Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Hate Crimes, Hateful Rhetoric, and Racial Bias in Hiring & Redistricting
Episode Date: February 6, 2022Anchored by MT founder and civil rights lawyer, Ben Meiselas and national trial lawyer and strategist, Michael Popok, the top-rated news analysis podcast LegalAF x MeidasTouch is back for another hard...-hitting, thought-provoking look in “real time” at this week’s developments. On this episode, Ben and Popok discuss: 1. A Federal Court’s rejection of convicted murderer Travis McMichael’s plea deal on federal hate crimes due to Ahmaud Arbery’s family objections, meaning he goes to trial this week facing another life sentence. 2. A black woman being convicted and sentenced to 6 years in prison for trying to vote before her probation was over. 3. NFL coach Brian Flores, one of only 2 NFL Black head coaches, filing a class action suit against the NFL and some of its teams because of its racially-segregated “Plantation”-like system. 4. The Fulton County (GA) District Attorney fighting off racist attacks on her credibility as she moves closer to having a Special Grand Jury gather the evidence she needs to indict Trump for criminal interference in the election process. 5. A Federal Court’s overturning a Texas law preventing state contractors from exercising their First Amendment rights concerning the Israel-Palestinian conflict. 6. The Ghislaine Maxwell Federal Judge deciding whether to unseal the defense’s motion for new trial on the basis that “Juror 50” failed to disclose that he had been a victim of sex abuse in the jury selection process. 7. State Supreme Courts protecting voting rights in redistricting in ways Federal Courts and SCOTUS have refused, giving victories to Democratic voters in Ohio and Pennsylvania so far. 8. Updates to the Jan6 Committee’s work including 3 more key cooperators. 9. Pence’s too little too late admission that Trump was wrong about Pence having the power to overturn an election, and the GQP’s latest Orwellian attempts to refrain the Jan6 Insurrectionist and attempted violent coup, as a mere “legitimate political discourse” And much more. Support the Show! Paint Your Life -- Right now Paint Your Life has a limited time offer, get 20% off your painting and FREE shipping, when you text the word "LEGAL" to 64-000. X-Chair -- Go to https://XChairLEGALAF.com now, for $100 off your order! X-Chair has a thirty-day guarantee of complete comfort, and you can finance your purchase for as little as $30 a month. AG1 by Athletic Greens -- Athletic Greens is going to give you an immune supporting FREE 1 year supply of Vitamin D AND 5 free travel packs with your first purchase if you visit https://athleticgreens.com/legalaf today. Smith.AI -- Work uninterrupted, run your business with less stress, and get more leads from your marketing efforts. Save $100 when you sign up using promo code "LegalAF" at https://www.smith.ai Buy Legal AF Merch: https://store.meidastouch.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Midas Touch Legal AF.
If it's the weekend, you got Ben Myceles and Michael Popak, Dishing, the key legal cases,
key legal issues in digestible ways.
You can understand the number one legal podcast in Cypress in the mall devs in Micronesia, and one of the top
podcasts legal in the world.
Popo, we will soon be the top legal podcast in the world.
Special shout out to Cyprus.
Special shout out, Micronesia, but special shout out to the fact
that I am in New York as I am
recording this. I have a flight
in a little bit, but Michael
Popeyes, we got to hang out in New
York. Oh, that was fantastic.
I wasn't sure I was going to happen
and you made it happen. I know
you were running from pillar to
post the whole time. You were
here for clients and other things, other exciting things you're not ready to reveal. But the most exciting event that night was that you met me at a cigar
bar that I'm a member of and we had a really great time together. And there is proof of
life. There is a photo that reflects that which we'll put up tonight. But it might as
well post the photo will have salty are incredible editor put the photo up right now for those who are watching
it. And so, Popeye, I could reveal the news. And, you know, it'll tie into the Brian Flores
versus NFL case we're going to talk about later. So as many of the listeners may know,
I was the lawyer in the Colin Kaepernick versus the NFL case a few years ago.
I'm currently General Counsel of all of Colin Kaepernick's
endeavors and General Counsel of Know Your Rights Camp
and I'm Kaepernick's business partner
across all of his endeavors.
So we announced this week that Colin Kaepernick
will, we've gone into production on his documentary.
We announced our director Spike Lee,
we have Jamel Hill. And so I got to spend some time in Brooklyn at Spike Lee Studios, 40 Acres
and Immule productions out in Brooklyn. We got to shoot a number of days out there and that was an
incredible experience and the Brian Flores news broke. One other thing to mention to our listeners and then we'll get into the law. So Popak lives like the Manhattan life. Popaks at the restaurants,
Popaks at the cigar bars like Popak is Mr. Manhattan. And so of course I met up with
Popak and you'll see the photo. We met up at a cigar bar. I haven't had a cigar popuck and I don't even know how long
and I'm reeling from the few puffs of the cigar that I have. The reason I'm wearing glasses is
like I've had like an eye allergic reaction. I've got sniffles like my whole immune system has
crashed. I thought you took to it like mother's milk, you were a champion. I somebody tweeted like don't expose bet.
I love people's image of you versus me.
They're like, don't expose Ben to these faces.
I'm like, I wasn't there alone.
I mean, I know I had to cigar in my hand, but there was another one at the table.
That's why I'm wearing these glasses.
I have like my eyes have been teary.
But anyway, let's get into the law.
We got a number of issues to discuss today.
When you're a political and legal discourse, that's our name.
I like it.
In the Ahmed Arbery trial involving the murder of Ahmed Arbery,
we talked about the state court where the three individuals who
callously, in the most horrific situation,
murdered Ahmed Arbery because he was jogging.
They were sentenced to life in prison
in the state court case,
but there was a federal proceeding,
a civil rights criminal action brought that in the commission
of the murder, Travis McMichael and the others violated Arbery's civil rights by murdering
him out of racism, out of discrimination, that the killing was racially motivated. And so the
feds came in to prosecute there. Now normally we think of that as a strong showing by the
Department of Justice to buttress what is going on in the state court proceedings. But here Michael,
the family was a little upset at the way the Department of Justice handled it is,
is what they said.
And the Department of Justice was attempting to enter into plea deals with Travis McMichael
and the others, which would have had them plead guilty, admit that the crime, the murder,
was racially motivated.
They would serve, basically, I think it would
be 30 years for that crime, but they would serve the federal, federal, federal, penitentiary,
right. And then they would serve out the rest of their prison time in the state court for
the life in prison. But the family didn't like this. I'm an Arborist family. They were outraged,
in fact, they pled to the judge. Please do not accept the plea agreement
and the judge that we're not going to accept the plea agreement.
So, Popak, maybe walk us through this case
and explain to legal AF first, too.
Like, you could just, a judge can just reject a plea agreement
and did the family really not know
about what was taking place?
There's so much to talk about an unpack
for the legal AF law school classmates tonight
on this one issue.
First you have what is the role of victims and their families in the sentencing and plea
process and do they have a role?
And the answer to that one is they do.
Whether you're in the state court system, which varies by state to state what a state
prosecutor has to do in reference to the family or the victims before entering into a plea deal.
Along the continuum of consulting with the family or not consulting with the family, the murderers of Ahmed Arbery, with a federal judge,
a judge, Lisa Godby would in Georgia. The requirement under the federal standard is that the family
and the victims have a reasonable right to confer with the prosecutors as they negotiate their plea deal.
Doesn't mean they have veto power, but it does mean there's a reasonable right to confer.
So when a plea deal is negotiated with the input of the victims or the families of the victims,
if there's, of course, the seat as there is in this case, it then goes to the judge who has the right to accept
or reject the plea deal.
And on the reporting on this one,
is that the judge was concerned really
with two aspects of the plea deal
and it ended up rejecting it,
meaning on Monday morning,
Travis McMichael is going to trial again,
and they're gonna be putting up,
it's gonna be, we're gonna be following this one. It's going to be, you know, we're
going to be following this one. Now he's decided since there's no deal, he might as well just roll
the dice. He's going to be defending himself, pro se, which is odd. And there's all from the press
reports, there's a whole group of text messages and emails and social media that established that he's a racist, that he uses the N word,
that he uses inappropriate references to people of color and black people.
And this is all going up on the screen as evidence in the case by the prosecutors, the federal
prosecutors, who are now going to go to trial on Monday against him to prove that it was
a race-based hate crime that he committed when
he committed the murder. Now, the judge was also concerned about a second thing, Ben. She
was concerned that the plea deal as negotiated would have tied her hands to give only 30 years.
