Jack - Episode 18 - Jail the Hitman (feat. Harry Dunn)
Episode Date: April 2, 2023This week, no one is above the law, Trump was indicted in Manhattan; Jack Smith is reportedly looking at conspiracy charges; new chief judge of the DC District Court, Jeb Boasberg, says Pence must tes...tify; plus listener questions.Follow Our Guest:Harry Dunnhttps://twitter.com/libradunnStanding My Groundhttps://www.hachettebooks.com/titles/harry-dunn/standing-my-groundDo you have questions about the cases and investigations? Click here: https://formfaca.de/sm/PTk_BSogJFollow the Podcast on Apple Podcasts:https://apple.co/3BoVRhNCheck out other MSW Media podcastshttps://mswmedia.com/shows/Follow AG on Twitter:Dr. Allison Gill https://twitter.com/allisongillhttps://twitter.com/MuellerSheWrotehttps://twitter.com/dailybeanspodAndrew McCabe isn’t on Twitter, but you can buy his book The Threathttps://www.amazon.com/Threat-Protects-America-Terror-Trump-ebook/dp/B07HFMYQPGWe would like to know more about our listeners. Please participate in this brief surveyhttp://survey.podtrac.com/start-survey.aspx?pubid=BffJOlI7qQcF&ver=shortThis Show is Available Ad-Free And Early For Patreon and Supercast Supporters at the Justice Enforcers level and above:https://dailybeans.supercast.techOrhttps://patreon.com/thedailybeansOr when you subscribe on Apple Podcastshttps://apple.co/3YNpW3P
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I signed in order appointing Jack Smith.
And those who say Jack is a finesse.
Mr. Smith is a veteran career prosecutor.
Wait, what law have I grew?
The events leading up to and on January 6th.
Classified documents and other presidential records.
You understand what prison is?
Send me to jail.
Hello and welcome to Jack, the podcast about all things special counsel. It is Sunday, April 2nd and I'm your host, Andy McCabe.
And I'm Allison Gill and today we wake up in an America where no one is above the law.
Donald Trump has been indicted by 23 of his peers in Manhattan.
And as we await the unceiling of the nearly three dozen charges against him,
we have some stunning news in the Department of Justice Special Counsel investigation,
as well because we can include now some of the stuff that happened this week
that's totally being drowned out by this indictment of Donald Trump, which I'm not sad about.
Go ahead.
But some some news that happened this week, including the new chief judge of the DC District Court, Jeb Bowsberg, ruling that former vice president Mike Pence cannot use the speech or debate clause to shield him from testifying about alleged crimes that Donald Trump committed.
And we also ruled.
He also ruled that Donald has no executive privilege against the testimony of the former
vice president.
And a CBS News report this week indicated that Jack Smith is looking at conspiracy charges
involving the former president.
And if that wasn't enough, we also heard this week that Trump has appealed Judge Barrel
Howell's order compelling the testimony of top aides, including our very favorite Alice
and former chief of staff, Mark Meadows, who could very well end up being the most important
witness in this whole thing.
In addition to the news, we're going to be joined today by Capitol Police Officer and super good guy Harry Dunn to discuss his thoughts on the Manhattan
Trump indictment and the disposition of the special counsel probe. And then of course,
we'll take some listener questions. So let's kick it off with that indictment and what it means
particularly for the Department of Justice. Yeah, absolutely. Now we know this is not a Jack Smith indictment.
It's not a Department of Justice indictment.
This is an indictment, presumably, according to reporting because we haven't seen the charges
yet, Andy, about the hush money payment paid to Stormy Daniels and maybe even Karen McDougal,
because we got some news this week that Karen McDougal was also involved
questions about her
Catch and Kill from the inquirer which is run by David Pecker who came in twice to testify before this grand jury
But you know these if this is a manhattan DA 23 people New Yorkers voted on this a A lot of people say that the Manhattan DA has indicted Donald Trump.
That's not true.
The grand jury indicted him.
And I think it's important that we understand that process.
But according to sources, 34 counts per sources that have to do with falsifying business records.
So I wanted to talk a little bit about,
because all we can do about these charges is speculate.
Right now we know that the judge,
and by the way, the judge overseeing this case,
look at the draw, same judge that oversaw the 17
count conviction trial of the Trump organization
for falsifying business valuations
and all that fraud that happened there,
fraud charges against
the Trump org.
Same judge.
He's been lashing out at the judge, but that judge is apparently, according to MSNBC,
weighing whether or not to unseal the charges before a rainment, because the DA can ask
for that.
The DA can also ask if he can talk, if he can tell the public about the indictment before
it's unsealed. And we have seen now the piece of paper granting Alvin Bragg the ability to announce and disclose
that the indictment happened. But we are waiting to see whether these charges will be unsealed
prior to a raiment or if we'll have to wait for a raiment. But I'm very interested in what those
charges are. Absolutely. And, you know, I mean, there's so much to think about here. I think
provisionally, Bragg's office is going to feel a lot of pressure. Most of itself imposed
to handle this as normally as they can, to at least check as many boxes that we would all consider to be normal process. And keeping the indictment sealed
until the defendant, in this case,
our former president, Trump,
has been presented at his arrangement.
That's the normal way it's done.
So for that reason only,
it's my guess that we probably won't hear
those details until he's arraigned on Tuesday.
But boy, 34 counts, which I think was a piece of
reporting that John Miller broke on CNN. 34 counts is a lot. But I think it's also important to point
out that it is kind of the common practice in the Manhattan DA's office to charge each separate act in a conspiracy or an overall criminal series of criminal
activities, each separate act is a separate count.
That's not typically what we see on the federal side.
The federal indictments read pretty cleanly as each count addresses a group of activities,
things, actions that were taken, conversations
that took place, what have you all around a particular crime.
In this case, because the fundamental crime is the falsification of business records,
it's entirely possible that each one of those counts is a separate, separate business record.
