On the insanity of the Georgia indictment against Donald Trump

Guest Post by Alex Berenson

Donald John Trump is in trouble. The country is in even more.

The bizarre legal martyrdom of Donald Trump entered a new phase Monday night.

The new indictment of Trump – and 18 other defendants – in Fulton County, Georgia overreaches absurdly both on legal theory and the facts it offers to back the charges.

It tries to criminalize speech, including public statements. It pretends a random array of events, many of which did not even involve Georgia, make a criminal conspiracy. Among the “overt acts” it includes is a text message from Trump’s chief of staff asking for the phone numbers of two Pennsylvania legislators.

Yes, that’s the entire “act.” No, I’m not making this up. I wish I were.

The indictment is a stunning abuse of prosecutorial discretion, made worse because federal prosecutors brought an indictment covering similar ground two weeks ago.

Yet if the indictment is a joke, its stakes could not be higher. It risks throwing the 2024 election into chaos and inciting political and societal disorder even more than Trump’s other indictments.

The Fulton County indictment of Trump is astonishing in its breadth. It covers 41 charges and 19 separate defendants, including Mark Meadows, Trump’s chief of staff in 2020.

(Oh my, what a big conspiracy you have!)

(SOURCE)

At the core of the prosecution are RICO – “Rackeeter Influenced and Corrupt Organization” charges against all 19 defendants. The fact that Fani T. Willis, the Fulton County district attorney, is using RICO is no surprise, as no law can be abused by prosecutors more easily, except maybe civil forfeiture statues.

Congress passed the first RICO statute in October 1970. Originally aimed at the Mafia, RICO lets prosecutors attack criminal organizations whose leaders profit without directing footsoldiers to commit specific crimes. (Just make sure he pays, huh?)

RICO lets prosecutors hold the defendants in a criminal enterprise liable for each other’s crimes, even if different conspirators committed them at different times. Members do not even have to meet each other. Essentially, the statute criminalizes guilt by association.

Thirty-three states, including Georgia, have now passed similar laws.

But both the original federal statute and the state laws that followed did not require violence as an element of the conspiracies. Thus prosecutors quickly began to use RICO laws to target not just the Mafia, but corporate crime too.

White-collar defendants complained they were facing long sentences for non-violent behavior that in some cases had previously faced only civil sanction. As the Los Angeles Times wrote in 1989:

An increasing number of legal scholars, some of them former prosecutors, contend that the law is so vaguely worded that almost any federal offense involving more than one violation of the law can be cast as a racketeering case.

Stephen Gillers, a law professor at New York University, says: “I believe that looked at nakedly, the RICO statute gives the prosecutor too much power.”

 

But Congress and state legislatures were – and have remained – unsympathetic to these complaints.

Recently, aggressive prosecutors have expanded the statute’s use even further. In a 2021 article about RICO’s growing use, The Wall Street Journal noted:

“Federal prosecutors have become more enamored with the RICO law’s ability to expand the story,” said James Trusty, former chief of the U.S. Justice Department’s Organized Crime and Gang division in Washington, D.C. Mr. Trusty said the statute effectively broadens what is considered criminal behavior under federal law and what is admissible in court.

Perhaps no prosecutor is more enamored with RICO’s powers than Fulton County’s Fani Willis. In 2015, Willis used RICO to prosecute Atlanta teachers who had inflated children’s test scores. Eleven teachers were ultimately found guilty.

Now Willis has set her sights on Donald Trump for his decision to contest the 2020 election – and the people around him who encouraged him and offered him strategies to do so.

As I have said many times before (and as I know many of you do not like hearing), Trump unequivocally lost in 2020 on both a popular vote and electoral vote basis. His decision not to accept the results of the election quickly was bad for our democracy. And his unwillingness to condemn the violence at the Capitol and encourage a peaceful transfer of power on Jan. 6 will stain him forever.

But.

But Trump’s complaints about the election were legal, protected speech. Even Jack Smith’s federal indictment makes that clear:

The Defendant had a right, like every American, to speak publicly about the election and even to claim, falsely, that there had been outcome-determinative fraud during the election andthat he had won . He was also entitled to formally challenge the results ofthe election through lawful and appropriate means, such as by seeking recounts or audits of the popular vote in states or filing lawsuits challenging ballots and procedures.

The Georgia indictment takes no account of the First Amendment rights of Trump – or anyone else. In fact, it goes the other way. It enumerates 161 “acts” making up the alleged conspiracy.

The first is Trump’s speech on Nov. 4, 2020 “falsely declaring victory in the 2020 presidential election.”

Yes, Willis is trying to criminalize the act of a political candidate claiming to have won an election.

The rest of the indictment is just as bad.

Many of the “overt acts” that Willis alleges were part of the conspiracy consist of efforts that the defendants made in Wisconsin and other states and have no plausible connection to Georgia.

Then there’s “Act 6,” the moment when Mark Meadows, Trump’s chief of staff, asks a Republican Congressman to pass along the phone numbers of two members of the Pennsylvania legislature. That’s it. That’s the entire “overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy.”