Most, when you and I negotiate occasional plea deals, I do some white collar criminal work
you do as well. We usually leave it to the discretion of the judge at the end.
These are recommendations by the prosecutor
and the defense with the input of the families.
But then at the end, you're really at the whim
of the judge who's doing set and sing.
Here, the judge had no discretion
as the plea deal was negotiated.
And she commented when she rejected it,
one, I'm concerned that the victim's families
are so vehemently against the steel.
And secondly, I'm not sure 30 years is high enough
for the crimes that they're admitting to,
so she had two concerns.
Now, the family issue is interesting
because the federal prosecutor,
who's, you know, she's representing the US,
she's representing the United States,
believes she was doing her job
because she did consult,
at least the testimony came out that way,
with the victims' families during Zoom calls,
and believe from their lawyers
that she had buy-in for the plea deal.
But as they got closer to the day of the hearing on this,
the families sort of decided they were totally
against it. And why are they totally against it, Ben? This is the interesting thing. It's
not because these people aren't going to serve lifetime without parole. The father and
son are going to serve lifetime without parole immediately following. However long they
spend in the federal can. It's that they get to go to a federal can for the first 30 years, which the families believe
is a cushier environment than having to spend time in the local penitentiary.
What did you think about that?
Because we're not talking about these people go free.
We're talking about where they spend 30 years of a 60 or 70 year sentence.
What do you think about that?
I think it creates some real complications in a way
because I don't know how you get around this, Popak.
We want the federal government, I think we
want the federal government to prosecute these claims,
especially because with the variability of state outcomes,
we don't know what's gonna happen.
Like look at Kyle Rittenhouse
and what would have happened
if the federal prosecutors in that situation
brought federal crimes.
You know, I think in that case,
the victims' families would not be objecting
to the federal government prosecuting
and entering into plea deals
that would sentence Kyle Rittenhouse, prison. And so I don't think the federal government prosecuting and entering into plea deals that would sentence Kyle written house
Prison and so I don't think the federal prosecutors come in this with any ill intent
But what they're nervous about is that in states with pervasive histories of racism
Will a jury of prosecutor a judge do the right things, you know in Kyle written house. We saw what that judge
and judge, do the right things. You know, when Kyle Rittenhouse, we saw what that judge was doing, right?
And the way that judge operated.
So we think the federal process is a backstop.
So we want to encourage these federal prosecutions, and ultimately, we do want to encourage these
federal plea deals.
I think this could just incentivize them from bringing civil rights cases like this. I just think it puts the federal prosecutors in a dilemma of what are they supposed to
do?
Have the federal prosecutors not pursued a robust prosecution and tried to get the admission?
I think people would have been outraged and said to the federal prosecutors, what are
you doing at such a clear cut case?
How are you not prosecuting this? And so it's just a very complicated situation.
And ultimately, I think at the end of the day,
the only way that because Travis McMichael
and the others were found guilty in sentence to life,
I only think what the family is saying is,
look, maybe just get these individuals to admit
that they did it.
Just the admission.
Which they did it.
Yeah, but maybe what you do is you don't even need the sentencing mechanism.
Like for the family, there's these people have already been sentenced to life.
So maybe just get them to sign a declaration and just this would be my solution.
Look, we're going to drop the federal charges because they're already sentenced to life and
the family doesn't want them serving federal person. So let's just get these individuals to
sign the declaration and we'll drop the federal charges because if they still pursue the federal
charges and they win, they're still going to be a federal life. Double life. Yeah, I mean,
I agree with you. I think that there was a
somebody screwed up in advising the family on this one. If the family's goal is to just put
them on the stand to clear their son's name further, not that his name needs to be cleared,
but to have it out there that this was which we all knew knew that this was race based in their murder of
their son or their family member.
And they just want another day in court, another trial because we already had one.
I guess that's one thing.
But double life doesn't make it any, you know, it doesn't meet out more justice.
These people are going to sit in a jail without possibility of parole. Only one of them,
Roddy is going to have a possibility of parole when he's 80. But I just sort of missed it. It was
like a swing and a miss for me. I think it's about the advice that's being given to the family.
So they're going to get one, I guess, what they want. Another two weeks trial with Travis McMichael
and his father representing themselves, all
the text messages going up about how racist they are.
And then the judges, if they get convicted, the judge will sentence them to life imprisonment.
And then the question will be, where do they start their life imprisonment?
Do they start in the federal system or do they start in the state system?
They have to start it somewhere.
We will keep everybody posted on the updates there.
I wanna talk Popoq about this unusual case
going on in Memphis, Tennessee.
The headlines, of course, are black women sentenced
to six years in prison over a voting error.
This relates to an individual by the name of Pamela Moses,
and she was sentenced to six years
and one day in prison for trying to register to vote.
Story gets a little more complicated
than that when you look into the weeds,
but it's still incredibly outrageous.
In 2015, Moses pled guilty to perjury and tampering
with evidence in connection to allegations
that she talked, that she stalked and harassed
a local judge, which in and of itself seems to be
a strange plea and a strange criminal prosecution in 2015.
But that...
What makes it strange, Ben?
What makes it strange is that she got prosecuted
for the tampering with evidence part
in connection with the allegations of a local judge.
It sounds very politically driven.
I mean, Pam Moses, the reason that this all
came to the fore is that she decided to run for mayor in Memphis, Tennessee, and then people
started looking at her record. But, you know, who knows what the relationship is with the judge,
but she was charged with tampering of evidence and connection with stalking a judge. It's just a very
strange factual circumstance, I mean, in terms of what you played for, but tampering with evidence is one of a handful of felonies that would
cause someone in Memphis, Tennessee to lose their voting rights.
And what Pam Moses says is, I never knew that.
Like I never even knew about that.
And then when I went to register to vote, it was my view that the judge in my sentencing there
had miscalculated the sentence.
I double checked with probation.
Probation gave me a certification that said,
I was ready, I able to vote and so I relied on that.
There was an error in that process.
What the prosecutors who prosecuted PAMO's
is that is you've made that all up. You knew from the outset that you were still on probation
from your tampering with evidence charge on the felony. And you basically knew that there
was all this backlog in the probation office. So you just got them to sign off on something
that they just thought they were signing like as
a scrivener of like, just any type of document. And once they looked into it, you knew that
you were an off probation. And then you registered to vote. But I guess why I want to highlight
this. I don't know what you think about it. Number one, but we talk about the January
6th prosecutions. We talk about people like the Oathkeeper terrorists.
We talk about, you know, even some of the lesser sentences, like you and I, and all the legal
aifers who have been on this journey with us, you know, know that the sentences are getting
stiffer now for the Jan 6th insurrectionist terrorists, but still the high end of the sentences that
we've talked about for the Jan 6th.
61 months, right, which is kind of right in, you know, even less than what she's has
to serve now for registering to vote, for attempting to register to the vote.
And not only that, but you have the local prosecutor over there, Amy Wyrick.
And she's issuing press releases, trumpeting this conviction and sentencing
as like a home run for her office, registering to vote as a six and a half year prison sentence.
A very sleepy, it's a very sleepy office.
If she's trumpeting this is her big, her big pelt on the wall.
Yeah. So, you know, the Pam Moses case reminds me and it really happened before you and
I launched legal AF.
But we'll talk about it now.
The one that I've always have been troubled with is the Crystal Mason case in which she attempted to cast a provisional ballot
in Texas. She had been freed from prison for tax fraud, but she was still unsupervised release.
The technicality she thought she could vote. She cast not even a real ballot then. If you remember, Crystal Mason cast a
provisional ballot to be reviewed by the voting board, the board of elections of that particular
precinct. She was sentenced to five years, and she's still sitting, well, she's actually out,
she's out appealing, but even the second level highest Texas appeals court has affirmed her conviction.
And she had much more, I think, good faith to believe that she could vote. It didn't really even vote.
So you have, and what's the common denominator between Crystal Mason and Pam Moses? They're both
black and black women. The Pam Moses case is what is the discussing Mason and Moses.
I think is the reason people are attracted to this show and attracted to what you and
I do.
Because analysis by Twitter and headlines doesn't work.