Now we know there were, I think, 11 payments to Michael Cohen
in the course of the payoff to Stormy Daniels
or compensating Cohen for having paid off Stormy Daniels.
So you can imagine right there
that could easily be charged as 11 separate counts
instead of one count of having paid off Stormy Daniels.
So yeah, and I did look at some of the past indictments
out of New York, out of the Manhattan D.A.'s office,
four falsifying business records.
And they have consistently been one count for this record,
one count for this record.
If there were 11 payments and then 11 entries
in the business record and then 11 counts of something else,
that looks like it's about 34 counts.
And it's what that second crime is that I'm really interested in knowing because you
have to, this was presented in this Supreme Court in New York, which means it's a felony.
And in order for falsifying business records to be a felony, you have to pair it with another
crime.
I have my own theories about that.
I don't necessarily think it's going to be campaign finance violations, because I do think
Trump has a long history of catching and killing these stories and might have done this
regardless of a campaign or not, although all these did happen.
And there were probably witnesses to keep it out of the public eye because of the campaign.
But I tend to think this might be something more along the lines of conspiracy or even
racketeering, which in New York is the enterprise corruption statute.
They call it little Rico, right?
It's kind of like the federal Rico.
It's been around in New York since 1986.
And there's three elements to it.
I can go over those in a minute.
But what I found interesting is something we learned this week that Weiselberg has swapped
out his attorneys.
Apparently, his attorneys weren't Trumpy enough and they were actually considering a cooperation
deal and that upset Donald.
So he sent in a guy named Seth Rosenberg and Andy, Seth Rosenberg used to run the rackets
bureau at the Manhattan D.A.'s office.
So I find it very fascinating that somebody who's into that sort of criminal enterprise
has a background in that is now representing Weiselberg who could face additional charges
as well.
So, you know, I just wanted to sort of bring that up that I'm not sure.
And everybody's been guessing what that second crime is,
but we'll have to just wait until we see those charges.
That's absolutely right.
So the importance of the second crime cannot be overlooked.
It's what turns this falsification of business records
into a felony.
It also brings, depending on what crime they pick,
it could bring vulnerabilities to this legal theory.
So one of the things people have been speculating about is that second crime would be violation
of federal campaign finance laws.
So there's all sorts of good questions about whether or not you can base a New York state
crime on a violation of federal campaign laws.
There's also a possibility that the second crime is a violation of New York State campaign
financing violations, although that would have taken place in the course of a federal election,
a national election.
So that raises other questions.
Can you be guilty of violating New York State campaign finance laws when you're running
for national office, not not office violating New York State campaign finance laws when you're running for national
office, not office in New York.
So lots of, lots of legal problems, potentially associated with those two.
I think you're right.
It's possible that the DA's office has tied the false business records to an entirely
different criminal theory, but either way, you can count on the fact that the Trump team is going to use this
kind of bootstrapped felony as an opportunity to fire a flurry of pretrial motions, attacking
the legal sufficiency of this indictment, of this charge, and that spells one thing to our folks,
the our listeners, and that is delay.
This is going to take a long time to go anywhere.
I trust me on that one.
Yeah, for sure.
And just to follow up on what I was talking about
before a class B felony of enterprise corruption
in New York, it says here,
when having knowledge of the existence of a criminal enterprise
in the nature of its activities and being employed by or associated with the enterprise, he or she intentionally
conducts or participates in the affairs of an enterprise by participating in a pattern
of criminal activity, or participates in a pattern of criminal activity and knowingly
invests any proceeds derived from that conduct, or any proceeds derived from the investment or use of those proceeds in that enterprise and this
certainly
benefited monetarily the Trump organization. So
again, I might be shooting for the stars here, but the signs are pointing my brain toward
I mean, I
Five years ago, I was like, oh, Davidson Cohen and Pecker and Trump have quite a racket going on
they caught and killed Stormy Daniels, Karen McDougall, a woman named Shira Bashard, who was
paid $1.6 million to be quiet about an abortion for an affair that she supposedly had with
Elliott Brody.
He was convicted of some other crimes that weren't associated with that, but ended up being
pardoned by Donald Trump.
So, I mean, we'll see how this plays out.
But Andy, how does this impact, because this is the jack podcast, we're about the special
council here.
How does this impact what the special council does?
Does it at all?
I mean, because this is such a different crime, this crime happened in 2016.
It's not anything
that Jack's looking at.
That's right.
So, on that level, it doesn't impact him at all.
This is not conduct or activity that Jack and his team are investigating, you know, as far
as we're aware, it's pretty far outside of his mandate.
However, I am going to guess that two of the,
maybe not happiest, but most interested,
closest watchers of this development yesterday
are both Jack Smith and Fawni Willis.
I don't think as much as we've heard people
ringing their hands around the timing of this indictment
and particularly people who are critical
of Alvin Bragg's
indictment of the president,
they're saying this is the least significant
criminal investigation of Trump,
and it shouldn't have gone first,
and there's all kinds of worries that this is going to,
it's the most political looking,
and it's gonna kind of poison the well
for the cases or potential indictments
that come after it.
I don't think that Jack Smith and to Lester St. Farmer, you will.
It's really that concern about that.
What they're looking at right now is this is a perfect opportunity for them to not have
to go first.
So that's a good thing.
It's also a good chance for them to just sit back and see how this goes.
Let's see what kind of public response Trump gets on the day of his
arrangement or, you know, who knows, on the first day of his trial, whenever that might happen,
that could be a long way away. So I think in one respect, it affects Jack Smith by giving him,
you know, kind of an opportunity. If you're out playing golf and you're in a for some,
and there's a lot of wind and you're not sure how, you know, the fairway is going to has been cut and you don't, you know,
understand, you know, you don't really know the course. Well, you don't ever want to be the first
person to tee off, right? You want someone else and you're a foursome to go first because like,
let's see how they deal with the wind. Let's see where their ball hit lands and how it rolls.
