Cohen’s pleas concocted by prosecutors to snare Trump

The point is that he did it in order to keep it from the American people, and he used campaign funds to do it.

SUPER illegal.

There is no proof he used campaign funds you lying loser. So what is criminal about engaging in a contract to keep someone to keep quiet? What specific code was violated dumbass?
 
I’m experiencing 1998 déjà vu as prosecutors once again work overtime to turn extramarital affairs and the efforts to keep them secret into impeachable high crimes and misdemeanors.
Unable to get the witnesses to compose the stories they want, today’s prosecutors are discovering they can simply compose the crimes by manipulating the pleas of men desperate to protect their families.

The Michael Cohen sentencing memo took aim directly at both Cohen and President Donald Trump.
It was used, unethically, to cast the president as directing a criminal conspiracy to make “secret and illegal” payments.
Sentencing memos are not supposed to use secret grand jury info to point fingers at those who are not being sentenced, but that’s exactly what these did.

One can say today that these New York prosecutors, acolytes of fired U.S. District Attorney Preet Bharra, have learned that the “plea’s the thing wherein to catch the king.”
First, they went after the man, not the crime, and turned up millions in unpaid taxes and some bank-loan misrepresentations by Cohen.
At that point, they convinced him to cave for the sake of his family; the trick was to get him to plead guilty to supposedly two campaign finance “felonies,” and then vaguely implicate the president as directing them (which Trump denies).

Despite promises to the contrary from prosecutors, they threw their star witness off the bus anyway, making him the biggest chump in this drama after he hired attorney Lanny Davis and burned all his bridges with his former client.
Once they had the guilty pleas in hand, the prosecutors no longer needed Cohen; they trashed him as a greedy liar and called for substantial jail time.

The reason these two guilty pleas were so valuable is that these prosecutors could not, in my opinion, have gotten them in court.
The first payment was not even made by Cohen but by American Media Inc., a bona fide media company with First Amendment protections; it could have decided to use the story that it bought, hold the story, or just prevent some competitor from using the story.

News outlets often hold stories on candidates they like and run stories instead against candidates they don’t like.
If such decisions are to be campaign contributions, then every arrangement with any witnesses against or for candidates would have to be scrutinized. Was NBC’s withholding of the Billy Bush tape on Trump a campaign contribution to him?
Was the illegal leak of that tape to another media organization a contribution to the Hillary Clinton campaign?
Is an offer of $10,000 to women to come forward with stories against Trump now a Clinton campaign contribution?
You can see why those in the media companies received immunity and were in no real danger, while the prosecutors used Cohen as their piñata once they had him on tax evasion.
The Stormy Daniels payment was made by Cohen, but so late that it never would have been reportable before the election anyway, a fact prosecutors omit.

The 2016 presidential campaign involved more than $2 billion of contributions, and the usual course is for the Federal Elections Commission (FEC) and its auditors to adjudicate issues like this administratively.
The last Obama campaign had millions of dollars of misreported information and paid a fine, as is typical.

Let’s also remember that the Steele dossier was at least partially paid for by a Democratic National Committee law firm that reportedly was used as a cut-out on the FEC forms.
And it is settled law that the ultimate recipient, not an intermediary, must be disclosed in such cases along with the proper use category.
Yet, this complaint has wended its way slowly through the FEC.
The law firm has not been raided by prosecutors, lawyer confidentiality has not been broken under the grounds that “oppo” research is not legal work. No one is pleading guilty to felonies.

What revelation would have had greater impact on transparency in the election — that Democrats had paid a British spy to gather dirt on Trump from Russia, or that Trump had a consensual one-night affair?

Perhaps the biggest difference between oppo research and paying for nondisclosure of an affair is that one is definitely a campaign expense and the other is a personal expense not covered by election law.
When prosecutors brought a similar case against former Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.), they failed to get a conviction and it came out that FEC auditors had determined that the payments from donors to his mistress were not a campaign expense at all.

Ironically, much of campaign expenditure law is about trying to prevent candidates from using campaign funds for their personal expenses and, generally, paying paramours to keep quiet would be considered a personal expense, not one that could be paid for with campaign contributions or federal matching dollars.
Under this new theory, would every payment to a mistress who was keeping quiet about an affair now be a reportable campaign contribution? Or payments to an out-of-wedlock child? Or a high school classmate who has an embarrassing story?

