Video: Former Dem VP candidate goes on trial today
posted at 12:41 pm on April 23, 2012 by Ed Morrissey
Eight years ago, he ran on the Democratic ticket for the second-highest political office in the country. Four years ago, he vied for the nomination in a tough three-way race between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. Today, John Edwards begins another battle — to stay out of federal prison. Edwards faces up to 30 years in prison on six felony and misdemeanor charges related to campaign-finance fraud and the cover-up of his affair with Rielle Hunter and their child together:
Among other things, the government alleges that Edwards “knowingly and willfully” received nearly $1 million in illegal campaign contributions to hide his pregnant mistress from the public so he could continue his presidential bid. Edwards acknowledges that while his actions were wrong, they were not illegal. He could face up to 30 years in prison. …
At the heart of the government’s case is campaign finance law, specifically whether Edwards violated the Election Act. Established in 1971, the Election Act states that to restrict the influence that any one person can have on the outcome of a primary election for president, the most any individual could contribute to any candidate for that primary election is $2,300.
Prosecutors will argue that Edwards accepted and received contributions from Mellon and Baron in excess of the limits of the Election Act. Court documents detail that Edwards accepted about $725,000 from Mellon and more than $200,000 from Baron. These unlawful contributions were then used to pay for Hunter’s living and medical expenses and to pay for travel and accommodations to keep Hunter from the news media.
Additionally, prosecutors say Edwards concealed from the FEC and the public the contributions by filing false and misleading campaign finance reports.
Court documents conclude, “Edwards knew that public revelation of the affair and pregnancy would destroy his candidacy and undermine Edwards’ presentation of himself as a family man and by forcing his campaign to divert personnel and resources away from other campaign activities to respond to the criticism and the media scrutiny regarding the affair.”
His defense, CNN reports, will rely on hiding behind the skirts of his now-dead wife Elizabeth. Edwards will claim that the money from Mellon and Baron was intended to protect Elizabeth, not himself, as well as the rest of his family. Good luck selling that to a jury. Edwards will also claim that he didn’t know that he was breaking the law and never intended to do so, a claim that tests the credibility of every defendant — and one would presume especially those who also happen to be multi-millionaire trial attorneys.
Politico handicaps the trial with six key points to watch. The first is connections to the “Obama world,” and at least one high-ranking official from the Obama 2012 campaign is expected to testify in defense of Edwards:
A deputy campaign manager for Obama’s reelection bid, Julianna Smoot, is listed as a defense witness. Smoot spent most of last year as White House social secretary before going to the campaign. She was finance director on Edwards’s 1998 Senate bid and on Obama’s presidential campaign in 2008.
While not every listed witness may be called, other administration officials on the roster include Mark Kornblau, communications director for the U.S. Mission to the United Nations in New York and traveling press secretary for Edwards’s 2008 campaign; Sam Myers Sr., trip director for Vice President Joe Biden and an advance staffer for Edwards; and Sam Myers Jr., an Education Department aide who also worked advance for Edwards in ’08.
Former Obama White House aides David Medina and Christina Reynolds are also on the list.
That’s not exactly the kind of buzz an incumbent needs, especially one who campaigned on the promise to end corruption in Washington. Thanks to the high profile of the defendant and the salacious nature of the circumstances, the media will be all over this trial, with updates and analysis. That will not only reflect poorly on Democrats in general, it’s likely to distract from Team Obama’s efforts to win the daily narrative in the media.
Politico also warns that the outcome might be “less than clear.” Given the intricate nature of the campaign finance laws in question, it’s a good bet that Edwards might beat a few of the counts. He’d better hope that the judge tosses the counts rather than rely on the jury to acquit, though, because the circumstances of the affair won’t make Edwards terribly sympathetic to any panel of jurors.
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“When the Bush administration was wracked with the leaks of classified information about its counter-terrorism policies, most notably its interrogation and electronic surveillance programs, Democrats in Congress happily took advantage of the information.
Nary a peep was heard about protecting national security and preventing the media from publishing classified information.
