LAUGHABLE: Firing Sessions Won’t Save Trump, or His Kids, From the Law
LAUGHABLE: Firing Sessions Won’t Save
Trump, or His Kids, From the Law
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| Attorney General Jeff Sessions and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein attend the Religious Liberty Summit at the Department of Justice on July 30, 2018, in Washington, DC. |
If Jeff Sessions is
planning on buying new drapes for the attorney general’s office, he’d better
hustle up, because the clock appears to be ticking rapidly down to zero. Donald
Trump, according to Tuesday’s Washington Post, “has privately
revived the idea of firing him in conversations with his aides and personal
lawyers this month.” This time, it sounds like he means it.
For
the sake of argument, let’s say Trump manages to overcome his towering personal
cowardice and actually pulls the trigger on a decision to fire Sessions. Replacing the attorney general would
require Senate confirmation, unless Trump taps a department head who already
underwent Senate approval, a move made possible by the Vacancies Reform Act of
1998.
This
would be messy, as the law isn’t clear on whether it applies to the replacement
of officials who have been fired, but is entirely possible. Trump’s final
option to replace Sessions without Senate approval would be a temporary recess
appointment, but Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and the Democrats have
made it clear they will hold pro forma sessions during any recess to thwart
this particular action.
Despite
all that, and the fact that firing Sessions for Russia-investigation reasons
(“He recused himself!”) would be prima facieevidence of
obstruction, say Trump actually does it, and everything after goes his way:
Sessions’ replacement takes over the Russia investigation and dumps Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who has thus far refused to fire Special
Counsel Robert Mueller … and Rosenstein’s replacement fires Mueller,
effectively ending the investigation … and Sessions’ replacement ultimately
refuses to make the fruits of the Mueller investigation public.
String
all these stinky sausage links together just so and Donald Trump is off the
hook, right?
Nope.
Neither
are his friends, and neither are his kids. Their legal woes have gone far
beyond the Russian collusion investigation but may very well lead right back to
it when all is said and done.
The Trump Organization is the repository
for all Trump revenues related to real estate dealings, and as the world
already knows, real estate transactions are the best and easiest way to clean
dirty money. The theory almost certainly being pursued by Mueller is that any
2016 election collusion was not the beginning of Trump’s dealings with Russia
but rather the end product of a long financial
relationship that began when no one else would loan money to a windbag casino
mogul who had already gone bankrupt five times. Yet even if the collusion
investigation is derailed or comes up dead empty, the president’s legal
troubles stemming from the Trump Organization will continue unabated.
Why?
The Trump Organization and the Trump
Foundation, and by proxy the Trump family itself, are all on the rocks.
“There
are now multiple investigations of the Trump Organization,” reportsAdam Davidson in The New Yorker,
“being conducted by the special counsel Robert Mueller, the New York Attorney
General, The New York State Department of Taxation and Finance, the Manhattan
District Attorney, the Southern District of New York, and — quite likely —
other jurisdictions. President Trump is unable to stop most of these
investigations.”
The Trump Foundation is another matter
altogether. If the allegations are true, Donald Trump and his family used the
foundation, which was intended to serve charitable organizations, as their own
personal checking account. According to the accusations, money from the
foundation was spent to make problems at and complaints against various Trump
properties go away. Worse, foundation money was used to purchase personal perks
like the notorious $10,000 portrait of Trump
himself.
“The
New York State attorney general’s office filed a scathingly worded
lawsuit,” reported The New York Times, “taking
aim at the Donald J. Trump Foundation, accusing the charity and the Trump
family of sweeping violations of campaign finance laws, self-dealing and
illegal coordination with the presidential campaign. The attorney general also
sent referral letters to the Internal Revenue Service and the Federal Election
Commission for possible further action, adding to Mr. Trump’s extensive legal
challenges.”
