Harrison Floyd was denied bond on Friday. A judge said he was a potential flight risk.

Floyd, who’s charged with racketeering, conspiracy and influencing a witness, turned himself in Thursday afternoon, ahead of Trump’s 20-minute appearance at the jail that evening. Prosecutors allege that Floyd, the former leader of Black Voices for Trump and the only Black man among the defendants, was part of a scheme to pressure election worker Ruby Freeman into making false statements. Freeman had been falsely accused by Trump and his allies of election fraud.

  • Enigma@sh.itjust.works
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    10 months ago

    If you think they won’t treat him differently just because he has money, then you’re mistaken. I was wrong in why he was denied bail, I admit that. But having money means nothing to the justice system when you’re black.

    • norbert@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      Situations like this really demonstrate the concept of intersectionality. The justice system will absolutely treat him differently because he has money. He will likely be treated poorer than a white person with money but he’ll unquestionably be better off than than a black man with no money in the same situation. If nothing else when he inevitably goes to prison he’ll have money to put on his “books” to buy things from the commissary. To say having money means nothing ignores decades (lol centuries) of evidence. There’s no war but the class war.

    • kescusay@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      I’m not saying he won’t be treated differently because he’s black. All I’m saying is that I’m this particular instance, being denied bail is 100% predictable when you get into fights with FBI agents, and being denied a public defender is 100% predictable when you have plenty of money to afford a lawyer.

      What happens from here? I don’t know. But what’s happened so far is exactly what you’d expect to happen with anyone in his position.