Legal AF by MeidasTouch - DeSantis Sinking the CDC Mandates for Cruise Ship Industry
Episode Date: August 1, 2021The leading law and politics podcast — MeidasTouch’s Legal AF — is back and coming in hot with special guest attorney Sam Yebri (samforLA.com). On its Sweet 16 episode, MT founder and civil righ...ts lawyer, Ben Meiselas and national trial lawyer and strategist, Michael Popok interview Sam, who’s running a #MeidasMighty-style, progressive, grassroots campaign to represent LA’s 5th District on its City Council. Sam, Ben and Popok discuss his campaign and approach to addressing and solving LA’s homeless crisis. After a brief interlude where Ben welcomes Popok back with open arms from his summer holiday, the hosts get back to their brand of hard-hitting analysis Legal AF listeners have come to expect. First up, Ben and Michael examine how various federal courts are addressing COVID-19 policies, from Florida’s sinking the CDC mandates for the cruise ship industry with the help of a flip-flopping 11th Circuit, to a Trump-appointee Indiana federal judge upholding a university’s decision to mandate vaccination for its students. Then, the hosts do a deep dive into Attorney General Merrick Garland’s recent decisions to: (a) deny Alabama Rep. Mo Brooks request to have the United States substitute in as the defendant in the case brought against him for inciting the January 6th attack on the Capitol, and (b) issue new DOJ policy supporting the First Amendment and preventing prosecutors from seizing journalists records except in extraordinary circumstances. Ben and Popok round out the episode with a look at yet another Former 45 courtroom loss. This week, the Second Circuit soundly rejected the Trumps’ attempt to force into private arbitration a class action suit brought against Former 45, Eric and Ivanka for endorsing a "multi-level marketing" "get rich quick scheme" run by ACN, allegedly causing tens of millions in losses. Ben and Popok scratch their heads over Trump et al.’s wacky decision to argue, in effect, that the Trumps were so close to ACN (and its alleged fraud scheme) that the Trumps should get the benefit of the arbitration agreement between ACN and its customers. Easter Egg Alert: Ben bans Popok from any future days off! Subscribe to the MeidasTouch Podcast for more episodes and remember to give the show a 5-star review! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up, Midas Mighty?
This is Ben Mycelis and guess who we got back from his never-ending vacation?
Michael Popak is in the house, which means if it's Sunday, it is legal AF provided that Michael Popak is not backpacking through
Italy. And I say that, Michael, with some resentment, but also with some sense of jealousy,
because it truly looked like a beautiful vacation, summarize it in 10 seconds, and then
let's get right to the wall.
All right. After two years of perfect art.
First of all, I'm glad to be back.
I'm glad to see you and I'm glad to be back with our listeners who made me, my heart got
really big during the vacation when I read all the comments about them missing us and
missing legal AF and missing Pope pocket, all of that.
And it's a pop.
You've got lots of fans.
There's lots of times where we have polls that say, who's your favorite brother?
And people will say, why can't Popock be included?
Right.
Yeah, why can't Popock be the brother?
Why can't we have Popock merch?
Popocking in this, popocking in that.
I mean, look, at some point, I think I've created a monster.
I created a superstar who's a clips the brothers.
You have to spin me off like work in Mindy
in my own show.
No, no, I can't tell you how thrilled I am to be back
in your presence and with you to do this show.
And even though I had a great two weeks,
this was a two year vacation in the making
because of pandemic, everybody suffered through it.
I just put it off, but as you said,
it was a trade through Europe,
starting an Italy ending in Greece
and everything in between for those that can get out
and travel, go see Sicily.
It's an amazing place.
I was really blown away by it.
But now I'm tan, ready, rested, coming in hot,
like a fajita, we're ready to cover all the topics today.
I love it. And we should probably let people know as well on the top end of this show while we're at it.
I joke about Pope-Pock's vacation, but at the end of the day, Pope-Pock deserves a vacation and we as Americans have employee rights and frankly the employee
rights need to be expanded. Now, Popoac because of the work that he performs would be an exempt
employee as the law would categorize it on lots of aspects of things. But what you should
always do out there for those people listening though, is,
you know, you should check though what your rights are as an employee. The laws in your
specific states set minimal thresholds. And America is grossly behind other countries
and the benefits we provide both in terms of medical leave for maternity and paternity leave. But states are beginning to catch up.
The federal law, what's called the FMLA, has baseline standards. Within the states, there's baseline medical leave standards. Some states expand on the federal law, but you should look at your employee handbooks. You should see what PTO paid time off you have.
You should look at your sick days.
You should make sure that your employers are in compliance with the law.
And there's a whole body of law in this area about what employers have to provide their employees in certain circumstances.
And it's possible that there are, if there are violations taking place, I mean, you can
give Popuck in my self-a-call.
And we could let you know, if we think that there are issues with meal breaks and wage
an hour violations and things like that.
And I joke with Popuck, but I want everyone to know,
I take these issues incredibly seriously,
and you as employees work,
you dedicate your life to these jobs.
Yeah, listen, I agree with you.
And I certainly encourage the people that work for me
to take all of the holidays and vacations
that they're entitled to.
I've been known to push a few associates out the door
when I felt like they were burning through vacation time
because frankly, employees that aren't recharged and rested are limited use to both
themselves and to the people they work for.
But you're right, our country is falling way behind in that area and while the laws that
you cited govern wage an hour and over time and time off for family and medical needs,
you know, there's just not a mandatory vacation time off
or paid time off period in this country
for just vacationing, for just turning your brain off
and being with your family and friends
and doing something different.
And, but if you have labor and a fair labor standard
at cases, wage and hour cases,
there's certainly things that you and I have handled in the past
that would handle in the future.
So nice segue off of my backpacking through youth hostels
throughout Europe.
Yeah, and I just wanted everybody to know that it's a joke
that Popo can I have, but we do take that time off
very, very seriously as you should,
as your employers should.
One note at the top of the show, we have a guest should, as your employers should want to know to the top of the show.
We have a guest today, Sam Yebri.
He's running for city council here in Los Angeles.
He's actually a well-known civil rights lawyer.
His offices are in century city, which is about 15 minutes, 20 minutes with no traffic,
six hours with traffic.
That's an LA joke for those people out there from Los Angeles. And I want to speak
to Sam because he's running on a platform as progressive but also very pro LA business.