I read a headline about Pam Moses case and it was like a, you know, like a, supposed to
be a neutral headline. And it said,
woman sentenced to six years for voting error. And I was like, wow, that sounds terrible. And then
people start comparing it to the Jans X insurrectionists who are at the mid-level now. Remember,
the highest sentences will be the conspiracy and seditious conspiracy at the end of obstruction
at the 20-year level. But they like to make that comparison.
And I get it because this is a black woman
and it looks to be a disparate sentence.
And we've talked about disparate sentencing
on racial lines in past podcasts.
But when you dig deeper,
the judge did make a statement in her sentencing
or in her conviction that she knowingly tried
to register to vote.
And he went further and said that he found, he made a finding of fact that Moses tricked
the probation clerk to give her the form, saying she was off probation knowing that she wasn't.
I don't know what the evidence was that was presented, but you know, that's a strong T for the judge to come out and say that that is the finding that
he was making concerning her behavior. And then they link it back to the fact that she stalked the
judge and pled guilty and was represented by counsel, pled guilty to a charge of tampering with evidence.
So on its face, on its surface, it looks bad.
But when you and I dive in deeper, which is what you and I get,
I don't want to say paid to do,
what you and I volunteer to do every Saturday and the weekend,
is to get deeper into the facts.
I don't like the sentencing, I don't like the trumpeting,
but I'm not sure that in reviewing the weight of the evidence
as if we were a judge or a jury,
we would find something differently as it relates to Pam Moses. I'm still more concerned
about Crystal Mason facing five years in a Texas prison because she cast a provisional ballot
while she was out of jail, but on supervised release with a month or two to go.
out of jail, but on supervised release with a month or two to go.
I agree with you, Popak. I mean, also the 2015 conviction and plea was not the first for Pam Moses. I mean, I think there was one of the things the prosecutor
pointed out was that there was about 15 or 16 other like criminal complaints
against her, you know, and so that there was a significant
history there. But, you know, I do think when you look at that sentence, there is a disparate
sentencing, but we wanted to give you more facts about that. Now, definitely want to delve into
the NFL lawsuit. Everybody's been saying, Popeyes, Ben, you got to cover the NFL lawsuit. Everybody's been saying, Popeyes Ben, you got to cover the NFL lawsuit. And I think I'm going to go out and be an Olympian, Popeyes,
because I think that in the past 50 years,
the case that I litigated against the NFL,
is objectively, however you look at it,
probably one of the most significant,
probably most written about
and high profile one in Kaepernick V, the NFL.
And so I have experience in this space
in a very, very, very unique way.
I've also been a student of the NFL's collective
bargaining agreement.
I work with NFL players in navigating
the various provisions of the CBA,
injury grievances, non-injury grievance procedures, article 17 procedures within the CBA.
So I come in this with a lot of background and I want to give you a deep analysis. Before doing
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Well, I lean in for the Flores analysis.
That's okay.
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So let's dive into this NFL lawsuit.
So the lawsuit is filed by the former dolphins
head coach Brian Flores.
He's suing the NFL.
He says the league is run like a plantation. He filed a
federal class action alleging discrimination of himself and other similarly situated class
of black coaches. Um, he cites the statistics that well, right now in the NFL there's only one black coach is Mike Tomlinson Pittsburgh Steelers one out of 32 one out of 32. Um 70% plus of the players in the league
are black 31 of the owners of the 32 are white. There's no black owner in the league, despite 70% of players being black.
Brian Flores goes through the history of discrimination in the league. There are two pages dedicated to
Colin Kaepernick, where Brian Flores says that Colin Kaepernick, who's a starting quarterback, who's a Super Bowl
Caled recorder back.
He, Brian Flores says that because of Colin Kaepernick's political stance, despite being a Super Bowl
Caleder quarterback, he's not gotten an opportunity to even interview for teams.
How much of that complaint, let me ask you a question.
How much of the complaint that Flores filed? Do you think
came from the pleading that you had originally done with Kaepernick?
You know, I don't think you have a Brian Flores lawsuit if Colin doesn't pave the way
in this area. You know, did the lawsuits are different. We filed an article 17 collusion case because players are subject to a collective bargaining
agreement.
So based on the league has an antitrust exemption,
there's a union that represents the players,
which is different than the coaches.
And so because of that dynamic,
there's a contract between the League and the NFL PA union.
It's called the Collective Bargaining Agreement.
And that process sets forth a adjudication procedure of disputes.
So if we filed our case in federal court, the Kaepernick case, the NFL would have said,
you're a union negotiated in arbitration,
Article 17 of the collective bargaining agreement,
so you should be in the arbitration.
Our case would have gotten dismissed,
but this is filed in federal court
because the coaches are not subject
to the collective bargaining agreement.
Now he's filing a lawsuit against the team he worked for,
the Miami dolphins, he had a winning record,
by the way, in his last season. He was the first coach in about 10, as I followed Dolphins, you know,
another adopted home state. He was the first coach in a long time that had two winning seasons.
In fact, everybody, until he filed the lawsuit in the sports world, was shocked when the dolphins
didn't retain him. Now with the evidence that's in the allegations that are in the complaint,
I understand why he's no longer working for the Miami Dolphins because he has some bombshell
allegations against the ownership there. But we were all shaking our head like how they fire
that guy. That guy had a good year. He won seven in a row. Yeah, and the allegation against the
dolphins is that Flora's alleges the owner, Stephen Ross.
Stephen Ross is a real estate developer.
His company also owns equinoxes,
but they basically have developed,
what's that area of Manhattan
that they basically literally like?
Hudson Yards.
Yeah, Hudson Yards is like all Stephen Ross,
but he's been a very successful developer before that.
But he alleges that Stephen Flora has offered him $100,000 a game to lose the
game's on purpose and to take the season so that the dolphins could get a better draft pick. He
said that he complained about that. He also alleged that Steven Ross tried to get him to go on a yacht and try to have him conspire to tamper and to
get other players and talent when there's anti tampering provisions.
So he alleges that when he wouldn't go along with this unlawful conduct, that was one
of the reasons that he was.
And interestingly, and I know you're going to dive into this case.
While the NFL's PR machine has come out denying the headline in the lawsuit, which is the NFL,
which I think comes from your original allegations, that the NFL is a racially segregated plantation,
as if we were in the 1700s with white owners and black people being discriminated against.
The NFL said, well, we reject that,
but we're gonna look into more the allegation
against Stephen Ross trying to bribe his coach
to tank games to increase his lottery pick.
You know, in our complaint, we called the NFL
a peculiar institution, which was a reference to that, although it didn't specifically use those words,
but it did use the words peculiar institution. So he also files the lawsuit against the New York Giants,
he because he interviews there and says the interview process there is a discriminatory process. He interviews with the Denver Broncos and says the interview there is a discriminatory
process and then he sues the NFL as well as one of the defendants in case.
Talk about the Rooney rule though because that really is the heart of those out there.
The heart of the Rooney rule is because the NFL had this history of discriminatory conduct
and just having white coaches.
The Rooney Rule was implemented within the NFL
to say you have to interview diverse coaches.
Now in theory, the NFL will argue,
we have this Rooney Rule because we wanna give
black coaches an opportunity.
But what most black coaches would tell you
is that it's a sham and that
basically when there's an interview process, there's kind of a dog and pony show where you just
have to call in the black coach just for the facade of, hey, we interviewed a black coach. Check
the box. Check the box. Check the box we called in a black coach. In fact, one of the pieces of evidence that Brian Flores puts in his complaint is before
he even interviews with the New York Giants, Bill Bella check, intended to send a congratulatory
email to the coach who actually got the job who has the same name.
Who's also named Brian, right? His name Brian, but he sent it to Brian Flores
and Brian Flore was like, great, I got the job.
And he goes, wait, wait a minute.
Are you talking about me?
And then I got the job.
I haven't even interviewed yet.
And then Bella check said, like, oh, I fucked this up.
I'm really, I'm really sorry about that.
And that's one of the pieces of the evidence.
And then his claim against Ben Vibranko's was,
it was a discriminatory interview process.
And he basically says that John L. Way and others
came in hungover and didn't even take it seriously
and kind of just made a sham of the interview process.
And look at the proof of the pudding, then.
Since the Rooney rule, which is 20 years plus,
as you started this segment,
one coach at a 32 is black.
What does that tell you?
The proof of the pudding is in the numbers.
Yeah, and exactly.
And there are a lot of coaches
who are white, who are related to each other.
