Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Jack Smith Puts Judge Cannon ON NOTICE
Episode Date: July 18, 2024Michael Popok and Karen Friedman Agnifilo are back for the midweek edition of the top-rated Legal AF podcast. On this episode, the anchors debate leading stories at the intersection of law and politic...s including how Special Counsel’s Jack Smith’s third appeal of Judge Cannon will fair as he seeks to overturn her fringe ruling that the Special Counsel has no power and is illegitimate; the outlook for a Trump prosecution in Georgia in 2025; President Biden’s moves to reform the Supreme Court and get constitutional amendments passed to overturn the immunity decision by the Court, and so much more. Join the Legal AF Patreon: https://Patreon.com/LegalAF Thanks to our sponsors: PolicyGenius: Head to https://policygenius.com/legalaf to get your free life insurance quotes and see how much you could save. Lume: Control Body Odor ANYWHERE with Lume deodorant and get $5 off your Starter Pack (that’s over 40% off) with promo code legalaf at https://LumeDeodorant.com! #lumepod Beam: Get up to 40% off for a limited time when you go to https://shopbeam.com/LEGALAF and use code LEGALAF at checkout! Fum: Head to https://TryFum.com/legalaf and get a FREE GIFT with the JOURNEY PACK today when you use code LEGALAF Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af MissTrial: https://meidasnews.com/tag/miss-trial The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown Lights On with Jessica Denson: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/lights-on-with-jessica-denson On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Coalition of the Sane: https://meidasnews.com/tag/coalition-of-the-sane Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to the midweek edition of Legal AF.
We sit at the intersection of law and politics
so that you don't have to,
and we curate the top four or five stories
at that intersection and bring it to you.
Wednesday's here, Karen Friedman,
Nick Nifilo, my friend and colleague, and me, Michael Popak. Got three big topics up for grabs
today. We're going to talk about the Georgia prosecution of Donald Trump. Is it DOA? Is it
dead on arrival? Because three judges of an intermediary court in Georgia have decided to postpone the hearing on both
Swanee Willis' motion to dismiss the appeal and on the appeal itself to well after the
election.
What does it mean?
Is there going to be a trial in 2025?
We're going to talk about that.
Then we're going to talk about Judge Aileen Cannon.
We just have to. We talked about a love letter that was sent
by way of a concurrence from Clarence Thomas
to Aileen Cannon, which has now been called a cancurrence,
because this was nothing but just a message
that he wanted Aileen Cannon to find
that the special counsel was illegitimate, was not properly
appointed, not properly funded, and the whole indictment, along with all the other co-conspirators,
should just be tossed out the window.
She's hated this case from day one since before day one.
Now Clarence Thomas gave her an exit ramp.
Look at Clarence Thomas in the middle of all this.
This is a guy that should have recused himself, never made any decisions at all given his
wife's involvement in the insurrection and yet he was involved with helping
Donald Trump not once but twice, joining the majority in the immunity decision in
July on July 1st and writing a concurrence in the immunity decision, which was a message directly to screw up and throw a monkey wrench directly into
Mar-a-Lago's prosecution on behalf of the special counsel.
Clarence Thomas sat around for years not talking. Now we can't
get him to shut up. We're gonna talk more about that here on
Legal AF. And then, as we said, as Ben likes to say on other hot takes and other versions of this podcast, every action has a reaction.
And we have a series of things that the Supreme Court has done over the last two terms, especially this year,
breaking down the wall between church and state, of finding or helping to find a special counsel to be invalid
against the woman's right to choose,
imposing and giving immunity, almost blanket immunity
to the person who occupies the presidency,
and suggesting that even pardons are appropriate in that scenario.
What do you do about it?
So we're going to talk about the evolution of President
Biden, who a year or two ago said, well, I got a blue ribbon panel. And, you know, they're sort of
split about what I should do to him coming out now, and really following the lead of Professor
Lawrence tribe of Harvard, and saying there's a number of things we have to do immediately,
including the number of people on the court,
making sure that special counsels in the future are protected,
making sure that pardons aren't used improperly, taking away immunity from the president and other
constitutional officers. Finally, we're hearing a coherent response to an out of control rogue fringe Supreme Court by the
President of the United States.
We're going to talk about it here on Legal AF.
What a week, Karen, since last time I saw you.