And I think Jack Smith is probably using this
for that opportunity.
So I instantly thought of my time as a comedian.
You never want to take the boat,
which means going first.
You want to see what this crowd likes.
Do they like dirty jokes?
Do they like clean jokes?
Do they like jokes about this?
Are they a laughing crowd?
Are they a kind of a quiet crowd
that you need to reach in and pull the laughs out of?
You get a lot of information by watching other people go first.
That's absolutely right.
So I think they're going to learn a lot from it.
There may be, we don't know yet, because we don't know exactly who Jack Smith may end up
using in his case, but on a less positive note, if there are witnesses that Jack Smith
is counting on in his case, and those witnesses are also going to be called upon to testify at this trial, that's less of a good thing because you always, especially if it's a witness who's who's testimony, you're really counting that person on the stand. And simply because when they've testified somewhere else under oath, whatever problems they created with that testimony, whatever issues
might have been raised about their truthfulness or the quality of their recollection or anything
like that, you're going to have to deal with those in your case that goes second. So to have
the first cut at the witness, you don't have any of the baggage that they might have created
in these other cases. So that's a little bit of a downside for him. I'm sure they'll be watching
the witness lists and ultimately whatever testimony comes out of them.
Yeah. And you know, a lot of people ask me like, oh, you're going to talk about this on the
Jack podcast, but what does it have to do with the special counsel? And I'll tell you,
because I think there's a third person smiling today. You talked about Fanny Willis, you talked about
Jack Smith. I'm going to bet somewhere, have an Amargarito, or probably a Scotch, is Robert Mueller,
the third, because the origination of this investigation is in the Mueller investigation. He is the one who uncovered these Hush money
payments and the whole scheme. He put it in Appendix D of the Mueller report, which is sitting
right behind me, as one of the 14 cases that was handed off to somewhere else. It's unredacted
now because it was settled in the Southern District of New York already, we know Cohen served a prison sentence and individual run did not.
But this crime, the investigatory birth of this crime that was charged in Manhattan this
week is from special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation.
I just wanted to remind everybody of that.
I love that reference.
And I also love the visual of Mueller sitting back drinking a margarita, maybe with a huge
sombrero on or something like that. I don't know. That's entirely in my imagination. I'm not
I'm speculating here, but you're right. You know, and Mueller and his team to be fair, they had the
the burden and the kind of bad luck, I guess, of having to do that work while Trump was still president.
And that, of course, was the biggest factor in walking away without pursuing an indictment.
If you're a close reader of the report, which I know that you are, Alison, and I know most
of your listeners are as well, you know that.
Yeah, it's number nine on page three of Appendix D. And you can see my face right now. I'm not
referencing anything. I just know that.
There you go. There you go. Look, we all know Mueller, how Mueller felt about obstruction
and the fact that, um, you know, the fact that Trump had, uh, in Mueller's words, you
know, the evidence, uh, proved each one of the elements of the offense, what eight or
nine times across the, across the across volume two.
So yeah, I think he's sitting back raising a glass saying, well, finally, somebody, somebody brought
one of these things over or this starting to bring one of these things over the finish line.
Yeah, Southern districts should have, but we know that Burman and Barr, there was a lot of
there was a lot of things that were shut down, including what I personally think was shut
down early, the Mueller investigation. I remember they were in the middle of a proceeding in court and they hit the Mueller prosecutors,
had to go to court and say, hey, this is news to us.
We were ready to prep on April 1st and now, bye, we're done.
So I don't know that it'll ever come out, but I have a feeling that that was curtailed
earlier than it should have been as well.
So just my thoughts, just my thoughts.
Let me hit one thing real quick before we move on
because it's been such a big topic on TV.
And it's this issue of timing.
There seems to be the thought or the desire
by many commentators that,
oh, they should have coordinated this better.
Jack Smith and Fahny Willis and Alvin Bragg
should have all gotten together
and drawn straws or something are coupled with a strategy as to who would go first. better, you know, Jack Smith and Fahny Willis and Alvin Bragg should have all gotten together and, you know,
drawn straws or something or come up with a strategy
as to who would go first.
And I'm telling you, it just does not happen that way.
And that would look awful.
You think that the cries from the right
about weaponization are bad now?
Yeah, that's right.
The federal government is conspiring with prosecutors
and two separate states to build the strongest case.
That's just not how cases are brought.
In very rare circumstances, if you have two jurisdictions that are putting on a case against
the same defendant in their separate jurisdictions and they depend on the same witnesses at the
same times, they will coordinate who goes first simply because the defendant and maybe
a witness, it can't be in two places at the same time.
So there could be, you know, judges make those sort of allowances for attorneys and
defendants availability when they're scheduling trials and motion hearings and things like that all the time. If those kinds of conflicts come up,
I'm sure they'll be worked out without a problem.
But separate sovereigns don't ask each other for permission. They don't take a back seat because, oh, your case is more
important than mine and mine is less significant. That's just BS. Alvin Bragg thinks he's got
probably cause to believe that Trump committed this crime. We think of falsification of business
records possibly to the extent of making it a felony. He's going to bring that case
If he thinks it's strong enough and needs to be brought that's his prosecutorial discretion
And if people don't like it and by people I mean the people of Manhattan of New York County
That's Manhattan New York if they don't like it they can vote them out the next time he's up for reelection
Yeah, absolutely. That's the check and balance right there the ballot box
So yeah, thank you.
Thank you very much for that insight because that, you know, I, that's something
that I had also seen and been wanting to address as well.
So, um, well, it is, it is a new day in America.
We have now held a former president accountable, criminally through indictment.
So the rule of law stands so far.
We'll be right back after the. We'll be right back after
the, we'll be right back after this quick break to talk about some other stuff that came out of the DC District Court.
Stay with us.
Hey everybody, welcome back. The new chief judge at the DC district court overseeing grand jury proceedings had a hell of a first week on the job.
