Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Jack Smith HAUNTS Deranged Trump as Evidence MOUNTS & Indictments LOOM
Episode Date: June 4, 2023Anchored by MT founder and civil rights lawyer, Ben Meiselas and national trial lawyer and strategist, Michael Popok, the top-rated news analysis podcast Legal AF is back for another hard-hitting look... at the most consequential developments at the intersection of law and politics. On this week’s edition, the anchors discuss: 1) revelations in the Jack Smith’s Mar a Lago impending indictment of Trump of a an audio recording of Trump that destroys his “declassification” defense, the various crimes the prosecutors are considering, and their focus on new video surveillance evidence; 2) updates in the Manhattan District Attorney Stormy Daniels hush money cover up criminal case against Trump, including efforts by Trump to judge-shop and move the case to Federal Court; 3) how close Fulton County District Attorney Fanni Willis is to indicting Trump and others for a sprawling, multi-state criminal conspiracy related to election interference and threats; (4) who George Santos is protecting when he is seeking to keep the identity of the people who bailed him out secret; and so much more. DEALS FROM OUR SPONSORS! SHORTFORM: Learn more than ever from important non-fiction books at https:/shortform.com/legalaf and receive 5-days of unlimited access and an additional 25% discount on the annual subscription. MANUKORA: Head to https://manukora.com/legalaf or use code LEGALAF to automatically get a free pack of honey sticks with your order — a $15 value! HIGHLAND TITLES: Use the discount code LEGALAF to get 20% off at https://HighlandTitles.com SUPPORT THE SHOW: Shop LEGAL AF Merch 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 Burn the Boats: https://pod.link/1485464343 Majority 54: https://pod.link/1309354521 Political Beatdown: https://pod.link/1669634407 Lights On with Jessica Denson: https://pod.link/1676844320 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Special Counsel, Jack Smith, Manhattan District Attorney, Alvin Bragg, Fulton County District
Attorney, Fawney Willis, big updates in each of these matters led by these prosecutors first.
It's Special Counsel, Jack Smith's Criminal Investigation, and Donald Trump's theft of
thousands of government records and obstruction
of justice.
We learned about an audio recording.
Low-irty there are recordings of Donald Trump.
These recordings are now in Jack Smith's possession and in these recordings, Donald Trump purportedly
brags about having a classified document about military plans in Iran.
Where is this document that Trump was referencing?
Trump failed to turn over that document in response to a subpoena we are learning.
We are also learning that special counsel, Jack Smith, is heavily focused on Donald Trump's
potential tampering with surveillance footage at Mar-a-Lago
this as Donald Trump's lawyers are accusing each other of being snitches. Second, updates in the
Manhattan District Attorney criminal case against Donald Trump for falsifying business records.
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg has filed an opposition in federal court to Donald Trump's attempt
to remove the case from state court to New York federal court. It is a motion for remand and
Trump does not want to be in front of that state court judge Juan Morshan. That's for sure because
in addition to filing the removal motion which happened
around last month this week he filed a new motion one to recuse or to try to
disqualify Judge Juan Moshan we will talk about that third we go south to
Fulton County Georgia where we learn Fulton County District Attorney Fawni
Willis is focusing on Donald Trump's criminal conduct, not just in Georgia, but also in other states.
Why?
I've got one word for you.
Rico, Rico, Rico, Suave.
Rico charges against Donald Trump.
We believe are being pursued by district attorney,
Fawni Willis.
And as part of demonstrating that conspiracy that Donald
Trump was engaged in, she's focused on his conspiracy in other states to commit crimes.
Finally, we can't have a legal AF without updating you on what's going on with
MagiRepublican, George Santos, who was criminally indicted by the Department of Justice out of
the Eastern District of New York Division. The Federal Magistrate Judge in the Eastern District Federal Court gave George Santos
until Monday after his lawyer begged for an extension to respond to the request by the
media to release the names of individuals who posted $500,000 in bail for him, whose
names for reasons that still aren't very clear to me are currently being kept a secret release
those names and release Michael Popak, Michael Popak from legal. I'm Ben Myselis, a pleasure to be
here with all the legal aeifers and with you, Michael Popak, how are you? I'm doing great, Ben. You know, there's a, that rundown, you just gave, there's a reason that Trump's closest
advisors have told him to be prepared mentally, emotionally, physically, if he can, and financially,
if he can, for indictments coming out of Jack Smith, Fawney Willis, and maybe Alvin Bragg
again over this summer.
They've told him that he's got to be prepared for it because it is happening.
And people that think, well, they're just blowing smoke and sunshine over there on the
Midas Touch Network.
Remember, we said the Alvin Bragg thing would come down.
We were just off by about two weeks, but we got the month right.
And we're going to get the month
right and the summer right for indictments against Donald Trump. Whether it matters to
the MAGA electorate, that's probably doesn't matter. They're okay with him being
multiply convicted, multiply indicted, multiply impeached, and a judge to be a sex abuser.
That doesn't seem to move the needle for them. But for the rest of America and independence and women,
I think it makes a major difference in the general election.
And that's why we're here covering those factual
legal political developments so people can make
their right decision in the polls.
Let's talk high level timeline right now before getting
into the updates on special counsel, Jack Smith.
Remember Donald Trump leaves the White House January of 2021,
and he steals all of these records.
By the time the National Archives realizes
that he stole all of these records,
it is around May of 2021.
They send a letter to Donald Trump saying,
hey, did you just like steal thousands of records,
including classified records and sensitive
compartmental information, they send that letter around May 9th of 2021. And then around May 11th of 2021, or shortly thereafter,
there's that video of Donald Trump leaving Florida in a private jet with staff members who are carrying boxes and they are
bringing it to bedminster.
That's going to become important with some of the updates.
We're going to be talking about later in this episode.
Then throughout that remainder of 2021, the National Archives is saying, you need to return
these records.
Donald Trump is saying, I don't have these records.
Then you go to 2022.
Finally, January of 2022, Donald Trump is like, okay don't have these records. Then you go to 2022. Finally, January of 2022, Donald Trump is like,
okay, I'd found some things, but this is all that I have.
I'm going to return it.
I got 15 boxes.
Donald Trump returns 15 boxes.
Lots of newspaper clippings, but when the National Archives
opens this in January of 2022,
and like open up the newspaper clippings, they go,
what?
There's classified material
in here. There's sensitive compartmental information in here. There's information in here that needs
to be viewed in skiffs. It's so highly sensitive. Sensitive compartmental information facilities.
So then what is the national archived do they have no choice but to refer this over to the department
of justice. They then conduct an investigation
as well. And they start asking Donald Trump and his lawyers like Evan Corcoran, what's going on.
And then Donald Trump and Trump's lawyers say, we've returned everything. Everything's in the
15 boxes. We don't have anything else. So what finally has to happen, the Department of Justice
has to issue a subpoena in May of 2022. They send this subpoena to Donald Trump and they say,
please return any other documents that you have classified records, sensitive compartmented information,
top secret information. You then have Donald Trump's lawyer Evan Corcoran, who becomes the lawyer,
who leads the search. And his job is to try to search around in Mar-a-Lago. And he seems to have tried to take that job seriously,
but we are learning that Donald Trump may have been playing Evan Corcoran with some of his own
aid, someone by the name of Walt Nauta, who will discuss more in this episode,
who while Evan Corcoran was trying to conduct the search for classified material, kind of right out of one of these comedic sketches,
although it's not funny because of the dangerous ramifications,
you'd have like, Corcoran go downstairs
in the storage room to count,
and then you'd have Walt Nowt to take the boxes
and then move them back to Trump's office
and kind of keep hiding it while these searches were taking place.