Like there's a lot of kind of whose dads were coaches.
And so the dads of coach, then the sons of coach,
the brothers are coaches.
And by the way, they may be talented coaches,
but at the end of the day,
they've been put in this opportunity
that black coach has never had that opportunity.
And on a similar point,
the feeder stream up to head coach
is not colleges where there's more black coach
has been up many more.
It is the offensive coordinator and the defensive coordinator
position.
And the numbers of blacks that occupy offensive coordinator
and defensive coordinator positions
is also woefully low.
So they're not even getting the leg up
to be in the academy, the coach academy,
to become a coach because they're not offensive coordinators,
they're not defensive coordinators.
Yeah, and so let me give you my analysis
of the case right now,
because the discrimination case,
by the way, the lawyers did an incredible job with the narrative in the complaint. It is powerful. The PR they did around the complaint, A plus. The one
question that I have in my mind is this case being framed as a class action for discrimination. And I want to break down why I think that ultimately
can be problematic strategically. Obviously, the lawyers can pivot out of a class action. They could
drop the class allegations. What I suspect may be going on is that they plet it as a class action to try to rally other coaches who this has
happened to and then drop the class accusations and bring these as discrimination lawsuits.
But you know, you have a, you know, you can have a lawsuit like person A,
sues company B because they get fired for being for their race, for their ethnicity, for their
religion, for not wanting to violate a law. That's a wrongful termination case. So if he
alleged just, I got fired by Miami, because I wouldn't do unlawful things, he could sue
Miami for wrongful termination.
I think that's a strong case.
Similarly, he can sue for discrimination
in the interview process.
New York Giants, you brought me in,
and you discriminated against me,
and you didn't hire me because I'm black.
And here's how I'm gonna prove it.
Same thing with the Broncos.
You discriminated against me in the interview process.
The class action means that you're filing
an on behalf of similarly situated people,
a class of individuals.
And you have to satisfy,
if it's a state case, state class action procedures,
but in federal court, you have to satisfy federal rule 23,
which is the class action provisions.
And then you have to have like numerosity.
There has to be a ton of people, you know, like not five, not 50, like maybe 50,
but like hundreds, thousands of people numerosity.
There has to be tipicality.
The plaintiff who's leading the case has to have the the lead class action. His claims or her claims or their claims have to be similar or identical to the class.
There has to be commonality. The class has to share essentially the identical damages and situation. in situation, then you have to prove that class counsels an adequate representative and the lead plaintiff is an adequate representative. Why I think
this is going to be difficult, though, as a class action, is because of the case,
Supreme Court case called Walmart stores ink versus dukes. It's a 2011 case.
It is a gender discrimination case brought by a group of women against Walmart and they
alleged pervasive discrimination against women in Wal-Mart across the United States of America.
And in that case, the Supreme Court held, you can't bring those as class actions. The discrimination while
maybe similar and the attributes could be the same, everybody experienced the discrimination
slightly differently. They didn't use the same exact conduct to every one of you similarly.
And so, and your damages may be slightly different. You may have gone
to a psychiatrist. You may have gone to a psychologist. The supervisor from North Carolina, who may
have discriminated against you, is different than the supervisor from Miami who discriminated against
you. So this Walmart case really destroyed any ability of discrimination cases to be brought by private litigators in federal
courts as class actions.
And so that's why you don't really see those.
They can be brought as mass actions.
Like you could group people together and many people can sue for their own individual
claims, but not as class.
I've got an opinion and a question,
a question of course to you.
My opinion is not different from your analysis,
but I think I know why they did this,
and not because I have any insider knowledge
just from reading it.
And I know these lawyers and their class action guys,
that class action lawyers.
The goal, if you're a plaintiffs lawyer and you've got a class action,
is to file it and you have to get past the first hurdle. The first hurdle in the process
is to convince the federal judge here that you have the right to certify a class
going over all the prongs that you had allized earlier in the segment, numerosity,
typicality, commonality, all of that.
And there's a trial within a trial.
There's a fight within a fight early on in the case, maybe six months from now, just on
the issue of can there be a disertification of a class putting aside the merits, although
the merits are involved in the prong analysis
that you just laid out, of course they are.
But the fight now is not one to prove whether Flores was racially discriminated against
or whether the NFL is a plantation as alleged on the first day of Black History Month, which
is when this case was filed in the South District of New York, the fight between the lawyers for the NFL and these teams and the lawyers for
Flores, the class action lawyers, is over certification. They get past certification.
This case is over. It will be settled almost immediately by this is my view almost immediately by the NFL.
The fight now the fight is between certification and non certification.
If certification happens with all the caveats and all the hurdles that you've identified then.
The problems with mass discrimination cases being the subject, proper subject for a class action vehicle.
They get past that.
They're done. They've won the case.
NFL will settle. They'll be changes historically, you know, culturally throughout the NFL and real changes as a result of the settlement. Now, here's the quite. That's my opinion. Here's the question I have for you.
still in the running for a series of head coaching jobs. And of course, those teams are saying the right things,
which are, well, it's okay that he filed that lawsuit.
We're still in an interview process.
Do you think, given your experience,
do you think Flores has just wrecked his career
for the next five or 10 years
while this thing's maybe being litigated?
Or do you think the NFL will bend over backwards and the teams to give them a head coaching job while he's while he's litigating it.
I think it would be very difficult for the NFL for a team to hire an active litigant.
to hire an active litigant,
even though that should not be the barrier for entry. I just think it is,
I think they should.
I think it's inappropriate that they don't.
I'm just drawing on all of the experience that I know.
I'm asking.
You know, that oftentimes it is a death now
when you file a lawsuit for you to get hired, you know, that oftentimes it is a death now when you file a lawsuit for you to get hired,
you know, in that in the industry.
Why did Florentz do it? He didn't want to keep going through the charade. He couldn't take it any
longer. Why is he using a maskiness? Why is he using the lawsuit? And whatever potential
remedy could be fashioned for him a year, two years, three years, or never,
depending upon the results of the case.
Why do you think he decided at the height of his career?
He is a recently former head coach in the NFL, one of only two when he was, when he held
the job, why file the federal case now?
He, but he clearly must believe that his
career is over before filing the lawsuit. Right. You know, I think that he thought if there
were other avenues of getting a head coaching job, he probably wouldn't have filed the
lawsuit. You know, the purpose of a lawsuit is to make you whole at the end of the day.
You know, the moment he got fired in Florida,
I think he believed all of his dreams and hopes
and aspirations of being a head coach in this league.
Stephen Ross is a very powerful owner,
hard-carnished, and that he's done.
And I think he's also courageous
at the end of the day too, but for filing the lawsuit.
There are some things that Brian Flore is did in the past
that I don't think were great.
That doesn't make what he did now less courageous,
but one of the things Brian Flores did,
for example, with a player on the Miami Dolphins
named Kenny Stills, you know,
who was one of the people who knelt with Colin Kaepernick,
Brian Flores intentionally started blasting
Jay Z music in the locker room in front of Kenny
Stills because at the same time Jay Z said that players need to stop kneeling and move
away from kneeling.
Byronic.
It's ironic that he's now standing on the shoulders of Colin in the case.
Well, but, but you know, that doesn't make, you know, you could then become courageous,
you know, like, you know, but,
but, you know, but there is that piece of the history too, because I remember when that
happened a few years ago, and I was like, that's a pretty fucked up thing to do to a player
who's kneeling for social justice, to retaliate against the player like that doesn't mean,
you now can come to the realization. But, you know, overall, Popo, I want to, I want to, I want to, I'm going to follow this one closely. And again, kudos to these lawyers,
very powerful case, the images, the way that complaint was structured,
the story being told, I'm wondering strategically if they pull away that
class action stuff, focus on the discrimination, because what I worry is
that they're going to get bogged down in the procedural
morass of class action discovery.
Well, they are the first six months.
They are.
And we're not and we're not going to focus on the discrimination until a year from now
and and that that could slow down the process.
But we'll follow up.
Popo while we're doing that before we go on to the next topic, what chair are you in?
Oh, it's a very important book. look at the whole setup is pretty incredible.
Tell me about your chair and you know that segment, which was, which was really fascinating.
I leaned into all of it because I was, I wanted to hear your, your impression.
Also reminded me that I'm glad I'm sitting in a really, really comfortable new chair.
