Trump is exploiting, abusing, playing, bending and breaking the legal system
As the Houdini of white-collar lawlessness, Donald Trump spent five decades âgaming the system.â He used rules and procedures meant to protect both the due process rights of all the people and our legal system to, instead, manipulate the system for the benefit of himself in more than 3,500 lawsuits.
And that was before he became president.
When it comes to exploiting, rigging, abusing, cheating, playing, working, breaking, bending, or stretching the rules of our system with a specialization in âlegal delay,â there is no other individual or attorney dead or alive in the United States with as much experience and expertise than Trump â the âplaintiff-in-chief,â as dubbed by legal scholar and leading litigator James D. Zin.
Trumpâs record speaks for itself. He wins or draws about 70 percent of the time whether he is the plaintiff or the defendant. And that was without the power of the presidency and before he carried around the Republican Party in his hip pocket. It was also back in those days when he was working the legal system from outside rather than inside, and when he was still shopping around for â rather than appointing â judges.
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Flash to the present moment. Trump is now a former president and presumptive nominee for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination. He also faces four separate felony criminal trials involving matters ranging from falsifying business records to illegally retaining classified documents to attempting to overturn a free and fair presidential election.
So letâs review the ways in which Trumpâs litigating skills and acquired political power have been gaming the system in various courts of law, with an emphasis on the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case and the person who is presiding over that trial, Judge Aileen Cannon.
A Trump nominee, Cannon might very well be the poster judge for Trumpian corruption and ineptitude.
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While Trumpâs lawyers have largely failed to effectively defend Trump in separate civil cases heâs facing â including the E. Jean Carroll sexual abuse and defamation cases, as well as the New York business fraud cases â Trump and his lawyers have proven quite effective in delaying the due process of justice across his criminal cases, which not only pose a threat to his wealth, but to his freedom.
For example, just as we all thought that the Manhattan criminal trial where Trump faces 34 felony counts for falsifying business records connected to âhush moneyâ payments was set to begin on March 25, we learned late Thursday afternoon that District Attorney Alvin Bragg is proposing âa 30-day delay in response to Trumpâs request for a 90-day delay to allow his lawyers time to review a new batch of records.â
The reasons are complicated, so I wonât bother to explain except to say the blame for this delay apparently goes to the U.S. Southern District of New York and a brilliantly timed motion by Trumpâs team. As a result, it means that the first criminal conviction of Trump by a jury of his peers will not probably occur before the 4th of July â rather than sometime in May.
Meanwhile in Georgia, matters are even messier.
On Wednesday, Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee quashed six of the 13 counts against Trump and his 18 alleged co-conspirators, reducing the former presidentâs felony charges from 41 to 38, leaving in place the rest of the racketeering indictments.
And early Friday morning, McAfee ruled because of the âappearance of improprietyâ that traditionally has been a standard for judges and not for prosecutors which is typically about a conflict of interest, the racketeering case can continue if either Fani Willis or special prosecutor Nathan Wade steps aside. (Wade officially resigned on Friday.)
Seems like a new standard of disqualification for prosecutors has been adopted in Georgia by the judge. However, in the context of the testimonies it seems fair and reasonable. Though technically appealable, this will not happen. Wade will now disappear and Willis will try to find a new special prosecutor so the case against Trump and his minions can move forward.
Now then, concurrent with Cannonâs rulings in the classified documents and obstruction of justice case in Florida, there was a recent case â unrelated to Trumpâs proceedings â where Cannon made serious legal errors, âincluding one that potentially violated the defendantâs constitutional rights and could have invalidated the proceedings,â according to legal experts and court transcripts.
Corrupt or incompetent, and probably both, Cannon has needlessly delayed justice where Trump and his two co-conspirators should have already been convicted and sentenced to prison. Consider that their initial indictments were more than nine months ago.
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After all, the classified documents case is a no-brainer, a slam dunk, nothing complicated about either the facts or the law despite a plethora of motions from Trumpâs lawyers â some of which were heard on Thursday at a hearing before Cannon. Trumpâs team claimed that the case should be thrown out for such frivolous reasons that she should not have even entertained oral arguments in the first place.
