Jack - Episode 21 - When Lawyers Become Witnesses
Episode Date: April 23, 2023This week: new evidence about text messages tying the Trump White House to stolen voter data in Georgia that was going to be used to overturn the 2020 election results; potential utilization by Jack S...mith of audio recordings from the Dominion defamation case against Fox; Epshteyn’s long meetings with Special Counsel prosecutor; Fitton FOIA fails; plus listener questions.Do 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.
Hey everybody, welcome to episode 21 of Jack, the podcast about all things special council. Today is Sunday, April 23rd.
We have a lot to cover.
I'm your host, Alison Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe.
Okay.
So today, Alison, we're going to cover some new evidence about text messages tying the
Trump White House to stolen voter data in Georgia that was going to be used to overturn
the 2020 election results, as well as the potential utilization by Jack Smith of audio recordings
from the Dominion defamation case against Fox.
And we'll talk about how our right wing media outlet got faced by DOJ
in their effort to mine info about the Jack Smith team.
That is amazing.
And I love that because we did an episode early on about lessons learned,
but like how Jack Smith is going to be so much more successful
because he has the entire Mueller investigation to look at, right?
And that's sort of, we'll talk a little bit about that.
We're also going to talk about Trump attorneys making attorneys get attorneys Boris Epstein
and his long, long ass meetings with special counsel prosecutors this week, along with another
Trump attorney of Encorecran, recusing himself or stepping aside as Trump's lawyer in the
documents case and what that could mean for these investigations that Jack Smith is conducting.
Andy, let's start though with Boris.
Oh, yeah, Boris.
Here we go.
Everybody hates Boris, right?
That's a new TV show.
This week on Fox News.
He has become the kind of Hollywood bad guy figure
and the whole documents team slash January 6th team,
slash whatever else.
Yeah.
So check out this one two punch that happened
on Wednesday, April 19th.
The Washington Post reported that Trump consultant and lawyer, Boris Epstein, was going to be taking
a more limited role in the January 6 case and the documents case, not an all-out recusal,
according to the sources, but backbench you a little bit.
And that might be because a lot of people are confused about whether or not he's legally
representing Trump or whether he's a campaign consultant.
But my immediate thought was it must be because he's a potential witness in both of these cases.
That's what happened with Evan Corcoran. We're going to talk about Corcoran later on in the show.
He quit Trump's documents legal team when he had to go in and testify before the grand jury,
pursuant to an order by Judge Bozberg who said, you know, crime fraud exception, go speak. We've covered that pretty extensively.
And like I said, we'll talk more about Corcoran a little bit later. But so
April 19th 2 p.m. Washington Post says he's taking a more limited role, not more than two hours later.
After the Washington Post story dropped, New York Times came out with
a story reporting that Boris would actually be meeting with special counsel prosecutors
in DC.
And we didn't have a lot of information at the time whether or not he was going to be
meeting with, you know, like, was it people from the criminal division?
Is it line prosecutors?
Is it Jack Smith?
We didn't know what case it was necessarily about, although we had a feeling it might have
been the document's case.
But before we get into some of that speculation or whatever is happening here with Epstein,
what are the circumstances, Andy, under which a person would have to meet the DOJ in person
and talk to prosecutors versus like a subpoena?
Like why are you bringing somebody in to talk to prosecutors versus like a subpoena. Like why are you bringing somebody in
to talk to you physically?
What, like, you know, I always think of this
as a meeting that could have been handled by email.
What's going on?
So even before we get to that,
just to touch on this idea of like,
he's kind of stepping back from the January 6 case
maybe a little bit sort of.
Recusal is like pregnancy. There's no middle ground. stepping back from the January 6 case, maybe a little bit sort of.
Recusal is like pregnancy. There's no middle ground.
You're either pregnant or you're not.
You're either recused or you're not.
You're out of the case entirely or you're not.
So that, to me right off the top,
sounds like a bit of a euphemism trying to cover
for what is actually happening here.
And then of course the drop from the New York Times kind of confirmed your sense that there
was something a little bit strange happening.
So why would DOJ want to meet with Epstein in person?
Well, let's just say, you know, why do you bring somebody in physically instead of negotiating
via email or over the phone or telecom or whatever?
So we have a tendency to think about investigations and how they're conducted.
We always think about the high level people, like the target,
like what's the target or the potential defendant doing?
What are they thinking?
And then you think a little bit about like co-conspirators
and co-conspirators becoming cooperators.
But in reality,
much of the investigators' time is spent identifying, locating, and talking to just plain old witnesses, people who are not subjects of the investigation, but they have critical information
that the investigators need to build their case. And with a witness, just imagine a regular fact witness,
what you would want to do is you'd go out,
you'd find them at their home or their work,
you'd talk to them, you'd convince them to come in
for an interview.
And they would then sit down with the agents
and also the prosecutor to go over the scope
of what they know so that the prosecutor gets an understanding
for what can this person actually provide for my case.
Oh, so this is sort of like cop shows where we see him like watch, come downtown and answer
some questions and go in and talk to the investigators or the line prosecutors and figure out sort
of what they know, right?
Like that's probably the most common reason you bring somebody in.
It absolutely is and it also gives you an opportunity to flesh out if there's going to be any
problems like whether or not this person has any privilege that might prohibit them from talking It absolutely is. And it also gives you an opportunity to flesh out if there's going to be any problems,
like whether or not this person has any privilege that might prohibit them from talking about what
you need them to talk about things like that. So you would talk and it's friendly, right? It
doesn't mean that person's a cooperator working for the government, whatever. It's just friendly.
You've asked them to come in and they agree. So the next step is if they have the information that you need
for your case, you would then bring that witness in front of the grand jury and you'd
ask them the same questions again for the purpose of getting that testimony quote unquote
locked in, right? So it's under both. It's preserved.
And we have a really great recent modern day example of that with Michael Cohen going
in a bunch of times to speak to the DA at the
DA's office or prosecutors at the DA's office.
And then during the last week of that whole investigation, he goes before the grand jury
once or twice to answer questions and then maybe gets brought back in as a rebuttal, but
I don't think he did.
I think it was somebody else.
But so that's a very excellent, yeah, it's not federal, but it's a very good example
of a friendly, tell us what you know.