First of all, he had to hand down a ruling about the form of vice president.
And he did under seal, by the way, so we're getting this from sources familiar,
probably team Pence, saying that Pence cannot use the speech or debate clause to shield him from all questions that
Jack Smith's team of prosecutors want to ask. And the reason I
think that Pence is the one who put this information out is
because the way they spun it was Vice President Pence wins
his speech or debate clause battle partially, footnote partially.
My headline was he lost his speech or debate clause battle because most of what Jack Smith, in fact,
from what I can tell all of what Jack Smith wants to know,
the judge decided it is not covered by the speech or debate clause.
But the judge said, Hey, you don't have to testify about stuff directly related
to your presiding over the Senate, uh, that day. Uh. But you do have to testify about any crimes
that you do crime, crimey discussions you had with Trump and so on and so forth. So I think
that this was actually a win for Jack Smith. What are your thoughts?
I think that's right. And as a provisional matter, I also agree with you that the likely source
of this information is from the Pence team.
And he gets back to that thing we talked about last week, like Pence really needed the
battle here, but he doesn't need the victory.
He needed to make this showing that he he resisted.
He didn't knuckle under to Jack Smith and the grand jury.
And he's done that now.
So now it's entirely foreseeable that he would be laying the foundation as it was to like,
hey, this is why we're going to end up in front of the grandiers.
It's not because we want to, it's because of this ruling from Judge Bozberg.
So yeah, and I think this one, most legal commentators, myself included,
there's a lot of room here for a compromise decision.
It's pretty clear that that absolutely hardcore Senate business sort of thing,
conversations with senators in the Senate. Like, that was your best bet or his best bet
for having parts of what he was looking to protect
considered behind the shield of speech and debate clause.
But the question with speech and debate clause always becomes, how much does it really
protect conversations that, let's say, a member of Congress has with other people outside
the boundaries of Congress, not about legislative things with people who aren't members of Congress.
And by that, through that lens, it always seemed like, you know, a rational judge, like
Bozberg, we know is, is going to find some area that Jack Smith could ask questions about.
That's clearly not within the kind of traditional core protections of the speech and debate
clause.
And I think it seems to me from what little
we know, that's what they came up with.
Yeah. And it sounds a lot to me like Judge Barrell Howell's ruling against Scott Perry
for his speech or debate clause saying like, sure, we're not going to ask you about your
these particular things with regard to your job as a congressperson, but we are going
to ask you about conversations with the executive branch but we are going to ask you about conversations with the executive branch.
We are going to ask you about this and that.
We're not we, but the prosecution team is allowed to ask you about these things.
I think that this matches this.
I think Pence, honestly, when we read the ruling, it's going to sound like Pence got
his ass handed to him.
But since he did get a little bit of a victory there, I think that that's the way that they're pushing this.
And I think that that's what, because right now, Pence has been asked about whether or
not he's going to appeal.
And he said, we're looking at that.
We're weighing that.
And we haven't heard a decision as of this recording as to whether or not Pence is going
to appeal this to the DC circuit court of appeals.
But in my opinion, I don't think he will. I think he's going to take
because he's spun it as a partial win. I think he's going to take this win because if he
appeals, he risks a total loss. Right. And that would be bad. I think he's going to take
this little W that he's found here. And by the way, this has changed the way that vice presidents, they have a
privilege now when they're as sitting as president of the Senate on the speech or debate
clause. But I think they'll take that. I think you'll take this win. And you won't appeal
it. Now, Jack Smith can also appeal those two, but I don't see him doing that because he
gets to ask Pence all the questions he wants to ask. And I don't think Pence will plead
the fifth because he's not a target here.
And if he does for some reason,
and he's worried he could be implicated in a crime,
which I don't think he could be,
but if he does, I think he'll be granted immunity
in these cases.
They're not going after Pence here.
I don't feel like.
Not a chance.
And I think you're right.
And it also allows Pence to do the very
pensy and thing of kind of trying to straddle this
thing and play both sides at the same time.
So he can say, oh yay, I won, but then he can also say, but not completely.
So I have to go and testify.
I don't really want to, but the judge is making me testify about this small kind of, you
know, non-Send it business stuff. And so he gets the, he gets the
opportunity to have resisted and appeal to the hardcore Trump supporters in that way.
But he also looks like Mr. Rule of Law, you know, I have some independence from Trump and
that and that silliness that happened on January 6th. And finally, I will say that in talking to a couple of very well-connected folks in
town last night, Pence was interviewed on CNN last night by Wolf Blitzer, which was
a pre-planned kind of scheduled event before the news broke about the indictment.
And a few of the folks that I was talking to seemed very confident that Pence was going to say
during that interview that he was not going to appeal the verdict.
Oh, we got a little inside scoop.
Yeah, I mean, I mean, I do.
And he made him a cab and thought,
No, this is speculative and so who knows?
And then of course, he was asked about it
during the interview and he didn't say that.
He just said, well, we're still considering it.
We're still considering it.
So it knows possible that he already intends not to,
maybe he was thinking about making some sort of public
announcement, but then just kind of stepped away
from the flame last night, the raging dumpster fire
of Trump's indictment and didn't want to kind of,
you know, take away from any of that.
So who knows? But I think we'll hear from him probably
by the beginning of next week.
And I agree with you.
I think his decision is going to be, let it lie.
I'll go in and testify.
Either that or don't even announce that you're not going to appeal
because that could make him look weak.
Just let it all go in and testify and be like, oh, I did my duty.
And I was protected by the speech or debate clause.
I won that fight vote for me.
Yeah.
And then a fly lands on his hat or whatever.
Yeah.
It was.
We can only hope on that one.
But if he does, if he doesn't say anything,
it doesn't make an announcement just goes in.
At some point, he's going to have to answer the question.
People are going to say, well, I guess you decided not
to feel well, yeah.
