• @Poppa_Mo@lemmy.world
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    1987 months ago

    Nice. I got contempt of court once and spent the weekend in jail. No ifs ands or buts about it. Judge wouldn’t even let me hand my house keys to my partner. Lol

    What a fucking joke.

    • TheRealKuni
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      757 months ago

      The judge doesn’t want to give Trump’s team any ammunition for an appeal. I realize it’s absurd, but if he’s thrown in jail without significant warning then they’ll argue it biased the already liberal jury (cause NYC) against him too much.

      (I am not a lawyer, that’s just my understanding.)

      • @baru@lemmy.world
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        687 months ago

        The judge doesn’t want to give Trump’s team any ammunition for an appeal.

        It’s still treating Trump different than most. If it’s such a problem to put Trump in jail, why isn’t it for any random person?

        • TheRealKuni
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          577 months ago

          It’s still treating Trump different than most.

          Of course it is.

          If it’s such a problem to put Trump in jail, why isn’t it for any random person?

          Because he is a former president of the United States who is currently running for re-election. This situation is unique in American history. As much as we may dislike these facts, they are true. The judge is in uncharted waters here, and needs to be careful to avoid anything that can be construed as evidence of bias against the defendant. This trial will be under scrutiny for as long as we have a country.

          It’s not fair that most defendants do not have the essentially limitless resources of the entire conservative political machine at their disposal to pay for their legal woes, but it is the reality of the situation.

          • FuglyDuck
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            187 months ago

            The judge is in uncharted waters here, and needs to be careful to avoid anything that can be construed as evidence of bias against the defendant.

            And in so doing, hold a bias for the asshole.

            • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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              7 months ago

              The judge is biased on the side of Justice. Getting the case thrown out out of principle wouldn’t help anyone but Trump.

              • FuglyDuck
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                7 months ago

                That’s bullshit and you know it.

                There are established rules and procedures. When you fudge them on one side, to avoid appearing biased to the other….

                That is itself bias. against your “side of justice”.

                This judge is afraid of Trump; and in his fear making a mockery of justice. You know it, I know it, and Trump knows it. Even the judge knows it.

                • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                  177 months ago

                  Yeah so let’s treat him the same way as anyone else so he can use that as an excuse to stop the procedure against him, that will sure show him!

                  Of all the cases where people want the judge to treat the accused the same way they would be treated in order to prove a point, this is probably the worst one.

            • TheRealKuni
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              57 months ago

              And in so doing, hold a bias for the asshole.

              Criminal court is intended to be biased towards the defendant. Hence the “beyond a reasonable doubt” burden of proof.

              (Obviously that bias is often not upheld properly, and plenty of people are railroaded by the system into unjust convictions.)

              • FuglyDuck
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                27 months ago

                The court itself might be, but the judge isn’t supposed to be.

                They have procedures and guidelines, for everything involved here. Procedures and guidelines that aren’t supposed to take “ex president” into account.

                Judges aren’t supposed to allow anyone to intimidate, threaten or otherwise manipulate the witnesses or jury.

                Remember- the people of NY are one of the parties; and all parties are entitled to a fair trial.

          • @Zron@lemmy.world
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            157 months ago

            I would make a terrible judge, because I don’t see how this is uncharted territory. Sure, it’s unprecedented, but that doesn’t mean we don’t know what to do.

            Our entire government is made up of citizens, that was the whole point in fighting a war to get rid of an unjust monarchy, ruling from afar.

            Trump is a citizen, if he broke the law he needs to go to jail. If he breaks the law during the trial, he should receive the same punishment as any other citizen would. Doing anything else just means we have a 2 tier justice system.

            The fact that he has fucked up 10 times and is still a free man is ridiculous. All the judge has done is show trump that he can do whatever he wants and face no repercussions. If you did something 10 times, and then someone gets mad the 11th, you wouldn’t say “sorry my bad” you’d say “why are you mad, I do this all the time”

            This country is a joke

      • FuglyDuck
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        167 months ago

        I think 11 contempt charges represents 10 more “significant warnings” than anyone else would get.

        I legitimate appeals court would accept trumps argument and illegitimate courts aren’t going to care and just side with Trump anyhow.

        This isn’t for appeals… it’s for mass consumption; and it’s a massive miscarriage of justice.

      • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        137 months ago

        The judge doesn’t want to give Trump’s team any ammunition for an appeal.

        If you believe this shit, you’re fooling yourself. Guy’s gotten ten warnings when any off-the-street plaintiff would be lucky to get one. Not only will there be ammo for appeal, Merchan is building precedent of untouchability. My man is straight up announcing

        The last thing I want to do is put you in jail.

        I-fucking-magine this getting said during any other trial. How much more biased can a judge get?

