Even the most carefully guarded prisoners are vulnerable to violence from other prisoners. Protecting presidents is a big deal, which is why we have an entire federal law enforcement agency dedicated specifically to it.
There are plenty of prisoners for whom meeting another prisons would be death sentence, far more so than trump (ask Trump’s buddy Sammy the Bull about that)
Even if special accomodations are required for the secret service that would surely entail a higher security prison not a lower security one.
My utterly uniformed gut instinct is that Merchan might give Trump a token jail sentence. Not enough to make it impossible for him to run for president, (in order to avoid the impression that it was a Biden plot to eliminate a rival) but enough that he gets it nailed into his thick skull that his illegal actions have consequences.
If that is the case, then just for irony’s sake I would like Mercha to say to Trump. “I’m sending you to jail, but I’m gonna let you out in two-weeks.”
That would be perfect. And then, two weeks later when Trump’s attorneys ask why he wasn’t freed, he’d say, “I never said two weeks. I said some time soon. Fake news!”
You dont get to go free just because you filed an appeal.
Right.
4 years- most suspended. Some supervised release. Maybe some period of house arrest.
Here is what happened to Martha Stewart - 1st time, senior citizen, white collar crime- per wiki-
After a highly publicized six-week jury trial, Stewart was found guilty in March 2004 of felony charges of conspiracy to obstruct, of obstruction of an agency proceeding, and of making false statements to federal investigators and was sentenced in July 2004 to serve a five-month term in a federal correctional facility and a two-year period of supervised release (including five months of electronic monitoring).[56]
I would expect most likely that the term would be house arrest. But the cases are somethat similar.
So was Martha.
But theoretically this could call for 30+ 4 year prison sentences- that will not happen.
Yes, in another thread I quoted a senior but retired Secret Service agent who said actual prison would be “too problematic”. But hell, supervised close house arrest with no phone and no internet could occur instead- and that would be just as bad… or good depending on how you look at it.
Also, a number of other democracies have had former national leaders imprisoned, and I have not come across evidence they either had bodyguards in lockup or suffered serious injury (although I might be missing some minor dust up.)
I’m afraid the difference here is what’s sometimes called the imperial presidency. POTUS unfortunately combines the jobs of prime minister, king, and emperor.
For what-Good behavior?
Contrition?
His tendency to follow rules laid out by the court?
Judge Merchant would be wise to weigh mitigating factors (defendant’s age) with aggravating factors (although this is his first criminal conviction, he has been found in other civil court to have defrauded and defamed people, so this is not an isolated incident) when deciding his sentence.
White collar crime, no priors, elderly, poor health. The Judge is determined to treat trump like any other person. It would be so unusual to get 30+ four year consecutive terms that that would be certainly overturned on appeal.
The Judge will keep the sentence within historical parameters. Like maybe what Martha Stewart got.
Anyway, this is what I predict.
If you want to predict 30+ four year consecutive terms - they please do. But somehow I have missed your post here in this thread when you gave your opinion about the sentence- can you tell me the post number so i can look at it?
I question that. It seems to me that anytime a prisoner, in a well-run properly staffed prison, is subject to significant violence, there was some lack of sufficient care. It needs to be investigated with lessons learned, regardless of whether the prisoner is a VIP.
It seems to occur more than a hundred times a year=
120 times in 2018. That is just killings. Prison beatdowns are more common.
And so you investigate and the killer is a lifer anyway. Or “nobody saw nuttin”.
Elderly, delusional, in poor mental health.
trump has a Schrodingers condition- too ill to be put in prison/ healthy enough to be President.
Who’s now dead.
But, yeah, trump isn’t getting consecutive sentences. Whatever sentence he gets for each count will run concurrent to the rest.
I think 11 month, 29 days - so he can do it in county jail - sounds about right to me.
Oh, and a maximum fine.
I wish the judge would also include his history of litigation as well in his consideration of sentence terms.
Trump U fraud, charity fraud, etc. Showing a lifetime pattern of deception?
I guess prior civil cases arent relevant
I’d disagree to the extent they go to a pattern and practice of dishonesty, which you cited.
This time it was criminal because Trump turned his attention to a presidential election. But he has been lying and cheating his whole life.
I’d expect his legal history should be a part of the presentence report. If not, were I the DA I’d certainly bring it up in my sentencing memorandum.
I didn’t even hint that.
Just consider the astonishing responsibility Juan Merchan now faces. His July 11 sentence is the sword of Damocles hanging over the Trump campaign.
Remember how Time magazine’s Person of the Year was supposed to be the person who most influenced the events of the year?
Judge Merchan – along with District Attorney Alvin Bragg – may well end up fitting that criterion for 2024.
LMFAO–it’s the best of both worlds!!!
No, in fact- I cant find that ever gave your opinions here? Just questioned others? I am puzzled and curious- So what IS your learned opinion on this issue?
Yes, but it was hardly 10 years. As I posted here before from Wikipedia-
After a highly publicized six-week jury trial, Stewart was found guilty in March 2004 of felony charges of conspiracy to obstruct, of obstruction of an agency proceeding, and of making false statements to federal investigators and was sentenced in July 2004 to serve a five-month term in a federal correctional facility and a two-year period of supervised release (including five months of electronic monitoring).[56]
Five months + two years supervised release. I can see something similar for trump.
Yeah, we used to do that all the time on the Joint Organized Crime task force*- The gangster would kill or intimidate the witnesses, so it ended up being 99 counts of wire fraud and money laundering. As the lead FBI agent put it- you can’t kill or scare the numbers.