Legal AF by MeidasTouch - FED UP Jack Smith SHATTERS Judge Cannon’s Scheme
Episode Date: April 4, 2024Defense attorney Michael Popok & former prosecutor Karen Friedman Agnifilo are back with a new episode of the midweek edition of the Legal AF pod. On this episode, they discuss/debate: (1) development...s in the Manhattan DA prosecution of Trump including the new and improved gag order to stop Trump from attacking family members of the criminal justice system, Trump’s last minute attempt to have the Judge disqualified and removed, and Judge Merchan rejecting (again) Trump’s last minute attempt to have the indictment dismissed on immunity grounds, (2) Trump finding an odd bonding company to post his $175 million dollar bond in the NYAG civil fraud case, (3) what happens next in Florida with the new Florida Supreme Court ruling that allows a 6 week ban on abortion to go into effect, (4) Special Counsel Jack Smith telling Judge Cannon in Mar a Lago that she is committing clear reversible error if she allows Trump to use the Presidential Records Act as a defense to the Espionage Act and Obstruction criminal charges, and so much more at the intersection of law, politics, and justice. Head to https://www.fast-growing-trees.com/collections/sale?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=description&utm_campaign=legalaf right now to get 15% off your entire order with code LegalAF! Upgrade your sleep with Miracle Made! Go to https://TryMiracle.com/LEGALAF and use the code LEGALAF to claim your FREE 3 PIECE TOWEL SET and SAVE over 40% OFF. Get up to 40% off for a limited time when you go to https://shopbeam.com/LEGALAF and use code LEGALAF at checkout! Lomi: Visit https://Lomi.com/LEGALAF and use code LEGALAF and checkout to save $50! Join us on Patreon: https://patreon.com/legalaf Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown Lights On with Jessica Denson: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/lights-on-with-jessica-denson On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Oh, there are just stories and developments
at the intersection of law and politics
we have to talk about at the midweek on Legal AF.
We're gonna kick it off
with the Manhattan District Attorney's Office and the developments
there which are extraordinary as we lead into the April 15th trial date with Donald Trump
kicking and screaming to avoid the inevitable.
This freight train is coming into the station on the 15th of April despite Donald Trump's
acting out and is pulling the emergency brake at every chance.
First we have an enhanced gag order that
has been put in place because, of course, the judge and the Manhattan DA's office is concerned
that Donald Trump is interfering with the administration of justice, is making people
not want to be jurors, not want to be witnesses, maybe not even want to be judges on this case,
because Donald Trump keeps attacking civilians, the
soft underbelly of the criminal justice system. In this case, family members like daughters
who work. Apparently, the crime committed not by Donald Trump but by Judge Marchand's
daughter is that she's employed. That's about it. And that gave Donald Trump free
run and free rein to go after her and try to bash her, defame her and destabilize everything in Judge Marchand's life or at least try.
But now we have an enhanced gag order related to family members expressly and some other
warnings that can only come from a person wearing a black robe about criminal contempt
and fines and maybe you won't know who the jurors are at all, Mr. Trump, if you keep acting out and
don't show any self-restraint. And then we'll talk about the, we saw it coming, we talked about it,
I did a hot take on it two weeks ago or a week ago, the motion to recuse and remove Judge Mershon
because, why? Because Donald Trump keeps talking about his daughter creating bad publicity for the case. And the daughter works for a Chicago based company that has a part of its client roster,
Democratic causes like Adam Schiff running for the Senate, and she used to work for Kamala in
some capacity in her company, but not her, did some work for the Biden campaign. And oh my god,
Democrats are mentioning the fact that the leading candidate for office for the Republicans is indicted 91 times and is going to
trial on April 15th as part of their fundraising. Shock! Oh my God. And that's
grounds now to try for the second time in a year to get rid of Judge Mershon
because he has an interest in the outcome of the case based on absolutely no
evidence, based on absolutely no sworn testimony, and no proper law.
Other than that, what could go wrong? We'll talk about everything going right for the Manhattan
DA as they get ready for the April 15th trial of Donald Trump for business record and election
interference fraud. And then we'll turn, we'll stay in New York, but we'll turn to the New York
Attorney General case. We already reported and talked about that the Appellate
Division First Department, which is the appellate court, sits over all things Manhattan, all
things Supreme Court trial level courts in Manhattan, civil and criminal, and they lowered
the bond amount requirement from Donald Trump's having to post against the $465 million plus,
plus, plus running with interest, civil fraud judgment obtained by the people of the
state of New York, by the New York attorney general, and lowered that bond requirement,
that undertaking requirement to $175 million. Still a boatload of money, a shedload of money
that has to be raised, but lower than the $465 million. Well, and we talked about,
and we'll touch on it a little bit here again on the podcast just to square the circle, we talked about why potentially the appellate court did that.
But in any event, Donald Trump had to post the bond or get a bonding company to do it
and boy, should we not be shocked at all that he had to go to a subprime lender that only
lends to people with no or low credit.
No, I'm not doing a car commercial for some sort of company like,
no credit, low credit, you can get a car loan. I'm talking about Don Hanke. And some people,
when I started talking about Mr. Hanke, thought I was talking about a Long Lost Simpsons episode.
I'm not. Mr. Hanke lent Donald Trump the money or at least put up the bond. He made all of his money
as the king of the subprime auto loans, charging usurious or
close to it rates for people that can't get credit to give them a car.
That's who Donald Trump went to because he had to go to another, a real billionaire who
was not part of an insurance company or not part of a publicly traded company who could
just sign off on his own signature to issue the bond and probably took some real estate or real estate related assets as collateral to step in for him.
But we got a new development with that bond, which we're going to talk about here.
So all hope is not lost.
The New York attorney general still might be able to go after assets before the appeal
is over leading up to September. Then we're going to get out of New York, but
stay with issues that matter, with all seriousness, especially on the ballot. Remember, we're
at the intersection of law and politics. And so abortion is again a key issue for the Democrats
and will be on the November 5th election. And it will be on the ballot in various
states, not just in the form of voting for a president who could put Supreme Court justices on,
who could stem the damage or tamp down on the damage that happened with the Dobbs decision.
But in each state, there's a privacy right embedded in most states' constitutions. Florida's Supreme Court, using the US Supreme Court's
reversal of the Roe v. Wade decision, ripping away a woman's right to choose, which had been
enshrined in the Constitution for more than 50 years in decision-making, using that decision,
they decided that it's okay ultimately for Florida to go to a six-week ban. Because remember,
Florida to go to a six-week ban because remember when Ron DeSantis, the governor, was trying to out-Trump Trump when he was running for office, spoiler alert, that didn't work out for Ron
DeSantis, and he decided, oh, a 15-week? No, we'll go to six-week. The women of the state be damned.
And that's what he did. He passed a new, the legislature in Florida first said 15
weeks, then they went to six weeks and they wrote in, just in a very disgusting, immoral fashion,
they wrote into their legislation that if the Florida Supreme Court gets around in the case
that's in front of them to find that there is no right to privacy that governs a woman's abortion right. In other words,
a woman's right to choose is not in the Florida privacy right in the Constitution.
We're going to six weeks. That's what just happened in Florida. As of May 1, there'll be a six-week
ban on a woman's right to choose in Florida. Except there's also a referendum that the Florida
Supreme Court also approved, which is going up on
the ballot allowing the voters of the state of Florida to decide once and for all whether abortion
by name expressly will be in the Florida Constitution up to, as this referendum is written,
up to 24 weeks. And staying in Florida, to New York, to Florida, now we got to go return to Donald
Trump. Jack Smith has fired his own cannon at Judge Cannon and has finally fired back at what
we said was a completely nonsensical and showed a tremendous lack of judicial temperament and potential bias against
the government in favor of Donald Trump by Judge Cannon in the way she decided to do this thought
experiment to require the two sides, the Department of Justice Special Counsel's Office
and Donald Trump to submit competing jury instructions based on a homework assignment by the judge that
demonstrated an utter lack of understanding of what the Espionage Act is and the law around
it, what the Presidential Records Act is, and whether there's ever a defense to the
Espionage Act or obstruction of justice because of the existence of something called the Presidential
Records Act.
And the fact that she gave that homework assignment is probably not only grounds for her reversal, but maybe
grounds finally, finally, for her reassignment off the case by the 11th Circuit. We'll cover all of
that, whatever else Karen Freeman, Rick Niflo and I can come up with, on the midweek edition of Legal
AF, one place, the Midas Touch Network on this
YouTube channel, and then of course on audio podcast platforms of your choice.
Oh, I'm winded.
Karen, I love the new digs.
Where are you?
I'm in my new office.
So I work with Donya Perry, who has been on the show before, and we have a new office
and I'm sitting in the
common area of the new office so you'll see people walking around behind me you
might hear some noises but I kind of wanted to show off my new office to
everybody because I love it so. I wanted to show off my new hotel room. I'm
traveling as some people know who follow me on Instagram or other places but I'm
really happy to be here with you I can't wait to get over to that new office. For those that don't know, Karen and I practice in the same city.