And I want to speak to him about certain issues like the homelessness crisis that we have here
in Los Angeles. And what do we do with mandatory vaccinations, you know, and balancing that with business interests. And
how does he square those away? So I'll be interesting to hear Sam's response in his background
and perspective as a civil rights lawyer. And it's one of the things Pope, and I like to do
on legal AF is introduce you to new upcoming candidates who could be the future stars of
their political parties. And we'll check back on them
in a few years and see if our predictions are right. So let's talk about a case involving cruise ships.
Popok knows a lot about cruise ships. He knows a lot about backpacking and he knows a lot about this 11th Circuit Court of Appeals decision reversing a district court order
and upholding CDC, what appeared to be very common sense restrictions within the cruise industry,
which DeSantis opposed and initiated this lawsuit because DeSantis wants to basically force cruise ships
not to have people wear masks and force cruise ships to allow unvaccinated people to run rampant.
And it's interesting. It's one of the few examples where the cruise ship industry is like,
no, no, no, we want these regulations because we're not fucking idiots and we want to keep our own people safe.
So we want to be able to have comments and restrictions.
We agree with what the CDC is saying.
And we see this in Florida
and in all of these other GQP states
of the government actually intruding
in business decisions where businesses
want to compel people to be vaccinated, compel people to be safe to force businesses to do the unsafe things. So Popok first off
I love just talking about cases with you. I'm so glad we're having these conversations and I'm so glad that I'm saying Popok
What do you think about this case? Yeah?
It's a it's a fascinating case and the way you've you've teed it up industry versus Republican governor,
which I never thought I would say is really right on point.
Look, the industry knows that it can't get people to start cruising again
and can't get confidence in their industry unless they go above and beyond the quality
of duty to make sure cruising is safe from a hygiene and COVID
sense. It seems like a million years ago, but it was just two years ago or less that the
thing that kicked off COVID in this country, if you will, was, if you remember, there was
the cruise ship. I don't know if it was in California, that was off the coast. And we wouldn't
let them on because they had an outbreak of this
new thing called COVID. This is when Trump said, oh, don't worry, it's going to disappear in a week.
You know, we're not going to let that cruise ship to bark anybody and those six people will stop us
from having COVID. How did that work out? So the cruise industry is really sensitive. They've had legionnaires, disease in the past. They've had viruses and
plagues run their way through pruships, these closed entities, these closed circuit environments.
And so the industry is like, how do we get confidence in cruising again? How do we fill our ships?
I know. We follow the CDC guidelines on things like masking and inoculations and cleaning and we'll do a test
cruise, a simulated cruise to test out all these procedures before we let live paying customers
on. And to Santhus and his infinite wisdom said, no, I hate that idea. People should just go on
regardless of whether they've tested it or tested it out with COVID, regardless of whether they're vaccinated, and they should just roam free on a 300 foot
enclosed environment for two weeks.
Terrible idea.
Yet, the DeSantis administration went
to the federal judge first in Tampa,
who was a Bush one in pointy,
and he agreed with San DeSantis that it was two onerous of a set of restrictions
on the cruise ship industry.
Again, a cruise ship industry that really wants to be regulated
in this area and ruled in their favor,
ruled in favor of Florida and said,
nope, I'm going to enjoy or put a stop at least for now,
the enforcement of the CDC guidelines on cruise ships. Well, the
others with brains in their heads took the appeal up to the 11th Circuit, which is the
federal appellate court for Florida and got a three-judge panel initially to rule in its favor
and stop the order of the Tampa judge, which would have prevented the enforcement
of the CDC regulations on the cruise ship.
So that was like a hooray moment for about a week.
Then the DeSantis administration did two things.
First, they filed an emergency application with the Supreme Court of the United States,
arguing that the Department of Health had overstepped its guidelines, which the CDC reports to,
and wasn't allowed to implement these regulations.
And ironically, the Supreme Court justice
that is assigned to the 11th Circuit, in other words,
their go-to justice for all things in Florida and Georgia
happens to be Clarence Thomas.
So they make an emergency application to Clarence Thomas while that's pending a new panel of
the 11th Circuit, three judges decide to that their original decision was wrong and they
lift the injunction, allowing the cruise ships to go out without complying with CDC guidelines.
One of the most interesting things about that, Ben, I don't know if you saw who ruled on
the 11th Circuit's favor, but it was a pretty mixed bag.
It's a Obama appointee judge.
It's a Clinton appointee judge, and it's a Trump appointee judge.
So this thing kind of crosses even political lines because they voted 30 to stop the CDC
from enforcing its regulations on cruise ships.
An interesting thing and I think we'll see this as a theme throughout this podcast is the
loudest voices of the GQP which is kind of a, it's the Trumpism on steroids, which is now the face of the
Republican party.
It is the insurrection party.
But these views that they have, and we saw it the other day, Popakware, it's like they
think they're civil rights leaders because they refuse to wear masks. They act like they're civil rights leaders
by providing disinformation to the public
about vaccinations and telling people not to be vaxed.
At the end of the day, one of the most conservative positions
out there, and we talked about this before the show,
should be to get vaccinated to conserve
your life and to conserve the lives of others in a party that is about personal responsibility.
This is the most personally irresponsible decisions people could be making by killing themselves.
And I tweeted out this photo last night, Pope, and To me, it made sense, but I guess to others,
because my brother's like,
what the hell did you just tweet out?
I tweeted out a photo of just a room
that looked like it was a room of like a hoarder.
It looked like a room of filth and disgust.
And I, the point of it was, and I wrote GQP,
and then I did like those letters that are like uppercase and lower
case, which is like, give me my freedom. And it's like at the end of the day, if that's
how you want to live privately in your home, the government shouldn't encroach into your
home until and unless that becomes the health hazard to the homes around it.
But you have the right to live how you want to live privately.
But when you start stepping into public spaces,
when you're talking about going into cruise ships,
the reason we have regulations,
whether it's speed limits, whether it's wearing seat belts,
whether it's just not doing things
that are incredibly dangerous and harmful to
others in public.
You don't have the right to urinate and take shits in public.
It's disgusting.
We have laws against that, you know, and you can't fight for your free, you know, you
have the freedom to do how you want to live publicly, but in private, but in these public
spaces, you don't.
So that's to me is what this is about. Yeah, there in private, but in these public spaces, you don't. So that
to me is what this is about. Yeah, there's two, I agree with you. There's two competing principles
there. Your personal liberty stops at the edge of my public health crisis. And you don't have,
and that's one, the second is there are just things that you and I in this society can do
completely autonomously and by ourselves. There are, but there are things that we cannot do by ourselves.
We cannot defend this country and operate a defense policy.
We cannot run an economy by ourselves.
We can't, most of us, unless you live in a single family
house, we have to live with other people.