(Just gimme the phone number and nobody gets hurt)

(SOURCE)

So, yes, Willis is stretching an already problematic legal theory to its limits.

For his entire career, Trump has dodged legal trouble. This indictment may seem like yet another trap he’s going to escape.

But here’s the thing.

He may not. Willis won in the cheating case. She convinced jurors to view changing student answers on tests as a criminal conspiracy. And she will have a very favorable jury pool to try Trump. Fulton County consists of the city of Atlanta and some of its suburbs and voted 73-26 for Biden in 2020.

Further, Willis has said she wants to try the case in six months, as the Republican primaries are beginning. By itself, that will hamper Trump from campaigning, though he is so far ahead of Ron DeSantis and other challengers for the Republican nomination his absence may not matter.

But if she wins, if she convicts Trump, he will go to prison. In Georgia, RICO charges carry minimum sentences of five years. And as commentators from both parties have pointed out, even Georgia’s Republican governor will not be able to pardon him. Only the state parole board can do so, and not until after his sentence is complete.

The Constitution does not bar Trump from being elected President. But, obviously, as a prisoner, Trump would face huge obstacles campaigning for President next summer and fall. He depends on his live rallies to rile and rally supporters and his ability to use the Internet to win publicity for himself. He will lack both those weapons.

This dynamic will be obvious from the moment Trump is imprisoned, should he be convicted. Both the fact of his imprisonment for criticizing of the 2020 election results and his inability to campaign will infuriate his core supporters. (If he does win the Presidency, I have no idea what will happen, but presumably Georgia will face pressure to change its parole laws to allow him to live in the White House as President.)

Trump is about as far as anyone can imagine from a sympathetic character.

But if he is convicted of and imprisoned on these charges before Election Day, a huge number of Americans will view him as a political prisoner. And if he loses, they will blame his imprisonment for that loss.

Congratulations, Alvin Bragg, Jack Smith, and especially Fani Willis. You are halfway to the most unthinkable magic trick of all time: turning Donald Trump into Nelson Mandela.

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29 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
August 19, 2023 7:20 am

What do you expect when they elevate black cunt fools to positions of power.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Anonymous
August 19, 2023 7:48 am

The Only ‘National Defense’ Needed in This Country, Is Defense Against the Real Enemy: The Ruling Class and the U.S. Government

.
No one for president.

Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
  Anonymous
August 19, 2023 10:13 am

This is a must read^^^^^.

TCS
TCS
  Anonymous
August 19, 2023 1:13 pm

H.L. Mencken was a clear eyed realist. Those with ears, let them hear.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
August 19, 2023 8:00 am

And yet he continues to play along with it.

For this reason I suspect he is part of this theater. It establishes that we should all go along with this lawless and corrupt system whenever they demand we do, regardless of how baseless.

Imagine if he just said no. I refuse to submit to these demands. Come and get me and then make it a Constitutional crisis.

Obbledy
Obbledy
  hardscrabble farmer
August 19, 2023 8:27 am

Right?!?……stopped reading at”throw the election into chaos”…….good laugh this early morn!……

TCS
TCS
  hardscrabble farmer
August 19, 2023 12:54 pm

No cog/dis there. How people don’t see this is beyond me. I’m thinking of starting a pool to bet on what day the CIA is going to kill Trump…5% to the house. As things stand right now they could throw him in a Federal pen and he’d STILL win an honest election LITERALLY from a prison cell.

I keep coming back to that verse in Revelation “were it possible, even the very elect would be deceived”.

As I see it, we’re living that moment right now…and as you are probably aware, shit gets MUCH worse from that point onward. Jesus wept.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  TCS
August 19, 2023 10:13 pm

Matthew 24:24

“For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect.”

King James Version (KJV)

TCS
TCS
  Anonymous
August 20, 2023 6:53 am

I stand corrected. At least I was in the right book collection though.

Sadducees, Pharisees & other 'lawyers'...
Sadducees, Pharisees & other 'lawyers'...
  TCS
August 20, 2023 8:35 am

…WOULD make big deal about it, however, NOT my intent to say You were wrong. Bible neophyte myself.

Wasted a lot of time looking up various verses, in the wrong Book(s)

Took a minute to figure it out, but thanks to algore, almost any snippet One can recall, even imperfectly?

Put KJV in the search bar followed by as much as You can remember, or someone else quotes.

Voila/EZPZ.

What i did using Your “were it possible, even the very elect would be deceived”.

🤣 “At least I was in the right book collection though.”

VERY funny/droll.

Obbledy
Obbledy
August 19, 2023 8:24 am

Hang all the lawyers!

Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
  Obbledy
August 19, 2023 9:54 am

Hang all of THEIR criminals posing as lawyers.

TCS
TCS
  Obbledy
August 19, 2023 1:31 pm

Politicians, medicos and “scientists” too. Make the presstitutes cover the story…and then hang them too! Then look to the Vatican, Israel and Mecca!

Eyes Wide Shut
Eyes Wide Shut
August 19, 2023 8:55 am

The only aspect that matters is that he is the “last trump” signaling the imminent rapture of the true believers in Jesus the Messiah and very soon fourth and final turning or 70th Week of Daniel in the biblical foretold history of our world as we know it.
It’s a breathtaking time to be alive and witness it first hand.

