I am curious if you bothered to actually read that article. It would appear you didn't since the entire thrust of this article is that intent to commit the other crime is all that is required.The experts say you are full of shit.
What Must Prosecutors Prove in Trump’s NY Trial?
Some in-the-weeds questions on which the New York Trump trial depends.www.lawfaremedia.org
Bragg must only prove A beyond a reasonable doubt, along with the intent to commit B, that potentially leaves prosecutors with more wiggle room to secure a conviction. Jurors might not buy with 99 percent certainty that the object crime was committed, but they could still vote to convict if they believe the intent was there.
[snip]
There’s no reference there to the other crime having actually been committed—just to the intent to carry it out or cover it up. “The way that I have always thought of this particular statute is that the element is intent to commit a crime,” Rebecca Roiphe, a professor at New York Law School and former assistant district attorney in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, explained.
[snip]
In fact, the New York Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court, considered this issue in People v. Taveras—and found that only intent is required.
[snip]
As in the Trump case, in Thompson, the Manhattan district attorney charged § 175.10 without charging the underlying object offense. Here, the appeals court found that the district attorney was not required to prove that the object offense had been committed.
[snip]
Pointing to McCumiskey and Crane, the appeals court held that “the jury's not guilty verdict on the counts of insurance fraud did not necessarily negate an essential element of the falsifying business records in the first degree counts.”
[snip]
Do all the jurors have to agree on which option among the three grouped in box B? An overview of the relevant law suggests that no, the jury does not need to be unanimous as to the object offense.
[snip]
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit blessed this interpretation of the statute in De Vonish v. Keane, writing, "A specific intent to commit a particular crime upon entry is not a material element of the offense under New York law. ... Rather, the State need prove only a general criminal intent”
The article you linked to shows your position is completely bogus and not supported by the law. It seems you are so deep in the cult you can't even see reality. Not only have NY courts upheld that the underlying crime doesn't have to have been committed, the Federal appeals court agreed that criminal intent is all that is required.