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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: locogringo who wrote (1085029)8/25/2018 9:20:29 AM
From: chronicle  Respond to of 1577019
 
Coming soon!



To: locogringo who wrote (1085029)8/25/2018 1:10:55 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 1577019
 
trump LOSING: Fmr. Attorney General: Trump looks weak attacking Sessions





To: locogringo who wrote (1085029)8/25/2018 1:13:52 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 1577019
 
trump LOSING: Trump is latching on to a popular right-wing talking point about Michael Cohen that experts say is 'nonsense'
Allan Smith
businessinsider.com
President Donald Trump has echoed a popular right-wing talking point in recent days as his latest defense from the plea deal to which his former longtime lawyer Michael Cohen agreed earlier this week.

The campaign-finance crimes Cohen pleaded guilty to? Well, they aren't actually crimes, Trump and others say. It's an argument that campaign-finance experts say is "nonsense."

In cutting a deal with federal prosecutors, Cohen pleaded guilty on Tuesday to five counts of tax evasion, one count of making a false statement to a financial institution, and two counts related to campaign-finance violations. Cohen said under oath that Trump directed him to violate campaign-finance laws just before the 2016 presidential election to boost his candidacy.

The latter two charges were in connection to payments to the former Playboy model Karen McDougal and the porn actress Stormy Daniels to silence their allegations of affairs with Trump. Cohen said that at Trump's direction, he moved to keep both former Playboy model Karen McDougal and porn star Stormy Daniels from publicly disclosing damaging information that would hurt Trump's campaign. He said under oath that the payments were for the purpose of benefiting Trump's candidacy.

"Directing" Cohen to commit such a crime would make Trump a co-conspirator, legal experts say.

Prosecutors wrote that they could back up Cohen's admissions through evidence obtained from the FBI's April raids on Cohen's home, office, and hotel room. The evidence, they wrote, included documents, electronic devices, audio recordings made by Cohen, text messages, messages sent on encrypted apps, phone records, and emails.

Later this week, it was revealed that American Media Inc. CEO David Pecker, who purchased McDougal's story, and Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg were both given immunity to provide testimony in the Cohen investigation.

Focusing on the payments to women, Trump first tweeted that they weren't actually a crime on Wednesday morning.

"Michael Cohen plead guilty to two counts of campaign finance violations that are not a crime," he wrote.

"By the way, he pleaded to two counts that aren't a crime. Which nobody understands," Trump said. "In fact, I watched a number of shows. Sometimes you get some pretty good information by watching shows. Those two counts aren't even a crime. They weren't campaign finance."

Trump seems to be referencing an argument first made by right-wing talk radio host Mark Levin on Fox News host Sean Hannity's Tuesday night show.

"I wanna help the law professors, the constitutional experts, the criminal defense lawyers, the former prosecutors, and of course the professors, I wanna help them understand what the law is," Levin told Hannity. "The general counsel for the Clinton mob family, Lanny Davis, he had his client plead to two counts of criminality that don't exist."

Levin says that if a candidate were to, for example, pay for a nondisclosure agreement "because I don't want this person to attack me during the campaign for something that occurred before the campaign," that is a "perfectly legal" expenditure and not "a campaign expenditure."

He said that such a matter was one that was personal in nature, and whether or not it benefitted the campaign is irrelevant.

Levin also interviewed former Republican Federal Election Commission chairman Bradley Smith on the matter, who said he agreed with Levin's assessment. Smith said if the such hush-money expenditures "incidentally" benefitted the campaign, there would be no issue.

'The argument is nonsense'But the payments were made with the express purpose of benefitting the campaign, as Cohen said in court and prosecutors said they could corroborate based on the evidence they had gathered.

The campaign's benefit wasn't a bug of the payments — it was the feature.

Additionally, the payments exceeded the maximum-allowed contribution, and they were not reported. Both are illegal. Cohen admitted in court he knew at the time that he was breaking the law.

"These were not just allegations by the government," Larry Noble, senior director and general counsel of the Campaign Legal Center and former general counsel of the FEC, told Business Insider in an email. "Cohen admitted to the violations of federal law under oath and a federal judge accepted the plea. So, Trump is not only attacking the SDNY for getting the felony plea, but he is also saying a federal judge wrongly approved that plea."

"In a word, the argument is nonsense," added Paul S. Ryan, vice president for policy and litigation at Common Cause, in an email to Business Insider. "Literally, the argument does not make sense."

Ryan said the enforcement section of the Federal Election Campaign Act makes it clear that what Cohen did was criminal.

"Cohen admitted and pleaded guilty to committing crimes," he said. "The Trump/Levin argument is so inane it boggles my mind."

Trevor Potter, president of the Campaign Legal Center and a Republican former chairman of the FEC, wrote in The Washington Post that Trump and others were wrong about whether or not Cohen had admitted to actual crimes.