We're both, when we practice, we're both in New York, or resident in New York, and we're just one
subway stop away from each other, and I'm going to come visit, and we're going to have lunch, you, me,
and Danya at some point, probably the next week or two. And I want to, I want to, I don't know if
we're supposed to like smash a champagne bottle against the front door
of your new office, but we'll come up with something
to celebrate.
And are you ready to talk about these matters
at the intersection of law and politics today?
You're ready to go, Pope.
I know you are.
All right, let's kick it off.
Let's start with your old office.
We're so lucky to have you and you as my friend
to talk about things about the Manhattan
District Attorney's Office where you were for 30 years or so as the number two, you
didn't start as the number two, but you ended up as the number two there and oftentimes
the acting Manhattan District Attorney.
So let's start with the gag order.
I'll turn it over to you on the gag and then I can kick it off on the motion to recuse
and then we can wrap up that segment.
Why don't you tell our audience what you found from a prosecutor standpoint about the first
gag order, Donald Trump's violations of the first gag order, and then what Judge Mershawn
did in the second gag order, and then that last piece.
Why do you think Mershawn didn't include family members the first time around?
Now that it's included, what do you think he does inevitably, invariably,
when Donald Trump violates the second gag order?
So I'm going to pronouncement right now on legal AF. I think Donald Trump has already
violated the gag order. Okay. So, and I'll get to why I think he has, and I'm
talking about the new enhanced gag order that excludes family members, I think he
has violated. So essentially, what I think is happening here is Donald Trump is
baiting Judge Mershon. He wants him, he wants to get him to do something or say
something that he can then go and get him
recused off the case.
That is what I think is happening here, and that is why Trump keeps going after Judge
Marshawn's family member.
Now, Donald Trump loves to go after the women in people's life and go after family members, whether it's Jack Smith's wife or whether it's the
Judge Angoran's law clerk. It's like he's trying to get under someone else's skin, right? Because
there's no basis to go after these people who truly aren't public figures and have nothing to do.
They're just doing their job or they're just being married to somebody. I mean, it makes no sense.
And he's doing the same thing to Judge Mershan with his daughter. And, you know, they're just doing their job or they're just being married to somebody. I mean, it makes no sense. And he's doing the same thing to judge Mershon with his daughter.
And, you know, as you said in the opening, his daughter works for
works for a group that consults, provides political consulting
to Democratic candidates and causes.
But there's nothing about her that needs to be talked about
or said in any way. This is the adult daughter of Judge Mershon that he's talking about, right? And
obviously, you can't necessarily impart anything about a person's family member, right? Just
because you have a family member that does or says or believes something. It has nothing to do with
with the the parent or the sibling or whoever, right?
And look, Donald Trump has a family member marry Trump, you know, they couldn't be more opposite, right?
But yet somehow he calls out other people and their family members.
So the first gag order, the first limited gag order talked about family members, but
was not clear that it referred to the judge's family members at all.
I think the reason it was inartfully drafted and unclear is because in the history of defendants,
I can't think of a single one that's ever gone
after a family member or an adult daughter,
or if they did, the minute the judge said back off,
knock it off, cut it out, that they didn't stop.
So I just think this is an unprecedented thing
that Donald Trump is doing that wouldn't be acceptable in any form,
in any courtroom, in any case in this country.
Because he is doing this unprecedented thing, I think it was inartfully drafted.
Okay, what happens next?
Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan DA, makes a plea to the judge to say, can you clarify?
Does this apply to family members?
Because Donald Trump just went after your adult daughter,
right?
There's no doubt about it.
It was a few hours after the limited gag order was imposed.
Donald Trump posts on Truth Social information
about Judge Mershon's daughter,
names her and accuses her of being biased, et cetera.
And Alvin Bragg did exactly what they were supposed to do,
which is bring a motion before the court to say,
there's been a violation,
or clarify whether there's been a violation,
but we wanna bring this to your attention
and make it part of the record, right?
Because you have to make it part of the court record,
especially if you're going to use it
as an escalating pattern of behavior ultimately
if he continues.
So otherwise it's an extra judicial thing that's happening.
So in an effort to make it part of the record, you bring a motion and you bring it to the
judge.
The judge ruled, okay, let me be clear.
My first gag order did not include family members.
So I'm going to now include them.
You can still go after me, the judge.
You can still go after Alvin Bragg, but the prosecutors who are just public servants and
not public officials, they're off limits. Witnesses are off limits. Jurors are off limits. Family
members are off limits if it's designed to materially impact the case, right? So he clarifies that.
What does Donald Trump do?
Okay, he's not allowed to speak about or cause others to speak about family members, right?
If it's going to materially impact the case, or it's designed to.
And the judge, when he did this, he wrote some pretty strong language in his amended
gag order.
He says, first of all, you have to balance the First Amendment with the fair administration of justice.
What does that mean? That means you balance the right of free speech with the judge's obligation to protect the trial,
to protect the jury, to protect the integrity of the court proceeding, right? The fair administration
of justice. You balance these. It's the highest scrutiny. It requires the court to make its
own inquiry into the imminence and magnitude of the danger that could flow from the utterance
and balance the character of the evil and likelihood against the need for free and unfettered
expression. That was a quote from the judge's order.
And he was citing a Supreme Court case,
Landmark Communications versus Virginia.
He also said the court has an obligation
to prevent outside influences,
including extrajudicial speech
from disturbing the integrity of a trial.
Okay, so he's talking about protecting
and preserving the integrity of a trial. So
Judge Marshawn goes on to say, the defendant doesn't deny making these utterances. He
says, however, that as a candidate, he must have unfettered access to the voting public
to respond to attacks from political opponents and to, quote, criticize these public figures.
Judge Marshawn said, but this went beyond that, okay?
You went beyond this.
You went to family.
You went to staff.
You went to private individuals, including the grand jury.
This stokes fear, and this also required the assignment of an increased number of security,
and it can risk the orderly administration of justice for fear of family safety.
What does that mean?
It means I'm scared to make decisions
or people might be scared to make decisions if I'm a juror
because I'm afraid something's gonna happen to my family
or if there's a witness,
I'm scared to come in and tell the truth.
Why?
Because I'm afraid something's gonna happen to my family.
And so Judge Murchon then goes on to say,
we didn't start with a gag order.
First, I gave you an admonition, right?
I said, watch it.
Then when you didn't,
I gave you a limited gag order.
Now I have no choice but to expand it.
And it's the eve of trial and the risk of harm is paramount
because the court doesn't have to wait for something bad to happen.
I have to protect against the contamination of the jury pool,
protect the impartiality of the jury once it's selected,
and the evidentiary record needs to be confined to just what happens
in the courtroom and in the jury deliberations.
They can't have the jury hearing extraneous things,
can't have the jury hearing these comments about Judge Mershon's daughter
or anybody else. It's not appropriate.
So he changed the gag order and he essentially,
it's three things that Donald Trump is required
to refrain from doing.
Number one, making or directing others
to make public statements about known
or reasonably foreseeable witnesses
concerning their potential participation
in the investigation or in this criminal proceeding.
Number two, making or directing others
to make public statements about number one,
counsel in the case other than the district attorney.
Number two, members of the court's staff
and the district attorney's staff.
Or three, the family members of any counsel or staff member.
If those statements are made with the intent to materially interfere with
or cause others to materially interfere with counsels or staffs' work
in this criminal case or with the knowledge that such interference is likely to result.
And the number three, making or directing others to make public statements about any prospective juror or any juror in this criminal proceeding.
So it's pretty clear now it includes family members, right?
What happens after this expanded gag order?
And this is where I think he violated the gag order.
Hours after this expanded gag order, Donald Trump posted a clip to his truth social account,
a clip of where Fox News commentator Brian Kilmeade was essentially slamming the judge's
daughter and named her. Okay. And he was all of Trump's arguments about the daughter, right?
Brian Kilmeade doesn't know anything about the judge,
his daughter has nothing to do with this.
This all came from Donald Trump, right?
This is 100% Donald Trump's agenda,
does not coming from anybody else.
And by Donald Trump taking,
going after the judge's family member, right?
By way of this Fox commentary, he's doing a couple of things. He's baiting
the judge. He's taunting the judge. But more importantly, I think he is violating the gag
order because let's read this again together. Making or directing others to make public I would argue that by reposting that clip, he is making a public statement about the
judge's family member that is designed to materially interfere with his ability to basically
rule on the case.
Why does he have to worry about the safety of his
daughter? I mean, I don't know if you remember, Popok, that there was a, I remember the horrific,
horrific case here in New Jersey where there's a federal judge, Esther Salas, who had, who there
was a defendant who came to her house to attack her and ended up killing her son.
