Lakhota
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- Jul 14, 2011
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But he has no problem attacking Clinton over her husbandās infidelity.
In the summer of 1990, at the height of his bitter divorce from his first wife, Donald Trump was carrying on a very public extramarital affair with a former beauty queen, Marla Maples.
As part of the coupleās divorce proceedings, Ivana Trumpās lawyers asked him under oath about his dealings with other women and whether he had been faithful to his wife.
Instead of answering, Donald Trump invoked his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination. Over the course of five depositions that summer, he was asked approximately 100 questions related to marital infidelity. He pleaded the Fifth on 97 of them.
āDonald preaches about his devotion to the Second Amendment, but it was the Fifth Amendment that was his favorite when he was deposed in the divorce with Ivana,ā wrote biographer Wayne Barrett in his 1992 book, Trump: The Greatest Show on Earth. A New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement report later verified Barrettās reporting on those depositions, which are still sealed.
For Trump, taking the Fifth seemed to work out well. He later bragged that he managed to settle the divorce without giving his first wife a penny more than required by the prenuptial agreement.
Now, with less than six weeks to go until Election Day, Trump is again focused on questions of marital infidelity and invoking Fifth Amendment rights. Only this time, the GOP presidential nominee has cast himself as the judge.
And everything looks different. Inside the moral and ethical bubble that Trump has created for himself, taking the Fifth 97 times is a savvy move, and powerful men arenāt constrained by marital vows. Outside that bubble, the Fifth Amendment is apparently used only by criminals, and adultery is a sin to be blamed on both spouses.
Following Trumpās disappointing debate performance Monday night, he said he deserved credit for not attacking his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, over her husbandās infidelity. His advisers and campaign surrogates fanned out across the airwaves to make the same case.
Campaign manager Kellyanne Conway said Trump was āpolite and a gentlemanā because he did not follow through on his threat to seat Gennifer Flowers, a former girlfriend of Bill Clinton, in the front row at the debate.
Rudy Giuliani, one of Trumpās closest advisers, said Hillary Clinton was ātoo stupid to be presidentā if she hadnāt realized all along that Monica Lewinsky, a White House intern, was telling the truth. As mayor of New York, Giuliani carried on his own very public extramarital affair, which cast a shadow over his administration.
Trump even holds Hillary Clinton, who has maintained her marriage for 41 years, partly to blame for her husbandās misdeeds. āShe was an unbelievably nasty, mean enabler, and what she did to a lot of those women is disgraceful,ā he said in May.
On Wednesday, Trump likened anyone who takes the Fifth to a criminal. āSo there are five of them taking the Fifth Amendment, like you see on the mob, right?ā he said at another rally in Iowa, inflating the number by two. āThe mob takes the Fifth Amendment. If youāre innocent, why are you taking the Fifth Amendment?ā
This was precisely the question that Ivana Trumpās lawyer posed to her husband during those depositions 26 years ago, according to Barrett the biographer. The lawyer, Michael Kennedy, also warned Donald Trump that by taking the Fifth so many times, he was giving the court grounds to draw a reasonable āinferenceā that he had committed adultery.
More: Trump Pleaded The Fifth 97 Times To Avoid Admitting To Adultery
Trump obviously doesn't believe that what is good for the goose is also good for the gander.
In the summer of 1990, at the height of his bitter divorce from his first wife, Donald Trump was carrying on a very public extramarital affair with a former beauty queen, Marla Maples.
As part of the coupleās divorce proceedings, Ivana Trumpās lawyers asked him under oath about his dealings with other women and whether he had been faithful to his wife.
Instead of answering, Donald Trump invoked his Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination. Over the course of five depositions that summer, he was asked approximately 100 questions related to marital infidelity. He pleaded the Fifth on 97 of them.
āDonald preaches about his devotion to the Second Amendment, but it was the Fifth Amendment that was his favorite when he was deposed in the divorce with Ivana,ā wrote biographer Wayne Barrett in his 1992 book, Trump: The Greatest Show on Earth. A New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement report later verified Barrettās reporting on those depositions, which are still sealed.
For Trump, taking the Fifth seemed to work out well. He later bragged that he managed to settle the divorce without giving his first wife a penny more than required by the prenuptial agreement.
Now, with less than six weeks to go until Election Day, Trump is again focused on questions of marital infidelity and invoking Fifth Amendment rights. Only this time, the GOP presidential nominee has cast himself as the judge.
And everything looks different. Inside the moral and ethical bubble that Trump has created for himself, taking the Fifth 97 times is a savvy move, and powerful men arenāt constrained by marital vows. Outside that bubble, the Fifth Amendment is apparently used only by criminals, and adultery is a sin to be blamed on both spouses.
Following Trumpās disappointing debate performance Monday night, he said he deserved credit for not attacking his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, over her husbandās infidelity. His advisers and campaign surrogates fanned out across the airwaves to make the same case.
Campaign manager Kellyanne Conway said Trump was āpolite and a gentlemanā because he did not follow through on his threat to seat Gennifer Flowers, a former girlfriend of Bill Clinton, in the front row at the debate.
Rudy Giuliani, one of Trumpās closest advisers, said Hillary Clinton was ātoo stupid to be presidentā if she hadnāt realized all along that Monica Lewinsky, a White House intern, was telling the truth. As mayor of New York, Giuliani carried on his own very public extramarital affair, which cast a shadow over his administration.
Trump even holds Hillary Clinton, who has maintained her marriage for 41 years, partly to blame for her husbandās misdeeds. āShe was an unbelievably nasty, mean enabler, and what she did to a lot of those women is disgraceful,ā he said in May.
On Wednesday, Trump likened anyone who takes the Fifth to a criminal. āSo there are five of them taking the Fifth Amendment, like you see on the mob, right?ā he said at another rally in Iowa, inflating the number by two. āThe mob takes the Fifth Amendment. If youāre innocent, why are you taking the Fifth Amendment?ā
This was precisely the question that Ivana Trumpās lawyer posed to her husband during those depositions 26 years ago, according to Barrett the biographer. The lawyer, Michael Kennedy, also warned Donald Trump that by taking the Fifth so many times, he was giving the court grounds to draw a reasonable āinferenceā that he had committed adultery.
More: Trump Pleaded The Fifth 97 Times To Avoid Admitting To Adultery
Trump obviously doesn't believe that what is good for the goose is also good for the gander.