I live in a high rise in Manhattan.
I can't just be by myself in a condo unit
because that's not how New York works.
So there are just things collectively
that as a collective, we have to do together.
And there's a social contract that's supposed to go on
among all of us.
It's not the declaration of independence.
It's not the Constitution.
It's not the Bill of Rights.
It's a social contract that says you can do what you want until you harm someone else.
And when we're in the middle of a public health crisis, you're not allowed to do certain
things that get other people ill or kill them.
And that's where it ends and that's patriotism.
And the Republicans have completely looked in they're blind allegiance to Trump,
and to try to get reelected again.
They have lost their way.
Their gyroscope is completely cracked
as to the intersection of personal liberty
and the social contract.
They've lost it.
They are lost as a party.
And look, one thing among many that Biden is doing properly,
besides being the adult in the room,
is he's trying to restore the social contract
that exists between us.
You know, I saw, you saw this photo of the hoarder.
I saw photos about a month or two ago of America in 1917
during the Spanish flu of US baseball players, Yankees and others,
wearing masks that look almost identical to the ones we're wearing today,
playing baseball, and you did that.
You got a polio vaccine because you were a patriot.
You got a small box, smallpox vaccine
because you were a patriot.
You would not kill your children
when they go to public school and hopefully private school
because you're a patriot and you're a contributor
to the social contract.
How this got distorted into a political fight about the Delta variant is just mind-boggling.
It's just a party that's lost its way.
Absolutely.
And we might as well talk now about while we're on the topic, the district court decision relating to the lawsuit filed by certain Indiana university
students against the state university.
It's the premier state university in Indiana's decision
to require as a point of enrollment that its students
be vaccinated.
It was interesting, Pope, I went to, I was fortunate
enough to go to a Phoenix Suns playoff game. They ended up losing to the Milwaukee Bucks and it
was an incredible NBA finals and NBA series, but you had to present your vaccine card and show that
you were vaccinated. They did a swab, which lasted about 10 minutes,
and then you could watch the game. And you had to wear a mask. Did I want to do all of those things?
No, but did I want to make sure I could watch it and be happy and be healthy and be safe and take
20 minutes of my day to make sure that I was protecting myself and protecting others.
Sure.
And so literally what we're talking about here is minimally inconvenient in the sense of
presenting your Vax card.
I mean, it's getting a vaccine at some point in time before you enroll in this public
university because in the accurate wisdom of the university's leadership, when you go into these public spaces
and these big lecture halls, they want to make sure that you're not getting your fellow students
sick. That's it. Yeah. Yeah. This case is amazing. So this is class
that versus the Board of Trustees of Indiana University. And you have eight students,
I guess their parents are behind it, who have decided
they don't want to get mandatory vaccinated and they're claiming that under the US Constitution's
14th Amendment, which deals with due process, that they have the freedom to be free of unwanted
medical treatment. But this is a public health crisis and we are now beyond what I'm now going to refer to as, I read it on Facebook.
We are now beyond that as a rationale for not getting vaccinated or bringing these kind
of lawsuits.
That you read it on Facebook, that you think, and I'm not making this up, it's in the
lawsuit, that you may get acne from taking the inoculation, the vaccination, is not a proper grounds
under our constitution, and the balance
that is weighed by a judge in a public health crisis
versus the 14th Amendment and constitutional rights
over your body, over your liberty.
That's not going to work anymore.
You're gonna have to come up with science.
You can't just say, well, young people
contracted disease at a lower rate,
so why are we vaccinated?
That's not good enough.
We're two years almost into this pandemic,
a pandemic that would have been crushed already
had we reached herd immunity in 70% plus vaccination.
We have a huge population of people in this country,
in the tens of millions who are not vaccinated,
primarily in red states, like Indiana.
And the other interesting thing about the decision,
in which the judge, who was a Trump appointee, okay?
So again, crossing political lines here,
common sense and constitutional analysis, the judge
said, look, I understand that there is a certain amount of body autonomy that comes with the
Constitution, the penumbra of rights, and the 14th Amendment.
I get it, but there is a public health crisis and a public interest that outweighs what
you read on Facebook.
I mean, that's what the 100 page decision basically says
and rejecting it.
And it's great.
I don't know what's gonna happen when they take it up
to the appropriate appellate court
and I'm assuming somebody will.
But for the very first decision to come out of a federal court
from a Trump appointee,
finding that mandatory vaccination,
which is now sweeping the country
in terms of federal government and even private
employers to have it come out in favor of the ability to mandate vaccination is a very good thing.
One oddity in the case though you should know because in the end is one of those states that has
outlawed the ability of an institution to ask for proof of vaccination,
either by passport or otherwise, sort of like Florida. Indiana can require based on this this
new law can require their students to get fully vaccinated, but they can't ask for proof that
it's happened. So it's going to be on the honor system. That is a very fascinating caveat, which in many ways kind of
swallows the rule, you know, it kind of swallows the mandate
and it is on the honor system. But it is odd. And we're going
to see this again and again, the politicization of a public health crisis where the conservative angle should naturally be go get vaccinated.
If that's truly what they believe as conservatives. And so it's just, it shows you that this is no longer a
conservative party, but just a whack job death cult. And when Sam Yebri joins the podcast
in a bit, I want to know his approach about mandatory vaccinations in LA because we are
going to see, this is going to be the trend, Pope, I'm right. Like I think at some point
people already having enough of this, you know, these idiot, unvaccinated people, you
know, who are fucking up just our
ability to go out and be safe and people who are vaccinated. You know, I just think that
we're going to start seeing more and more institutions requiring vaccination cars and
mandatory vaccinations and laws being passed. And these idiot wacko idiot GQ peers, pretending
that their rights are being infringed upon because they have to get a shot in their
arm that's going to save their life.
So just on that, I just read a very good article yesterday.
We're now moving in the pendulum.
We're now moving from pretty please once you get vaccinated and now rapidly into, we'll
give you $100 if you get vaccinated, but the new things that the companies are doing,
which we're all being rolled out almost at the same time is, okay, you don't want to get vaccinated, but the new things that the companies are doing, which we're all
being rolled out almost at the same time is, okay, you don't want to get vaccinated, we're
going to make it hard on you. You have to wear a mask and not one of these cloth masks.
You've got to wear one of those uncomfortable K95 or N95 masks. You've got to get tested
weekly. You have to pay for it. And if you get COVID, notwithstanding that, and you're out, this is interesting.
Some of the companies are saying,
those are lost wages that we're not gonna compensate before.
