The arraignment seems to be taking a lot longer than these things usually go. Wisely, the judge decided not to have cameras running the courtroom to limit the potential for theatrics, but the specific charges are not yet in the public eye until the proceeding is over.
The case # is 71543-23 and paper copies of the indictment have been released to reporters, so it'll probably be available in the next hour or two. Reporters who were in court said it's a barebones indictment with 34 felony (class E) counts of falsifying business records, along with a 'statement of facts' summarizing the case. No gag orders from the court, but judge admonished both parties to restrain their rhetoric in public statements.
So much for equality under law. People spend weeks without being released on their own recognizance even for petty traffic violations.
Handcuffs, orange suits and sleeping on concrete for days for the rest of us.
Why bother to begin with?
Which in your opinion is worse? The guilty getting away with their crimes or being punished unequally with high profile defendants getting the "white glove" treatment and a joke of a sentence? Delayed justice is better than an open mockery of it like this.
If he is accused of a crime treat him like any criminal would get treated in that situation and jurisdiction(assuring his safety of course by giving him a private cell and allowing secret service). If he is guilty then his prior role as president or his wealth and age should not be a factor in sentencing.
It shouldn't matter how it appears or the riots and outrage and public opinion it might cause.
The indictment is not the problem but how he just strolls in and out like it was a dentist appointment all for appearances sake. Who else gets treated this way with their personal bodyguards even accompanying them through the whole thing.
You mean punishment to prevent crime in the future. That isn't justice, is it worth it given the cost?
> It does, though. It objectively matters in terms of actual, predictable outcomes.
You don't get what I am saying, yes it matters in a general sense but for the purpose of administering justice it does not matter and it is irrelevant. It isn't despair either what I am saying, I am simply stating the fact that this is injustice being portrayed as justice, a perversion of justice if you will.
What cost is being incurred here that wouldn't be even higher with actual justice? What do you actually want the authorities to do that is both politically feasible and would have a better outcome? If they overreach too hard, we won't even get the punishment, and the precedent is set that it's fine to use the presidency for personal gain. That's the cost that's truly too high.
I think you highlighted the core problem of political practicality here. Neither the precedent set, politics nor the chances of succeesful prosecution should override the very critical thing that gives prosecutors and the courts authority to prosecute, judge and punish people to begin with: that they administer justice and they do so equally.
I would much rather prefer everyone be treated nicely like donald than donald be treated as harshly as others.
But the end goal is not to punish trump at all costs regardless of what he has done. You can kill someone and be justified under the right context! The purpose of this system in theory and practice should be equal administration of justice which begins before you are are indicted and arressted and ends at completion of punishment or being found not guilty.
If others would spend days in jail, so should donald. If others get a slap on the wrist or something worse so should donald.
I mean he literally extorted a foreign head of state over military aid and even after his time in office he has not been prosecuted. Again, justice keeps taking the back sear when it comes to trump, that is my frustration, how america has devalued it.
Bail is designed to ensure you show back up for proceedings, and to protect the community if you present a danger to others. If you don't present a danger to others and you aren't running anywhere, then personal recognizance makes sense. It's an imperfect system but the solution is to give personal recognizance bail to more people not fewer.
Ok, I have no problem with him being released. I have a problem with him skipping the line and being out in an hour or two. Even serious white collar criminals spend a night before even seeing a judge and making a plea.
Are you suggesting that he would use his executive authority to punish people for cheering that he was arrested?
I would consider that an absolute bar to him being elected, regardless of who he would punish. The fact that many people would approve of that mis-use of power -- perhaps enough to get him elected -- implies that democracy itself has failed.
Of course such people also seem convinced that the indictment here is faulty -- either that he's not guilty of the crimes, or that they are petty, and are only being prosecuted for political reasons.
So from their point of view, democracy has already failed. Which is what he's been telling them for three years.
From a red vs blue politics perspective, team blue should not be surprised if a vindictive Trump uses this precedent to go after Biden and Obama for equally stupid nonsense.
The case # is 71543-23 and paper copies of the indictment have been released to reporters, so it'll probably be available in the next hour or two. Reporters who were in court said it's a barebones indictment with 34 felony (class E) counts of falsifying business records, along with a 'statement of facts' summarizing the case. No gag orders from the court, but judge admonished both parties to restrain their rhetoric in public statements.
Update, here's the indictment: https://www.manhattanda.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Donal...
...and the statement of facts: https://www.manhattanda.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Donal...