And from the first moment I sat in this X chair, my body immediately said, ah, so this is
what a real office chair is supposed to feel like.
If you can look at the background, I have another office chair, which I don't like as
much as the X chair.
I love this one.
Oh, chair.
See you later.
You're on the X chair.
No, that's all.
This is on the X chair.
And I look, now I look forward to sitting at my little podcast studio here in my office with you every with you every weekend. You can your chair the one you're sitting in now, Ben.
Can your chair give you a massage while you're working my X chair. This podcast is brought to you by X chair.
Yeah, I'm not even sure you're sitting on a chair.
Looks like you may be sitting on some sort of ball.
Can your office chair heat up or cool down?
My X chair can.
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to like this chair. And you got it, you got to sit on something you feel good and we sit
a lot in the day. And popoq, you installed that yourself in like 30 minutes, which shows you
it's easy to set up. I was so impressed that you were able to do that. You know, and that just
says easy setup, easy installation. Go get it right now. So Popeye, I want to talk about updates on the Gile max. Well, short update
on the new trial. We talked about several weeks ago, her and her legal team filed the
motion for new trial because one of the jurors started giving press interviews after she was convicted and found guilty, saying that
he was a victim of sexual assault, and that he convinced the other jurors to convict her
because of his experience.
And then essentially he acted as an expert in the jury room to try to convince other jurors
about problems with fading memory and the
like of when you are a sexual assault victim.
The problem is when he went through his jury questionnaire and what we've talked about
on legal I have takes place at the beginning before the trial happens during jury selection process called the voidier, the vo-i-r-d-i-r, vo-i-r-d-i-r-e vo-dier.
Which one does that mean voidier?
To speak the truth, preliminary examination to...
It's not exactly that.
It's a French word.
We'll have to put it up on the chat.
It's French for speaking the truth.
Yeah.
I had a, I went to law school
as people know in North Carolina.
And my, that is a funny little aside.
How lawyers in different regions
pronounce Vaudere.
I pronounce it the way you do.
In North Carolina, and in the South,
they pronounce it Vordyrie.
Yeah, well, and actually,
if you translate a word for word, from old French and derived
and derivative from the Latin verum, that which is true. But it basically means to speak the truth.
So the issue is this individual didn't tell the truth in the preliminary blood deer process,
said that he wasn't a sexual assault victim. He likely would have been disqualified from the
jury because lawyers want to avoid precisely what took place here. You want jurors who
are impartial, who will watch what's happening and weigh the evidence and, and, and follow
the evidence. And so the, the update here, Popoq is that Gilaens Maxwell's team, they want to keep the
motion that they filed for a new trial, what's called under seal.
They don't want it being made public.
Tell us about what that even means.
What does under seal mean?
And what are they concerned about that becoming public?
Because that was their most recent letter brief to the judge. I also like how in New York, you all
file letter letters like letters to the judge. Yeah, it's it's weird. So in federal court
practice in the Southern district, you write a lot of letters to your judge. You, of course,
you actually file them. So they're all in the public record. But for instance, you can't file a motion,
like a motion to dismiss in federal court, New York until you send a letter to the judge
and the other side telling the judge why you want to file the motion and the grounds for
it, which means your letter is basically your motion, a smaller version of your motion.
Then the judge will even sometimes hold a hearing.
You know, get you on the phone to talk about your letter request. And then once you get the letter request, then you file your motion. But by that time, the judge has already heard the
arguments in this letter process. So now we have a letter process. By the way, I like the letter
process. But you know, out in California, we have this a ton of stuff that involves you like what's called meeting and conferring
with the posing council where you have to like go back and forth with like letters to each other
and try to resolve it with each other before you can then go to the judge. We can't write letter
briefs and so we have to file formal motions. And then you have to rely
on the opposing lawyer to like fill in their part in the motion. And then they, the problem is in
theory, that's great. But lawyers game that meeting confer. And so the process becomes really
cumbersome and not what it was intended to do. I like the matter process. Yeah, yeah. Although one
day we'll talk about the thing I don't like in your practice in California, which is the tentative ruling
that the judge posed before you even opened your mouth
and had your oral argument.
But that'll be for another day.
So they've sent a letter, the lawyers
for the defense of Galein Maxwell, the defendant's lawyers,
have sent a letter to Judge Nathan.
And they've said, look, we have filed the motion
for new trial.
In the motion for new trial attachments,
we have attached the juror questionnaire,
this 20 page document that every juror was asked to fill out,
was required to fill out as a prospective
juror so that the lawyers on both sides and the judge could see the answers asked follow-up
questions in the Void Deer process where you and I actually stand in front of the prospective
jury pool and we say juror number 27, juror number 10, what do you think about this?
I see on your form, it says the following.
Tell me more about that.
This is what you and I get to do with the what your process
or the judge does it a lot in the federal system.
Well, that means your questionnaire has to be accurately filled out.
There was a section as you and I have anticipated
that asked for were you the victim of prior sexual assault or any kind of victim related to sex crimes and
This juror number 50 who's already been who's already outed himself. He's making a documentary in London through either the
Independent or the Guardian. He's he's now identified himself as Scotty David. So we'll call him Scotty David
Scotty David. So we'll call him Scotty David. Scotty David did not insert in the questionnaire
something that was that apparently is true, that he as a child or otherwise was a victim of sexual
assault. He goes in, he gets selected. Mate probably would have got bounced from the jury under
one of the challenges that either side official challenges that either side are allowed to raise.
They get a limited number of them and he may have still squeaked through. Sometimes you and I get
jurors that we were like, hmm, I wish I didn't have to take juror number 16, but I'm out of challenges
and there's no other way around it. So it's not a guarantee that he wouldn't have made the jury pool,
but certainly lying or forgetting to list a very important element of the case
doesn't look great for him. The judge is going to hold a hearing. The fight on the most
the letter that is just sent to them is whether the questionnaire is going to be unsealed. So there's
a process in the court system, federal or state that certain information and certain documents for a limited time
and on a narrow grounds can be sealed from the public view.
Meaning the judge can see it,
the participants, the litigants can see it,
the clerk can see it, but the public can't see it.
And different judges take different views,
but there is a federal law and statute and rules
that govern what can it can't be
sealed. And the judges have to lean in favor of unceiling so that the process is public. And
in the light, you and I had a recent case in which there was a fight over what will be
sealed and what won't be sealed. And of course, when there's really embarrassing facts or
business information, the lawyers for that team will want to bend over backwards and overseel
everything. And then the other side wants to remove the ceiling and the judge has to mediate
that in the middle. The defense has said, don't unseal the questionnaire because we don't want
Scotty David and his team to see it before we cross examine him at the
hearing that you're going to hold your honor about whether we're entitled to a new trial.
We don't want him to know our cross examination strategy and advance.
That's the fight here.
There's going to be a hearing.
He's Scotty David's going to be cross examine.
The fight now is whether he's going to get in advance and advance the questionnaire because
the jurors don't leave the process with the questionnaire in their back pocket. They don't get to take it home.
They got to put it all. Everything that was involved in the case, it gets sealed and enveloped
and gets and gets stored by the clerk, but they don't get to take home like courtesy copies or
memorabilia for the trial. Here's my questionnaire. So that's the fight. What do you think about that?
That should he get the questionnaire in advance? No, right. You shouldn't get the
questionnaire in advance. I mean, he should just be asked the questions. He should testify
truthfully. I mean, I think we already know what he's going to say. He said that he breeze
through the questionnaire. He thought he filled out everything truthfully. And I don't think
he's going to say anything different than that. You know, when I think he should just, I think he should just say what he said in the jury room.
You know, it's really unfortunate. It's a really unfortunate thing.
We want Gelae Maxwell to be, we want that sentence to hold.
I don't want that jury verdict to be tainted at all.
But I think it is critical and important in any case, whether you are Gilei Maxwell
or whether you're a far more sympathetic plaintiff
and I think, mostly all, I mean,
far more sympathetic defendant.
And I think most would be more sympathetic
than defend.
And in fact, whether you're a plaintiff or a defendant,
we just want people to have a fair opportunity
in our court system.
And this is not what's supposed to take place
in the jury room.
