="Hayabusa Rider, post: 39691456, member: 10614"]I suggest you come to NY and talk to the prosecuters and tell them they can't prosecute a criminal. The reality is that no President has been a criminal anywhere near this in modern history. Now you explain to us how a woman who could eat Trump for dinner can't fufill her legal duty? You are looking her in the eyes and saying Trump can't go to jail.
When you get your ass back it won't be in a MAGA hat.
NY is one of the most corrupt self-serving state there is and Trump believe it or not is a perfect representation of that state, even though it's run by supposedly holier than though Democrats.
https://www.law.columbia.edu/media_inquiries/news_events/2014/december2014/moreland-commission
Marton said New York election law is so porous that many seemingly corrupt behaviors are not technically illegal. Because the New York state legislature is “part-time,” lawmakers are eligible to seek other sources of income and have wide latitude to manage their finances in ways Marton said are prone to abuse.
“We looked at things that were legal but shouldn’t be,” said Marton. “Actual criminal activity was the exception because the laws are very difficult to break.”
Janos Morton, former special counsel to
the Moreland Commission The commission issued around 300 subpoenas, which ran into stonewalling from legislators who many speculated were planning to wait out the commission’s projected 18 to 24 month life span.
The New York Times later reported that Cuomo’s office had interfered with the commission’s work, prompting a federal investigation from U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara ’93.
Wu said that public disgust with the system and the commission’s unceremonious end boosted his ultimately unsuccessful campaign.
“Getting involved with New York state politics, I felt I looked into the heart of darkness, far worse than I expected, and I’ve felt the chill ever since,” said Wu, the Isidor and Seville Sulzbacher Professor of Law.
Briffault agreed that the state of affairs is concerning.
“New York state continues to face very serious ethical and corruption challenges and there is not much reason to believe the government will reform itself,” Briffault said. “Any change will have to come from outside of Albany.”