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Sunday, June 9, 2024

Pudzer: Trump's 'true crime': winning presidential election, threatening to win another.

 President Trump’s actual offense at his New York trial was not a misdemeanor accounting violation magically transformed into 34 felonies. His crime was winning a presidential election and threatening to win another. New York Democrats prosecuted Trump solely to create a political advantage for their unpopular candidate by convicting and threatening to imprison his Republican opponent. It's really that simple.  

But employing our legal system as a tool of progressive politics comes at a great cost. It puts the integrity of that system — and our republic — at risk.  

Recognizing the inevitable impact political and cultural compassion can have on judicial proceedings, our legal system provides certain protections to assure its integrity. They include requiring that our laws be clear, our judges unbiased, and our prosecutors act as ministers of justice enforcing the law fairly rather than using it as a political cudgel.  

Trump was denied these protections at every stage of his prosecution.  

First the law. Because every citizen is responsible for knowing the law, laws must be knowable. The accused must understand what they are accused of, so that they can adequately defend against it. In fact, the Sixth Amendment provides the accused with a constitutional right "to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation."  

Trump was denied this most basic due process protection.  

According to CNN’s chief legal analyst Elie Honig, District Attorney Alan Bragg inflated misdemeanors past the statute of limitations and "electroshocked them back to life within the longer felony statute of limitations" by alleging "that the falsification of business records was committed ‘with intent to commit another crime.’" 

Bragg inexcusably "refused to specify what those unlawful means actually were — and the judge declined to force [Bragg] to pony up — until right before closing arguments. So much for the constitutional obligation to provide notice to the defendant of the accusations against him in advance of trial."  

ABC's chief legal analyst, Dan Abrams, agreed, asking "why didn't the defense even know what the charge was that they were gonna be applying, what law they were going to be applying… There were a lot of questions for the defense going into this, I think, as they were making their closing arguments not even knowing what the law they were going to be battling over was."

As accurately summed up by CNN’s Honig, the charges against Trump were "obscure, and nearly entirely unprecedented. In fact, no state prosecutor — in New York, or Wyoming, or anywhere — has ever charged federal election laws as a direct or predicate state crime, against anyone, for anything. None. Ever." Those charges were "seemingly crafted individually for the former president and nobody else."  

That certainly sounds political.  

Of course, an unbiased judge could have addressed those issues. So, how about Judge Merchan, who presided over the trial? Under New York’s Rules of Judicial Conduct, a judge is required to "avoid" even "the appearance of impropriety in all of the judge’s activities" and to "perform the duties of judicial office impartially and diligently." In fact, a judge must — the Rule says "shall" — "disqualify himself… in a proceeding in which the judge's impartiality might reasonably be questioned."  

Was this a case calling for disqualification under those standards?  

Well, to avoid that appearance of impropriety, the Judicial Code also specifically prohibits judges "making a contribution to a political organization or candidate." But, according to CNN, Judge Merchan contributed to the Biden campaign, the "Progressive Turnout Project" and an organization called "Stop Republicans."  

Yes, it is actually called "Stop Republicans." According to its website, the group is "dedicated to resisting the Republican Party and Donald Trump’s radical right-wing legacy."  

He contributed $35, which is a small amount and would likely avoid deeper scrutiny in any other case (which may explain why it was so small). But keep in mind that, for good reason, the Judicial Code prohibits "making a contribution" regardless of size.  

People do not make contributions of this size because they believe it will impact an election. They do so to show they’re on the team — in this case, Team Biden. The point of making such a contribution is to show partiality — that is, support for the candidate to whom — or the cause to which — you contribute. Why else contribute?  

So, might Judge Merchan’s "impartiality… reasonably be questioned"? Well, the defendant was the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. The judge not only supported his Democrat opponent, but also a group committed to stopping the Republican Party in general — and a guilty verdict could do just that.  

Seriously, this does not seem like a close call.  

How about D.A. Bragg, who, under New York’s Rules of Professional Conduct, has the "responsibility of a minister of justice and not simply that of an advocate."? Well, to get elected in ultra–Progressive New York City, Bragg boasted that he was on the team that "sued Trump over 100 times," and was "the candidate in the race who has the experience with Donald Trump." 

