Red flag raised that Trump may order evidence against him 'to be destroyed' once in office
1 month, 2 weeks ago

Red flag raised that Trump may order evidence against him 'to be destroyed' once in office

Raw Story  

A hefty majority of Americans said last month that they thought it would be wrong for Donald Trump to order the cases against him to be dropped, according to the USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll. Meanwhile, Trump's legal ally Mike Davis has already tweeted a warning to Smith telling him to "lawyer up," indicating that the pro-Trump staff is ready to begin their retribution campaign. "Look, there was no guarantee that Donald Trump was going to be convicted in either of these federal cases, but what it means is that no jury of his peers will get to decide based on the evidence whether he was guilty," said the reporter. "There's tons of evidence supporting the charges in both of them, that Donald Trump hoarded classified information, that he allegedly obstructed evidence and things that were arguably worse than what Richard Nixon did in the scandal that cost him the presidency," said Dilanian.

History of this topic

Donald Trump is back as president: What happens to the criminal, civil cases against him?
1 month, 2 weeks ago
Trump 'better start focusing on his legal troubles' due to 'powerful evidence': expert
11 months, 3 weeks ago
Trump vows to keep talking about criminal cases despite prosecutors pushing for protective order
1 year, 4 months ago

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