"For election law purposes, the two crucial facts in" Cohen's admission under oath "are that the payment was 'for the purposes of influencing the election' and that it was done 'in coordination and at the direction of' Trump," he wrote.

"What we know about the facts would provide substantial evidence to any jury that these payments were all about influencing the election at a crucial moment, rather than purely personal matters — and thus, the payments were violations of federal election laws," he wrote.



To: locogringo who wrote (1085029)8/25/2018 1:49:08 PM
From: sylvester80  Respond to of 1577019
 
trump LOSING: EXCLUSIVE: ex-Trump World Tower doorman's "catch-and-kill" contract released
By Sonia Moghe, CNN
Updated 12:14 PM ET, Sat August 25, 2018
cnn.com

(CNN)A former Trump World Tower doorman who says he has knowledge of an alleged affair President Donald Trump had with an ex-housekeeper, which resulted in a child, is now able to talk about a contract he entered with American Media Inc. that had prohibited him from discussing the matter with anyone, according to his attorney.

On Friday, Marc Held -- the attorney for Dino Sajudin, the former doorman -- said his client had been released from his contract with AMI, the parent company of the National Enquirer, "recently" after back-and-forth discussions with AMI.
CNN has exclusively obtained a copy of the signed "source agreement" between Sajudin and AMI, which is owned by David Pecker.

Why the Allen Weisselberg immunity deal may be the biggest news of this bananas week

The contract appears to have been signed on Nov. 15, 2015, and states that AMI has exclusive rights to Sajudin's story but does not mention the details of the story itself beyond saying, "Source shall provide AMI with information regarding Donald Trump's illegitimate child..."

The contract states that "AMI will not owe Source any compensation if AMI does not publish the Exclusive..." and the top of the agreement shows that Sajudin could receive a sum of $30,000 "payable upon publication as set forth below."

But the third page of the agreement shows that about a month later, the parties signed an amendment that states that Sajudin would be paid $30,000 within five days of receiving the amendment. It says the "exclusivity period" laid out in the agreement "is extended in perpetuity and shall not expire."
The amendment also establishes a $1 million payment that Sajudin would be responsible for making to AMI "in the event Source breaches this provision."

Trump's hideous legal landscape just got even worse

"Mr. Sajudin has been unable to discuss the circumstances regarding his deal with American Media Inc. and the story that he sold to them, due to a significant financial penalty," Held told CNN. "Just recently, AMI released Mr. Sajudin from the terms of his agreement and he is now able to speak about his personal experience with them, as well as his story, which is now known to be one of the 'catch and kill' pieces. Mr. Sajudin hopes the truth will come out in the very near future."
The New Yorker's Ronan Farrow broke the story in April of how the contract came into existence. Farrow reported that the New Yorker obtained an "unexecuted copy" of the contract. CNN has obtained a copy that was signed by Sajudin.
In April, Sajudin told CNN he claims to have knowledge of a relationship Trump had with his former housekeeper that resulted in a child.
At the time, AMI called Sajudin's story "not credible" and denied any connection between the story and Trump and his then-personal attorney Michael Cohen.
The White House did not respond to CNN's requests for comments in April.
CNN has contacted AMI to clarify whether Sajudin has now been released from the contract to be able to speak on terms of the agreement and to seek reaction on this latest development, but has yet to receive a response.

Former staffer: Pecker could turn on Trump 02:52

Sajudin's allegation that Trump fathered a child out of wedlock has not been independently confirmed by any of the outlets that have investigated the story.
Held said he cannot give the exact date the agreement was terminated, per another agreement the attorney made with AMI in order to get his client out of the contract.
Held said that now that Sajudin has been released from the agreement with AMI, he would no longer be liable for a payment for speaking out.
"He's a blue-collar worker and a million dollars would have ruined him for life," Held told CNN.
What the doorman claims to know
When the story surfaced in April, Sajudin told CNN about the alleged relationship in a statement:
"Today I awoke to learn that a confidential agreement that I had with AMI (The National Enquirer) with regard to a story about President Trump was leaked to the press. I can confirm that while working at Trump World Tower I was instructed not to criticize President Trump's former housekeeper due to a prior relationship she had with President Trump, which produced a child."
The Associated Press reported in April that Cohen "acknowledged to the AP that he had discussed Sajudin's story with the magazine when the tabloid was working on it. He said he was acting as a Trump spokesman when he did so and denied knowing anything beforehand about the Enquirer payment to the ex-doorman."
Cohen pleaded guilty Tuesday to charges of tax fraud, false statements to a bank and campaign finance violations tied to his work for Trump.
In that deal, he pleaded guilty to paying $130,000 to former adult film star Stormy Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, to conceal her story of an alleged affair with Trump. He also pleaded guilty to working with AMI to pay off former Playboy model Karen McDougal in a similar "catch and kill" agreement in order to keep her allegations of an affair with Trump from being published. Trump has denied an affair with both women.
Pecker has received immunity in the Cohen case for providing details of the payments to prosecutors, a source confirmed to CNN on Friday.