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Actor/comedian DL Hughley wants to charge Trump with manslaughter. He's guilty.

 


Actor/comedian DL Hughley :

wants to charge Trump with manslaughter. He's guilty.


DL Hughley, a comedian and talk show host, believes the House Select Committee did not go far enough in recommending Donald Trump's trial.


Hegley said Trump should be punished with manslaughter for the murder of Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, according to TMZ. The Commission referred the former President to trial for four crimes, including incitement to an uprising.



"Spying on sedition, you know, to mess with the election, I mean, you name it, he did it," Hegley said. I think he should be charged with the manslaughter of the policeman who died, even though he was not at that event.

Look :

  • what they're going to do to us is call us conspirators
  • and everyone inside is going to jail.
  • Everyone inside is going to jail

so now it has to be the same thing.

I think he's a crazy criminal. Clearly guilty and clearly guilty. It takes this country on a path from which I do not know it will ever recover ".


Hegley argued that the former president

should never be allowed to run for government again.



We've all seen what happened

and justice isn't about doing the thing we love

 it's about what we think is right

Higley said.

He should be excluded from running again. anyone who tries to overthrow the will of the people, who is armed, who uses white nationalists and skinheads to influence the results they want, should have been automatically excluded ".

He added:

If he is not charged

the indictment does not mean that he is convicted

but if he is not charged

she will talk a lot about our legal system.

"Stop saying out loud that nobody is above the law because obviously they are."



Even if the House committee's recommendation

on January 6 to send criminal charges against former President Donald Trump to the Justice Department merely constitutes a recommendation, it draws attention to the possibility that the department would condemn the former president.


U.S. Attorney Merrick Garland and Justice Department prosecutors must consider a number of criteria before reaching this ruling, which is unique in our country's history.



According to the guidance of the Ministry of Justice for lawyers

the Attorney General must "initiate or propose"

a trial only if he considers that "a person's conduct

constitutes a federal crime."

"Admissible evidence" must also be "sufficient to

secure and maintain conviction," according to the law.



The bar for what is seen as acceptable is quite high.

"acceptable evidence"

and therefore identifying it is crucial.

Prosecutors cannot always benefit from the evidence they gather in court.


Each important piece must be carefully examined by prosecutors before it is included as evidence in the trial. Regardless of how powerful the truth is, if it cannot be presented to the jury, the prosecution must take it from consideration.


According to the guidance of the Ministry of Justice for lawyers

the Attorney General must "initiate or propose" a trial only if he considers that "a person's conduct constitutes a federal crime."


Admissible evidence

must also be "sufficient to secure and maintain conviction, according to the law.


There is a very high standard of what is considered "acceptable evidence", and therefore identifying it is crucial. Prosecutors cannot always benefit from the evidence they gather in court.


Each important piece must be carefully examined

by prosecutors before it is included as evidence in the trial.

Regardless of how powerful the truth is

if it cannot be presented to the jury, the prosecution must take it from consideration.



Following these guidelines

prosecutors typically seek to charge only in

scenarios with a high probability of success.

The Ministry of Justice maintains its distinguished record of convictions in this way.

For example

according to a Justice Department report

the government received 42,302 convictions in criminal cases in all federal counties in 2021, compared with only 128 acquittals. The majority of the guilty convictions come from a plea.






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