Eventually, Evan Corcoran invites over
the Department of Justice top counterintelligence official,
somebody named by the name of Jay Platt
to show up at Mar-a-Lago on June 3rd of 2022.
The day before, now we learn through some of these surveillance
footage, the special counsel, Jack Smith had Walt Nauta
and a maintenance official by the name of Carlos Dioliveria
were moving boxes around in Mar-a-Lago
and kind of shifting where the boxes were located
that had classified material in them
before the DOJ shows up on June 3rd
as part of the response to the subpoena that they
issued back in May.
Evan Corcoran is there with Christina Bob.
They sign an attestation saying that these are all of the records.
They put them in a red-weld folder, about 38 documents.
They say, this is it.
We have nothing else.
Shortly thereafter, the DOJ did something very very smart. They issued
another subpoena for Donald Trump's surveillance footage. That starts freaking everybody out at
Mar-a-Lago, including that maintenance worker, Carlos Diola Varia, who then reaches out to somebody
by the name of Yusil Tavares, the IT worker at Mar-a-Lago, who deals with this surveillance footage,
who's now gone before the grand jury asking, hey, how does this surveillance footage work?
Like, what can they capture on those footage?
And are we really going to give this footage over to the Department of Justice?
Then the Department of Justice learns that Donald Trump has not turned over all of the
records.
They file for a search warrant on August 5th of 2022 that a magistrate judge signs
on August 5th, on August 8th. They execute the search warrant. They find thousands of
government records, including over a hundred additional classified records and many, many,
many classified folders that are actually empty as well. Next up, Donald Trump files that motion
with Judge Eileen Cannon that delays the process
that we talked at nauseam about here.
And then you fast forward a little bit,
the DOJ wins that battle.
Special Counsel Jack Smith gets appointed
in November of 2022.
So about six months ago or so,
special counsel Jack Smith's been investigating
everything since then,
believes also there's been obstructive conduct
since the search on August 8th of 2022.
I want to give you that framework
because a lot of these things that have been uncovered,
like a lot of the things we've been talking about
all have happened in under a year, right?
And Spins Special Counsel, Jack Smith's been appointed.
We're talking about a six month period
where a lot of these discoveries have been made.
So with that timeframe in mind,
because it's important that we go back
and situate everybody on what's going on here.
There's a lot that's happened.
Popeye, give us some of the updates that we're now learning this week.
Yeah, that's a great framework.
It's funny.
You and I talk a lot before we get on to the show, but we didn't talk about one particular
thing that I had come across and read.
I'll probably end up doing a hot tick on it.
It's, there's a draft prosecution memo that's been prepared by former prosecutors
who are now in private practice, Norm Ice and Daniel Perry and others, and they really
lay out in 150 pages exactly what the ultimate prosecution memo, what they would think Jack
Smith's would look like back to Merrick Garland, laying out both the chronology that you just put down here for our listeners
and followers, almost to a T, and then matching it with about four major crimes that they
think would be charged by Jack Smith related to Mar-a-Lago.
This is a Mar-a-Lago draft or model prosecution memo, and all of those things that, before
I get to the new updates, all of those things that you just laid out then for those
prosecutors and of course they want to they want that to get out to the public and to get over to Jack Smith would violate at least four different major
criminal
statutes one of them being first of all we talked about this before on legal AF
We talked about this before on legal AF
Mishandling of government documents SB Natch act 18 USC 793 little e
National defense information or NDI
Being the key driver of that statute not the fact that it's classified or top secret member for everybody There were third on Ben's description. There were 13,000 pages of documents
on Ben's description. There were 13,000 pages of documents, ultimately, that the Donald Trump did not turn over of that. We always focus on this 100 top-secret classify,
but there were another 12,900 that many of which went R N D I national defense information.
And that's what matters for the statute, not the other thing. Then the second crime that they think has been
implicated is concealing government records willfully 18 USC 2071. Third is obstruction, which
is if you go back to Merrick Garland's press conference when he announced Jack Smith's
appointment, he must have said obstruction about six times Then, so obstruction is 18 USC 1519 in the criminal code.
Criminal contempt, which we haven't talked too much about on the show, but it's sort of
what it sounds like.
There is an order from a federal judge.
It was a search warrant.
That is an order.
There have been other turnover orders subsequent to that by the chief judge of the DC Circuit
Court overseeing all things grand jury once
barrel howl now a Jeb Bozberg not doing what you've been told to do under a federal order
by a judge is criminal contempt under 18 USC 402 and then the catch all that every government
prosecutor uses in every case I've ever been involved with as a defense lawyer,
is false statement to a federal official authority, which is 18 USC-1000 and 1.
So when Trump or Corcoran make statements to Jay Bratt about, no, there's not 13,000 other or 100
and 100 top secret classified documents next store in the desk drawer of Donald Trump. It's just these 34 in envelope.
That is potentially a lie and a 1,001 criminal violation, which I'm sure they've told Evan
Quarkron.
Those are the crimes.
The new information is we've got the convergence of focus on video testimony, video evidence,
sorry, video evidence, and then the movement of boxes in and out of the storage room and the fact that Donald Trump
intentionally misled his lawyer Evan Corcoran and Christina Bob by extension by telling them
directly that all of the documents from the White House that were implicated by the National Archive and the
from the White House that were implicated by the National Archive and the ultimate subpoena and then search warrant were behind one door of one room called a storage room at Mar-a-Lago.
A, that turns out not to be true because right next door in the office or wherever the office
is located at Mar-a-Lago, in a desk drawer, in another place as were these top secret and
classified in other documents. So he misled his lawyer to then mislead the government, J. Brat, in the meeting on June
2nd and others because it's not that he wanted to give his lawyer a plausible deniability.
He lied to Evan Corcoran.
Evan Corcoran has now basically said that.
I did not know there were documents in any other place.
Now Evan Corcoran's got his own problem because you've got to do due diligence
and you've got to confirm things before you sign
or have Christina Bob sign and say under penalty of purgery.
This is after a diligent search,
all of the documents that exist, that wasn't true.
It's hard to blame your client.
Oh, my diligent search was in one room
that Walt now pointed me to and wanted to sit on me while I did the review.
And I just took my client at his word.
I'm not sure that's good enough.
One of the reasons I don't think Evan Corcoran is in the case anymore and had to depart
and has gone into the grand jury stripped of attorney client privilege.
So you have the movement on the video cameras because you know, any master criminal like
Donald Trump always forgets
about his own video surveillance equipment
sitting out in front of that same set of doors
and on it because they subpoenaed that information
the government from the Trump organization.
They saw two things.
Well, one thing they saw, one thing they didn't see.
The one thing they saw was movement of boxes
on date stamps that showed up before the meeting
with Jay Br Jay Brat
on June 2nd and after Donald Trump was having Walt now to move boxes in and out of that room,
even before Evan Corcoran could do a search. Go put a few more boxes in there, take a few more out.
