Legal AF by MeidasTouch - House Sets Vote for IMMINENT RELEASE of Trump Tax Returns to Public
Episode Date: December 20, 2022The House Ways and Means Committee will meet behind closed doors Tuesday to vote on the release of Donald Trump’s tax returns. Legal AF Host Michael Popok reports on what to expect. Shop Meidas Mer...ch at: https://store.meidastouch.com Join us on Patreon: https://patreon.com/meidastouch Remember to subscribe to ALL the Meidas Media Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://pod.link/1510240831 Legal AF: https://pod.link/1580828595 The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://pod.link/1595408601 The Influence Continuum: https://pod.link/1603773245 Kremlin File: https://pod.link/1575837599 Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://pod.link/1530639447 The Weekend Show: https://pod.link/1612691018 The Tony Michaels Podcast: https://pod.link/1561049560 American Psyop: https://pod.link/1652143101 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is Michael Popok with Legal AF with Breaking News.
Monday is not the only bad day of the week for Donald Trump this week with the Jan 6th Committee voting to make a recommendation of seven years of personal and business tax returns
for Donald Trump, they will be voting whether to release all of that information, that financial
valuable information to the public, meaning other prosecutors, prosecutors who currently
have cases against Donald Trump, like New York Attorney General James, and around the country.
And civil lawyers who also have
financial fraud cases against Donald Trump are licking their chops, trying to get their
hands on these tax returns.
It was a little followed series of events, but starting in 2019, the House Ways and Means
Committee headed then and now by Richard Neal sought the tax returns directly from the internal
revenue service, the Department of the Treasury. Because at the time Donald Trump
was still in power, his Treasury Secretary Steve Manuchin refused to turn over
those returns doing the bidding of his boss Donald Trump. It took the lawsuit
that was brought by the House Ways and Means Committee that was assigned
unfortunately to a Trump-appointed judge in Trevor McFadden.
Trevor McFadden finally, after two years and after the end of the 2020 election,
allowed the House Ways and Means Committee to get their hands on eight years of personal and business tax returns for Donald Trump
because one of their roles
is supervising and providing oversight to the Internal Revenue Service.
And their question, which is a very good one and completely appropriate legislative intent,
is how does the IRS audit function work with a president of the United States?
Do we have to enhance certain rules and regulations as it relates to the president of the United
States?
And so that is the purpose and the policy goal of the House Ways and Means Committee.
Finally, that was agreed to by Judge McFadden.
However, Judge McFadden, a Trump appointee, as I mentioned, also noted just gratuitously in his 48-page ruling
that he hopes the Houseways and Means Committee doesn't vote to release these tax returns publicly,
although in the same breath, he had to recognize that they have the full power to do that
in there as a legislative body in making recommendations. And his, frankly, his observation as a judge is meaningless
without him having entered a stay that was upheld
by the DC Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court.
You may be asking, well, the Supreme Court do about all this.
Well, Donald Trump ran to the Supreme Court several months ago
on an emergency application, no surprise,
to have the Supreme Court
issue a stay to stop the IRS from turning over his tax returns to the Houseways.
It means committee.
It was referred first to Chief Justice Roberts, who sits over that particular court.
Then to the full Supreme Court, and on a vote of the Supreme Court, they declined the invitation of Donald Trump
to issue that stay.
So the House Ways and Means Committee
is free to, as part of their legislative process,
to vote, to release the tax returns to the full house
or a portion of them and to the public.
That's happening this Tuesday.
And if the result is, as I suspect,
that the bulk of the information
that has contained in those tax returns
are going to be voted to be released to the public,
prosecutors around the country
are gonna be first in line
to get their hands on those tax returns.
The head of the line is gonna be
Letitia James, New York Attorney General.
Right behind her is going to be Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan District Attorney, who's also now
looking at insurance fraud and loan fraud and tying that back to Donald Trump after letting
that case sit for over a year. He'll now have new evidence and new information he never had before.
But there are civil lawyers, civil lawyers around the country that are handling at the present
time, civil fraud cases against Donald Trump and his children related to him hawking telecom
investments or telecom multimedia presentations and the like.
So there are a number of lawsuits that are going on in Florida, in New York, in
other places where the civil lawyers would like to take a gander at those tax
returns to see what they reveal about representations that Donald Trump made as
a spokesperson, as a marketer, as an advertiser, as a shill,
as a grifter in selling products on licenses, much like his recent NFTs selling, you know,
phony images of himself that weren't even creative, independent, created independently.
They were scraped from the internet and catalogs and websites and where they just photoshopped
his face on it and made them into a superhero because, you know, one-secrefter, always
a grifter. So these tax returns are going to be a valuable commodity in the prosecutor world
and the prosecutor network and civil attorneys who will try to pick the bones of Donald Trump
and his children for everything that they're worth for any
misrepresentations they made related to investments that they proposed,
recommended or marketed to the average investor, the average person.
So it is a tremendous development that has not gotten much press.
We're reporting on it here on legal AF and on the Midas Media Network that on Tuesday, the Houseways and Means Committee votes to
release seven years of tax returns, business and personal for Donald Trump, to
the public at large, prosecutors everywhere, civil lawyers everywhere. So the
focus, of course, because we're all getting
a little bit of Trump fatigue is on Monday's Jan 6th vote on a symbolic referral to the
Department of Justice, the Department that's already turbocharged with the arrival of Jack
Smith. But the real, if you're really following closely what's happening here. The real potential financial jeopardy for Donald
Trump is not the symbolic vote for a symbolic recommendation by the Jan 6th Committee. It
is the release of his tax returns that he has fought tooth and nail over the last four
years to avoid turning over by the Houseways and Means Committee. And we will follow and follow up after the vote on Tuesday.
This is Michael Popak reporting for legal AF.
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