Taken
as a whole, that’s one hell of a list of legal problems, and not just for Papa
Don. The kids are not alright; Donald Jr., Eric and Ivanka Trump are up to their eyeballs in serious Trump
Foundation dealings. The brothers are both board members, as was Ivanka until
she stepped down after her father’s election. The civil lawsuit undertaken by
New York Attorney General Barbara Underwood is but the tip of the legal
iceberg.
“[Underwood]
forwards all this evidence that she gathered to the IRS for them to investigate
as a potential criminal tax matter,” explainedRachel Maddow last week. “She
forwards it to the Federal Election Commission, for them to investigate as a
potential set of criminal campaign finance violations. She CCs it to the Public
Integrity Division at the US Justice Department. And within New York state, the
state tax department starts investigating that evidence as well — as laid out
by Barbara Underwood to see if, in addition to the civil lawsuit, there should
be a state criminal referral against the Trump Foundation, and President Trump
personally, and each of his three eldest children personally.”
It
is not too farfetched to wonder if, or perhaps when, one of these upstanding
citizens will throw the rest of the family to the wolves to save themselves.
They have plenty of people to emulate in this regard. The Trump Organization
and the Trump Foundation, and by proxy the Trump family itself, are all on the
rocks because of fully knowledgeable insiders who are getting squeezed until
they squeak.
It
started last week with the twin-bill detonations of Paul Manafort and Michael
Cohen. Cohen, Trump’s long-time personal attorney and “fixer,” voluntarily cut
a deal with the Southern District of New York to tell what he knows about
illegal hush money payoffs to two women Trump had affairs with — adult actress
Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen MacDougal — using Trump Organization
money.
Paul
Manafort, Trump’s former campaign manager and international lobbyist, has not
talked yet, but with a conviction already around his neck, a second trial only
weeks away and a presidential pardon perhaps a political impossibility, Mr.
Manafort has a decision to make … if he hasn’t made it already. The Wall Street
Journal recently reported that Manafort sought to cut a deal with Mueller
before the second trial begins, but the talks broke down. As the September 17
trial date approaches, Manafort may very well try again.
After
that came the announced cooperation of David
Pecker, CEO of American Media Inc., head of the National Enquirer and close
friend of Donald Trump. Pecker was the conduit through which Trump paid
$150,000 to quash the story of his affair with Karen McDougal. On the surface,
the Pecker deal is about getting the goods on Michael Cohen, but as Cohen
himself has indicated (and his recorded conversationsprove), all roads
lead to Trump.
Even
without the Russia-related matters, this is a stupendously large and convoluted
legal nut to crack. How can any investigators hope to fully understand it all,
much less prosecute it?
Answer:
Flip the accountant. His name is Allen Weisselberg, and he knows everything.
“Weisselberg
is chief financial officer for the Trump Organization,” report Erin Kelly and Fredreka
Schouten of USA Today, “which is the Trump family real estate and branding
empire. As the longtime financial gatekeeper, Weisselberg likely knows a great
deal about the company’s payments to Cohen. Weisselberg, who also serves as one
of two trustees of the trust that controls Trump’s assets, was granted immunity
to provide information about Cohen, according to the Wall Street Journal.”
Compelling
the infamously reticent Weisselberg to speak on the record about the inner
workings of Trump World is, in short, the keys to the kingdom. Even if his
information is currently limited to Cohen’s payoffs to MacDougal and Daniels,
that information could establish bedrock proof of Trump’s felony complicity in
campaign finance violations and election interference.
“It
is safe to say that the entire world of Trump watchers — those journalists,
political folks, and advocates who carefully monitor every bit of Trump news —
went bonkers,” continued Davidson of The New Yorker.
“Weisselberg is the man to whom those people most want to speak.”
Donald
Trump can fire Jeff Sessions, re-hire him and fire him all over again. It won’t
change a thing for him, or for his children, if they are as complicit as they
appear to be. The New York State Attorney General, the New York State
Department of Taxation and Finance, the Manhattan District Attorney, the US
Attorney for the Southern District of New York, the Federal Election
Commission, the Public Integrity Division at the US Justice Department, plus
all the civil suits grinding away out there, are not going away.

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