Legal AF by MeidasTouch - A Historic Week of Trump Legal Defeat
Episode Date: February 20, 2022Anchored by MT founder and civil rights lawyer, Ben Meiselas and national trial lawyer and strategist, Michael Popok, the top-rated news analysis podcast LegalAF x MeidasTouch is back for another hard...-hitting, thought-provoking look in “real time” at this week’s developments. On this episode, Ben and Popok discuss and analyze: 1. A very bad week for all things Trump: A. Loses motion to dismiss Jan6 civil conspiracy claim. B. Trump, Jr. and Ivanka ordered to testify in New York Attorney General civil investigation into financial fraud. C. Trump Organization added to inauguration fraud case and Former CFO ordered to testify. D. Long-time accounting firm bails out and declares all Trump Organization financial statements “unreliable” 2. The Special Prosecutor’s recent filing concerning Trump and Russia, and whether it alleges that Hillary intercepted Trump’s communications. 3. The decision by the judge in the Sara Palin libel trial against the NY Times to take the issue out of the jury’s hands and finds that no “actual malice” proven as a matter of law. 4. Stuart Rhodes’ request to be released from pretrial detention and spend his time at his family’s house instead. 5. Remington entering into the first ever settlement by a gun manufacturer and victims in the Sandy Hook massacre. 6. Brian Flores amending his suit against the NFL and several teams alleging retaliation when he didn’t get a head coaching job he interviewed for, and the NFL’s choice of counsel to defend it in the suit. 7. President Biden’s decision-making process for picking his first SCOTUS justice to replace Breyer. And much more. Support the Show! AG1 by Athletic Greens -- Athletic Greens is going to give you an immune supporting FREE 1 year supply of Vitamin D AND 5 free travel packs with your first purchase if you visit https://athleticgreens.com/legalaf today. X-Chair -- Go to https://XChairLEGALAF.com now, for $100 off your order! X-Chair has a thirty-day guarantee of complete comfort, and you can finance your purchase for as little as $30 a month. Masterworks -- Join an exclusive community investing in blue-chip art at https://www.masterworks.art/legalaf today! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Midas Touch Legal AF podcast.
If it's Saturday, it is Legal AF live.
If it's Sunday, it is Legal AF basically.
Every day of the week now, it is Legal AF.
If you are looking for a top notch litigator who gives legal advice from some alley that he's in for those
listening. Popok is in a undisclosed bunker location recording outside in an alley. Popok,
where are you and what are you doing right now?
That sounds terrible. My remote location is the side of my Miami office in a patio area because I'm trying
to get a combination of stable Wi-Fi and a quiet place for you, me, and all of our listeners.
But yes, if you're looking for a litigator in an alley or a phone booth, I'm your man.
Oh, Pock, a lot to discuss this week. A pretty, if your Donald Trump, you pretty much went over five
this week when we're talking about badly.
All the fame, all the fame stats been.
It's probably even worse than that over five record, but we've got news coming out that
the documents that Trump did take to Mara Lago, the National Archive that said those indeed are classified documents.
So there will be some deeper implications.
We've talked about this in prior legal AEPs, but it has been confirmed.
They are classified documents.
The Presidential inauguration committee, the PIC, a civil action brought by the attorney general of Washington, DC, that is now set for trial
in September of this year.
So Trump is staring down that trial.
As CFO Weiselberg has been ordered to appear for a deposition there, but that is not good
news for Donald Trump and the Trump organization. Donald Trump has been compelled to testify at deposition in the civil action brought by
attorney general, Tish James, as has Don Jr. and Ivanka and others.
We talked about this in prior legal AFs.
The Trumps making all of these red herring and just baseless legal arguments why they shouldn't have to be
deposed. The judge swiftly rejected that. We will talk more about that on the episode of legal AF
Trump's accounting firm, Mazeers in a court filing. They said that their financials can no longer be relied on.
And that was presented in a legal document, causing
all of Trump's inner circle to freak out now.
And that's big news right there.
And then I meet Mata, federal judge in Washington, D.C.
Denied Donald Trump's motion to dismiss the claims that he was complicit
in the conspiracy relating to the January 6th insurrection in a 112 page opinion.
I mean, Meta says, Hey, I'm not taking this lightly, but there are clear facts from what's
being pled in the complaint that can assert claims
against Donald Trump, the claims against Rudy Giuliani, Trump, Jr. Those were dismissed,
but the case against Donald Trump will go forward, meaning Trump, Jr. and Giuliani are
going to be deposed in that action.
So that's a good overall summary of the Trump legal news.
We'll get to each of
those on the podcast today. But let's just talk about some other news for those loyal
legal aifers. We talked about the civil action arising out of the sandy hook massacre.
And it was announced this week, Pope, that Remington arms agreed to reach a settlement with the families
of the loved ones who were murdered as a result of the mass shooter.
It's a $73 million settlement.
This comes two years plus after the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled that the case can proceed based on a claim
of misleading marketing relating to the gun as a way that the lawyers in that case got
around a 2005 federal law named the protection of lawful commerce and arms act, which gives
gun manufacturers almost carte blanche immunity
to be sued in a case like this.
Now, Popoq, I want to get your take on it.
My own view of it is this is an incredible settlement in a very tragic situation.
I believe if this case would have been appealed to the United States Supreme Court, my own
view is the 2005 federal law would have actually been held to preempt the marketing state law claims
in the theory that was used. But nonetheless, I'm glad that there was a resolution here,
and it's fairly unprecedented. Yeah, it's the first time in the history of gun manufacturing,
the United States, that a gun manufacturer has been found liable and has paid money to the
victims of gun violence. And we're talking about Sandy Hook. We're talking about over 20 victims,
including two-thirds of them, small children under the age of six, all who died at the hands of an
AR-15 that was shot by Adam Lanza,
the Remington AR-15.
And Remington has been trying to do the same strategy
that all the gun manufacturers have done over the last 30 years,
which is to stretch out the plaintiffs to lay,
bombard them with the materials, many of them,
not relevant, just do a data dump on them,
and try to use all sorts of methods as you've
described in the law process, legal process to avoid liability. Here, they even tried as a business
decision as immoral as it's going to sound. They tried to settle the case for less than half this
amount. They tried to settle it for $33 million. And God loved the victims'
families. They rejected it and said, we'll see you in court. It's not enough to compensate
the nine families or so that Sue Remington on these theories and finally Remington saw
the day or saw the light and decided to settle and to pay and to set now a precedent.
And we no longer will have to say you and me on legal AF
that no gun manufacturer has ever been found liable.
One has, they've paid a substantial amount
and I'll never bring those children and teachers
and administrators back.
But I do agree with you that at this case proceeded
with the current composition of the Supreme Court.
I'm not sure that liability angle would
have helped.
I agree with you, Popox, switching gears. A settlement has been reached in the lawsuit
filed against Prince Andrews. Prince Andrew had filed a motion to dismiss. He made procedural arguments that the victim that he
is accused of raping that she was living in Australia. She was no longer an American citizen.
