Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Derek Chauvin CONVICTED for the Murder of George Floyd
Episode Date: April 22, 2021On Episode 5 of Legal AF, MeidasTouch’s weekly law and politics podcast, Legal AF, hosts MT founder and civil rights lawyer Ben Meiselas and national trial lawyer and strategist, Michael Popok, anal...yze the jury’s verdict to convict Chauvin on all 3 counts for the murder of George Floyd, and with special guest criminal defense lawyer Alexandra Kazarian, discuss Minnesota’s sentencing guidelines and predict the length of Chauvin’s sentence. Next up, the “Analysis Friends” take a deep dive into Liberty University’s suit against Jerry Falwell, Jr. to claw back the $10 million it paid him because he failed to disclose that he, his wife, and a Miami Beach pool attendant (you can’t make this stuff up), were having a threesome. Returning to the world of criminals, the Legal AF dynamic duo (and with apologies to the Sopranos) tackle the recent inadvertent disclosure by the Justice Department that it had reached its first plea deal with an “Oathkeeper” who attacked the Capitol on January 6th, who in return for turning in his friends and cohorts, won an all-expense paid trip to 3 years in jail and the witness protection program. To round out the episode, Ben and Michael learn to “count to 5” and take a hard look at SCOTUS’s 2010 Citizens United decision allowing for unlimited corporate and PAC money to flood our election system under the First Amendment, and whether there are 5 votes on the current Court willing to allow donations to be made in secret in the new Koch Brothers-backed suit, Americans for Prosperity Foundation v. Rodriguez. Special “easter egg” alert: Ben uses the word “sperm” in the context of our high-brow Supreme Court analysis and Michael takes the bait! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Midas Touch Legal A-CAP podcast that is legal analysis friends with Ben
Myceles from Garagos and Garagos and Michael Popack from Zupano Patricius and Popack,
Michael Popack, how are you doing this afternoon?
I'm doing great, Ben.
We better get right into it. We got a lot to talk about.
A lot to talk about today. So the breaking news, of course, was the Derek Chauvin trial,
who murdered George Floyd. He was now convicted of murder today. Any surprises there, Popack?
No, not really. I think that as people that follow and listen to us know,
I was predicting a second degree murder conviction
based on the weight of the evidence that was presented.
I thought it was devastating for,
in favor of the prosecution and against the fence,
especially the medical examiner walking through the timeline
of how effectively
Chauvin crushed Floyd the death under the weight of his body for nine solid
minutes. And I don't think I don't think there was a dry eye in the house when
that was being described that I'm sure it affected this jury of 12 individuals
six of which were people of color and six of which were
white.
And they returned the verdict in a, just for our listeners, in rapid, in a rapid, rapid
timeline to come back in one day after this long of a trial with this many issues and this
much evidence.
As soon as you and I heard, we were on the phone on something else earlier
about our practices.
And we heard, oh, the verdict's back.
I mean, you and I both looked at each other like that.
That's it.
That's gotta be pro prosecution
and the defendant is going down.
We should talk through that for a second.
So for people out there, they hear,
you know, the jury reached a swift verdict, Michael, why would a swift verdict, a quick verdict
in this case after really less than a day of deliberations?
There were some deliberations on day one,
a total cumulative deliberations of 10 hours.
Why would that short deliberation period
signify to a legal observer with the keen eye for how these things play out.
Why would that demonstrate that? It was likely that Jerry was going to find guilt.
Sure. Sure. And I've done about 30 jury trials. I've good experience.
Jerry's science teaches us that juries make up their mind in the opening statements.
In the opening statements weeks ago, they start forming their
decision and they're sort of just waiting for the evidence to come in and waiting for
the lawyers to stop talking so they can render their decision.
The judge tells a jury, especially a criminal jury, they're to keep an open mind and listen
to all of the evidence that's presented and don't start forming opinions, but these are
human beings.
And these human beings, although they can't talk to each other during the process, I mean,
they have chit chat over lunch, but they are not allowed to deliberate or discuss the
case before the case is given to them and they're charged with the jury instructions by
the judge who's just happened yesterday.
For a jury to come back that quickly in a complicated case like this where evidence forensic
evidence is presented witness testimony, police experts, for them to come back so quickly
means that they quickly in their own minds had formed a decision early on in this case that
Shoveon was guilty of murder and
then it was just the matter of sitting in a room for the first time really and
talking among the 12 of them, right? It's 12 people and and they do sort of an
initial poll in the beginning. Let's find out how much deliberating we have to do.
Who here right now thinks would vote for guilty of one of the three charges. And so
right after they picked the jury for person, which happens right away, they go right into
this process. The fact that they came back so quickly just demonstrates to me that the
jury very early on had made a decision in their own mind. And then as soon as they got together
with their peers said, let's move to the charges and look at the actual
instructions by the judge as to what these counts for murder and for manslaughter, what are
the elements of these counts and does the facts and the evidence that we heard fit those
elements they concluded quickly that it did and they voted to convict our all three counts. Correct, and so the counts were charges of second degree,
unintentional murder, third degree murder,
and second degree manslaughter,
had the jury deliberated longer,
that may have told us that there was somebody holding out.
In order to convict, you have to have a unanimous jury.
All 12 have to find for each of the counts that they're guilty on that there was indeed
guilt.
And so observers would start looking if it starts lasting multiple days that even one
single juror that holds out can actually create a hung jury
and cause an entire new trial to have to take place
if there is a hung jury.
