Newsletter: An expert helps you cut through the noise of the Trump indictment
Good morning. Iâm Paul Thornton, and it is Saturday, June 17, 2023. Letâs look back at the week in Opinion.
In the darkest days of 2020 and 2021, when COVID-19 was killing thousands of Americans per week, there was a hunger for expert commentary â the kind that didnât hold back from delivering bad news, but also didnât come across as needlessly alarmist. For me, that was Dr. Eric Topol, a physician-scientist at Scripps Research Institute. His evidence-driven opinion pieces often appear in The Times, and his Twitter feed is still a must-follow for pandemic and health science insight.
So too is the need acute for fact- and experience-driven analysis after former President Trumpâs indictment, an event stirring up its own storm of commentary based on motivated reasoning and outright lies. As with COVID, finding a true expert to help the layperson sort everything out is critical. Iâm glad to say Opinion has found one in our columnist Harry Litman, a former U.S. attorney and former deputy attorney general. Pay attention to his writing.
Last week, I recapped some of Litmanâs commentary throughout Justice Department special counsel Jack Smithâs investigation that, taken together, counseled patience amid calls to indict the former president sooner. This week, Litman is back with two pieces â one on the controversial judge overseeing the former presidentâs case, and another dissecting Trumpâs âoutlandish and dangerousâ plan to beat these charges.
Hereâs Litman on U.S. District Judge Aileen Cannon:
âCannon is the Trump appointee who allowed the former president to temporarily derail the classified records investigation with a civil action challenging the search of his Mar-a-Lago estate. Her rulings on that episode were hopelessly mangled and result-oriented, drawing two harsh reversals by the conservative U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, which finally put an end to the misadventure. ...
âThere are nearly 700 federal district court judges in the country. Of all of them, Cannon is the first whose fairness might reasonably be questioned. And of all cases in the federal court system, none calls for a judge and a process that inspire public confidence more than this one. Itâs of paramount importance that this case be assigned to another judge â any other judge.â
And hereâs Litman on Trumpâs plan to escape accountability:
âTrump is engaged in an outlandish and, for the country, very dangerous plot to delay the case until he can end it by winning the presidency in 2024. At that point, he could just order the Department of Justice to stand down.
âNote that Trump wouldnât have to run the legal risk of pardoning himself at that point. Even if he is speedily convicted â a prospect made considerably less likely by the assignment of Trump-appointed Judge Aileen Cannon to the case â his conviction would almost certainly still be on appeal by January 2025, allowing him to simply order the department to drop the case.
âHow can Trump, abetted by Cannon, go about maximizing the delay? Through a series of pretrial motions, all lacking merit to various degrees but nevertheless likely to take up considerable time.â
The media are already getting the Trump indictment wrong. Trump has been in legal trouble most of his adult life, yet his federal indictment on 37 criminal charges is being treated by the media as some unprecedented event. LZ Granderson says this kind of coverage is nothing new for the ex-president.
The PGA Tour-LIV Golf merger isnât the problem. Golf is. The U.S. Open is underway at Los Angeles Country Club, an exclusive, 300-acre facility in one of the most expensive, housing-starved areas of the country. The clubâs land is assessed for tax purposes at an absurdly low $18 million, and what are taxpayers getting for their generosity? The problem isnât just with the L.A. Country Club, but golf as a sport, writes law professor Ray Brescia.
Affirmative action isnât hurting Asian Americans. Why does that myth survive? The belief that Asian American applicants must score higher on standardized tests to gain admission to elite universities dominates the discourse over an upcoming Supreme Court decision on affirmative action. Professors Janelle Wong and Viet Thanh Nguyen find a lot wrong with this.
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Another L.A. City Council member indicted: Here we go again. On Tuesday, Councilmember Curren Price was charged with embezzlement, perjury and conflict of interest. The Timesâ editorial board wants Price to resign and major reform at City Hall.
You might have noticed I took some time off recently. It was because my mother was stricken by brain cancer, and overnight my brother and I became her caregivers. This happened suddenly: The first Monday of May, my mom was a healthy, independent, 65-year-old nurse working at L.A. General Medical Center (itâll always be âCounty Hospitalâ to me), and by the following Friday she had lost her ability to walk, speak clearly or do anything to support herself. Along with my brother, Iâve learned how isolating and exhausting caregiving can be in a society with a frayed safety net.
Stay in touch.
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As always, you can share your feedback by emailing me at [email protected].
More from this week in opinion
From our columnists
- Jonah Goldberg: Republicans wanted Clinton prosecuted for her emails. And now they defend Trump?
- Jean Guerrero: Gen Z and Millennial Latinas fighting for social justice need to learn from Chicana legends.
- Jackie Calmes: If the GOP candidates wonât take on Trump, why run at all?
From the Op-Ed desk
- L.A. and other cities are recovering, but not their downtowns. Why?
- Ending LAUSDâs Primary Promise reading and math program is a mistake.
- Violence against Black women and girls is underreported. Hereâs how we can address it.
From the Editorial Board
- Gov. Gavin Newsomâs plan to speed up construction is half-baked. California leaders can do better.
- GOP leaders are playing with fire by impugning Trump indictment.
- Why Mayor Bassâ proposal for L.A. city drug treatment funding makes sense.
Letters to the Editor
- On L.A. Times layoffs, readers talk subscribing, political slant and preserving journalism.
- How did two law partnersâ bigoted, racist emails stay secret for so long?
- You donât have to be anti-LGBTQ+ to quibble with the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence.
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