Jonathan Turley
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 63 |
Date of birth | May 6,1961 |
Zodiac sign | Taurus |
Born | Chicago |
Illinois | |
United States | |
Nationality | American |
Spouse(s) | Leslie (m. 1997) |
Residence | Washington |
D. C. | |
United States | |
Job | Professor |
Writer | |
Jurist | |
Law professor | |
Education | Northwestern Pritzker School of Law |
The University of Chicago | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 445924 |
Jonathan Turley Life story
Jonathan Turley is an American lawyer, legal scholar, writer, commentator, and legal analyst in broadcast and print journalism. He is a professor at the George Washington University Law School.
Four takeaways from Trump indictment for 2020 election interference
... Jonathan Turley, a prominent conservative legal scholar, who had described the previous indictment related to classified documents as strong, " Some of the speech might be protected by the First Amendment, " said Mr Huq of the University of Chicago Law School...
How big are Donald Trump's legal problems?
... Even if a conviction was secured, " it would likely be overturned absent some new evidence showing an active role in planning or facilitating the riot" says criminal defence lawyer Jonathan Turley, who was called by Republicans to testify at Trump s impeachment hearings...
Trump impeachment: House Democrats to unveil formal charges
... Nadler and the Dems know this, but refuse to acknowledge! Law professor Jonathan Turley, who testified for Mr Trump s Republican Party before the House Judiciary Committee, told the BBC: The problem is not with the legal basis for such impeachable offenses but the evidentiary record...
Trump impeachment inquiry: The case for and against
...From right: Noah Feldman, Pamela Karlan, Michael Gerhardt and Jonathan Turley Experts are debating what the US Constitution says about impeachment, in light of the ongoing inquiry into President Donald Trump s alleged abuse of power involving Ukraine...
Trump impeachment: New phase begins in congressional inquiry
... From left: Profs Noah Feldman, Pamela Karlan, Michael Gerhardt and Jonathan Turley Some spectators even brought binoculars to the hearing As she began her testimony, Prof Karlan scolded the committee s top Republican, saying she was insulted by his comment implying that she had not reviewed the intelligence committee s public testimony of 12 witnesses...
Trump impeachment: White House aides can be made to testify
... What are the legal implications? By Jonathan Turley, law professor at George Washington University Presidents are not kings...
The democratic presidential candidate, Biden calls for a Trump charge
... A self-inflicted woundthe analysis of Jonathan Turley, a lawyer,a letter, of the law concern about the lack of a vote and the secrecy of the proceedings...
White House 'will not co-operate with removal request'
... A self-inflicted wound the analysis of Jonathan Turley, a lawyer,a letter, of the law concern about the lack of a vote and the secrecy of the proceedings...
Four takeaways from Trump indictment for 2020 election interference
By Kayla EpsteinBBC News, New York
The special counsel investigating Donald Trump 's efforts to overturn The results of The 2020 US Election has charged The former president with four criminal counts.
The 45-page indictment alleges Mr Trump orchestrated a broad conspiracy designed to keep him in power after he was defeated by Joe Biden .
The charging document unsealed on Thursday accuses him of knowingly spreading " pervasive and destablising lies" about Election fraud that threatened The presidential Election and therefore American democracy.
Mr Trump faces four serious charges: conspiracy to defraud The United States , conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding, obstruction of an official proceeding, and conspiracy against rights.
He described The latest charges - The third separate criminal indictment he is Facing - as part of " un-American witch hunts" against him.
And some legal experts have raised doubts about whether Mr Trump's actions amount to crimes - or if what He Said and did was protected by The US Constitutional First Amendment right to free speech.
Here are four key takeaways from The Justice Department's case:
1. Prosecutors accuse Trump of a multi-pronged conspiracyIn The indictment, special counsel Jack Smith does not Focus On one particular incident, such as The January 6, 2021, attack on The US Capitol by Mr Trump's supporters.
Rather, he considers The entirety of Mr Trump's actions over a two-month period from just after Election Day to The Day he left The White House.
" Despite having lost, The defendant was determined to remain in power, " The indictment states on The First page. " So for More Than two months following Election Day on November 3, 2020, The Defendant spread lies that there had been outcome-determinative fraud in The Election and that he had actually won. "
Prosecutors Go On to outline a tri-part Criminal Conspiracy that violated various elements of Section 18 of The US Code:
That last charge brings home The harm Mr Trump allegedly caused voters directly, said Daniel Charles Richman , a professor at Columbia University Law School.
It " usefully captures The harm not just to The government, alleged elsewhere to have been defrauded, and Congress, alleged to have been obstructed, but to The citizens whose right to have their votes mean something Trump allegedly tried to take away" Mr Richman told The Bbc .
2. Trump allegedly had six co-conspiratorsThe indictment lists six unnamed co-conspirators alongside Trump, who prosecutors allege helped him carry out his unlawful efforts to overturn The Election results.
Four were lawyers working for Mr Trump's campaign, one was a political consultant and The Other a Justice Department official.
The Prosecution claims that they, together with Mr Trump, pushed officials in states where The races had been close to ignore The popular vote, disenfranchise millions of voters and replace legitimate electors with fake ones.
It also accused them of attempting to use The Power of The justice department to conduct sham investigations into supposed fraud and of pressuring then Vice-President Mike Pence to fraudulently alter The Election outcome as part of his ceremonial role to certify results in Congress.
Prosecutors included these individuals to back up their conspiracy charges, Aziz Huq of The University of Chicago Law School explained. Basically, you can't have a conspiracy with just one person - you have to conspire with others.
However, The six have not been charged in this indictment - and there is no guarantee all will be. There could be many possible reasons prosecutors decided not to name The co-conspirators here, Huq said. For one, these individuals could be co-operating with The government.
3. Trump knowingly repeated false claims of Election fraud, indictment saysThe indictment does not just allege Trump made false claims - it says that he knew that what he was saying about The Election results wasn't true.
Government prosecutors say this is an important element to his conspiracy to stay in power.
" But The Defendant repeated and widely disseminated them anyway - to make his knowingly false claims appear legitimate, create an intense national atmosphere of mistrust and anger, and erode public faith in The administration of The Election . "
The indictment also says Trump lied and echoed false claims of Election fraud for months, despite repeated warnings from multiple people in his circle, those " whom he relied" on for " candid advice". That list includes:
The indictment points to an occasion on 31 December, 2020, when Mr Trump, having been told again his claims were unfounded, allegedly " suggested he might change The Leadership in The Justice Department. "
Establishing that Mr Trump knew he was lying will be crucial to proving his intent to commit A Crime .
4. Trump may have a free speech defenceJack Smith acknowledges in The indictment that Mr Trump, like any American, had a right to challenge The results of The Election - and even to falsely claim that he only lost because of supposed voter fraud.
And that First Amendment constitutional right to express his views may be one hurdle The Prosecution has to overcome in this case.
Jonathan Turley , a prominent conservative legal scholar, who had described The previous indictment related to classified documents as strong,
" Some of The Speech might be protected by The First Amendment, " said Mr Huq of The University of Chicago Law School. But, he added, " speech that is used to facilitate The Crime is almost never covered by The First Amendment. "
That might be a reason why The special counsel tries to stress that what Mr Trump said and did was a key component of his conspiracy to overturn The Election result.
" The defendant's knowingly false statements were integral to his criminal plans to defeat The federal government function, obstruct The certification, and interfere with others' right to vote and have their votes counted, " states one key passage.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com