Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, the prosecutor in the Georgia Trump trial, proposed March 4, 2024, as the date to start his trial.
Legal experts called the six month timetable
overly optimistic; very, very ambitious; and not really realistic
There's a lot of problems logistically prosecuting a former president, including coordinating with the Secret Service.
(Not to mention the fact that Trump is facing three other indictments.)
When asked whether she was trying to get her chance at Trump first, Willis responded,
We do want to move this case along.
If it were purely a case of serving justice, the speed and date wouldn't matter all that much. However, it's pretty clear to everyone at this point that this has very little to do with justice, and everything to do with politics.
So why March 4?
The day after her proposed trial March 5, is a Tuesday, but not just any Tuesday. It's Super Tuesday, the biggest day in the primaries: The day more than a dozen states will vote for the Republican presidential nominee.
In fact three trials out of the four indictments facing Donald Trump are set to begin around the same time in the middle of primaries.
The only exception is Jack Smith's charges regarding Jan 6, which is proposed to begin January 2, and there isn't even a judge assigned to the trial yet.
(But I mean that seems superfluous... does a kangaroo court even need a judge?)
Trump's strategy in all of this is to delay the trials until after the 2024 election.
Whatever happens, the next year will certainly define the future of America.
This nation will never be the same.
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