Francie Barrett wrote: » Deutsche Bank is potentially big. If he can't refinance his debts they could decide to play hard ball and foreclose on his business empire.
Timberrrrrrrr wrote: » Has she even been invited? Why would she be, she's just her daddies lackey, hopefully Biden tells her to fùck off and that she's not welcome.
Nody wrote: » DB will not foreclose it; DB will sell on his loans as most banks do with loan portfolios they don't want to recoup money. However and that could make it very interesting depending on who buys it. A vulture fund could make a healthy profit on pushing his businesses into bankruptcy and buy them cheap for example; or an anonymous Russian company may end up buying it all (if they think they can still use him for destabilizing USA further).
ECO_Mental wrote: » The first 100 days of Trump being out of office "he's going to go through some things" he's going to be busy :cool::cool::cool: I think now the wall has broken, he has no platform to spew trash, lies and garbage and take peoples eye off the ball. A lot of chits are going to be called in so I foresee him being bankrupted again. The likes of the SDNY and a lot of state persecutors are just chomping at the bit to have a cut off him. Expect a flurry of indictments and investigations. The federal charges I will and see what happens over the next week to see if he pardons himself. I want to see repercussions for all his enablers as well especially Cruz et al, there has to be accountability for all the lies. The whole Jan 6th insurrection sealed his fate because if people were angry with him before they are absolutely apoplectic with anger with him now. They will show no mercy...as they shouldn't as people have died. He really is a stupid person, he could have gone next Wednesday with a small fuss and then spend the next ten years on twitter hurling from the ditch saying how incompetent the next POTUS is and he would have done it this way and spend his life on Fox news. But now he is a nobody with no platform to spew his **** (and this was his only skill) so hes a nobody now and for a narcissist this if anything must be killing him. The next year is going to be fun all the crap he is going to get caught up in and not being able to spin his BS about it.
Nody wrote: » DB will not foreclose it; DB will sell on his loans as most banks do with loan portfolios they don't want to recoup money.
L1011 wrote: » Apparently they have been seeking a buyer for 4 years; with nobody interested.
prawnsambo wrote: » I'm strongly of the belief (strength being directly proportional to the desperation he's shown to stay in office) that he is terrified of what will happen to him once he's outside the safety of the White House.
Quin_Dub wrote: » If he doesn't give a "self-pardon" he can't give a pardon to the kids as they'd be called to testify against him and couldn't refuse.
In the wake of Wednesday's assault on the nation's Capitol, President Donald Trump has been advised he potentially could face civil liability connected to his role in encouraging supporters who went on to storm Congress, sources familiar with the conversations told ABC News. "Think O.J.," an adviser explained it to Trump, according to one source. It was a reference to O.J. Simpson, who was found not guilty of murdering his ex-wife and a friend but later faced stiff civil damages after being sued by his ex-wife's family.
As ABC News previously reported, sources tell ABC News White House Counsel Pat Cipollone advised the president that he could face legal jeopardy for encouraging his supporters to storm the Capitol building, according to sources familiar with their discussions. After these conversations, sources say the president grew angrier, and the entire pardon process has been described as "on hold" -- meaning others who have been lobbying the president for pardons, including his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, may not receive one.
jill_valentine wrote: » They don't want unity, they want to get away with it.
Nody wrote: » The problem has been the question if they could take a sitting president to court; with that going away...
Call me Al wrote: » And I'd believe that this is a huge motivation for Trump's behaviour. He may be staring down the barrel of the Deuteche Bank foreclosure shotgun without the protection of his office.
Quin_Dub wrote: » This article also covers the risks he still faces even if a self pardon was to hold up.. And more interestingly , he's clearly beginning to think about the "big picture" in relation to those pardons Anyone pardoned could be called as a witness in a civil case too..
prawnsambo wrote: » You also can't plead the fifth if you've been pardoned. For obvious reasons. That's a bit of a double-edged sword for him.
gimli2112 wrote: » I think he has that covered, he'd simply lie through his teeth.
Quin_Dub wrote: » Yep - He KNOWS they have him bang to rights , certainly in New York over the dodgy property deals etc. and likely several others. He was desperate to stay in office to try to ride out the statute of limitations (or just hoping they'd get bored waiting). He is going to get absolutely drowned in litigation as soon as he leaves office.
briany wrote: » Pretty high stakes gambit from Trump to become president in order to duck some charges and some debts. Why not just feck off to Dubai? Moscow
prawnsambo wrote: » Yeah. Accepting a pardon is an admission of guilt as Gerald Ford said. So should he pardon himself, he's leaving himself open to civil cases from anyone affected by the insurrection on Wednesday. Apparently he's in a sulk about it and reports say that he's saying that if he can't have one, nobody else can either. A lot of nervous Trump kids ensuing I'd imagine. And Rudy of course; who I suspect has been pedal to the metal in illegality in the mistaken belief that he'll get one.
briany wrote: » Why not just feck off to Dubai?
Zubeneschamali wrote: » Trump hates to travel, he said even the White House was a dump when he had to move there.
briany wrote: » Pretty high stakes gambit from Trump to become president in order to duck some charges and some debts. Why not just feck off to Dubai?
duploelabs wrote: » That's because trump thinks this is good interior design
aloyisious wrote: » I don't know how much of a link DB has with the German state but the U.S insurrection bid must have brought back memories to Germans of their past history of putsches. The Govt may have guided the DB announcement seeing it as a chance of a good start to the year as well for the relationship with official Washington after the Trump era, tie up loose ends.