So we've moved from pretty please,
do the right thing, go out and get vaccinated,
to if okay, idiot, if you don't do it,
and you're now infecting everyone,
and impacting our business model,
you're now gonna pay, you're no longer gonna be a free loader and a free rider in the system.
You're going to pay the consequences.
And as you let Sam in, we should mention the group that has or the organization
that has one of the strictest policies and requires, you know,
vaccination passports is none other than Fox news that requires these vaccination passports.
And we are joined by Sam Yebri. Sam, am I saying your last name correct?
You are. I've been Sam Yebri. Yeah, give me two Michael.
As long as someone named my cellist can pronounce the last name right, I'm very sensitive to the pronunciation. Sam, welcome to the Midas touch
legal AF podcast. Popak has graced us with his presence. Popak took a four month vacation.
And so he showed up today, finally after all that time, as we mentioned. Sam, as a litigator
and as a civil rights lawyer, what was the longest vacation you've taken
of consecutive days in the past decade?
So, usually has to do with the birth of one of our children.
We have four kids on the age of eight.
So we've taken some baby moons, maybe a week with an extra weekend, so nine days with
my wife, you know, begging us. uh, when we formed the law firm of the every my cellist in
pro-pok, you will have four weeks paid vacation. You can take anything
consecutively. I'll be in charge of administrating that policy.
If we could be so lucky to have Sam, you know, the first thing I, when Sam told me
that he was going to be running
for city council is I said, you the craziest person in the world, you've got a successful law
practice. Sam is a distinguished civil rights lawyer. He takes on a handful of cases, but does an
incredible job at them and has developed a reputation in the community where lots of other lawyers
just over the past few years have been like, you got to meet Sam.
This guy knows that a handle
his cases, he crushes him and
he's developed this incredible
reputation.
But Sam, you're running for
city council.
You're a young guy.
What is going through your
mind to leave a successful
practice to do this?
You sound like my parents.
They say, are you Michigan?
Are you crazy to give up your
practice? You have four little kids amounts to feed? But it's really the, you know, I love,
I always start off by saying how much I love Los Angeles. It's a phrase we don't hear often
anymore, especially those of us who've lived here for a long time have seen it can degrade. But
I just have this desire to give back I came here as a refugee from Iran at the age of one and really lived the American dream
And have a debt to to repay this incredible city
I think all of us can agree our city has a lot of challenges a lot of problems
And it's not going to get better with the same old folks in charge and I want to be a part of the solution
I really want to tackle these problems and every day I see people dying on the streets from homelessness or our streets
Not being clean and not being safe
and solutions not being provided.
My heart breaks.
I want to turn the city around.
And I think a lot of good people share that passion
and it's really exciting to talk to people
who want to help and chip in.
And Sam, that's what I want to talk about right now,
which is the homelessness epidemic.
I mean, it's probably as bad in LA
as it is anywhere in the country.
I just had a friend come in from Canada.
And he wanted to see all, first of all,
he thought that I like hangout places.
And I had to make it very clear that I don't do things.
So he thought, because I'm a lawyer in the entertainment sector
that I like go to all of these restaurants like Nobu and Mr. Cha,
I'm like, I've never been to any of these restaurants.
You wanna go to Tony's pizza on the corner.
I'd be happy to.
So I brought him though to some of those restaurants
just to show them that like,
you know, to have some credibility and keep them as a client.
But I said to him, I said under this condition,
I wanna drive you through Skid Row.
I wanna drive you through real LA.
So you truly have an understanding
of what LA looks like. It's as bad here as it is anywhere. But this is an issue confronting
cities. I was just in Chicago, the violence, the homelessness there right outside in downtown
was horrible. But how do we as progressive as Democrats, as people who believe
with this kind heart that want to help people,
how do we remain compassionate towards the plight
of individuals, but also make sure our streets are safe
and keep things in good conditions,
because we get hit hard on that by the GQP
and these conservatives,
and we don't usually have great answers. Right. So I'm glad you mentioned the fact that your friend was visiting because
when someone asks you to take you to a town around Los Angeles, it's a wake up call.
I think we're a lot of us grown numb to what we're seeing around and we don't we avoid places
like Skid Row, right or Venice Beach. And that's really where the suffering is. So I start
up by saying we have a duty to people who don't have a home, right?
I think that housing and shelter are right
and we have to do everything we can
as a government to provide alternatives
to sleeping on a park bench on the streets
or on the beach, right?
With that also said, there's Ornans past last week,
which really set out clearly that there are certain places
where people cannot sleep, whether it's parks,
next to schools, next to fire hydrants,
there's certain basic rules that any first world city
needs to employ.
So you have to balance both of those competing interests.
Homelessness is on one hand, a massive poverty,
economic disparity, affordability of rent crisis.
We have to get serious about the other side of it,
which is mental health and addiction. It's a really a crisis that unless we tackle that side of it,
it's not going to get any any better. And the city tends to focus on the housing side of things,
or building brand new construction, housing for those who are unhoused. In a very expensive
cumbersome slow wave scene statistics, $5,600, $700 per unit.
Well, every day, five people who are unhoused
are dying on the street.
That's irresponsible for us to take that sort of slow
cumbersome approach that has no urgency.
When there are other models that we can use
to get people into hotels and hotels,
get them into tiny houses, modular housing.
And there's the, I think the best work being done
are these nonprofits that are on the ground,
providing services and care and offering treatments.
Some of the bigger ones, like Union Rescue Mission
or small ones that have shared housing models,
like Alexandria House or Friendly House,
there's things that I think money should be devoted
to those nonprofits that can get out there
and help people.
Every life saved is really critical.
And I think government just we've not shown the urgency.
And you're right, we're getting hit as Democrats, right?
It's worse in blue cities, right?
And what I always say to my fellow Democrats,
is that I don't think it's progressive
to let people wither away and die on the streets.
We have to change our mental health laws right now,
unless someone is an imminent threat to themselves or someone else or or quote, gravely disabled, they can't get the help
that they need. And some of us in the party say that, you know, we should not be changing
those rules because there's civil rights and privacy and civil liberty issues here and
let people make decisions how they want to live their life. But I don't think they can
make those decisions if they have severe mental health and addiction issues. And that's
a big part of it. This is get serious about that aspect of it.
Sam, I think you're right on the money when you're not treating homelessness as a monolithic issue
of people who just don't have housing because people who don't live in urban environments, I live
in Manhattan and so I pass it every day. I live right by Central Park so I pass it every day,
I live right by Central Park, so I pass it every day, the issue, the problem.
And you can't treat it as just, there's two sides of it.
