Well he has said he likes libertarians but they cannot win so I'd have to guess whoever NAMBLA backs. What is curious about this that the article which is hard to believe has stood since 2011 saying Trump was arrested for suspicion of sex with a 12 year old boy at his casino. Now that's pretty actionable if false and he sues everybody. I've never noticed it before. "However, in 2011 an article was published outlining the gift of $5000 given to Nevada Senator Harry Reid by the candidate, mere days after Trump’s arrest on suspicion of having sex with an unidentified twelve year old boy in the owner’s suite of Trump’s Las Vegas hotel and casino. Since the publication of this article there have been rumors online about Trump’s relationship with NAMBLA."
"Ms. Banks is currently incarcerated indefinitely because the State will not accept her $10,000.00 cash bail and she does not qualify for a residential drug treatment,” the court petition says. Pregnant Alabama woman put in jail to 'protect the fetus' had to sleep on the floor after suffering bleeding condition Many prisons had a difficult time keeping people safe during the COVID-19 crisis, but one Alabama jail kept a young woman in jail to protect her fetus. Ashley Banks was arrested with an unregistered gun and a small amount of marijuana. Normally she would be let out on bond awaiting trial, but because she was pregnant and admitted to drug use, Etowah County put her in jail for three months, AL.com reported. She's already at a high risk due to a family history of miscarriages. "She’s not the only one, according to attorneys involved in her case," the report explained. "Several pregnant women and new moms accused of exposing their fetuses to drugs have been held for weeks or months inside the Etowah County Detention Center under special bond conditions that require rehab and $10,000 cash." Rehab facilities aren't cheap and if women are being forced to fork over $10,000 and pay for rehab, there aren't a lot of options. In Banks' case, she didn't qualify for rehab from the state. “The stress and conditions in jail and prisons, including lack of consistent access to standard prenatal care and mental health care, poor diets, poor sanitation, infestations with bugs and vermin, poor ventilation, tension, noise, lack of privacy, lack of family and community contact, can be detrimental to physical and mental health which can result in poor pregnancy outcomes for both the mother and the baby,” wrote Dr. Carolyn Sufrin, an OB/GYN, an expert on incarceration and pregnancy at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.