Events in Pennsylvania transpired.
A convention has started.
And if you could believe it, the only people that have been convicted in the last month are two Democrats, one named
Senator Menendez and the other one named Hunter Biden.
Well, Donald Trump, Donald Trump.
I don't know how that's lawfare.
The only people that seem to be getting convicted are the son of a president who's a Democrat
and a Senator who's a Democrat for New Jersey.
Who was prosecuted by a special counsel, no less.
That's right. Suddenly. Right. And we're going to talk about that. Democrat for New Jersey. Who was prosecuted by a special counsel, no less, that's suddenly,
right. And we're gonna talk about that. That's one of the
things I want to get to with you when we get to that segment,
which is, what does that do to open the floodgates of everybody
who got convicted by being prosecuted by a special counsel,
going back to time immemorial? Because if it was invalid,
nonc protonc, as we like to say sometimes to brag on our Latin in law
school, then it was invalid at then and now, and they could be seeking to vacate all of
their convictions.
Let's kick it off, Karen, with anything that you'd like.
I'd like to start with Georgia, but tell me how you're doing.
We haven't seen each other in a while, and certainly there's been a lot that's happened
in between. I mean, and I don't say this with a lot of pride, but it is the first time in
four years of Legal AF that we did not put on an episode. And it's really because frankly, and I'll
apologize to the audience now, we were scrambling because at the moment we were about to go live,
the events in Pennsylvania, we were trying to get our minds around it. We didn't really have full information.
Maybe we should have done a live version of it,
of the shooting issues, but we sort of didn't do that.
And so, we didn't put out that episode from last week,
but we'll find a way through Patreon
to drop it as far of content, but look what's happened.
So it's the last time you and I were looking
across a laptop together.
Yeah, no, a lot. A lot has happened. And, you know, now the Republican Party is allegedly calling for unity
and the convention is happening.
But more importantly than what has happened there is that Judge Eileen Cannon
dismissed the Mar-a-Lago case
on the first day of the Republican National Convention.
Talk about a partisan decision.
I mean, of all days to do it,
it was absolutely such a sending a message
straight to Donald Trump.
Talk about a love letter.
You say Justice Thomas, that was his love letter to her. This was her love letter to Donald Trump, talk about a love letter. You say Justice Thomas, that was his love letter to her.
This was her love letter to Donald Trump.
So if there was ever any doubt that she's trying
to curry some favor or seek higher office
or whatever it is she's looking to do to Donald Trump,
just the fact that she had a 93 page decision dismissing the case in full,
ready to go on the day of the convention. It was just stunning to me. Absolutely stunning.
She should have just attached that to her application for the Supreme Court, see attached.
And we talk about the political calendars and how judges like Judge Chuck can
want to stay away from the political calendar. And any judge worth his or her salt stays away
from the political calendar. And the way you do that is, okay, I'm not telling you if you are
going to write a 93 page decision, that's wrong, that's fringe, that's rogue, that it's going to
get reversed. And we'll talk about that at the appropriate time on the show. Just wait until after the Republican National Convention.
Don't do it the day of and after the shooting.
That is the worst time.
That shows that it's politically charged.
Do it next week.
And then, I mean, we will be equally critical
as we're going to be on this show tonight, you know,
as a spoiler alert.
But don't give us the opportunity and
Karen the opportunity to say at the top of the podcast that this is a love letter to Donald Trump
on the day of the... No other judge would do this. Chutkin wouldn't have done this.
Mershon wouldn't have done this. The DC Court of Appeals or any of the judges there would not have.
Any other judge in the Southern District of Florida would not have done this but her,
but she doesn't care. And we're, but her, but she doesn't care.
We're going to talk about why she doesn't care.
But why don't you, I know you're doing something on the Georgia appeal along with, I think
your mistrial colleagues, but why don't you, since you're steeped in it, why don't you
talk about what's going on in Georgia with the appeal?
Because there's been a new development there, and I think you're the right person to kind
of catch your audience up on it.
Yeah, so oral argument date has been set for December 5th
at the Georgia Appellate Court
to determine whether or not Fannie Willis
can continue to prosecute that case.
If you remember that this was a case where
some of the defendants said that she had an affair and therefore she should be disqualified.
