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Taking Down Trump

12 Rules for Prosecuting Donald Trump by Someone Who Did It Successfully

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"An indispensable must-read. This is THE book to read to understand what’s going on in the cases against Trump.” — Joy Reid, MSNBC News anchor and host of The ReidOut
A former prosecutor provides an essential guide to ensuring that Donald Trump, and other oligarchs of his ilk, no longer beat the rap, and face serious jail time for their crimes . . .

    For a half century Donald Trump has evaded justice. Now he finally faces trials for his lies, cons, and misdeeds—but many fear Trump will never face any real consequences.  
    Is our system so broken that some people are now above the law? 
    In Taking Down Trump, Tristan Snell—a former assistant attorney general for New York State who took on and beat Trump in a court of law—argues that Donald Trump can indeed be defeated, and shares his secrets for how to beat him.
    Snell led New York State’s prosecution of Donald Trump for defrauding hundreds of Trump University students, resulting in Trump having to shell out $25 million to his victims —Trump’s first and only major legal loss to date. 
     Snell lays out 12 key rules for how to beat Trump—including:
  • How voters and activists hold prosecutors accountable
  • How to stand up to Trump’s public bullying
  • How to persevere against all the stonewalling and counterattacks
  • How to get key figures to cooperate and cough up critical evidence 

  •     Along the way, Snell discusses his own experience prosecuting Trump, and observes how prosecutors in the various cases against Trump are exploiting such rules—or not—as well as how Trump’s revolving team of lawyers can be expected to behave, or, more accurately, perform.
        Whether you’re a concerned citizen, a lawyer or prosecutor, or an activist or advocate, Snell shows how America’s systems can still work to bring even the richest and most powerful to justice, and why those systems are worth preserving and improving. Ultimately, this is a road map for how America can begin to escape the Trump wilderness of fraud and fascism.
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      • Kirkus

        January 1, 2024
        A trial lawyer explores the many ways that Donald Trump has succeeded in evading punishment--and how to thwart him henceforth. Snell, who successfully prosecuted Trump for the Trump University fraud, argues that when confronted with lawsuits or criminal charges, Trump is his own worst enemy, "a cheap, predatory asshole who doesn't pay his bills" and who doesn't listen to his own underqualified lawyers. Trump has managed to stay out of trouble, Snell opines, by using tactics that can be overcome. One is the mob-boss trick of intimidating witnesses, which a few recently delivered gag rules haven't done much to curb--but, if the judges do their jobs, could land Trump in jail. "If at all possible, get Trump under oath--and he will hang himself," Snell urges. It's possible but unlikely, writes the author, that Trump will agree on a plea deal that will still land him in prison, for the walls are closing in. "He's losing in court, and he knows it," Snell writes, "so now he's aiming to undermine the courts entirely, to declare them all illegitimate." But the courts are where he is, and it's not because anyone's out to get him. As Snell observes, he's in court in 2023 and 2024 because he committed a swarm of alleged crimes in 2020 and 2021, and it takes a couple of years for things to go before the bench. When the former president lashes out at his legal opponents, most viciously against women and especially women of color, take that as a sign that the prosecutors are on the right track. Cheapness, narcissism, bullying: They're not likely to work this time, Snell concludes, as they have for so many years in the past. A valuable set of program notes; readers will eagerly wait to see if prosecutors act as Snell hopes they will.

        COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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