“Tony Soprano can’t invoke the First Amendment for telling his crew he wants someone whacked.”— Duke University law professor and former Enron prosecutor Samuel Buell, quoted by Michael Schmidt and Maggie Haberman, “First Amendment is Likely Linchpin of Trump Defense,” The New York Times, Aug. 3, 2023
What a concept: Tony, Paulie Walnuts, Silvio, and the
rest of the crew as First Amendment defenders. It looks like they’re about to
go defending their constitutional rights in this picture, doesn’t it?
Don’t be surprised if that involves baseball bats,
knives, chemical sprays, axes, and other instruments you’re unlikely to find in
a town square.
Oh, wait: some of those same objects showed up at the January 6, 2021 insurrection at the Capitol in DC!
In keeping with the link between a New Jersey figure (the
real-life one has a golf course in Tony Soprano’s state) and criminal
conspiracies, the object of Prof. Buell’s quote tweeted yesterday, “IF
YOU GO AFTER ME, I’M COMING AFTER YOU!”
This came only a day after the judge in the case
involving “The Former Guy” issued this extraordinary warning: “It is a crime to
try to influence a juror or to threaten or attempt to bribe a witness or any
other person who may have information about your case, or to retaliate against
anyone for providing information about your case to the prosecution, or to
otherwise obstruct the administration of justice.”
(Thanks to my friend Rob for alerting me to Buell’s
apropos quote.)
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