And then, okay, Evan, go in, they're all in there now. And then after he's booked, they took
him back out again. That's what they saw in the video.
What they didn't see on the video was missing video.
There was missing video that they're trying to get to the bottom of with the security company
that runs these things, along with Matt Kalamari and Matt Kalamari Jr., who were responsible
for security ultimately the Trump organization, and those two have gone in, of course,
in testified.
So then you got the bet minister, the maintenance worker
who's already been identified by name by the New York Times.
He's already gone in with his lawyer a couple of times.
It's a never great sign for Donald Trump
when your maintenance worker has a criminal defense lawyer.
And he's cooperating.
He's fully cooperating with the government
in every way, shape and form and just totally opening the books. He's got photographs. He's fully cooperating with the government in every way, shape, and form, and just totally opening the books.
He's got photographs of the room.
He talked about loading the SUV that walked out a drove from Florida to New Jersey, filled
with boxes.
And then, I've said on this podcast, and in my own hot tics, there's going to be a search
warrant that's going to be issued or a subpoena first for Bedminster.
People here and with what we do have been amazed that as of right now, the government has
been taking Donald Trump and his lawyers at their word about the search at Bedminster,
especially with Tim Parletori going on CNN saying, I couldn't properly search Betminster. And it's the reason I'm departing because Trump's lawyer, Boris Epstein, has gotten
in my way and interfered with my search.
I don't know how that didn't immediately lead Jackson with team to go get a subpoena
slash search point based on that testimony alone.
But I think we're going to see those developments in coming up soon. Ben,
did I leave anything out between the video and the new recording that was part of the July
meeting, July 2021 meeting, but before at Bedminster, but before going there, here's the thing I want
everyone to remember about Bedminster, though, Jack Smith basically
cut a deal with the lawyer, Tom Tim Parlettory, Jim Trusty, and some of the others, that
those lawyers, who by the way, Parletory and Trusty have, of all of the lawyers on Trump's
teams, have pretty good reputations before representing Donald Trump in the legal community. So I Tim
Parliamentary just left and resigned about two three weeks ago for the reasons that you just stated when he said his
searches of
Bedminster were being obstructed those searches were not just hey, I'm gonna do this search because Donald Trump wants me to
quite the opposite. Special counsel Jack Smith had him do the searches. Same thing.
At test station under penalty of perjury where if the lawyers at test stations were false if they obstructed justice,
it would just be a new count. It would be a new charge where they could potentially face 20 years in prison if they lie.
So, when I like to think about the toolkit of a prosecutor, one way to give an example
is that they have the hammer, which is executing a search warrant, FBI agents show up, knock
down the door, and conduct a very invasive search, like with a search warrant,
like what took place on August 8th of 2022 at Mar-a-Lago.
But there are other tools in the toolkit.
Sometimes you basically use a surgical scalpel
because at the end of the day,
the goal is to investigate the crime.
The search warrant just won tool to investigate the crime.
And perhaps if you conducted two search warrants,
one at Bedminster, one at Mar-a-Lago,
you would be losing all additional sources of information
that could potentially shut down
because then both facilities would be locked down.
I think Special Counsel Jack Smith has more people
on the inside than we're currently aware of,
that he knows what's going on at
bedminster and in the other properties, that it would be Donald Trump's reflexive criminality
after the August 8th search warrant at Mar-a-Lago to then try to hide documents and move documents
into a place like bedminster or Trump tower. And I think Special Counsel Jack Smith has got that.
And remember, the National Security apparatus in the United States did a security assessment.
These documents are all traceable, so we know what documents are missing at this point.
And if they are missing, I think Special Counsel Jack Smith at this point pretty much knows where they are.
But the other big update, you know, and I think it's helpful that I set out that framework
in the beginning. And you could tell us a little bit about it, Michael Popebeck, is that in July of 2021,
there was this meeting that was held between Donald Trump, some of Donald Trump's aides, and two people who were ghost writing a book
for Mark Meadows, setting the stage, I'll toss it back to you.
Yeah, that's great.
So, what we didn't know is that Trump would often meet with people like Mark Meadows, the
ghost writer for Mark Meadows memoirs.
Back when Mark Meadows thought he would be a popular novelist or author
instead of being a potential criminal defendant, you know,
when people didn't know he was burning documents in the White House fire place,
they had a meeting and they, and at that meeting was an aid
who recorded what happened at these meetings.
I guess for posterity and for notes and so they
could help write the Mark Meadows book. And this is on the heels of Donald Trump always was
incensed that then Joint Chiefs of Staff, or the Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman, General Milley,
had gone out and to try to make the rest of the world feel more comfortable
about this madman in the bunker like Hitler in the final waning days of the administration,
having his finger on the nuclear button.
He called his counterpart, for instance, in China to tell him, don't worry, we're not going
to let this guy start World War III.
Basically, and he said other things publicly about what you would normally not do.
And I originally read them.
I'm like, wow, the commander in chief is being challenged publicly by under a civilian
command structure by his chairman of the joint chiefs.
And in any other world, you'd be like, that could be, that, you know, that could be treason
on the part of that guy.
But we all, of the, of the general, but in this case, because the rest of the world and
thinking Americans were really worried about what Donald Trump would do, we wouldn't
put a past of starting a war in order to stay in office or, or get reelected or any of those other things.
So he hated that, Donald Trump.
And he hated the press and the media attention that Millie was getting.
And so apparently, in and around this time, in about March of 2021, he said Millie, who he had called an effing idiot at Mar-a-Lago during a rant of his, said
to the small group of people, including the aid in Mark Meadows, I'm not the war monger.
Millie's the war monger.
And I have a document, it's classified, really can't show it to you, but I have a document
where he had war plans to go after Iran.
See, he's the madman, not me. Well, there's a number of problems with that.
First of all, if that document really exists, and let's put a pin in that for a moment, let's assume Donald,
here's a number of problems for Donald Trump's defense of the Mar-a-Lago case. One, he knew his documents so well.
These half-hazardly packed boxes
that just happened to show up from the White House
that he actually had an inventory in his head
that he knew about that document.
So he could go, in order, he's telling us,
hey, go get me a Coke.
And while you get it, get that milly document
that I have that says he was gonna go
for a war plan with Iran.
Really, you know your documents that well?
There's like an inventory. I thought there were thousands of them and you didn't know what was in those boxes.
So that's the first problem. Second problem is that this demonstrates that he knew the things were classified and that they hadn't been
magically telepathically declassified on on January 19th, what he left office or in the last
waning days. So you got that problem. Three, he sort of indicates that he knows he
can't show people these things because he's a lot of classified. I didn't get a
chance that they're not declassified. Okay, that's a problem. And it completely
blows apart all the defenses that trustee and at the time, part of the
Torey were so delicately crafting that got blown apart at the CNN town hall.
Again, the gift that keeps on giving appears
to be that CNN town hall now,
because they've all known about this recording
for quite some time.
It's early as March, they've known about this recording,
the lawyers for Donald Trump,
and they were on pins and needles apparently
when he went in front of in May at the CNN event,
and he used a very interesting phrase
that I'm sure all of the investigators and prosecutors
for Donald, for, at Jack Smith for Donald Trump
were circling, which was he said that he has,
when they asked him, has he shown documents to people?
