Gulf Today

Even with Desantis’ help, Trump could be in danger

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The walls are closing in on Donald Trump. Not the big, beautiful walls on the southern border, but potential felony charges in New York, Atlanta and Washington, DC.

Trump’s own impeachmen­t lawyer posed the odd defence that the time to “go and arrest him” would be “ater he’s out of office” during the Senate trial in which he was ultimately acquited. Mitch Mcconnell, in his head-snapping mea culpa, also invoked criminal remedies at the time: “We have a criminal justice system in this country,” he said, adding, “and former presidents are not immune from being accountabl­e.”

So where does that leave us? Cyrus Vance, the District Atorney of New York, has had an open investigat­ion for years that appears to be focusing on phony, shiting property valuations given to banks, insurers and tax authoritie­s. Trump has fought to prevent his financial records and tax returns from being turned over, presumably for good reason, but his repeated appeals have now come to an end as the Supreme Court has refused any final relief.

Given that Donald Trump may never have done a straight deal in his life, the likelihood of actionable state law wrongdoing is high. Michael Cohen, who is in a position to know, offered that, with the now-inevitable release of his tax and financial records, “it does not look good for him”.

In Georgia, new Fulton County District Atorney Fani Willis has made clear she will aggressive­ly investigat­e criminalit­y arising from Trump’s recorded phone call trying to pressure the Georgia Secretary of State into somehow “finding” enough votes to overturn the election. “An investigat­ion is like an onion,” she said. “You never know. You pull something back, and then you find something else.” There is a big onion in Georgia. Trump’s calls to state officials urging them to subvert the election, for instance, could run afoul of a Georgia statute dealing with “criminal solicitati­on to commit election fraud.” To the extent that Trump was coordinati­ng with Lindsey Graham, who also intervened with the Secretary of State, Rudy Giuliani, or others, conspiracy or even racketeeri­ng charges could be brought under Georgia law, Willis suggested.

While a person indicted federally can be arrested anywhere in the United States, if Trump is charged with a state offence, the governor of that state must request extraditio­n from the governor of the state where Trump is located — in this case, Florida and its governor, Ron Desantis. In Timothy Snyder’s typology, Desantis is a “breaker,” not a “gamer”. His devotion is to his own political advancemen­t, without regard to any moral or political guardrails. He is an uber

Trump loyalist; he encouraged the legal challenge to the presidenti­al election. He told local health officials to stop publishing Covid statistics until ater the election and overrode local officials’ mask mandates. He is positively Trumpian in his lack of respect for truth or the rule of law. And he will decide on approving extraditio­n.

Just as Trump has stonewalle­d, delayed or ignored the rule of law, his acolyte Desantis can stave off the day of judgment for his mentor, perhaps indefinite­ly. He can insist he is in the process of investigat­ing, until some court orders him it is time to wind it up. That ruling could then go through the federal court system, to the Supreme Court.

Once his investigat­ion is concluded, Desantis can then find that Trump “ought [not] be surrendere­d.” That too can inch through the appellate system. And finally, Desantis can contend that Justice Marshall’s overruling of the fugitive slave extraditio­n case was wrongly decided and see whether the conservati­ve bloc will rediscover federalism and allow the extraditio­n to be refused. That final decision would leave Trump to avoid the day of judgment and remain “the Prisoner of Mar-a-lago.” Eric Lewis, The Independen­t

 ??  ?? Ron Desantis
Ron Desantis
 ??  ?? Fani Willis
Fani Willis

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