When historians look back on this
era, they’ll inevitably ask how a nation built on principles of democracy,
justice, and equality allowed one man to commit such a broad range of crimes
and abuses, and whether Donald Trump is indeed the most dangerous criminal in
American history.
To fully grasp the gravity of
Trump’s actions, consider the extensive categories of his criminal and
potentially criminal conduct, each more disturbing than the last.
First, there’s the relentless
financial corruption. Trump has long played fast and loose with the law when it
came to his finances. In New York, his company was convicted of tax fraud and financial manipulation
designed to deceive lenders and inflate his wealth. Trump University was
shuttered after a $25 million fraud settlement, its “students” left feeling
defrauded.
His charitable organization, the
Trump Foundation, was dissolved following revelations that funds intended for
charity were instead used to benefit Trump personally and politically, and to
pay off Pam Bondi in Florida where he and Epstein were living (she was AG for
almost a decade and never went after Epstein).
But Trump’s shady financial
dealings didn’t begin or end with these public scandals. For decades, he was
closely associated with New York’s organized crime families. Trump Tower itself
was built using concrete provided by mob-linked companies.
Roy Cohn, Trump’s mentor and
attorney as I detail in The Last American President: A Broken Man, a Corrupt Party, and
a World on the Brink, was a notorious fixer and lawyer for mob figures
such as Anthony “Fat Tony” Salerno and Paul Castellano.
Trump’s casinos also regularly
skirted the law, drawing scrutiny from federal investigators for potential
money laundering linked to organized crime, and his former casino manager
recently revealed to CNN that Trump and Jeffrey Epstein once
even showed up together with underage girls in tow (the White House denies the
story).
Trump’s long relationship with
Epstein further exposes his moral bankruptcy and possible criminality. The two
were close associates and owned residences near each other in New York and Palm
Beach, socializing together frequently.
Trump famously described Epstein
as a “terrific guy” who enjoyed the company of beautiful women, some “on the
younger side.” Multiple reports suggest Trump knew about Epstein’s exploitation
of minors, yet Trump continued their association until public scandal made it
inconvenient.
Then there are Trump’s
questionable international relationships, with none more alarming than his
mysterious affinity for Vladimir Putin. Trump’s first administration
consistently favored Russian interests, dismissing election interference
findings from American intelligence agencies, undermining NATO, and, in his
second administration even withholding military aid from Ukraine, thus
benefiting Putin’s geopolitical ambitions.
While the full nature of Trump’s
entanglement with Putin remains hidden, Trump’s obsequious behavior toward the
Russian dictator raises serious questions about financial leverage or
compromised loyalties. For example, the only major country in the world Trump chose not to impose tariffs on this year was Russia.
Trump’s disturbing Russian
connections also include his 2016 campaign manager and close confidant, Paul
Manafort, whose career was dedicated to installing pro-Putin autocrats and
corrupt oligarchs across Eastern Europe, including Ukraine and Albania. Heidi
Seigmund Cuda writes about his recent Albania connection in her great Bette Dangerous Substack newsletter.
Manafort was convicted of
multiple felonies, including tax and bank fraud, stemming from his shady
dealings overseas, actions intimately connected with Putin’s broader
geopolitical ambitions, for which Trump pardoned him.
Trump’s choice of Manafort to
lead his 2016 campaign wasn’t coincidental; it signaled to Moscow an openness
to influence, further raising troubling questions about Trump’s susceptibility
to foreign manipulation and complicity in Manafort’s criminal schemes.
Trump’s election interference
is equally alarming. It began with hush-money payments to Stormy Daniels and
Karen McDougal to manipulate public perception during the 2016 campaign, for
which he was convicted of felony election manipulation charges in Manhattan
last year.
More brazenly, Trump attempted to
subvert democracy in Georgia when he lost the 2020 election by demanding of
Georgia’s Secretary of State, “I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one
more than we have.”
His attempts to cling to power by
any means necessary reached a terrifying crescendo with the conspiracy to
overturn the 2020 presidential election, ultimately joined by over 100
Republican members of Congress. This led to a federal indictment, making him the first former president
charged with seeking to destroy the very democratic system that put him into
power.