And I just remember how horrific that was, right?
It was so terrible.
Like these things do happen.
And the American College of Trial Lawyers,
which is one of the most prestigious groups
of trial lawyers in this country,
they came out and made a statement,
basically condemning this
and condemning these statements by Trump
and attacking
just all of his attacks, right? Whether it's about the prosecutors, the judges,
the family members saying, look, you know, you can't do this. This isn't right. It's
dangerous. It provokes violence. It provokes violence against the court
system, against judges, prosecutors, jurors, witnesses, and their families, and it undermines the public
trust in the rule of law. And so, Judge Bershon has essentially been bending over backwards for
Trump, and he's been trying to allow him to speak freely because he's a political candidate,
but there has come a point where he has to do something about it. And I think Donald Trump crossed the line by posting that, that, uh, reposting
that, that whatever you call it, um, interview.
Um, and you know, I'll tell you one other thing really quick about, about this
gag order, cause it just really gets under my skin.
I can't, I can't stand how Donald Trump baits Mershon.
He's doing it because he wants him to do something
that will then get to your next section
that you're gonna talk about, which is recusal.
Because right now there is no grounds for recusal.
And so this is going to be his way to bait him
into doing or saying something
to try to then actually have something to recuse himself.
But I think he's violated the gag order.
Let's see if anyone does anything about it.
So Mershon is too smart to take a bait.
I think that's why he didn't originally put the family prohibition in there.
He wanted to see if anything, he was setting a trap for Donald Trump.
He's never probably his entire career on the bench ever had to warn a litigant or a defendant in a
criminal case that he shouldn't attack the judge's family. That just sort of goes without saying.
And I like the fact that when Judge Murchon issued his new decision in order,
he started by putting Donald Trump back in his place. He's always referred to
as the defendant, just like a garden variety indicted person that he is. No other respect
is afforded to him nor should there be. And he tells them in the very beginning of the first
paragraph of the decision and order, defendant has been indicted for 34 criminal counts under New York Penal Code and then describes the case
for both election interference and for business record fraud related to Stormy Daniels.
That's how he starts it. He doesn't have to start it that way, but that's the way he starts it
because he wants to reorient and get back the leverage that should come with being a person
who is a Supreme Court member and a person who's trying
the case. So that's one. I agree with you that it's probably been violated and what the judge's
powers are and I don't think he's going to be hesitant at all to exercise the two remedies
that he cited at the end of his order, both under the judiciary law. One of them is,
I will find you
in criminal contempt. That's what it sounds like for our audience. That means we're skipping civil
contempt where, well, you pay a fine and maybe you start complying better and all. No, we're
beyond that. We're into criminal contempt. That means if you violate it and I find that you
violate it, whether the Manhattan District Attorney brings it to my attention or I find it on my own, I'm going to put you in jail. Bring your toothbrush because
you're going to go to jail for a period of time. I don't know what it is yet, but that is where
you are about to go and I'm going to fine you up to $5,000 a day, which is the limit under another
provision of the judiciary law. If you don't stop screwing around and you are screwing around, I'm going to take
away your right to know who the jury's identities are because you've shown that you don't comply
with any norms, let alone court orders and my mandates. That's the bazooka that Judge Bershaw has on the recusal which is
coming. I agree with you that Donald Trump, as he did with Judge Chutkin, as he did with Judge
Angoran, tries to pressure like a full court press to continue college basketball is on the air right
now. He tries to pressure hoping they'll make a mistake,
the judges, they'll say or do something.
And then he self creates the record that he then relies on
to move to disqualify the judge.
He did it with Judge Chutkin, moved to disqualify her
based on statements she made or didn't make.
Usually he's false about the representation he makes.
And then he, and that didn't work.
And she didn't refuse herself or disqualify herself.
He didn't like the rulings in Judge Ingoron's chambers
and said he was biased and tried to get him
to make a mistake and get him off.
And that didn't work.
And Judge Mershon, this is just a repeat.
He already did last March,
ended up with an August decision, tried to get rid of Judge
Bershawne because he happens to have a daughter who's employed.
That's basically what it comes down to, that she works for a political consulting firm
out of Chicago called Authentic and they have a client roster that includes Democratic candidates.
You have to make the link between that and the judges having a financial or other
interest, not just being the administrator of justice, in the outcome of the case. Then also
make a link that Lauren Mershon, and I'm not outing her, she's out in the public already in
all of the reporting, that Lauren Mershon somehow will be benefited herself because of the way the administration
of justice is going for Donald Trump and rulings that are being made. And since there are no new
facts, same daughter, same judge, same relationship, she has the same job, and they do the same thing,
since they made this motion last time. The Manhattan DA's
office pointed out to the judge, you don't even have to have briefing on this. They asked for it
because Judge Bershaw does trust them to exercise good faith in their filings and has warned them
already that if you cross the line from zealous advocacy into kind of misleading the court and
taking bad faith positions, you know. I have my own inherent authority
to deal with that. And the first thing is you're going to have to ask me for permission to file a
motion. And they asked him for permission in a two-page letter on Todd Blanch's letterhead.
And then the Manhattan DA fired back and said, there is nothing new here. You already got,
Your Honor, a ethics opinion from the judicial ethics panel that said,
you, your daughter, what she does for a living, what you do for a living, and the case in
front of you are not in any way related to show that there's grounds to have you disqualified
or that you should recuse yourself.
So don't.
And he's not going to.
And Manhattan DA said, don't even take briefing on this.
You got their letter motion.
You got our letter. The two letters just say no. And if he just says no and then also
refuses to certify the question on appeal, he's not going anywhere between now and April 15.
But we're seeing again the emergency break attempted to be pulled by Donald Trump time
and time again. I got one left that is in the back of Donald Trump's mind,
I am sure, that if he can't, if this doesn't work and he can't get some sort of last-minute emergency
application with the appellate division to do something somehow to stop the jury from being picked on the 15th of April,
don't be surprised if he tries to fire his lawyers. I've seen this happen before.
It's the equivalent of going bankrupt.
You fire your criminal defense lawyers
and you say, oh, irreconcilable differences.
I can't get along with Susan Necklase or Top Lanch anymore.
They keep losing.
He won't say that last part,
but that's what's in the back of his mind.
I want to bring in somebody new.
They need to get up to speed, judge.
Due process.
You can't let the trial go forward.
Let's see what happens. That's the final attempt, like Jan 6th was the final attempt to burn down democracy when all else failed. This will be the
all else fails for Donald Trump. We're going to talk about the motion to recuse, which will
probably be rejected by the time Ben and I take the air on Saturday. We'll then turn to the Cannon case and what's
happening down there with the jury instruction homework and whether that ultimately provides
grounds for Jack Smith to seek the reassignment by the 11th Circuit of Judge Cannon. We'll
talk about the Florida abortion decision by the Florida Supreme Court, what it means and what happens next.
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Let's talk about the New York Attorney General, the $465 million bond, and Donald Trump just
making the deadline to post the reduced bond or undertaking that the Appellate Division First Department
gave him, which is the 175 million dollar undertaking. He finally found a bonding company,
not one anybody ever heard of, at least in the bonding world, not one that's associated with an insurance company,
which is usual, not one associated with a public company, which is also usual, but instead a little known bonding company owned by the king of the some prime auto loans, Don Anki,
a $8 billion Forbes 20 listed rich person who apparently on his own say so without having to
go through true underwriting, decided to bail out Donald Trump and give him a hundred and seventy five million dollar bond, which I'm sure
there's a large fee that was paid for that. And one of the reasons I think that
Don Henke did this, Mr. Henke's bond came into play through his company Knight, is
that I'm sure he was willing to take things other than cash.
All other bonding companies, legitimate bonding companies,
like the ones owned by Chubb Insurance or that are part of insurance companies
or publicly traded companies, they hate real estate.
They only want cash, dollar for dollar, especially if your IOUs are compromised
by the fact that you operate or have been a judge to have operated a fraudulent business and
your financial statements have also been a judge to be fraudulent and you've lost your
chief financial officer because he's going to jail for fraud and banks have fired you
and insurance companies don't want to work with you any longer.
It's hard to get a bond without putting up the dollar for dollar assets behind it.
So, Trump insurance required, for instance, the $91 million to be posted behind
the E. Jean Carroll bond that Donald Trump had opposed. They required $91 million to be held.
He basically signed over apparently his Charles Schwab account. I used to know he has Capital One
and Charles Schwab just like everybody else. But he has $91 million in his and he turned it over in a restricted
account in favor of the bonding company in case he defaults. And that came out of his
$400 or so million of cash that he admitted he had about a year ago, leaving him, let's
say, let's just call it an even $300 million. And that's to operate all of his businesses,
run his burn rate on all the money that he
owes and his families.
And so it's a lot of money for you and me.
But for Donald Trump, $300 million sort of cutting it close in cash.