He knows things, they're important,
he's coming in to provide them.
And then it's like, yeah, we really need this information.
We could need it as testimony of trial,
so then you get them locked in.
That's all under the assumption
that the interaction between the government,
the witness, the witness,
totally friendly, no coercion, no nothing.
And why do you do that in person?
Just because it's a much better FBI, I mean, or experts I know.
And probably some of these line prosecutors are experts at talking to, and we talked
about this a lot in the Mueller investigation when Komi came out with his book about, hey,
we're way better at
interrogating potential witnesses than this torture shit that you're trying to do
in stellar wins or whatever. It's very much like you want to talk to them in the office
away from distractions, away from their family, away from their co-workers or other phones ringing and that sort of thing.
It's a way to get their attention very focused.
You have the opportunity to work with them on their recollection, like they may think,
like, oh, I don't remember anything about X.
And then you can, through the cognitive interview techniques, you kind of go back and reset
them, put their mind in a place in time when events took place.
You prompt their recollection with talking to them about things like what were you wearing,
what had you done that day before you saw the car accident, that kind of thing.
And it kind of brings back for people more detail about what happened.
Also crucially, it really allows the prosecutor to assess the witness and to make a determination as like,
how good is their recollection?
Are they credible?
Do they have other problems in their past
that might make them look like a,
like a not a very truthful witness?
Because all that's important for the prosecutor
to figure out could I actually rely
on this person at trial for that?
And do they seem cooperative?
Do they seem like a recountivement witness
who's gonna be a, you know, like a real problem? So that's where it gets interesting. And you would start with a witness like
that in the same way. You'd say, we'd like you to come in and talk to us. And sometimes
a not a hundred percent cooperative witness will come in and do that just for the purpose
of gaining their own intelligence to understand what is the government want to know about?
What kind of questions are they asking me? Who's running this thing?
Who's the prosecutors of the agents I need to be concerned about?
Ultimately, if that person doesn't come in or they do come in and then they don't want
to go to the grand jury, then you start to wave things like subpoenas and compulsory process
over their head.
Then you start talking about, well, we'll just bring you in front of the grand jury.
Well, at the grand jury sort out all the things that you know and things that you
have done and criminal exposure that you might have. In that very kind of leveraged, I'm not
going to call it coercion, but it seems coercive sometimes. That process is how you end up with either
a full on hostile witness or someone who ultimately strikes
a deal with the government.
Okay, I'll come in, I'll testify, but I want immunity for X, Y and Z.
Okay, so this could be them just bringing Boris in to take his temperature and see what
he knows.
That's one possibility, but we already know last year the feds seized Boris Appshane's phone. And he's been under at least some kind of
investigation for a while because in order to see somebody's phone, you have to have at
least evidence that a crime more likely or that not occur.
Sorry, it's all caused.
The evidence on probable causes on that phone. So maybe this, you know, if it's just a temperature
taking thing, maybe it's a more advanced temperature-taking situation,
but there are other reasons that you would bring a witness
in like this, aren't there?
There's, you know, it's likely in this case
with the evidence off the phone,
and who knows what other evidence they might have
from other witnesses, other documents,
things they've subpoenaed that we're not even aware of.
It's likely that the temperature on Boris is already high.
You don't have to have him come in to explain what was on his phone so you understand it.
You understand it.
You know what's on there.
You know the significance of it.
But you might bring him in to walk him through what's on his phone to confront him with
things.
What'd you talk about in this call?
Whose phone number is this?
Of course, you know whose phone number it is.
You're just trying to see if he answers the questions
truthfully and fully.
And that is all part of this process of escalation,
I'll call it, not coercion, escalation,
where you're making it clear to him that like,
he could be in the soup here.
He could be in trouble.
It's time to start thinking about
doing something other than being shady and trying to dance with the other side.
Yeah, and a couple of things here. Like I said, they've got his phone. And that is another reason
to bring people into the DOJ offices. To show them evidence you don't want to send via email or to
walk out or some sort of evidence that is protected. Just evidence that you don't want to send via email or to walk out or, you know, some sort of evidence that
you that is protected, just evidence that you don't want to get out of the office. So
you bring them in and show it to them and then they can take notes and leave.
It's also a note that Boris Epstein was part of the alleged conspiracy to obstruct justice in the documents case. He is the one who
coordinated Corcoran and Christina Bob's letter of attestation that classified documents had all
been handed over pursuant to that May 11th subpoena that they all went down and had a party about
on June 3rd of Mar-a-Lago. A month, a little, two months before the, the actual search warrant was
a month, a little, two months before the actual search warrant was executed. And so I could see them.
And again, we're just speculating here, but I could see them saying, oh, hey, we talked
to Bob, we talked to Corcoran.
We got Corcoran's notes now, and we've got transcripts of audio calls.
And what do you have to say about this?
Well, you could be looking at an obstruction
charge unless you want to help us with the fraudulent electors scheme or something else.
I mean, you know, again, part of, I guess, to make it more general, part of this entire
escalation situation that you're talking about.
That's right. You have no idea what what Jack Smith's team may have gotten from Christina Bob and or Evan Corcoran.
It could be that either one of them sat down in front of prosecutors and said, oh yeah,
this whole thing was planned from the beginning.
The plan was, don't give up everything, keep all this stuff, the Trump wanted.
Okay, how'd you know the plan?
Oh, well, but Boris told me.
He called me on such and such a date and said, here's what you do.
Here's what you tell the feds, get them out of there
and give them nothing.
And that's, I'm completely speculating here,
saying that just to create the hypothetical.
But like, if that's the case,
then you're at the point now in this investigation
where you talk about flipping up, right?
You always start at the operational level
and then you keep going up and up and elevating to targets
of greater responsibility and greater significance.
It's entirely possible that they think of Boris in that way, that he is someone who was
really calling the shots behind Corcoran and Bob, and therefore is ultimately could be
held responsible for the obstruction that they executed.
And it could be the opposite.
It could be that they have a fraudulent
electroskeam evidence that he participated in
that conspiracy, and they're using that
to get documents information,
or save America a pack information,
which I want to talk a bit about as well.
