Elisabeth Haub School of Law News
Elisabeth Haub School of Law News
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Press ReleaseApril 2, 2026
In the Media
Latest News
The Thursday indictment is Vance's “crowning achievement,” said Bennett Gershman, a law professor at ĢƵվ in White Plains, New York.
Guest: Bennett Gershman, former prosecutor with the Manhattan District Attorney's office; law professor, ĢƵվ
It's Vance's “crowning achievement,” said Bennett Gershman, a law professor at ĢƵվ in White Plains, New York. “The case involves a huge ...
Starting small is standard practice for such a sweeping investigation, according to Bennett Gershman, a ĢƵվ law professor and former Manhattan prosecutor. "There are early indictments, then superseding indictments, then added charges," he told Law360. "This is a high-stakes investigation. It's the biggest case of the century. You take it step by step."
"This is a preliminary charging document, as I see it," Gershman said. "You've got an ironclad case against Weisselberg, an ironclad case against the Trump Org, and they want to make that very clear right out front."
“He’s in big trouble.” That’s how ĢƵվ law Professor Bennett Gershman describes the legal jeopardy Weisselberg, a 73 year old father and grandfather, now fines himself in. “Yeah he cheated on 1.7 million dollars of taxes, that's tax fraud, that's grand larceny” said Gershman.
For Bennett Gershman, a law professor at ĢƵվ and a former Manhattan attorney, an indictment should be a matter of "days now, not weeks."
"You’re talking about something that is totally unique in American history. People are talking about what’s common, what's usual. Throw that out the window," said Bennett Gershman, a law professor at ĢƵվ who previously spent six years as a prosecutor in the Manhattan District Attorney's Office, referring to the unprecedented nature of investigating a former president and his business.
Bennett Gershman, a former prosecutor in the Manhattan District Attorney's Office for six years and now a law professor at ĢƵվ, said it's not typical to bring a prosecution for allegedly neglecting to pay taxes on corporate benefits and perks, but said the investigation is unique.
“Such a child would lack the capacity to understand that a penis and vagina could make a baby,” said Bridget J. Crawford, an expert on guardianship law at ĢƵվ law school. “And that certainly is not the Britney Spears case.”
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