• @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    If she dismisses because it has to be filed in DC…they can just file in DC, get a more favorable judge, and have a great reason for why the court must reject Trump’s inevitable change of venue request.

    Florida was only picked to avoid change-of-venue requests. It’s not like there is nowhere to legally charge this case.

    • @NightwingdragonOP
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      291 year ago

      If she dismisses because it has to be filed in DC…they can just file in DC, get a more favorable judge, and have a great reason for why the court must reject Trump’s inevitable change of venue request.

      But that would virtually guarantee that the case would be pushed out until 2025 at the earliest, which is exactly what Trump wants. He wants to draw this out until he either gets re-elected and just has the cases dismissed, or he just dies without having ever been found guilty. And considering he’s 77 years old and thinks the four basic food groups are McDonalds, Burger King, Wendys, and Dunkin Donuts, the odds of him getting what he wants are pretty heavily in his favor and only increase with every frivilous delay tactic.

    • Davel23
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      1 year ago

      If she dismisses with prejudice that means the case cannot be re-filed. I’m not sure if that’s something she’s able to do in this case, but that would effectively kill the case completely.

      Edit: I am by no means a… law… talking… guy, so it’s good to hear from multiple replies that this is most likely not an out for Tr(eason)ump.

      • Blakerboy777
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        241 year ago

        You can’t dismiss with prejudice because of a simple jurisdictional issue like that. “You should have filed it somewhere else, but now you can’t file it anywhere”. Prejudice means that the case has no merit and saying you should have filed it somewhere else indicates it is possibly meritorious.

      • Granite
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        121 year ago

        I don’t think the appeals court will let that stand.

        • roguetrick
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          61 year ago

          Yeah, dismissing with prejudice would get reversed immediately.

        • @NightwingdragonOP
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          -221 year ago

          If she has the authority to do so, there’s nothing that an appeals court can do about it. Once a case is dismissed, that’s the end of it.

          • roguetrick
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            181 year ago

            You can appeal a dismissal just like any other final judgement.

      • @ashok36
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        31 year ago

        Even if she did it wouldn’t stick on appeal and it would only affect the new charges. The original indictment was from a grand jury in Miami.