He said, not really, not really, not know, not really,
but I could have.
And they all cringed, apparently, so reporting is reporting because they know about the March
recording and they've been waiting for Jack Smith to strategically leak it to the media
which he's now done as part of the prosecution team that it exists.
But then there's a bigger problem.
Besides the fact, it blows away the whole, he overpacked,
he didn't pack his own boxes or he overpacked the boxes
and didn't know what was in them.
And he didn't know there was classified
or he declassified everything.
All that tape does is destroy almost every one
of those defenses that he could possibly have.
He doesn't have any other defenses.
A reliance on attorneys doesn't work
because he's never relied on his attorneys.
They told him that he didn't declassify.
Here's how you declassify.
There's memos about classification
that he was given before he left the White House
that he ignored.
He tried to lie to his lawyers.
Every lawyer he's ever had about Mar-a-Lago,
he has lied to.
From the very beginning, when they initially started,
quote unquote, negotiating with the national
archive about the return of documents in exchange transactionally. If you give me the Russia
interference documents from 2016, I'll give you everything that I'm required to return.
No, that's not any lie to his lawyer at that time. One that we haven't even talked about yet
and told that person to tell the National Archive
that all the documents have been returned
when there were 13,000 sitting over in Mar-a-Lago.
Every, remember, every lawyer he's ever had about Mar-a-Lago
and beyond, he has lied to, period.
And that is the evidence that would go
into the prosecution memo of Jack Smith.
The other problem is, does the document even exist?
He's either a liar and a fabulous,
who makes stuff up and set it to a group of people,
which is, you know, you can believe that.
Or he has the document, but they can't locate it.
How do we know this?
Because now there's reporting that in March, March was a big month.
We, we didn't know it at the time because a lot of this didn't come out.
And so Ben, you and I couldn't report on it.
But March was in, it was an incredible month for Jack Smith
between the grand juries and everything else.
One thing that we didn't know about is that a new subpoena got issued by Jack Smith
through the, uh, Jeb Bozberg, the, the,berg, the chief judge of the DC Circuit, asking
specifically based on new reporting and the tape that has been out with the government
since March, they had a subpoena that said, give us everything that you have in your possession about an invasion plan or map related to Iran and Millie.
What do you got?
Which would capture this document if it exists.
And the lawyers for Donald Trump,
including at the time Tim Parletori said,
we got a couple of things about Iran,
but we don't seem to have that particular document.
So either it is lost, it is stolen and secreted, which goes to the government's point.
You can't trust Donald Trump.
Look what he's done.
He can't, we can't even find it.
It was in one of those empty envelopes, classified folders, can't find it.
Or he made it up, he just, he just, sorry, I just beat me out on that one.
He just made it up, right, to get back at Millie to a small group of people
that he never thought would see the light of day.
They're both bad.
They both show criminal intent, but, but one of them is just, so I'll be
asking about you.
Think that document exists.
Yeah.
Three points, and I'll close the loop here.
Number one, I think the document does exist because I don't think
special counsel Jack Smith would subpoena for the very
specific document if it didn't exist.
Remember, the DOJ is working closely with the national
security advisors to know what documents are missing.
So, and then also we've learned from the recent
reporting that special counsel Jack Smith has also been
cooperating with Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Mark Milley,
or I should rephrase it the other way,
that Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
General Mark Milley, is cooperating against Donald Trump
with special counsel, Jack Smith.
And I think we know a little more about the document too,
that provides a little layer of specificity,
and it was actually created before Mark Milley became the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff as well, which is why it's not actually even a Mark Milley related
documents.
That's one point I want to make.
The next point I want to make is the incident also shows how transactional Trump is with
the documents.
You could imagine that that one was recorded by his aide, Margot Martin, someone who worked
for him at the White House and worked with him after the White House. She was the one was recorded by his aide, Margot Martin, someone who worked for him at the White House
and worked with him after the White House.
She was the one who recorded it.
So there's probably tons of meetings that aren't recording.
You could pretty much imagine almost that every meeting
him saying and bragging about the classified records.
Yes, that's the malignant narcissist he has
and that's why he wants to have these records
in the first place.
Finally, my theory is, special counsel Jack Smith was not the one who selectively leaked
this story to CNN.
I think it was Tim Parlatory who selectively leaked it to CNN.
Tim Parlatory who resigned from Donald Trump's legal team, who would know this, who knew about
the obstruction that was taking place at Bedminster. Tim Parlatore had what was
been referred to as a murder suicide pack with Donald Trump's other lawyer, Jim Trusty,
that they would both leave together. Trusty is still in there. I think this was a move by Parlatore
to kind of let the other lawyers know that you better get out of this thing because you're about to get
in trouble and to let the world know that parlatory was right for getting out when he
did.
Need to me has the motive to do that.
I don't want to cut off your points.
Did you have another point?
I want to talk about parlatory for a minute.
Talk about parlatory, but first, make a quick break.
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slash legal AF. Welcome back to Legal AF. We are live pop-ok before we took that commercial break.
Yeah. You were getting worked up. You were cursing. You were, we had a bleep you there for a moment.
And so we just had a, we had to settle down a little bit. So tell me, you know what's not
short form you and me. We're not short form. We're a long form legal a furs and here we go the I I agree with you that I think there's leaks going on at the
Trump attorney departing attorney level, but I also think there's a reason we've been so that's one
One stream of leaks that's coming out, but the other stream of leaks are strategically by by Jack Smith
People were in the beginning we would get a lot of flack like,
or we'd see it in the tweets and social media.
I don't think he's doing a darn thing.
We're not hearing anything about these grand juries.
What's going on?
I want to hear more about what's going on
in secret grand juries, and we were like, be patient.
First of all, he's not a leaker,
but the reason we're hearing about it now
is not because Jack Smith's lost control
of his investigators and his lawyers and their,
this is strategic. This is what prosecutors do when they want to put pressure both on the, on witnesses that have yet to be cooperative like Walt Nauta,
the personal valet who knows a lot, but has told Jack Smith I'm not cooperating anymore,
unless I get an immunity deal and they haven't yet given them the immunity deal.
If they're going to do that, I think they're going to, they're going to do it ultimately.
And it puts pressure on people like Donald Trump to let them know that they're coming
for them, which of course they've always known and squeezing other witnesses that we haven't
even talked about yet.
Walt Natta is a big problem, has a big problem.
And Jack Smith wants to crack that nut to get everything out of him about Mar-a-Lago.
I think they're going to make one more run at him or they're just going to tell the lawyer,
we're going to indict your guy. We're going to indict your guy because we don't think he's been
honest and truthful based on the video evidence. We think he knew about his complicity with Donald
Trump and moving these boxes. He knew why he was moving them. He knew he wasn't just a moving man,
moving boggy. He knew he was doing it for a reason. He, because he offered to go, not offered. He was instructed to try to get
into the room with Evan Corcoran, when Evan Corcoran was searching through the documents, and Evan
Corcoran was like, I barely have national security clearance. I'm not going to let you go look at
the boxes. But that was Donald Trump wanted to put his guy in the room to make sure that Evan
Corcoran didn't go astray and
misleading. So there's culpability for Walt now to, and if he doesn't get on to the
train, he's going to get run over it. Or as I like to say, this is a line of nails. And
Jack Smith is the hammer.
