The Trump ally’s acknowledgment came in a filing Tuesday related to the 2020 election workers’ lawsuit about baseless claims of fraud that he made against them.
The Trump ally’s acknowledgment came in a filing Tuesday related to the 2020 election workers’ lawsuit about baseless claims of fraud that he made against them.
Since you seem to know what you’re talking about, can you (or anyone really) explain why this couldn’t be used in another case?
Please use small words as I am dumb.
Sadly, the answer to this is going to feel pretty circular. It can’t be used in other cases because this was a no contest plea and the difference between a guilty and no contest plea is that a no contest plea can’t be used in future legal matters as evidence for guilt.
No contest pleas are not always available to a defendant. Consider it similar to any other plea bargain.
The philosophical justification is that the person has not admitted to anything and the court did not find him guilty. The no contest plea is your way of saying “I admit no wrongdoing but will simply accept the punishment to avoid this whole process”. Since there was no trial you can’t say the person was found guilty in any trial.
If they find him guilty why couldn’t that be used in future cases? I don’t see the functional difference between pleading “innocent” and being found guilty versus “no contest” with the same outcome.
They aren’t finding him guilty. If you offer no contest, there is no trial.
The
prosecutionplantiffs COULD reject the no contest bid and pursue the trial anyway. Which is why I said earlier you should think of this as a plea bargain of sorts.