The Big Dog
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- Joined
- Jul 26, 2007
- Messages
- 29,742
17 pages of people not understanding what a plea bargain actually is. Wow.
A bunch of people saying something is true, does not make it true. Arguments must stand up on their own evidence, not who supports it.
There are sports where the judgement of the umpire/referee/judge decides on what happened. It doesn't matter what other people think - the laws are that the official decides. Similarly, with law. The judge is the person adjudicating on the law. In this case the judge (along with the vast majority of disinterested* observers) agreed that a campaign crime had been committed.
In cricket, if a bowler appeals for LBW, the batsman walks and the umpire signals LBW, it doesn't actually matter what anyone else thinks, by definition the batsman was out for LBW.
*Yes, disinterested as opposed to uninterested.
There are sports where the judgement of the umpire/referee/judge decides on what happened. It doesn't matter what other people think - the laws are that the official decides. Similarly, with law. The judge is the person adjudicating on the law. In this case the judge (along with the vast majority of disinterested* observers) agreed that a campaign crime had been committed.
In cricket, if a bowler appeals for LBW, the batsman walks and the umpire signals LBW, it doesn't actually matter what anyone else thinks, by definition the batsman was out for LBW.
*Yes, disinterested as opposed to uninterested.
People analyze umpire calls all the time. As long as a bar exists somewhere,the umpire is not the final word on the play. There are many words spoken about the play afterwards.
But the only one that matters
Those bar conversations can get extremely heated. Sometimes they start fights. Those opinions matter.
17 pages of people not understanding what a plea bargain actually is. Wow.
Do you think it's credible that Michael Cohen is guilty of the campaign finance violation charge he pled guilty to?
Not at all. Those bar conversations can get extremely heated. Sometimes they start fights. Those opinions matter.
There comes a point in any discussion when I think people need to actually ask themselves why they are continuing to argue.
In cases when every single point that can be raised, has been raised, multiple times, nobody is going to be convinced of the others viewpoint. Especially when they flat-out reject any argument but their own. The comment (that was) directly above mine is a perfect example.*
But obviously, you are liberty to continue. Ill check back in 10 more pages or so and see if the discussion has advanced. I'm willing to bet it won't have ^^
*Damn you Ninja William![]()
These types of situations is why God invented gambling. People can put up a bet and just wait, and let the outcome do the talking.
Nope
Are you suggesting that Cohen pled down from a crime he did commit to a crime he didn't commit, so that, while still guilty of campaign finance violation(s), he didn't commit the exact violation with which he was charged?
I don't think prosecutors are allowed to do that. If arrested for, and charged with, say, theft, you can't plead down to jaywalking, unless you also jaywalked while committing the theft. They can't just pick some lesser charge from a grab-bag.
The only other way I can think to interpret your arguments is that you believe Cohen committed no crimes at all, and lied when pleading guilty.
This leaves only the position that the prosecution, judge, Cohen's defense lawyers, and Cohen himself, all agreed that he committed the crimes, but you personally don't believe it. Is that it?
Yes, your analysis of the campaign finance charges seemed to hinge on the Edwards case, which has no impact on this case, and the FEC guidance, which has no legal impact, and an assumption that Cohen and Trump can show some reliance on that FEC guidance, even though there is no evidence that they can.
Compare that to lawyers who have actually seen the documents obtained from Cohen and have had time to review them in detail. Do you think they may know the situation a bit better than you? Well, I'll wait to see how the hand plays out.
...I will cheerfully concede that Cohen might just be dumb enough to have **** his own bed....
No, I have explained my position crystal clearly on several occasions.
The prosecutors had him (and his wife) dead to rights on the tax claims. However, if Cohen wanted a deal, the prosecutors required him to plead to all their charges, given the fact that they have bigger fish in mind.
The judge did not rule on the merits of the charges.