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The Felon in the White House: Trump’s Latest Bid to Evade Justice Exposes a National Crisis

eherbut@gmail.com

America now faces a staggering reality: the President of the United States is a man convicted of 35 felonies, found liable for sexual abuse and defamation, and still actively trying to avoid paying the $83.3 million judgment he owes to writer E. Jean Carroll.

And on Tuesday, Donald Trump made his latest courtroom move — asking an appeals court to toss out that judgment on the argument that he should be immune from accountability simply because he was president when he defamed her.

This is not leadership. This is lawlessness wrapped in narcissism — and it now sits in the Oval Office.

A Convicted Felon — Now Claiming Immunity

Let that sink in.

Trump’s legal team didn’t argue he was innocent. They argued he shouldn’t have been held responsible — because he was president at the time he made the defamatory remarks.

The comments, made after Carroll accused Trump of rape, were vicious, public, and intentional. He smeared her character, mocked her story, and unleashed a torrent of abuse from his supporters.

The courts sided with Carroll. They recognized the damage done and awarded her $83.3 million in damages.

Now, Trump wants to walk away from it — not by disproving it, but by declaring himself untouchable.

34 Felonies and Zero Accountability?

Donald Trump isn’t just a defamer. He’s a convicted felon, found guilty of falsifying business records tied to election interference and cover-ups. He’s under ongoing criminal investigation in multiple jurisdictions.

Yet he now holds the most powerful office in the world.

If a person with a criminal record can’t rent an apartment in some cities — how is it that a convicted criminal is signing laws, managing nuclear codes, and appointing judges?

It’s not just hypocrisy. It’s a constitutional crisis in slow motion.

A Moron in Power — or a Master of Deception?

Trump once said, “I could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and not lose any voters.” That wasn’t just a rhetorical flourish — it was a warning.

Today, his grip on the MAGA base remains terrifyingly strong. Every courtroom loss is rebranded as a “deep state attack.” Every crime is reframed as “persecution.” Every consequence becomes “unconstitutional.”

He has turned victimhood into a political brand. But behind the bluster is a man whose actions — from tax fraud to sexual misconduct — have been proven in court.

This isn’t about politics. It’s about the rule of law, human decency, and whether America still has moral boundaries.

The Real Danger: Immunity Culture

If Trump succeeds in reversing the E. Jean Carroll judgment on the grounds of presidential immunity, it sets a horrifying precedent:

Any president could abuse, defame, or intimidate private citizens — and claim protection under the office.

That’s not immunity. That’s impunity.

And that’s the path to authoritarianism.

America is not supposed to be ruled by kings or criminals.

Yet today, we are governed by a man legally labeled a sexual abuser, convicted of felonies, and now desperately evading accountability while pretending to speak for the people.

This is not greatness. This is national humiliation.

History will not be kind to those who stayed silent — or cheered him on.

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