He also acknowledged the political importance of going after the former president, stating that "it’d be hard to argue with the fact that that’d be the most important, most high-profile case."  

Obviously, he won the election and then initiated that "most high-profile case." Known for releasing people accused of actual crimes, he went after President Trump with unparalleled gusto.  


The importance of these protections against injustice was particularly acute in Trump’s case, since the trial took place in Manhattan, a borough of New York City whose residents voted 87% for Biden in 2020, the highest percentage of any major metropolitan area in the nation. Denying him this due process protection was equivalent to a directed verdict of guilty.  

You would have to be exceedingly naive to believe this case was decided on an unbiased application of the law to the facts rather than patent political bias. It was always a political exercise designed to provide Democrats with an issue sufficient to overcome President Biden’s unpopular policies and declining mental acuity. George Soros’s son Alex recently made that crystal-clear, stating — "Democrats should refer to Trump as a convicted felon at every opportunity." Undoubtedly, they will.  

Democrats talk incessantly about preserving democracy as they make every effort to subvert it when a political tactic plays in their favor. President Trump’s lawfare trial is a prime example. If this tactic succeeds, lawfare will become standard operating procedure for both parties — and a disaster for our nation. Surely, even the most ardent Trump haters are aware that you cannot preserve democracy by abandoning it.  


Trump’s conviction will very likely be reversed on appeal, but after the upcoming election. Nonetheless, we can yet put an end to this anti-democratic power grab. Our Republic has one final line of defense — political accountability.  

That judgment will come this November.  

Andy Puzder was chief executive officer of CKE Restaurants for more than 16 years, following a career as an attorney. He is currently a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Heritage Foundation, and a Senior Fellow at both the Pepperdine University School of Public Policy and the America First Policy Institute. His next book, "A Tyranny for the Good of its Victims – The Ugly Truth About Stakeholder Capitalism" will come out early next year. The views expressed here are his own and do not reflect an institutional position for The Heritage Foundation or its board of trustees.  

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/trumps-true-crime-other-lessons-from-his-new-york-trial

Hochul shelved congestion toll over subway-crime worries: Paterson

 Gov. Kathy Hochul scuttled the congestion toll to enter Midtown because she believes too many people are afraid to take the subway so they drive in instead, ex-Gov. David Paterson said Sunday. 

“What she told me in a private conversation was she just thought about people who were afraid to ride the subways, so they drive their old car over the bridge, and they have to pay all this money,” Paterson said on 77 WABC radios’s “The Cats Roundtable.” “She was thinking really of individuals who would be affected.

“Hochul realized that some of the problems that the antagonists to congestion pricing are raising are not going to go away,” said the former governor, who is a Democratic, as is the governor.

Governor Hochul scrapped the Midtown congestion bill in the eleventh hour.Governor Kathy Hochul/Facebook
Former Governor of New York David Paterson claims he knows why Hochul shelved congestion pricing.Getty Images
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Felony assaults on straphangers soared more than 50 percent from before the pandemic in 2019 through last year, with 373 vs. 570 incidents.

The violent trend prompted authorities to flood the subway system with extra cops — but even that has resulted in just a 1% decrease in overall transit crime between January and March of this year compared to the first quarter of 2023, according to the NYPD stats.

Paterson admitted Hochul’s 11th hour about-face was jarring coming “so close to the June 30 deadline,” when the MTA was supposed to implement the controversial first-in-the=nation $15 congestion toll to enter Manhattan south of 60th Street.

He dismissed speculation that Hochul shelved the toll so that fellow Democrats running in November for competitive New York congressional seats — a situation that could determine which party controls the House — don’t have to defend congestion pricing from withering attacks from Republicans.

Paterson said he ultimately backed Hochul’s decision on reneging on the toll, insisting she did not make such a momentous turnabout based purely on political expediency.

“Those who would be antagonistic to her have tried to say that this is a political move. … But I think that’s kind of [unfair] at this point with all that is involved to think that the governor would just turn around and do it just to win a few [congressional] seats,” he said.

Former governor Paterson does not believe that Hochul stopped the congestion bill for political reasons.Getty Images

Debate rages now over how the MTA would make up the lost revenue from the $1 billion a year that had been expected from the new Manhattan toll to finance transit capital needs.

