You guys can cry that bullshit all you want. Doesn't change the fact that he became a billionaire. If I handed you $300 million, the only thing you would have is $100 million and a warehouse full of junk. Because that's what you leftist do. You try to fill your empty souls (and empty minds) with material items (and you get super pissed off when you can't do that and others can).
Trump is in debt to foreign banks for nearly a billion dollars and his legal fees are huge.
Capitol riot suspect’s court hearing turns to potential criminal charge for Trump
The judge and lawyers discuss whether the then-president’s pressure on Vice President Mike Pence could have amounted to obstruction.
news.yahoo.com
Could former President Donald Trump be charged with a crime for urging then-Vice President Mike Pence not to certify the electoral vote tally?
That appeared to be the thrust of a question U.S. District Court Judge Carl Nichols posed on Monday at a court hearing for one of the hundreds of Americans charged in the Capitol riot.
The judge and both sides in the case found themselves debating the scope of a law being wielded against many Jan. 6 defendants that makes it a felony to “corruptly” interfere with an official federal government proceeding and carries a penalty of up to 20 years in prison.
The statute is typically applied to court-related conduct, like threatening judges, jurors or witnesses. However, prosecutors have leveled the obstruction charge against about a third of the roughly 700 Jan. 6 defendants over their alleged efforts to disrupt the electoral vote tally that Congress was undertaking when a crowd loyal to Trump broke through police lines and forced their way into the Capitol.
At a hearing on Monday for defendant Garret Miller of Richardson, Texas, Nichols made the first move toward a Trump analogy by asking a prosecutor whether the obstruction statute could have been violated by someone who simply “called Vice President Pence to seek to have him adjudge the certification in a particular way.” The judge also asked the prosecutor to assume the person trying to persuade Pence had the “appropriate mens rea,” or guilty mind, to be responsible for a crime.
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