But now President Obama has to live in the leak-happy world that he and his colleagues created to undermine the last administration. And they don’t like it. Unlike the Bush administration, however, they are willing to go to lengths that threaten the freedom of the press to stop it — this administration has conducted far more investigations and prosecutions for leaking than its predecessors. And, for the most part, this administration has gotten away with it from the press, which has given them a pass on civil liberties compared to how they treated Republicans.
I deplore the Obama administration’s assault on freedom of the press. But I have no sympathy for the AP or the mainstream media, because this is how you get treated when you are in a politician’s pocket. If the AP’s editors and reporters and their colleagues at other newspapers had been more adversarial toward this President, as they were with President Bush, they would been treated with far more respect. The AP should wish for a return of the days of a Republican administration, which considered the press a worthy adversary, rather than a servant to be mistreated at will…” – John Yoo
http://ricochet.com/main-feed/On-the-AP-Justice-Department-Story
workingclass artist on May 14, 2013 at 11:52 AM
So four dead Americans weren’t enough to get Carl off his fat butt but a shot at the liberal media has him exorcized? Welcome to the club buddy, a bit late aren’t you?
jnelchef on May 14, 2013 at 12:01 PM
Let’s face it, when push comes to shove, the leftwing media would choose a leftist dictatorship over a Republican victory. They’ll stamp their feet a little to let Obama know he got a little too close on this one but they will go back to sleep on his lap before too long.
jnelchef on May 14, 2013 at 12:04 PM
Welcome to the party pal.
Jack_Burton on May 14, 2013 at 12:27 PM
Fox news just said that Holder has recused himself from the investigation into the phone records seizure. Said it may mean that Holder did not sign off on it.
jffree1 on May 14, 2013 at 12:34 PM
Knee jerk reaction of a dictator… yawn… His reporter butt-buds don’t mind having their ‘love letters’ spied on.
RalphyBoy on May 14, 2013 at 12:47 PM
Amazing isn’t it, how upset the media gets when it’s their ox being gored.
hachiban on May 14, 2013 at 1:05 PM
the attorney general would have had to sign off on a request to wire tap the ap phones.
2012chuck on May 14, 2013 at 1:25 PM
I don’t recall the GOP treating the press as a “worthy adversary.” The Zombie Press is concerned only the progressive side, because they too are progtards.
I call them the Zombie press because they have less use than a Corpse. At least a corpse can be used for medical research and training. The Press Corpse is utterly useless these days, unless you are a Progtard politician.
Quartermaster on May 14, 2013 at 2:21 PM
Dear Carl,
I have attended many events at which you and/or your colleague – Bob Woodward – have spoken. I’ve been a fan for many years. Sadly, I am left with the sense that your questioning intellect lacks balance in the sense that you are less willing to question those whom you like or whose ideology is one that you perceive as similar to yours.
I expected more. You should have, too.
The signs that the current occupant of the White House and his supporters are all about power – not hope, not change – were there during the first election when there were threats to jail those who said “bad things” about the candidate. You recognized similar abuses of power in 70′s. Unfortunately, you completely missed it this time.
Here’s hoping that the tapping of the AP’s phone lines will lead to your personal reformation. To paraphrase my friend Sam, “there’s no such thing as a bad questions, there are just bad answers.”
And ALL questions should be on the table . . . at all times.
EB
EdmundBurke247 on May 14, 2013 at 2:36 PM
No. The MSM created Obama and they will protect their reputations by protecting Obama.
BMF on May 14, 2013 at 4:49 PM
So, Carl’s bull finally got gored.
Barnestormer on May 14, 2013 at 5:01 PM
If the Obama administration is doing this to one of its biggest cheerleaders, I can only imagine what it’s secretly doing to conservative media.
Time for conservative journalists to have face to face meetings with contacts in parks, safe houses, and inside cars with heavily tinted windows in parking lots.
It’s time for PKI to be embedded in phones and emails because you can no longer trust the government–actually, you haven’t been able to trust the government for a long time now.
BMF on May 15, 2013 at 7:34 AM
We should also check if DOJ was tapping SCOTUS too, especially around the time of the Obamacare impossible-to-fathom ruling. This president openly attacked them, so you can probably assume his minions were using the full power of the government to make sure they were one step ahead of deliberations.
I’m not saying this happened, but you have to admit the pattern of intimidation is there.
virgo on May 15, 2013 at 10:21 AM
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