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Published | 2023/06/29 |
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Beau says:
Beau provides insights into Giuliani's proffer agreement with federal authorities and the potential implications for Trump and his associates, hinting at significant legal consequences.
Legal analysts
Deeper insights into the ongoing legal proceedings and the potential impact on future investigations and political consequences.
#Giuliani #ProfferAgreement #LegalDevelopments #Trump #ElectionInterference
Well, howdy there internet people, it's Bo again.
So today we're gonna talk about Trump's queen, at least for a day, Rudy Giuliani.
Because there have been some new developments.
Okay, so yesterday we talked about the fact that he went in for an interview.
And when we were talking about it, I kept using the phrase entirely voluntary, over and over and over again.
I had a hunch. The reporting now confirms that. We now have the two words that
we've been waiting to hear. Proffer agreement, otherwise known as Queen for
a Day. So what happens is Giuliani goes in to talk to the feds, okay? He tells
them everything. I mean everything and he can't lie. If they determine he's not
telling the truth, well that whole deal, that whole agreement, it's gone. Under
this agreement, he tells them everything. They can't use what he says in that
room, directly anyway, against him. But if he doesn't tell the truth, the whole
truth, and nothing but the truth, well, he's in a world of trouble. Generally
speaking, there aren't a whole lot of reasons in a criminal case to engage in
a proffer agreement. In Giuliani's case, unless he believes he can talk his way
out of this, which is hard to believe given the fact that he actually
understands the federal system and he's already seen the indictments for the
documents, the only other real reason to go this route would be to make a deal.
would be to make a deal, to try to get a deal. If there's a lawyer out there that
has some other reasoning behind it, put it in the comments down below. But
generally speaking, it's Rudy presenting his side of the story, okay, and trying
to convince the feds that he wasn't really involved and shouldn't be
charged, or it's, hey, I'm telling you everything, remember that it's sentencing.
That's kind of what happens here. Now, given just the massive amount of time
that the special counsel's office has devoted to looking into everybody, they
probably have a dump truck full of evidence to sway Rudy into agreeing to
come in and talk to him. That might be what happened. Now here's the the part
that people may not like. He'll probably get a deal. If he's telling the truth
he's wanting one, he's gonna cooperate, he will probably get a deal, and it'll probably be a really good one.
And I know for a whole lot of people watching this, you're gonna be like, but he was central. He was a functionary.
If Smith can get Giuliani and Meadows, that's the Holy Grail.
That's it. Everybody else goes down. Those are the two people that he really needs
because every scheme, every route that they tried, went through one of them or
they were aware of it. So those are the two people that Smith was probably going
after and is probably willing to extend them a pretty decent deal to get them to
talk about everything else. Giuliani, because of his history, he knows how
this process works. It's not like he didn't understand what a proffer
agreement was. There are a lot of people who believe Meadows has already gone
through all this. We don't have hard evidence to say that, but those are the
two, those are the two people that Smith is probably trying to get to cooperate
the most. If he gets them, that's it. The electors, the fundraising, the
the conversations that took place at that hotel, it's all it's all out in the
open. He has what he needs for everything, for every avenue, and it looks like he's
trying to get it. So it is, if this is the route that it's going, Rudy is looking
for a cooperation agreement. Now, I know there are a lot of commentators that are
like, well, he'll still have to do some time. Maybe, maybe Smith might be saying,
okay, we'll give you a lesser charge or something like that, but realistically
because of the just massive amount of information that they have, Meadows and
Giuliani, they may not do anytime. If they actually cooperate, they may
pretty much walk, but we'll have to see. I find it hard to believe that Giuliani
thinks at this point in the game that he's going to be able to walk
into a proper agreement and not tell them everything, try to hold things back, or
try to basically talk his way out of it. That just doesn't seem likely. So overall
this is, I mean it's definitely a huge development in the case and it's
probably really good news. Again, it depends on how much information they
provide, if they provide any, and how charitable Smith is feeling, how badly
he wants to do it. The other thing to keep in mind is they may have enough
physical evidence via communications and stuff like that, that really they
just need context. If that's the case, well, he may not get such a great deal.
But this was probably a turning point when it comes to election interference
January 6th, taking voting machines, all of that stuff. The thing is Meadows and
Giuliani, they know about schemes that at this point to the public's knowledge they're
not really even being probed yet.
So they could definitely provide information that would be very valuable to the Department
of Justice.
And that entirely voluntary interview that took place under a proffer agreement.
That's really bad news for Trump.
And for pretty much anybody in Trump's orbit.
Anyway, it's just a thought, y'all have a good day.
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