And I've already
said, Popeye, it's my belief, very confident that that sadly, the verdict is going to be
overturned by the judge, you know, after kind of a full hearing on these issues. I want
to turn to what's going on in Texas, a judge recently granting an injunction in favor of an engineering company
that said a Texas laws infringing on our first amendment rights and our ability to speak out as a Palestinian against Israel,
if we want to as a company,
that that should not be a factor
in whether or not a government does business
with us as a company.
Wherever you stand on the issue,
we're not gonna be having on this legal AF, politicized discussion on the
Israel-Palestinian situation right now, period. Just not what we're doing on this,
because in my view, what should be undisputed, regardless of where you stand, is
that the court made the right decision here. And so let me tell you, and I'll get your opinion on that, Popeye.
The state of Texas enacted a law that in relevant parts specified the following, quote,
a governmental entity may not enter into a contract with a company for goods or services
unless the contract contains a written verification from the company that it
won does not boycott Israel and two will not boycott Israel during the term of the contract.
Plaintiff, A&R engineering and testing ink is a company that has done business with the
city of Houston in the past and wants to continue to do so.
Its contract is up for renewal and Houston has tendered A&R new contract, which contains the language requiring A&R to certify that it will not boycott Israel.
And this company was not comfortable doing so. And the court ruled in favor of the company
and the court said, quote,
the speech contemplated by this company
may make some individuals,
especially those who identify with Israel
and comfortable anxious or even angry.
Nevertheless, speech even speech
that upsets other segments of the population
is protected by the First Amendment
unless it escalates into violence and misconduct.
And we don't just see this law here in Texas, Popoac,
because this is also a sign of some of the other laws.
Republican governors are trying to force unprivate companies.
We see a lot of this with DeSantis in Florida,
trying to enact provisions that if you want to do business.
With Florida, you have to enact radical right wing
extremist agendas.
You can't teach this.
You can't have that policy there.
You can't, as a private company do mandates.
And so what's so strange and interesting and unlawful is that this Republican party, though,
that's found in the past, I thought their view was that big government encroaching on private business. All you see is them, Republicans wanting to encroach
on private businesses and tell them what to do,
what they can say or can't say using the force
of their government powers.
What do you think about this case?
What do you think about the rule?
Yeah, look, I like all the points that you hit.
The gyroscope we've talked about this before,
the Republicans moral universe is missing.
The gyroscope is spinning really out of control.
Right-wing people had always been pro-business
and conservative, I mean that in the traditional sense
in their approach, conservative meaning restraint, not conservative meaning activism.
We'll talk about it another time. The Supreme Court that used to be comprised of a
Rehnquist in a San Jose O'Connor practice conservative restraint. A Supreme Court comprised of
Alito Gorsuch, Amy Coney Barrett, Thomas, and the like practices a brand
of conservative or right-wing activism from the bench.
So you and I are always like, well, how do you reconcile these positions?
And the reality is they're not reconcilable.
So Texas passed a law against what is called the BDS movement, the boycott
divestment and sanctions against Israel movement.
And the reason we're talking about it here,
and the reason you're so right, is because it implicates
first amendment issues, which are part of our political
discourse, and part of the litigated politics that you and I
talk about.
And we promised our listeners and followers from day one
that we would not blow sunshine, and we would not run away from tough issues, although it's not, you know, this is not really the heart of our case. So Texas passed the law. It's actually the second law. The Texas had passed their 2019 law had also been struck down or was about to be struck down by a federal court. They rewrote it. And this is the revised attempt to stop people who have federal, I'm sorry,
state contracts with aspects of the state from also exercising their First Amendment rights
to participate in the BDS movement.
And this engineering firm that had a contract with the city of Houston needed to sign a
pledge that they were not going
to participate and voice their opinion
about the Israel, Palestinian issues,
the owner of the engineering company's Palestinian.
He refused to sign it.
That meant the city of Houston didn't give him the work,
which made him a plaintiff with standing to sue
on the fact that this statute would have violates the First Amendment Constitution
and Judge Hannan, or Hainan, who sits in Houston,
a federal district court, Southern District, Texas,
appointed by W by Bush, ruled in his favor
and said this law, as you just said,
we may be uncomfortable by certain aspects
of First Amendment speech, right?
You know, Dave Chappelle makes people uncomfortable. This topic may make one side of the aisle or
the issue uncomfortable, but that's what the First Amendment is for, up with certain limits at the
Constitution and the Supreme Court have illuminated. But so I agree with you. I think even though my political feelings
may lean a different direction,
looking at it as constitutional
analyzers and scholars, the way you and I try to be for our legal AFers,
I think that decision was right.
I sighed here with the Republican judge who ruled that that particular statute
is unconstitutional to the first amendment.
What do you do if you don't like that the business has this position or that position?
You could boycott the business. You know, you could say, hey, we're not doing business,
we're not going to purchase services from the business. That's a good way.
Here I ran the other way though, because the engineering company doesn't take walk in business.
They're really for what I can see.
They do municipal big projects.
They need cities and states to hire them, but he rightly refused to sign the certification
that he's, that he legislates his conduct in a completely unrelated area.
I want my engineers to be certified to know how to build buildings, to know how to make
measurements. That's what I want. What they do in their off time and whether they have a podcast
like you and I expressing whatever view, as long as it doesn't incite violence, it's not seditious
conspiracy. They can have that podcast too. Why would say this? You know, they have a, yeah,
I, we could delve deeper into the business. The, the hook on
the regulation, which is now unconstitutional, is that they have a city contract. So if you want to
have the city contract, I'm not sure if that means they exclusively do business with the city
versus with people outside of it. But the hook is, if you want a contract with us, here's how you
have to speak. And they're very lucrative.
Those city countries.
And the court said you can't force, you can't force that.
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Popoq are you happy you finally have a popoqy?
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I wanna turn to a big ruling in North Carolina.
Lots of very positive,
Jerry Mandarin news for Democrats.
We talked in the last podcast about Alabama, the NAACP, and a number of entities
filed lawsuits against the racist redistricting that took place in Alabama, went to a three-district
court judge panel ruled that the Alabama map, which essentially put made, even though African Americans and Alabama make up close to 30%
of the population, it basically just created one congressional district
instead of two. And so that was ruled to be unconstitutional
in Alabama. And we were, I think, talking on that show,
there's a big ruling that could happen in North Carolina and the North Carolina Supreme Court.
And the gerrymandered, it's saying, the gerrymandered, redistricting done by Republican lawmakers
last year that would have given GOP candidates a sizeable advantage in North Carolina elections
for the midterms. and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and the political and stand, but the four Democratic justices joined in the majority opinion here.
And the North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein
wrote, quote, under our Constitution,
political power must be vested in derived from the people.
And our government must be founded upon their will only.
And so a very profound and important ruling here. And one of the things
Popok as well that is, you know, I think very notable for our legal efforts in terms of like
the Jerry Mander maps, according to the Cook political report. Let me just read what David Wasserman wrote. He says, and owing to some
acrobatics, Jerry Manders and Illinois and New York as well as favorable court developments
in Alabama, Ohio and Pennsylvania. This was before this North Carolina ruling even came
out. Democrats have now taken a small lead in our redistricting projections for the first time all cycle.
This was supposed to be a disastrous redistricting situation for Democrats, but it's actually
turning out to be in the Democrats' favor.
Now, my view and the view of the Democrats in the legislation that they won't pass for the people
is that gerrymandering shouldn't exist.
This is ridiculous.
We should abolish this concept of gerrymandering.
So, but it exists.
The Republicans have tried to racially gerrymander
and they've done it in such a gregious ways
that federal courts, the state courts are saying,
you can't do it.
It's absurd to me that you could politically, gerrymandering, and that that's okay, that
you could try to slice it along political lines.
But it's very hard to do that for Republicans without being racist.
And that's the difference where they found versus where the Democrats gerrymandering.
Because the Democrats gerrymandering is not done in a racist way, it's been done in a political way,
but not a racist way. So what do you think about this ruling Popeye?
I think thank God for the state courts system, thank God for the show, because we've talked about
from the very beginning, the courts being the vanguard and the protector of the people
if done appropriately.
And it's not the federal courts that are saving the bacon
here for the Democrats.
It's the state courts.
The reason the federal courts have been sort of
sidelineed from the redistricting fight
and finding constitutional violations
based on redistricting really comes from a 2019 Supreme Court case
where Roberts was in the majority
and wrote the opinion, Rucho versus Common Cause,
where, and this is going to shock our listeners and followers,
the Supreme Court took the position that redistricting
and how states divide up their map for their electorate
and for their elected officials is a political question.