But I'm sure that Don Hanke, who has real estate investments himself and is willing
to be more creative in the type of assets he was willing to take, probably took something
along the lines of, I'm just guessing here from my own experience, something along the lines of a stream of income
that comes from assets that Donald Trump owns, lease payments, commercial rental payments,
and other things that bonding companies usually don't want to take.
I'm sure Don Henke was like, we'll take it because he wants to be in bed and in business
with Donald Trump. We have for the first time in our entire political life,
for 270 years, a president who is for sale,
a presidential candidate who is for sale,
who's put himself up for the highest bidder,
who's told the world that he's financially compromised,
that's willing to sell bits of himself on an open market called NASDAQ
with stock that has his initials on it.
You want to buy a presidential candidate?
You can.
DJT is the stock initials.
Here every time he's in trouble or financially compromised, which means he's compromised
from a national security standpoint.
This is why you don't usually put somebody in a position of authority who's a bankrupt,
who has credit problems because they could succumb to bribery or become
a foreign asset.
This is the problem.
So, Donald Trump needed the money at this point.
He's on bended knee or bended something.
He got Don Hanke, the king of the subprime mortgage, who only gives loans to people with
no or low credit.
Sounds like a commercial to give them the money.
But there's something in return. There is a quid pro quo. We know what
the quid is. We just don't know what the quo is yet, but we will. But it's just another example
of Donald Trump having to auction himself off and get that bond posted. Now, what that means is that
while the bond is in place, but there's a defect in it. While the bond is in place, and now that it is in
place, Letitia James has to stop all of her collection activity on the $465 million judgment.
Let me tell you what it doesn't mean because I've seen it in the chat. It doesn't mean that
interest is not still running on the full 465, it is. It doesn't mean that somehow she has to
just accept the $175 million if she wins and he defaults.
It doesn't.
It's just the undertaking or placeholder that the appellate court has allowed him to
put in it to stop enforcement proceedings during the pendency of the appeal, which will
be fully briefed over the summer with an oral argument in September.
So that's what we had.
But Karen, did you see that the bond that this company that doesn't do a lot of business
in New York turned out to be defective?
It has been bounced by the clerk's office.
Yeah, it seems like it's something that's easily remediable, but gee, what a kind of
unforced error.
It makes them look incompetent, frankly.
What do you make of it?
Yeah, they don't take...
New York doesn't take IOUs and pieces of paper that say that they are undertakings
from companies they've never heard of, signed by presidents, this guy Amit Shah,
who works for the company they've never heard of, without a financial statement,
without a balance sheet. How ironic that Donald Trump used a bonding company that forgot to submit
their personal financial statements for their company to show that they have the wherewithal
to stand behind a $175 million bond.
And surprise, New York clerk wasn't just accepting
a piece of paper stamped by Knight Bonding Company
and some guy they never heard of signing it and saying,
okay, enforcement of the judgment is over now.
We got a piece of paper that says it.
There's errors in the judgment form, which will get fixed as Karen, you just alluded to. And then
they're going to have to submit their balance sheet and show that they are solvent as a
bonding company. Yes, they have to be licensed in New York, but that doesn't mean that the
clerk's office knows right now where they actually are solvent and are good for the
money. So this is going to be interesting. They'll give them some time and know to answer the questions,
I'm sure that will arise. It doesn't mean that in this short period of time while they fix this
problem that Letitia James can go sell Trump Tower, but it's got to get fixed. But it just
shows you that we had to go out of state to California to some company
nobody's ever heard of to go find a person like Trump who headed the company, who just
on a say so on a handshake would allow him to take out $175 million of credit in a way
that as you always say, no normal average person would ever be able to do this. If you and I walked into Don Hanke's
office and said, hi, I need $175 million judgment to post a bond post in New York. Then you gave him
the description of everything that went wrong in your financial life. I mean, how quickly would
he be calling security to have you escort it out? But the reason that Donald Trump went to Hanke is obvious because any other
legitimate normal bonding company and the ones that I've dealt with are all
backed by usually by insurance at that level by insurance companies, and they
are picky on who they do business with and the requirement for assets.
And so he found this, this Don Hanke guy to bail him out.
But at what, this is my posit, at what cost?
At what price?
How compromised is this candidate
that he had to get it from him?
And what is the policy, policies that he will try
to implement if he ever gets anywhere near the White House
again as a result of having to do business on this bond?
That's the issue for me, right Karen?
Well, you know, when it was originally, he had to give the
full amount, right, the almost half a billion dollars, his
lawyers had to beg the appellate division, first department to
please make that number lower, because they were turned down by
over 30 legitimate companies, and banks and insurance
companies, etc. They just couldn't get the bond, they
couldn't get the money.
And so the appellate division essentially bailed him out,
lowered the amount to 175 million.
But he still couldn't get a bond even for that amount
from one of these illegitimate companies.
He had to go to what's essentially a used car salesman.
I mean, literally that's what this is.
And it just really goes to show what a fraud Donald
Trump is, right? He holds himself out as this billionaire business person. But really, when
it comes down to it, he has bankrupted more companies, right? Everything he's ever tried to do
is bankrupted. And he doesn't have, you know, Alina Haba can go on TV and say
that Donald Trump, maybe not every
company, but a lot of his business
ventures have gone bust, obviously.
And Alina Haba, meanwhile, goes on
and says, oh, he's a billionaire,
he's rich, he's this, he's that,
but he can't come up with cash and
he can't get a loan from anybody.
And that should tell you something,
right? That should tell you
something. So I just find the
whole thing really suspect and also shady. And I just don't understand. I just don't understand
how he continues to get away with it with his followers. Yeah, because yeah, I agree with you.
It's because they don't care. I did a hot take on how the Trump media stock is being propped up for a short
time. They can't do it unlimitedly because they're just too small by his followers that are on the
5 million active users on Trump media, Trump technology, media company, whatever it's called,
which by the way is not that much higher than what the Midas Touch Network has.
And we're not publicly trading at whatever dollars on the stock exchange.
But his people, I saw it, I don't know if you saw it in the New York Times, Karen.
I know you did, you probably did.
They said that going to a Trump rally now is the equivalent of going to church.
And I read that title and I was like, oh, I got to read this. And now he goes into his rallies,
and there's like a moment of hushed silence where he starts using biblical vocabulary and vernacular,
and people in the audience bow their head like he's some sort of high
priestess. And he talks about, in biblical terms, the battle for the soul of America
and that he's the one that's been chosen by God to fix it. And his people put their
hand up like they're at some sort of, you know, revival meeting. And it's scary to see, you know, we joked on the
network about the 59.99 Bible, but it's just this complete collapse of church and state.
It goes beyond trying to use religion as a wedge issue, as a wedge cultural issue to
drive a wedge between Americans to try to get elected. It's now, there were people in
the audience, as reported in the New York Times, that told the reporter
that they thought—I hope people are sitting down for this one—that Donald Trump is more
crucified than Jesus Christ.
And this is where this kind of cult following for Donald Trump is right now. And to be clear, I have no issues with prior to Trump, Republicans
as a party or as people or as fellow Americans, I may disagree with their policy decisions.
I may not have agreed with all the planks of the presidential platform, but ultimately,
I could recognize them as another party, one of two in our country
that we're trying to govern and try to set policy.
I don't recognize what's happening now by the MAGA takeover of this Republican Party.
I feel like I'm living in the 1800s, and when there were these multiple parties and there
were takeovers of parties and what was once the Whigs is now the, I mean, it's just a complete co-opting of what was once
a legitimate party in this country under our constitutional system and has now just been
co-opted by evangelical Christians and others who see Donald Trump as their Lord and Savior.
It's- But what I don't understand is if you're an evangelical
Christian and a Bible-fearing good person,
and there are so many in this country,
how you can back and support a rapist,
somebody who brags about touching women
in their private parts,
somebody who's cheating on his wife with a porn star,
somebody who, I mean who he doesn't live an upstanding Christian life.
He doesn't live a life that should be in any way celebrated or revered.
And that's what I don't understand, how he's co-opted, how he's been able to get people
that I know and love very much, and I respect very much,
close friends, close family members who have values and morals. I don't understand how
he's been able to convince them that he's somebody worth following at this level. It's
just really… Pete Because on the fundamental, I agree with you, but on the fundamental things
that move and animate them, on policy, on abortion, which we'll talk about in a bit,
on religion in school, on other things that where they see the world through their biblical lens,
he's on the right side of those
issues for them in a way they think the Democrats aren't. And the solicitation of the evangelical
right, the Christian right has been going on and successfully by the Republican Party, you know,
since Lee Atwater, Karl Rove, all the way down to today. And it is a problem for the Democrats
because if we can't as a party,
just to speak off of topic for a moment,
but at the intersection of law and politics,
if we can't make our tent large enough, and we do,
but get the message out that they are welcome,
of course, as fellow Americans in our party,
it will make it more difficult
than it needs to be every election cycle for us to win the presidency, just well.