Oh, we ran out of time, or I didn't feel like it that day,
or I was wondering what you were talking about.
Yeah, I was like, oh, yeah, it looks like you,
the appeal window is closed, so we'd be like,
yeah, but I didn't have to appeal, I won, you know?
Yeah.
That's the way he'll spin that,
and that's the way he's been trying to spin it
since we got this news.
But Bozmerg also ruled in another matter too.
First week on the job, first day on the job.
And that's Trump's executive privilege
claims trying to prevent Pence from testifying. So we covered the speech or debate clause
claim by Pence, who is making that claim. Now Trump is stepping in like he does with everybody
and trying to assert executive privilege. And Judge Bozberg tossed that all out, whole cloth.
Nope, nope, no executive privilege here. You must testify. That means he has to
testify about his, Pence has to testify about his conversations with Trump leading up to January
6th. That would include the phone call on January 6th, because no executive privilege applies,
because Bozberg threw it out. And no speech or debate privilege would apply, because that conversation
could be in further interests of a crime. And if it wasn't in further interests of a crime,
then you don't need that testimony. So yeah, so that was also tossed out. And we knew that I
didn't expect that any part of every single executive privilege claim Trump has made. He has lost
all the way up to the Supreme Court. So this one will happen to he has appealed. Trump has appealed.
He will lose. But again, Delay is his friend.
Absolutely. And that's what this is. It's a strategy to drag things out and and
cost people time and effort and, you know, try to distract them. The more he can delay,
the more he drags any potential culmination of this investigation into the center of the
campaign. That's what he seeks to do.
Push it as far and deep into the campaign season
as he possibly can.
So it raises some good questions about how Jack Smith sees
that timing and if there is in fact a point at which he feels
like he has to slow down or back off.
I certainly hope not, but I'm sure we'll talk more about that
as we get closer.
Yeah, absolutely. All right, everybody, stick around.
We'll be right back with Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn.
You don't want to miss it.
Stay with us.
Everybody, welcome back.
Today I am honored to be joined by Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn, who testified before the January 6th select committee.
Let's listen to part of that testimony,
where he describes what he wants from investigators.
I use an analogy to describe what I want as a hitman.
If a hitman is hired and he kills somebody,
the hitman goes to jail,
but not only does the hitman go to jail,
but the person who hired them does.
There was an attack carried out on January 6th.
And a hitman sent them.
I want you to get to the bottom of that.
Everybody, please welcome officer Harry done.
Hi, Harry.
Hey, what's up, y'all?
Thanks for having me on the show.
Hey, Harry, it's such a thrill to have you here. You've become like a fixer. I think in so many
people's minds from your courageous testimony and the way you were able to stand up and speak
your truth to the January 6th committee. I wonder, I think it would be great for our listeners
to understand a little bit more about your background.
So can you tell us just a little bit about when did you start with the Capitol Police and
what kind of work did you do there?
Sure.
As far as the fixture thing, I wanted to have to do with anything of my stature, standing
at 7 or without her.
Well, it doesn't hurt.
Like a literal fixture, you know.
No, I have been with the Capitol Police Officer.
I'll start year 16 coming up in November.
So I've been there for a good while.
I work outside of the Capitol,
may, responsible for providing building security,
exterior security for the main complex of the Capitol.
I've been there to all kinds of
for some amendment demonstrations, civil disobedience, and unscibble disobedience. Let's not confuse that with legitimate political discourse. But anything in between just creating a safe environment
for Congress and to fulfill their congressional responsibilities
in a safe, secure environment.
That's pretty much my main responsibility
as a Capitol police officer.
That's outstanding and thank you for doing that.
Thank you for sharing that with us.
And Harry, after the indictment of Donald Trump voted on by the grand jury in Manhattan
this week, you tweeted, I'm not excited.
I'm even more angry.
The hell with that hush money, he incited an insurrection and had his goons attack me
and my co-workers.
Let's go department of justice.
Talk to us about that and your thoughts behind that. You know, I'm speaking right now as a angry selfish victim, I guess, you know, sure, America
and democracy was put in jeopardy. It still is on January 6th. The day's leading up to it,
and hell, even afterwards. But that day, you know, everybody sees police officers a lot of time as people
who are there just to save the day and to rescue people. But while we were doing that, we
were also being victims of an attack and victim deserve justice. And I think that's one of
the reasons I've been so outspoken about that. Yeah, I do believe in the strong sense of,
you know, duty,
patriotic duty standing up for what's right and doing. But I'm a victim.
And my coworkers were victims. And we want justice and we demand justice. And it's
unacceptable. That is taken away. I think we're at 814, 15 days now,
since that attack on the Capitol and not just the capital on us.
So selfishly, I want a little bit of, you know,
be able to be some justice.
And yes, the hush money, I know you were talking about it
earlier about the hush money.
Sure, that, you know, that's important.
And that needs to show that nobody is above the law.
But this is a, if I can say this,
I want selfishly, I want him to pay for what he did to me
speaking as they victim.
So.
Yeah, you know, how does it,
we've all sat back and watched what is by any stretch,
by any characterization, a massive investigation
that the FBI is involved in right now,
and they've got, I don't know,
a 950 people that they've indicted
and charged and many people convicted
and serving sentences and stuff,
but like, talk to us a little bit about how,
that just doesn't feel like the whole picture, right?
The people who are on the Capitol that day
and who engaged in that bloody combat with you
and your colleagues.
Yeah, those folks need to be held responsible.
That seems to be happening,
but it just doesn't feel like the whole picture.
Yeah, you know, while I was thinking the same thing,
because I was like, you know,
what, how would I feel if Donald Trump is arrested
and held accountable?
We're like, yeah, so that's it.
And then we just go back to normal.
No, like even after Donald Trump doesn't exist anymore, there's who's the next Donald Trump.