Then they had this hearing to see whether there was a conflict of interest because she was having
a consensual adult relationship with the lead prosecutor, Nathan Wade,
who she brought in to prosecute that case.
He's a former judge, he's a former prosecutor,
and he's a well-respected attorney in that community.
She brought him in after several other people,
including the former governor of Georgia,
who turned her down to be the
lead lawyer on that case. So she brings him in. She and he then had a consensual adult
sexual relationship, apparently. And, and as a result, the there was this long involved
hearing saying that was a conflict of interest. Now, many of us, including me, watched that
entire hearing to really try to see what the conflict of interest. Now, many of us, including me, watched that entire hearing to really try to
see what the conflict of interest was and whether there was a conflict of interest. And certainly,
I didn't see any evidence whatsoever come out that there was a conflict of interest. And in fact,
Judge McAfee did not find that there was an actual conflict of interest. What he did say, however,
is that there was an appearance of impropriety,
an appearance of a conflict.
Now, I still disagree.
I don't understand it.
It's not like she was having an affair with someone
on the other side of the V, the Georgia versus Trump.
It's not like one of the defense attorneys.
It's not like she was having an affair with the judge.
It's an HR question mark, whether or not
that's appropriate.
But what's the conflict?
It was unclear.
It was never clear.
People speculated that it was financial,
but they never really kind of developed that at the hearing.
So I was surprised that he would even
say there was an appearance of impropriety,
an appearance of a conflict.
But he did.
But he said it would be remedied if Mr. Wade
were to get off the case, which he promptly did. He resigned. But Judge McAfee allowed
the defense to appeal, which they did, and they briefed it, or the briefing at now,
oral arguments is set for after the election. So at the time they'll know whether
or not that he's going to be president or not. So there's a lot of moving parts to this case.
This case is very much tied to the DC case, the Tanya Chutkin case, in the sense that a lot of the evidence is the same,
a lot of the charges are similar,
and a lot of the conduct is similar.
This continues and does a lot more on Georgia,
and obviously has 17 more defendants than that case.
But the reason it's significant
is this July 1st presidential immunity decision. So let's just start with can Fonny Willis prosecute the case? That's what's
going to be decided. If she gets removed from the case, frankly, I think the case is, is, you know,
I don't know who they would put in to do it or who could do it. So the case is a big question mark
then. But let's say she can stay on the case. The next thing that has to happen,
first of all, Donald Trump is gonna be president.
There is absolutely no way that case will go
against him during his presidency.
And the reason is federal law,
through a memo from the Office of Legal Counsel,
interpreting the United States Constitution,
has determined that a sitting president
cannot be prosecuted while they were president.
That just cannot happen
because it interferes with his ability to run the country.
So because of the United States Constitution's
supremacy clause, which I think it's Article 6,
clause two says basically that the law, the supreme law of the land is federal and takes
precedent over any conflicting state law. So even if Georgia state law said you could prosecute the
sitting president because that's federal law, that would control. So Trump, if he wins, will not go
to trial while he is president number one
She could proceed against the other
Defendants however, but they'll still have to be an analysis about the evidence and about the charges and immunity again
Because of the supremacy clause, right?
The Supreme Court now has has determined that he's immune as to certain certain things
So a lot of that what's in that indictment,
I think would come out.
The candidate Trump stuff, right?
The fine 11,780 votes, the perfect famous phone call,
I think actually will survive.
And I think the Georgia specific stuff
is more candidate Trump.
So it's not President Trump will not be his official acts,
but your guess is as good as mine of what will happen.
But that case as to Trump is very much in question as to whether or not that will go
at all or certainly will go anytime in the next four and a half to five years.
And what survives with the other defendants, I do think that could go though, whether or
not he's president.
But that's what I think.
Yeah. I think you're right.
So Fonny Wells has a motion to dismiss the appeal,
but I assume it will now be heard after the election.
Her grounds for that, which I covered once before,
is that there is no ability to appeal the fact
finding that is at the heart of the decision by Judge McAfee.
And once you rip that away from the appeal, there's nothing else to do.
There's so much deference that's given to the trier of fact in this area.
And that's what they're just trying to do.
They're trying to make the appellate court redo the factual hearing or interpret the
facts differently.
