someone who used to be president and currently running to be president again, is caught up in so many allegations of misconduct, of crimes. and so everything changes now. i mentioned this once earlier tonight. we will remember march 30th. it will be marked in the history books. the future is unwritten, whether it s marked at the beginning of a trial that sends someone to prison or the beginning of a process that cleared his name. we can t tell you that and anyone that tries to p prejudge that might be getting ahead of the process but is the end of a period where donald trump was not legally held to account. and today, in the rest of donald trump s life are different, as he learns, perhaps for the first time in his life, what it is to be completely out of control, to have to react to a government and propecsecutorial system whe his antics do not matter what matters is what a judge says, what a jury of his peers says not what he says or posts. so we re going forward on this tog
law enforcement has to beñi■rigt 100% of the time. someone who has a terrorist oe( violent extremist only has to be right once. f■ last question toe1 you, e■does this indictment, in any way, influence thel■ other prosecutors? r■t r to thef■ right and say, w, this is happening, does this impact what i m doing? so, i m talking about faniq■ willis and, obviously, jack smith. no, i don t think so. i think that if youe1ñr■are worg togethere■ on a coordinated investigation, you might. but these so, i don t think. so i think alvin bragg brought this case when he was ready. and i think funny will send q■(■(■same in their cases. in their cases and, last question i guess, to you, charles coleman, do you think it is likely jason johnson said he thinks it sx■ unlikely that ir actually go to jail on these counts. michaelqcohen did. 5■■■ó■t was a federal caw;k know is different. e■but this is a case that sent