Like, it's an ideology. Now, that's spreading. And it's almost cancerous. That's spreading
through this society. I mean, the company people are supporting him. He bragged this week or
last week that his J6 song with the J6ers made like the billboard like top 100 or
something like there are people out there that support the so-it's this ideology now and that's
what's kind of get you little down and depressed sure like as a victim or somebody who just cares about
justice being served yeah when that happens but then you have a lot of people out there
that support him that don't really care that he did
with you, that's not a big deal to them.
So that's the bigger picture of it.
It's so threatening, like we were at now,
that we're on this, you know,
there are people on the right that are saying
that they want this civil war. And it's kind of like that's, it's really scary, man. When you
think about it, it just was a country like, you know, where are we going there? You know,
how do we get back to where, you know, there's a little bit of civility and a little decorum
and decency amongst each other. And now everything's about hate, hate, and either your
disser, your debt. And if you are a diss diss then you must be like, it's like your with us or against us kind of
thing. And it's, and it's really, that's the bigger picture. So it's not just about Donald Trump
going to jail. I mean, yeah, as a victim, that's what I want, you know, but as an American citizen
who's concerned about our country, it's like, it's so much more than just him going to jail.
country, it's like it's so much more than just him going to jail.
Yeah. And despite the fact that his support is dwindling, it, it, it still exists. There are still is an existing support of, of Maga. But maybe, if it helps you feel any better,
uh, there were eight people at Mara Lago today, uh, Trump supporters protesting and zero
in New York. Um, we can go all the way back to 2015 and 2016 where Cohen paid somebody with
with cash and a boxing glove in a Walmart bag to rig polls.
He always lies about his numbers.
He always, whenever they put, they Photoshop more crowds in, whenever he, you know, because they have to
seem bigger and more important than they, than they are constantly trying to fluff up their
numbers like when my cat gets scared and his tail gets poofy and tries to look big.
Isn't that because it's all about image to them. It's not about anything that we're actually
saying of substance. It's all about, hey, we wanna make it seem like we're fighting for you, we wanna make it seem like it.
So people will be more to donate money to them
when it's all about, you know?
Yeah, and I wanted to ask you because,
you know, there was a sort of a more somber conversation
on Maddo last night about dispassionate applications
of justice and how it doesn't always look and sound as sexy as we want.
Justice usually ends up somewhere in the middle.
And I wanted to ask you about that because it could be, and I'm not sure how the country
would react to this or how you would react to this, that some of the charges that come
out of Jack Smith's office won't be like treason and sedition or even insurrection. It might be something more like obstructing
an official proceeding or wire fraud or money laundering
or obstruction of justice, those kinds of charges
that are easier to win, but also not as bombastic
as something like seditious conspiracy,
but also not as hard to prove as something
like seditious conspiracy. And I not as hard to prove as something like seditious conspiracy.
And I was wondering, does it matter to you what those crimes are?
Because I mean, if he goes down for obstructing an official proceeding, the coup, and trying to obstruct the official proceeding by sending the mob out there,
is that going to feel like justice, you think to the two Americans? You know, that's so interesting.
As you said that because I, we as Americans, we want everything in black and white, every
single thing, Zeta, black or white, and when that, when you, that comes to applying the law
and it's either right or it's wrong, did he break the law?
Yes or no.
And then if it's no, then all right, he needs to go to jail or excuse me if it's yes, then he needs to go to jail
And then everybody they it's just wiggle room around it. So as a police officer
I train new officers. I'm a field training officer
So these new officers they're coming. They learn and hey, can we do this and they just want a yes or no answer
I'm like wait, it's not that simple. It's grayery
You can you can do whatever you can articulate
that you, that you, why you did what you did.
Like, can there be circumstances
when you can shoot somebody in their back?
Yes.
Can I tell you also,
we just do people in their back?
No, that's not what I'm saying.
I'm saying, it has to be a reason
and you can articulate why you did what you did.
So I think that's why it's frustrating
because Americans, we just want a yes or no answer.
Like it seems like just as she'd be straight forward
and that's why it's a little frustrating for me
because it's like, yo, we saw what he did.
Like, that's why that's what my frustration,
it was a take so long.
We saw what he did, we heard what he did through his own words,
we see what he's continuing to do,
he's doubled down, triple down, all of these statements.
And it's so frustrating.
This is black and white right now.
We don't get black and white that often.
And yeah, that's why it's a little song-bearing.
Because it's like, we got a actual black and white case
right here.
What are we doing?
But then again, I'm not a prosecutor.
I'd have no experience in the criminal justice system
as far as the judicial process of it. But I think I'm just as frustrated as many other Americans
out here.
I totally get that. And as a law enforcement officer, how many times have we, how many
months, years, whatever it is, and a long investigation where you're seat, you know what someone is up to.
You know what sort of crimes they've been involved in. You know, they're, you know, whatever it is.
Moving drugs in a neighborhood or extorting businesses or committing financial crimes,
and you just struggle to be able to collect the evidence that you need to hold someone accountable
in this system, you know, up to the thresholds and the requirements
of our democratic system.
And that is frustrating.
But when the day comes that you finally have built
that case and it's strong and solid and goes forward,
even if it doesn't address every single thing
that that person's ever done,
you take a lot of satisfaction in the fact
that you've built something that's gonna stand up in court and tell the truth and hold someone accountable and
You know, hopefully that's the end here no matter whatever charge it ends up being
That we have an opportunity to hold the right people accountable for that horror that we all watch and that you had to live through on January 6th
Yeah, and yeah, like you said that's the main thing and that's what a lot of people that I've talked to are saying this has to, like when you
heard the saying before, when you go back to the king, you better not miss or something
or whatever variation of that kind of that quote.
And I get it.
And like I just said, as a law enforcement officer, when you see something black and
white, yo, we got it.
What are we waiting for?
You know, you're working with prosecutors,
are you working with the D.A.
And you're like, look, yo, this is, what are we doing?
Stop.
I got right here.
Trust me.
Like, and I feel like that's where I'm just like squeezing.