        • @Furbag@lemmy.world
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          87 months ago

          Guy’s gotten ten warnings

          Playing Devil’s Advocate here, but nine of those were all reviewed at the same time, and while the decision to group them all together and issue a final warning was pending, the tenth violation was committed. Technically, and this is a really big fuckin’ technically, he has not committed any violations since being put “on notice” that the monetary punishments are over and the jail time would start. They decided on one today that occurred before that decision, so they’re not holding it to the same standard.

          I do believe the next violation will carry jail time, without a doubt. Trump has also mostly shut up since being put on notice as well because he doesn’t want to be put in a cell any more than you or I do.

          But it is extremely, maddeningly frustrating that Trump has gotten away with it so far. The Judge’s decision today proves beyond a doubt that the law is not being equally applied in favor of Trump himself.

          Honestly, I don’t know if I could be an impartial judge in this case, because knowing Trump I would have warned him the very second he stepped foot in the courtroom that he was already on notice and that he should expect jail time if even a single word escaped his mouth that is in violation of the gag order that was already in place. Maybe Judge Merchan is more magnanimous, more cool-headed, or simply too wary of the blowback from applying the law equally with a megalomaniac like Trump who has an army of idiots at his back. I don’t know. All I know is, I don’t think he’s out of line just yet, but hearing statements like “I don’t want to put you in jail” for a guy who is too rich for fines to have an impact on is not reassuring.

        • @refalo@programming.dev
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          37 months ago

          I think you’re missing the forest for the trees here, check out some of the other comments here, it’s more complicated and nuanced than that IMO

      • @Chef@sh.itjust.works
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        107 months ago

        You should be ashamed of yourselves!

        Back in the driveway, we were nothing!

        Now we’ve risen to the highest level, but you’re throwin’ it all away!

        If you’ve forgotten what baseketball means to America, you have only to look at this board - the Malaka-Laka Balance Board of Trust.

        Don’t you see what we have here?

        A game where guys with bad backs and bad knees can… get together and compete on the same field as guys that are all goosed up on steroids.

        But more than anything, isn’t this game about gettin’ together with your friends and just havin’ a good time?

        I remember. I remember a long time ago, I didn’t have anybody.

        You guys took me in. I guess that’s why it kills me to see you like this.

        If we can’t be friends… then the heart and soul are out of this game. Certainly out of me. I know I’ll never get that back again.

        We have sullied the waters of the Lagoon of Peace!

        I’m begging you, for the love of our Caribbean brothers, dudes, stop this madness!

    • @Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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      57 months ago

      It’s 2 times. The first 9 violations were assessed as a block (it was 9 separate tweets). So this is only his second warning.

      Given that the judge doesn’t want to get the case thrown out on appeal, two warnings is perfectly reasonable.

      • @Burn_The_Right@lemmy.world
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        37 months ago

        Look, buddy… Your reasonabilitiness is getting in the way of my pissedoffedness. Meet me back here in two weeks so one of us can say “See? I told you so!”

    • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      247 months ago

      “The last thing I want to do is put you in jail.”

      ~ Judge Juan Merchan

      We love our fair and impartial judiciary, don’t we folks? Lets give Judge Merchan a big hand. He’s helping to Make America Great Again.

      • @drislands@lemmy.world
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        287 months ago

        I wonder if he means that in the sense of “putting you in jail is only going to empower your frankly rabid base of supporters. I need to avoid even the slightest hint of a mistrial so we can put you in prison for good.”

        • Jojo, Lady of the West
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          77 months ago

          I need to avoid even the slightest hint of a mistrial so we can put you in prison for good

          I mean I’m pretty sure that’s it. There’s no chance whatsoever this doesn’t go to appeal if he’s convicted, and you don’t want the case to be overturned because the appeal court thinks the judge was biased against Trump

        • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          -27 months ago

          putting you in jail is only going to empower your frankly rabid base of supporters

          What does the judge think will happen should the jury returns a guilty verdict?

          • @PrettyFlyForAFatGuy@feddit.uk
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            7 months ago

            A jury of people selected (partly) by his own lawyers convicting him should be a lot easier of a pill to swallow for his base than a “Democrat” judge unilaterally deciding, on his own, to detain trump.

            key word here is “should”

            Honestly while Trumps legal team have been complaining about not being able to get a fair trial, that works both ways. I’m worried about enough MAGAts making their way onto the jury to nullify

      • He knows that the rabid Republicans will try to twist it to say that he was jailed to prevent him from attending his own hearing. When they would gladly teleconference him in from the cell, like they do with other criminals. But that’s not good enough for Donald Duck. Either this Jack-o’-lantern gets to sit there and look pretty or he will scream and cry a fit until election day comes around and it’s too late.

        It’s all part of the nut factory’s plan.

        • Chainweasel
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          37 months ago

          Contempt charges are usually held in a cell in the courthouse, and they just parade you out for your trial and then put you back in the cell when it’s over. He’ll be able to do literally nothing but attend his own trial.