I couldn't agree more with you there. Did you have a point on Tim, a parlor, you also
wanted to make or was it? No, no, that was it. No, it was your point that, yes, I believe,
didn't Parliamentary is leaking, but I think there's also strategic leaking about the prosecutor.
I like it.
Let's talk about another prosecutor, Alvin Bragg, some updates to report in the Manhattan
District Attorney criminal case against Donald Trump.
You'll recall back at the end of March, Donald Trump was indicted
on 34 separate felony counts for the falsification of business records relating to his hush money
payments to an adult film star that he was assigned to the case, judged by the name of
Judge Juan Mershon.
Donald Trump does not want this judge presiding over this case.
Judge Juan Mershon presided over the other Trump organization criminal case where Trump organization was
convicted on 17 felony counts for its tax fraud and related crimes earlier or
several months back. It seems like a long time ago, but that was only a few
months ago when that happened. So Donald Trump sent a few things. First, he's
filed what's called a removal
to try to get the case removed to federal court,
saying that the conduct at issue involves
his conduct while he was in office,
his defense is involved,
defenses that he would be asserting
that are federal in nature
because he was in office at the time.
So he says a federal court should be presiding over it. The case eventually got transferred to a
federal judge named Judge Hellerstein, who actually has some experience with Donald Trump. It's not
exactly a favorable judge for Donald Trump. In fact, I'd probably, if I was representing Trump,
which just induces vomit to even think about,
I'd probably want to be in front of Judge Juan Mershon
instead of Judge Hellerstein and federal court.
So that move kind of backfired in any event.
And I think recognizing that it backfired
and that Donald Trump also thinks that he wants to now be in state court, but
now he just doesn't want to be in front of Judge Juan Mershon. He filed a motion to
recuse or to disqualify Judge Juan Mershon saying that there are conflicts of interest there.
But this is part of a pattern and practice of Donald Trump, as well as mega Republicans in general, essentially
trying to weaponize the fact that judges who are pro-democracy take their ethical responsibilities
very, very, very seriously.
And so they try to exploit that because unlike a mega Republican judge, like a Clarence Thomas,
for example, who just goes out and parties with and takes millions of dollars in gifts from
people who go before him and whose wife, basically it has a whole career based on business
relating to the Supreme Court.
Pro-democracy judges who care about the law, even the Supreme Court, you know, pro-democracy judges who care about
the law, even the smallest things, sometimes they'll recuse themselves for. And so this
is all part of a plan of judge shopping and attacking the judiciary. I want you to talk
more about it, but I wanted to make that broader point. I don't think Judge Juan Mershant
will recuse himself here, but nonetheless, it is framed through Judge Juan Mershan will recuse himself here, but nonetheless, it is framed through Judge
Juan Mershan is a good person whose pro-democracy who cares about law and order.
So exploit that by putting their reputation into this.
Let me pick up with the recusal disqualification that I'll just touch briefly on the removal
because we've done that before. We've seen a number of judges in the last few days actually talk about their appearance of
impropriety or bias and then make a decision whether to stay in the case or go.
Got three examples right here, right? We're not going to spend too much time on it,
but we got the judge down in Florida, North Florida, federal case, who's decided that
because a distant relative had 30 shares of Disney stock, he was, federal case, who's decided that because a distant relative had 30
shares of Disney stock, he was going to remove, he was going to disqualify himself, recuse
himself, and step out of the case of Ron DeSantis versus Disney or vice versa, Disney versus
Ron DeSantis. Most people shook their heads because he wrote a scathing order on the way out,
a very noisy departure. Like, why'd you when some relative have 30 shares that doesn't sound like that's enough even under the
federal standard. Then you had Judge Hellerstein, which we'll talk about in the
removal, he figured out that back in 1990s when he was, because he's in his
late 70s, when he was a lawyer and a partner at a now defunct law firm in
New York, but that was very well considered called Struckstruck in Levant,
that he actually worked himself,
not just the firm, on a matter involving the entity
that owns Trump Tower.
So he represented Donald Trump by extension,
by it was called, I think it's called Trump Fifth Avenue,
holding company.
You know, lots of people, lots of lawyers in Manhattan have done work at one time or another.
I know at least three of them for Donald Trump and his business affairs and business dealings.
When he was a semi-legitimate business person, subject to the fraud and civil fraud that's
being brought against him by the New York Attorney General's office. And here you have,
so he said, I do not, he didn't leave it to the parties.
He said, I don't see this at all as impacting my ability
to be impartial or biased or to be impartial and not biased.
And I'm not getting out.
Anybody want to say anything about it?
Well, who would say anything about it?
Donald Trump's not going to say anything about it.
He represented Donald Trump.
And the other side, man, at D.A., I'm sure it doesn't care.
So you have that.
Now here with Juan Mershon, we've done the reporting in the past.
And I'm not making these numbers up just to minimize it.
He gave a $30 donation to either act blue or Joe Biden directly at some point.
Put aside his family issues because nobody in the disqualification,
recusal analysis, what your loved one does for a living or in their spare time doesn't matter.
As long as you don't have that bias or partisanship about you as a judge,
doesn't really matter what your wife or daughter do in this case.
matter what your wife or daughter do in this case. So the so in order for a Trump to win in his efforts to to judge shop assuming he doesn't get the case out of federal court. He's got to stay in
the federal in the state court. He wants to get rid of Juan Moshon. Why? We've talked about it in
the past. Why? Because Juan Moshon presided over the 17 count jury conviction of the major Trump
entities for tax fraud.
Donald Trump's on the record is saying he didn't like the way that Juan Mershon
handled Alan Weisselberg and the testimony against the Trump organization
forcing basically Weisselberg to make a decision in a day's time after he'd been given a
considerable amount of time about whether to testify or not. And then telling him, you can go to Rikers Island, I don't really care. But you're
going to either testify and cooperate or you're not. And I don't care which, but we start
the trial on Monday. Well, Trump did like the way Mershan handled Weiselberg. And then,
of course, Mershan in the one major role he had during the trial was he, at the end,
he fined the Trump organization entities $1.6
million.
So they want to get a rid of Mershahn.
The standard in New York, because it's different in every place, and I practice in New
York.
The standard in New York is similar.
It's whether the judge and the judge himself or herself makes that initial call under a
very liberal abuse of discretion standard, meaning it's very rarely, if ever,
overturned at the higher levels of court, they have to make the decision that they can
no longer be fair and impartial because of some significant conflict.
And the other side has the burden of demonstrating that there is a substantial evidence of a significant conflict.
They're never going to be able to do this here. The $30 donation and the courts are clear.
The court decisions are clear. Bad rulings that you got against you in a prior case or in this
case is not bias. You have to have more. And if's the burden is on them on Trump's lawyers, necklace
and Todd Blanche, to prove that there is a substantial evidence to support a significant
conflict for this judge. What they want to do is try to embarrass the judge to step aside
on his own, because there is case law in New York at the Court of Appeals level, which is the highest court in New York, that if you, the judge shouldn't let it
get that far, if the judge believes that there is an appearance of impropriety, he should
step aside and let the chief administrative judge reassign the case.
