Las Vegas Review-Journal

Trump show keeps coming — on to court

- By Carl Golden Cagle Cartoons Newspaper Syndicate Carl Golden is a senior contributi­ng analyst with the William J. Hughes Center for Public Policy at Stockton University in New Jersey. Contact him at cgolden193­7@gmail.

“THE Trump Trials,” a multi-act drama of intrigue, deception, ego and struggle for power, is scheduled to debut off-broadway in March, opening what will likely be a longer run than “Phantom of the Opera.”

It will go on the road during 2024 with engagement­s in Washington,

D.C., Florida and probably Georgia, where it will play to packed audiences in courthouse venues.

Its lead actor, former President Donald Trump, will head a cast of dozens of household names from the political, legal and academic worlds as federal and state government prosecutor­s strive to win guilty verdicts on a staggering array of charges arising from Trump’s actions in the aftermath of his 2020 loss to President Joe Biden.

With Trump enjoying a commanding lead in the contest for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, the impending trials create an unpreceden­ted and surreal circumstan­ce for prosecutor­s — placing on trial a candidate for president and potentiall­y a president-elect.

That the wheels of justice will grind slowly on for years is certain as Trump confronts two federal indictment­s, one in New York and one in Georgia.

The New York charge of business fraud for disguising hush money payments as legal expenses to conceal an extramarit­al affair is by far the least consequent­ial, dismissed by some as the equivalent of overdue library books. The potential for salacious testimony, though, holds some appeal.

Far more serious are the federal indictment­s charging Trump with illegally retaining classified government documents and obstructin­g efforts to retrieve them from his Florida home and the allegation­s that he conspired to overturn the results of the 2020 election by spreading claims he knew to be false.

The indictment in Georgia is based on Trump’s alleged effort to overturn its election outcome and declare him victor.

The sheer volume of motions, hearings, arguments and appeals — many of which will be disputes over arcane points of law — could well create a boredom that will test the theory that the only thing shorter than the public’s memory is the public’s attention span, particular­ly with the distractio­n of a presidenti­al campaign.

Trump’s legal team will use time to its advantage, convinced their client will benefit from a trial and the carnival-like atmosphere it will produce. While guilty verdicts are certainly a possibilit­y, it probably will be years before final adjudicati­on by which Trump will have reached his early 80s.

At the same time, acquittals will deal damage to the Department of Justice, validating accusation­s by Trump and his supporters of a government witch hunt and abuse of power to destroy a political opponent.

No matter the outcome, it will accomplish little to heal the deep divisions and polarizati­on gripping the country.

A finding of guilty or innocent will not sway either faction.

It is, however, intriguing to envision a scenario in which Trump is the Republican nominee and — despite the odds — defeats Biden, leaving prosecutor­s in an uncharted no man’s land in search of their next step. Do they continue to pursue a duly elected president or withdraw the cases believing that the occupant of the office is immune from criminal prosecutio­n?

In seven months, the curtain will go up on opening night of “The Trump Trials.” Long lines at the box office are anticipate­d, and curtain calls are certain. Look out “Phantom.”

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