And therefore, the Supreme Court
would not sully their hands with purely political questions.
They would leave that to the electorate in the states
and backed out of an abdicated responsibility
over regulating
on a federal level, redistricting.
Now people at home listening and probably thinking,
what do you mean the Supreme Court back that
of a political question issue?
All they've been doing this last term
has been involving themselves in highly charged
political issues, but you'll find that when,
you know, this is reverse engineering, when the Supreme Court doesn't want to get involved with something, they say, oh,
political, purely political question. We can't, we can't sell it ourselves, we can evolve
with that. But when they want to get involved with something, then all of the political question
doctrine goes out the window. State courts don't have this problem, and the state courts have
stepped up, and the result is what you just quoted.
At the beginning of the term or the beginning of the season, we thought, oh, shit, with
all of the voter suppression laws that are coming out of the 2020, sorry, the earlier election
with Biden, that the Republicans are ramming down everybody's throats at the statehouse
level.
They're going to do the same thing on redistricting, and we're going to be worse at the midterms and beyond because of Jerry Mandering.
And it looks like because of the state courts that have rejected these maps and forced
these legislators to go back to the drawing board and do them fairly and equally,
we may end up, Democrats may end up plus one or plus two
in an advantage of the Republicans. So be careful what you ask for when you're a Republican
legislator sitting there trying to gerrymandor. Now the two recent ones, the three recent,
well, the two most recent ones are North Carolina and Ohio, both by four to three decisions
of their highest courts. And the four to three decision in Ohio,
which throughout the map there recently,
one Republican switch sides and voted with the majority.
In the North Carolina Supreme Court decision
rejecting just yesterday, the proposed map
for the Republican led legislation or legislature,
they, we went down party lines for, as you said,
four Democrats, three Republicans. If the map had been accepted, it would have resulted in 10
safe Republican districts and only three safe Democratic districts. And the Supreme Court of North Carolina said, you have to now use a
statistical analysis to make sure that the way you're drawing this map mirrors the electorate at large
and the demographics of the electorate at large and come back to us with another map. Similar thing
in Ohio, relying not on the U.S. Constitution, but on the state constitution, which required
fair distribution of the electorate in redistricting.
So it looks like we may have dodged a bullet this season, but it's only because the state
Supreme courts are stepping forward and throwing out these maps.
Look, Democrats, Jerry Mandertoo, I'm not here to, you know, we're going to call it balls
and strikes.
There's at least 12 states that have illegal redistricting maps if the voting law that's
been kicking around Congress way too long were passed.
It would eliminate, it would find violent of that law that hasn't yet
been passed. 12 states maps, seven of them are Republican, but five of them are Democrat.
Right now, as of Friday, a case just got filed against New York, which is heavily Democratic
by 12 Republican voters saying, hey, we're getting redistricted out of existence by the Democrats are in power.
So it's not, Jerry Mandering is not just, it's not a new thing, and it's not just a Republican thing.
Democrats do it too, and they will for as long as their, this voting law is not passed by Congress.
Exactly. And just here's the difference at the end of the day.
Democrats want to eliminate Jerry Mandarin.
While it exists, we're going to have to play the game.
And we're not going to do it in a racist way because it's not in our DNA as Democrats,
but we're going to have to Jerry Mandarin.
But we want to eliminate it.
It's a very easy comeback when they go, oh, well, I thought you're against gerrymandor. We are. We want to get rid of gerrymandor.
Why don't you want to get rid of gerrymandor? Because I'll tell you why. I don't want to get
rid of gerrymandering. Just look at in non gerrymandored states, especially with local legislative districts for local state offices. People elect
Democrats. By and large, Democrats would crush in non-Jerrymandered states. If you don't
divide and carve it up and make these Frankensteinian districts, Democrats would have power,
very long-lasting power. But speaking about, though, just like racism in the Republican DNA, I want to turn to
Fulton County, Georgia, where the district attorney there, Fawney Willis, has in paneled,
there will be in paneling.
She wrote to the courts there for a paneling a special grand jury to investigate Donald Trump's
extortion of Raffensburger his interference in the election process, you know demanding that
Raffensburger, their secretary of state in Georgia find more votes, you know, Trump's attempts to tamper with the results in Fulton County and elsewhere.
Lindsey Graham's efforts there. So,
Fony Willis, she gave a interview to the Atlanta Journal Constitution, one of the main papers in
Georgia, main paper in Atlanta. And what she told the paper is that the Fulton County
the paper is that the Fulton County, the court process that was going to be allowed by the judge, that they're expected to seat this special grand jury starting May 2nd. She told the newspaper that
it could potentially continue to work through 2023, but that they expect a lot of activity to be taking place in June and July of the
summer. You know, she also said, quote, there's a possibility that after two months, we'll
have all of the information. We need to press forward. There's a possibility that after
a week, one, that some of the issues, you know, may come to a halt. We're not sure, but
we may press ahead. But when
let me clear, Popeye, what she says that we will maybe be able to press forward after two months.
She's talking about a criminal prosecution of Donald Trump and other co-conspirators in Georgia
who tried to interfere and did interfere with the elections who extorted their Secretary of State and Georgia, who engaged in all of that, which we have on
audio. One of the reasons why I said, you know, we're speaking of like racism in the Trump Republican DNA.
Let me give you what Willis says to the newspaper. She says, quote,
I've gotten more racist comments in the last year than ever before. I get called an N word very regularly.
It's really silly to me that they believe that by hurling those kind of insults,
that it is going to impact the way we do our investigation. It's not going to impact me to do
something faster. It's not going to impact me in treating
the former president or anyone else unfairly.
And it's not going to make me stop
when I have a lawful duty to do.
The heart goes out there, you know,
but she's doing incredible work out there.
And I think it's gonna result in a late 2022,
early 2023 prosecution of Trump.
I agree.
And the thing that I found most troubling about that article, about it, is that she's asked
the FBI to help protect her and others related to it.
At the same time, that Trump at a recent rally blew the racist dog whistle again, calling prosecutors racists because they're going
after him and his family.
Well, let's look at the prosecutors that he's obviously referring to.
Latisha James, Fawney Willis, and Alvin Bragg of the Manhattan D.A.'s office, what do
they have in common?
They're black. So when a white person of privilege,
and there's no more entitled or privileged person
in the universe, he's to use his phrase,
he's the most entitled and privileged person,
the Trump and his family, says racism
tries to turn the tables on what racism is
and the definition of racism and turn it on its head and claim that because the prosecutors
have an urban cities and states and country, you know, states happen to be black. It must be a racist witch hunt against him is really, you know, anybody that that continues to want to be in the Republican party with Trump as
its titular head really has to check themselves into a psychologist. I've been really, I think it's
become if this is the talking points and the planks for this party and they've lost their way.
It absolutely lost their way. I think about Mike Pence speaking
at the Federalist Society Convention this past week.
And he spoke out, he condemned Trump
for spreading the big lie.
I mean, Pence is such a coward
so that when he comes out with these statements,
it's like, okay, now a year plus later you he comes out with these statements, you know, it's like, okay,
now a year plus later, you're coming out with a statement that's strong and saying that you
absolutely had no authority to owe.
I don't like the way he put that. Everybody's giving him some sort of, you know, not
they're on the independent side, some sort of mock credit because he came out a year later
and said something against Trump. What he really said, Ben, at this Federalist Society conclave in Orlando,
was that don't blame me, Mike Pence, because I, as the vice president,
had no authority to overturn and not accept the electors.
And neither would, and he went on, because he's got raw meat.
He's got to throw out at these people,
because he'd like to run for office again. Neither will Kamala Harris, when we retake the White House,
she won't have the right as the Vice President. It's all about me, me, me, me, me. It wasn't about Trump.
It was like, don't hang me politically or otherwise, because I had no choice as the Vice President.
But the worst part of that day was who followed
him. So they gave him polite golf clap applause. Thank you, Mr. Pence. Great. He gets off the stage
and who gets on the stage, your favorite governor, governor, death santa's to arousing, you know,
parade of applause and throwing flowers and yay, we love you. That's where the Republican Party is.
Oh, absolutely.
That is where they are.
They are with the Santas, which is a Trump
by a different name.
And death Santas ambitions are authoritarian as well.
One of the things I look forward to though,
if that's antices, their candidate is just,
if he's even going to debate.