And that's not their job and she pointed that out but rather than
hear that early they're hearing that I assume closer in time or at the day of the oral argument
whenever that is set and as you said it's only the second the first level appeal there's also
there's also a Georgia appellate court the supreme court of Georgia that would have to get involved
as well but then you have the the heart of the matter is the heart of the case being ripped out by the immunity decision. We've always said that, yes,
state prosecutions are great when it comes to Donald Trump, if they're successful, because they
can't be pardoned away as easily. It depends on your state and your governor or your parole board,
probation board, whatever it is in your particular place. But the Supreme Court has just given a blanket,
almost absolute immunity or immunity that's very difficult to overcome for official conduct. And
they would require, and it's now the law of the land, and they would require, and any judge in
Georgia will have to follow the Supreme Court on this issue. They're not going to be able to come up with their own aversions. That many of the things in the
speaking indictment, the sprawling indictment that Fonny Willis chose to use, and we applauded her
for it at the time, are going to be sifted out and surgically removed from the indictment,
because they're not going to be able to support the charges because
of the official conduct.
And official conduct can't be used as evidence to help you prove unofficial conduct.
So she's got a bit of a problem if she even gets the case back about what her indictment
looks like versus what the Supreme Court, US Supreme Court decision is.
And then you've got the whole kick it down the road, kick the can
by these three judges on this panel outside of Atlanta.
These are people who didn't want the political calendar to be involved.
They're like, yeah, except in favor of the candidate.
Let's kick it way out there.
Now one of the things that I've called for, and we'll talk about it probably in another hot take
or as this thing develops, is the thing that's missing,
as you said, is the other co-conspirators,
they're not out of the woods.
The immunity decision doesn't help them.
They, at worst or best, they conspired to commit crimes
with somebody that had immunity.
That doesn't help them.
And I would assume based on her track record
and her approach that she's gonna prosecute the case
against the other 14 or 15 regardless.
Many of those people that are in there, think about this.
If Donald Trump somehow gets restored to power,
there's no other way to put this,
many of these people that have been indicted or unindicted, unindicted co-conspirators,
cooperators, they're going to be swept back with him. People have to recognize that his
coattails are loaded with felons, people in and out of prison, people who lost their law licenses
or should, and co-conspirators,
including ones charged around the country in the Attorney General cases.
And I've said, and I called for this in a recent hot take, we should demand, and Joe
Biden should demand, that Donald Trump put up his cabinet, tell us who is going to be
in his West Wing.
Who's your Attorney General? Who's your Secretary of State? Who's your attorney general? Who's your secretary of state?
Who's in this office?
Who's your chief of staff?
I mean, a lot of times in order to make a country
feel better or at least know what they're voting for,
a presidential candidate will be pictured
with their cabinet right around the time of the convention.
You know Donald Trump's not gonna do that because he doesn't want people to know, especially
the independents and those that are still on the fence about his candidacy,
about the criminal element that he's gonna sweep back into the into the White
House with them and some of those people are in the Georgia prosecution. You don't
think Mike Roman, who was the head of his election day operations, who was the
mule to carry the fake elector certificates, you don't think he's going to be back in a
White House with Donald Trump, even though he's indicted in Georgia?
Donald Trump doesn't care about that.
He's putting on the stage today, or tomorrow, Peter Navarro.
Peter Navarro just got sprung from the Miami Penitentiary today.
He's changing out of his orange and he's changing into some suit
and they're throwing him up on the stage
to be celebrated and feted
because that's what the restoration
of Donald Trump's presidency sort of means.
Carol, what do you think about that,
about the cabinet, naming your cabinet?
Tell me who your attorney general it is
because I keep speculating that it's Rudy Giuliani, Aileen Cannon, Jeffrey Clark, Alina Haba. Who's
your first lady? I think that's either Alina Haba, Ivanka, or maybe Melania. I'm not sure.
I know. I mean, I know it's, yeah, was surprised where where we're speaking of where we're Melania and
Ivanka on the first night at the convention. I mean they would know where to be seen so
Well, we're gonna we're gonna we're gonna talk about something he got away with in Florida with judge Aileen Cannon
she of the Southern District of Florida in a
I mean, I'll just tell you it was not a jaw-dropping as an understatement
in a, I mean, I'll just tell you, it was not only, jaw dropping is an understatement of the fact,
the way we reacted on our own text chain
when it came out within moments was,
but you had some good predictions about that,
and I agreed with you on one part.
