'This is purely political': Trump rages at Manhattan prosecutors in criminal probe into the Trump Organization after they convene grand jury to consider whether to indict him while Michael Cohen gloats 'no one is above the law'
Former President Donald Trump raged against Manhattan prosecutors for conducting a 'purely political' investigation after it was revealed that a grand jury had been convened to consider whether to indict him with criminal charges.
Manhattan prosecutors have convened the grand jury that will weigh criminal charges against Donald Trump, according to reports on Tuesday.
The grand jury will also consider whether other Trump Organization executives or the business itself will be prosecuted, The Washington Post reported.
Trump's former attorney Michael Cohen had praised the news of the grand jury just before his old boss released his statement on the revelations.
'This is a continuation of the greatest Witch Hunt in American history. It began the day I came down the escalator in Trump Tower, and it’s never stopped,' Trump said.
'They wasted two years and $48 million in taxpayer dollars on Mueller and Russia Russia Russia, Impeachment Hoax #1, Impeachment Hoax #2, and it continues to this day, with illegally leaked confidential information.'
Manhattan prosecutors have convened the grand jury that will weigh criminal charges against Donald Trump, according to reports on Tuesday
Former President Donald Trump raged against Manhattan prosecutors for conducting a 'purely political' investigation in a statement made to his website
Michael Cohen, Trump's former personal lawyer and fixer, is photographed leaving his Upper East Side Apartment in New York City on May 20th
Trump claimed that 'no other president in history' has had to endure the situations he has before touting a number of his accomplishments, including Space Force and the coronavirus vaccine.
'This is purely political, and an affront to the almost 75 million voters who supported me in the presidential election, and it’s being driven by highly partisan Democrat prosecutors,' Trump said.
'New York City and State are suffering the highest crime rates in their history, and instead of going after murderers, drug dealers, human traffickers, and others, they come after Donald Trump.'
That statement, however, is false. While crime has undeniably risen in New York City to alarming levels, those numbers are still well below the 1970s and 1980s when there were more than 2,000 murders a year in the Big Apple, according to The New York Times. NYPD data shows that there have been 165 murders this year to date.
'Interesting that today a poll came out indicating I’m far in the lead for the Republican Presidential Primary and the General Election in 2024,' Trump continued.
'Our country is broken, our elections are rigged, corrupt, and stolen, our prosecutors are politicized and I will just have to keep on fighting like I have been for the last five years!'
Investigators are looking into whether his business manipulated the value of his real estate portfolio to defraud banks and insurance companies and if any tax benefits were obtained through the evaluations.
The president has denied any wrongdoing and believes all the investigations into him are just further examples of Democratic witch hunts.
The grand jury will also consider whether other Trump Organization executives or the business itself will be prosecuted
The president has denied any wrongdoing and believes all the investigations into him are just further examples of Democratic witch hunts
The Post reported that the panel will sit for three days a week for roughly six months.
The members on the panel will hear a number of cases, which is traditional with New York State grand juries. They aren't convened on a case-by-case basis.
The convening of the grand jury is the latest development in Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance's case against the former president which has picked up steam in the last two weeks.
It also indicates Vance may have evidence of criminality against Trump, according to Rebecca Roiphe - a former assistant district attorney in Manhattan who is now a professor at New York Law School.
Legal experts believe that seating a long-term grand jury indicated that 'prosecutors are convinced they have a case.'
She said that seating a long-term grand jury indicated that 'prosecutors are convinced they have a case'.
Vance's team may present the entirety of their case at once or in between the panel reviewing other cases. It is unclear if the grand jury will be asked to consider returning any indictments, the outlet reported.
Renato Mariotti, a former federal prosecutor and columnist for Politico, said that if charges come they are still 'months away.'
'The mere fact that a special grand jury was empaneled does not mean that any particular person will be charged. It does not necessarily mean that Trump himself will be charged,' Mariotti tweeted.
'But it is fair to say that Vance's investigation is far along and that charges are on the horizon.'
Donald Trump, wife Melania, with the Barry and Jennifer Weisselberg, the son and daughter n law of Trump Org CFO Allen Weisselberg. Jennifer has been assisting the criminal probe into the Trump Org for months
Vance is leaving office at the end of the year meaning there's a good chance he'll pass the two-year probe to his successor.
Trump is facing two investigations into his business practices in New York.
Democratic New York Attorney General Letitia James announced last Tuesday that her civil investigation into Trump's business conduct has turned criminal as she claims he manipulated the value of his assets to mislead tax authorities and lenders.
She did not say what prompted her office to expand its investigation into a criminal probe.
James announced on Friday that her office would also working alongside Vance's probe as she said she has assigned two lawyers to work with the his office on a criminal investigation into Trump's business dealings.
James, a Democrat, said her office is also continuing its ongoing civil investigation into the the Republican ex-president and his company, the Trump Organization.
'Two of our assistant attorney generals have been cross designated as district attorneys,' James said at a news conference on an unrelated topic.
