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In response to the Saturday letter asking if any Democratic leaders have the "courage" to say that the indictment of former President Donald Trump is "an abuse of the legal system and miscarriage of justice," please understand that an assessment of the merits of the case requires reasoning and an objective view of the facts, not bravery. Could we see the indictment and hear the evidence first? That is what the jurors who hear the case will be instructed to do.
Yes, the charges could be a political overreach. But consider the fact that multiple individuals in Trump's political orbit have already been convicted of serious crimes. Those in his business orbit have fared no better. Both the Trump Organization and its CFO have recent felony convictions. Trump's former fixer, Michael Cohen, was convicted of crimes committed, according to the Department of Justice, in cooperation with and at the direction of Trump. Is it reasonable to claim both complete credit for a business's success and total ignorance of its felonies?
Reports suggest that many of the crimes to be charged involve fraud and tax evasion schemes similar to those proven in the criminal case against the Trump Organization. When given the chance to expose the "witch hunt" under oath, Trump invoked the Fifth Amendment over 400 times. If that was done in good faith, Trump himself has acknowledged that truthful answers to the questions posed would tend to incriminate him. Trump's jury cannot consider that as evidence of guilt, but a fair-minded observer certainly could.
Frederick L. Grunke, St. Cloud
The writer is a retired district judge.
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