Yeah, look, it's just so complicated.
There was a time in my life where I would have described myself as purple, right?
There's some, I think we pay too much in taxes. I think when it comes to certain, especially fiscal things,
I think the government needs to be a little bit smaller, et cetera.
Obviously, when it comes to social issues, I'm extremely liberal.
But also when it comes to law enforcement, I still believe in the rule of law.
I came up as a prosecutor. I am so not purple because I can't have anything
to do with this Republican party.
I don't recognize it, I don't respect it,
I don't value it, and I would have nothing to do with it.
And I used to be someone who would say,
I vote for the person, not the party.
I would never say that right now.
I will only vote Democrat 100%.
Even if I don't agree with everything they say,
because the MAGA side of the Republican Party,
which is essentially the whole Republican Party now,
this is about our democracy.
This isn't about, do you believe in this issue
or that issue?
This is about democracy.
Donald Trump doesn't want to follow the rules, the law. He
wanted to steal an election. Take it. Doesn't matter what people voted for or who they voted
for or what they said. He wants to do and say whatever he wants. They want to basically when
the Supreme Court is going to look at history when it suits them and
not look at history when it suits them so that they can rule on things like abortion
or whatever else they want so that they can get the policies that they want.
It doesn't matter what the law is.
It doesn't matter what people vote for.
This is what we're going to do.
I can't help but say it feels like, I remember, my grandparents,
we've talked about this before, were Holocaust survivors. I used to ask my dad, how did that
happen? How did that happen? How is it possible that people followed Hitler? How could that have
ever happened in this world? You look at at what, you know, you look at people
who are following Donald Trump, and I have to say, it scares me. You know, I don't think
we've, we've come much further than that. So I know we're getting completely off topic.
No, we're gonna, I'm gonna round it in right now, because we're gonna, we're gonna, we're
gonna talk about Florida abortions, rights rights as expressed by the new Florida Supreme
Court decision and what it means in November.
And speaking of a refusal to adhere to the rule of law, we'll end the podcast with our
discussion of what's going on in Mar-a-Lago with Judge Cannon and what Jack Smith, the
special counsel, does next in terms of potentially
seeking her reassignment from the case and getting a new judge of the Southern District of Florida
on the job. We'll do all of that, but first another word from our sponsors.
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And we're back and we'll thank you again to our Pro Democracy sponsors. For those that
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us bring this show to you on a daily, hourly, and weekly basis. Let's transition now, Karen,
to the Florida Supreme Court decision. I'm a Florida practicing lawyer.
I lived there for 20 years.
I know a couple of people who are on the Florida Supreme Court, and I was very,
um, disappointed and crestfallen by the, not shocked, but, uh,
crestfallen by the decision.
Let me just lay out with the decision as I'm gonna turn it over to you.
In an overwhelming decision of the Florida Supreme Court, only one person in dissent there, Judge La Barga, they decided that
unlike the line of precedent stretching back to 1989 in Florida, that the
amendment to the Florida Constitution that had been enshrined in the Florida
Constitution since 1980, establishing a right to privacy in
Florida or a right to be left alone as we used to like to recall it, that that embodied a woman's
right to choose and independent from the US constitutional right of a woman, whether under
a due process analysis under the 14th Amendment or under a privacy analysis that had been given to a woman
or it was a constitutional right of a woman for over 50 years under US constitutional principles
until the Dobbs decision two years ago, March overturned Roe versus Wade and all the other
precedent related to it, even the super precedent as we like to call it, and found that there was no federal constitutional right to choose. Independent of that, Florida had
on its books since at least 1980 and through a 1989 line of cases called TW, a woman had a right
to have an abortion and not have it banned or limited by a legislature in Florida for all that time until Ron DeSantis
got into office and got swept in along with a Florida legislature that just rubber stamps
whatever he wants. And Ron DeSantis, in order to be a tough guy and run on the Right to Life platform,
decided at first after the Dobbs decision came out to try to lower the ban down to 15 weeks.
He already had the Texas ban at six weeks,
which was on the books under SB8 in Texas,
but he didn't wanna quite go that far.
He was still trying to get the moderate vote.
So he went to 15 weeks.
But the Florida legislature wrote in there that if the,
because it was already a case that was wending its way through
the Florida court system, ultimately through the first district court of appeal up in Tallahassee
and then up to the Florida Supreme Court brought by Planned Parenthood chapter that would try to
determine whether embodied in Florida's right to privacy Article 1 provision, there was a right
for a woman to have an abortion that couldn't be limited at the 15-week mark. They wrote into
their legislation that if that case guts the privacy right and says that there's no right
to an abortion under the current version of the Florida Constitution, we're going to six weeks.
Knowing that, because of course that's part of the record, the Florida Supreme Court, in an overwhelming majority decision with one dissent, said that their brethren and their
colleagues back in 1989 of another Florida Supreme Court got it wrong because they didn't properly
analyze how the privacy right got voted by the voters into
the Constitution in 1980. And they didn't get the context right, and they didn't get the legislative
history right. And they based it on a right to privacy that they thought was in Roe versus Wade,
but that really wasn't in Roe versus Wade, and therefore, we're taking it away. I mean,
there's no other way to put it. It's really reverse engineering. We want to get it.
We want to remove as a policy from the state of Florida the right of a woman to make these
most intimate decisions about her reproductive health and rights. And we're going to do it
by slapping what our brethren did back in 1989 and saying they got it wrong.
And they also completely ignored this 91 page or so
decision, which you and I read. They also ignored the fact that in 1980, when the Florida voters
were voting on the right to privacy, yes, they might've been concerned about data collection
by governments and they wanted to keep government out of their computers, maybe. And yes, the gay community was
interested in certain things. But one of the reasons that they weren't that concerned,
and there wasn't a lot of debate about a woman's right to choose being part of the right to privacy,
is because there was already a 18-year or more right on the books by Roe versus Wade, which was reaffirmed a number of times
before 1980 that a woman had a constitutional right to choose. I mean, Dobbs, for the first
time in constitutional US history, took away a right once given to a group of people, in this
case women, and their right to choose and ripped it away from them and said it didn't exist after having established
it 50 years prior. So that's one of the reasons I could probably think of course that's ignored
in the order. Well, they weren't really talking about women's right to, you know, no shit because
it was already, you know, people felt comfortable that Roe versus Wade would not be overturned and
didn't have to take it up in the local constitution of the state. So that's that.
Then there's an amendment. I'll turn it over to you to talk about the amendment. Then there is a
proposed referendum that's on the ballot on November 5th. Tension Florida voters about
a woman's right to choose being enshrined literally expressly in the Florida constitution.
They issued their decisions on the same day,
turning it over to my partner, Karen.
This really felt like a compromise to me
because there were two decisions, both four to three, right?
And I think it was, okay, one of them is gonna be,
we're going to say, yes, the six weeks, okay,
it's not in the Constitution, this right to privacy, but at the same time, we're going to let the people of the state of Florida vote.
I thought that was sort of an interesting nod to the Dobbs decision, which ultimately did say leave it up to the voters, right? Leave it up to see should there be a right to privacy, a right to abortion, and that's going to be voted on.
And it'll be very interesting to see when the rubber meets the road, you know, if women
are going to show up in Florida and if women are going to come out and they're going to
vote for the right to an abortion.
And I think in some ways, this is going to be the starkest example of an identity crisis
that states like Florida, which traditionally used to be purple,
it kind of isn't anymore.
And it'll be very interesting to see what happens there
and what they do, because this goes beyond kind of reading
the law and what does it mean.
This is really coming down to women
are going to have to come out and they're going to have
to say, you know what, back off and I want to be able to make my own decisions with my
own body.
And you know, look, the decision here was very much the, you know, they kind of say,
oh, but you know, six-week ban has exceptions.
And if there's rape and incest and abnormalities when the mother's life is in danger, they
specifically say, but not if there's, it has to be physical health, not mental health,
which I thought was really interesting that they called that out and made that distinction, right?
They're basically saying,
they're putting a value on physical health
that is superior to mental health,
even though one of the number one causes of death
in this country is suicide.
So, it really doesn't acknowledge what the trauma having, you know, a pregnancy,
an unwanted or a pregnancy that could risk someone's life, what that does to somebody.
But they really, they absolutely are trying to say, oh, it's okay, there's these exceptions,
these exceptions.
But we've seen in practice in states where there are these exceptions,
the doctors feel like they can't make these decisions.
Doctors feel afraid.
They're afraid to say, well, what if,
what I believe that it's a health issue,
I believe that her life's at risk,
but you know, what if I'm second guessed
and someone believes otherwise?