And it depends on the context.
This would be the type of case.
If there was a hung jury that the prosecution would retry.
But sometimes in other cases that are less eye profile where there is a hung jury that often leads to
deals between the prosecutor and the defense, or sometimes
even depending on how close it is hung, how close it is if
it's 12 to a 6-6 split, that often determines sometimes
whether a prosecutor will drop the charges.
But of course, it was not hung in this case.
It was a unanimous verdict on those counts.
And there was just this line, Michael, I'm sure you remember it's line that's going to
go down as just being this this legendary line in legal history where the prosecution
stated, you were told for example that Mr. Floyd
died, that he died because his heart was too big. You heard testimony on that,
the prosecutor said, and now having seen all the evidence and having heard all
of the evidence, you know the truth. And the truth of the matter is that the
reason George Floyd is dead is because the defendant,
Mr. Chauvin's heart, was too small.
And I just think that line will encapsulate this trial.
Great, great, great line from, from, from just trial geeks like you and I.
It was a perfect, it was the perfect phrase to drive home for a jury.
I'm sure the prosecution felt very good
about their case as each day progressed.
When you're in the courtroom like you would I,
you spend a lot of time observing the jury.
And I'm sure they felt from body language
and from facial expressions that their case
was resonating with that jury.
And they drove it home like a dagger into this case
with that immortal line. And in contrast, you've got that defense, look, you know, the best they're
trying for is a hung jury as you described. They knew they were never in their wildest imagination
going to get an acquittal. But they looked at that jury and said, in effect, I mean, this was the paraphrase, forget about the video showing nine minutes
of my client sitting and strangulating
and crushing the life out of Mr. Floyd.
Forget that nine minutes,
but look at the other 16 minutes that happened before that
and that just went over like a lead balloon.
That is not. Remember this
jury, we talk about the nine minutes you and I and our listeners think about nine minutes.
But I want our listeners to go to go after this broadcast, this podcast, look at their
watch and sit and stare at it for nine minutes. Because that's how long this jury watched
a video with the officer crushing the life out of Mr. Floyd for
nine minutes. It's almost unbearable to watch and that jury did it and for the defense
to come up at the end and say, forget the nine minutes. Let's look at the 16 minutes before
that. That went over like a dead cat bounce.
So after the guilty verdict, Bell was revoked for Derek Chauvin, who's now 45 years old.
He was placed in handcuffs and remanded into custody, meaning he was sent to jail.
Now we go into the sentencing phase.
And I understand for the sentencing phase, Derek Chauvin waived jury trial or waived a jury over sentencing.
So that means the judge is going to be the person who interprets the sentencing guidelines.
Now Chauvin could face up to 40 years in prison for second degree murder, up to 25 years
for third degree murder, and up to 10 years for manslaughter.
But Minnesota has what's called sentencing guidelines
that recommend about 12 and a half years in prison
for each of the murder charges
and about four years for the manslaughter charge.
In this case, the state has asked for a tougher sentence
than the guidelines, but that will
ultimately be up to the judge. The sentencing is set for eight weeks from now. And so while
today justice was served, we do have to look to what will happen in eight weeks, because if those
sentencing guidelines are indeed followed.
And we're talking about somewhere in the 12 and a half
to 15 year range,
I think you're gonna see lots of people
very shocked to buy that outcome,
but also it shows the disparate kind of systems
and justice is because we know about stories of people
from black and brown communities who were,
you know, purportedly caught shoplifting
or, you know, who were purportedly found with marijuana
who were serving 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 life sentences
on occasion.
So what do you think ultimately is gonna happen
in sentencing, Michael, and what should we look for here?
And to drive that last point, there's a African American woman who's serving five years
because she accidentally voted in the wrong pre-sector. And if that crime was committed,
the one that Chauvin is convicted of in New York, he'd get closer to 30 to 40 years.
So the disparate nature of state-by-state sentencing, which is what we have in our York, he'd get closer to 30 to 40 years. So the disparate nature of state-by-state sentencing,
which is what we have in our country,
I want to manage the expectations of our listeners
because there are already probably shocked
that the sentencing guidelines in Minnesota
are 12 to 15 years or 12 and a half years.
And just to be clear, because the conviction,
even though it's on three counts,
the two murder counts and the one manslaughter count,
because it's really the same crime
with three different counts,
it is more likely that the judge is gonna sentence him
to what's called concurrent sentencing,
meaning he serves all sentences at the same time,
not consecutive.
So he's not gonna get 12 plus 12 plus 4,
if they go by the guidelines, he's going to get 12 and a half for all three crimes. Now,
what Ben has just outlined is you're allowed, if you're the judge, and if the prosecution
seeks it, to do what's called an aggravating increase or enhancement to the guideline number to make to drive it up.
In order to do that, and one of our various suit followers on Twitter asked me and you,
what are the Blakey factors? Because it was mentioned by the judge at the very end.
And they asked me what that was. So I'll let me bring it out now for the kind of inside baseball geeks that follow us.
In 2004, the Supreme Court of the United States, in an opinion called Blakey, said in effect that
if you're going to increase over-sentencing guidelines, someone's sentence, and you're going to
use factors to do that, except for the factor of prior conviction. If you're going to use any other
factor to enhance the sentence, to increase the sentence, you have to do it by way of a
jury decision. Unless that jury function has been waived by the defendant, as Ben noted,
for whatever reason, the defense decided early on to waive having the jury also be involved with sentencing. Probably because they
thought they were going to lose and they didn't want that same jury also deciding, well, we really
hate the guy. Let's ratchet up the sentencing to some 40, 50, 100 year sentence. I'd rather take
my chances and have a second bite at the apple with a judge. So, they waved it.