Those are generally the main reasons
that you would bring somebody in.
At the end of the day, it may be,
and I would find this to be reasonable and logical,
it may be that Jack Smith's team has concluded that Boris Epstein is very close to Donald
Trump.
In terms of the hierarchy of how decisions are made at Mar-a-Lago, you could be one heartbeat
away from Trump if you have some goods, some leverage, some sway over a guy like Epstein.
So I'll see how that goes.
Now, something else you would bring somebody into talk to is perhaps to hash out some
privilege in vocations.
And something that's of note, and I've been reporting on this for a while, we've talked
about it, is that Boris Epstein, after the search warrant was executed
on Mar-a-Lago, he immediately went back and changed his disposition, his relationship with
the Save America Pack from consultant for the Trump campaign to legal. And presumably, he did this,
and he did it retroactively, saying all the work I've done for the Save America Pack in the past year and a half
has been legal work, not consulting work.
First of all, I don't think you can do that.
I don't think you can change the disposition of,
and make yourself a lawyer retroactively.
Unless somebody writes you a letter saying,
yeah, we go back, he's been giving me legal advice on this for the beginning, but it's pretty broad, the attorney client privilege. And it usually applies.
And somebody might say, okay, it's reasonable. A judge could say it's reasonable to assume
you were acting and giving legal advice to the Save America pack, even though you called
yourself a consultant, but he went back and changed it to legal. So this could also be
a meeting about not just taking the temperature
or escalating or putting pressure on him, but it could be about to discuss what sort of
privilege claims he might make if he's brought in and maybe trying to hammer that out prior
to if they're going to turn him into a witness or if they're going to turn him into a target
or, you know, however they decide to go, They could be hashing out a lot of things.
He was there for eight hours on Thursday.
And we are recording on Friday.
And as, as of this recording, he came back for a second day today and is still there.
Yeah.
So that's why I think that this, this is possible, but I find it to be unlikely because if the, if the, if the, some total of the difference,
let's say, or the discussion between Epstein and DOJ or Jack Smith's team right now is
what he'll be able to testify about and what he can't testify about because of claims
of privilege, that's the kind of thing that the lawyers negotiate over the phone. You don't come in for two solid days of in-person meetings to work out a legal technicality like
that.
Right.
And I do agree.
I just want to interrupt you real quick.
I do.
I agree with you on this because the way that Jack Smith has operated in the past is you
brings you into the grand jury.
And then if you invoke any kind of a privilege,
or take the fifth, he'll run across the hall
to Bozberg or previously Barrel Howe
and deal with it there, right?
And that's generally how subpoenas work, right?
You show up, you invoke your privilege
and then we discuss it.
We don't sort of preempt any sort of privilege discussion.
So.
That's right.
And you would have to also prepare like a privilege log,
which is like a list of all the things you have
and a claim for specific privilege.
Some of that would be done with Epstein's attorneys
ahead of time, just so everybody knew like,
okay, what ground is everybody gonna be standing on?
But then you're right, you would actually, you'd say,
you know, they would call, you imagine prosecutors
calling Epstein's attorney and say,
we wanna come in and interview him. And then Epstein's like and say, we want to come in and interview him.
And then Epstein's like, well, what do you want to ask him?
And then they say, well, we're going to ask him about bad X, Y and Z.
Okay, well, he's got attorney client privilege with all these entities and these people.
So he's not going to testify about any of that.
So they would noodle that back and forth a little bit to see if they could come up
as something that was worthwhile.
And if they couldn't, bam, you hit him with a subpoena, and it's like, okay, fine.
You come in front of the grand jury, you make
your claim a privilege and then will litigate it quickly. So the almost 16
hours he has spent over the last two days indicates to you that this might be
more of the accelerated sort of pressure stage. Right. I think it's substantive
for sure. You don't do two days over legal
arguments between the sides that can't even make the final decision. So it's definitely
substantive. Whether they're really turning up the heat on him is possible, is maybe
that the heat has already worked and he's now in their testifying. There's just all kinds of possibilities,
but I think it's serious.
Yeah.
And one last thing, one last reason you bring people in
to the DOJ's office is if you get a call and say,
we're going to indict your guy, come in
and hit you have one last chance to argue against indictment.
And I honestly don't have a temperature reading
as to whether that could be this or not, other than does that take two days.
Well, that's an interesting prospect. So typically when that happens, and to be fair about
the unfairness in and all, it's really, that only happens to really like high profile people get that kind of, you know,
last minute opportunity to kind of make their case
to the prosecutor's try to convince them not
to indict your client, but usually that conversation
is only between the attorneys.
You wouldn't actually bring the client in for that.
Now, I say that with full disclosure here,
my attorneys did that in my case,
when there was a criminal investigation open on me
for zero reason, but nevertheless,
it hung out there for two years.
My attorneys went in and talked to the prosecutors
at every level, you know, many times,
explaining to them that there was no case here.
And one of the times they said,
well, we would really like to talk to your client.
And this is like not something that any sane person
who actually was facing criminal liability would ever do,
which is why I said, yeah, sure,
I'll go in and talk to them.
So I went in to the prosecutor's office
and they let them ask me whatever questions they wanted
for like, I don't know, like three or four hours
it seemed, it was or four hours seemed.
It was a very long conversation and you know, that was it. So I guess I just, I say that just to indicate that like
there's a lot of possibilities here, but at the end of the day, what we know is Epstein is here in person long sessions.
Those are substantive conversations about something. Whether you're looking at him as a witness or a
cooperator or a target,
you know, there's different likelihood on all those possibilities, but it's one of them.
Yeah, and I think it's possible that they're not just talking about the fraudulent electric scheme in January 6th or just the
documents case or obstruction in the documents case. They could also be talking about the save America pack fraud investigation.
That's right.
Because as I said, he retroactively made himself a legal adviser for that organization.
And we'll talk about this a little bit later in the show, but a lot of lawyers are being
paid out of that pack.
And they could be asking questions about that among other things.
There's so many things that he has information about on so many cases
across so many different crimes, potential crimes, alleged crimes, that I can see why he
could be there for two days.
No doubt.
