TRUMP JUST GOT NAILED WITH ANOTHER DESTRUCTIVE LEGAL CASE FROM SAUDI ARABIA

If the Department of Justice examines Trump's financial ties to Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. In that case, the president could have to face further legal challenges.
Trump's newest legal problem, which involves payments to Saudi Arabia, might be his undoing.
Suppose the Department of Justice looks into former president Trump's financial relationships with Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. In that case, Trump might face additional legal issues.
After new information surfaced concerning the financing of LIV Golf, the Organization for Democracy in the Arab World (ODAW) recently called on the DOJ and Congress to launch a probe against Trump. The LIV Tournament is privately owned and funded. DAWN reports that MBS paid Trump millions of dollars in agreements over the previous five years and that Trump hosted several LIV golf tournaments at his club. The group DAWN wants the contract with the former president looked examined to see whether it was lawful. No probe is currently underway.
Any illicit dealings between Trump and his MBS would have to have happened while he was running for office or in office. A former federal prosecutor and chief of the West Coast Trials Attorney's office argued that the arrangement would be improper even if it had been arranged when Trump was not running for president or acting as president.
Newsweek quotes Neama Rahmani. According to Rahmani, it is quite apparent that no foreign government may provide anything of value to political candidates or anybody holding public office in connection with elections. It would be immoral and bad, but not criminal if this happened after he became president but before he became the [2024] candidate. Rahmani speculated that one of three outcomes was possible if an inquiry were conducted. The first and least catastrophic scenario is if investigators discover that Trump was unemployed throughout his time in the office or while vying for office. The Federal Election Commission (FEC) may also handle any infractions and levy penalties against Trump.
The likelihood of Trump being indicted by the Justice Department is the gravest. If initiated, the probe would be independent of those looking into Trump's suspected misuse of sensitive data and the riot that broke out in the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. According to Rahmani, the "far more serious" grounds for prosecution is Trump's engagement with LIV golf rather than any of the other inquiries. Possibility of resulting in Michael McAuliffe, a newly elected federal prosecutor, told Newsweek that Trump's actions in Saudi Arabia might be a determining factor in the country's electorate in 2024.
TRUMP JUST GOT NAILED WITH ANOTHER DESTRUCTIVE LEGAL CASE FROM SAUDI ARABIA