Like, look, you got it.
But, you know, like I said, I trust the people that are in
position that are doing their jobs.
Just like me and my coworkers, we did ours.
We just want the same expectation
that they are going to do theirs.
And I do believe that they are.
I'm just a little frustrated with the pace of it,
but then again, that doesn't, you know, I don't know.
I've never worked on that side of a case before.
So I can only just sit back and wait impatiently, I guess.
Yeah, and the thing that's hard about it too is that not knowing leaves a vacuum for
for any number of disinformation and things to come in. But since Jack Smith was appointed,
how do you feel about the pace of the investigation now with Jack Smith as special counsel versus the pace of
the investigation that we knew about at least when before he was appointed.
Well, yeah, to go back to what you just said, it leaves a vacuum.
I'm gonna look at what they're doing already now for this indictment.
Like, they're already speculating what's in it.
And we have no clue.
Like, you don't even know what's in it.
They're saying, President Trump has been charged with X-Wat. Nobody knows what he's been, you don't know. So they're trying to get out
in front of it. And then when it comes out, and then I've just been waiting, I hope that it's
nothing that everybody speculating about. So now they're just going to have to triple,
double down on what they're saying and say, well, they wouldn't have done it anyway. Or who knows
what you'll say. So that back in me does exist. But with the in regard to Jack Smith, I'm just glad that the things that happen, you know,
as we've seen, he's the court in DC the last week or so have a compelled witnesses that
they have to testify leading to all the way up to Mike Pence and, you know, who's testimony
or do they want more that's outstanding besides him,
what Mr. Meadows. So I think the pace of that, that's like, all right. So not like you're going to
talk to the king of England now, you know, you know, who's next, like this is where this is it,
this is it. So it feels like, you know, we're getting close. You know, this is the testimony that's outstanding that doesn't that we don't have yet.
So I think once you get that and we've been compelled now that they have to give it,
then we'll get the ball rolling even more. But it does see that, you know,
and based on all accounts where people have that no jack Smith that know his work,
I'm just say that he is serious about doing his job.
And that's all you can really ask for,
follow the facts and wherever the facts lead,
you act accordingly.
And that's all you can really ask for in investigations.
And I've said that more than one time that,
you know, the facts lead could say that, you know,
what he didn't do anything, story, I'll be upset,
I'll be pissed,
but I accepted as that's the rule of law
and that's the way the justice department works.
You follow the facts and you act accordingly
based on only the facts, not your opinions
and none of that stuff.
So yeah, that's for sure.
That was for sure.
Well, thank you so much for coming in
and talking to us today, sharing your time.
I appreciate you.
And we thank you so much for your service.
That day and every day, because every day
is a day of service in your job.
And so we appreciate you.
And everybody must follow Libra Dunn on Twitter.
Absolutely, absolutely wonderful.
I've got a book coming out.
I've got a book coming out.
I'm going to ask you.
Yeah, that's what I'm going to ask you.
Tell me what I'm going to ask you. I'm sorry. Well, no, so coming out. Oh, please. Yeah, I'm coming out. Just gonna ask you, tell me. I'm sorry.
Well, no, so I mean, it's some memoirs, it's just my story.
I just have realized that people like listening to me
and listening to things I have to say.
So I'm gonna put it down on paper.
I'm not a big reading fan, what I've started to,
as I've been writing the book,
I've started to wanna read more. But right, been writing the book, I've started to, you know, want to read more.
But, you know, October 24th, standing my ground would be out
and I'm just excited to be able to have that opportunity
to turn something a tragic day,
and a dark day in this nation's history,
to be able to turn it into some kind of light.
But I will say this, I would trade all of that shit
and all the accolades, all the metals, all the words,
the books, I would trade all of it in
for that day to have never happened.
And you know, because it was such a dark day
in our American history.
But I am excited to be able to share a little bit
a memoir of my life, my life before
and my life actor January 6th. So I'll talk to you for it. We can't wait to read it and you got
a promise to come back here and talk to us again after it comes out because I'm sure we're going
to have a ton of questions for you. I'd be happy to be happy to. Awesome. October 24th standing my
ground officer Harry Dunn, thank you very much.
Thanks, Sean. Thanks, Harry. Everybody stick around. We'll be right back.
Welcome back. Okay. This week on CBS News, Robert Costa reported that sources directly familiar with witnesses
and questions tell him that it's clear that special counsel is now tightening the January
6th probe around Trump and his inner circle with a focus on the infamous December 18th, 2020
Oval Office meeting.
And you will recall that that meeting involved efforts
by Trump to really pressure national security executives
and DOJ officials with kind of getting in the middle
of that, you know, using them to buttresses claims
that there was problems with the vote in Georgia
and other places.
Okay, Kosta also says that witnesses have been pressed
in recent weeks about Giuliani, Sydney Powell, and others.
We sought to use the levers of government
to stop the certification of the election.
And sources directly involved believe that a case
on conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding
could be in the work.
So here we are, Alison, at your favorite of all statutes, I think.
I was asked, what is your favorite statute? I'd be like, oh, my friend, Allison, she loves
18 USC, 1512C2. C2, woohoo! Yeah, it's by far my favorite statute. I first started noticing
the language when Liz Cheney started using it, headling the lead up to the January 6th hearings.
I was like, that's real specific language there. Then we learned about it again when there were
two particular crimes that Judge Carter in California found that John Eastman and Donald Trump
violated more likely than not by a preponderance of the evidence in order to force him to hand over
his emails to the January 6th committee under the crime fraud exception. And those two crimes were conspiracy, 18 US code 371 and obstructing an official proceeding,
18 US code 1512C2.
So those are, that's very, that's where I expected this to go.
But what I found a little concerning about Trump's behavior on that day on the 1218 day was going to the
DOJ, the DHS everywhere he could, the US Marshall service to try to get them to seize voting
machines and end the election and redo the whole thing.