After Cannon decided to appoint a special master in September 2022, I argued in âWhy the Mar-a-Lago âspecial masterâ decision is so dreadful,â that to hold the former president to a higher bar for indictment or prosecution âonly serves to reinforce the existing biases of our justice system, favoring the powerful at the expense of most everybody else.â
As Duke law professor Sam Buell tweeted at the same time, the ex-president âis getting something no one else ever gets in federal court, heâs getting it for no good reason, and it will not in the slightest reduce the ongoing howls that he is persecuted, when he is being privileged.â
I also quoted New York University law professor Andrew Weissmann, who as an assistant U.S. attorney from 1991 to 2002, has prosecuted high-profile organized criminals. He similarly tweeted: âIn none of the rare Special Master appointment cases â of attorneys like [Michael] Cohen and [Rudi] Giuliani -- did the court ENJOIN the criminal investigationâ like Cannon did in the documents case?
No, they did not.
Cannonâs âmalfeasanceâ in the Mar-a-Lago investigation case was revealed on Dec. 1, 2022, when a unanimous per curiam decision by the 11th Circuit vacated her order to appoint a special master, who was slated to oversee the review of the classified documents seized from his residence on August 8, 2022.
Itâs possible Special Counsel Jack Smith may soon be headed to the court of appeals because he has sought reconsideration for what he calls a âclear errorâ and âmanifest injusticeâ where Cannon had âdecided to unseal the identities of two dozen potential witnesses, along with sensitive information they provided to the government.â
Smithâs reconsideration motion also argued that Cannon âminimizes the risk of real-world harm and witness intimidation these individuals would face.â
In fact, this danger is so real that Brian Butler, a 20-year employee at Mar-a-Lago, in order to get out in front of the news, gave an exclusive insiderâs interview to CNN on Monday about some of his anticipated testimony and his concerns for his fellow employees who have also been indicted along with their Boss.
Among other statements, Butler maintains that these indictments have nothing to do with âwitch huntsâ â the term Trump uses for most any legal or governmental action for which heâs the target. Trump, Butler said, is not to be trusted and that the country would be better off if it could free itself from Trump.
According to several legal analysts interviewed by Salon, Butler presented himself as an âidealâ and âcredibleâ witness with âessential evidenceâ including details of his âunknowing involvement with the movement of classified documentsâ as well as his âclose-knit friendshipâ with Carlos DeOliveira, one of the two other Trump employees who plead not guilty.
On Thursday morning, before Cannon was to hear from Trumpâs lawyers on the motions to dismiss the entire prosecution based on the Presidential Records Act (PRA) and âunconstitutional vagueness,â MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin had this to say on âMorning Joeâ: The PRA âdoesnât support the interpretation and almost the perversion that Donald Trump is trying to give to it.â
And late Wednesday evening, Joyce Vance, the distinguished law professor and former head of the U.S. attorneyâs office for the Southern District of Alabama, had this to say in her Civil Discourse Substack: âIf this was any other judge, Iâd be telling you there was a 105% chance these motions would be dismissed. But with Judge Cannon, we just have to wait and see how she rules.â
Associated Press reporters, who were at the hearings in Florida, wrote that Cannon âappears skeptical of Trumpâs bid to dismiss his classified document prosecution.â
Judge Aileen Cannon and Special Counsel Jack Smith
Aileen Cannon (Source: U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary)
It turns out they were correct. In a two-page order, Cannon ârebuffed argument by Mr. Trumpâs lawyers that the central statute in the indictment, the Espionage Act, was impermissibly vague and should be struck down entirely.â
Although the judge has still not set a trial date, she indicated that some of Trumpâs arguments might be more appropriately received by a jury, hinting that there very well may be a trial someday.
Even though Cannon ruled against the motion to throw out the case as most legal experts thought she should, the hearing of oral argument on the matter still served Trump well in further delaying a trial that most likely will not occur before the end of summer.
Perhaps most ominously, Cannonâs ruling without prejudice means that it can be raised again during jury instructions which means that the case against Trump, even the obstruction of justice, could then be dismissed altogether and not appealable by the state because of the double jeopardy clause.
During the past couple of months while at campaign rallies and events, Trumpâs dementia seems to be growing worse with every speech he makes. Nevertheless, the plaintiff-in-chief still seems to be at the top of his illegal gamesmanship.
Gregg Barak is an emeritus professor of criminology and criminal justice and the author of several books on the crimes of the powerful, including Criminology on Trump (2022) and its sequel, Indicting the 45th President: Boss Trump, the GOP, and What We Can Do About the Threat to American Democracy, to be published April 1.