Florida officials are debating what to do about Donald Trump if he's indicted by New York prosecutors while in their state as an obscure state law gives Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis - seen with Trump at a 2018 campaign rally - the power to decide extradition
The investigations by James and Vance both seem to have started because of Trump's former attorney Michael Cohen who turned on his longtime friend after pleading guilty to lying to Congress and making hush-money payments for him.
Vance started his criminal investigation in 2018 after Cohen pleaded guilty and quickly expanded as he sought out Trump's tax records.
Prosecutors finally obtained his tax records in March, after a protracted legal battle that ended when the Supreme Court ruled Trump had to hand them over.
Cohen praised the news of the formation of the grand jury in a tweet on Tuesday.
'I am not surprised by this at all and have been steadfast in saying the wheels of justice turn slowly but they nevertheless turn. No one is above the law!!!' he tweeted.
James began her civil investigation of the Trump Organization in 2019 after Cohen testified before Congress, claiming Trump inflated and deflated the values of his assets - misleading lenders and taxing authorities.
Michael Cohen and others started to react to the news of the grand jury formation on Tuesday
Jennifer Weisselberg, the former daughter-in-law of Trump's longtime finance chief Allen Weisselberg, has been cooperating with both investigations.
She has given investigators reams of tax records and other documents as they look into whether some Trump employees were given off-the-books compensation, such as apartments or school tuition.
Allen Weisselberg was subpoenaed in James' civil investigation and testified twice last year.
People took to Twitter on Tuesday to react to the news of the grand jury formation.
Congressman Bill Pascrell, a Democrat from New Jersey, wrote: 'NY has convened a grand jury to potentially indict trump and his associates for years of documented financial crimes, abuses, and felonies.'
'I was the first member of Congress to demand trump be prosecuted for his crimes,' he added.
Actor George Takei surprisingly slammed the grand jury for being 'one-sided'.
'NY prosecutors will be presenting their case to the grand jurors, with no defense counsel or judge present. It’s a forum that’s so one-sided, the target audience can be made to believe nearly anything. Kind of like Fox News, eh?' Takei wrote.
Trump issued a statement last Wednesday complaining that he's being 'unfairly attacked and abused by a corrupt political system.'
He contends the probes are part of a Democratic plot to silence his voters and block him from running for president again.
Trump was pictured arriving at Trump Tower in Manhattan on Monday morning just days after James announced the criminal probe into his business.
He stepped out of his car on Fifth Avenue and looked at cameras after a trip from his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey, where he is spending the summer away from the heat of Mar-a-Lago.
Since James announced the probe, there have been mounting questions over whether Allen Weisselberg will turn on him.
On Thursday, Weisselberg former daughter-in-law Jennifer said he would 'definitely' flip on the president and former Trump Organization executive Barbara Res said she believes he is already cooperating with prosecutors.
'I think Weisselberg is very concerned about his kids,' Res told MSNBC's Ari Melber.
'I think that what they're doing is the kind of thing they did with [retired Lt. Gen. Michael] Flynn. Remember his kid? I don't think Weisselberg will let his son go to jail. So that's what he's doing.'
Mariotti explained that, in order to prove fraud, prosecutors will need to prove if the defendant knew the statements in the documents were false.
'It's easier to prove knowledge for people involved in preparing or authorizing the documents, like Weisselberg,' he said.
'So don't be surprised if people like Weisselberg are their initial target, to induce him or others to flip.'
He added: 'Someone like Trump or his children will only have liability if they knew of the false statements and participated in the scheme in some way or moved it forward somehow.'
Florida officials are preparing options for what to do about Trump should he be charged by New York prosecutors while he is in the Sunshine state.
An obscure extradition clause in Florida law could benefit Trump if he's indicted during Vance's criminal investigation.
Jennifer Weisselberg said Thursday that Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg would 'flip' and assist prosecutors 'To me a liar - a cheater is a liar is a thief and as far as I'm concerned, there's been nothing legal going on in the past 21 years,' she told CNN
In Florida's statute on interstate extradition, the state's governor has the power to intervene over whether an indicted 'person ought to be surrendered' to law enforcement officials from another state, Politico revealed.
If Trump gets charged by the grand jury, Florida's Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis - a close Trump friend and ally - could decide if he should be handed over to New York authorities.
Trump, however, has moved to his Bedminister, N.J., club as Mar-a-Lago has closed for the hot summer season. In moving, he lost the protection he had in Florida.
Law enforcement officials in Palm Beach County, where Trump lived in his Mar-a-Lago club after leaving the White House, are preparing for a possible indictment coming down from New York.
And they're discussing how to handle the thorny extradition issue that could come from it, two sources close to the matter told the news outlet.
'The statute leaves room for interpretation that the governor has the power to order a review and potentially not comply with the extradition notice,' Joe Abruzzo, clerk of the Circuit Court of Palm Beach County, told Politico.
He is the official who would be in charge of opening a potential fugitive-at-large case.
Abruzzo is also a close friend of President Joe Biden's brother Frank, who works for a Florida-based law firm. Abruzzo said that, despite his friendship with the Biden family, 'the full extent of the law will be followed and carried out appropriately, without bias.'
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