Is the Trump indictment collapsing?

Is the Trump grand jury falling apart? That's definitely one of the theories circulating after Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg called off today's grand jury session. Fox News is reporting "Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office has 'canceled' the grand jury meeting that was scheduled to take place Wednesday as part of the investigation into former President Donald Trump, amid speculation of a possible indictment." Further, Fox is reporting that the "grand jury was notified Wednesday morning and was placed 'on standby' for Thursday."

Alan Dershowitz told Sean Hannity last night that former federal prosecutor Robert Costello's testimony "I think that Bragg now only has two possible results from that. Number one, he can say, ‘alright, I’m going to try to make the case without Cohen.’ He cannot use Cohen as a witness anymore. That would be unethical because of the testimony that Costello gave. Or he could say, ‘look, I have to drop the case.’ He may not be able to make it without Cohen. But if he can’t make it without Cohen, he can’t make it, because no ethical prosecutor is allowed to put on as a witness somebody who has told the lies and has contradicted himself so much."

This is getting a strong rebuke in the legal community. Check this out:

First, this is a novel theory that's never been tried before. Next, the 'star witness' (Michael Cohen) is a convicted perjurer. Third, Cohen told a third party that Trump didn't order him to pay off Stormy Daniels. What part of that case sounds solid? Let's remember the old saying that 'if you're going after the king, you'd better take him down with the first shot.' Otherwise, you're in big trouble.

Bragg is in trouble. There's nothing about this case that is solid other than the politics. Taking on Trump in New York is good politics. After that, it's a wobbly case.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Tim Walz's Confederate Flag Fiasco

What is Kamala Harris afraid of?

Why is Joe Biden letting Hamas off the hook?