Or why do I, I know, I know the trajectory of what's happening
right now? Her life's not in danger right now, but it will be if this pregnancy is allowed to
continue for the next six weeks. So I have to wait for six weeks and allow her life to actually
deteriorate, her health to deteriorate, and to become in danger, right? While until I can
actually perform this, it's actually torture for people. And, you know, because Florida is
largely surrounded by water, almost entirely except for the top portion, right? And there,
it's essentially only surrounded by other southern states that also have outlawed
abortion.
This will really transform access to healthcare and access to medical care in the South.
Abortions will only be available to wealthy women or women who are able to travel. I mean, because the six week ban is, you know,
essentially outlawing abortion because most women
or many women don't know they're pregnant at that stage.
And so I think that this is going to be
a really important vote to see where people are in Florida.
Right, this is like an identity crisis and they have an
opportunity to assure this right to healthcare, this right to make a decision and it'll be
interesting to see what they end up doing. If this doesn't drive people to the polls,
women and men who support women in Florida on November the 5th. I mean, the Supreme Court, Florida,
I don't think they thought they were giving a gift to the Democrats, but if this doesn't drive
voters to the polls to once and for all vote a lot, this isn't even down ballot from the
presidential election. This could drive many, many people that are women and people that care about women on this issue to the polls.
Yeah, they'll vote for Biden too, that's good.
But this is a shot for the first time since 1980
on the right to privacy in Florida
to enshrine and embody once and for all
a woman's right to choose up to 24 weeks
on the issue of these most intimate affairs of her life,
about whether to carry to term a being.
We'll leave it at that.
And so I hope that the silver lining of this
is that it drives voters to the polls
in the ways that we've seen in other states
in the special elections to date in
Alabama and other places. And that is the coattails upon which Joe Biden rides for the state of
Florida. So we're going to turn lastly to the Cannon decision to give homework to Donald Trump and to provide her primarily the Department
of Justice in a way that demonstrates that she either just doesn't understand the proper
defenses to the Espionage Act claim against Donald Trump, doesn't care, is just siding
with Donald Trump because the way she framed her issues and the way she framed her request
for jury instruction drafts so early before there's even a jury. We're not even close to picking a jury in this case, nor legal issues being sorted out,
sort of demonstrates for me her sort of fundamental misapprehension. But we also have new reporting
that Judge Murchon, as we talked about at the beginning of this podcast, getting ready for the April 15th trial
that I said he's getting ready for, is clearing out the brush of any remaining motions that are
out there. Having rejected a couple of weeks ago, nine different motions filed by Donald Trump in
an attempt to limit evidence and witnesses and defenses at trial or to have defenses at trial,
there was still one that was still lingering out
there.
And we were just waiting for the ruling to come in.
And that was, does Donald Trump have presidential immunity?
Okay, stop right there.
He was a candidate for office who implemented as alleged in the indictment, a strategy to
stop women who claimed to have had sex with him in some capacity from going public
to undermine his candidacy against Hillary Clinton in the first form of election interference.
And he wasn't president yet.
And all of the acts really under the conspiracy that are alleged in the indictment, the payments to Stormy Daniels by Michael Cohen involving
Allen Weisselberg, his chief financial officer, involving the National Enquirer, David Pecker,
in all of this and all of that. It was well before he became president. So, how does the immunity
part come in? And now we have the ruling from Judge Mershon.
I'll just quote one part of it
that we thought here on the Midas Touch Network
was interesting.
Here's Judge Mershon not being happy again
with the lawyers for Donald Trump,
meaning sanctions could be coming.
Defendant's decision is unjustifiable.
In other words, his decision to file
this late filed motion for immunity defense and
renders the motion untimely.
Further, as an aside, the fact that defendant, this is always Trump, waited until a mere
17 days prior to the scheduled trial date of March 25, that was the original trial date,
to file the motion raises real questions about the sincerity and actual purpose of the motion. After all,
defendant had already briefed the same issue in federal court, and it was in possession of and
aware that the people intended to offer the relevant evidence at trial the entire time.
The circumstances viewed as a whole tests this court's credulity. Motioned to dismiss on grounds of immunity denied.
He already denied it at the start of the case when they try to get rid of the
indictment on a motion to dismiss. This case is going, is there any doubt in your
mind, Karen, that the case is going to start picking a jury on the 15th or 16th
of April? Is there any doubt in your mind? I would have said a hundred percent no,
but I would have said that before when March 25th was the date,
not in a million years could I have predicted this delay based on the data dump from the
Southern District.
So I'm never going to say 100% certainty anymore.
There's no doubt in my mind that Judge Marchand is doing everything he can to keep this case
from going.
This presidential immunity argument and decision
is just a setup because Trump is now,
the next thing that's going to happen
is he's going to appeal and he's going to try
and get the appellate courts to issue a stay
so that he's gonna say, look, in 10 days,
this very issue is being argued
before the United States Supreme Court.
What's the rush? Just wait brief stay
Let's let the Supreme Court that's already in an expedited basis. Let's let them rule and then we'll know why why would you go forward?
You know, it's not like we're waiting years. This isn't a huge delay
It's a few days and that's how they're gonna phrase it. So this was this is just a setup for that
He's gonna try it. It's going to fail, but he's going to try and delay.
You're going to see lots of desperate attempts to get a delay between now and the trial date because he doesn't want to go forward.
You said what I've been saying for months now, which is he's going to maybe potentially fire his attorneys.
That's the surefire way to try and get a delay. But in New York, in criminal cases, you can't just fire
your attorney. Once you enter, and once an attorney enters what's called a notice of
appearance in a court file, you have to get permission from the court to be let off the
case. And so it'll be interesting because even if Trump either fires his attorney or
threatens his attorney or creates some kind of irreconcilable conflict, those attorneys still have to get, or that attorney still has to get permission from the court
to get off that case. And that does not happen easily in New York State Court. That is one thing
that a lot of judges do not allow to happen. So we'll see. It'll be very interesting to see
what happens. But yes, I do think the trial's
starting. I think it's more likely than not starting on that date. But who the heck knows
what's going to come up because Donald Trump is a master at mucking up the water.
Well, one of the problems they're going to have is that they were untimely already in the E. Jean
Carroll case in raising immunity and got slapped when Alina Habba raised the issue
in an oral argument before the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, now federal. And they were like,
why are you raising this three years into the case? Isn't this a little late in the game
for you to be raising this issue? And basically they denied it on two grounds, one being it was
untimely. Yeah, they could try it. I mean, I think the Appellate
Division First Department is wise to Donald Trump at this point and knows that he'll be flailing
to try to stop the trial. And I'm hoping that the people there that we respect on the court, Karen,
don't fall for it again. They've already given them enough breaks. It's the same Appellate
Division that just let them post $175 million bond instead of something much higher. They've already given them enough breaks. It's the same appellate division that just let them post $175 million bond instead of
something much higher.
They've delayed aspects of this case, but not the ultimate trial date in the past as
a little bit of a breathing space or breathing room.
All right.
So I'm a betting man.
I think it'll be the 15th of April or there or within a day of that.
We'll be picking a jury.
It might take a week to pick a jury.
I agree with you. It's very hard to get off a case, especially on a criminal case. Even saying,
you got to really lay out a reconcilable differences that makes it unethical for you to
continue in that position. Not getting paid is not going to be enough and those kinds of things.
But we'll follow all that. And let's just take a quick drive down to where I'm at now, down in Florida, and talk about
Judge Cannon. You did an amazing interview today, I thought it was, with CNN. Why don't you take the
lead on that, frame it, and then I'll give my little two cents and we'll wrap up our podcast for
tonight. So, Judge Eileen Cannon did what many judges do ahead of or at the very kind of right before
trial, ahead of the trial, which is give me your proposed jury instructions. Because at the end of
a case, what a judge does is a judge will say to the jury, okay, you've been asked to, you've heard
all the evidence, you've heard summations, now you are asked to render
a verdict on the following charges. And let me read you the elements of each of those
offenses. And the charging of the jury is what it's called, can sometimes take hours.
It's a very long process. It's methodical, where the judge literally instructs the jury
on the law, because the lawyers aren't allowed to tell the jurors
what the law is.
And so the judge is the only one who's allowed to say this is the law.
And they talk about the elements of the statute and the definitions of different words.
And you sit there and you listen to each and every definition, every element that the people
have to prove or the government has to prove each and every element of each and every crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
And that's how it works.
And it's a unanimous verdict that you have to have in criminal cases.
And I remember as a prosecutor, you finish your case, you get all the evidence in, you know, you're listening to the charge and you just you shake your head and you're like, oh, beyond a reasonable doubt
of every one of these elements, did I do it?
You know, it's nerve wracking.
So judges often will ask the lawyers
for their proposed jury instructions.
And what they'll say is get together, see what you agree on.
You know, what charges do you want?
What jury instructions do you want?
See what you agree on and point
out what you don't agree on.
There are some very standard jury instructions that people don't necessarily engage in, that
you know it's going to happen.
