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#convict trump
republikkkanorcs · 1 month
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alex-guerin · 2 months
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There's a little under halfway to go, but I figured I'd share this and maybe it would pick up traction and we can help hit the 48000 signatures. Even if you don't live in the USA, you can still sign the petition.
And yes, it has been confirmed that Trump owes over half a billion dollars in civil penalties (MSNBC). This petition is to help to let the powers that be know that he needs to be held accountable for the things he's done.
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nerdykeith · 8 months
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The fact that even pro republican network Fox News is putting out anti-Trump ads on their network, really highlights that he really screwed things up. I don't know if this will guarantee that he loses, but I sure hope it does.
The bottom line is I just hope Trump does in fact face the consequences for his actions.
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jaywinaustin · 12 days
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Cannot stop thinking about an au where Turnabout Trump doesn't happen/happens but Olga is convicted instead so Apollo is still working at the Gavin law offices for his first few cases. He meets Trucy at one of the crime scenes and she tags along on his investigations, but she doesn't tell him about her connection to Phoenix until after their first case together. Ema likes Apollo less at first bc she doesn't like the fop and you work for his brother, who she also hates bc he's very condescending when he cross examines her in court.
When you meet Klavier in the second case you can ask Kristoph about him and vice versa. They don't interact with each other but you get to learn some more things about the brothers, their opinions on each other and their backstory. You also find out that Klavier was the one who got Phoenix disbarred and Kristoph is apologetic about it, given that Phoenix is his "friend" (though they haven't interacted at all since phoenix was found not guilty).
At one point Trucy is visiting Apollo at the Gavin Law Offices when Kristoph returns and "politely" kicks her out. She then reveals to Apollo who the daddy she keeps talking about actually is. You get to meet Phoenix again in the next case and find out more about the incident 7 years ago.
Over the course of the game you/Apollo starts to grow more suspicious of Kristoph and his intentions, alongside a growing sense of horror that you got an innocent person convicted in your first case. It all comes to a head in Succession when Drew Misham finally uses the stamp, which turns up fixed to a letter in the Gavin Law Offices postbox that Apollo collects on his way in one morning. You hand it to Kristoph and he promptly disappears with it, feigning excuses. Phoenix uses this case to finally spring his trap and test the jurist system. Kristoph gets the double whammy of his brother and mentee turning on him at once and the murder of Shadi Enigmar is properly resolved. It's also revealed that Trucy started tagging along on Apollo's investigations to collect intel for Phoenix.
At the end of Succession, Apollo is offered a role at the newly-renamed Wright Anything Agency and there's a final rise from the ashes-style case that serves as Apollo's first proper case as an official WAA employee and helps tie up some loose threads/lets the characters deal with the fallout of Succession.
Idk I just think it'd be fun/satisfying to realise slowly that there's more to everything than meets the eye.
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odinsblog · 8 months
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sniperct · 11 months
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Also, cuz I've seen this
Trump has not been charged with treason
It appears his charges may involved the espionage act(which is about as high as you can get without actually being charged with treason), but treason requires a super high bar (deliberately so due to how often the charge was used to eliminate political enemies in England) to clear in this country and it's unlikely they'll ever charge him with that unless they have an absolutely slam dunk case and even then it's iffy.
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[PREV]
April 20, 2026: 10:45 AM
Okay, no more messing around--this is the first trial with your name on it, and you can't spend it all listening to bad music on your phone!
...also, it would probably be bad if Mr Gavin's friend got convicted of murder. That too.
You straighten your tie and look around the courtroom--it seems as though everyone's gotten really invested in the nuances of poker-playing in the past twenty minutes. Okay. While you've been distracted, several pieces of evidence have entered into the court record, and Mr Gavin seems to be on the verge of a breakthrough. Let's assess:
-It seems that Olga Orly, current witness, was dealing the cards for a poker game between Phoenix Wright and Shadi Smith
-Smith and Orly conspired to expose Wright of cheating in order to maintain a seven-year-long winning streak. By slipping an extra ace into the deck, they would be able to 'prove' this.
-In the photograph entered into the Court Record, however, each player only has two aces in their hands. However, this contradicts the actual preserved cards from that night, which show one set with two aces and one set with three, making five in total
-One might expect, based on Orly's testimony, that it would be Wright's hand with the extra card--but it's Smith's hand that has the extra ace, sticking out like a sore thumb with a bright blue back amidst the red cards
This has got to be it--the breakthrough you've been waiting for! Or at least, waiting for somebody else to think about for you. Not even looking at Mr Gavin, not giving the rest of the courtroom the slightest regard, you bang on the bench like a true seasoned defense attorney and voice your opinion to the room at large.
"The defense would like to formally accuse the witness, Ms Olga Orly, of murder!"
.....
Crickets. Dead silence. You're not quite sure whether this reaction is good or bad.
Luckily, Mr Gavin is always there to add to any ambient tension in a room. "Well done, Justice. We established this ten minutes ago. Do you have any other genius observations to contribute?"
What?
Looking around, you notice that Ms Orly is no longer at the witness stand. Prosecutor Payne is regarding you with the kind of bafflement typically reserved for conspiracy theorists touting their beliefs at an academic conference. Mr Wright just shrugs in your direction, as though he half-expected this.
