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alt / alt.atheism / America's Dumbest Journalists - Suggests Government Makes Ammo For Mass Murderers

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o America's Dumbest Journalists - Suggests Government Makes Ammo For Mass MurdererFeeble Old Trump

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Subject: America's Dumbest Journalists - Suggests Government Makes Ammo For Mass Murderers
From: Feeble Old Trump
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Date: Sun, 14 Jul 2024 00:07 UTC
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From: X@Y.com (Feeble Old Trump)
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Subject: America's Dumbest Journalists - Suggests Government Makes Ammo For Mass Murderers
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Doddering feeble old trump will die behind bars and the traitors who
support him will be rounded up and culled.

641 years behind bars? No, but Trump�s risk of prison is real.

Of the more than six dozen felonies that Trump is accused of, many often
result in harsh sentences.

The indictment against former President Donald Trump charging him by the
Justice Department for his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020
presidential election is photographed.

By Erica Orden

08/02/2023 06:37 PM EDT

Donald Trump now faces 78 felony charges across three criminal cases � many
of them carrying the potential for hefty prison time.

If Trump were convicted on all counts and given the maximum statutory
penalty for each one, he would face a whopping 641 years in prison. And
that�s not counting additional criminal charges he may face in Georgia,
where the district attorney in Fulton County may be on the verge of
indicting him this month.

But the reality of any prison term that Trump could plausibly receive is
far more complicated.

In both state and federal courts, judges have wide latitude in sentencing.
None of the crimes Trump has been charged with carry a mandatory minimum
sentence, and defendants with no prior criminal record � a status that, at
least for now, applies to Trump � rarely receive the maximum. And if the
77-year-old former president were convicted of multiple counts within the
same case, any sentences for those counts might run simultaneously, rather
than being stacked on top of each other.

More broadly, sending Trump to prison could raise unprecedented practical
and legal issues that would be on any judge�s mind. For one thing, there is
the extraordinary logistical challenge of jailing a former president who is
entitled to around-the-clock Secret Service protection. For another, there
is the potential constitutional crisis that could ensue if Trump were
reelected to the White House in 2024 and then ordered by a judge to serve
out a prison term.

Those concerns aside, some of the felonies Trump is accused of �
particularly in the two federal cases brought by special counsel Jack Smith
� routinely entail significant sentences. Legal experts anticipate that
Smith�s team, if they obtain convictions against Trump, will seek
substantial prison time in both cases they have brought, one involving his
retention of classified documents and the other involving his bid to
overturn the 2020 election.

Trump himself has even touted the threat of a significant prison sentence
in recent fundraising emails, with his campaign and a PAC saying in late
July, �While my primary opponents continue to take cheap swipes at me as
the Department of Justice plots ways to throw me in JAIL for up to 561
YEARS, I am asking YOU to stand with me at this pivotal moment in the
election.�

The charges that might carry the most severe penalties for Trump involve
obstruction of justice. In both federal cases, Smith has accused him of
violating various provisions of the federal statutes that prohibit
obstructing official proceedings or obstructing investigations. All of the
obstruction charges � which include allegedly impeding the government�s
attempts to retrieve the classified documents and disrupting the Jan. 6,
2021, session of Congress � have a 20-year maximum sentence.

While Trump�s lack of a criminal record could weigh in favor of a sentence
much lower than that, prosecutors might argue that so-called aggravating
factors � like Trump�s alleged efforts, in both cases, to pressure others
to commit crimes � support a stiffer term.

Trump�s willingness, or lack thereof, to accept responsibility if convicted
also would play a role in a judge�s sentence.
Politicians react to Trump�s Jan. 6 indictment

The core charges in the classified documents case � 32 counts of willful
retention of national defense information in violation of the Espionage Act
� also routinely entail significant sentences for people found guilty.
Earlier this year, a former Air Force intelligence officer was sentenced to
three years for retaining various classified documents. In 2021, a West
Virginia woman was sentenced to eight years for retaining a single National
Security Agency record.

Additional charges in the election-interference case � alleging a
conspiracy to defraud the United States and a conspiracy to deprive people
of the right to vote � are less common in this context, so a potential
sentence is more difficult to predict.

The case that appears least likely to put Trump away is the prosecution by
the Manhattan district attorney�s office, which charged Trump with
falsifying business records in connection with a hush money payment to
cover up an alleged affair with a porn star.

In that case, Trump is charged with 34 felony counts under New York law,
and each count carries a maximum sentence of four years. But legal experts
say judges seldom sentence first-time offenders to any prison time for that
crime.

Trump is set to be arraigned in the election case on Thursday in
Washington, D.C. He has pleaded not guilty in the other two cases.

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