I mean, there was reporting just this week from CNN, Caitlin Pollan, it's reported that
a number of Trump associates and staffers and people like that who have had their legal representation paid for
by the Save American Packed have now been interviewed
by the special council team with questions
about that representation and how their lawyers treated them
and the kinds of questions they asked them.
And this is all getting at that topic
that you and I have talked about a couple of times now,
particularly with the example of Cassidy Hutchinson, who we assume, we don't know
for sure, but we assume is probably in that group, that, you know, this Save America
Pack paying for everybody's lawyers, is it really trying to provide representation to
people who need it, or is it an effort to control their testimony, to limit what they say,
to keep them from cooperating fully with prosecutors, all in an overall effort to control their testimony, to limit what they say, to keep them from cooperating
fully with prosecutors, all in an overall effort to protect Trump.
You know, one guy I'd like to talk to to find out the answer to that question would be
the self-designated and therefore retroactive lawyer for the state of America, pack Boris
Epstein.
So all roads bring you back to Boris.
And one way or another is a lot of possibility there. Yeah, absolutely. All right, we're going
to be right back. We've got some breaking news that came out on Friday to talk about.
And a couple other things. We're just going to take a quick break. Stick around. We'll be right back.
Welcome back. All right, there's some new explosive reporting coming out from Zachary Cohen at CNN.
Cohen reports that in mid-January 2021, two men hired by former president Donald Trump's
legal team discussed over text message, what to do with data they obtained
from a breached voting machine
in a rural county in Georgia,
including whether or not to use it
as a part of an attempt to decertify
the state's pending Senate runoff results.
Wow.
So this, yeah, this scheme involved,
Jim Penrose, Sydney Powell,
Doug Logan of the Cyber Ninjas, Rudy
Giuliani, and the three people that actually executed the burglary of the voter data in
coffee county, Georgia.
Yeah.
And remember, we've seen like there's been some pop-up reporting here and there of actual
video footage of these two people going into the coffee county voter registrar's office,
somebody, you know, going under the computer, downloading these data,
handing them to these people, and now we have a connection to several
criminal investigations. And in the text messages, which were obtained by CNN,
which have not been previously reported, Penrose, Jim Penrose references the upcoming
certification of John Ossoff.
So it's not just about Trump's 2020 election loss.
Now we're talking about Perdue, David Perdue, who lost to Ossoff.
Remember because we found out in the we morning hours of January 6th that Democrats seized
control of the Senate because Ossoff and Warnoch won their seats
and the Georgia runoff.
And then, you know, we were happy for like a couple hours.
Two seconds.
And then, bam, we were blindsided by now.
And it was like really big news that got zero coverage
because very quickly we were watching
that disaster at the Capitol.
Yeah, so Penrose basically texted,
we only have until Saturday to decide if we're going
to use this report to try to decertify the Senate runoff election or if we hold it for
a bigger moment. The texts were obtained from someone familiar with the Fannie Willis probe,
by the way. And it's also being used possibly in the Michigan investigation. A lot of people forget
because it's not getting the media coverage that Fulton County and Manhattan,
DA and Jack Smith are getting.
There's a criminal investigation into election interference
happening in Michigan, which is run by Gretchen Whitmer
and Nestle and like all these amazing,
Jocelyn Benson, amazing, amazing people.
And so this has to also do with cyber ninjas,
which ran that racket down in Arizona.
And ultimately wave the white flag
at the end of the day, they found nothing.
A hundred times, right?
But so this seems to be have a lot to do
with state election official
and maybe attorney general
or district attorney investigations.
But this could also tie in to,
you're like, why are you bringing it up on the Jack podcast
about Jack Smith?
This could tie into his investigation, couldn't it?
Well, it could, and on a number of different ways.
We know that Jack Smith is examining
and is interested in the broader effort to breach
or seize voting machines.
We know this because
of some of the questioning that Kuchenelli and others from DHS received under grand jury subpoena
asking questions about did Trump ask was he was he was it suggested to him to seize the voting
machines who did that. Of course, we know that's Mike Flynn and Sydney Powell. So that's a piece of
what they're looking at in those crazy town meetings leading up
to January 6th. Yeah. And Derek Lyons, who was a Deputy White House Council in the Trump
Administration, testified to the January 6th Committee. We saw it on video that Rudy Giuliani
brought up Georgia voting machines in that infamous December 18th, 2020 oval office meeting, which
is also being investigated.
And well, I should say in conjunction with what you just mentioned, with a seizure of voting
machines, like, and we talked about this last week when Flynn and Sidney Powell, like you
said, came in and said, here's a draft executive order, you know, saying that you can seize
voting machines.
You can do anything.
You can do anything. Yeah. And everybody was like, no, you can seize voting machines. You can do anything.
Yeah, and everybody was like, no, you can't.
That's stupid.
No, you can't seize voting machines, Kuchinelle.
And now there are all these people, like probably even Hirschman are testifying the
Pats.
I don't think they were there because they had been disinvited because, you know, lawyers
with common sense, the normies, I guess, as they were called, were disinvited to these kinds
of meetings and emails and stuff. But Derek Lyons told them that. That Giuliani brought up
the Georgia voting machines in that meeting. And here's his testimony. Lyons said, quote,
his Rudy's point of view, was it in some way the campaign, I believe, was going to be able to
get access to voting machines in Georgia through means other than seizure
and that like stealing.
And that evidence could be leveraged
to gain access to additional machines.
Meaning, hey, look, we got this information,
we don't know how, but look, we got this Georgia
voting machine information.
This is the pretext for seizing all voting machines
or you know, what a voter data or whatever
to stop the election, which is what they were trying to do.
So that is exactly the line straight to these Jack Smith investigations.
Yeah, not to get into too much of a legal argument with the distinguished Mr. Lions, but
actually government actors, people acting on part of the government, going out and taking
voting machine data.
That's a seizure. It's an unlaw, voting machine data, that's a seizure.
It's an unlawful seizure, but it's definitely a seizure.
And I think it's also important to put this in the bigger context.
We know that Jack Smith is looking very closely at the lecture scheme, very closely at the
effort to delay the certification, very closely at the pressure campaign on pants,
all that stuff.