There are people who clearly have been priced out
of a marketplace, and would like to afford housing,
and are trying to make a living wage, but can't,
and are on the street.
That's one group, or in shelters or other things.
But there are good tools for those folks.
Rent subsidies and building more affordable housing,
helping them with eviction protections,
so they don't get them awfully evicted.
And there's tools there that work with.
But the people that I think you have to address
in a different way are the people that the average tourist
and local person passes at the entrance
of Grand Central Station,
Port Authority bus terminal, Penn Station, Central Park,
and those people are suffering
because you can tell from observation
from severe mental health and or drug addiction problems.
And they deserve housing as well.
Now, if you don't address, as you said,
the underlying mental health issue, putting them into a home is one thing. Having them have the ability and the survival
skills and desire to stay in that home is another, because if you talk to some of them,
and I have, they'll tell you, in their own way, they prefer to live on the streets. And we have to address that as well.
And I think your approach is the first step.
I think that's right. And what I often say is housing and shelter is necessary, but
it's not sufficient. And we can't build our way out of this crisis alone, unless we're
building the wraparound services and the mental health care in the city of LA, in the county of LA for 10 and a half million people,
other than jail beds and ER beds. For someone who has a mental health breakdown or addiction
breakdown, they're 81 residential psych beds for someone to get outpatient treatment from the
county. If you don't have insurance, if you don't have other places to go, that's shocking.
And it's, what's really happened to safety net
for people who have those issues,
has really been ripped apart,
and we have to put a piece of back together.
And there's a study that came out last week
that the leading cause of homelessness among women
is domestic violence.
And then those women need different type of responses
to falling to homelessness.
They, like you said, it's not monolithic.
You can't love those folks in everyone else
who's either sleeping in a car because they got evicted
or because they have an addiction to an opioid, right?
There's really a really unique personalized care
that's in treatment that needs to happen.
And I think the nonprofits need to come in
and I want to empower them to do this work.
And Sam, Democrats are leading, though,
in this space of public safety and public health,
when it comes to vaccinations. The way we're encouraging vaccinations in public spaces,
I think we can be, unless I'm mistaken here, I think we can be bold also in framing homeless this as a public safety and health issue that does require
it to be addressed, you know, in a similar matter as, hey, we don't want unvaccinated in public spaces
to harm others. Similarly, you know, we want to make sure for everyone's protection that we have
robust support for homeless and non-homeless alike in these
spaces. I think that's right. In Los Angeles and in California, Democrats were really innovative
in coming out with immediate responses to make sure folks that were homeless didn't contract and
spread the COVID-19, right? There were parks were utilized, and shelters were set up quickly,
and trailers were presented,
and people understood that they'll give up
some of their public space for the short term,
so that folks who are in-house can have a place to go
during the pandemic.
But now the challenge is, what do we do long term, right?
We can't permanently give up our public space
and our beaches and our parks and rec centers,
and we have to build a forebohousing faster and cheaper, and I think Democrats and I'm is we get in our own way by having and rec centers. And we have to build a affordable housing faster
and cheaper and I think Democrats and I'm going to get
in our own way by having a whole lot of rules,
whether it's ADA or labor, environmental
that make it really difficult to build supportive housing,
to build shelters and build affordable housing.
I think we need a little more common sense
and reform on how to do this.
And this is where the local government
can make a huge difference.
And Sam, we just talked about before bringing you on
a district court judge upholding a
Indiana universities decision to require vaccinations for enrollment.
That specific judge was actually a Trump appointee who on balancing the interest said we have
to focus on the safety of our students, but I do understand the civil rights
aspects of it, but when you step into this public space and you can infect others, we have to be
cognizant of those public health concerns. What are your views regarding mandatory vaccinations
in public and private spaces in Los Angeles.
Yeah, so I was really pleased to see that Governor Newsom
and now some city council members and council advisors
have called for the either mandatory vaccination
of all city, county and state employees
have actually called that call for that several weeks ago
as a candidate or in lieu of mandatory vaccinations weekly testing.
Now, L.A. USD is going down that path as well.
It's a competing balance.
I think if the fall of the science, I'm someone who thinks that giving up some minor
freedoms like masks is a small ask when we're talking about potentially saving lives,
saving your neighbor's lives, if you put in that context.
Vaccinations, I understand there could be some reasons
like folks don't wanna do it.
And I do have some concerns about making them
requiring it until it has, there's full approval
to federal government.
Once that happens, then it could be treated
like any other vaccine, right?
When any of our kids go to a public school
or things like that.
So I think we gotta continue to follow signs
and open to see what the federal government does.
And I think at the minimum,
large public gatherings, government employees,
major public space issues should be regulated in a way,
whether it's vaccine, mandatory testing,
mandatory masks, things like that.
Do you think downtown LA is gonna make a comeback?
I do, I'm bullish. Maybe I'm either naive or overly optimistic about the future of LA. I think once we get out of this pandemic and people kind of remember what LA is and can
be, they're doing a bright future. So we're finally going the way of Michael of Manhattan
with some real public transportation in the next six years on the West Side of Los Angeles,
the district that I'm hoping to represent fifth council district.
There's going to be a subway coming to Beverly Hills, Century City, Westwood Village, and
the VA, if you know that part of town, for the first time ever, and it's going to get
linked up to LAX and Hollywood and to downtown to Santa Monica.
Thousands of people are going to be hopefully housing near transit with bike lanes so that we can actually use those
Those stations and then one thing the mayor Garcetti did is we have the Olympics in the world cup coming
We need to put our best foot forward and there's sort of this urgency not only because of the crisis everywhere with homelessness and crime and other issues we're facing
That that as a minimal forces to step up our game, and I think we will
Well Sam, I want to applaud you for taking the step
to run for city council.
Frankly, at huge risk of leaving a very lucrative,
very prosperous civil rights practice that you have.
And you know, me and the brothers and might as touch
and popock were somewhat accidental activists. We weren't really talking about politics until politics truly encroached into our lives in a way that felt like life or death.
And I know that's why you're doing this and making these sacrifices. And I think the city state and I think in the future nation will be better off for it.
state and I think in the future nation will be better off for it. You can find Sam at Sam4LA.com. That's S-A-M-F-O-R-L-A.com. Sam, you have a great time. Thank you so much for
joining the mind, especially, Gilaia. This is my pleasure. Thank you, Ben. It's got
a opportunity. Michael Bimini at the Spirit Converse. Good luck, Sam. We'll follow you.
Appreciate it. Thank you, by now. That was Sam Yebri joining the Midas Touch Legal AF podcast.