So, the Blakey factors, well, they'll be analyzed only by the judge and sentencing,
not by that same jury being brought back to determine if the heinousness of the crime,
if the, which it is heinous, if what happened here to send a message
to the rest of the community in the society and the police at large that this is not to be tolerated.
This is not to be allowed for the future.
And this person sentence should reflect that.
I'm looking at multiples of 12 years to be to be proposed by the prosecution and ultimately imposed by this judge. Yeah, and I think that the jury, based on how quick they came back, if they were the
ones determining sentencing, I think there would have been a significant sentence that probably
looks like the max of 40 years or 40 plus years.
I think we will just put a pin in it for now and see what this judge is going to do.
But I do think it will be somewhere between 12 and a half and 20 as opposed to more than 20 would be my prediction just based on some of the motions that the judge was ruling on.
It's hard to read the tea leaves of where he stands, but the fuss he made over the statements
by Congresswoman Waters. To me, I think brought this a little bit out of proportion considering that we had a past
president who would literally comment on every single case that was out there.
And I don't think that the vaccine waters, kind of a bit of a strisand effect. I don't think those comments during the case is a helpful thing to do in
any shape or form. But I think there's some strisand effect to it of now giving it more
attention than it actually got to create the issue in the first place. And so it was just
odd for the judge to comment on it. But that just is one of the reasons that I think
that hearing how the judge ruled on that
that may lead to a different sentencing result
than it may be.
But I would normally agree with you.
And here we're trying to read the tea leaves
for our listeners.
I think it'll be higher.
I think the prosecution's going to ask for close to
the 40 given the the grievous nature of what happened. And I think the judge, although I agree with
you, I thought he went way overboard in an open an avenue for appeal that I think you and I are
going to talk about in future shows for forine Waters' comments about protesting in the streets
depending upon the result.
I don't think that impacted the jury at all.
This jury was not sequestered just for the listeners.
This jury was allowed to go home at night.
They weren't held up in a hotel.
That's done on rare occasions.
But they were instructed not to listen to the media
and not to listen to the press and not go on the internet
and do research.
So hopefully they usually jurors are pretty good about that. But the reason I think it might be
higher than what you can leave it on this is that I don't know if you watched the actual
television broadcast and the judge reading the verdict. Did you see that?
I did. He looked, I'm just watching another human being and I've seen hundreds of judges up on up
on the bench.
He looked relieved that the jury came back with a three count conviction.
I mean, I don't want to say he was, you know, he wasn't going to do cartwheels, but he
looked relieved that they came back with that not only because they think it jibed with
his own, you know, judges make their own, they reach back with that. Not only because they think it jibed with his own,
you know, judges make their own, they reach their own conclusions, even though they're not the
ultimate trier of fact in a jury trial. The jury is. That's why you stand when the jury enters
the room because they are the judge. They are the jury that makes the ultimate decision. But that
judge is making is forming his own opinions because he's also knows going in
He's going to be handling sentencing so he's paying attention. My gut is it's going to be higher
It's not going to be 12 and a half it may not be 40
He might be more like 25 or 30, but that's something for all of us to keep an eye on and you know and in two months time
We'll have a podcast on that issue
Well, I like and we're going to admit now into the room, Alexandra
Kazarian, perfect timing. I'd love to get her take. Let's welcome Alexandra
Kazarian. Alexandra is a lawyer at my law firm. She specializes in
criminal law. Michael and I dabble in criminal law and do the research, but day in and day out,
Alexandra Couserian is in the court. She's currently in her car right now, spending a few minutes
with us. Alexandra Couserian, welcome to Midas Touch podcast, legal A.A.
Thank you so much. It's so good to be back.
Good to have you. She said great to be back early on when we started.
Might as touch one of the very first videos in addition
to the video with Michael Popak was a video of Alexandra
Kazarian.
And we were talking about a COVID outbreak
that was happening very early on.
Like this could have been early April or late March
and ensuing riots that were taking place.
I think in LA County, if my memory serves me first.
They were in the jail.
Yeah, no, it's, I remember that very, very vividly. We're talking and we're concluding our thoughts
on the Chauvin verdict.
What are your thoughts, Alexandra?
You know, I've been on a couple interviews today.
And everybody's asking me as a criminal defense attorney,
do I think that the jury got it right?
And our fearless leader Mark yesterday
was making fun of me because I watched the closing argument.
And I said, you know, I honestly think this might be a not guilty.
Because I think they really, really brought up some really great points.
And it put a little doubt in my mind, but in the end, I think that there really was just an overwhelming amount of evidence against the presumption of innocence. So I think the verdict was right.
I think it was just, and I think it's going to be interesting to see what the judge does
with the sentence.
It's important to note, and as we give you different perspectives, no, and for Alexandra
Kazarian to get to that point, she's a criminal defense lawyer by trade, looking into the evidence code sections, the specific jury instructions,
ultimately determining that there was indeed guilt, but truly grappling with the evidence,
which is a significant part, not jumping to conclusions, but really hearing how the evidence plays at. We were talking, Alexandra, about sentencing. And you weren't on, so you don't know my view
of where I think sentencing is going to go or where popox view of where the sentence
thing is going to go. Where do you think ultimately the sentencing, the sentencing that's
going to be recommended and implemented in this case.
