10 Things in Politics: Trump Org could crumble in trial - 6 minutes read




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Here's what we're talking about:
One thing to watch for: President Joe Biden and the first lady, Jill Biden, are set to tour the area where a Surfside, Florida, condominium building partially collapsed.
1. A MAJOR DAY IN TRUMPWORLD: Former President Donald Trump's legal problems are about to get a lot worse. The cornerstone of the former president's brand, the Trump Organization, along with Allen Weisselberg, one of his most loyal aides, are said to have been indicted, with the charges expected to be made public later today.


My colleagues dived into how things could unfold from here:
Going after Trump's company is a rare move: Prosecutors would most likely have to show that at least one executive — referred to as a "high managerial agent" in New York state law — engaged in or at least tolerated misconduct. Legal experts say the strategy could make it easier for prosecutors to garner cooperation. And the risks to the Trump brand are substantial.
Key quote: "If, and more likely when, the golden paint is tarnished or fades from what might become a Titanic of an organization post-indictment, not only will banks, lenders, and business associates begin to flee, the financial consequences may send employees running for lifeboats and pointing a finger at the captain to protect themselves before everyone is submerged along with the former president," Jeremy Saland, a former prosecutor in the Manhattan district attorney's office, told my colleagues.

Should this go to trial, experts expect a document-intensive case: Manhattan and New York prosecutors went all the way to the Supreme Court to obtain Trump's tax returns and financial records. Experts also said the relatively small size of the company meant few employees would be likely to testify, but this could also limit the company's defense.


Weisselberg is the ultimate Trump insider: He has served the family since the '70s and was the only non-Trump to oversee Trump's trust while he was in the White House. Jennifer Weisselberg, Weisselberg's former daughter-in-law, previously told my colleagues that prosecutors were trying to flip him.
She also detailed Weisselberg's role, including how he may have skirted tax rules: "It was like, 'OK, the way we're going to maestro this is instead of a raise, we're going to pay my daughter's tuition,'" she said of Weisselberg's approach. "'Instead of a raise, we're going to pay for the apartment.'"

More on the key people to watch as the case unfolds.





Some of Sen. Kyrsten Sinema's former staffers described a "tense" office environment.



Samuel Corum/Getty Images



2. Former staffers of Sen. Kyrsten Sinema say working for her was a nightmare: Sinema, a Democrat from Arizona, has gained a reputation for overseeing an office that's tough for junior employees to work in, even by Capitol Hill standards. "It's probably the worst job I've had in my entire life," said one former staffer who previously worked elsewhere on the Hill.
3. Bill Cosby released from prison after court overturns sexual-assault conviction: Pennsylvania's highest court ruled that Cosby's deal with a local prosecutor in 2005 should have precluded him from being charged in the case that eventually landed him behind bars. That prosecutor, Bruce Castor, made headlines earlier this year as one of Trump's impeachment lawyers.


4. Two children are among 18 confirmed dead in Florida condo: Two young sisters — Lucia, 10, and Emma Guara, 4 — are the youngest victims identified so far among the rubble of a partially collapsed condominium building in Surfside, Florida, the Miami Herald reports. Still, 145 people who lived in the tower remain missing.
VIDEO: Why the Miami condo may have collapsed, and how it could happen again







Insider


5. Donald Rumsfeld's legacy: Rumsfeld is the only person to have led the Pentagon twice: once as the youngest defense secretary and later as the oldest. Rumsfeld's second stint, during the George W. Bush administration, dwarfs his legacy, as he led the department into wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. He died Tuesday at 88. More on his influential and controversial legacy, including his role in the Iraq War.


6. The cost of inequality: A new Insider series dives into how and why inequity persists in the institutions that govern daily life in America while illustrating the real economic cost to society.
Some key findings:







Insider









Insider









Insider


7. Republican lawmakers flocked to the border: The GOP sees immigration as one of the key issues to retaking the House, Politico reports. Roughly two dozen GOP lawmakers traveled to a Texas border town before Trump's visit to argue that the Biden administration was failing to properly secure the border.
8. China marks a century of communist rule: Anyone who tries to bully China will face "broken heads and bloodshed in front of the iron Great Wall of the 1.4 billion Chinese people," President Xi Jinping said at a mass gathering Thursday, the Associated Press reports. Xi's comments come as Beijing and Washington continue to clash over trade and human rights.


9. Historians ranked Trump the lowest of any president from the past 150 years: The latest edition of C-SPAN's historian survey ranked Trump among the worst presidents in US history. The survey since 2000 has been taken each time there's a new president, and the latest pegs Trump even below William Henry Harrison, who died just 32 days into his term. At the same time, Barack Obama cracked the top 10 for the first time. Here's where everyone else stacked up.







CSPAN/Twitter


10. 'You CLEARLY owe it to yourselves': The former New York Times Styles editor Choire Sicha recently quit his high-profile job — and offered some brilliant advice for anyone feeling burned out. "You can't solve your own burnout," he wrote. "You can only change the system or your situation." Read more from his helpful advice.
Today's trivia question: On the heels of a historic day for college athletics, which president is credited with helping lead to the creation of the NCAA? Email your guess and a suggested question to me at bgriffiths.com.


Yesterday's answer: It took until 2005 for every state to have two statues in Statuary Hall. New Mexico's statue of Po'pay, who is known for leading an 1860 Pueblo revolt against Spanish settlers, was the 100th statue.

Source: Business Insider

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