SCOTUS Clerk Reveals Secret How Trump Can Get Potential Conviction Tossed IMMEDIATELY
Arthur Fergenson, a former judicial clerk for the late Chief Supreme Court Justice Warren Burger, has laid out a path for former President Donald Trump to swiftly challenge any potential guilty verdict in his New York trial. This insight, shared during an interview with conservative commentator Mark Levin, offers a dramatic twist in Trump’s ongoing legal battles.Fergenson explained that Trump could petition the U.S. Supreme Court immediately if convicted, leveraging both statutory writs of certiorari and a variety of other processes known as common law writs. These mechanisms, though rarely granted, provide a legal framework for the Supreme Court to review cases from lower appellate courts.
“The Supreme Court can act by its statutory writs of certiorari to take a case from a lower appellate court,” Fergenson stated, adding that they could also use common law writs authorized by the Judiciary Act of 1789.
The crux of Fergenson’s argument hinges on what he perceives as a denial of due process in the case brought forward by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. Bragg’s strategy involved upgrading misdemeanor bookkeeping charges to felonies under COVID-era statutes, resulting in 34 felony counts and a potential 136-year prison sentence for Trump.
However, Fergenson pointed out a critical flaw: Bragg has not identified an underlying crime that would elevate these charges to felonies.
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