But given the caliber of Trump’s legal representation:NEW: Donald Trump has filed a $49 million lawsuit against journalist Bob Woodward and Woodward's publisher for selling recordings of his interviews as an audiobook, claiming he agreed to be taped but not for public release. With @MarioDParker: https://t.co/pGcVttR69l pic.twitter.com/uVlVywbQdh
— Zoe Tillman (@ZoeTillman) January 30, 2023
Trump attorney goes on wild 'fake president' rant: 'They' are trying to 'enslave everybody' https://t.co/fqtnuZ0T4t
— Raw Story (@RawStory) January 30, 2023
They are trying to take over the world and enslave everybody," she said, likely referring to liberals. "That is wrong; it's un-American, and it goes against everything our Constitution stands for."
"We will get Donald Trump back in office," she added. "At that point, I think we need an investigation into who actually overthrew the United States government to install a fake president?"I think I’m safe in assuming this lawsuit doesn’t state some novel legal theory that’s likely to prevail against common sense.
Precedent is not only set by published appellate court opinions. Something courts are reluctant to do can become more likely when the same parties try the same stunts too many times.The New York attorney general asks a judge to sanction Trump, his eldest children, and their attorneys for their responses in legal filings, including allegedly false statements that contradict previous sworn testimony.
— Kara Scannell (@KaraScannell) January 31, 2023
Those tactics work against private parties who are paying lawyers to go to court. As I’ve said before, Trump is facing governments, who have lawyers just for this kind of thing. Cohn’s tactics don’t work now (the federal Fair Housing case Trump and Daddy list decades back is a case in point). And courts are conservative: they don’t like to do what hasn’t been done before. But if one court sanctions the party(ies) for egregious behavior, it becomes easier to seek similar sanctions elsewhere.Since then, he’s deployed tactics he learned from Roy Cohn, often - according to people who worked with him - trying to find lawyers or judges he thought would be favorable to him https://t.co/SJl7wTRfsJ
— Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) January 31, 2023
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