It was one of his arguments. He tried to also make an argument that the victims settlement with Jeffrey Epstein, which purported to dismiss all potential
defendants that somehow Pritz Andrew was included in that dismissal. Outside of those legal
arguments, Pritz Andrew made some factual arguments, which are odd and they're not to be considered
on motions to dismiss where you look at the four corners of the pleading,
but he had said that he was with his daughter at a British equivalent of like a Chuckie
cheese.
And he also stated that her description of the sexual assault could not be accurate because
she described him as sweating.
And he stated he was incapable of sweating.
That was actually what his defense was.
I think the settlement demonstrates that he is capable of sweating because he settled rather
than take this thing to trial after the queen allegedly leaned on him to settle up this
really disgusting matter.
Now the interesting thing about the settlement, well two things, press is reporting even
though it's not public.
Apparently the press has determined that it's about a 12 or a $13 million settlement.
Poor Prince Andrew, he had a sell his ski shell A
in order to pay for the settlement.
How much money was the settlement
they reported again, Popeyes?
12 to $13 million,
of which a fair portion of it will go to victims
and charities related to victim and survivors
of sexual abuse,
the rest, the lawyers for geography and geography yourself.
Now, the interesting thing, and I want to get your take on this,
because there's been no more public victim of sexual abuse than Virginia's
offering.
And at the end, she did get a substantial amount of money,
and money devoted to, as I said, victims,
charitable foundations related to victims and their families.
But she did not get out of Prince Andrew
and admission of guilt.
What, and you could tell, this was a negotiated sentence
that they put in the public filing.
Then I want to get your take on it.
The negotiated sentence, Ben, was that the prints will acknowledge that she is a confirmed
victim of sexual abuse, and basically apologize if there was any suggestions otherwise, without
taking blame for him being her abuser.
Now, and she's settled.
What do you think about all that?
You know, I think that I never second guess in this situation the victims
right to make that decision, right? At the end of the day, it is up for
geography and her counsel to make the decision that's best for them. You know, the trauma that I could never even fathom,
that she experienced, what it will take for her
to get that closure in her life is something
that is kind of a uniquely her decision that,
you know, I never second guess.
You know, at the end of the day, litigation
can only accomplish so much.
And as we've seen from people who listen to legal AF, litigation itself, even if you're right,
on all of the facts, the process of litigation could just be so incredibly slow. And with all
of the appeals that someone like a Prince Andrews has, you know, for this
to last five to 10 years for her to be re-traumatized by all of this, I think at the end of the day
where I cite on this is that we all know what the settlement means, the public knows what the
settlement means, whether or not he's willing to take personal accountability for it in an official statement, the resolution
and the purported settlement number speaks volumes and speaks.
Just this pop-up moving on to another update.
We talked about the Brian Flores lawsuit on a prior legal AF, some new updates to report
there. Brian Flores and his legal team amended the lawsuit.
For those out there, what's an amendment?
You can update your lawsuit if there are new facts
or you could amend your lawsuit
if additional facts are discovered.
The variety of reasons why you can amend it.
But oftentimes you'll see when complaints are filed, they'll be the complaint and then there could be a first amended complaint, second
amended complaint.
One of the weird things when you're a litigator that you learn, if you're in the litigation
process, which you experience, is sometimes even if a judge dismisses the case, unless
there's absolutely no possible way that an amendment could be filed that could cure any of the defects
in the original complaint.
Oftentimes a judge will allow a party to have another opportunity to file the complaint
with additional enhanced facts called leave to amend or the judge can grant leave to amend
or sometimes the party's on their own can ask leave to amend or just file an amendment.
And there's different rules about the timing of it, whether you have to ask the judge for permission.
I won't get fully into the weeds of that here, but for what you need to know here,
Brian Flores legal team added a new fact that happened where he applied for the job
as the Houston Texans head coach.
The Houston Texans gave the job to somebody
else. And the claim now, bringing the Houston Texans into the lawsuit when these lawsuits
are filed, you'll often see that they'll be filed against. In this case, the NFL, Miami
Dolphins, New York Giants, and Dose, one through 10, or Dose, one through 50.
So a DOW defendant, a new defendant here was added to Houston Texans and the allegations
are they retaliated against Brian Flores.
He would have been the head coach, but for the filing of this lawsuit, the other update
to report the NFL's attorney has now appeared in the case, or
at least publicly appeared, former Obama attorney general, Loretta Lynch, from the Paul Weiss law
firm will be representing the NFL, which I also find interesting, because in my experience litigating with the NFL, Eric Holder, another
Obama attorney general who was working at Covington, the law firm, that Covington law firm
represented the NFL in my cappernick litigation.
And so the NFL seems to have a strategy here, though, of hiring former attorney generals
who then go into private practice.
I'm going to be more, I'm going to be more suspect. They have a habit of hiring black former attorney
generals when they've got an issue of racism being charged against them. So, Loretta Lynn,
she was a former judge in the Eastern District of New York and the attorney general,
the United States is a very fine lawyer. She's also a black woman and they feel they've got a major problem and maybe they would have hired her if she was white. But I think you just proved
the point by telling me the last two people that they've hired against your client who is a high
profile black athlete and now the Flores charges. The other interesting thing about the claim and the
amendment, because you and I talked about when we talked about Flores and just to remind everybody,
because we sort of jumped into the middle of the movie and some people haven't seen or
listened to prior podcasts.
You've got Flores who's a well-established coach, head coach of the Miami Dolphins, leaves
the team under sort of strange circumstances, sports people, and we're sort of scratching
their head because he had a good season and why is he leaving?
And there are very few minority,
there were two at the time, maybe one at the time,
was him and Tomlinson, there were head coaches.
And then it came out two things.
He filed a suit saying two things
went really, really wrong in my career.
One, the owner of the Miami Dolphins
wanted me to throw games in order to approve
their draft status, That's really bad.
And the NFL said, we're going to look into that one.
But the second one he said is, I've been racially discriminated against because I'm not getting
the proper consideration for head coaching jobs under the Rooney rule, which is 20 years
old.
And the proof of the pudding is in the tasting because there's two now now one at the time when he filed head coaches that happened to be black. And so that's that's the civil rights case
that he's brought NFL, as you said, brought in Loretta Lynch now this week to defend them
and and disclaimed any knowledge of racism in the NFL, which is sort of an impossible position.
But the interesting thing about the added claim that you just talked about that I found is that the Texans did hire a head coach even though Flores was in the running,
therefore retaliated against in his view because he didn't get the job, but they hired a black coach.
They hired Lovey Smith. So it's a very interesting claim. It's, if they hired another white guy,
I think it bolsters the claim.
The Texans obviously knowing that Flores was in the mix when they finally decided who
they wanted, they went with a black coach.
It just wasn't Flores.
What do you think about that?
You know, where I worry here, I think there's a lot of great, first off, I think Flores
as lawyers are great lawyers. I think the lawsuit has accomplished a great deal already in shifting the conversation and
putting these issues front and center about why there is this disparity of black coaches
in the NFL.
I worry that there's a lot of procedural issues in this case.
One that we didn't talk about on the prior legal left that I should have. We don't have enough time to cover all of these issues though, is
that these coaches often have an arbitration provision, an arbitration provision that would
compel these cases into arbitration. We did talk about, on the last legal AF, that in
terms of establishing a class requires there to be numerosity, typicality.