Well, I don't think that the sentencing stacks and looking at it, I think that because all three incidents come from the same act, I think that the sentence, you know, people keep reporting that it's going to be a 40 year maximum, but I think that it's really around 15 or 18. So I think if the math ends up bringing it down
to below a 20 year maximum sentence,
I imagine that the judge is going to give him
the maximum.
If enhancements do get stacked,
and they do take it above like a 30-ish level,
if that's something that's possible,
I think then the judge is probably going to contemplate all of his years of good service as a police officer in my experience when law enforcement officers get sentenced after conviction.
Judges tend to give them good, they give them credit for good times served as a law abiding law enforcement officer.
So if it's, if it's,
if the sentencing range is possible above 30,
I think that you catch a little bit of a break probably.
But if it, if it really is,
if he's maxed out around 15, 18 years,
I think he's gonna get it all.
My name is Dr.
I'm not a doctor.
How is that ultimately determined?
How is the stack ultimately determined or not?
Cause we've seen obviously that 40-year number.
How do we know if it fully stacks up as an 18-year max
or a 40-year max, and who makes that decision?
The elements of the crimes, well,
if it's one single act charged in three different ways,
then that one act can only be punished one time.
And here I think it's just one act.
I think it's the unreasonable force being applied, which is really the main factor.
That's the act.
And what the intent was behind it was argued, but the act itself is putting his knee on
his neck and causing the death. And I think that one act can only be
punished once, and I think the highest maximum possible is that 15 or 18 year. So if it's more than
one act, if it's an assault, because you shot two, it's two counts of assault because you took a
gun and you shot two different people, or if you shot once and two people were in that range, that can actually be stacked.
But if it's one act charged three different ways, you can't stack it.
So it would be, so hey, Alex, it's Michael.
So it would be, hey there, it would be concurrence sentencing, not consecutive, right?
Yeah, it's, there's a, in California, we have penal code section 654. So you can, you can
send it to whatever you want on each one of them, but they're all going to merge.
Right. And the highest. So it's symbolic. You can be sentenced on each one separately,
but it won't even be concurrent.
It's actually they merge all together
and then the highest one takes over.
Alex, let me ask you a follow-up question, Ben,
just one second with Alex.
You said that above a certain number,
you think the judge may give him power phrasing,
may give him a break for his years of unblemished police service,
which I agree with in the normal circumstance.
But given sort of the heinous nature of what happened
and the backdrop of everything that we've seen,
the message that you're trying to send,
also that this won't be tolerated.
Yes, it's punitive, obviously.
But if you're trying to send the message to law enforcement, this is not going to be tolerated.
And you're going to be sentenced to sort of the top end if it happens again.
And that's a messaging that the judge is appropriately sending.
Do you think he's still going to say, well, having said that, you know, Shevon never had
a problem before.
I'm not sure that's true, by the way.
He might, I think he did have a couple of problems before. But do you think that's going to come into
place or the weight of this historic moment is going to suck the air out of the room and make
the judge put his foot to the floor and give him the higher sentence? I think it's a really
dangerous proposition for judges to make examples out of defend. I don't think that that's appropriate,
but I do fear that every single judge thinks about that. How is my face going to look on the
front page tomorrow when I put the sentence out there? So I do think that that's going to be a
factor. I don't think it should be a factor, but I definitely think that with the public outcry, with the fact that this jury didn't really take a lot
of time before they decided that this was a grigious conduct, I think that the judge is
going to feel very comfortable thinking that society wants him to give the maximum.
And if he still inclines, there's nothing stopping him from doing that. I don't think there's
going to be a big outcry
from policing and saying, hold on, yeah, 10 years
is a good officer.
Where were you able to see the TV broadcast
of the judge reading the verdict?
I was, yeah.
He looked relieved.
He did.
That was exactly what I was looking at.
I was looking at his face.
And as soon as I saw his face, when he read that,
I thought, oh, this is fine.
It's not going to be a problem.
Right.
Alexandra, because Aryan, thank you so much for joining the Midas Touch podcast. We hope you will
come back as a regular guest and enjoy the rest of your day.
Anytime. I'm hoping out from my car next time.
And I want to thank you sounded great from the car.
Michael Popack, moving on to the next topic of the day, we have the Liberty University lawsuit against its former president, Jerry Falwell, Jr.
We learned about a year ago or so, I think that there was this generous payout package of about ten
and a half million dollars.
But in this new lawsuit, Liberty University, you know, it is essentially claiming that
when Falwell was negotiating that severance pay, he was really breaching his fiduciary
obligations because he was not disclosing to the university
all the shit he was dealing with and all of the malfeasance he had engaged in.
And so essentially, he entered into, it's basically when you break down what this lawsuit
is, it's really fraudulent inducement.
We would not have entered into a severance agreement with you or given you a golden parachute
on good terms.
Had you not disclosed from us material facts that you were ultimately all of the things
you were doing against the university was going to harm our reputation.
It was going to, we were going to determine that you were bad for business, you know,
possibly breaking the law.
And we would never would have entered this agreement.
So that's the case filed by Liberty University against Jerry Falwell Jr.