You focus on the ones that you want certain language to go a certain way.
There are model jury instructions, there's pattern jury instructions, there's jury instructions
out there that you can draw from.
You don't normally make them up.
You look and you see, okay, what has been said before?
What's been upheld by the appellate courts before as the appropriate language?
Sometimes cases get reversed because the wrong language of jury instruction occurs. So the court here asked the parties
to engage with two competing scenarios
and offer alternative draft text that assumes each scenario
to be correct formulation of the law to be issued to the jury.
So essentially said, I'm going to give you a hypothetical,
and I want you to give draft jury charge language.
And I have to say, when I read the statute, when I read her two hypotheticals, Popak,
I had to go back and I started questioning my own ability as a lawyer.
I started thinking, do I not understand the
law? I studied this. Not only did I go to law school, we all, in preparation for all
these legal AFs, we read every single decision. We read every single filing. We study the
law. We study cases. And these hypotheticals were so far afield of what my understanding and interpretation of
the law is that I couldn't understand how she got to these two hypotheticals.
So it wasn't either or, it was neither. And so I looked at that and I thought,
what the heck? And I know you did and Ben did too as well because it was so
outrageous that she thought that the law was the way she said
it was.
I'll go into more detail in a second.
I think she showed two things, A, inexperience, because there's no way that an experienced
judge would do what she did and think that it means what it means.
But the other thing too, I started to think, because there was a while there that I thought, you know, she's so in the pocket of Donald Trump and trying to help him.
And, you know, she should be recused from the case because of that.
And there's a part of me that wondered in this particular instance, is she afraid of Donald Trump? Because there is no other explanation for why she would
pose the hypotheticals in this way, because it was that egregious. Essentially, what she said was,
it was both of these scenarios had to do with a legal premise that what Jack Smith last night in
a late night filing called fundamentally flawed legal
premise, Jack Smith came out with a scathing, scathing motion about this hypothetical scenario.
And he said, essentially that these scenarios are flawed because they she's basically says in them
videos are flawed because she basically says in them to determine whether a former president is authorized to determine under the Presidential Records Act, is this personal or is this presidential?
And again, I was like, the Presidential Records Act, what does that have to do with the Espionage
Act?
It's like she's conflating two different statutes, right?
Presidential Records Act is its own statute, and it has to do with at the end of the presidency,
go out and take out your love letters from Melania, from the nuclear codes and separate
them out because you're going to want to take your Valentine's Day cards with you.
Those aren't necessarily presidential unless of take your Valentine's Day cards with you. Those aren't necessarily presidential unless, of course, your Valentine's Day card was given to you by Kim Jong
Un. That was considered a presidential record because it has to do with your official job.
It's not personal in nature. But she's saying the Presidential Records Act potentially allowed him to just decide
what's personal and what's not and what he's allowed to keep.
And so essentially, Jack Smith reoriented and tried to reorient Judge Cannon to say,
this is about the espionage act.
And this is about the espionage act and the ability to possess highly
classified documents, right?
You're not allowed to possess them or store them in an insecure facility.
And that comes from an executive order.
It's executive order one, two, five, two, six.
And that's what governs possession of classified information.
Donald Trump is not charged with possessing all of those boxes
and all of those records.
He's charged with 34, right? That's what Jack Smith did. He carefully and surgically went through those
boxes and said, okay, you weren't supposed to have some of these. Some of these would
be a violation of the Presidential Records Act, but I'm not going to charge that. That
has nothing to do with this case. I'm only focusing my case on the violations of the Espionage Act
because that's what's really serious here, right? Is you possessing essentially our nuclear codes
when you're not supposed to and you refuse to give them back and you stored them in an unsecured
facility. And so Jack Smith said in his filing, the legal premise is wrong and it would distort
the trial and it would distort the trial and
it would result in an acquittal, right?
He said either scenario, Judge, is going to result in an acquittal because what you're
saying is that Donald Trump, what you're asking us is to give you language to charge the jury
that essentially says he can just declassify, he could just not declassify something, he
could just determine in his mind that something is a president is a personal record or a
presidential record. So of course, they're going to say he
decided that right, because that's what he's going to say.
That's what his defense is going to be a trial if she gives that
jury charge. And so what Jack Smith is saying, if you do that,
you are putting this trial in jeopardy and you are essentially
because once the jury is sworn, okay, once you pick a jury and the jury is sworn,
something called jeopardy attaches. And those are magic words. That means that if there is an
acquittal or a conviction, double jeopardy applies. The government doesn't get a do-over, okay?
Especially if there's an acquittal, It's done forever. What he said was
essentially by saying that the Presidential Records Act applies here and by asking for a jury
charge regarding that, what you're doing, Judge, is you're making an acquittal almost certain.
Because it would be after jeopardy attaches, we wouldn't be able to appeal at the end.
So what we're asking Judge Cannon, we're asking you to do is to promptly decide whether
the unstated legal premise underlying your recent order represents the correct formulation
of the law.
If the court wrongly concludes that it does and needs to include the Presidential Records
Act in the jury instructions.
Please inform the parties well in advance of trial so the government can consider appealing
before jeopardy attaches."
Jack Smith also says, quote, the adoption of a clearly erroneous jury instruction that
entails a high probability of failure of a prosecution, right?
An acquittal, that's a failure of a prosecution.
A failure of the government couldn't then seek
to remedy by appeal,
constitutes the kind of extraordinary situation
which empowers to issue a writ of mandamus.
So the two scenarios that the court was asking Jack Smith
to consider, right?
Or both parties to consider was scenario A, the courts, in the
court's order, this would be the charge, right? In the court's order that the Espionage Act,
a former president is authorized to possess any document that the jury determines qualifies as a
personal record as defined by the Presidential Records Act that would wrongly present to the
jury a factual determination that should have no legal consequence under the elements of Section 793.
Likewise, if the court concludes as posited in Scenario B that a president has carte blanche
to remove any document from the White House at the end of his presidency, that any document
so removed must be treated as personal under the Presidential Records Act as an unreviewable
matter of law and that also as a matter of law a former president is forever authorized to possess
such a document regardless of how highly classified it may be and how it is stored that would constitute
a quote clearly erroneous jury instruction that entails a high probability of failure and so the
government must be provided with an opportunity to seek prompt appellate review.
As I said, it's normal to discuss in advance jury selections, but Cannon did Jack Smith
a favor, frankly, by signaling her wrongness or this erroneous jury selection.
If she had waited until the end to do it,
that would have been fatal to the case.
So part of me was like, why did she do it?
If she was really in the bag for Trump,
why did she do this in advance?
And that's why I think maybe she's just scared of Trump.
And so she's trying to maybe get off the case
because this is gonna get her recused from the case finally.
So it was very interesting to me to see this motion.
So what Jack Smith did is he said,
look, let me give you instead the well-supported jury
instruction for the elements of section 793
of the Espionage Act.
Let's talk about the plain language of the statute.
Let's talk about the language of executive order 13526,
which implements the regulations of the Espionage Act.
And he basically said, look, you're
trying to propose this as a defense,
but this is not a defense that is allowed, and it's made up.
And it was made up at least a year
after you possessed these documents.
Jack Smith says, look, you were in negotiations with the National Archives for a long time,
asking the National Archives, you know, talking about these documents. You never once said,
these are personal, personal records. I'm allowed to keep it. You know, you didn't do that. This was
a reliance on what he called it, pro-Hawk justification concocted
more than a year after he left the White House. And by doing that, he's actually basically making
this up later after the fact. He also calls Trump out and says he never represented to the court,
to this day. He's never represented to the court, that he in fact designated the classified documents as personal.
He didn't say it in his motion to dismiss.
He didn't say it in his reply.
He didn't say it in the hearing on March 14th, 2024, just a few weeks ago, despite every
opportunity to do so, despite every incentive to do so, he never did it.
And so it does not apply.
And let me just read for you what the presidential records act says.
It defines a personal record as any document of a purely private or non-public character,
which does not relate to or have an effect upon the carrying out of the constitutional
statutory or other official or ceremonial duties of the president.
In fact, all the, so Jack Smith goes on to president. In fact, all the documents in the indictment are of a nature that make this straightforward
that these are not presidential records.
It would be pure fiction to suggest that these highly classified documents, don't forget,
Jack Smith only put in their highly classified
secret important documents that were created by members of the intelligence community,
created by the military and presented to the president during his term in office. To say
that's purely private and that they don't relate to or have an effect on his carrying
out of the constitutional statutory duties of the president just absolutely flies in
the face of any just you can't even make that argument with a straight face and you know Jack
Smith just eviscerates Donald Trump. He says your own representatives didn't you know didn't make
this representation. We interviewed the White House Counsel's office, national security advisors, we've
interviewed everyone who ever worked for you, Donald
Trump, none of them said that you designated these as
personal. So, you know, he basically accused him of
inventing this and told Judge Cannon, figure it out
because and figure it out early, because if you don't
we're appealing and he's going to move
to get her recused off this case
because she does not know what she's doing.