You have to have a lot of people.
And I've yet to see all the people kind of come forward.
I know that there are hypothetical people.
I know that there should be lots of people,
but who's gonna be coming forward
for this to be established as a class action?
And then I worry as you bring in more and more teams into this, are you turning this into
a very complex, multi-front war against numerous billion dollar entities that each have significant
procedural defenses that in the long run is going to potentially undercut the strength
of what these claims are.
Popoq, I mean, I somewhat dodged your question because I really don't know is the answer.
I don't know the inner workings of the team and their decision to hire one black coach
versus another black coach and whether there was a retaliatory reason
for it and what would the team have done but for Flora's filing the lawsuit.
I don't feel there. I have the expertise to comment on the hypothetical nature of it,
but I do flag on the legal side the increasing complexity as I see it from a litigator around the case.
And, and, go ahead. No, I mean to cut you off. Go ahead. No, I was going to say, and
to add to your point, you now have five defendants. You have five major law firms all pointing
their heavy artillery at this one case. As you said, some points they'll join together
to attack Flores' case, sometimes
they'll do it separately, but why open so many fronts?
But I'm not here to criticize another law firm, especially one that's doing sort of
God's work, because I do believe in the lawsuit.
And already, to your point, already, the lawsuit, let's be frank, let's call it, let's call it what it is.
There are now 400% more head coaches that are minority, black, or brown, and there were
when Flores filed a case a month ago.
The recent hiring spate and all the firings and irings, there are four people of color.
They're just not one of them is not Flores, they name Flores.
But so there has been a positive impact,
much like your client, Colin Kaepernick,
you know, sometimes in the beginning,
that plaintiff who sits on the bus,
who sits on the bus, who kneels,
who puts up his arm in protest,
isn't immediately rewarded himself.
That's often not the reason they bring the case
in the first place, but they are leading the way,
they clear the brush for those behind them to have success.
You know, I always think to, you know, people like Brian Flores, the assumption being that
he has to sacrifice so that others can succeed.
And I always wonder, well, why, why can't, though, we just take a look at it.
Like, I love talking about lawsuits, Popeye.
I love talking about the inner workings of litigation,
but sometimes, though, I do wish
that there could really be a broader focus
on mediation, not as a strategic litigation device,
but truly people just coming together and picking up the phone and
You know, Brian Flores should be a head coach somewhere, you know, they should recognize his accomplishments
It shouldn't be a foregone conclusion that he's never gonna get a job for the rest of his life
I just wish sometimes like human beings would just do the right thing
But unfortunately we have a litigation legal system
because that oftentimes isn't the case
unless people are compelled.
I wanna talk Popok about this fake bombshell,
this John Durham nothing burger filing
that relates to whether or not the Latham and Watkins firms
should have to sign a conflict waiver
and the filing basically saying, there is no issue if Latham and Watkins firms should have to sign a conflict waiver and the filing basically saying, there
is no issue if Latham and Watkins signs a conflict waiver.
But somehow this was, became the biggest story in the right wing echo chamber, not somehow,
because Trump was losing all of his cases and the right wing echo chamber knows where it's
going.
So they picked up on some random lines.
What do we have. What do we
have? What do we have to distract everybody? Oh, we got this one. And I mean, it's literally
made up fake news. I mean, that's why the right wing talks about fake news because they're
the purveyors of it. But before going into that, I want to talk about our sponsor, our partner,
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day. Seriously, get athletic greens athletic greens, dot com slash legal AF. So pop up, I gave a nice
tease of what's going on in this John Durham filing. And I guess for those who need some kind
of reminder of John Durham and what's been going on here. So Michael Sussman was a very well
respected lawyer at Perkins, he's still as a respected lawyer. I mean, I think he's getting an unfair shake right here.
And Michael Sussman had some attorney-client relationship
with the Clinton campaign.
When Michael Sussman argues now, though,
is that the relevant period the Clinton campaign in 2016
really didn't even exist anymore
by the time he approached the FBI.
But he approached the FBI with information.
What was the information?
That Trump was conspiring with the Russians so that he could be elected.
And that Trump was basically putting his people in connection with Russia, with a foreign
entity to support Russian operatives in interfering with the United States election.
So Michael Sussman, a patriotic American trying to help the United States of America.
But as part of the Trump, I've been spied on.
There is a witch hunt taking place.
Bill Barr appointed as a special prosecutor, John Durham.
And John Durham's mandate was basically
go and try to prove that Obama or Clinton was spying on the Trump administration.
Basically, attack the truth tellers, attack the people who were trying to expose that Russia
was interfering and that Trump was colluding with a foreign power.
So this is about attacking the truth tellers.
And what they alleged Michael Sussman did is that when he talked to the FBI after Trump had won,
he didn't mention that he was retained by the Clinton administration.
It's really a trumped up pun intended bullshit allegation,
you know, really politically motivated against Michael Sussman, that his omission, or his
saying that he wasn't there in capacity to represent any particular party that that was
false. And Sussman says, I really wasn't representing them at the time. I didn't lie to you, but
also the Clinton campaign didn't even exist really at the time. And I'm trying to tell the FBI that Trump is conspiring with the Russians to interfere
with the election.
You're coming after me for that.
And just so you know, that's what that's how the Republicans use the DOJ.
It could truly be called the Trump DOJ because that's what he had Bill Bardu attack his
political enemy.
So this John Durham case against Michael Sussman is moving towards a trial.
There's a lot of pre-trial motions that are taking place.
And one of the issues that's raised by John Durham is that Michael Sussman's lawyers
at Latham Watkins may have a conflict of interest.
And what Durham's doing is something that prosecutors though do a lot before the trial,
they don't want susment or any defendant for that matter,
basically to argue that they had ineffective assistance
of counsel because their lawyers were conflicted,
because ineffective assistance of counsel
in a criminal case is a way that you could actually overturn
a verdict if you're found guilty.
So all this filing was basically asking was, Hey, Michael Sussman's lawyers, Latham and
Watkins, you may have a conflict of interest because you may represent also other corporations
that Sussman may work for.
We don't know if there's a conflict, but hey, Nathan Milottkins, can you and Michael Susman
just put on the record that there's a conflict waiver
and that there is no issue here?
Is really what Durham's saying.
Now, in Durham's filing, he does then go
and basically mention that there was a tech executive,
number one, who provided data to Michael Susman.
Now, what this data basically apparently is in the worst case scenario is like data about
like just the not what was actually searched, but merely the existence of potential communications
through like the whatever it is, what's a called popo, not a VPN,
but just the existence of like,
when someone searches a website and leaves like just a trail,
and there was, there's nothing about spying on the Trump.
There's no going into Trump data.
It simply was there communications
that was going on from Russia in the 1600 Pennsylvania area
that's basically taking place.
No, not even that.
Not even that.
No, you're now you're buying in.
Unfortunately, you bought into the Fox News spin.
It's not even that.
So look, there are four things that the Fox organization said and they were wrong on all for
about the Durham investigation and the filing that they were wrong on all for about the Durham investigation and
the filing that they just made on Tuesday about the lathe and Watkins issue, which is
a relatively straightforward issue. Why Durham decided that he had to put so much detail
into an unsealed document in order to lay out part of his case for a relatively garden variety issue
of disqualification and waiver.
