AlanDershowitz, Harvard law professor, says convictions against former President Donald Trump will come quick, before the elections, in an attempt to quagmire his chance for presidency.
AlanDershowitz, Felix Frankfurter professor of law at Harvard Law School, said the latest indictment of former President Donald Trump, and perhaps even the three others, amount to "nothing."
Attorney and law professor AlanDershowitz in Washington on Jan. 29, 2020. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)
Dershowitz told The Epoch Times that while Trump could be convicted in a jury trial in Manhattan, he would later win on appeal.
In a July 2022 opinion piece in Newsweek, legal scholar AlanDershowitz criticized the Biden administration for making a “dangerous argument that threatens executive privilege, as well as other important and long recognized privileges.”
AlanDershowitz, who taught at Harvard Law School for nearly five decades, interpreted the provision differently in an article published in the Compact Magazine in August.
Meanwhile, retired Harvard Law professor AlanDershowitz argued over the summer in an opinion article that President Trump can't be disqualified under the 14th Amendment's Section 3.
AlanDershowitz, a professor who taught at Harvard Law School for nearly 50 years, expressed skepticism of the legal grounds supporting Mr. Bragg’s case.
Similarly, former U.S.
Clinton of wrongdoing, she has leveled allegations against Britain's Prince Andrew and Harvard Law Professor AlanDershowitz—both of whom have denied wrongdoing.
(REUTERS/Brendan Mcdermid)
A constitutional law expert, AlanDershowitz, has argued that the trials should be televised to a wide audience because it would clarify the former president's actions and role in the cases.
Legal scholar AlanDershowitz dismissed the testimony given by Michael Cohen in former President Donald Trump’s New York trial, saying that a key witness who could counter the testimony has not been called to testify.
In Navarro's defense, Harvard professor emeritus and constitutional law scholar AlanDershowitz argued Congress and the DOJ should have sought a judicial ruling over Navarro's privilege claims and given him subsequent time to comply with the subpoena
Retired Harvard law professor AlanDershowitz said the protests at the Capitol were protected First Amendment demonstrations.
“Look, these were not obstructions of justice,” Mr. Dershowitz told Newsmax on Dec. 15.
“In order to turn the state statute into a felony, you have to borrow a federal statute,” retired Harvard law professor AlanDershowitz told The Epoch Times in an interview in March 2023.
The Department of Justice (DOJ) is likely attempting to ensnare former President Donald Trump on obstruction of justice charges, predicted Harvard Law professor emeritus AlanDershowitz.
Attorney AlanDershowitz, a Democrat who represented President Trump when he was indicted, is an emeritus professor of Harvard Law School who has studied the politicized cases against the 45th president.
AlanDershowitz, a prominent U.S. lawyer, urged the incoming Israeli government coalition to reconsider planned legal reforms that would weaken the nation’s Supreme Court.
AlanDershowitz, the Harvard Law professor emeritus, predicted that Department of Justice lawyers will "cherry-pick" what they want to be redacted when disclosing an affidavit that sought a search warrant on former President Donald Trump's Florida home
Some legal experts, including former Harvard Law professor AlanDershowitz, have said that the charges Bragg are bringing should be classified misdemeanors but say he is using an untested legal theory to charge Trump with a felony.
AlanDershowitz, a professor who taught at Harvard Law School for nearly 50 years, expressed skepticism of the legal grounds supporting Mr. Bragg’s case, saying he was using “made-up laws” to muster a politically motivated attack.
Retired Harvard law professor AlanDershowitz told Fox Business that the appointment was "illegal."
"The regulation provides clearly that special counsel have to come from outside the government for good reason.
Harvard Law Professor AlanDershowitz similarly criticized the Trump defense for not raising issues he said it should have during the trial. “This was not a well-tried case by the defense,” he said on Rumble.
"It's illegal," attorney AlanDershowitz told Fox Business on Monday. "The regulation provides clearly that special counsel have to come from outside the government for good reason.
Retired Harvard Law professor AlanDershowitz told The Epoch Times in March that Trump could run—and serve—"from prison" if he is convicted and sentenced.