• Tier 1 Build-A-Bear 🧸
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    147 months ago

    So what does this mean for Trump, does he go to jail? Have to pay some money? Can he still run for president?

    • @[email protected]
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      337 months ago

      It depends on the sentencing, which is right before the RNC in a few days. I’ve heard the usual punishment for this kind of stuff is at most 4 years of prison, but for first time offenders it is usually suspended. So my guess is that it’s a big blob of nothing, again.

      Then again, imagine being assigned as parole officer to Trump.

      • @[email protected]
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        27 months ago

        I doubt you could put him in prison, he’s still technically a former president, where would you put secret service for example? Lots of undefined legal gray area here

        • @[email protected]
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          167 months ago

          I don’t think it’s the Secret Service or the logistics of the thing that’s the problem. They can just join the prison guards and work in their place in Trump’s ward. They don’t serve Trump, they serve the people. They can be Trump’s prison guards as well as his protectors.

          The bigger problem is that I don’t imagine G7 leaders would be keen to attend a summit at Rikers, or that Trump wouldn’t cause a constitutional crisis every single minute deliberately.

        • @[email protected]
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          97 months ago

          where would you put secret service for example?

          In the guard room where they could watch him from far enough way that they wouldn’t have to listen to his constant complaining.

    • @Putykat
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      37 months ago

      He can’t vote, at least in this election

      • @Dicska
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        67 months ago

        I SO want him to lose by ONE single vote then… Even if he would probably never consider blaming himself for it. It would still be there in the back of his mind forever.

      • @[email protected]
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        27 months ago

        NPR sez Florida law would disallow him voting, but he wasn’t convicted in Florida, so they defer to the law in the state where he was convicted. New York allows felons to vote up until they are imprisoned, which doesn’t seem likely to happen before election day since he is appealing. Skin of teeth again.