way to do this would be to file an appeal in US district court on a writ of prohibition. If that's denied go to SCOTUS."
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I watched an attorney (one who is licensed, if that's the word, to argue before SCOTUS) talk about this. He made some interesting points.
First of all, the decisions by the lower appellate courts gave no legal basis for denying the appeal. One of judgments was only one page long, with no cited law. The other, though longer, also cited no legal basis for denial. They just said "nope."
However, and I think this is where SCOTUS is coming from, he questioned whether SCOTUS actually has jurisdiction in this case. I forget his reasoning for this - I'll have to rewatch it - but it makes sense if that's the case.
On the bright side, just like the child-molester, Trump can effectively pardon himself.
wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 13:37 last edited by jon-nyc 1 Oct 2025, 13:38@George-K said in Couple Ls for the fat man:
First of all, the decisions by the lower appellate courts gave no legal basis for denying the appeal. One of judgments was only one page long, with no cited law. The other, though longer, also cited no legal basis for denial. They just said "nope."
I haven't read the judgement. But the case seemed pretty weak according to Advisory Opinions analysis yesterday. TFM made three arguments: (1) Immunity gives him the right to stay sentencing pending appeal , (2) Some evidence shouldn't have been allowed due to presidential immunity, (3) he's president elect, so he's special.
(1) It's true that in general, claims of immunity are adjudicated before court proceeding start (or continue) because immunity gives you immunity from the process itself. But this doesn't really apply since the crimes he was convicted of occurred before he was president.
(2) Some evidence introduced was from when he was president and might not have been allowed. This is true as far as it goes, but in general sentencing doesn't stop just because a defendant wants to appeal some evidence. You appeal after sentencing.
(3) The constitution doesn't recognize president-elect as a 'citizen+'. And while it's true he is busy interviewing people for roles, this stuff even happens before elections. We have one president at a time, and the fat man aint him.
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 13:37 last edited by
Is there anybody in the legal profession that doesn't think Bragg's case gets overturned?
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 13:40 last edited by
If that happens, think of how historic TFM will be. The first convicted felon to be president, and the president to have his felony convictions overturned. He's just racking up the records here.
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 14:27 last edited by
Hysterical.
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 14:31 last edited by 89th 1 Oct 2025, 14:32
Trump will be known in the history books for his MAGA movement and January 6th. Maybe for presiding over COVID. And his business successes and bankruptcies, and I guess felonies, too. Oh and maybe giving Elon a blowjob, but future kids will claim it's AI.
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 14:44 last edited by
SCOTUS:
https://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/courtorders/010925zr_2d8f.pdf
The application for stay presented to Justice Sotomayor and
by her referred to the Court is denied for, inter alia, the
following reasons. First, the alleged evidentiary violations at
President-Elect Trump’s state-court trial can be addressed in the
ordinary course on appeal. Second, the burden that sentencing
will impose on the President-Elect’s responsibilities is
relatively insubstantial in light of the trial court’s stated
intent to impose a sentence of “unconditional discharge” after a
brief virtual hearing.Justice Thomas, Justice Alito, Justice Gorsuch, and Justice
Kavanaugh would grant the application.
IOW, the reason SCOTUS declined is because, as I noted above, the appeal process had not run its course.
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 14:57 last edited by
Yep. Same as my #2. #s 1 and 3 don’t apply.
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 14:57 last edited by
What a good look that Alito calls Trump to request a favor knowing more Trump shit was headed his way this week.
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 16:32 last edited by
“Trump receives unconditional discharge”.
Headline? Or porn flick?
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 17:02 last edited by
A judge sentenced Trump to an unconditional discharge today. I can relate. I had one of those at the Fair in 2007 after a bacon wrapped deep-fried cheesecake. Prayers up to the President elect.
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 17:11 last edited by
Wait til he meets Bubba, who’s giving the unconditional discharge.
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 18:13 last edited by
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 18:26 last edited by
As a tactic, this is the kind of stuff that elected Trump.
Now, this is going to be overturned. When it is, does a really nice case for violating Trump's civil rights exist? I've read some think it does...
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 18:26 last edited by
Secondly, is there a civil case in here, somewhere?
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He gets sentenced in NY (5-4 SCOTUS) and Jack Smith can release his report. (As he should, it’s the law. Remember Hur’s report?)
I guess this will officially make him a convicted felon.
wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 19:38 last edited by@jon-nyc said in Couple Ls for the fat man:
(...Remember Hur’s report?)
You mean the one that said the dried up, grifting, child molester was too senile to take to court despite his crimes? That report?
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 19:41 last edited by jon-nyc 1 Oct 2025, 19:41
The one the said over and over there was insufficient evidence to pursue him and then he threw in that comment so he’d be a magat hero instead of a magat goat.
But the point is the Biden DoJ released it.
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The one the said over and over there was insufficient evidence to pursue him and then he threw in that comment so he’d be a magat hero instead of a magat goat.
But the point is the Biden DoJ released it.
wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 19:44 last edited by@jon-nyc said in Couple Ls for the fat man:
The one the said over and over there was insufficient evidence to pursue him
That’s the rub. Trump’s won’t show there was insufficient evidence to pursue him. Just not enough time, especially after scotus hit the ‘start over’ button in July.
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The one the said over and over there was insufficient evidence to pursue him and then he threw in that comment so he’d be a magat hero instead of a magat goat.
But the point is the Biden DoJ released it.
wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 19:56 last edited by@jon-nyc said in Couple Ls for the fat man:
The one the said over and over there was insufficient evidence to pursue him and then he threw in that comment so he’d be a magat hero instead of a magat goat.
But the point is the Biden DoJ released it.
IOW, you're willing to accept Hur's comment that there's insufficent evidence, but you won't accept the Hur's comment that, at the time the geezer was not quite as brain-addled as he is now.
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wrote on 10 Jan 2025, 21:38 last edited by
I mentioned the Hur report. Despite knowing exactly what I was referring to you pretended to ask a clarifying question while your real intention was to frame it differently with some commentary. I did the same.