A bigger fish from Cohen tapes

quit pretending I said something I didn't asshole

I didn't--and quit calling me names--that is juvenile. You said "what should we do with the people who attack Americans in the street because trump is going to prison?"

I don't know what you are talking about with "Trump is going to prison" part, but you said people who attack other people in the street (I assume both groups are Americans). If a person attacks another person in the street or anyplace else that is usually some form of assault, not terrorism, unless you are leaving out some facts.

Is this something that already happened or just a hypothetical?
 
Pleading not guilty would have cost him (I think he said) $8000 to retain a legitimate lawyer. He plead "no contest," he said he would not plead guilty to something he didn't do.
I can ask him tonight, I'll see him at our pool match.

They let some people do an Alford plea which is the same as guilty/no contest but you are saying you are not admitting you did anything wrong. No contest plea means they cannot use your admission of factual guilt in a civil case if you are sued later.
 
I didn't--and quit calling me names--that is juvenile. You said "what should we do with the people who attack Americans in the street because trump is going to prison?"

I don't know what you are talking about with "Trump is going to prison" part, but you said people who attack other people in the street (I assume both groups are Americans). If a person attacks another person in the street or anyplace else that is usually some form of assault, not terrorism, unless you are leaving out some facts.

Is this something that already happened or just a hypothetical?





the dutch have it on tape asshole


Trump is going to be caught soon


then Fox "news" listeners who sleep with their guns are going try to kill us


your assholes love an excuse to shoot people
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allen_Weisselberg



Allen Howard Weisselberg (born August 15, 1947) is an American businessman. He is the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) of The Trump Organization.
Weisselberg was born in Brooklyn, New York[1] and went to Thomas Jefferson High School. He received an accounting degree from Pace College in 1970.[2]
Following college, Weisselberg worked for real estate magnate Fred Trump and The Trump Organization. By the late 1980s, he was controller of the organization and worked under CFO Stephen Bollenbach.[2] In 2000, Weisselberg was named Vice President of Trump Hotels & Casino Resorts. He also served as treasurer of the Donald J. Trump Foundation.[2]
On January 11, 2017, it was announced that Weisselberg would serve as a trustee at the Trump Organization alongside Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr while Donald Trump serves as President of the United States.[1] Weisselberg lived in Nassau County on Long Island as of 2005.[1] He appeared as a judge on the seventh episode of the second season of The Apprentice.

trumpy is going to prison
 
Another way prosecutors can misuse grand juries is to present a lousy case to avoid indictments. Some say that is what happened in Ferguson, MO.

The prosecution works with cops every day. When a cop kills someone, a weak case means no indictment and the prosecutor can blame the grand jury, taking the public heat off.

Another issue is that grand juries are empaneled for extended periods. They get to know the prosecutors and their staff members, often on a first name basis.
 
trumpy is going to prison

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Another way prosecutors can misuse grand juries is to present a lousy case to avoid indictments. Some say that is what happened in Ferguson, MO.

I see you are another moron who avoids facts in these cases.

Offering the most definitive account yet of the shooting of an unarmed black teenager that stirred racially charged protests across the country, the Justice Department has cleared a Ferguson, Mo., police officer of civil rights violations in the death last August of Michael Brown.

In an 86-page report released Wednesday that detailed and evaluated the testimony of more than 40 witnesses, the Justice Department largely corroborated or found little credible evidence to contradict the account of the officer, Darren Wilson, who is white.


The rest of your post was just mindless blather not worthy of repeating.
 
Years ago before the company closed, a friend and co-worker was laid off just after he went through a messy and costly divorce. He started to date a coke dealer and went on a coke bender. He was a good guy, never in any trouble. After a few months, he dumped her, quit doing coke and got a good job. Shortly thereafter, she got busted. His phone no. was on her phone records and prosecutors "thought" he was involved in distribution (he just partied, never sold to anyone). Using her lies and the lies of a few others (they never searched his car or home, never found a shred of evidence he did anything at all), the prosecution took this case to a Grand Jury, they handed down an indictment recommending 5 or 6 felony charges. Over a year and a half after he Quit partying and became re-employed, he was arrested. The arrest cost him his job and he couldn't afford to fight the charges, so he pled to 2 of them and spent 3 or 4 months in jail. He got out and has been gainfully employed ever since and has never done any drugs since the time he spent with that whore.
Now, tell me this was right. (BTW, we're still friends).

Sure is shit isn't. He suffered because he was stupid and made poor decisions. 3-4 months in jail for 2 felonies? Sounds like he got a light sentence.

Looks like he was exposed to the world of lots of people in jail or prison that were stupid, made poor decisions and couldn't afford an adequate defense.
 
Another way prosecutors can misuse grand juries is to present a lousy case to avoid indictments. Some say that is what happened in Ferguson, MO.

The prosecution works with cops every day. When a cop kills someone, a weak case means no indictment and the prosecutor can blame the grand jury, taking the public heat off.

Another issue is that grand juries are empaneled for extended periods. They get to know the prosecutors and their staff members, often on a first name basis.

There is also conflict because prosecutors will blame police for poor paperwork or preparation making it difficult to prosecute a case. I once served on a curriculum committee and the criminal justice department wanted to drop an English requirement from the associate degree requirements. The advisory committee would usually approve the recommendations of the department but the prosecutors, judges, and administrators in the room all objected. They wanted better writing ability by the officers.

Sometimes prosecutors will present a case to a grand jury when it involves a prominent person, police officer, etc. They may not think they have a good case but they do not want to be blamed for favoritism, so they let the grand jury decide.
 
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