I agree with you that she was gonna find a way
to get rid of this case as quickly as possible,
and she has, but the 11th Circuit is the backstop for that. It's the firewall,
hopefully does the right thing. We're going to break all that down. We're going to talk about
finally what Joe Biden's administration and the president himself is doing about in reaction to
what we just watched the Supreme Court do, the train wreck of the Supreme Court.
As it ethically circles the drain, somebody's got to stand up and do something about it.
And finally, we've got President Biden
who's proposing to do something about it.
I think that's part of the job he hasn't yet completed
that he wants the American people to vote him in for.
We'll talk about all of that.
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And we are, thank you Salty, and we are back.
Well, we've warmed up. I feel like I've cleared my throat
I'm ready and my I took two aspirin at one point right before we got on the show because I knew we were coming up to
the Mar a lago
Aline cannon fireball special
Holy-shmigoli
You know, it's like I
Mean let me just I'm gonna turn it over to you in 30 seconds.
Let me just say this.
There's nobody, I'm not surprised by anything that Dailien Cannon does.
And unfortunately, we finally have the opportunity to take an appeal of this crazy 93 page decision.
Three pages of which actually looked at the statutory language that was appropriate,
but read it out of context and read out most of the language following the lead of Judge Clarence Thomas.
He's wrong too. And just the other 87, 88 pages is just make-weight.
It has nothing to do with the heart of the case. The heart of the case is a two-page section. She got it wrong. She didn't cite to the right legislative history.
She got the language wrong. She knew she got it wrong because she just dispatched it with,
well, that's all that needs to be said on that one. She literally wrote that. As soon as I saw that,
when I first saw 93 pages, I said, well, this is hard hitting I mean I'd agree with it but there's gonna be intellectual integrity
here she's in a former appellate lawyer for the Department of Justice this is
right up her alley here we go nope not at all it's just a a sophomoric wet mess
which is gonna be my prediction gonna be is going to be easily dispatched by whatever three judge
panel of the 11th Circuit gets this. At the same time, you're going to look, finally, we've been
talking about it for over a year, Jack Smith's going to be able to ask for reassignment. And if
she doesn't know what reassignment is, and she doesn't like statutory language, she should go
look up the statute that allows her bosses in the 11th Circuit to reassign her off of this case because under the Lemon Law, there's three
defects and three recalls, you're off the case. She already had two before the indictment
even came out. She now has this major one in which she's dismissed the indictment with
prejudice and closed the case and didn't even give the special counsel who she doesn't think actually exists. She thinks it's a figment of her imagination.
It is an illegitimate prosecutorial body. She doesn't even give them that
the courtesy, the courtesy of delaying the effectiveness of her order until
they get their appeal up and running. And my favorite part, Karen, is when they noted when they
when this spokesperson for the special counsel's office, they made a made a
point of saying, we're not a figment of your imagination. We exist. We are
employed by the Department of Justice and our boss is the Attorney General.
And we have gotten the Attorney General's approval to appeal your backside.
That's the last part was mine.
All right, catch up everybody on the ins and outs
of the 93 pages, then we'll say what happens next.
So a couple of things.
First, let me see how well I know you
after all these years of doing this weekly podcast with you.
Let me guess, the part of the opinion that you think
of the 93 pages that's substantive
is around page 20
Something mid 20s 24 25 so good
You know popok I just know you now is that wait help me out here who is winning the fourth race in Pimlico tomorrow
Because you're very good at this kind of stuff. No, I mean look the prediction
I got I got half a prediction right, I got half a prediction, right.
I got half a prediction wrong, right.
Soon as you know, the frustration with Eileen Cannon is, is that she doesn't rule on anything,
right. She never makes a decision.
There's every substantive legal motion out there is still not ruled on.
She didn't even set a trial date and it's just been
beyond frustrating. And when she does say something, it's one of these strange three or
four lines minute order in her docket. There's no like piece of paper decision that's handed down
anywhere with any analysis. And as a result, there's not anything to appeal. Everyone's like,
why isn't Jack Smith appealing? Why aren't they asking her to recuse herself
or to get her off the case, asking the appellate courts
to disqualify her?
And the reason is they've been waiting,
because she didn't do anything.
