Karnal wrote on Apr 7
th, 2023 at 1:38pm:
Mike did three years in jail for this crime, dear, and he has the big fella giving the order on tape.
If it's such a nothing crime, why the reason for Dear Leader's conspiracy:"Pay in cash?"
If an ex prime minister was caught doing something similar in Australia, there would be no question: face the music, lock them up.
Because Americans idolise their presidency, they get ever so toosh about nabbing presidents, but do you know?
They're the same ones who said Trump couldn't be got as prez. Wait until he's out, they said.
Romney voted to impeach. Now he's speaking up for Trump because the MAGA voters are deserting him.
So I'm curious. What is the crime you want your much loathed Hillary locked up for again?
And what is the crime you want your much loved Dear Leader let off for again?
That's a question.
he did too:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2018/dec/12/michael-cohen-sentence-latest-ne...Trump's former fixer Michael Cohen sentenced to three years in prison
Cohen guilty of hush money payments and lying to Congress
Cohen admitted covering up Trump’s ‘dirty deeds’
Follow the latest US politics news
Tom McCarthy and Erin Durkin in New York
Thu 13 Dec 2018 05.34 AEDT
First published on Thu 13 Dec 2018 02.15 AEDT
Michael Cohen, Donald Trump’s longtime personal fixer, was sentenced to 36 months in prison in New York on Wednesday for crimes including lying to Congress and
facilitating illegal payments to silence two women who alleged affairs with Trump.Trump hush money: no charges for National Enquirer company over payments – as it happened
Read more
The sentencing by the US district judge William Pauley in Manhattan capped a stunning about-face for a lawyer who once said he would “take a bullet” for Trump but has now directly implicated the president in criminal conduct.
In an emotional court scene in which he described his disillusionment with Trump, Cohen said he had committed the crimes out of “blind loyalty” to the president.
“I have been living in a personal and mental incarceration ever since the day that I accepted the offer to work for a real estate mogul whose business acumen that I deeply admired,” Cohen said. “I know now, in fact, there is little to be admired.”