But most of that has at least one thread
that comes back to this idea of fraud,
that what many of these people did
was committed a fraud against the United States
of America, against the government,
against the voters in of America, against the government, against the voters,
in trying to tip back the results of this election,
knowing that there was absolutely nothing
to any of these arguments,
there was nothing to this evidence.
It was all essentially being used
to deceive people to commit some level of fraud.
And I think that's really where the foundation of whatever case he brings against anyone,
Trump or any of these other people, a lot of that case is going to be based on very basic claims
of fraud. Yeah, for sure. And then to go, I'll read a little bit here from Cohen's article in CNN,
in their hunt for evidence to support
their baseless claims of voter fraud.
After the 2020 election, Trump allies hired a little known Texas-based security company
called Allied Security Operations Group to investigate alleged voting machine irregularities
in a handful of swing states that Trump lost, including Michigan, Arizona, and Georgia. A few weeks before the coffee county burglary in late December 2020, Trump allies were granted access to voting
machines in Antrim County, Michigan. That's a county of about 24,000 people where Trump
won Handelie, same with coffee counties, very red. The team then took those data with
the help of the Allied Security Operations Group, produced a report alleging Dominion voting system vulnerabilities.
And that report, which has been widely debunked, formed the basis of a lawsuit filed by Sydney
Powell.
And that's that antrim lawsuit that we've all seen.
That suit was one of more than 60 suits filed.
And she's actually been sanctioned for it and had to go back to take some classes on
how to write pleadings because of that.
But still Logan and Penrose, who were part of the team that produced the Antrim County
report, considered using the coffee county data in a similar way to challenge the Georgia
Senate runoff.
In their text from January 19th, the two men planned to create a report with the help
of the Allied Security Operations Group's lawyer, a man
named Charles Bundren, who was deeply involved in earlier efforts to gain access to voting
systems.
If you can draft a report for review on Friday morning with Charles Bundren, that would
be the best.
Penrose wrote to Logan, and Bundren was part of the team enlisted by Trump's lawyers to
find evidence of voter fraud after the 2020 election.
He helped oversee the multi-state push to access voting machines on behalf of the Trump
legal team.
And he also had a hands-on role developing some of the most extreme options, considered
by Trump's inner circle, including helping draft those executive orders directing the military
and the DHS to seize voting machines.
So this guy and this coffee county situation are directly tied to these Flynn,
Sydney, Powell, voting machine seizure executive orders that were laughed out of the oval office
by people who know what they're talking about on December 18th.
Completely. And I think evidence like this really ties it all together in a vivid and effective way for prosecutors.
It's one thing to say, like the fraudulent electric scheme is ultimately an effort to
deceive and that's great.
We understand what that means, but at trial, you have to be prepared to go down in the
weeds and show the chain of custody and this person told this person what to do, that
person went and did it. You have to be able to really build this thing brick by brick.
And in this case, that's clearly kind of what they're adding here.
Yeah.
With this text exchange between these guys about Georgia.
Yeah.
And further, Arizona was going to use the allied security people for their report, the Bundering guy.
But because of the backlash on the Antrim County,
the scrutiny over the Antrim report,
Arizona opted for a different firm to investigate
their false claims of election voter fraud
called cyber ninjas.
Bring in the cyber ninjas.
Uh, but Bundren remained involved in that process. The guy from ASOG and the allied solutions
or allied security operations, uh, and coordinated directly. They all coordinated as part of
this. And he also worked with fellow ASOG member, allied security member Phil Waldron.
He's a retired Army colonel who is part of Giuliani's team
that helped write up that entire slide show
on how to pressure Pence to throw out the electoral votes.
That's right.
So this is all,
like,
like the overlaps and the cross-currants,
which is like a very hard to keep track of,
but that's why we're here, right?
We're shedding a little light on the whole thing,
but fascinating, really good stuff.
Yeah, absolutely incredible how everything is tied together.
I remember, you know, connect the dots,
blah, blah, blah, blah.
And that's what we're doing.
I am Charlie from Always Sunny in front of my murder board,
talking about how all these things mixed together
in Zachary Cohen as he and I did an excellent job of writing this up.
So I highly highly recommend you check that out.
All right, we're going to take one more quick break and then we've got some more stuff to talk about.
Stick around. We'll be right back.
Hey everybody, Welcome back.
So we spent a great part of the show in the first segment and the A block there talking
about Epstein, Boris Epstein and how he was, you know, back benched or slowly retreating
from working on Trump's legal team.
You know, like you said, it's like you're being, it's like pregnancy.
You're either on the team or you're not.
And he's more like Homer Simpson slowly backing into the treasury.
But we do have somebody also on Trump's legal team who has made a clean break with the
legal team that he was working on.
And that's Evan Corcoran.
We know the story.
We know the backstory that he came in and testified previously to the grand jury. He invoked some attorney client privilege, and then Jack Smith team overcame that invocation
of attorney client privilege using the crime fraud exception.
And then he, a corkeren, had to come back in and testify to what he knows and also hand
over some notes and invoices.
Invoices is interesting.
And things like that.
So then all of a sudden we hear it,
because a year ago when Bob withdrew
as legal counsel on the documents case and loyered up,
I was like, all right, your turn, Corcoran.
I mean, you guys are witnesses in this case.
She was very forward leaning about that, actually.
She immediately pulled the rip cord, got a lawyer and started meeting with the joj which
is the smart thing to do under the circumstances if you're thinking along the
lines of staying out of jail and retaining your law license
yes so corcoran just now has recused i guess i'm not sure left the legal team
uh... and was you know brought in to testify again
uh... to to again to the committee.
Now, it or not the committee, the federal grant jury.
Sorry, so many investigations that I can't keep the ball straight.
I think this is interesting because he says that it was his law firm that made him do it.
Right? The law firm was like, we don't want to, we can't be part of that and part of this at the same time.
But then why didn't they do that
when he testified before?
Or did he, or did he, or did they?
I'd never say, that sounds a little bit to me,
like him kind of putting the blame on the decision
on someone else, kind of like, my parents won't let me.
So that's hard to know, but it's also impossible, like in the regular, regular world of litigation
and even the regular world of criminal defense, the idea that your attorney would end up
having to go before the grand jury and essentially testify against you, is it almost unheard of? It's so rare that happened here.
