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Don’t know if the article picked this up, but in Georgia a pardon board, not the governor, makes the pardon determination and, I am told, requires that a portion of the criminal sentence be served before a pardon is considered. This is a tough case to prosecute, and these are uncharted waters, but it raises the specter of a candidate running for president from behind bars.
A pardon can’t even be considered until 5 years after any criminal sentence is completed. The talk of changing the Georgia Constitution to allow the governor to pardon Trump would required Democratic support and is not going to happen.
That is specifically mentioned in the article as well as delineation of state versus federal crimes in regard to presidential pardons.
Sounds like the Georgia investigation was worth the wait.
For anyone curious but not reading the article, a large part of the “something ingenious” seems to be RICO charges.
It does sound exciting, maybe this will have been worth the wait. I’m not even American, but I don’t think it’s overstating things to say that the fate of the world is (at present) pretty tied into the fate of American democracy. Even the indirect ripple effects from something like this are huge
(Edit: quote formatting)
The one thing to note is that, with something like 20 defendants, it’s going to be pretty slow getting to trial.
That last bit about pardons only being available 5 years after serving the punishment is great to hear.