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Baitball Blogger

(46,704 posts)
Mon May 13, 2019, 12:43 PM May 2019

I don't understand the legal parameters to prove Trump's culpability in witness tampering.

For example, his attorney, McGahn, said that he declined Trump's request on several occasions to claim that Trump was clear of obstruction. So, I'm thinking, isn't that enough? How far is this supposed to go before the evidence is legally actionable? Because, the next level is for McGahn to have actually gone through with it and stated that Trump was not guilty of obstruction and then he calls back his claim, which of course, Trump would say that it was hogwash coming from a ex-employee.

Does anyone else see how this weird set of circumstance is allowing Trump to "get away with it."

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I don't understand the legal parameters to prove Trump's culpability in witness tampering. (Original Post) Baitball Blogger May 2019 OP
I'm with you. spanone May 2019 #1
It all goes back to Spiro Agnew. n/t rzemanfl May 2019 #2
a thicket of lies, but to whom, and who brings charges? stopdiggin May 2019 #3

stopdiggin

(11,304 posts)
3. a thicket of lies, but to whom, and who brings charges?
Mon May 13, 2019, 03:40 PM
May 2019

I think "tampering" and obstruction have been fairly clearly established/demonstrated. The issue (I believe) is in the "sitting president" principal. Another point here .. who brings charges? The DOJ? Barr? I think you can see the problem. There are things going on at a state level (still having to account for "sitting president). But the McGahn thing almost certainly a federal consideration.

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