And the idea that you would then continue
having that person represent you,
it's just, that's the time to find a new attorney.
I mean, it's insane.
Unless there's none left.
There's not any lawyers left that are willing
to take your case for less than a $3 million up front cash retainer.
Or, or unless you have some other reason for wanting to remain connected to your, I guess,
former kind of still current attorney who testified against you.
And that would be to keep tabs on what's going on with that guy.
And who's
he actually meeting with and what's he saying about me and let's keep him under the tent
just for now? Yeah. And before this all happened,
Corcoran made a trip up to talk to prosecutors at the Department of Justice. And we weren't
sure what that meeting was about except that it had to do with the documents case. And
obviously, I think Corcoran is more steeped
in the documents case, less like an Epstein who was one of the architects of the fraudulent
lecture scheme, architect of the letter, the attestation letter in the documents case,
architect, like, see America, pack legal counsel. He's fingerprints are on everything.
Every single criminal investigation you can think of, he's part of.
But Corcoran here is the guy who wrote the letter that that Christina Bob signed and Christina
Bob insisted on having edits be made to that letter to say to the best of my knowledge.
We've handed over all the documents pursuant to the subpoena issued, male, eleventh, etc., etc.
And so that he, I think his feet are firmly planted in the old documents case.
But he would be one of the last witnesses.
And you know, he's, he's interviewed Jack Smith has, they've talked to in subpoena, I should
say, not just interviewed, but subpoenaed, more than two dozen witnesses,
just in the document's case alone.
And Corcoran and Boris would be the last two.
It could very well be.
They could very well be.
They're certainly not on the front end of your witness list.
You never really know what those folks, if in fact, are coming in and they're testifying,
you know, completely, you never know what they're going to say.
And they could bring someone up or mention something that then sends you back out, scurrying
with another grand jury subpoena.
That's the way grand jury investigations work.
But yeah, it's hard to imagine that there's a whole boatload of additional people that
need to be talked to, at least on the documents case.
Yeah.
And that might be why Chris Kies and Jim Trusty were brought in
because Trump was like, well eventually all my lawyers
are gonna be witnesses, so I need two attorneys
that didn't know me until now.
To come in and who can't be called as witnesses against me,
except maybe even an obstruction of justice in other ways.
All right, so we'll see what happened with Corcoran.
We'll see what happens with Epstein.
As soon as we get more information, we'll be able to talk to you about that probably
on the next episode of Jack.
But interesting, we know this week, and this isn't Jack Smith's story, but Fox and Dominion
have settled their defamation case for $787.5 million, half of what was initially asked
and apparently no apology.
They don't have to admit on air that they did anything wrong.
And I have many, many feelings about that.
But what I want to talk to you about today that has to do with the Jack Smith investigation
is a little interview that a lawyer for one Abby Grossman who is a former producer at
Foxx for the Barteromo show, she was fired.
And because she filed a lawsuit saying that those Fox lawyers coerced her testimony, told
her to not recall things that she recalled.
And also that she had recordings and more evidence that were suppressed by Fox lawyers,
that she wanted to come forward with. And that
evidence, including not just that evidence, but also the fact that Fox lied to the court
about Rupert Murdoch being an executive at the Fox News News versus the Fox Corp, prompted
the judge in that case to appoint a special master to review an
investigate wrongdoing by Fox's lawyers. Now that has dissolved because of this
settlement, which I'm bummed about, would have loved to have seen. And it would
probably be Barbara Jones again. She's like everybody's favorite special master
these days. These days, I'm in the last five years. And I would have loved to have
seen that go through to fruition.
But what did that lawyer tell Ari Melber, Andy?
Well, the lawyer for Abby Grossman tells Ari Melber that multiple law enforcement agencies
contacted them about obtaining the recordings they had of the Fox News anchors.
So this, of course, causes us to wonder,
gee, what could those law enforcement agencies be?
And would one of them be the special counsel's office?
Yeah, because, you know, first I was like,
why, you know, first of all, definitely, you know,
there wouldn't be a criminal case against Fox.
Could there?
No, I doubt it.
But I doubt it. You know, I mean, I? No, I doubt it. But I doubt it.
I mean, I did talk, I doubt it too.
I did talk a little bit about it with Pete Struck,
who said, well, you know, I mean,
if they were giving in-kind campaign contributions
by coordinating messaging with the Trump campaign,
perhaps, but that's real hard to prove.
Yeah, there's a lot easier campaign finance,
violation cases that don't get
brought. Right. I think that one would be tough. But more importantly, there's recordings of Rudy
saying they don't have any evidence of voter machine fraud, at least quote, not yet.
And there could be some coordinated messages with people in the Trump circles saying that
they know they lost the election and that it was all BS, right?
Because that was the big lie that the dominion was trying to prove, and they did prove it
was ruled by the judge before the settlement happened that these were false falsities.
They were lies. This misinformation about the voting
machines. And that could be of keen interest to Jack Smith considering everything we've talked
about in today's show about his investigation into the seizure of voting machines.
I think that's possible. I think it's also let's not forget that some Fox figures on air talent things like that.
We're actually in contact with Trump during the period that we know Jack Smith is most interested in.
That lead up to January 6th, then the weeks after the election and before the 6th.
So it's possible that these, they believe these recordings
would be relevant to testimony they may already have or may be seeking from these people,
people like Sean Hannity and others who we know were in direct contact with Trump. And
that testimony could be very important to proving this really elemental fact, which is Trump's intent.
What did he actually believe at that time?
This goes back to a point you and I've talked about.
Probably every week, one of Trump's main defenses will light.
If in fact, he's indicted and goes to trial will likely be,
he will claim that he legitimately believed that the election had been stolen from him. And therefore, the efforts that he took were not fraudulent or deceptive.
There was just an effort to restore his rightful victory. I can't believe I just heard
myself say that, but nevertheless, all of this evidence about things that people told
me whether it's his own lawyers, the White House lawyers, his own hired forensics company that produced a report
that said, yeah, no fraud here either.
All, that's just a mountain of evidence
to contradict a defense like that.
So just show the jury that it's really unreasonable.
It would have been unreasonable for a defendant Trump
to not understand that there was no fraud in the election.