There also has been criticism over the nearly $500 million that has already been spent by the transit agency on trying to get congestion pricing up and running, including installing toll collecting technology.

“It’s still the right decision,” Paterson said of Hochul’s controversial move.

Hochul and state lawmakers could not agree on alternative financing for the MTA, after the toll plan was yanked, during the final days of the Legislature’s session last week.

Transit advocates who championed congestion pricing are livid that the governor threw the program under the bus and are holding rallies to try to save it.

“The 2% of New York commuters drive to work in Manhattan are far wealthier than public transit riders and people who drive to work elsewhere, making congestion pricing a highly progressive policy, the only one that will raise sustained, dedicated billions of real dollars for reliable and accessible subway service — while also speeding up bus service and deliveries and cutting emergency response times and air pollution,” Danny Pearlstein of the Riders Alliance said Sunday.

But congestion pricing is deeply unpopular, with nearly two-thirds of New York voters — across all demographics and regions — who are opposed to charging a specific toll to enter Midtown, a recent Siena College poll revealed.

The tolling program was approved by ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the Democratic-run legislature in 2019. But even Cuomo said the state should hit the brakes on congestion pricing earlier this year, asserting it wasn’t the right to time to do it given New York’s slow-than-expected recovery from the pandemic.

https://nypost.com/2024/06/09/us-news/gov-hochul-shelved-congestion-toll-over-subway-crime-worries-david-paterson/

'Sullivan: ‘hard to say’ how Israeli hostage rescue will impact cease-fire negotiations'

 White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan on Sunday said it is “hard to say” if the recent Israeli operation to rescue four hostages in Gaza will influence ongoing cease-fire negotiations between Israel and Hamas.

The IDF, along with two other units, carried out a special operation on Saturday at two different locations in Nuseirat in central Gaza to rescue four hostages being held by Hamas. The operation, which included a heavy air and ground assault, marked Israel’s largest rescue operation since its war with Hamas began last October.

The operation, which the Gaza Healthy Ministry claimed left over 274 Palestinians dead, came just over a week since President Biden announced an Israeli-proposed cease-fire and hostage release deal aimed at ending the war.

When asked on ABC News’s “This Week” if the operation or similar operations affect cease-fire negotiations, Sullivan said, “It’s really hard to say right now.”

“It’s hard to say how Hamas will process this particular operation and what it will do to its determination about whether it will say yes or not,” he added. “We have not gotten a formal answer from Hamas at this time.  We’re waiting for them to communicate to Qatar and Egypt, two of the mediators involved in the hostage negotiations. “

While Gaza health officials approximated the death toll to be at least 274 killed and nearly 700 others wounded in the Saturday mission, the IDF estimated fewer than 100 casualties.

Sullivan declined to confirm either party’s numbers.

“Well, of course, the Israeli Defense Forces have put out one number, the Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry has put out another number.  We’re looking into it,” Sullivan said. “It will take some time for us to make any kind of determination.  And we may never be able to definitively determine it.”

“Civilians were killed.  And that is tragic.  It is heartbreaking.  I’ve said before that the Palestinian people are going through hell in this war,” he added. “They’re caught in the crossfire.  Hamas hides among civilian infrastructure, hides underground, and puts the Palestinian people in harm’s way.  And this whole thing, this whole tragedy could be over, all the hostages could be home.”

The current cease-fire proposal under consideration includes a three-part road map to end the fighting and release the remaining hostages. 

Sullivan, speaking on several of the Sunday morning shows, repeatedly called on Hamas to respond to the proposal.

Last week, the leaders of 18 countries with citizens held as hostages issued a joint statement urging Hamas and Israel to agree to the cease-fire proposal.

“There is no time to lose. We call on Hamas to close this agreement, that Israel is ready to move forward with, and begin the process of releasing our citizens,” the statement read.

Israel’s war with Hamas has raged on for more than eight months since the U.S.-designated terrorist organization launched a surprise assault on southern Israel that killed more than 1,200 people and took about 250 others hostage.

Israel’s retaliatory military campaign in Gaza has since killed more than 37,000 Palestinians, per the local health ministry.

https://thehill.com/policy/international/4712469-jake-sullivan-hard-to-say-how-israeli-hostage-rescue-will-impact-cease-fire-negotiations/