Yeah, so I agree with all that.
The reassignment process, which I have a hot take on,
is they got a show at the 11th Circuit
that what she's done so far satisfies three factors
of a case called Torquington in the
11th Circuit, which is based on a second circuit case, which basically says, has this judge,
because of their decision making, basically painted themselves in a corner
so that they are doubling down on wrongheaded decisions in the past in their current decision
making and therefore that is undermining the administration of justice. The answer to that
factor is yes. She's made a series of wrong decisions in this case starting from her
interference pre-indictment with the prosecution or the investigation of the case and had been reprimanded
twice by the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, even before this case became a case in terms
of an indictment.
And she's made a series of mistakes about the Classified Information and Procedures
Act, which is at the heart of the case, and now making fundamental error about for all to see as called out by Jack Smith about whether
the Presidential Records Act provides a defense to espionage act, which it doesn't, can't, or to the
obstruction of justice count at the heart of the case. So if they can show that the Torkington
factors that one, that the administration of justice won't be impaired by her removal.
How could it be? She hasn't made any real decisions. The case is sitting in a suspended
animation without having been set for trial. The argument would run the other way. You
put a new judge in there. The new judge would come in very quickly, survey the landscape,
figure out there were a handful of motions that needed to be resolved
now, set the case for trial, and then work backwards from there for a very efficient
pretrial practice and motion practice and jury information or jury instruction practice,
and get the case tried, which is the goal. You wouldn't know it, for those that watch us, that this is the goal of the federal court,
is actually to efficiently try cases
and get to their conclusion for justice.
You wouldn't know it, by the way, Judge Canada is doing it.
And that is the essence of asking for reassignment.
It happens rarely.
Florida has a lemon law.
It's basically three, it's like three strikes,
three defects by the judge and she gets recalled.
Bring her back in. It's like Westworld.
You know, we need, you know, two guys are gonna come in and take Judge Cannon away with white lab coats and
replace her with somebody that actually knows what they're doing. And this,
this is it, man. And the way that you've outlined exactly how Jack Smith has fired,
there's a reason he wrote an
entire brief on this. It's not because he thinks he's going to be able to talk her out of it and
talk her off the ledge or talk her into reconsidering. It's because he's establishing
the record for his eventual soon to be appeal. And in there, he's going to catalog all of the misfirings and mistakes that she has
made that go to fundamental clear error and the undermining of our criminal justice system as
relates to this case. Fundamental reversible error. And he will catalog all of them,
cite the Torkington factors that the court should apply,
and not only ask that she be appealed
and or instructed and given a mandate
on how to properly run the case,
but that she be reassigned.
And they're gonna have to think long and hard about it.
I'm not sure the 11th Circuit,
at least the current group of it,
led by Judge William Pryor sitting in Atlanta, can think
of too many other cases, certainly not ones of high profile and national security involving
a former president, of course, in which a judge has made so many fundamental, reversible,
clear errors and miscarriages of justice.
And now faced with that, they're going to have to figure out what the 11th Circuit stands for.
What does it stand for? They have the inherent authority and power as the
11th Circuit and the bosses of their trial court level people to reassign them.
There's a couple of rules right on the books, statutory rules that allow them to do exactly
that for the proper administration of justice, not just issue mandates, not just coaching
counsel, not just reverse and send back for further orders or further proceedings, but
actually reassign.
And I can't think of a better case than that.
The entire world is watching what the 11th Circuit and in this case, the Southern District
of Florida is doing.
And I am sure, I'm sorry, I know a number of these judges on the, not only the 11th
Circuit, but on the Southern District of Florida.
Many of them came up from the trial court, the state court level where I practice frequently.
And I know that for a fact, well, not for a fact, I can suppose that they are slapping their foreheads about what Judge Canada is like,
and wishing that they had the case. People that have been on the bench for five and 10 and 15
and 20 years, who have been judges for 15, 20 or 30 years, who know what they're doing,
that understand the rules, understand the Constitution and understand how the things are briefed and have good law clerks. We did some reporting on Midas
such recently. She can't even keep a law clerk. The law clerks do most of the writing and research
related to opinions and she can't seem to keep one. She had two leave in December, which is quite
unusual. She hasn't been able to replace them. She's shorthanded. I assume she's doing her own work,
which is equally scary. Give it 11th Circuit. This is my plea. Give the case to one of the other just judges, and I know you can think of one, in the 11th Circuit in Southern District of Florida who's
more qualified to handle this case and get this case tried. Public justice requires it.
and get this case tried. Public justice requires it, right? Public have a stake and have a seat at the table. When it comes to trials, it's not just the right of the accused to a fair trial.
It's the right of the public. That's why things are not done generally sealed. They're done in
the open. It's the right of the public to observe a criminal process
to its conclusion.
We don't do secret trials.
We don't do star chambers, except in rare circumstances.
And it's not a war tribunal.
We're supposed to know what's going on
at any given moment.
We're supposed to really understand it.
And the question under the Torkington factors is also
if a lay person who's not a lawyer possessing of all the
facts that I've just outlined, Karen has outlined, would believe that there is an appearance of
justice being undermined, then the judge needs to go. And I'm sorry, I don't care which side of the
aisle you sit. I don't know how you can objectively as a lay person, not even as a lawyer, go through the
facts I've just outlined and come away with a conclusion that the appearance of propriety
hasn't been compromised here or that the appearance of justice not being done isn't in the air, isn't
in the ether. It is. And so I implore the 11th Circuit when Jack Smith deems it's time, and we trusted him
so far to do the right thing, and he brings it to the 11th Circuit's attention.
We've reached the end of the midweek edition of Legal AF.
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just the free subscribe on anywhere you get your audio podcast from, right?
Whatever's left these days.
So Apple, Spotify, et cetera.
And then we do these clips of everything we just did tonight.
We'll do segments and do them as separate hot takes that we call Legal AF after dark.
And there are for people who miss the show,
didn't have the ability to sit through an hour
and 40 minutes show like we just did,
but still wants the information.
And as a little bit of a marketing tool
that you can help be our marketing department
and take that clip after you've listened to it,
send it off to friends and family and people in your life
and say, hey, you know that show I love Midas
on the Midas Touch Network Legal AF, here's a clip.
And maybe they'll join our audience.
And that helps us as well.
And that's why we do that type of stuff.
And now we have a new Patreon, which allows people to kind of get some instructional videos,
if you will, a Ted Talk meets a law school class about the fundamental issues that we're
talking about, the building blocks of the things that we try to do as much as we can during a hot take like this one or a podcast like this one, and we try to do it on the hot takes.
But this allows us just to focus not on a current event that happens at that moment that we need to kind of catch and explain, but on the fundamental issues of state and federal practice, procedural, criminal law, state law, tort versus contract negligence,
defamation and rules of procedure and things that matter. And so we do it there on Patreon.
So go to patreon.com slash legal AF and you'll find new content exclusively there,
which I don't think is anywhere else on YouTube. And then we've got a store
where you can get merchandise there. Thank you, Salty. We've got store store where you can get merchandise. There it is, thank you, Salty.
We've got store.mitustouch.com.
I think we got mugs, coffee mugs, the Legal AF logo on it,
and all these wonderfully designed t-shirts
that you can mix and match the logos
and the colors that Karen Freeman and Nic Niflo
contributed to, brought in the designer of.
And then we have our sponsors, of course,
that were on the show today that we welcome you and hope that you'll help them sell some products.
Let's be honest, that's one of the reasons that they are on the show with us and we like
the products, we use the products, and then we talk about them on the air.
So Karen, let's bring Karen back.
Karen new office, for those that are wondering, it's not Law & Order.
It's not her home.
It's her brand new spanking new office with lots of people walking around in the background
showing a very busy law practice.
And I always love doing this with you.
Don't tell Ben, it's one of my favorite times of the week.
Saturday is too.
And then join us on Legal AF on Saturday where Ben,
Mycelis and I kind of catch up, catch our breath from the week and do things after
the midweek, if you will, that are important at the intersection of law and
politics. And then on Hot Takes, the three of us, you, Karen, me and Ben do about
every hour on exclusively on the Midas Touch Network and you can find each
of us, we each have our own playlists. If you slide over in the Midas Touch YouTube channel,
you'll see not only the videos and the hot takes and all that podcast, there's a section that says
playlist and you can go down and you find your favorite among the three of us or all three of us
and look at our content is all there in a nice library with a bow
around it. So we've reached the end. I want to do a quick shout out to the Midas Mighty and the Legal
A F'ers and welcome them to join us on Saturday with Ben, Mycelis and me. And Karen, always a
pleasure to be with you for this time. You too, Popak. Okay. See everybody next week.