Of course, Jerry Falwell Jr. was one of the very first of this group of, you know, Evangelical
or I so called Evangelicals because the Evangelicals I know do not, you know, evangelical or I so called evangelicals because the evangelicals I know do not, you know,
believe that Donald Trump's sexual abuse of women and his conduct aligns with the values of
Christianity. But Jerry Falwell, you know, brought Trump in to speak a Liberty University. He was one of Trump's,
you know, buddies. He reached this agreement and of course we now know over the course of the
last year, you know, all of this malfeasance that's now come out that he didn't disclose
at the time he entered into the Severance Agreement. So what do you think about this lawsuit,
Pope Mark? Yeah, this one, this one is fascinating. I call this one the Miami pool boy case
because just to bring our listeners up to speed, Falwell disclosed a year ago himself in his
own media statement and in his own lawsuit against Liberty University, the Evangelical Christian college that his father founded, the former now deceased
Jerry fall well.
He disclosed that he was basically, I'm going to use a term that I've only picked up in
the media, that he was a thrupple, that he wasn't a couple, that his wife had an affair
with literally a pool boy at the fountain blue hotel in Miami Beach
that they met, that they made investments with, and that I believe he also disclosed or
it came out that he liked to watch that Jerry Falwell Jr. liked to watch his wife and this
pool boy, Kabana boy, do whatever they were doing.
He disclosed all of this, I guess, to try to get ahead of the story in his own press release. He also disclosed it in allegations of a lawsuit that he brought
against Liberty. Well, Liberty turned around and using those two statements against Jerry
Falwell, Jr. said, just as you outlined it, Ben, that we would never have entered into
that $10 million separation package with you. If we had
known that you were either being extorted by the pool boy and or that you and your wife were in
this elicit affair that is completely against and this is paraphrasing from their lawsuit,
the Christian values and the liberty way that the entire university is built on.
But they actually took special delight
if you read the complaint that was filed in Lynchburg,
Virginia State Court.
If you read it, they actually take special delight
in the complaint to say,
we're just quoting your own words, Jerry Falwell, Jr.
You put it in your own press releases
and that's the basis for our suit.
And then one day we'll talk on the on the podcast in the future about securities law and securities law
litigation. And securities fraud is very similar to how they framed this lawsuit. We would not have
the securities fraud cases are we would not have invested we would not have the securities fraud cases are, we would not have invested, we would not have bought that stock.
Had we known that all sorts of shenanigans were going on in your accounting program, or
that you had violated the law somewhere, or you were bribing officials in foreign countries
in order to do your business, we would not have done that.
They're saying the same thing.
They're saying we wouldn't, we would have given you zero. You would have owed us money. We want our $10 million back because you
not only violated your fiduciary duty by entering, entering into this elicit affair with the
pool boy from Miami, but, but you've harmed us and our brand, our Christian brand as a result.
This is going to be an interesting case to follow.
and our Christian brand as a result. This is gonna be an interesting case to follow.
No doubt about it.
And, you know, there are a few contractual issues
that come up, you know,
and one contractual issue is what's actually called
a representation and warranty.
And so very frequently when I have a deal that I'm doing
or sometimes if there's an employment deal, a deal amongst
corporations, you put what's called a representation and warranty that you've abided by the laws that
you don't know of any malfeasance that you've been engaged in, your under no investigation,
you've engaged in no prior conduct that could materially embarrass
or harm your counterpart in the deal.
And you put these representations and warranties in the agreement.
The broader the better for the party that you represent to make the other party sign
on to these representations and warranties, because if it ever turns out that they violated these representations
and warranties, you can have a direct and obvious breach of contract based on the strict
language of the contract.
Now, obviously, if there's something called fraud in the inducement or fraud generally,
you don't necessarily need to spell that out in the contract, but
you have to show the fraudulent intent going into the contract itself and a course of
dealing that was intended to defraud you.
There's also a contractual doctrine called the implied covenant of good faith and fair
dealing that in contracts in general, this doctrine recognizes that parties
don't necessarily always come up with the most precise language in the world, but basically
don't be an asshole in the contract and totally do the opposite of what the intent is,
is basically a breach of,
you know, implied warranties in the contract.
With one, with one, I agree with you,
with one clarification, you still have to tie
what's called the implied covenant
of good faith and fair dealing to an expressed provision
in the contract.
It's not a free floating concept, although I do like
the way you put it.
It is a commandment that I'll shall not f with my contracting party. But you still have to tie it to section 22 of the contract
in doing what you were supposed to do. You violated an additional implied duty of good faith and fair dealing.
So I don't want to leave the listeners with the impression that it's sort of a standalone provision that doesn't tie back to an actual provision in
the contract. It's up to lawyers like you and I creatively to tie those two things together.
Absolutely. Now going from a criminal case to a civil lawsuit back to a criminal case,
to a civil lawsuit, back to a criminal case, there was a oath keeper. It's what they call themselves an oath keeper.
It's an insurrectionist.
They fascist one of these individuals who a white supremacist is probably a better name
for who these people are.
One of the insurrectionists who invaded the Capitol building on January 6th, pleaded guilty last week to charges in
connection with storming the U.S. Capitol. In his plea deal, this individual by the name
of John Schaeffer acknowledged that on January 6th, he was among the first people to force
their way through police lines and into the Capitol. And he was acknowledged, he acknowledged that he was wearing a tactical vest
and was carrying bear spray as he did so.
They went through bear spray, he used it.
And he used the bear spray.
I guess the question becomes here,
this was the first person to plead guilty.