And, you know, he is so ill-equipped to,
so cowardly won't answer basic questions,
such a hypocrite that I'm frothing at the mouth
to put the Midas touch machinery on that person right there.
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A.I. code legal AF. Popok. Give us us some Jan six updates. I know you want some
or you want some Jan six jam. Here's some.
Give us some Jan six. Give us some Jan six. Jan.
There's some Jan six jam. We should have some jammy music.
We'll be with some jammy music on like we're doing another ad read. So we got
some big developments here as we move towards the ultimate sort of presentation
of the evidence, which we both expect to happen
in the first quarter, no later than the second quarter
of 2022 by the committee.
They've now gone through over 400 interviews
and don't be confused everybody.
A lot of these Republicans that are out there
at press releases and news conference is saying
we will not participate.
We will not turn over our records are doing just that behind closed doors.
They are participating.
They are giving evidence under oath.
They are turning over their text messages.
This thing is crumbling if Trump was trying to have a united front behind
him of not cooperating with the Jans X committee, it's failing, which is why, and I'm sure you've
talked about it on the brothers podcast, which is why you've got the GOP trying to sanction the two
members of the Jans X committee because they are participating in the persecution of
legitimate political discourse. That's now the new or well-in
conversion of the Jans X insurrection. You and I call it a Jans X insurrection.
I know, you saw that the RNC Republican National Committee, they sanctioned Liz Cheney, right?
I started talking about, right? They say, yeah, pretty wild.
Yeah. Yeah. Ronomick Daniels comes out and says, it is not, it's not an insurrection.
It's legitimate legal, I'm sorry, political discourse. And why are they doing that?
They're trying to undermine the credibility of the crazy thing.
Oh, you were saying it, but it just, it just isn't fully like it.
You have to say it over.
You heard it, but I almost didn't hear it because it's so the Republican Party, this Rona McDaniels, their position as a political party is in favor
of the insurrection.
Therefore that, that was legitimate political discourse.
That's what they're for as a political party.
By the way, they don't even have anymore, like an actual like policy book,
Rema Rimmer, the last one that's like anything Trump supports we support. Was there
there was no planks for their platform? They didn't publish a platform. So now the one thing
that they put publicly is that they're for the insurrection. That's their problem.
Ronan McDaniel, who's the niece of Mitt Romney, Mitt Romney, who's come out in favor of
the Gen 6 committee's work and against things like Trump announcing in a way of tampering
with witnesses that if he ever gets back in office, he's going to be pardoning anyone
who participated in Gen 6, whether they killed people or otherwise, or
murdered people or otherwise.
The, you know, again, this party, God forbid they were a party in power or had a podcast
or social media during the Civil War.
You could see how they be defending what happened in the South against the North, just the
way that they are completely converting the language of what happened in the South, against the North, just the way that they're completely converting
the language of what happened before our very eyes.
Okay, any sentient human being with five senses
knows what happened on Jan 6.
Just watch the video of the bonfires
and the crowds overrunning it
and the fight hand-to-hand combat
look like game of thrones, battle scene
between the Capitol police and the
proud boys, oath keepers, and everybody else behind them. How you can call that legitimate
first amendment expression, which we talked about earlier in the podcast,
means you're either lobotomized and saying to members of a cult, because that's the only way
you can come out and say that. So good news for our listeners and followers. We like to end on good news.
400 plus people have been interviewed
by the Gen 6 Committee successfully.
Road, Stuart Rhodes, who's sitting in the federal can,
the federal detention center.
He just gave a video testimony to the Gen 6 Committee.
Now a lot of it, he asserted the Fifth Amendment
because he's up on charges for suspicious
conspiracy, so his lawyers had him assert the fifth.
But apparently, he did answer many questions of the Janssix committee, Kaylee McAnany,
whatever that low light press secretary that used to stand at that podium and blind
of the American people about the purported fraud and the election.
Even though Trump blew the dog whistle, don't participate, don't turn over your text messages.
She's turned over her text messages. In fact, one of the text messages that she received from Sean
Hannity, which even Sean, even Sean Hannity privately told the White House, get off of the big lie, get off of the fraud,
loser argument, stop raising it. Those text messages that Kaylee turned over have already led to a
follow-up request to Ivanka Trump about her role in the whole thing. Bernie Carrick used to be
police commissioner in the New York before he went to jail for fraud, who had a press
conference that said, I'm not going to participate with a
JAN-6 committee and cooperate, as cooperated with the JAN-6
committee and given testimony. So, you know, all of this is
just a tremendous result and success for democracy for the
for for the investigation JAN Six is doing, and terrible.
Thank God, terrible for Trump and all of his supporters.
Let me put this all together.
So in the gerrymandering cases,
Democrats are actually in the lead
in the projections for redistricting.
If you look at polls and generic polls,
Democrats are also in the lead.
What is going to be happening over the next six to nine months?
Well, we've talked about the DOBS versus Mississippi case,
where the Supreme Court stands poised to overturn Roe v Wade or at the very least uphold
Mississippi's 15 week ban on abortion. Now Florida is looking Governor Death Santas,
the Republican legislature there, is seeing what's going on in the Supreme Court. They've proposed their own 15-week ban on abortion
with no exceptions in cases of rape or incest. That was proposed in a legislative session to at
least have those exceptions in the ban. That was rejected. So what's going to happen this summer
So what's going to happen this summer is that Roe v Wade will be either significantly weakened or completely overturned and Republican states and Republican governors and legislatures
will be enacting 15 week bands in their respective states at a minimum.
What else is happening?
Popox giving you the January 6th updates. We are going to have a lot more information
that will come out, likely a report that will come out,
but public hearings will be taking place
and right around the election time,
that information is going to start being made public.
Like all that information is going to be public.
What else is happening?
COVID cases are down across the country now.
The jobs report was a positive one.
I always stop.
You're under selling that.
This is the most job 6 million created by any administration since statistics were kept
since 1939 for all of those people that say during a campaign that Republicans make
more jobs, go do the math.
Every administration that's been democratic, every administration that's been democratic
has created more jobs in total than Republicans who are supposedly propusness since time immemorial. And not only is that proven by Biden's record,
it is the most job creation in the history of record keeping in the United States.
Box news right before those job numbers were announced. We're literally giddy
rooting for bad job numbers. The whole morning they said,
it's gonna be an interesting morning this morning.
Oh, it looks like the economy's in a free fall.
Look at how we're they gonna spend this.
And the job reports come out and they had to,
they had to eat it, but it just so fucked up
that they root against the country.
So you have the confluence of these factors.
Polling is also increasingly showing
that Americans are sick and tired of childish,
whiny, childish, whiny behavior by this Republican Trumpist
party. You put those factors together.
Democrats are going to hold the house and Trumpist party. You put those factors together.
Democrats are going to hold the house if you remain engaged.
That's the one F.
You listening, you have to be active,
you have to be engaged.
You have to start contacting friends, family,
registering people to vote.
The legal stuff informs the political landscape in many ways.
That's why this podcast, so great,
is so important that you know the intricacies of the law.
But we need you now to go out there
and to be an advocate to register voters, to canvas,
to do anything you can to spread these messages of truth.
Michael Popaki, it looks like the Popaki insurance are literally about to sell out.
Wow.
So not just my family, it looks like others are actually buying it as well.
You know what I liked about that, that rundown with that jam that you just did the bed,
we're going to call it the Ben Jam when you do that.
I really liked it. I also like it because as we've said, democracy is a
participatory sport. And you just identified all the ways that we're arming our people
mentally, emotionally, for the fight ahead to keep the house, which and get all those lost paths that we need off those books.
Special thanks to all our sponsors, X Chair, paint your life, Smith, AI, athletic, greens,
Michael Popak, was so incredible seeing you in New York.
We should definitely, definitely get that photo of me and you.
It could sit next to your not crooked blue painting that's in the background.
A perfectly straight painting, that angle proves that it is perfectly straight.
Popeyes, the kind of person who's got the, what's the tool called to make sure?
The level level.
Popaks got, Popaks got the level.
I know a lot about law, I know very little
about mountain paintings and the walls,
but we thank you all for all of your support.
Keep fighting for democracy, keep fighting for truth,
keep listening to legal AF,
Ben Myceles, Michael Popak,
giving a special shout out to the Midas Mighty.
See you next time on legal AF.
you