But I don't think the judge here is going to do that.
He, and this is also in a lot of states, but not in New York, unfortunately.
I would have argued that they've waited too long to raise the issue, because in Florida,
where I also practice, you don't bring that, that motion within 10 days of you having
knowledge of the issues that you think are grounds for the disqualification.
You've waived. We're two months out from a
rainment. They've known about that donation for a long, long time and
anything else they're going to put together. Now, we don't have all of the
ability to talk about the motion because it was filed under seal. It'll be
unsealed soon. We'll get copies of it. But for right now, we're doing a little
bit of shadow boxing based on a press release that the Trump organization
put out or the Trump lawyers put out about it.
The end of the day, I do not believe that Judge Juan Roshan is going to let another judge
handle this case.
He's not going to find that there's an appearance of impropriety.
It says a terrible precedent every time a criminal defendant, garden variety, doesn't like
his judge, looks up as political background or record and just says, oh, you got to get out.
He's all right.
I'm getting out.
He's not going to do this criminal.
And this is state.
This isn't Florida federal about Disney.
This is about due process and due process rights.
So I think that loses.
On the removal side, just to break out a little legal AF law school, the party that wants to drag it into federal
court from state court, literally make a federal case out of it, files this notice of removal.
They have to have grounds.
The grounds here, the only, there's only one ground that they could possibly do by arguing
that Donald Trump is a federal officer at the time of the crime, at the time of the crime, or the crimes that
are charged, or the actions that support the crimes.
And as a federal officer performing a federal officer function, he's being sued in state
court.
That's called federal officer removal jurisdiction.
And that's the only hook they have.
And so Alvin Bragg did a great job in his motion
for remand, which is what you do when you want to, you want to keep it in state court. He said,
he's, he's not a federal officer. First of all, the statutes and the law around the statutes
says that presidents don't qualify as federal officer. That's interesting. And even if he was a
federal officer, when the crimes that were alleging,
both federal election and state, garden variety, run-of-the-mill, business record fraud,
state of New York, that happened while he was a candidate, not when he was president.
The fact that some of the book entries and some of the payments made back to Michael Cohen
was when the guy won the office and was sitting there. Doesn't mean it was a federal officer's performing a federal function when he was covering
up the stormy Daniels affair.
So not a federal officer, even if he was a federal officer, he wasn't functioning as
one.
This was a private business matter.
And my favorite part of them of the papers of the motion for remand is when they used
the Donald Trump's own words against them.
And they found his tweets when he was still tweeting when Donald Trump said that the agreement
between him and Stormy Daniels, the NDA, non-disclosure agreement.
And all of that relationship was a, I'm not, this is sounds like a pun, was a private affair,
a private agreement between two parties.
Right.
You weren't president.
It wasn't a presidential act to enter into this cover-up agreement
with Stormy Daniels to pay her money.
Your own words and hanging him on his own petard,
which we've said, prosecutors are gonna use the words
of Donald Trump at every press conference,
tweet, social truth, rally, campaign,
whatever interview against him in their filings,
and it is persuasive.
And I think this case with Hallerstein at the end of June is going to stay with Judge
Mershon and Mershon is going to stay with the case.
I just think how disgraceful this is.
Remove the legal trappings just for a moment. The Donald Trump's argument was that paying an adult film star,
hush money payments, was a presidential act.
And this is someone who large media networks normalize.
This is someone who is the leader of the modern day
Republican party.
That is not me being hyperbolic in saying, oh,
that's what he says. He literally said it. That's his motion that paying an adult film star
is a act of him in his official capacity as and the falsification of business records, part of his official capacity of being a president of the United States.
It is so utterly disgraceful.
But then we turn south to Fulton County, Georgia.
There we expect indictments to take place late July to early to mid August. And don't take our word for it. Just take
Fulton County District of Derni. Fony Willis is word for it. She's previously sent a letter
to the Fulton County Sheriff's Department letting them know that they should be prepared
for high profile indictments in that July 31 to August, a few weeks into August time period.
Fulton County District Attorney Fony Willis has similarly sent correspondence to those
working within her office, the Fulton County District Attorney's office, and the courthouse
into all of the judges, letting them know to prepare their dockets to try to hold remote hearings during
that time period as well, so that they could be prepared for high profile indictments
that will be taking place in that time period.
And now we learn about the expansive scope of this investigation focused on these other acts criminal acts by Donald Trump and his top aides in
other states because part of showing this overall criminal conspiracy that also took place in
Georgia had tentacles in all of these states when you bring a Rico and racketeering charge, you show this common plan and scheme. And ultimately, you're able
to charge Donald Trump with the acts of those, even at the lower rungs of the common plan
and scheme. And his Rico racketeering charges, that's a major powerful tool in mob investigations,
mob mafia criminal prosecutions. Because usually the mob boss isn't the person
who actually does the hit, right?
Usually, the mob boss puts out the statement, and then that gets trickled down to lieutenants,
it gets trickled down to the individuals who actually do the hit.
And how do you charge the mob boss with murder?
Well, one of the ways is through the Rico racketeering
criminal enterprise type of charge.
And that's what Fulton County District Attorney
Fawney Willis is here.
And if you look at that same structure,
you start to think about Donald Trump at the top.
You start thinking about people below that,
like Giuliani and Sidney Powell,
who wanted to seize voting machines and when they couldn't
do that, they then had criminal conspiracies to find kind of, I guess you call them
Magadonians now. I guess that's what Donald Trump calls the cult to find your Magadonian
Republicans who are who have clout in certain red areas.
And so for example, in Georgia,
you had someone by the name of Kathy Latham,
who was the chair of the coffee county GOP,
who allowed people in the Trump campaign
to breach voting data to steal voters data
in the coffee county elections office.
So there was basically a robbery. There was a
break in that took place. And that didn't just happen in coffee county that also
took place in Pennsylvania and Michigan and Colorado. And there was also Donald
Trump had his people engaged in other criminal conduct in places like Arizona
and New Mexico and, that also took place
in Georgia and in other states.
So you kind of put that all together as part of pleading, Yoriko and racketeering.
I want to talk about that.
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And now back to the video. We are back live on legal AF, Rico, Rico, Rico, Suave in Georgia.
Tell us more, Popeye, about what's going on.
And if I call you honey, it's because I'm referring to one of our sponsors, but I also like you.
On the Rico, which we talk a lot about, the wonder, what has Fony well has been doing since several months ago when she said
indictments were imminent?
Let's get off her back for a minute.
The process of taking the Special Purpose Grand Jury report, which went on for a seven-month
process of a Special Purpose Grand Jury, to develop facts and evidence and to get from them some recommendations about indictments.
It's not the same thing as going in loaded for bear, loaded for Trump in front of a real grand jury, an endating grand jury,
in which you present not just that evidence, she's not limited to what was done and develop factually in front of that jury with all those 70 witnesses
and documents.
She's continued to expand her probe, and it's very far reaching at this point, partly with
new evidence that she's developed.
And then she will go in at the end of July or the beginning of August, presenting really
two different work streams of evidence and witnesses and testimony and documents to
the grand jury, the inditing grand jury.