    • @ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca
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      627 months ago

      Yes, if they can pay the $10,000 fine.

      The judge said everyone gets warnings and fines before jail time. If he could, he’d issue a large fine, but he can’t because state law caps the fine at $1,000 per violation. The judge acknowledged that a $10,000 fine for a multi-millionaire isn’t even a punishment, but immediately jailing someone because they can easily afford the fine seemed wrong. Trump violated the gag order 10 times before being officially told to stop, so the judge is lumping them all into a “first” violation. He said the “second” violation absolutely will be punished with jail time. We’ll see.

          • @refalo@programming.dev
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            37 months ago

            IMO It’s not always that simple. Yes some countries do this but it can also backfire (and has). Some examples:

            • unfairly targeting rich people in order to help the town budget

            • previous annual incomes may be vastly different from current monthly wages (furloughed etc.)

            • punishment being spun as a political tool similar to trump’s martyrs

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        137 months ago

        …but immediately jailing someone because they can easily afford the fine seemed wrong.

        No it doesn’t, not even a little bit! Restrictions on their time are the only things rich people understand; they should be jailed instead of fined early and often.

        • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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          07 months ago

          And then they get the case cancelled because it’s clearly bias against them that they don’t get to just pay the same fee as anyone else as a first warning.

          • @Dkarma@lemmy.world
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            17 months ago

            Lol…that’s not how it works. You don’t get a case cancelled for the judge holding someone in contempt…

            • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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              7 months ago

              You do if it’s Trump and he uses it to question the judge’s neutrality.

              How long do you think before they replace the judge and get things started again? If you believe it won’t be long enough to get him elected then I’ve got a bridge to sell you.

    • Natanael
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      87 months ago

      This is the second time in this criminal trial (all previous ones have been civil trials), and this me the judge stated that fines are clearly not working and that jail time could be necessary if it keeps happening.

      Yes I knew we’ll all believe it when it happens, but it is different now that he’s in criminal court and the maximum fine has been dealt both for the first and second infringement.

  • @blazera@lemmy.world
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    687 months ago

    Wheres all those people that were telling me he’d be jailed with the next contempt charge?

    • @Wiz@midwest.social
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      7 months ago

      The protection did not even ask for jail time! WTF!

      A weekend in the clink without a cell phone would do the man some good.

      Edit: I meant to say prosecution, but autocorrect.

    • @Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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      37 months ago

      It’s not a sentence. This is a penalty imposed by a judge for misbehaviour in a court room, not a sentence handed down for a crime.

      And the judge has to give at least a couple of warnings (this is actually the 2nd, not the 10th; the first 9 violations were all assessed as a block) or else he risks the actual case getting thrown out on appeal.

    • @Ragnarok314159@sopuli.xyz
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      27 months ago

      Sentencing him to jail is going to activate his base. That’s my only concern. People who have grown tired of him crying wolf will finally see this as the deep state locking away Trump to keep him from campaigning.

  • @BedSharkPal@lemmy.ca
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    657 months ago

    Oh neat, a judge admitting that the justice system isn’t blind at all and that there is a privileged class with very different rules.

  • @lambalicious@lemmy.sdf.org
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    397 months ago

    10th time

    only now threatens jail time

    Correct me but any pregraduate law student who hasn’t been skipping on their classes could get rich by filing for the obvious bias the judges have to allow 10 contempts of court, wouldn’t they?

    • @ripcord@lemmy.world
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      267 months ago

      This is the second ruling of contempt

      First ruling was collectively over 9 comments he made.

      This is the second, and said next would be jail time.

      • @BakerBagel@midwest.social
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        87 months ago

        This is still from the first batch of contempt charges. The judge ruled on 9/10 and wanted more information before ruling on the 10th

      • @lambalicious@lemmy.sdf.org
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        17 months ago

        So, if I am understanding correctly, as a citizen I can threaten a judge 9 times, or threaten 9 different judges, and demand that I can only be held accountable for only one of them, or for all of them as a package only once?

          • @lambalicious@lemmy.sdf.org
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            17 months ago

            Feel free to explain then, because from here it looks like El Trumpo should have been thrown to jail 8 contempts ago, like any normal citizen. Right now if I was a US citizen I would be justified in citing precedent that I can’t be sent to jail or even threatened with jail time with only 6 contempts.

    • @Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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      257 months ago

      Don’t be fooled by the “10th time”. There were 9 separate violations that were all brought as a single complaint last week. So technically one “time” (as in, one ruling), just regarding 9 separate tweets so technically nine separate incidents. Number ten here is basically Donnie’s second strike in terms of actual warnings. If he gets a third without repercussions, then I think it’ll be fair to say the judge may be bluffing.

      Remember, judges have to play things a little softly if they don’t want to set up precedent for appeal. He can’t give Trump any reason to claim he’s being treated unfairly. Two warnings is perfectly reasonable.