I mean, I'll let the viewers and followers try to figure out why Durham did that, but
having done that, the issue is even better.
Like you said, it was a, I think you used to phrase nothing, Berger.
Here's what the Harris's how Fox reported it. Fox said that the Clinton campaign
paid a consultant to infiltrate the servers of Trump at Trump's house and at the White House
concerning the Russian investigation. You know how many of those four things are wrong? All four.
All four. First of all, there is no link and Durham that not make a link in his filing between Hillary
Clinton or the Clinton campaign and the hiring of this particular executive.
At most, they said the executive was trying to curry favor with people.
He was doing it on his own.
In other words, he was an independent contractor.
He wasn't hired by Hillary.
So there's no Hillary fingerprints on any of that.
That's one.
Secondly, he did not infiltrate servers.
As you were just trying to describe,
there is a way to figure out the traffic.
I think it's public data was all I was trying to say.
It's public data.
Yeah, it's pinging servers.
And all you can establish is not what is being transmitted.
He's not reading or peering into correspondence
or communications.
All he's doing is saying this server at this location
is communicating or has traffic with this server
at this location.
And it's just a data point.
It's not getting into the service.
They infiltrate the service.
That's the second thing that was wrong
about the reporting.
The third thing that was wrong
is it was not a Trump's home, nor was it at the White House.
As has been pointed out in a subsequent filing, it happened before Trump was president.
So it was not at the White House.
So Jim Jordan jumping up and down and saying, this is the greatest thing since the, since
the White House since Watergate, this is a sitting president who was being surveilled wrong.
This is before he was president.
And it's not at his house.
That's because people don't know where Trump lives.
I live in New York.
I know what's Trump Tower, which is on Fifth Avenue, where he has that apartment that's
ever shrinking because he claimed it was like triple the size than it really is.
30,000 square feet, then 8,000 square feet.
Yeah, he just missed just missed it by 25,000 square feet.
And Trump International, which is a building that sits on Columbus Circle and Central Park
West, which he does not live in.
And that is where the drive by happened related to the servers.
So they didn't surveil his house, they surveilled another building.
They didn't get information out of it by penetrating the servers. They only saw a data flow and it
happened before he was president. So over four Fox, great job. Now, having said that, it
is a slightly troubling that there was a tech, a tech person and he's now been outed by
the media. It's, it's nothing. His name is Roddy Joffrey
that he, to Curry favor with the campaign, decided that he was going to, you know, take
a look at traffic that may or may not have been private, but that it does not link back
to Hillary Clinton. So if he's got a problem from a criminal standpoint, what does it have
to do with Durham's investigation? And why did he put it in a public filing in order to both embarrass Hillary or make some sort of
allow the Fox News media, right wing media to make a connection and also for late them. I get late
them didn't want to do it. I guess that's why they had a file. They couldn't resolve it privately,
so they had a file publicly. But why, why file this to allow people to lead to conclusions and spin it in their direction?
What do you think, Ben?
Well, I think that's exactly what he wanted to do, John Durham.
I think he wanted to file it to allow people to do exactly what they did.
That's why Bill Barr appointed him and specifically to try to get that out there this week.
We know that Fox News coordinates with the Trump administration.
Not only coordinates, they basically give orders to Donald Trump about what he should do
and what, you know, he's, he's, Fox News became Trump's main advisor in all of this criminality.
And a lot of the criminality.
And so all of this is actually coordinated, you know, it's always projection with the right
wing, you know, when they accuse might as touch and people of coordinating when we didn't
even have anything to do with like the videos that they're talking about, the right wing
really does coordinate like Fox News coordinates with Trump and they put these things out there
to intentionally get these stories in a week where they know Trump
is getting crushed legally to help him out and to give him cover. And then Trump jumps
in with his statement, basically, you know, declaring that there should in some years be a death
penalty for this conduct. I mean, this was all coordinated.
And as lawyer and as lawyer then used that this person we've talked about who has this
small firm of that Mr. New Jersey, basically she works out of the clubhouse at Trump, at
Trump golf course.
She jumps up and down during the hearing and we'll talk about it a little bit later tonight
in the segment in which the judge ultimately ordered the Trump and his children have to
testify in the civil case, brought civil investigative case brought by the New York
Attorney General.
She jumps up completely apropos of nothing other than to draw attention to her and away
from her client and says, it says in her cross, her discussion turns to the, the New
York Attorney General, Alicia Jameson says, what are you going to do about Hillary Clinton
surveilling and penetrating and infiltrating my client's servers?
What are you going to do about that?
What does that have to do with the hearing? And it's other than being an incorrect fox talking point,
why is it being brought up in the courtroom? It just shows you the depths to which they go. Now,
I want to just round this segment out with one thing because I've seen it on the Twitter feeds
to you and me. The special prosecutor can be fired. People are like somebody fired Durham.
There's one person that can fire Durham and his name is Merrick Garland.
And people know my position on Merrick Garland.
I want to ask your opinion.
Do you think Merrick Garland who has the power to do it?
Ultimately.
Do you think Merrick Garland should discharge the special prosecutor?
Absolutely not.
Agreed.
Absolutely not. Agreed. Absolutely not. And he shouldn't do it because
the special prosecutor right now was hired for political reasons. There legitimately is
nothing that he has. The big, the big case he has is against this Michael Susman, which is a very weak case in and of itself
for not telling the FBI that at least at one time
he was representing the Clinton campaign.
It's a very winnable criminal case.
He's got great lawyers and lengthen Minwantkins
and why give Durham and all this kind of radical right-winning,
extremists more attention than they deserve.
That's all that firing Durham would do.
And again, it is a manufactured, fabricated, nothing burger of an investigation.
And look, Durham, while he's appointed for political purposes, though, is still at least somewhat
guided by ethical responsibilities practicing in federal court.
And so there is also limits to where he's what he's going to do.
Well, listen, and to your point, short of chloroforming Durham and taking him out. Garland does have under Department of Justice Policy.
He does have the ability to call him in on a regular meeting
to talk about, all right, you've been at this for a year.
You've spent X amount of dollars and you've used this amount of resources
and you're down to a one count lying to Congress against one lawyer
in all of this time. Where are you going with this
and how much longer? He can't call them on the carpet privately, not going to be public,
it's not going to be a press conference about it, especially in the in the Garland Department
of Justice. But he can't, by the way, he might have already done that. I'm sure he's just not letting
John Durham just do his own thing and he never checks in with Merrick Garland. I'm sure he's
getting regular reports about progress. And if the proc, and if he finds that the one area that the attorney general can discipline
the special, the special counsel, the special prosecutor is if he violates the Department
of Justice Guidelines and principles, then he can be sanctioned or he can be removed.
But I don't, short of that, I agree. Let him play
in the small little play box that he's created for himself. And don't draw attention to
him.
