Los Angeles Times

‘Meh’? See how trial goes first

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Re “Trump’s New York criminal trial hardly warrants a ‘meh,’ ” Opinion, April 15

UCLA law professor Richard L. Hasen sounds like a sportscast­er before any sporting event, touting one team over the other. He opines on how the event will play out and the fan reactions to the perceived outcome.

Everybody has an opinion about Trump’s criminal trial related to his pre-2016 election payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels, but no one can say for sure what will occur and how it will end.

There are too many variables in play and anything could happen. As in all sporting events, let the game play out.

Watching Trump finally being held accountabl­e for his alleged wrongdoing in court will be a spectacle Americans will surely find enlighteni­ng.

It will certainly change minds in his campaign for the presidency.

Nelson Sagisi

Santa Maria

Hasen forgets his recent history when he says that the New York criminal case against Trump cheapens the term “election interferen­ce.”

Trump made arrangemen­ts to pay Daniels just after the infamous “Access Hollywood” tape was released in October 2016. This occurred between the second and third presidenti­al debates between Trump and Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton. His attorney wired the money the day before then-FBI Director James B. Comey reopened the case into Clinton’s emails.

Because of the hush money payment, we’ll never know how the 71.6 million voters who watched the third debate would have reacted if Trump had to answer that night for his alleged affair.

We’ll never know how the final weeks of media coverage would have differed if there had been two major stories — the email investigat­ion, and Trump’s alleged affair.

Whatever else “election interferen­ce” means, it must include paying to hide damaging informatio­n from voters and the media on the eve of an election, then lying to cover it up.

Tyler Hagenbuch Venice

Trump need not win an outright acquittal in the “trial of the century” to proclaim himself a “winner.” All he needs is a sole juror to vote not guilty, whereupon the court must declare a mistrial.

In this circumstan­ce, any retrial almost certainly would not begin until after the election. That will give Trump ample space to crow about how he is the wholly innocent victim of a massive witch hunt, thereby prodding his inflamed loyal base to cast ballots in unpreceden­ted numbers for his reelection.

I would deem the New York proceeding­s the “trial of the millennium,” as any result short of a conviction will surely seal our democracy’s demise.

Sarah S. Williams

Santa Barbara

In Monday’s newspaper, there was full-page coverage of Trump’s trial in New York plus two-thirds of the OpEd page devoted to him. There was less coverage of the real news about President Biden and his security team discussing Iran’s attack on Israel.

One item is a circus; the other is a serious threat to global security.

Please do not devote so much print space to the Trump trial; cover actual news and our current president.

Betsy Patterson Ojai

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