TCS
TCS
  Eyes Wide Shut
August 19, 2023 1:36 pm

He’s The AntiChrist if you ask me, coming with all signs and lying wonders. The CIA is going to kill him, and three days later he’ll rise and Hell will follow after him.

Eyes Wide Shut
Eyes Wide Shut
  TCS
August 19, 2023 5:01 pm

He’s no hero or villain.
Just the last trump.

Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
August 19, 2023 10:06 am

One will recall that when Texas sued other states demanding audits of their flawed elections because those elections cancelled the legal votes of Texans, we got this ridiculous and continuous “You have no standing to sue because they are not in Texas, Case dismissed.”
Now some low IQ, Soros backed, hog bitch, lying hack is attempting to imprison 18 people, the majority of whom were not in Georgia and did nothing regarding Georgia. This is a fraud on the courts and should be dismissed.
If it wasn’t so fuqueing sick it would be funny. Precedent says this is a non-starter.
Hilarious examples are Trump charged with a RICO felony for making fun of Mike Pence the traitor. Mark Meadows is being charged with a felony for making a phone call or text from the White House requesting the phone number of a Pennsylvania legislative leader. None of this has anything to do with Georgia let alone the jungle of Fulton County GA where the steal and corruption are on video for all with eyes to see and ears to hear.
I believe we should all do like Charlie Kirk and start calling this scum “Big Fani” Willis.

Relaxer with Shea Butter
Relaxer with Shea Butter
  Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
August 19, 2023 10:19 pm

wanda sykes put on some weight, for sure.

KJ
KJ
August 19, 2023 10:08 am

As I have said many times before (and as I know many of you do not like hearing), Trump unequivocally lost in 2020 on both a popular vote and electoral vote basis. His decision not to accept the results of the election quickly was bad for our democracy. And his unwillingness to condemn the violence at the Capitol and encourage a peaceful transfer of power on Jan. 6 will stain him forever.

Nonsense. I stopped reading there.

Normally, I don’t even read this jew bastard’s articles anymore after he agreed with the $100 trillion damage award against Alex Jones, but I made an exception for this one.

No more exceptions. I’ll be skipping right over, along with Mann Coulter and Kurt Schphincter.

Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
  KJ
August 19, 2023 10:38 am

Same here. The evidence is overwhelming and breathtaking.

lamont cranston
lamont cranston
August 19, 2023 10:10 am

Petition for a Change of Venue to Rabun or Fannin Counties.

Walter
Walter
August 19, 2023 10:33 am

Becoming ungovernable may become our only way out of this mess. Speaking to middle class productive members of the society, not the dregs who already got the memo from their masters in government.

TCS
TCS
  Walter
August 19, 2023 1:43 pm

We Americans have always BEEN “ungovernable”. Just ask Mad King George!

You see where that has led us, right?

The problem is Governance itself. Only Jesus is worthy of the Crown, and He’s out of town at the moment.

poordude
poordude
August 19, 2023 10:38 am

The person who wrote this has obviously not watched 2000 Mules or examined the aircraft carrier of evidence of systemic election fraud in the 2020 election. There was a red wave in 2020. If you go look at the numbers, Trump was running away with the election until they “shut down” the counting in the middle of the night and started loading up on the fraudulent ballots. There is video footage of vehicles delivering large quantities of additional ballots in the middle of the night in multiple places. Then all of a sudden Biden was ahead. Efforts made to look more closely at the election have been throttled any way possible by the left. People who win honest elections use the election data to prove they won. They do not run to court to try to stop anyone from looking at the data.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  poordude
August 19, 2023 1:12 pm

People who win honest elections use the election data to prove they won. They do not run to court to try to stop anyone from looking at the data.

Exactly.

Does not prove they cheated, but is certainly suggests they are very scared someone might find out they cheated.

But I doubt it makes any real difference. The same people win every election, no matter who the Electoral College picks from the two people you are allowed to vote (rofl) for.

TCS
TCS
August 19, 2023 1:06 pm

Well. At least I live in an influential State. Virginia hasn’t “decided” jack shit since the Civil War…and they chose poorly as it turned out. Perhaps that’s why they are irrelevant to this very day.

Just sayin’.

Anonymous
Anonymous
August 19, 2023 4:53 pm

As I have said many times before (and as I know many of you do not like hearing), Trump unequivocally lost in 2020 on both a popular vote and electoral vote basis. His decision not to accept the results of the election quickly was bad for our democracy. And his unwillingness to condemn the violence at the Capitol and encourage a peaceful transfer of power on Jan. 6 will stain him forever.

Put your mask back on Berenson. On this issue you’re a complete asshole.

TCS
TCS
  Anonymous
August 20, 2023 7:09 am

To what end and purpose are we trying to save our Republic if we refuse to even CALL IT a Republic?

The argument can be made that it’s already lost and there’s nothing worth saving. I am of this opinion.

It’s time for the parasites to find a new host. This one is dead.

Doug
Doug
August 19, 2023 8:03 pm

How about”stupidity” instead?