Then I like that he was up front about the vaccination issues and where, you know, where
he stood on it.
You know, I think it's good to see.
He really is making it like, you know, he's
taking a pay cut that's probably 10x of what he's making to run for city council. And so I do applaud
him for that and we need people like that who are willing to, you know, sacrifice a lot to
represent the people. I want to talk about another person who's
ostensibly done that, who we've talked about before.
And we'll talk about two different
activities that he's taken.
Now, Merrick Garland, who oversees the Justice Department.
First, Popo, let's talk about the
declination by the Justice Department to
represent Congressmember Mo Brooks, one of the inciters of the insurrection.
Mo Brooks, Donald Trump, all these cronies tried to avail themselves of whether it's congressional privilege, executive privilege, all of these immunities trying to have the justice department to either indemnify them,
represent them,
bail them out of these civil lawsuits that they're in.
And frankly, with the January 6th commission to prevent them from testifying
before the January 6th commission in a memo that was widely reported,
the justice department said,
inciting an insurrection, you do not have the
privilege of being a government employee, you're not in the course and scope. And this differs,
though, Popoq, from other moves where we were a bit critical of the Justice Department, the Justice
Department recognizing executive privilege with respect to the Lafayette protesters and Trump and the DOJ,
the old DOJ and Trump's DOJ attacking peaceful protesters.
And the defamation case that they step the jail.
And EG Carol.
So what's going on here, Pope?
Yeah, this is really interesting.
I mean, the ultimate say about whether Mo Brooks is going to be substituted out as a defendant because he was
a federal employee within the course and scope of his duties and substituted in would be
the U.S. government, which is what he's trying to do.
We've talked about indemnification on various other episodes, but here it goes beyond
that.
If he were successful,
and if he is ultimately successful with the judge, he's already failed at the Department of Justice
Level in getting himself out of the case, the US government would come into the case as the defendant
and defend themselves, if you will, because their federal employee, Mo Brooks, at the January 6th assembly that took place yards
from the Capitol, that Trump and others,
including Giuliani, and in this case, Mo Brooks,
incited the whip to up and fermented the participants
to march and charge and attack the participants to march and charge
and attack the capital.
And when Mo Brooks stands in front of a group
that's already at a fevered pitch
and says to them, we're gonna kick ass
and we're gonna take names
and then point some in the direction of the capital
and Trump does the same thing and says,
I'll meet you there as he walks off
in the opposite direction of the White House.
And these followers, these cultists, these idiots, these insurrectionists take that at face
value and charge the Capitol.
We've now all heard the heartbreaking and heart piercing testimony of the Capitol police
of what happened that day.
So Mo Brooks shows up at this rally.
He's wearing apparently body armor,
which came out later.
The rally is paid for by a Trump not a pack,
like might as touch, but a Trump supported not for profit,
who pays for the whole thing.
And he says, oh no, but I was a federal employee.
I'm a congressman from Alabama.
You have to represent me and take me out of the case
and let the US government be the defendant.
And the first step in that process
is going to the Department of Justice
and asking for us what's called the certification
under federal rules and the DOJ manual
that allows him to step out of the case, the government
to step in.
They took one look at it and they said, okay,
we're gonna make this easy on you.
Electioneering and campaigning,
which is what you were doing,
is not part of your official federal duties.
It's what you do to get reelected.
It's what you do to curry favor with Trump
and for whatever reasons,
but it's not something you did as a Congress person.
And therefore, you're outside the scope of your duties
because you were campaigning or electioneering and therefore we're not, you're outside the scope of your duties because you are campaigning
or electioneering and therefore we're not going to step in and substitute in for you as
a defendant.
Now, that ultimate decision is still with Judge Mata, who is a Obama appointee, a meat
to Mata in a VC circuit, but now that the DOJ has said we're not certifying it, it
will be next to impossible for Mo Brooks to convince the sitting federal judge that the
DOJ was wrong and he was actually acting as a sitting congressperson at the time he told
people to basically attack the Capitol.
Marik Garland is a very smart individual. He was a DC circuit judge. When you rise through those ranks as a
Democrat appointee, it's based on a meritocracy, unlike Trump, who is picking completely unqualified
individuals to be judges. And so, Merrick Garland, you know, should have been a Supreme Court justice. He was, of course, held up by Mitch McConnell, who created some bizarro interpretation
that in the last term of Obama, Obama couldn't appoint somebody and prevented Merrick Garland
from being appointed and then swiftly appointed a justice within what seven days
after Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
And within 38 days left in the term.
They can't win.
And Jamie Coney very.
Because there's no intellectual consistency there.
But there is intellectual consistency.
If you look at the decisions
Merrick Garland's made and you look at the E. Jean Carroll
defamation case, the Lafayette square case, and this most recent Mo Brooks decision.
And you can distinguish them.
And I think that Merrick Garland is anticipating the challenge.
And he's ready to go into cases where he's defended the farest edges of executive privilege and government
privilege. The E. Jean Carroll defamation case, obviously a sexual assault is not within the
course and scope. The defamation case relates to a question where Trump was accused and rightfully
so of defaming an individual, but it was during a presidential press conference.
And so he was under the draping of being a president.
Now, he's a complete psychopath disgusting,
fucked up person who brought such shame on the presidency,
but nonetheless, he was acting in the capacity of a president answering
question. And to your point, let's just throw it up, throw it back at you. If he had made those
statements, Trump not at an official press conference, but at one of his rallies, what do you think
Garland would have done? He would have done exactly what he did with Mo Brooks here. He would have said that's not in the course in scope. And, and, and Merrick Garland is protecting though, future
lawsuits against a president for misspeaking as presidents may not as Donald Trump's would
in the future, but protecting a president who may just say something wrong and then get
sued for it. And then someone point to that decision in the E. Jean Carroll case as precedent to sue in the future, whether it's Biden or
a future president. American Ireland may be giving a little bit too much credit to the type of
credible people who will be presidents, but we hope we don't have a Trump again. And similarly,
Lafayette Square, while attacking peaceful protesters was shameful and horrific. On the forest reaches,
it could be viewed as a presidential act of dealing with defense and protest and outside the
White House and it happened on or around the grounds of the White House. And so do I think that
that should receive the protection? No, um, of executive privilege, but do I see the argument
why on the forest edges?
You would give it executive privilege, yes.
But in this case with Mo Brooks, you draw the distinction.
Look, we've recognized two cases
that were outrageous examples,
but that's as far as we're gonna push it.
This Mo Brooks clearly falls into campaigning.