Popeye, you talked about Trump's lawyer making that absurd argument. Well, what about Hillary
Clinton spying on Donald Trump in connection with the hearing about whether Trump, Don
Jr. and Ivanka need to testify under oath in the New York Probe,
while the New York State court ruled that Tish James has a quote, clear right to do so
in conducting these depositions. And the judge noted that the judge Arthur Engoran
had reviewed thousands of documents and even commented that seems like a words to
this effect seems like she's got the goods on the Trump administration and seems that
this is a very meritorious prosecution and all of these bogus red herring arguments being
made by Trump, Don Jr., and Ivanka about somehow that they shouldn't testify here.
They need to be compelled to testify under the grand jury proceeding in the criminal case
going on in the Manhattan DA's office, in which case the Manhattan DA would have to grant
them immunity.
The judge rejected that and said, look, this is the attorney general of New York.
She's engaged in a civil investigation into misconduct against the state and she has
every right to conduct this investigation and her investigation has showed me the judge a lot of
facts that shows that she's heading in the right direction. So it's not even simply pop-up for me
that they were compelled to be deposed. Now under the current rules,
the deposition would take place in 21 days
and they'd have to turn over documents in 14 days now.
We all anticipate them to appeal,
because that's just what the Trumps do.
And they're gonna use probably the RNC money,
which is basically their piggy bank
to support their own litigation against them.
You know, he has $150 million in the bank from all of his fundraising at his disposal.
Trump.
So he's not going anywhere anytime soon.
And every time he looks, it drops, you know, the gas tank drops a little bit.
He just has another fundraiser where he makes, he's shameless.
He, he tells them it's not going to a political action committee.
It's going directly to my bank account. And then he just uses it to fool these absurd things. He's going to have a, he's not going to a political action committee. It's going directly to my bank
account. And then he just uses it to fool these absurd things. He's going to have a, he's not
going to win. Let me just make a popokian prediction. He is not going to win at the first department
appeal, which is where it goes first in Manhattan. And he's not going to win it at the court of
appeals, the highest court of the land in New York. Here he knows that he's already been dropping press releases about, I can't get a fair shake in New York. The judges are all
against me. Patricia James ran on a platform to bring me down. That's all she's doing. But he's
having terrible, terrible days in court as a prelude. And we're going to get to it eventually.
To what I think, and I've talked about it on legal AF Wednesday, is the spark
that'll burn down the paper house of the Trump Empire financially because of the domino
effect from having his 11 year auditors and accountants not only just walk away, it's
one thing to say, we're not doing your returns this year.
We're not doing your financial statements this year
because you're not being cooperative with us
on some issues we've asked you about, which is what they've said.
But for them, I've been doing this for 32 years.
I deal with auditors and accountants all the time,
including when I work for a public company.
I've never seen an auditor walk away
and walk away and leave and detonate a hand grenade in the
face of the client on the way out, which was everything that's in all of the financial
reporting, banks, lenders, investors, anybody else that was relying on these financial statements,
completely unreliable. Don't rely on them, which only supports the 160 pages
that that says James filed a month ago, outlining all of the financial fraud and inflated asset
values and inflated financial statements that that Trump and his family have been basing.
You know, this has been the the paperhouse, the the sand castle upon which the entire Trump
financial empire is based.
I'll read the measure's statement quote, we have come to this conclusion, the conclusion
that their financial statement should no longer be relied on and they're resigning.
We have come to this conclusion based in part upon the filings made by the New York Attorney
General on January 18, 2022, our own investigation and information received from internal and external sources,
while we have not concluded that the various financial statements as a whole contain material
discrepancies based upon the totality of circumstances, we believe our advice to you no longer,
our advice to you no longer rely upon those financial statements is appropriate. Again,
we believe our advice to you to no longer rely upon those financial statements is appropriate. We, again, we believe our advice to you to no longer rely upon those financial statements
is appropriate.
Now, the one thing I want to focus on here is we talked about this on the Midas Touch
podcast, but there's just, you know, a lawyer wrote that statement for them to send
to the general organization.
Literally.
But here's, I think, the important part.
Well, we have not concluded that the various financial statements, quote,
as a whole, quote, contain material discrepancies,
based upon the totality of circumstances, we believe our advice to you
no longer rely upon those financial statements is appropriate.
So to me, what they are saying there is, as a whole, we know what we're doing at Mazers.
Like we're putting together financials as we see them.
There's some accurate stuff that we put together, but we know how to do math.
We're doing our job as a whole.
But they didn't say that there's no areas that contain material discrepancies.
What's obvious in the statement reading between the lines is what they're saying is you, Trump,
provided us with the material discrepancies.
That's what we no longer can rely on because it's obvious the input data that we were given
by you is false and fraudulent.
Now they don't say that specifically, but am I lawyerized?
That's how I read the statement.
Oh yeah.
The measure's result is interesting for two reasons.
One, while they were not the auditor,
they did provide certified financial statements
to banks and lenders on behalf of Trump.
So for Trump to issue a press release,
which every time he issues a press release,
it's like another
gift for the prosecutors and the civil investigators against him. Because he said a couple of things.
He said, why would anybody rely on my financial statements? They always understated my finances
and my assets because I have a brand that's worth $3 billion where to get that from his own mind.
And therefore, the financial statements were never completely reliable.
Thanks, Trump.
Secondly, he has a requirement in every loathe he's ever taken out.
And just to be clear, he is not a billionaire.
I want to make this clear one more time.
He is not a billionaire.
He owes a billion, almost.
If that's what your definition of a billionaire is, that you owe a billion, then he's a billionaire.
But he was never a billionaire.
It was always an inflated value based on up and down real estate for which he primarily
did not own the real estate.
He primarily licensed his name for the real estate and the development.
So that entire hot air balloon of the Trump organization now may be torched because this issue with mazers puts him potentially
in default on every loan up to $550 million because he can't satisfy the financial condition
requirement within the loan.
I think that's a great point, Jaree's there, Popak, and to put more light on just one thing that you spoke about. Trump essentially confessed in that statement
that he put out two false financials
and understating and overstating his financial records.
I mean, immediately thereafter,
Tish James filed what he said in court
and her filing said, you know, it's highly unusual
but it's basically unprecedented for
a day after his lawyer goes in and makes the claim that Trump has no knowledge about these
financial conditions for him to put a statement and basically do what he's being accused
of doing, misrepresenting his financials.
And so the short of it is, mazers is out, Trump now is swirling the drain
and not able to satisfy his financial condition,
clauses and covenants in his loans.
And him, his daughter, his son
are all subject to the deposition.
The judge said, of course, you need to be deposed.
So that is those are those facts there.
I want to talk about the Sarah Palin trial
because the headline seems to be a great one. The Sarah Palin case was dismissed by Judge
Ray Cough out of the Southern District of New York. I'm not a fan of Sarah Palin, I would
say, whatever is furthest from being a fan of someone that
put me in that category when it comes to Sarah Palin.
But I got to tell you, and I have a great deal of respect for Judge Raycoff in the Southern
District of New York, but I got to tell you, this was a mistake.
This was a bad ruling that was made by Judge Raycoff in dismissing Sarah Palin's lawsuit is Ben
myself is taking Sarah Palin's side.
Is it going to be good?
It's going to be point counterpoint because I don't agree with you.
So go ahead.
Popoks not going to agree with me.
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So Popeye here is going to disagree with me.
Let me set the stage.