One of it will be what came out of the special purpose grand jury.
She has that under her arm.
The other will be witnesses that she brings in new and then an expansion of her case.
She's got kind of the individual crimes, I think, down pretty solidly, but
connecting them all to a Rico racketeering influence and corrupt organization act under
Georgia law, not federal, under Georgia law is taking a minute. Why? Because she gets
the benefit of Georgia law having one of the most expansive Rico
statutes on its books anywhere in the country. Every state has a Rico, a version of the federal
Rico statute on their books to handle enterprise crime, organizational crime, a crime involving
two or more acts, two or more people in a coordinated strategy to
accomplish a criminal objective.
Every state's got that.
But every state and its legislature, it depends on how broad and expansive it is.
And Georgia's got one of the broadest.
For instance, under Georgia law, let's just look at the underlying claims.
Pardon me. Let's just look at the underlying claims pardon me
Miss handling of government documents is I'm sorry that was I was doing my federal my federal lineup
Let me get let me get my body willous lineup see what happens on live TV
The statutes that she's looking at her's criminal solicitation to commit election fraud state crime Georgia
False statements to state and local officials state crime Georgia, state crime, Georgia, false statements to state and local officials,
state crime, Georgia, conspiracy, state crime, racketeering, we'll talk about and threats
to election administrators.
Now how does she tie all these people together?
Mark Meadows, Donald Trump, Lindsey Graham, Powell, Giuliani, and others fake electors, the
Republican party of Georgia.
How does she put all that together?
She does it through a Rico indictment.
And Rico indictment there is just requiring two criminal acts.
In Georgia says it could be federal or state criminal acts, so it's very expansive.
A pattern, right, to achieve a common purpose.
And so she's got all of that.
And now there's new reporting that she's not just looking at what happened on the dirt
in Georgia.
She's looking at what happened in five other states to tie it back as a master scheme
to interfere with the election and the election particularly in Georgia because she's right
It wasn't just Georgia that they wanted
Okay, that wasn't the only
Place that they were focused they were looking at Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and
Georgia that was the strategy in each one of those things
You know, it's one of these, like an Avenger movie.
They had to get all five or six of these jewels
in order for something bad to happen and destroy the world.
And Georgia was one part of it.
So if that's one part of it, the fact that these other bad acts
happened around the country all under the auspices
of the same group of racketeers,
she can then expand her investigation into
those areas.
And we know now, based on what you and I have done in reporting on legal AF just two
months ago, less than two months ago, she is focused now as is Jack Smith, this is where
there's competing prosecutors fighting over the same evidence, so to speak, on those two outside vendors, consultants
that Donald Trump hired, not one, but two, Sympatico software and Berkeley research that
he hired to try to get to the bottom of all of his working theories about dead people
voting, sorry, vote flipping by software from Trump to Biden, other fraud at the polling
places.
Well, he paid above $1 million to both of these entities, and they both reported back,
Sympathico reported back to the Trump campaign, and Berkeley reported back to Mark Meadows
and Donald Trump himself in the White House that there was no fraud.
We couldn't find any fraud.
The none of your theories work.
The people you said go talk to, that they either didn't know what they were talking about
or had no evidence to support it.
The technology thing we looked at it.
And that's on top of cyber ninjas in Arizona who also got paid by the Republicans there
and said there was no fraud.
So she wants to see that and how it also impacted Georgia.
So she's focused on that.
How do we know that she's focused on Rico?
Because that's like her middle name.
She has used Rico more than any other prosecutor
in her position in Vulton County combined.
She also has on her bench a leading Rico expert as one of her prosecutors. We've
talked about him before. She's got Joe, sorry, John Floyd, who is an Rico expert. She hired
him before what happened for the election issue, but she, he's an in house consultant,
all things Rico. And she's used it successfully
and other criminal schemes in very creative ways and she's going to use it here.
Now, what's the advantage of the prosecutor? It sounds great. We keep talking about Rico.
What's the advantage? It's easier for her to prove her case. It's easier for her to piece together,
far flung, what seems to be maybe not connected things,
all in one criminal conspiracy.
It also gives her the ability, unlike some other indictments,
to write an entire description of the conspiracy,
which she's going to do, at the top of her indictment,
in prose, in narrative, about the players, the acts,
the state court, the state violations,
the federal violations, the out court, the state violations, the federal violations,
the out of state violations, and connect the dots
and bring them all home to Georgia in one big fat conspiracy.
It allows her to synthesize all of the evidence
and all of the multiple targets and participants
in the conspiracy.
And some of them can be unindicted.
So so people know, she doesn't have to,
other than Trump, which we know she's gonna indict.
I'm not going out too far of a limb here.
Even Trump's people think that's gonna happen.
But the others like, is she gonna indict Lindsey Graham?
It doesn't matter.
He can be what's called an unindicted,
co-conspirator for a rico scheme.
He can even be unnamed. He could even give him a
number. We'll figure it out in about 10 seconds who it is. Unincorporate, unundited co-conspirator
number one, sitting in Washington in his office in the Senate, making phone calls. I wonder who
that is. But that's okay. We care about the
description of the scheme, of course. We care about the indicted people, but she can have
unindicted co-conspirators and she will. So that's why Georgia prosecutors like that having that
in their toolbox. Because as I've said in the past, Trump is also between two major bodies of law that are not favorable
to him.
One in New York and one in Georgia.
In New York, the attorney general has probably the most powerful set of civil fraud powers
at her discretion of any other attorney general in the state in the 50 states.
He's up against that in the civil fraud case.
And in Georgia, he's not only got a prosecutor
who's amazingly competent and focused on him, rightly so.
But at her disposal, probably the most powerful set
of racketeering laws of any local prosecutor in the state.
And in any state. I think when people see the indictment at a
Fulton County, Georgia, people are going to say, wow, because my
expectation of that indictment is that Fony Willis is going to
throw the full book at Donald Trump and his other co-conspirators.
And then she's going to pile on some other books after that. She's not messing around and that one,
you know, stay tuned and again, the timeline of these things, you know, and I see
sometimes the comments, you know, on YouTube and in other areas. It's like, you
know, you all have been saying
that indictments are coming.
Let's make them happen already.
But if you go back to the episodes,
the legal aeifers who have been with us from day one,
know that we've actually, I think set out
a fairly accurate timeline with respect
to all of these prosecutions.
I think we nailed it when it came
to the Manhattan District Attorney. I think we nailed it when it came to the Manhattan District
Attorney.
I think we are nailing it when it comes to special counsel,
Jack Smith.
And we've been saying almost for the past nine months,
when no one else was saying it, that we thought that by this
summer, as when we would see the first indications that there
would be a charging decision, that there would be an indictment
and special counsel, Jack Smith,
and we've been talking about, you know,
that June, July, August timeframe.
And so, you know, look, whether it gets moved back a month
or two months from a target date,
that's just the fluidity of the law, right?
And so when it comes to Fulton County District Attorney,
Fawni Willis, the explanation for why it's probably moved back,
I would say about 60 days from our target date,
is a good thing for justice.
I always like when clients would come into my office
and Pope Akiyama have a similar experience,
and they want you to set out the case.