Yeah, and I mean, there's, first of all, like, there's a bunch of stuff that we didn't get to see.
There was evidence that we didn't get to see in the Dominion defamation case that were communications between Fox, Newzankers, and all sorts of other people, and
executives, and stuff like that.
That's right.
Now, and we still have a case out there pending that is going to be deciding or at least
commenting on or considering the definition of corrupt intent as it relates to Title 18, Section 1512C2, obstructing an official proceeding,
which is one of the crimes I assume the Jack Smith
is probably looking at with regard to Trump.
So that's coming out in May.
It's different from the one we just had, right?
That was only looking at whether C1 and C2 were married
and depended upon each other.
This other one, and the reason that they didn't change the law in this more recent ruling
that came out, is that they are going to be deciding, because somebody filed to dismiss
the charges on the definition of corrupt intent.
That'll be decided.
I don't think the law is going to change.
I don't think they're going to rewrite the boundaries of what corrupt intent is.
And Jack Smith will have always had to prove corrupt intent. But Andy, have you ever
gotten evidence from a discovery in a civil case? I know we did it. The one that stands out
in my head is the guy named, I can't remember his first name, but I remember his last
name was Cock. And he wanted to be Secretary of the Army.
And Manifort, you know, we have David Pecker,
we have the Cock guy.
I got it, I always say.
Yeah.
He was a banker who gave a quarter of their,
you know, balance sheet to Manifort,
to get him to have Trump make him Secretary of the Army.
There's a bribery thing.
And the DOJ was able to get the Mueller team, I believe, was able to get a ton of information
because of a divorce proceeding with COC.
And so have you ever reached into a civil proceeding?
What when can you do that?
Can you do it after Discovery's close?
Can you do it after the resolution of the case?
Can you do it any time to reach in for all of that discovery that
was brought and is it legal to get all of the discovery that was brought in a civil
case?
You know, these are all really good questions.
And having spent my life on the criminal side, not the civil side, I'm not sure I have
all the answers here, but I've never had, I never had to do that in any of my criminal investigations in reach into a civil case, chasing around Russian OC figures
and terrorists.
They're not prolific litigators on the civil side,
I guess, the ones that I had.
But it's essentially like any other information.
And in the course of a criminal investigation, particularly a
grand jury investigation, as soon as you know it exists, and you know who the custodian
of those records is, obviously, who has possession and control of those sorts of records, you can
just hit them with a grand jury subpoena. Now, you might have a fight on your hand.
Sometimes at the conclusion of,
if a civil case is resolved through a settlement,
sometimes the sides will make as a part of that settlement,
they'll require each side to destroy the evidence
that the other one provided or return it or what have you.
They'll be a um I don't think
that happened here though because this lawyer said we're we're doing that. Yeah I mean I think that
there's there I think it's possible in more cases than not. But I think Fox could sue to block that
discovery from going to the Department of Justice and we might see a legal battle there. They could
try um but what I'm likely that the government will do is they'll just serve
the subpoena directly on Fox.
Hey, you're a business.
You keep these records as a part of your business enterprise and we want them.
And so you have a fight on your hands, but I don't think it's safe to say that pretty much
anything you know about can fall within the scope of what you
can try to get as a part of the grand jury investigation.
Where, by the way, it was Steve and Cawke and he was sentenced to a year in a day in prison for
that bribery scheme. There you go. All right. Let's take some listener questions.
Sure. Yeah. So the listener questions this week are pretty good. I found
two actually that both go to the same questions of timing. Okay, so our first question comes from Kevin.
And Kevin says, I know that Trump has tried to apply this artificial timeline for him to be charged,
at least federally, the closer to the primaries, thinking that much more of
a stink will be raised by his retrumpelkins.
Is that going to stop Mr. Smith from bringing at least the documents case, especially if
he uses the fact that he has other cases open on him?
I really don't think this should matter, but does Jack or Merritt Garland, I really hope
not.
Thanks, and great podcast.
So it's a good question because it raises this issue
that's been concerning me a lot lately,
which is as we get deeper and deeper into the calendar
and therefore deeper into the election season,
how is that going to influence what Jack Smith decides to do?
So first of all, it's not relevant.
You know, the same, the reason that kept Mueller
from inditing anyone that
OLC, that DOJ, OLC policy that you cannot indict a sitting president is obviously not relevant here
because Trump is not a sitting president. But what might be relevant is the general DOJ policy
that you shall, that shall not take overt actions in the period just before an election. Now, that period
is not particularly clearly defined. Some people at DOJ, if you ask them, they'd say that's two months,
some people would say it's three months. Generally, I think most people would say somewhere between 60
and 90 days before the election. So that basically defines, I think, the runway that Jack Smith has to deal with.
And I think those are also overt and investigatory steps, right?
Like if you've already been diited, there's no rule in the judiciary system that says we
have to postpone a trial.
However, I could see a lawsuit
coming from Donald Trump saying you're interfering with my ability to campaign, et cetera.
And we've never seen anything like that. It might have to be litigated. But, you know,
Garland was asked, point blank. Does it matter that he's running for office? Will that influence
your decisions at all? And he said, no, that has absolutely nothing to do with any decision I'm going
to make. And I can't imagine that Jack Smith would be more conservative than Garland on this
now. No, no. And I do think that the take no action and the lead up to an election policy
would prohibit Jack Smith from inditing Trump in that period. So he's got to, if he's going
to indict him, he's got to get that done before,
whatever, 60 or 90 days before the election. But once it's done, it's done. I don't think there's
any prohibition to going forward with that indictment in the normal course of business, if whether it's a
trial or whatever, because the reason we've discussed before, it's different. You know, when you're trying to indict a sitting president,
you are arguably denying the people, the country,
the good and honest services of their president
because you're throwing this massive distraction
on his plate.
That doesn't apply when people have had the choice.
Do I vote for a guy who's under indictment or do I not?
That's how, I mean, I don't, look, I say this,
so it's not like it's a resolved issue.
I don't think that is ever quite been in this situation
before, but that's my guess of how they would justify it.