The Sarah parent, the Salah parent, Sarah Palin, third times a charm, the Sarah Palin stays
in the pot.
The Sarah Palin trial in Southern District, New York is a lawsuit chief filed against the New York Times alleging that this editorial that was written in 2017
by the New York Times defamed her. It talked about the 2011-2012 shooting of representative Gabby Giffords, how Sarah Palin's pack had this cross hairs,
picture, and that that somehow according to this editorial and implied that that somehow inspired the shooter and that Sarah Palin was there for to blame is what the editorial suggested,
Sarah Palin said that is defamatory. This has been proven to be false. And she sued the New York
Times judge Ray Coffs, the district court judge out of the Southern
district of New York.
He initially dismissed the case, the second court of appeals, which is the court of appeals
that oversees New York district courts overturned Ray coughs ruling.
The case goes to trial.
The case gets delayed in trial.
Cassarra Palin who brags about being unvaccinated gets COVID.
She goes out to all the swanky spots in New York, and apparently wanting to trying to
or wanting to or just recklessly disregarding people and spreading COVID all over New
York, because she had COVID.
Case goes to trial.
There's a trial that lasts a week plus. the case goes in front of a jury. The jury
is deliberating. The key issue here because Sarah Palin is a public figure is not whether
the New York Times made a mistake in saying these things about her because the Times editorial
individual said he did make a mistake. The question is, did he act with actual malice,
which is the standard under the case, New York Times v Sullivan, when it comes to a public figure
to prove defamation, you have to show actual malice when it comes to a public figure. And so the
defense from the defendant in this case, New York Times and its editor was former editor was,
I made a mistake. I didn't intend to defame her. There was no actual malice here. We're sorry, which is an interesting defense. Usually you see defense is saying,
we can do it. Here I think I messed up, but there's no actual malice. Now, while the jury is deliberating,
judge Raycoff grants a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. In essence, he's finding himself as the 13th
juror, or in this case, the extra juror, and saying, I heard all of the evidence, I don't
believe there are any facts under which a reasonable juror could find in favor of Sarah Palin.
So I'm not even going to allow the jury's decision to hold.
Now, he did something interesting and said,
we'll let the jury make its decision,
but no matter what the jury decides,
I'm the judge, I'm deciding as a JNOV
or a judgment as a matter of law,
which also known as a judgment,
not what's standing the verdict,
that I'm going to set aside what the jury does.
Now, here's why I don't like a book,
I don't want to hear books.
I've had lots of cases I've been involved with
where I've been on the plaintiff's side.
I wouldn't say lots of cases.
There's been a handful of cases
that my firm has been involved in big cases, big jury
verdicts, where a judge after the fact, after a jury has awarded massive damages, you
go through a three month trial.
We have a jury system, a jury's ruled in favor of my client.
And a judge goes, yeah, I know the jury said that, but I think differently as the judge,
there's nothing more frustrating than when you go through this trial.
Now, one of the things we learned in the Sarah Palin jury, though,
is that through push notifications, you know, those annoying notifications,
sometimes you get out of your phone.
Well, the jury, while they were deliberating, although the jury's instructed not to look at the news,
jurors who had push notifications got the message
that the judge dismissed the case as they were deliberating.
Shortly thereafter, the jury sides in favor
of the New York Times.
They do not reach in favor of Sarah Palin.
The jury has since said that the push notifications didn't disway them at all. They would have found no
actual malice in general. But I think the problem here's Popeye because why not just let the jury decide
at that point? Why do that? Now there's going to be some area on appeal for Sarah Palin. So I'm not,
I don't think Sarah Palin is right here. I think she should have lost the case.
I think the jury did the right thing by agreeing that she does not win this case, inciting
with the defendants. I just think at this point, if it's a jury trial, let a jury decide
at the end of the day, not the judge. That's where I come up, but I do not agree with that.
I don't agree with it. This is why you and I get paid the medium bucks.
It's for this type of disagreement, respectful disagreement,
which is how we started our career in our friendship,
with a respectful disagreement.
I'm fine.
I don't see the judge under rule 50,
the federal rules of civil procedure,
a judgment as a matter of law, which is what this is.
And it's not a judgment, not standing the verdict,
because there wasn't a verdict. If there was a verdict, then it would have
been a JNOV. But the judge is not the 13th juror in that scenario. I beg to differ. The judge
is the law giver. And the judge is the last gatekeeper for cases before they go to the jury.
There's a couple of places in a case where the judge is the
goalie, the judge is the gatekeeper before the jury, motion to dismiss, which as you've talked
about, and I've talked about in the past, Judge Raykov said, oh, motion to dismiss, yeah, there's
no actual malice here. Thank you, and good night. And the second circuit said, no, don't dismiss
the case for Sarah Pail and yet.
Let go through discovery and take it up another time. The second time, and I don't know what really
happened here. Maybe you do Ben, you can tell me later. But usually there's a summary judgment
motion. These facts were sort of undisputed. These things happened. This editorial was published, this admission was made, this error was confessed.
And as a result, there either is evidence of actual malice at that point after depositions,
because this is a civil case. So there were tons of depositions, everybody was supposed,
or there isn't. Now, I don't know what happened with the summary judgment process here.
I'm actually surprised that this case got even past summary judgment. But that's second place that a judge as law giver can decide to dismiss a case or to rule
as a judgment as a matter of law in favor of one or the other.
There's one last place that a judge as a matter of law, even after the deliberation,
even after all the evidence been presented, even after the jury's been seated, even after
they deliberate.
There's actually two more places.
He can do it before what's called
either a directed verdict or a judgment
as a matter of law,
which says, we don't even go to 12 lay jurors.
The judge applying the law to the facts
can find there's no disputed factual record
and applying the law to the facts.
It doesn't even law to the facts.
It doesn't even go to a jury.
You don't get your jury decision.
You don't get your day in court because I have not heard any evidence.
This is what Judge Raycoff said of actual malice.
I heard evidence of an error.
I heard evidence of an attempt to correct an error.
And I heard evidence of, I'm not even sure he heard evidence of any damage to Sarah Pan
on reputation, but he certainly did not hear evidence of actual malice.
So to let it go to a jury system at that point, I think would be malfeasance by the judge.
Now, why did he allow, and then he's got one more shot at that.
He can let the jury deliberate.
He can say, I'm going to hold the directed verdict in reserve.
Okay. I'm going to hold it sub Judas, what we call it.
I'm going to reserve judgment.
I want to see what the jury's going to do, but then I'm going to rule at the end.
And then I've seen judges will let the jury do their thing.
And I know you'd hate this based on your position.
And the judge says, no, no, I'm going to grant the motion for directed verdict because
I got to do my job.
And my job is applying the law to the facts and the pendant of the jury process, which
is the fact finder.
And then they apply the law.
Now, why did he why?
And I talked about this with Karen on the Wednesday edition.
Why did the judge, why did Raycoff make the decision, announced the decision, but let
the jury continue to deliberate in the dark
about the decision.
And I think that was really a judge-break-off thing.
He had already got synched the first time around by having his decision reversed.
I think he wanted to see what the jury was going to do.
But do you have any doubt that if the jury had come back and found actual malice, that he
would not, he'd already granted the rule 50 motion?
