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Pattern of TRUMP TRIAL Looks EERILY FAMILIAR to PRO-LIFE ACTIVISTS…!

The news came on Thursday, May 30, and was stunning – if hardly unexpected.  Former President and current Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump was found guilty on all 34 charges of “falsifying business records” by a Manhattan jury.  Headlines blared the intended message:  Trump was a “CONVICTED FELON”!

Democrat officeholders, and even Republicans of the sort that support the Lincoln Project, crowed with delight.  Republicans of a more Republican stamp echoed Trump in condemning the jury’s decision as a miscarriage of justice.

Trump was not convicted of anything connected to pro-life activism.  But activists subject to the U.S. judicial system saw a lot in the progress of his trial that struck them as familiar.

Why are we at Life Legal even commenting on this issue?  Does the pro-life movement need to say anything here about Trump?  Hasn’t he recently made comments that put him into the compromise camp?

Right after Roe v. Wade collapsed, one of our finest litigators remarked that President Trump was “a deeply flawed figure to whom we owed an enormous debt of gratitude.”  Trump did not, of course, toss Roe into history’s dustbin all by himself.  Mitch McConnell guided Trump’s Supreme Court picks.

Still, it was Trump who pushed them through the difficult confirmation process.  Without Trump, Brett Kavanaugh especially would have ended up borked.

But it is not out of loyalty to Trump that we’re commenting now. We are lawyers, and the stench of this conviction is impossible for us to ignore.  

The very charges verged on the ridiculous.  Trump was accused of falsifying records concerning a non-disclosure agreement with porn star Stormy Daniels in order to “interfere” with the election he won in 2016. But the records were made in 2017, after the election.  Is Trump supposed to be a Time Lord?  Is he alleged to be associated with the unsavory Dr. Who?

Beyond this instance of lunacy, many features of Trump’s trial bear a more-than-passing resemblance to the treatment pro-lifers have received in court.

Way back in 1940, Robert H. Jackson, soon to become an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, cautioned federal prosecutors about a tendency that alarmed him even then: “It is not a question of discovering the commission of a crime and looking for the man who committed it.  It is a question of picking the man and then searching the law books, or putting investigators to work, to pin some offense on him.”

This is what’s happened to Donald Trump.  And it’s what is attempted against many pro-lifers when their witness becomes too effective.

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