Well he also perjured himself at the trial and that is how this came out.
But three of the perjury charges which I believe were about the same lies, but during the trial were dropped in the plea bargain.
He was scheduled for multiple days of testimony. But after his first day, Forbes magazine published a story with emails and documents refuting his tesimony and he never returned to testify.
Trump’s Longtime CFO Lied, Under Oath, About Trump Tower Penthouse
I saw that. Do what you will.
NEW: Judge accepts Allen Weisselberg's plea deal is to plead guilty to “two counts of perjury in the first degree” (complaint was 5 counts) and that “the people recommend the sentence of 5 months in jail.”
5 counts of perjury in the 1st degree.
https://twitter.com/frankrunyeon/status/1764671696231956827?t=Sd5ekbXUjI_p183q2Zq_Ew&s=19
Court Reporters say AW is in court in handcuffs waiting his turn
https://twitter.com/frankrunyeon/status/1764667279172677648?t=UHrzZCjuhdvOf04XnQBxdA&s=19
NY Times and AP also reporting this https://apnews.com/article/trump-fraud-weisselberg-perjury-0101a9972cefd1e1fb4ba6d36e69fecb?taid=65e5dc49d370a800015ad654&utm_campaign=TrueAnthem&utm_medium=AP&utm_source=Twitter
Allen Weisselberg, the former chief financial officer of the Trump Organization, surrendered to the Manhattan district attorney Monday morning for arraignment on a new criminal charge, the prosecutor’s office said.
The district attorney didn’t immediately disclose the nature of the charge, but people familiar with the investigation had previously told The Associated Press and other news organizations that prosecutors were considering charging Weisselberg, 76, with perjuring himself during his testimony at Trump’s civil business fraud trial last October.
Allen Weisselberg, the former chief financial officer of the Trump Organization, is expected to plead guilty to perjury charges Monday in connection with the testimony he gave during former President Donald Trump's civil fraud trial, according to three sources familiar with the matter.
Weisselberg was not expected to enter into a cooperation agreement with the plea that would require his testimony at any future trial, one source familiar with the matter said. Weisselberg arrived at the Manhattan district attorney's office before 7 a.m. and is expected to make the plea this morning.
What do you suppose 13818 does?
There's been a lot of misunderstanding about that
Yeah but 3/14/2024 is 3 divided by 14 divided by 2024
What is the illegal part?
Quarter mile?
Didn't happen. That's an exaggeration by almost 10 times. If the truth is on your side no need to exaggerate.
It was more like 60 yards according to witnesses.
60 yards =0.0341 mile
The crash site was just south of the Melrose intersection on on Highland Avenue. The engine was found further down the same block from the crash. Well before the next intersection.
The distance between intersections is 0.1 mi. So it was well short of that and thus cannot be 0.25 miles.
Right before his crash his friends and family said he was acting erratically and we're looking to do a drug intervention. The coroner found traces of meth in his system.
If the argument is the crash couldn't have sent the engine that far, what is the alternative? A bomb? A bomb that powerful would leave a ton of evidence on the car.
Give who?
Desantis supports the release?
The story of Purdue is pretty well known.
They even got Giuliani to help them keep selling Oxy.
The US government secured a criminal conviction against Purdue Pharma in the mid-2000s but failed to curb sales of the drug after Rudy Giuliani reached a deal to avoid a ban on Purdue doing business including the federal government. The George W. Bush administration opted to settle the case instead, with the executives and the company paying $634.5 million in fines in 2007. How Rudy Guiliani slipped a fast legal maneuver past everyone is explained below.
https://kffhealthnews.org/news/how-america-got-hooked-on-a-deadly-drug/ Lots of Purdue Pharma docs here
Purdue and the FDA https://www.marketplace.org/2017/12/13/opioid/
Oxy addiction happened in 1990s. Afghanistan under the Taliban was the largest opiate grower in the world during that time except for year.
In the past two decades 2/3 of the Taliban's money came from heroin.
They just did a big crackdown last year.
Also heroin comes from other countries. Burma is the second biggest provider
The story of Purdue is pretty well known.
They even got Giuliani to help them keep selling Oxy.
The US government secured a criminal conviction against Purdue Pharma in the mid-2000s but failed to curb sales of the drug after Rudy Giuliani reached a deal to avoid a ban on Purdue doing business including the federal government. The George W. Bush administration opted to settle the case instead, with the executives and the company paying $634.5 million in fines in 2007. How Rudy Guiliani slipped a fast legal maneuver past everyone is explained below.
https://kffhealthnews.org/news/how-america-got-hooked-on-a-deadly-drug/ Lots of Purdue Pharma docs here
Purdue and the FDA https://www.marketplace.org/2017/12/13/opioid/
Allegations like this have gone on for a while.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cassie-ventura-sean-diddy-combs-settlement-lawsuit-alleging-abuse-rape/
This last one is big because he claims to have video.
folks are cashing out.
But this is normal, why do you think this equals a crash?
Have you seen how high the Dow Jones is right now? The S&P? Nasdaq?
I don't know if you invest in US markets, but they all are at all time highs.
Profit taking is super common at market highs.
Did you see this part
For nearly the entire bunch, share prices are trading near all-time highs.
Also $11 billion dollars in trades across various sectors over several months is not going to crash the market.
Did you see this part?
Many of the sales were made according to 10b5-1 trading plans that the executives set up late last year and early this year. These trading plans are created in advance so that shares are automatically sold by a broker at a specific date or when the stock hits a certain price. They’re set up to be triggered at a time when the executive doesn’t possess material nonpublic information that could potentially move the stock price and gives the executive a defense against potential insider-trading charges by regulators.
This means these trades could be nothing more than Walmart family members saying, if the stock ever goes above $52 during a period when I don't have nonpublic info make this trade.
I like the video opens with a semi right in front of him.
Then after he tells us these three lanes are restricted to truck traffic and we start seeing cars zoom by.
The video then mentions a trucker who didn't want to go to NYC, so his boss gave him a different load. So what's the effect of that? That doesn't mean that load won't go to NYC.
I think the case is weak.
But even if SCOTUS rules against him, the delay helps Trump. It pushes the trial out even further.
Read the part here about Seal Team Six to see why I think it's a weak case. https://www.newsmax.com/politics/questions-immunity-trump/2024/01/09/id/1148916/
That's a good sign for Trump.
This was posted a few days ago, when that Twitter post went up.
The judge did not find Trump guilty.
A jury did. It was a civil trial with a jury and the jury found him liable.
In the Prince Andrew case he was being sued by an Epstein victim. She asked the judge to dismiss the lawsuit because she settled the case.,
That article has new news in it. Trump has to put up the full amount, but can seek a loan to raise the amount he doesn't have.
Judge declines to pause Trump's $454 million fraud penalty, but halts some sanctions
The judge ruled that Trump must post a bond covering the full amount in order to stop enforcement of the judgment. Singh did grant some of Trump's requests, including pausing a three-year ban on him seeking loans from New York banks — which could help him secure the necessary bond.
To answer your question the same article says
In all, Trump has at least $543.4 million in personal legal liabilities from Engoron's ruling and two other civil court judgments in the last year.
so maybe $400 million wouldn't have been enough.
Also he might need some cash to cover his other expenses. He still has loans to tune of a couple hundred million he needs to keep servicing.
So we will see what happens now that this judge halted the ban on loans
Did they say this court?
I know Habba said this on TV
Searching for journaling suggestions I found several articles claiming thses claims from Twitter are false