According to Politico, the break "would push any indictment of the former president to late April at the earliest, although it is possible that the grand jury's schedule could change." According to the report, the grand jury was not expected to examine any evidence in the Trump case on Thursday.
Although it is plausible that there was a change in the schedule, this is not the most noteworthy aspect of the indictment. In fact, it appeared for the last few weeks that there would not be an indictment at all.
For starters, last week, Robert Costello, a former legal advisor to Michael Cohen, appeared as a surprise witness. Trump boasted that Costello's testimony was indisputable proof of his innocence. In the wake of Costello's testimony and new evidence, the following grand jury session was abruptly canceled, and when the grand jury reconvened, they did not hear the case involving Trump.
Related: Americans Know Indicting Trump Will Backfire on the Democrats
Then there were reports that prosecutors were having trouble persuading the jury to accept that Trump is guilty of a crime... Subscribe for free to Breaking Christian News here
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