I think we're gonna see the domino effect now
of many other pleas like this. I think we're going to see the domino effect now of many other
please like this. I mean, there's significant time, the maximum sentence of 20 years, 10
years, this specific plea agreement under the sentencing guidelines is for about three
and a half to four years. I think that these individuals should definitely be charged with more than three and a half
to four years for invading the capital building.
But what's going on right now strategically is the prosecution, the federal prosecutors
are making some sweetheart deals early on to see who's going to take it to rat out the
others and to point fingers at the others.
And so right now, if you wanna take the three
and a half to four year deal,
you're gonna have to point the finger at others
and trust me, those prosecutors are out there
telling people right now,
your window is about to be closed.
And so if you don't come back to me
in a set period of time,
we're going to,
you know, prosecute you to the fullest extent of the law. And that 20 year plus sentence
is what we're looking at.
Yeah, this, this John Schaper. It's a lot of interesting things about this oath keeper
case. First of all, we, you and I were not supposed to know about this plea deal as quickly
as we did. I don't know if you, this. On April the 5th, the Justice Department
was supposed to have filed on the docket,
the federal docket, the plea deal,
but it was supposed to be sealed.
So that we wouldn't know about it.
It was inadvertently somebody,
some junior Justice Department attorney,
I hope that person's still there,
but that some junior attorney.
Hit the wrong button when they filed it. And it was unsealed. And so the whole world
knew on April 5th about this sweetheart plea deal for John Schaeffer, which you and I
probably wouldn't have known about, if at all, probably for another year. But just to
put it in perspective, for those that were big sopranos fans. This is like when Adriana was picked up by the FBI and they tried to squeeze her to get
to Tony soprano.
So, that's John Schaefer.
He's being given the three-year deal, not because he didn't do anything terrible.
I mean, he sprayed chemicals on law enforcement during the Capitol attack, but the reason
he was given a plea of only interfering with the
Congress's job of counting the election results and being someplace he shouldn't have been,
which is inside the capital, and not something more severe, like the other 300 people are going
to be charged with, is because he is a major cooperating witness. He's going to bring down this
Oathkeeperers group.
And for those, I don't know if you've caught 60 minutes
this past weekend, they had an interview
of the Arizona chapter of the Oath Keepers.
And they basically admitted on national television
that current law enforcement is working with the Oath Keepers
to provide them training and probably
were involved, which we already knew, and were
involved with the attack on the on the Capitol.
But this John Schaefer just just around it out.
He's not only getting the sweetheart deal.
I don't know if you caught this.
They're recommending because he's probably asked for it.
They're going to put them in the witness protection program.
They're going to change his identity and they're going to move them somewhere because they're
worried about what the earth keepers could do and the other proud boys and all the rest of
these, these, I'll use another phrase, Michugan, a white supremacist group out there.
And there was the Michugan connection because his name was Shaper.
Yeah.
Yes.
So they're going to put him who knows where in some, you know, Arizona golf community
somewhere.
But he could be the beginning, as you said, to the unraveling of all this. If he turns on the
Oathkeepers, you're going to see them being convicted of 30 years, 50 years of hard labor and
leavenworth making big rocks into little rocks, which is exactly where they belong.
into Little Rocks, which is exactly where they belong. I was so, this is nothing to do with what you're just saying, but it strikes me as a point
to bring it up.
I've been watching recently, and it probably has some legal point that I'll, what we'll
flesh out right now.
I've been watching on Netflix, the El Chappo show on Univision.
And I was, I commented to my girlfriend who is first generation and she's from Mexico.
And I was like, the Mexican government literally worked hand in hand with all of these drug
cartels.
They knew what was going on. Like Chapo was their partner.
I'm like, how crazy is that that that was going on there?
You know, and she said to me without, you know, without the pause,
well, yeah, maybe it's not drug cartels per se in the United States,
but the business cartels and the way they work with Donald Trump
and they work hand in hand with the GQP, you know, the same way the keepers are working with
the police department and the law, you know, and law enforcement.
I mean, that level of collusion between the illegality of the government and, you know,
and these other interests out there, it just struck me as such a great point that you made
that the only difference is is that,
in Mexico, the cartels are obviously more outwardly violent,
with what they're doing, but in fact,
what the corporations are doing here,
although maybe you don't see the violence in the streets.
The collusion is causing mass death,
whether it's through corruption
and pharmaceutical companies and collusion are,
the denial of science,
the way we deal with climate change.
It just struck me as I've been looking for a time
to bring an analogy up somewhere because
I thought it was so profound and whether that deserves to go there or not.
But when we, you talked about the relationship between oath keepers and the police department,
it's just like that.
That is.
I mean, if Trump had his way, we would basically look like, you know, you know, ironically
like the cartels linked with the Mexican government.
That's what he wants.
And all the garrison rushing.
I mean, not to get too deep in the weeds here, but look, Eisenhower in his farewell address
talked about the dangers of the military industrial complex in America.
And we're talking about the 1950s.
I mean, the old line that you and I learned in grade school still goes on, which was, as
goes general motor, so goes America.
There's a reason for that.
You know, when you have a constitutional democracy that's grafted on top of a capitalist
structure, and we're going to talk about next or soon, we're going to talk about the role
of corporations and First Amendment rights. But that, that
close relationship that your girlfriend noted that goes on with cartels, that's no different
than the military industrial complex. And it's no different than the, than the outsized role
of corporate America on domestic policy and foreign policy.
