Even constrained, new indictment against Trump stronger
By David French / The New York Times
When thinking about including charges in an indictment, prosecutors can decide which claims to make by asking whether the charge is strong or weak. In other words, does the evidence clearly support the charge, or would they be stretching either the evidence or the legal theory to make the case?
But theres another, related calculation, and thats asking whether the claim is clean or complicated. By clean, I mean simple and direct. Is this a charge, regardless of the strength of evidence, that the jury will find easy to understand? Obviously, the best possible case to bring is one thats both clean and strong: The statutes and evidence are straightforward. The case is relatively easy to make.
And thats exactly how Id describe the new Jack Smith indictment of Donald Trump. I disagree strongly with the Supreme Courts immunity ruling, but to the extent there is any silver lining in that dark constitutional cloud, its that for Smith, less is truly more.
Even absent the immunity ruling, Smiths first indictment would have given Trump room to argue that he was doing nothing more than using the levers of government power to investigate election fraud, a classic function of the Department of Justice. His actions were corrupt and unprecedented, but their official nature gave him hope for a defense.
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/french-even-constrained-new-indictment-against-trump-stronger/