And by the way, the message here when you read the memo and says, or are there federal
officials, which clearly meant Trump and Trump's inner circle and basically gave the January
six commission card blanche to say, go subpoena, go subpoena Trump.
I think they're going to.
By the way, I agree with you.
I, when mo Brooks was dodging
service of process, because this starts with the Eric
Swalwell and others lawsuit about the insurrection. When
Mo Brooks was literally dodging service at his house, where
the process server had a sneak in and serve the wife who
happened to be in the house, was he acting within the
corsets, scoping finger congress within the course of scope of being a
Congressperson? Or was he just being a scummy guy that didn't want to get served with a lawsuit
that he knew was coming? I think he was acting as a scummy person. I didn't know the lawsuit was
coming. And doubling down now, a scummy person who was avoiding a lawsuit where he was acting outside
the course and scope of his congressional duties to
incite an insurrection. Another major Merrick Garland decision was sending the message loud and
clear within the DOJ, stop going after reporters, stop trying to probe and pry into who their sources are. Of course, Merrick Arland doesn't have that as a blanket rule. If the reporter is engaged in illegal
and unlawful conduct or in the commission of a crime, the government can have its duty to
investigate criminal conduct. But the idea here is under the Trump administration, there was
an enemies list that was created that made the Nixon's enemy list pal in comparison and Trump would go after and subpoena and seek the records of reporters and their sources to try to out people and create very dangerous situations where you could put the sources life in peril.
Yeah, there's things to unpack here.
One, just to put a little bit of a real life framework to this.
The committee to protect journalists,
which is an online database, estimates that in 2020,
30 worldwide journalists were killed in retaliation
for their reporting at 11 so far in 2021. it is a dangerous occupation to be a journalist.
I know the Republicans don't feel that way because the journalists have been called the
enemy of the people. They're not. They're the ones trying to kill them.
Right. They're the opposite. They're the opposite of the enemy of the people.
They were empowered by our founding fathers to be the protectors of our democracy
in the free
exercise of First Amendment right and the freedom of press. All those things that were denied to our
founders and colonists by King George. And it starts really from our cradle of civilization and
and democracy. So it's really offensive and unpatriotic to go after journalists. Having said that,
So it's really offensive and unpatriotic to go after journalists. Having said that, I applaud and I know you do too, Merrick Arland's decision to pass a
federal DOJ guideline and regulation that will prevent seizing journalists records during
what's called a leak investigation.
So there's a leak of confidential information usually at the White House or at a department, and that information
makes its way into the press in order to get to the bottom of it, sometimes the government
refers to as a mole hunt, M-O-L-E hunt, comes from spy novels, and in order to do a mole hunt,
you got to figure out how the leak happened, so you naturally would love to talk to the journalist
who may have the confidential informant that gave them the information, but you have to balance the need to protect confidential information and national
security secrets against the First Amendment right and the Freedom of Press. And of course,
the Trump administration didn't balance those things, and they just went after journalists and
secretly obtained their iPhone records and other records to try to find
out, in this case, you know, who leaked information about the Russian investigation. It's just
wrong. But the, that's on one level. One level is good. We've got a Department of Justice
Official, the Attorney General of the United States that has a backbone, a spine, and ethics
and has passed this new regulation. But what we really
need passed while Biden has the majority in Congress is legislation at the congressional level
that permanently protects journalists from this type of thing. Because if Biden loses,
or he's out, and Garland's gone, the next attorney general, and if he's a stooge like bar was under Trump,
they could change the policy. So, rather than having this flip-flop policy,
there is right now being considered in Congress what's called, I'll use the acronym,
pressa, which is the Protects Reporters from Exploitve State Spying Act. I think it's a very cumbersome name. I think they just
wanted the acronym, but it is a permanent fix to this problem of journalists who operate in the
gray area all day long and have their own constitutional rights violated and potentially more in terms
of retaliation against them by a crazy out there with a weapon. You know, the cumbersome name,
you see what they were trying to do
because protecting private enterprise
from intrusion by governmental actors
should be a conservative point of view,
but it isn't now.
Those new conservative parties isn't conservative.
We don't call them conservative.
They're GQP wackos who are out there calling
the press the enemy of the people.
So that name you gave is cumbersome because my own opinion
is they are trying to appeal to some group of Republicans
who may still favor limited government, which is not what the GQP favors.
Anymore, hoping to get some votes. And at the end of the day, in a world where the GQP supports
an insurrection, and the insurrection is exposed as an insurrection by the media who hold people to account.
The GQP is very fearful of the media.
Shit, the GQP wouldn't even pass a resolution to support the Capitol police officers.
So the idea that they're going to come along and support this, that could hold them accountable. I won't hold my breath, but I am glad this
is a step in the right direction. And Popoq, finally, I want to conclude by talking about
a case where Trump lost in court, a big setback, but it really hasn't gotten a ton of headlines
in a week that's been filled with what's
gone on in the January 6th Commission.
And rightfully so.
But how's this for a headline, Popeyes and courthouse news service?
No arbitration for Trump in pyramid scheme class action.
The second circuit this week, advanced a suit over the former president's endorsement of
a multi-level marketing pyramid scheme. We're only select few of the top reprofits off the
backs of lower tier cogs. Now, I remember, and you may remember Popeye, I think I was on
an airplane, you know, and you would go through some of these pages and like on those random corny like airport magazines, you would see like Trump endorsing just like some of this random shit and go attend this seminar.
And it's basically these multi level marketing schemes, you know, have people pay tens of thousands of dollars to attend seminars and then they bring their friends in and their friends bring their friends in and they're supposed to be compensated.
But basically it's all a gigantic Ponzi scheme. And of course, Donald Trump before he ran for president of the United States and was elevated by idiotic,
idiotic, idiocracy, cultist party was running pyramid schemes. He has that distinct, he will be one of one in history as being a president
before elected who ran pyramid Ponzi schemes. And on that basis was elected. But in this
specific case, Trump was sued for aiding and abetting the pyramid scheme. Trump cited
an arbitration agreement between the Ponzi scheme company and the individuals that the Ponzi
scheme contracted with.
So Trump's argument to break it down basically was, this was my company, like he leaned into
it.
In other words, and he said, they should have viewed this pyramid scheme.
That's a known pyramid scheme.
As though I was one with them so that there can't be a class action.
This should be compelled into arbitration and not go before the court.
It's strategically stupid.
It's publicly stupid.
It's legally stupid.
And the second court agreed with my assessment, at least on it being legally stupid because
this class action for fraud will proceed against Donald Trump and his kids.