And if for some reason, I don't see this being the case,
but if for some reason, Jack Smith has not indicted Donald Trump,
or at least made a charging decision about Donald Trump before the 60 day window, before the election, if for some reason
that hasn't happened, and we elect, re-elect Joe Biden, then everything just resumes as
normal after that.
Game on.
Game on.
If a Republican wins, then the investigations will probably end or be stifled or they, but I guarantee you
they will just be ended.
And you have to remember, though, that even if indictments and convictions happen before
the election, if a Republican wins, they're going to pardon everybody for these jacksmith
federal crimes that are, that are brought up.
So I still don't see a clock.
The only thing is, is that you have to make sure a Republican
doesn't win in 2024 and take over the White House and stop everything because they'll either
stop it by stopping the investigation or stop it by pardoning everybody if it's already
been done. And that is the case whether or not they Trump was indicted a year ago or
you know, or or next year, it doesn't matter.
You could even stop an investigation by just issuing preemptive pardons.
You don't even have to be charged to receive a pardon that keeps you from being charged.
Bannon.
No, bannon was charged.
No, he was charged.
He was charged.
That's all those mat gates and all of his friends who are asking for pardons at the end
of the last administration.
So second question, same basic theme comes to us from Janice.
Janice says, if Trump is federally charged in three separate cases, meaning January
6th, the documents case and wire fraud, would there be three separate trials or would any
of them be collapsed?
I think that it's a really good question.
There's kind of a division of opinion.
I mean, I think most people think of it as two cases, not three.
Basically, the documents case, and then the case of everything that's connected to January
6, whatever comes out of that, if anything.
Yeah, I would kind of consolidate the wire fraud with the fraudulent electric scheme, because
as we were just talking about with that voter machine thing
and how that has to do with both.
Right, it's all part of the same mess.
It all rises from the same basic facts.
So that's certainly arguably one possible case
that could go forward,
and then you have the documents case,
it's arguably separate.
Some folks think that it's unlikely
that Jack Smith wouldn't even bring an indictment
unless he addresses all of that stuff in one indictment. I'm not so sure about that. But
even if, let's say, the documents case gets indicted and then January 6th is ready, you
could supersede the existing indictment with the January 6th related questions, possibly, if you could
make the argument that they're close enough related and bring them all together at one time.
But I think the more likely resolution is those two cases get indicted separately and then
proceed down their own tracks on separate timelines.
Yeah, I agree. That's exactly how I see it going down as well.
So yeah, but the question remains is, does he, if he's ready to go on the documents case,
does he wait until he's ready to go and make a charge and decision on the January 6 case?
Or does he, because, you know, sometimes that prosecutorial discretion brain has to look at everything ahead of you to decide what you're going to charge.
So I don't know. I don't know if he's going to do that or not. I tend to think he won't. I think if he's got the documents, on that sucker and then go forward with a separate batch of indictments on January 6th, which
may or may not include the president.
Eastman could be the tallest hog in the trough that gets taken down on that case if there's
not enough evidence there.
So, I tend to agree with you on that.
And I think they're both pretty close to being wrapped up because you've got pens in the January six case is
the next guy coming in and you've got a corkering in the documents case and and Epstein
in all of it.
And yeah, we're at the tippy top still waiting to see mark meadows show up somewhere,
but you know, keep your fingers crossed.
There's there's always a little time left.
Well, he's been ordered as part of the Ocho
nostra to come in. And so I am assuming he would come in before Pencewood. I'm
assuming everybody would come in before Pencewood. But who knows? Who knows? Well,
see, we'll see. Well, excellent show. Great conversation. Thank you so much. Once
we get all this information, we'll put it out. You know, we talk about this on the
daily beans daily. We go in depth here on the Jack podcast.
Listen and subscribe.
And if you want to be a patron of this podcast and get these episodes out free,
you can do that by going to patreon.com slash muller.
She wrote.
So thank you very much to our patrons who are listening right now.
You make this show possible.
Any final thoughts before we take off for the week?
No, I stumbled across one thing that it deserves,
I think a very brief mention, which is good to see
that judicial watch, here's our right wing media outlet,
judicial watch, announced on there in a release today
that they had failed in their effort to foya the names
and identities of all those people associated with the Jack Smith special counsel team.
So they'd filed apparently on December 9th for all staff, rosters, phone lists, or similar
records.
And on April 12th, the Justice Department said that under exception six and seven A of FOIA,
there will be no soup for judicial watch at this trough.
So I think that's a great move by DOJ.
It definitely goes in that category of learning
from past mistakes.
Yeah, I was gonna ask you about that
because we knew all of the Mueller team,
the 16 angry Democrats or whatever. And I guess
maybe Jack Smith was like, I don't want to be labeled the 42 angry liberal, whatever.
A little of the rotors, professional prosecutors. I don't know. So yeah, I think that's really
a good move.
Having seen how people like Tom Fitton and Judicial Watch just spent a year or more relentlessly
attacking the professionals that were associated with that team.
That's right, it's Tom Fitton.
He's the guy who has been advising Donald
to not give back the documents, right?
That's right.
Non-Layer.
Tom Fitton.
That's exactly right.
So I would have been a remiss how to not point it out
Tom's failure today, so happy to have done that.
Yay.
I love it when Tom Fitton loses.
There you go.
It's always a good, it's always going to work.
I think that means it's going to be a good weekend.
And we won't have six more weeks of winter when Tom Fittons FOIA request fails.
Fittin FOIA failure.
FOIAed again by that's got some. That's got some legs to it.
Yeah, I know.
Well, I'll go work on that alliteration.
But yeah, thanks for bringing that up because I know we talked about in episodes early on
what are some of the lessons that could be taken forward in the Jack Smith.
We have the benefit of a full special counsel investigation into Trump specifically in the
Mueller investigation.
And that's a good lesson learned.
It reminds me of why Judge Kaplan, Judge Lewis Kaplan,
anonymized the jury in the E. Jean Carroll case
because it is clear and evident mountains of evidence
that Trump and his team and his allies will target you
and go after you.
I'm gonna go after you.
Absolutely sure.
That's how they roll for sure.
The fit and foya.
All right.
Anyway, thank you so much everybody for listening.
We'll be back next week.
I've been Allison Gill.
And I'm Andy McCabe.