Which is a great transition to that point, which is on April 26th,
the Supreme Court is going to hear a major case that could fundamentally
alter the courts' approach to laws requiring political organizations
to disclose their donors.
This was a great article in Vox that talked about the history of citizens united
and this new case, which may be citizens united
on steroids.
Citizens united pretty much dismantled
a lot of the reform out there on campaign finance reform
that existed.
You had what was it, McCain fine gold,
and you had a number of other initiatives
to clamp down on corporate influence in politics
and to permit the more disclosure of donors
so that there wouldn't be dark money.
Citizens United came in and basically created mechanisms through political action committees
and other ways where corporations could come in and be treated as people, but also make
unlimited expenditures to certain organizations like Super PACs or PACs in other groups, and make
significant donations to politicians.
But citizens united at that time still allowed the federal government to come in and to create
disclosure requirements.
Of course, there are end runs around it.
This is what we call dark money.
And there are some ways for groups to either hide
behind shell companies or other LLCs and figure out ways not to disclose their identity.
Opposite as such. Exactly. We go above and beyond to be transparent in every one of the donors
and donations we have and list them all. But this new case, which is called Americans for Prosperity Foundation
versus Rodriguez, really threatens to upend it. And it's a conservative group that's trying to,
and again, I always correct myself whenever I say conservative because I don't think these groups
are conservative. I think I'm far more conservative than them. So every time I catch myself,
I'm going to put a nickel in the jar and punish
myself. But in American's Prosperity Foundation, verse Rodriguez, the basic goal is for the
GQP members to find ways not to disclose corporate donors. And they're doing this in a very
kind of nefarious way that maybe you want to talk about. That's actually utilizing arguments of where organizations do not want to disclose, maybe
they're charitable contributions to protect their identity for fear of being attacked
and fear of violence and having to give their address, but they're trying to take those
laws that are meant to protect,
specifically protected classes that are looking to donate, but they're trying to use those laws,
and to transplant it here, to protect corporations from having to disclose their identities
in political donations. Do I have that about right? Yeah, you do. So, let me, let's put a finer point on it.
The lawsuit Americans for Prosperity Foundation is led by the Koch brothers, which is a
rabid, right wing, tremendously wealthy set of Republican donors.
They've been out there forever.
They've been trying to influence successfully have influence elections forever.
And what they want.
So these lawsuits, though, I think you should mention too.
They're very planned out, methodical lawsuits.
There's almost a whole corporation built around
a lawsuit like this.
And these groups like the Koch brothers think,
they plan out which specific court should I file it in?
Who should be my plaintiff?
We should, which group should we create to be the front of this lawsuit?
And their plan is working hand in hand with groups like the Federalist Society and helping
to push these judges onto the Supreme Court and into positions of power on Federal courts
of appeals,
they look to see where they can have the best reception with these cases,
and they put these cases all across the country. So just because this one is one that basically,
you know, got through, this is a horrible example, and I just apologize in advance for giving it,
but this case is like the sperm that found its egg.
And this one made its way through the system
and arrived at the Supreme Court.
But there are lots of other ones that are always
trying to find that egg at the same time
to be fertilized by the Corrupt Supreme Court.
Yeah, I'm not going to continue with that metaphor.
But I will say not only do the Koch brothers are behind
this case and other cases has been described, as you described, but they use their own overly
archery conservative law firm filled with federalist society lawyers called the Thomas Moore
firm, the Thomas Moore Society, which ends up being the lawyer of choice for the Koch brothers.
But let's bring a finer point to it.
So in 2010, with a vastly different composition of the U.S. Supreme Court, four members that
were there are no longer there.
They've been replaced with very conservative members of the court, decided that corporations
have first amendment rights rights of free
speech and the way they can express themselves is to have no limit to the amount of money
they can pump into the political and electoral system which has led to some terrible results
super PACs that raise billions and billions of dollars really unaccounted for and just pump
it into candidates and issues and policies.
And we've had a fight back.
I mean, you know, might as such as a pack.
They're raising money to fight back against this dark money that's out there.
The difference is might as reveals its donors because it can.
Now, the one thing that was left standing as bad as the 2010 Citizens United decision
was from pumping big dollars
into the election system, the electoral system,
the one thing that even all of the judges,
but one, eight judges, even the conservative ones,
said was okay, was regulations that required,
the federal regulations that required
the donors not be anonymous, that they have to be disclosed
as part of the dollars that these big packs were donating. that donors not be anonymous, that they have to be disclosed
as part of the dollars that these big packs were donating.
And the way that this Americans for Prosperity case,
which is going to be heard in oral argument on April 26th,
and then we'll have a sperm.
That sperm case.
Sorry, you got me to say it.
On April 26th, in an oral argument, what's
going to be argued there is, and this is what really gets my goat as you alluded to, is
that they're going to use laws that were made primarily by African-American political
organizations like the NAACP in the 1950s against Jim Crow law
to their white privilege conservative advantage.
So in the 1950s and 1960s,
the US Supreme Court was sort of unanimous
that you could keep hidden donors from your legitimate organization
if you had a legitimate fear that if you outed them,
if you told people
who they were, there could be violent revolts against them.
They could die for having donated to your organization.
So if you donate to the end up and here's how.
Donate to the end of the ACP.
We will have to disclose your contributions.
The Ku Klux Klan will come and kill you.