And what about the 268 settlements reached on behalf of congressmen and paid for by taxpayers? Are all confidential settlements done in election years now illegal campaign contributions, so that we need to lock up scores of congressmen on felony counts?
No doubt keeping them secret was critical to their elections — and those settlements, unlike Trump’s alleged behavior, sometimes included illegal elements.

The New York prosecutors also go on a laughable diatribe about the sanctity of election laws and transparency. Really? From folks who operate in secret by threatening people into what they want after they find a weakness?
I hardly think details of Donald Trump’s private parts is the kind of transparency that the late Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and former Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) were trying to accomplish with their 2002 election law reform.

I am hard-pressed to believe that the stories of brief encounters with these two women, neither of whom claim any harassment or abuse, would have had any effect on the election in the first place. They would have primarily hurt Trump’s wife and children, and it’s only because of the election and declining media standards that these women had increased marketability for their stories.
These are personal expenses that Trump, a frequent target of such schemes, would have likely made anyway.

Step by step, the special counsel and New York prosecutors are showing that they regard
Trump protégés as little more than pawns in an all-out effort to remove the president.

This is no honest inquiry respecting the will of the people.
Never before has an administration, a family and a campaign been treated in this fashion by prosecutors who have created far more crimes than they have found.

I, for one, don’t believe we can allow our democracy to operate this way, ever. Let the people decide their leaders through elections — and let’s get some adult supervision of these prosecutors, or it will be 1998 all over again.
https://itk.thehill.com/opinion/cri...pleas-concocted-by-prosecutors-to-snare-trump
Mark Penn served as pollster and adviser to President Clinton from 1995 to 2000, including during Clinton’s impeachment.

truly desperate post, too bad Mueller has it all on tape

sad
 
There is no proof he used campaign funds you lying loser. So what is criminal about engaging in a contract to keep someone to keep quiet? What specific code was violated dumbass?

The money must be reported or it is a campaign finance violation. Now there can be accidents or mistakes or there can be the intentional aim to hide it from the voters.
 
There is nothing honest about Trump.

There is NOTHING honest about you and the losers on the left. We get it. You're mad Hillary lost and now you think you can lie, cheat, kick, scream and make shit up as you desperately flail whining about Trump.

You're an idiot and you make that obvious every damn day on this forum.
 
but he did.
the consequences of not doing so would have been disastrous. as it is he still gets 4 years.

But if he been charged on the taxi medallions and god knows what else,he would have wound up like Manafort facing what is life in prison in solitary confinement

"I'll make him an offer he can't refuse"
He obviously was shown the evidence and realized if he didn’t go along it would be disasterous.

This is such a high profile case which much at stake, Nuekker isn’t going to do anything half assed.
 
Never before has a crime family lived in the Oval Office.

There still are none you dishonest dumb fuck.

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There is NOTHING honest about you and the losers on the left. We get it. You're mad Hillary lost and now you think you can lie, cheat, kick, scream and make shit up as you desperately flail whining about Trump.

You're an idiot and you make that obvious every damn day on this forum.

Its Republicans who are going to hand down the indictments, little cunt. Not any Democrats. OOPSIE!
 
"In legal filings released Friday, prosecutors said Cohen told them that when he made the payments to the women, "he acted in coordination with and at the direction of" Trump, whom they identified in the filings as “Individual 1.”

"Legal analysts said the allegations against Trump could amount to a felony if it's determined that there was a conspiracy to conceal payments from campaign contribution reports – and from the voters."

"Obama's violation "consisted of failing to submit certain forms in time, while the Trump allegations involve large payments through shell companies and his lawyer."

"The former is negligent, and the latter is knowing and willful. That is the difference – the mental state required."

"In August, Cohen pleaded guilty to campaign finance felonies and told a judge that Trump directed illegal payments "for the principal purpose of influencing the election” for president in 2016."

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2018/12/10/donald-trump-payments/2262446002/

Perhaps "they would have likely made anyway" is true, but the secrecy and manner inwhich they were made is the difference

And forget the martyr appeal for Trump, his blunders is solely his own doings

More speculative bullshit.

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1. Why was he paying hush money?
2. Why would he want to keep that from the public?
3. Why did he use campaign funds to do it?
4. Why did he direct Cohen to specifically do that?

Why do you keep lying about him using campaign funds? The man can write a hundred thousand dollar check as if it were pocket change you moron.

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