Step by step by step, though,
as though these dates are set in stone.
And it is important to always remind the client
that I won't want to keep certain dates set in stone
if it is in your interest.
If we say we're gonna file on this date,
but then we get a lot more information
and we speak to new witnesses.
Why would you want to file prematurely early?
Let's get the better insight and information.
So to your point, there's been a lot of developments in the Fulton County District Attorney's
case that has pushed this back about 60 days that has been gathering more evidence that
has been speaking to more of these fake electors who are now flipping that is
It is compiling a broader scope of this all of those things bowed well for
justice and the time frame is to me second to
Justice being served and finally speaking about justice being served. And finally, speaking about justice being served,
can't be illegal without giving you a final update on what's been going on with George Santos.
George Santos, of course, was indicted by the Department of Justice last month out of the
Eastern District of New York. Few updates to report here. You know, one of the things we learned when he was
criminally indicted for all of these false statements that he's been making on his
congressional that he's been representing to Congress and getting money from unemployment
insurance that he shouldn't have received, wire fraud.
He got bailed out, $500,000.
He didn't pay for it.
Out of his own pocket, there was a group of individuals who paid the $500,000 to bail
him out otherwise.
He'd still be in custody.
But those identities are secret.
They remain secret.
The deal was done under seal. I don't think the
deal should be under seal. This is information that we the people deserve to have. He's a member
of the House of Representatives, which he disgraces each and every day. He works for us.
He works for us. And the kind of surety's, the surety bond that's posted to post the bail for him. That's not like
some secret super secret information. And so fortunately, a number of media entities filed
a motion to disclose the identity under the First Amendment, New York Times, ABC, Washington
Post, and several others filed a motion. The magistrate judge in the case, magistrate judge, and why shields set an order for George
Santos and his lawyers to respond about why this should still be kept secret.
The deadline was June 2nd.
On June 2nd, George Santos's lawyer sent this bizarre letter brief to the court and basically
said that it's taking them a lot of time to find cases that will help them distinguish
these very, there's so much gravity in this matter that they have to spend more time in
the weekend to search for case law that could help them keep this information secret.
I mean, the judge was like, I give you, I give you one more business day.
Okay.
Okay.
Like I'll give you until Monday.
So the judge granted an extension of time for George Santos's lawyer, I guess, to spend
the weekend trying to search for cases that support their position.
I'll give them the hint here.
There aren't any.
This should not be kept secret.
This is precisely the type of information that should be public, really.
In a case involving a fraudulent, lying member of Congress, should we keep the identities
of the sherders a secret? Absolutely not.
But we will see what the briefing is that's filed by George Santos, but I expect to get
the identity of those individuals, which will be fascinating indeed, Popeye.
Yeah. I don't much to add. I mean, just to be clear for those,
we don't skip any steps.
The prosecutors know the names.
They were provided to them because the prosecutors
have to vet collateral and money that's being put up to make sure
it's not a continuation of a crime.
I've been involved with a number of cases where the government has come back
and said, where's that money coming from?
What's the source of that money? And have challenged where the bond and bail
is coming from, if it's coming from a potential criminal source or a back channel.
Like, oh, it's an LLC off the Cayman Islands. Like, no, we're not allowing that. Tell us
more. This is about the public disclosure. And we just had a recent, very high profile version of exactly the way I
think it's going to play out and write to where Ben, you also predicted, which is we're
going to learn the names. Sam Bankman freed in the FTX matter and the collapse of FTX did
not want the world to know that three professors at Stanford that worked with his parents who were also
Stanford professors, and that were at one time mentors to San Bankman Freed had put up their
houses and half a million dollars with a collateral.
And he, I don't know if that was the condition of them giving it, that they would try to keep
it secret, but they didn't want to be there.
They're still on faculty at Stanford.
And there was the same motion practice that we're doing here and reply briefs and everything.
And at the end, in response to the media's inquiry, the judge says, yeah, I'm disclosing
that.
So it's going to come out.
Now, if the reason he doesn't want it out, this is a guy where that based on new reporting,
he's lied about who his treasure was.
He never really had a treasure because the press reached out to the treasure
and she said, huh, I'm not the treasure of what.
When you're being charged for financial crime
impersonating other people, identity fraud
and things like that, you don't get the benefit of a cover.
I guess his argument is what, Ben?
It's a political witch hunt.
And my donors have the right to support me, but they shouldn't be outed. Your donors
are outed all the time. This is this problem with an understanding federal election law.
Your donors are always outed. I make a donation of $1,000 to a candidate.
Judge Morshan makes a donation for $30 at Joe Biden. It's reported and you
can get access to it. Why should we not? So, I don't even know. What is the best straight
face document that he makes?
I think the best straight face argument was to temporarily keep it sealed by saying that
there's a privacy concern for these individuals. And as part of negotiating his surrender,
he basically says, look, I'm gonna show up at this date,
voluntarily, these people wanna be kept private.
It's all happening fairly quickly.
So I think the Department of Justice ultimately is like,
they don't care one way or the other.
I got a prediction of who it is.
I got a prediction of who it is.
I want to hear you, I want to hear a prediction,
but I think what the argument will be,
which is a losing argument,
is going to be kind of play the victim and saying,
because he's exposed to threats and all of these things
for his conduct
by bringing other people in, they'd be exposed to threats and harassment, you know, but that's
just clearly not the case.
And the bottom line is that if they are going to step into a nerina, a public arena, a
courthouse that no one forced them to step into this arena. They on their own said, we are standing shoulder to shoulder
with a traitor and a complete fraud.
Take your prediction of who it is.
All right, this is just spitball in here.
But the people that were very close to him,
including the ones that were,
he made a lot of money off of a yacht brokerage
where he sold a yacht for a Miami Republican fundraiser and reasonably well-known person.
I'm not going to name them here, but if you Google things, you'll figure it out.
And that person's wife was a big supporter of his campaign.
They also sold that boat through him to another supporter in Long Island, and he got paid
a large finder's feet commission to that
devolder entity of his, which is what gave him enough money to ultimately loan his campaign money.
I have no reason to believe they're no longer supporting him. Pardon me in standing behind
him, but I would not be shocked when they finally rip off the curtain to see that Miami family,
being one of the families that helped support
him for the bail in the bond.
We will see and we will keep you posted here on legal a f another incredible episode.
I have so much fun spending this time with you, Michael Pope, with all of the legal a
furs out there.
And I see the legal
furs go. I never thought of myself as an a fur before. Yeah,
you're a legal a fur. That's the community where we're all in
it together. So whether you're a mightest mighty, a legal a fur,
a political beat down brigade or a lights on luminary, I think
we'll come up with names for all of the rest. It's one
community pro democracy. We focus on the rest. It's one community pro-democracy.
We focus on the facts.
We try to do this with intelligence, compassion, inject humanity back into this, but to really
spend our time working through these issues and talking about them and having a serious
debate and discussion, which I don't think really exists
in many other places, and it is so critical that we bring that back together as a major
part of what the media does.
And none of this is possible without you who are watching this, you who are listening to
this, you are the key to this pro democracy community
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It's gonna be a very, very, very busy summer,
but busy in a way that is good for justice.
Have a great rest of the weekend,
have a great week, and we'll see you next time
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