And I'm just looking at this photo right now. And I just tell everybody just to Google this,
no arbitration for Trump in pyramid scheme class.
This photo of him with like the other pyramid schemers and Photoshopped Malania is literally both hilarious and
puke inducing at the same time.
Popok, we got a few minutes left on the show.
What's going on on this one?
All right.
I like this case, too.
This is another case by a friend of mine here, Robbie Kaplan, same lawyer for Gene Carroll.
She's been making a cottage industry out of going after Trump civilly and otherwise.
And this one's interesting.
You and I have talked about arbitration before.
In order for him, in order for Trump and his children, because they're all been sued individually,
the unique strategic decision that good lawyers made, and I'm going to contrast it with bad
loyering by the Trump lawyers in this case. The good lawyers, the smart lawyers decided not to sue ACN, the pyramid scheme company,
but all who had an arbitration provision that would have put them into arbitration.
But only sue Trump and the children under an aiding and abetting and racketeering and fraud
and California unfair trade practices case in order to avoid arbitration.
This is not a case you want to take to arbitration if you're a plaintiffs lawyer like you and I are on occasion.
It's a case you want to take to a trial and you want to be able to have a jury and you
want to have damages and discovery and depositions.
That's why you want to try to get your way out of arbitration if you can.
So they made the strategic decision not even to sue ACN.
Trump said, well, wait a minute.
There were, even though I was a spokesperson and I got paid millions of dollars, I should
get the benefit of the arbitration provision that's in the ACN agreement with its operators.
And operators are people that bought in for thousands of dollars in order to be able
to sell telephone service and all this other BS, which is all like you hold a multi-level marketing.
It's all, as you said, a Ponzi scheme. It's all pyramid scheme. And none of them made
any money. The only people that made money was ACN and Trump and his family with endorsement
fees. And Trump said, I get to use that agreement. Now, normally under arbitration agreements,
which are a creature of contract, you don't get the benefit of being able to use an arbitration agreements, which are a creature of contract, you don't get the benefit of being able to use an arbitration provision unless you are a
Signatory, you sign the contract that has the arbitration provision in it. He did not sign the contract that has the arbitration provision in it. So we had a go to a default argument, which is an argument under what you and I call equitable a stop-all, which says, even though I didn't sign the contract, under equity and under certain other conduct
between ACN and me, the other parties, right,
the plaintiffs should have known
that I was gonna ultimately use the arbitration provision.
And the second circuit took a look at it
and said, let me get this straight.
You're doing things outside as an endorser,
which is secret.
No one really knows that you're getting paid these millions of dollars.
That's the foundation of the lawsuit.
But at the same time, you're arguing that the people who were victimized by your Ponzi
scheme should have known that not only were you in bed with ACN, but that you would be
that you were going to be using their arbitration provision one day.
No way.
Okay.
Case dismissed. Lower court decision affirmed,
and you're gonna have a trial, Mr. Trump,
with no executive privilege, and your children seeking
millions and millions of damages.
And while he can try to take a Supreme Court appeal,
my God, it's a dead loser,
and he's gonna be in deposition in that case within the
next six months.
We talk a lot about the podcast, which is, you know, loyering is about the law, but it's
also about strategizing.
And here, this didn't really make any sense to me, Popok, because if I'm representing Trump, I want to basically make the argument,
and it disgusts me to say this, but he did the wrong thing so I can give what the right argument was,
is that the celebrity apprentice was, you know, gave a light endorsement to this thing.
Nobody could have associated that I was integrally involved in the operations.
This was just kind of almost parody of,
of, you know, an Iowa distance.
If I was him and his lawyer,
I would distance from the entity,
but his tact to try to get this into an arbitration
was to say, no, no, we're the same.
We're basically the same company.
We're like them. And he, and the victim should have known it. And the victim should have known we were the same. The victim should no, we're the same. We're basically the same company. We're like them.
And he, and the victim should know we were the same.
The victim should have known we were the same.
We're basically the Ponzi scheme company.
And so it was just that it's strategically
a blender, legally a blender, but, but frankly,
you know, the right and just results concluded there.
Let me give you one more inside baseball.
Talk about blundering to contrast the plane of lawyers
and their great strategy of how they put the case together.
The Trump lawyers, this should come as no shock to our listeners
because the Trump lawyers, whether it's at the election
law cases or these cases, are always making mistakes.
They made another mistake in the lower court
before they went to appeal.
They did not raise below. They did not mistake in the lower court before they went to appeal. They did not raise
below. They did not raise at the trial level. The argument that the arbitrator should decide the
issue of whether these claims should be arbitrable. There's a whole body of law in arbitration under
the Federal Arbitration Act that say what things need to be decided at the trial court level or the
appeal level. And what actually has to be decided
by the very arbitrator that some party is claiming
they should be in front of.
And there is an argument to be made,
I'm not sure it was that strong,
that the arbitrator should have been the one
to make this decision, not the trial, not the judge.
And the second circuit said,
that was an interesting argument,
but it's one that you needed to have made
at the trial court level before the appeal,
and you didn't do it, so you've waved the argument.
So you've got tr... it's like a clown car again of Trump lawyers who can't even do the fundamental
things in a court, which is preserve issues for appeal. And I'll give one more inside baseball,
and then leave our viewers and listeners with this. Just one thing I've noticed, Popak, as an overall trend
over the past 18 months.
These arbitration clauses were generally a species
of corporations who wanted arbitration clauses in there,
believing that that would defeat and destroy class actions.
It would prevent costly litigations
across the board now, when I deal with companies,
just generally, essentially all of them,
the trend that I'm seeing, and on my side,
when I represent companies and I'm talking in-house.
So across the board, what we're seeing is a lot less arbitration provisions being built
in because plaintiffs' lawyers are starting to understand that you can bring lots of arbitrations
or that arbitrations can end up actually being significantly, not a little bit, significantly
more expensive for the corporate defendant who often has to bear the full costs of the arbitration than it is for the plaintiff, but Pope, I just want to let you know that I am glad you are back from vacation, our listeners are glad to be listening to the Polpocchi in dialect. They missed you. I missed you. I am glad to have
you back. We all wanted to wish you a great vacation, but had fun on this episode and look forward
to next week's and the week after that and truly continuing to grow might as touch legal
app and special thanks to Sam look forward to following
career popo any final w
thrilled to be back in the
and staring at your scruff
yet another addition of
just stuck with no a bad
you know you you went on
I will just simply say shou
might as Mighty and thank you
for listening to this edition of Midas Touch, legal AF, Ben Myselis, Michael Popeyex
Icon.
you