What a coincidence! Thomas Barrack, another Trump “advisor” and chair of the Presidential Inaugural Committee has been arrested and charged with acting as a foreign agent.

context-cdn.washingtonpost.com/notes/prod/def….

This isn't actually a FARA violation. It's worse.

1/
22 USC 611 (FARA) is a documentary requirement and (if you lie) can carry a 5-year sentence.

Barrack was charged with the "espionage lite" statute for people working on behalf of a foreign power: law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18…
This one carries up to a 10-year penalty.

2/
One reason I said, "what a coincidence" is that this week I'm writing about Republican lawbreaking.

But who the heck can keep up?

3/
The link from Tweet #1 didn't work. Here's the indictment: context-cdn.washingtonpost.com/notes/prod/def…

A foreign agent is someone working in the US but "subject to the direction or control of a foreign government."

This doesn't include consulates or officials. It's someone working in secret.

4/
If you're working in the US, but subject to the control of a foreign government, you're required to provide notification to the Attorney General.

Here's what's mind bending: The guy secretly working under the control of a foreign government was advising the US President.

5/
Barrack was working for not 1, not 2 . . . but 4 unnamed Emirati officials whose names are known to the grand jury.

And what did they have Barrack doing?

Among other things, influencing US foreign policy and "obtaining information" about US government positions.

6/
Just think how much easier it is to accomplish these goals if you're the Chair of the Presidential Inaugural Fund and an advisor to the United States president.

Whether or not Trump knew, he looks bad. Right?

7/
If he knew, then he's letting his staff secretly work for a foreign government. If he didn't know, he was a dupe.

One problem with all these crimes is that it's hard to focus on one. There are too many! It's dizzying! They all fade into a blur.

8/
None of them can sink the public consciousness. The Trump Org indictment was just a few weeks ago.

Compare that to the constant repetition of "her emails" -- a made-up crime. It was hammered so often that even those who know there was no crime feel a nagging doubt.

9/

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More from @Teri_Kanefield

20 Jul
I haven't really wanted to weigh into this, but the idea that people commit crimes because they think (or know) they won't be held accountable does not hold up to the research on deterrence and punishment.

1/
I can dig up the research on whether punishment actually works as a deterrent. I don't have it at my fingertips, but I've written about it.

About this administration not holding "anyone" accountable, who is bringing all those charges against the insurrectionists?

2/
One of the pillars of democracy is prosecutorial discretion.

You can read about it here: findlaw.com/criminal/crimi…

I have spent much of my professional life frustrated at the charges prosecutors choose to bring. As a defense lawyer, I've rarely agreed.

3/
Read 9 tweets
18 Jul
Here I expanded on some ideas I tweeted about this week:
🔹Are we too far gone?
🔹Will the GOP succeed in unraveling 100 years of progress?
🔹Sadopopulism

I did something different in this video. I’m not on the screen; instead, you can read the text.
You don’t get to see my pretty green office, but this was a lot easier for me to put together.

I put the transcription on my blog, here: terikanefield.com/are-we-too-far…
I expanded on this thread, adding more reasons people (well, Democrats and people left-of-center) who are following politics closely often feel panic and despair.

Read 4 tweets
13 Jul
Yes, because Republican policies are unpopular. If the discussion is fact or policy based Republicans
will lose, so they need to keep everyone riled up.
The right-wing is only part of the reason you're exhausted.

Stick with me here.

The right-wing has to create an endless cycle of crises because they have no other way to 'govern.' They have to keep their supporters scared and you outraged . . .

. . . which creates a feedback loop of sorts. When the left is outraged, the right gets stoked.

The other problem is social media algorithsm.

If I tweet: "Democracy is hanging by a thread! We don't have much time! This is a crisis!" I will get lots of clicks.
Read 21 tweets
11 Jul
Yes, and the 'kompromat' theory gives them way too much credit. It assumes that if not for kompromat, they'd do the right thing.

And it's not like they hide their cheating.

The kompromat theory is reverse projection. Good people can't believe they do this stuff willingly.
Exactly.


It isn't kompromat. It's what @ruthbenghiat describes in her book.

Once a politician does anything to help or shield a Trump-type leader, they have a hard time pulling back. They get roped in. I'll put the screenshot in the next tweet.
From her book, Strongmen: From Mussolini to the present\

Once they help him in any way, they can feel stuck. It's hard to back out because they've now alienated everyone except the hardcore extremists.

I felt that way when Hawley punched his fist toward the crowd that day . . .
Read 4 tweets
11 Jul
Since the indictment was filed against the Trump Org. and Allen Weisselberg, there’s been lots of media spin and lying (and some misunderstanding) about the indictment.

Here I dissect the lies (and misunderstandings) and why they matter.


1/
Here’s an edited transcription if you prefer to read:
terikanefield.com/the-trump-org-…

I'll come back after a bit more ☕️ and write a Twitter Summary hitting the main points.

2/
Last week I talked about the bogus legal defenses being offered on behalf of the Trump Org and Weisselberg.

It’s easy to mock the stupid legal arguments offered by Team Trump. He usually loses in court. He lost all those elections cases.

3/
Read 24 tweets
5 Jul
An observation about the Trump Org indictment: The criminal scheme was described as ongoing as of June 30, 2021.

Even when they knew they were being investigated, they kept cheating.
The arrogance is stunning. I did a brief stint years ago in a firm that represented white-collar clients, and I did see that attitude. They thought they were "pushing the envelope" and it was no big deal.

A task of the lawyers was to persuade them that they were in big trouble.
I think this is exactly right. It's the only way he has ever earned money. The Trumps don't add value. They take advantage of situations. He floats on debt; he borrows against assets he inflates. His "product" is his "brand."

He thinks he's clever.

Read 4 tweets

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