"Ms Orly had to be removed from the courtroom following her shock at being named as a murder suspect. In the meantime, we've been debating whether to continue the trial today or leave it for a later time," Mr Gavin clarifies. "Personally, I believe we should allow for more time to investigate, but we've hit some...snags, shall we say."
He shifts his icy glare over to where Mr Wright stands. Wright narrows his eyes.
"We can't end the trial here for today, Gavin. Just think! We have all the evidence we need. Don't we, uhh. Justin?" He's looking at you.
"It's Justice," you say, still feeling disconnected from what's happening. He could have bothered to get your name right, considering he allegedly requested you specifically for this case.
"Yeah, that. Look, we alternated between two differently colored decks of cards while playing, right? That was specifically to prevent them from getting mixed together."
It still happened, though, you think, uncharitably.
"It was the blue deck you were playing with in the final game, wasn't it?" you ask, desperate to seem as though you were at least following along with the trial a little.
"Actually, we were playing with red cards." Wright doesn't seem surprised at your misinterpretation, though, even though everyone else in the courtroom seems a little thrown off. You don't know why you had that impression, though--there's just something that's itching in the back of your mind telling you that the cards were blue.
"But a card of the wrong color in the deck means somebody cheated!" Payne screeches from across the courtroom.
"Yep. Except--a card of the wrong color raises a couple questions. When was it swapped...and who swapped it?"
Payne sneers. "Obviously it was swapped before the murder!"
"Was it?" Wright smiles, a little thing that doesn't quite reach his eyes. "Apollo, what do you think?"
You don't answer immediately. There's something about Wright's expression that makes you feel that the most obvious answer isn't going to be the correct one--and you need to think this through. Logically, you'd think that cheating would have to happen before anybody got murdered. However...
If the cheater swapped a blue card into a deck of red ones, they'd be found out immediately. There's no way they could swap the cards during the murder--there would have been far too much going on at that point. So it must have happened...
"After the murder. They swapped the cards after Smith was already dead." You don't know why Wright is being so enigmatic about this, but you also know that you're correct about this.
"Ah, but if it was after the murder...who swapped the cards?" Wright still has that expression on his face. You're reevaluating the part of you that's still hanging onto that university-student-idolization of the man, because in-person, he's infuriating.
"It's Orly, of course," Mr Gavin says, seemingly as fed up with this as everyone else. "The murder has been done, the only two left alive are her and Wright. Wright is our client, and furthermore would have no motive to aid his opponent in victory. This is a pointless exercise, and we are wasting the court's time."
"Are we?" Wright queries. "I want to hear what Apollo thinks."
This again! Come to think of it, something's not quite adding up. Wright has no motive to swap the cards, correct, but the added ace had the wrong color back, and Orly was the dealer. She would have known the color of the cards--and wouldn't have made such a careless mistake. If the swap took place after the murder, obviously Smith couldn't have done it. But that's....impossible.
"I don't think there is an answer," you say. "Nobody present in the room at the time would have swapped the cards in the way that they've been swapped. Not only is the card's color incorrect, but...the blue card in the red deck isn't even an ace, though we know there were five of them in play."
The courtroom fills with murmurs of disbelief. You're still reeling, somehow having gone from listening to terrible legal-themed music to having the realization of the decade.
"The person who swapped the cards added in a king to the deck, rather than an ace--they've created a win with a full house, but for the wrong person, and in the wrong way. This could only happen if they were unaware of how the game had progressed--that is, if the person who swapped the cards was somebody besides Orly, Wright, or Smith!"
There's an uproar as the court processes this information. You feel as though the room's spinning, and grip the edge of the bench to keep steady. Distantly, you hear the judge bang his gavel and call for a recess, lecturing both Wright and Mr Gavin on keeping information from the court--and requesting Mr Gavin meet with him in his chambers.
The courtroom slowly empties, and you find yourself--somehow--back in the defense lobby.
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godisarepublican · 1 day
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writersarea · 1 year
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Best way to find out about the Trump Indictment: Someone interrupted our Law Student Mental Health Committee meeting to say it. I think that did wonders for us, tbh
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nerdykeith · 8 months
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Happy to see that Donny T isn't getting any more special treatment so far. His plea to postpone his most recent trial for fraud, has been denied. Judge rules his plea is without merit, which is such the case for most things that come out of Trump's mouth.
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jaywinaustin · 1 month
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ausetkmt · 7 months
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The Associated Press
Judge rules Donald Trump defrauded banks, insurers while building real estate empire https://apnews.com/article/donald-trump-letitia-james-fraud-lawsuit-1569245a9284427117b8d3ba5da74249
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tomorrowusa · 9 months
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youtube
Tim Miller at The Bulwark looks at Donald Trump's third (and biggest) indictment.
There will probably be a fourth indictment related to Trump's famous January 2021 phone call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. Stay tuned.
Tim also reminds us how Republicans had a chance to rid themselves of the burden of Trump at the second impeachment trial but blew it and are now stuck with him because of their cowardice in 2021.
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muddypolitics · 3 months
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I think a lot of people in this country are out of touch with reality and will accept anything Donald Trump tells them. You had a jury that said that Donald Trump raped a woman. And that doesn’t seem to be moving the needle. There’s a lot of things about today’s electorate that I have a hard time understanding.
Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT): Trump Lawyer Takes An Absolute Drubbing By The Judge
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going-to-superhell · 9 months
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🫶🏻✨🩷✨🙏Manifesting they declare Trump guilty on all charges🙏✨🩷✨🫶🏻
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