Trump’s Kentucky Campaign Chair
Pleads Guilty to Child Sex Trafficking
https://gritpost.com/trump-campaign-chair-trafficking/
By: Jake Shepherd
February 10, 2018
رئیس کمپین انتخاباتی ترامپ در ایالت کنتاکی
به اتهام قاچاق جنسی کودکان اعتراف کرد
One of President Trump’s loudest supporters will likely spend the rest of his
life in jail after the conclusion of his child sex trafficking case.
life in jail after the conclusion of his child sex trafficking case.
یکی از پرشورترین حامیان رئیس جمهور ترامپ، احتمالا بعد از پایان گرفتن پرونده قاچاق کودکان، بقیه عمر(کثیف-م) خود را در زندان خواهد گذراند.
همین کافیست که متذکر شویم: این فقط ملایان و پاسداران نیستند که دست به قاچاق دختران جوان ایرانی به کشورهای حومه خلیج فارس میکنند.
ننگ و نفرت جهانیان نثار این لاشه های متعفن مردسالار- سرمایه دار
زنده باد جنبش آنارکوفمینیستی در روژوا (سوریه) و مناطق آزاد شده
زاپاتیستیا(مکزیک) : تنها حامیان زنان در جهان
71-year-old Timothy Nolan — a former Campbell County District Judge who was chair of the Trump campaign in Kentucky according to court documents — entered guilty pleas on all 21 counts against him in court on Friday. A press release issued by the office of Kentucky Attorney General Andy Beshear listed a multitude of charges, including human trafficking of adults, human trafficking of minors, and unlawful transaction with minors.
Nolan will serve 20 years in jail and pay restitution of $110,000, with a bulk of the fine going toward the Human Trafficking Victims Fund, which the Kentucky General Assembly established in 2013. Nolan will be eligible for parole in 2022, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer. If he had not entered guilty pleas, Nolan would have faced up to 100 years in prison.
The New York Daily News reported that Nolan had a total of 19 victims dating back to 2004. While the victims’ information has not been publicly released, some of them included children below the age of 18. Judge Kathleen Lape said Nolan threatened arrest and evictionto force women and girls to have sex with him. Nolan also apparently paid the women and juveniles with heroin and painkillers, and gave alcohol to a minor on more than one occasion.
In a statement following the pleas, Nolan’s attorney, Margo Grubbs, argued that what Nolan did would have been seen as legally acceptable under the laws of a different day and age.
“[Nolan] took full personal responsibility for these acts that in his potential day and generation would not necessarily be considered to rise to the level of human trafficking,” Grubbs said.
Some of Nolan’s pleas were Alford v. North Carolina pleas, meaning that the plea was given to avoid trial due to overwhelming evidence, but that Nolan still maintains his innocence.
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Jake Shepherd is a freelance writer from Cleveland, Ohio. He enjoys poring through financial disclosure statements, spirited debate, and good scotch. He remains eternally optimistic about the Browns. Email him at jake.d.shepherd.21 (at) hotmail (dot) com.
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