Ominous Scene At NYC Jail Ahead Of Trump’s Potential Arrival

Ominous Scene At NYC Jail Ahead Of Trump’s Potential Arrival

According to reports, Secret Service officers have had meetings with New York City jail authorities to get ready for a potential conviction in Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s questionable “hush money” case.

As the trial moves into the final arguments phase, preparations are underway, a source within the New York Department of Corrections told CBS News. A decision might be made as soon as this week.

As per the article, any Secret Service agents assigned to safeguard Trump while he is incarcerated will be under the protection of correctional authorities.

Though the location of Trump’s possible incarceration is still unknown, CBS pointed out that the infamous Rikers Island prison, which has a special wing for well-known convicts, may handle shorter sentences.

“There is reasonable doubt all over this case,” former prosecutor Randy Zelin told CNN on Tuesday. “Anytime a human being needs to make an important decision in life, if you have enough information, you go ahead. If not, you seek more—that’s reasonable doubt,” he said.

“How did Michael Cohen get away with stealing $30,000… and make $4 million from this? He thought he’d be chief of staff; he’s a fixer. If the plumber comes to my house to fix my leak, I could be home. That doesn’t mean I know how he’s doing it and what it’s taking to be fixed. Stormy Daniels—let’s hold a pity party for her,” the attorney continued.

Critics have voiced worries about Judge Juan Merchan’s dubious jury instructions despite continuous reporting—even from left-wing networks like CNN and MSNBC—that Bragg’s witnesses have been unimpressive.

“Before the jury entered, the judge told the parties not to go into the law, ‘that will be my job.’ That is precisely what worries many of us. Merchan has proven a minimalist judge giving the defendant the bare minimum of protections at every turn,” said constitutional law professor Jonathan Turley in an X post Tuesday.

“The fraud instruction alone is so generalized that it would seem to encompass any claim that the defendant sought to influence the election through his actions. Merchan has done little to tailor standard instructions for this novel and frankly troubling case,” he continued.

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