That's what he was trying to do.
A while he was pressuring Pence to throw back the votes from certain states, seven states
and working to try to get Jeffrey Clark installed.
That whole, there's like eight different prongs of that conspiracy to obstruct the electoral
account on January, January 6.
So I think that that sort of confirms for me where I thought Jack was going to go in the first place.
I agree.
And, you know, that, that mess of different, you know, I think they described it kind of
like a hub and spoke.
He had, you had Trump and his advisors pursuing all these multiple different lines, some of
which were clearly in effort to kind of scrub the results of the, of the election and
started over, have a new one,
or just throw out the results from some places, or just simply delay the certification.
But in any case, each one of those efforts ends up relying on that fundamental obstruction
of the official proceeding, which in this case, of course, was the certification of the
election on January 6.
So it is core to each one of these different possible conspiracies that Trump and this
cast of characters were pursuing at the time.
Yeah.
And that's why the testimony of this last round of subpoenas that were the people who were
compelled over the objection of Trump for executive privilege
to testify to the grand jury, including Meadows, Scavino, Nick Luna, John McIntee, that whole group,
Coochanelli of top Trump aides and lawyers, why their testimony is so important. And we learned
this week that Trump has appealed now to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals on the grounds of executive
privilege to block their most of them coming in a second time because they asserted the
privilege the first time.
Again, this is a loser, but his whole point is to delay.
So we will see what happens in that.
We're following all of those cases for you.
And before we go, Andy, I am really interested in the listener questions that we have this week,
because I bet we have some really, really good ones. We do. We have some great ones. And some of them,
man, our listeners are really thinking around corners. And so some of these questions are
pushing my knowledge of Georgia state law and things like things like that, which is not very
deep to begin with. But I've got two picked out that I think we can probably
cover pretty quickly.
The first one we talked about a little bit
at the top of the show, but I just want to make clear
for our folks, the principles behind this.
And so this one comes from Gail.
And Gail says, I hear the Stormy Daniels case
always referred to as, quote, the hush money payment,
but that isn't actually a crime, is it?
I thought it's an illegal use of campaigns fund charge.
Can you clarify and what's the difference?
Thanks and love the podcast.
Well, thank you, Gail, for the question.
And you're right.
It's referred to as the hush money payment case because I mean,
what better title than the hush money payment case?
The porn star pay off.
I mean, you don't get a better little tagline for your case than that.
But in fact, paying someone hush money to keep a story quiet is not a crime.
There's nothing criminal about that.
The crime that's alleged here, we think,
because we haven't seen the indictment yet,
but from all the information that's come out
from the grand jury proceedings,
the fundamental crime is that falsification of business record.
So it's the allegation that they made these payments
to Stormy Daniel and then Trump paid Michael Cohen
to kind of reimburse him for making the payment
out of his own personal funds, Cohen's personal funds.
And then those payments to Cohen, the reimbursement,
was captured internally and Trump documents
as a business expense.
They claimed that it was a, they were paying Cohen
for legal fees and things like that.
And that characterizing, mischaracterizing
the true purpose of that payment is the fundamental crime.
Now, that crime becomes a felony
if it's committed with the intent of covering up or committing a separate crime. Now that crime becomes a felony if it's committed with the intent of
covering up or committing a separate crime. And we talked earlier about how that separate
crime they may be relying on could be a campaign funds campaign finance violation at the federal
or state level, or it could be something entirely different. So we're gonna see on Tuesday when Trump is arraigned,
what that case is actually predicated on,
but we think that the core of it
is the falsification of business records.
And one thing I've been wanting to point out,
I forgot the second crime that makes it a felony.
The statute says it becomes a felony
if the falsification of business records
was committed
with the intent of committing or covering up another crime. That does not mean that Trump has
to be found guilty of the second crime. Of course, the prosecutors will have to show evidence
of Trump's intent. And in this case, an example of that would be, you know, they were Trump wanted to kill
the story because he thought it would be bad for his election.
So they used this money to pay off this woman and they didn't claim that as a campaign
expense, which they should have, because it was really done in furtherance of helping
his campaign.
They don't have to prove the fundamental campaign finance violation.
They would have to show evidence of it so that the jury would be able to conclude that he had
the the records in intent, but it's not like they vote on it like a guilty. Okay, so it's kind of
like obstruction. How despite what Bill Barr thinks, you don't actually have to be guilty of the crime
that you're. That's exactly right. That's exactly right. And what's our second question.
Second question is Dave.
He says, I don't know why the Justice Department
can't know exactly how many top secret classified documents
were left at the White House during the Trump administration
and not returned to a vault at some agency.
I mean, it sounds perfectly reasonable
when you put it like that Dave.
Do you imagine the DOJ has such a list?
Quick answer, no.
I'm quite confident that don't have such a list.
The people are arriving at the White House with classified documents literally many, many
times every single day, as people from other agencies come in to talk to White House staff
and aids about different classified materials.
So it's all kinds of flow of classified stuff in and out of those spaces in the White
House that are approved for classified storage.
So it's not a problem in and of itself, but it does create an environment where there's a lot of classified stuff floating around.
And there isn't any one person who can tell you every piece of classified that's on the grounds at any given time.
Yeah, and I think you talked about that in an early episode too.
The only kinds of classified documents that have sort of an inventory like that
are the code word classified documents.
And the majority of classified documents
are not code word classified.
And that's why I'm hoping that at some point
we can digitize our classification system,
bring it into the current century.
That would be absolutely wonderful
because then we'd be able to keep track
of all of those documents.
That's where we need to go with the question.
Totally.
Thank you so much for your listener questions.
If you have one, you can send it to us by emailing hello at mullershierote.com and putting Jack in the subject line.
It's been an amazing week of news.
Thank you so much for covering it with me.
I've been Allison Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe.
And we'll see you next week on Jack.
And I'm Andy McKibb.
And we'll see you next week on Jack.