Well, that's what he made it as usual.
That's why I disagree with you, Pope, I can why it somewhat falls
in between a judgment, not what's standing the verdict. I'm with you because there was
no verdict. I mean, it was the motion, you know, that at the end of the party's putting
on there, both of their cases, he dismissed it as a matter of law.
But as a matter of law, why would you, if it's a matter of law on the judge, clearly
sees there's no actual malice, why would you want that case to go to a jury?
I don't know.
That's why it's very, that's why it's very odd.
I mean, you know, but there would be a cynic in me that would say that it would likely
the jury would become aware, even if you said that the jury wouldn't be aware
that whether it's a push notification or whether someone's going to leave the courtroom,
it's a high profile trial, whether they read it in a newspaper, they hear about it on the
taxi going home.
It's not a sequestered jury.
You know, there's a cynic that basically says, you know, hypothetically was a judge putting
his thumbs on the scale of justice there.
And that's, but I know you don't think so, but why even raise the specter?
Why even allow that? And this is precisely what happened, though. Now, because of what he did,
the jury saw it in a push notification. Palin's going to have an appeal to the second circuit.
And I, you know, what I have?
What's the grounds for appeal? The judge already, let me make this clear. The judge didn't
say, I want to make this clear. The judge did not say, I am going to grant a conditional
judgment on, as a matter of law at the conclusion of evidence while they're deliberating, because
I don't see actual malice, but it's contingent on whether the jury comes back thumbs up or thumbs down. He didn't say that. He said, I'm
granting it. It's granted. I'm going to let them deliberate to make a record because I have a
feeling he was reasonably confident that the jury, you know, he's watching the jury every day.
He's watching the instructions when they were given the instructions and whatever questions came
out. He probably thought, let me just, let me just lay it all on here.
I'm going to rule.
And I think the jury's going to go in my favor too.
Now, where he screwed up is he should have taken their phones from them.
When you and I go to a concert and see a comedy show, they're like, put your phones in
a bag.
Why they continue to have their phones while they were deliberating.
I have no idea.
But he was the other thing that was not not that wasn't contingent on the jury.
What if this changes your mind that there was a summary judgment filed?
And he denied the summary judgment.
Now, how do you were, were palens, lawyers, that bad, that they had the facts
that were sufficient for purposes of overcoming a summary judgment,
that they literally couldn't put those same tribal issues of fact, essentially in their
case in chief where he then dismissed it when it was in.
Here's what he did.
Raycoff, the reason why Raycoff was overturned originally by the second circuit in this
case is he held a mini trial from the outset and he hated the case.
He thought the case was totally dumb and stupid. So he said, get this case is he held a mini trial from the outset and he hated the case. He thought
the case was totally dumb and stupid. So he said, get this case out. And the second circuit
said, right, if you may believe this case is dumb and stupid, but you have to go through
what's the code of civil procedure. Reikov's like, but why this is a dumb, you know, he
can say like this. He's like, but this is a really, this is a really dumb case. Why are
we wasting each other's time when I as a judge know this is a dumb case and
Raycoff's right.
He is a dumb case.
He's right to dismiss the case.
The way he did.
But also just the way it went down, I just would have said, let it go to the jury at that
point, let the jury decide that Pellan loses the case.
Let them decide.
And then Pellan doesn't have any other arguments.
I hear your point, Pope, I get, I get your position.
And I get what you're saying is that,
whether the jury got the push notifications,
doesn't make any difference whatsoever
because that, you can say that their decision
became irrelevant at that point.
And I guess what my point was is,
why even issue a judgment
as a matter of law while they're deliberating,
just to let them deliberate,
let them find in favor of the New York Times,
and let's not have this process of now judge,
you've taken this away from palin,
which she's gonna claim to the second circuit.
And this could drag on longer, that's all,
that's my point.
Popeyes agrees, I won the debate apparently.
I'm losing my lighting here,
so I'm shutting up for now.
Other additional just quick updates to talk about
in the Matt Gaetz investigation,
we know that prosecutors in Florida,
federal prosecutors are investigating
his rape
of a 17-year-old girl.
I hate when people call him wingman.
That gates his wingman.
I mean, when it comes to rape.
I might have done it one or two twice,
I agree with you though, it's inappropriate.
Yeah, you know, Joe Greenberg,
who formally served as the Seminole County Tax Collector
and pled guilty to multiple counts of sex trafficking.
He's turned on gates. His
sentencing has been pushed back multiple times. Popak, what does that mean?
Yeah, I think that it's bad news. It's bad news for gates. And, you know, he's been
relatively quiet lately. You know, he's not doing the Marjorie Taylor green gates tour
of America, Van tour of America. you know, because he's not Donald Trump
and he doesn't have the money or the status or the love of the Republican party the way
Trump does. And he's in deep shit. It's not just Greenberg who is going to, is the reason
his sentence is being extended is because he's continuing to cooperate with the prosecutors.
And all of that cooperation, all of it, 100% of it, is pointed at Matt Gaetz.
He's got now, they've got the ex-girlfriend who's testified to the grand jury and she recorded
statements made by the victims.
That's not good for Gaetz.
Greenberg has got every incentive in the world to roll over on him and just give every phone, text message, uh, travel, itinerary, photograph, video, the, and the like that he has.
And I, I'm gonna go on, I'm gonna, I'm gonna go out on a limb here. I'd be shocked if Gates
is not successfully prosecuted for sex trafficking.
It's, it's imminent. I mean I mean, I think, especially now that this
sentencing has been pushed back again, I suspect before the next
sentencing that something's going to happen with gates. I would
expect that, you know, and literally that could be any day at
this point. We could wake up next Wednesday or next Friday or in
three weeks and Gates knows that he
wakes up every day knowing that that will be the day that he that he gets perplex.
He may not, he, you see, he wakes up, he may not be sleeping at all.
And there's a no doubt about that.
On other updates, Biden Supreme Court shortlist narrows to the three names who we told you
on legal a F, we're going to be on the
short list, Katanji Brown Jackson, Leandra Kruger. And now Jay Michelle Childs, Katanji Brown,
Jackson sits on the DC circuit, court of appeals. She was already approved with bipartisan support
into that position in the past year. So, you know, that's why that's a safe
pick as well. Leandra Krueger, who's on the California Supreme Court, incredible record,
incredible prosecutor. I think a bit of a riskier pick though simply because she hasn't
gone through the process already. And we don't know if she has bipartisan support or how
that's going
to go down. Although at this point, Democrats have the vote. So it's not like we need bipartisan
support here. And then Jay Michelle Childs district court judge from South Carolina. We know
Congressman Clyde Born, who was instrumental in helping Biden get elected. He's from South
Carolina. South Carolina was a pivotal state for Biden
and Clyburn saying, you got to pick child's position on that, right? Because I'm going
to flip here. I was I was on the J Michelle child's bandwagon a couple of weeks ago. We did
a whole episode on legal AF Wednesday on it. I'm starting to get the feeling the Clyburn
is hitting this too hard that he is making
himself a pain in the always of the West Wing.
And that siding with Lindsey Graham is not going to satisfy the progressive wing of the
party.