We'll give the information to the Ku Klux Klan will come and kill you, will give the information to the Ku Klux Klan. So, the NAACP and others say, it is important to keep our donor list confidential to protect
their safety. Right. And so, that is what the Koch brothers in this case are trying to use
to their advantage. And by the way, the crazy thing about that case, what I'm gonna say was, it was NAACP versus Alabama.
And Alabama wanted to specifically force the NAACP
to release it.
I mean, how sick is that?
So specifically, the Ku Klux Klanke K Killing.
Yeah, to kill and quash the NAACP at a time
when it was fear, the whole organization
was fearing for its life.
So I wanna make this clear
for our listeners. The specific issue that is going to be before the court on the 26th of April
is the following. California where Ben sets and operates has a law on the books that says that if a
charity or political organization has takes in donors.
It has to reveal those donors not to the public
to the attorney general only of the state of California
so that if they have to, in the future,
investigate fraud by that charity, they know where to look.
Let me make it clear.
It is not a law in California that donors
to that kind of charity are disclosed to the public.
So it ends up in the newspaper or on Tucker Carlson.
It's not.
It is a law that they have to disclose it to the attorney general only.
And the Koch brothers are now going to use that to try to get at least five votes on
this current Supreme Court. And let's do the math on our fingers.
That means Alito, Kavanaugh, Thomas, Gorsuch, Coney Barrett, maybe they get Roberts, although
I doubt it. And that's your five. Can you count to five? Then you have a new decision.
And if the new decision is the court says, not only do we not like the law in California
that says that an attorney general can get the names of the donors, we think that all
donors should be allowed to be anonymous donating to this dark pool of money.
And that's the fear that you and I and people that are of our political persuasion are afraid
of that there, that the current Supreme Court is going to
run a mock and there's going to make mischief out of this what could be a narrowly decided
decision about California's Attorney General disclosure law.
And here's some of the arguments that this Thomas Moore Law Center, you know, makes,
you know, they claim, well, if a corporation makes this contribution, they have to do it
anonymously out of the speculative fear that ISIS could get their information and then
ISIS could attack them. And so that's part of the argument that they're trying to twist
from the NAACP ruling to this. And look, we know with those Supreme Court justices
that you listed that 5, 4 right there,
if it was up to them, they would have corporations
and all the dark money as possible
that went into elections.
I mean, a lot of that's what funds these cases to begin with
That's what funds the Federalist Society and that's what funds this whole you know corporate tank over
of
the United States which goes back to
My girlfriend's point and we come full circle with, you know, the Supreme Court that Trump
put in there, you know, really is the Supreme Court.
That's pro American corporate cartels.
Okay.
At the end of the day.
Let me turn this back to the QDP and the Republicans.
How then, I'm going to add, this is a rhetorical question, but one may be Ben, you can, you can, you can give your opinion on our answer. If the Supreme Court, the current
Supreme Court, finds that not only is unlimited money in elections through corporations, a
proper expression of the First Amendment, but that the donors that, that are that make
up charitable and other political organizations can be kept
anonymous.
How are we to police foreign money, which is unconstitutional?
It's unconstitutional for foreign nations to impact or attempt to impact our elections,
Russian money, Chinese money, fill in the blank money. How do you police that,
that if corporations don't have to disclose who their donors are or packs don't?
So what's to stop the Putin's of the world through a couple of shell companies from stroking,
stroking a large check to make sure that they're chosen candidate, their their manchurian candidate
is elected. How do you police that?
You can, and the answer is it was rhetorical.
The answer is, is that you can't police that, but that's when you take all of these doctrines
espoused by the GQP to its logical conclusion.
And it doesn't even have to be many steps to get to the logical conclusion.
It's not like this huge leap.
They're destructive to the fabric of this country.
They're destructive to themselves.
They're destructive to the safety.
And it's like, even with corporations,
the corporations are still made up of individuals.
And those individuals don't always stay
in those corporations for their entire life.
Very frequently they move on to different corporations,
yet we espouse the corporate oftentimes
over the safety and respect for the dignity of the human.
And forget that the corporations just run by people.
And that's one of the weirdest things in my world when I have these cases and I have litigations
when I make deals.
When you meet the people, people are usually good when you really get to know what their
motivations are.
But you put people together and have a corporate interest and they do things that are against people.
And it's oversimplifying to conclude after some very thorough legal analysis, you know,
when I'm not trying to sound like a stoner right now to conclude, people are good.
Incorporations are bad, man.
But you are the end of the day, we want
laws that help people. We want, we don't want to be anti-human. So I will leave everybody out with that.
The continue my pop culture sub references.
I you almost sounded like Charlton
Heston and soiling green when he discovers
that the crackers that he's eating are made from people.
It's people, it's people.
That's what that's what the show's about.
It's about people.
Show's about people.
The show's about the Midas mighty.
The Midas mighty out there showing Popok, just a ton of love.
Can we get Popok please, at least 10,000 Twitter followers, please?
Let's get this man past 10,000 Twitter followers.
This was a great episode of Midas Touch Legal AF podcast.
We covered a lot.
We appreciate your support in making this
one of the top legal podcasts in the United States
in the world.
We greatly appreciate and appreciate your support.
That's like that was such a Trump as a,
when Trump would do the words wrong.
He would say both words and act like the one words.
I appreciate and appreciate your support. And we'll be back same time next week. Ben
Myceles, Michael Popak, signing off. Shout out to the Midas
Mighty.
you