Trump’s abuse of presidential
authority is chillingly unprecedented. Robert Mueller’s investigation laid out multiple instances
where Trump criminally obstructed justice, brazenly interfering with federal
investigations. He solicited foreign interference from Ukraine in the 2020
election, a move that led to his first impeachment.
Trump’s presidency was also
marred by repeated violations of the Emoluments Clause as he profited directly
from foreign governments funneling money through his hotels and golf clubs. He
pitched Teslas from the White House in flagrant violation of the Hatch Act
(penalty: 5 years in prison). Even after leaving office in 2021, Trump
illegally retained classified documents and obstructed federal efforts to
retrieve them, leading to further federal charges.
One of the most grotesque and
morally bankrupt chapters of the Trump presidency unfolded in the early months
of the Covid pandemic, when Trump and his son-in-law Jared Kushner reportedly made the political calculation that the virus was
“only hitting Blue states” and disproportionately killing Black Americans so
it could be weaponized.
According to reporting at the
time, Kushner convened a secretive White House task force of mostly male,
white, preppy private-sector advisors who concluded that a robust federal
response to minimize deaths would be politically disadvantageous. Their analysis
was clear: since it was primarily Democratic governors and Black communities
suffering the early brunt of the pandemic (NY, NJ, WA), Trump could politically
benefit by blaming local leadership and withholding meaningful federal aid.
It was a cynical — and deadly —
strategy to let the virus burn through the opposition’s voter base that
ultimately led to an estimated 500,000 unnecessary American deaths and gave
us as the second-most Covid deaths per person in the world.
This approach not only
explains the administration’s chaotic and insufficient response to testing,
supplies, and coordination, it exposes a level of callous — morally, if not
legally criminal — political calculus rarely seen in modern American history since
the days of the Trail of Tears.
Leaked documents and internal
communications at the time confirmed that federal resources were distributed
unevenly, often favoring Republican-led states.
Trump also regularly lashed out
at Democratic governors like Gretchen Whitmer and Andrew Cuomo while ignoring
their pleas for ventilators and PPE. As the death toll mounted, Trump publicly
minimized the virus, holding rallies and rejecting masks, while privately
admitting to journalist Bob Woodward that Covid was “deadly stuff.”
This wasn’t just negligence: it
was targeted neglect driven by racism and partisanship, carried out in the
middle of a once-in-a-century public health emergency.
Beyond these abuses of power,
Trump openly incited political violence. His rhetoric fueled vigilantism and
violent confrontations at rallies.
Most infamously, on January
6th, 2021, he incited an insurrection designed to halt the peaceful transition
of power in a stunning betrayal without precedent in American history. He
encouraged extremist and white supremacist groups like the Proud Boys, Three
Percenters, and Oath Keepers, effectively endorsing domestic terrorism.
Right up until he took office and
corruptly shut them down, investigations continued into potential wire fraud
and misuse of funds from Trump’s “Save America” PAC, alongside scrutiny into
financial irregularities involving his Truth Social platform.
Investigations into obstruction,
witness intimidation, and potential bribery — now blocked as the Supreme Court
has put him above the law, or shut down by his toadies — further compound his
record of potential crimes.
Yet Trump’s ultimate crime
goes beyond mere lawbreaking. He has methodically eroded democratic
institutions, weaponized disinformation to undermine public trust, and attacked
the traditionally nonpartisan independence of the judiciary, intelligence agencies,
military, and law enforcement. His assaults on the press are right out of
Putin’s playbook. Trump’s relentless assault on truth and democracy normalizes
authoritarianism and political violence.
Thus, his most dangerous crime is
not simply corruption or obstruction, nor even incitement of insurrection: it’s
the deliberate attempted destruction of American democracy itself. This crime,
far more profound than any individual act, threatens the survival of the
republic itself.
If America is to survive as a
free nation, we must confront the reality of Trump’s actions. He isn’t merely a
criminal; he’s become the most dangerous criminal in American history precisely
because his actions imperil the very foundations of our democracy.
Allowing such crimes to go
unpunished risks setting a precedent that future would-be autocrats may follow,
forever tarnishing the promise of American democracy. Once he’s out of power,
our nation’s new mantra must become, “Never forget, never forgive, never
again.”
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