And I'm not sure Jay Michelle Childs is the briar replacement, the person who can bring the disparate wings of the Supreme Court
together the way briar could. If you're looking for the most brilliant person, the most brilliant
person who's probably the closest to briar in terms of temperament and ability to bring
people together, it's probably Leandra Kruger from your home state. She's also the youngest.
She'd be on the Supreme Court for like 40 plus years.
She's not even 40 yet.
And I think Katanjee Brown Jackson, I'm gonna now switch.
I think it's either Katanjee or Leandra.
And I think Clyburn is actually doing a disservice
to Michelle Childs to continue to her rang Biden
and all the people around him to pick her.
That is a very controversial position.
Yeah, I know.
That's why I'm here.
That's why I get paid the median bucks.
Po-Pot getting paid the median bucks.
Kruger was born in 76, so she isn't her 40s, so just she was 38.
Oh, she was 38 when she was appointed to the California Supreme Court.
That's right.
That's why I get paid the median bucks.
Po-Pot.
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Go to X, chair, xchair legal AF dot com. I want to say this. I love my x chair. Make
sure you get your x chair. Of course, Popok, we saved the best for last and it was Friday's
112 page ruling by judge. I'm eat mate. We should maybe rewind a bit just to tell you.
I mean, mate, earlier in the week,
there were arguments from,
oh, what's the name of that oath keeper, Stuart Rhodes,
who was trying to get out on,
he was trying to get out on bail.
And the prosecutors, just so we know,
he was remanded into custody,
and kept into custody by the magistrate in Texas.
But then as we told people, he was going to be tried in DC.
So he gets moved to DC, the motions for his release then get filed in DC.
And I don't think Judge Mehta was not having that oath keeper before him.
But it is just goes to show you too that these federal judges, it's interesting.
The state court judges, often there's different criminal judges and civil judges, but in federal,
I mean, Mata and the same week is hearing a bail motion that Stuart Rhodes and his lawyers
followed, that filed that he should be released.
And you're also hearing and ruling on the civil case brought by members of Congress and others against
Donald Trump, Rudy Giuliani, Oath Keepers, Don Jr. and others in a civil case.
And so Popok, what do you make of Amit Maita's first, the issues regarding steward roads?
It would be great to have him on the Supreme.
But for right now, he's doing God's work with all of these capital insurrectionists.
He made the right decision on Rhodes.
I don't know why Rhodes keeps bringing up getting out on bail.
He's never getting out on bail.
If there was anybody that was made under the federal rules to stay in pretrial detention,
it's got to be the armed insurrectionist
and conspirator and leader of a pack of 20 oatkeepers who were bent, hell bent on storming the capital,
armed and dangerous. He belongs in jail. I'm sorry, without bail until he gets his day in court.
And if he wins, which he won't, he'll get credit for time served. Or I mean, if he loses, which he will, credit for time serves.
If he wins, then he just spent a year in a federal detention center.
And now we'll talk about Amit Maita's ruling on Friday, denying Trump's motion to dismiss
the claims brought by members of Congress and others against Trump, Don Jr., Giuliani,
by members of Congress and others against Trump, Don Jr., Giuliani, oath keepers for their role in inspiring, aiding and abetting, supporting the insurrection.
And 112 page ruling judge made the states, quote, to deny a president immunity from civil
damages is no small step. The court well understands the gravity of its decision, but the alleged
facts of this case are without precedent, and the court believes that its decision is
consistent with the purposes behind such immunity. He goes on, quote, after all, the
president's actions here do not relate to his duties of faithfully executing the laws, conducting foreign affairs,
commanding the armed forces, or managing the executive branch." They entirely concern his
efforts to remain in office for a second term. These are unofficial acts, so the separation
of powers, concerns that justify the president's broad immunity are
not present here.
And the civil lawsuits here were brought against Trump under the 1871 Ku Klux Klanak, a civil
rights law that prohibits conspiracies against the federal government or to deprive people
of their rights.
And the same ruling should be mentioned.
Mata did dismiss the case against Rudy Giuliani,
dismiss the case against Don Jr.
And some other individuals as well.
And Eric Swalwell's case got dismissed,
and then released some of his claims.
Some of the parts of it did, yeah.
But the big headline here and the big takeaway is Donald Trump himself will be subject
to potential civil liability.
This goes to the next step, meaning there will be discovery.
Trump will have to be deposed.
And these were very strong words by Amit Maita in this 112 page, order Trump.
As you legal aeifers will recall from prior legal a F he argued
on the president at the time, I get immunity for everything.
This was in my official acts.
I enjoy executive immunity, presidential immunity.
And Amit Maita rejected those arguments.
I like to make this.
Yeah, I like Maita's,
I like the poetry of some of the language he used in that
hundred and twenty one pages. He he
said it you can't you can't blame
corn. See or end corn producers for
causing starvation at a rally and
then point the starving people at the home of the corn producer and not
be liable when they go when they go in their storm the castle and kill everybody inside.
And that's the analogy of the metaphor he used with Trump and what Trump did on the ellipse
that day in fomenting the mob, in winding them up, and pointing them like a missile at the
capital. And what was he to expect about that? So now we've got the first ruling in the history
of America, where a former president is being charged, is being, has a civil case against them for conspiracy to violate the civil rights of other US
Americans. First time over 230 years of this republic. And judge made a felt the heavy burden
in writing that decision. And I give him credit for having the brass to do the right thing here
and make that ruling, which will now go to the, the, the appellate division above him at
the DC. And then it goes to everybody, the Supreme Court of the United States.
A historic week of Trump legal defeat, historic.
I like it.
I'm Trump legal defeat. That is the title for the podcast.
Popok. It's, it looks like it's getting dangerous wherever you are
right now. I don't, I want you to be safe, protect Pope, and all costs. This is, this is
this is Pope, after dark. I don't know what's actually going on where you are, Pope,
so that does it for the legal AF today. I mean, we covered like 20 things. So we will be back on Wednesday when Popok and KFA
break down the legal issues and the mail bag feature
where you take questions from the legal AFers
is an incredible thing.
If you have questions for Popok and Karen Friedman
AgniFelow, reach out to Popok, reach out to Karen,
DM'em or send them tweets with your questions
or even email them.
And they will get back to you, special thanks to all of our sponsors on today's podcast,
special thanks to Athletic Greens, special thanks to X-Chair and special thanks to Masterworks.
Popock always a pleasure.
I sincerely mean it.
Like go be safe wherever you are right now.
I'm for a drink.
It's five o'clock somewhere and it's five o'clock after this show.
I got one request.
Sometimes you ask me final, final words, Popoq.
We are tantalizingly close to 1,000 reviews on all platforms
for our podcast. I mean, we're really close.
I would, it would really warm the cockles of my heart if we got to an even thousand.
But it's up to our listeners and followers to do it for us.
The cockles of Popock's heart.
Wow, those are, you, you Popock likes poetry. For me, Popock,
at the end of the day, if I meet Maita, just said denied, that would be poetic justice, but we could
talk about Popocking Cockles on the next Midas Touch Legal. I have special shout out to all the Midas
Mighty. See you next time on Midas Touch Legal.
All the Midas mighty, see you next time on Midas Touch.
Legal, pay.