She refused to make a ruling.
She refused to make a decision.
She refused to do anything substantive.
As you said, there was two other times
that she was smacked down hard
and pretty quickly by the 11th Circuit.
They didn't waste any time to unanimously smack her down
and overrule her in this case, right?
Is there, but my question to you is,
is there really a three strikes when you're out?
Like there's three reversals when you're off the case
or is that just sort of understood in the 11th Circuit? It's of understood? It's understood. The Southern did other courts do it too. The Southern District
certainly has cited in cases and it seemed to be around three. They'll give you like you know it's
like those cases the dog bite cases you get one free dog bite and then that's not then you can't
yeah there's like three major errors in your rulings.
It's like, no, you're off the case.
And we'll just have to see, I'll go back to you here.
We'll just have to see which three judge panel they get.
She had two separate three judge panels.
I think there was one justice judge that overlapped
that slapped her back hard when she tried to interfere
with the investigation before the indictment.
One was headed by the chief Chief Judge William Pryor.
I think they've been chomping at the bit, Karen,
to get a substantive ruling,
and they couldn't ask for better.
You're like, you did a great hot take on it.
Like, I mean, this is a gift, and this isn't a small gift.
This is like a gigantic gift
to the special counsel, right?
This is a gift to the special counsel, because now they is a gift to the special counsel because now they can appeal obviously,
because this is lawless.
I mean, every other time that anyone has ever questioned this and appealed this,
it's just been not, you know, it's not the law, right?
Essentially, essentially the argument goes like this.
The United States Constitution has something called the appointment
clause, which essentially means that any appointment
of an official with power has to be confirmed by the Senate, right?
The president appoints and it's confirmed by the Senate.
And so all the United States attorneys are confirmed by the Senate, the cabinet members,
you know, et cetera.
Everybody's confirmed by the Senate.
And what they're saying is this violates the Appointments Clause. And they could be,
they would be right, except there are several statutes that actually authorize the appointment
of a special counsel, two of them. And those are the ones that I think that you, where
she did some legal
analysis or tried to, even though it was just perplexing, because when you read the two
statutes they clearly say this is okay.
But they're in 28 United States Code, Section 510 and 515.
And basically, Section 510 says the attorney general may from time to time make such provision
as he considers appropriate authorizing the performance by any officer, employee or agency
of the Department of Justice, any function of the attorney general.
I mean, you know, there's no doubt that this is a function, investigation and prosecution
is a function of the attorney general.
And so it clearly says they can essentially designate someone else
and appoint them to do it, but she barely even addresses it in her opinion.
All she basically says is, oh, but he's not an employee of the Department of Justice
or of the government. He's from the outside, so it doesn't count.
And you scratch your head and you say,
that makes no sense.
And then there's 28 United States code 515B or 515B
that basically says each attorney specially retained
shall be commissioned as a special AG or special attorney
and take the oath by law.
So, I don't get, she says this refers to the US attorneys,
but that's not what it says.
Right.
It's special, right?
That's exactly what it says.
So I didn't quite understand her argument, right?
I just didn't get it.
And then where's the site and Karen not to interrupt, but where's the citation to anything
other than other than Aileen Cannon on her interpret statutory interpretation?
Where's the legislative mystery?
She cited to Thomas as concurrent.
Of course, and Thomas leads back to landmark foundation,
legal foundation, which is a MAGA right wing
that indirectly is involved with his wife.
This is corruption writ large
and baked into a 93 page opinion.
And that's why we're calling it out.
Yeah, no, it's, it's, it's atrocious.
Um, what happened there, you know, there's the fact that, that, that, that issue wasn't even
before the Supreme court, nobody briefed it.
And even more importantly, that not a single other justice of the Supreme court joined
Thomas's concurrence on that,
leads me to believe that there's hope
that if she gets reversed and it gets to the Supreme Court,
that maybe it's not a given
that this is going to be completely dead in the water.
That being said, timing wise, if he's elected president,
he will tell, he will
he will tell his Department of Justice to dismiss the case and, and he'll pardon himself.
So the argument is very similar. The reason I think if it ever got back to the Supreme
Court is because even though it's always been argued by MAGA, another fringe theory is the Gen 6 committee was invalid
because it wasn't appointed properly, there weren't enough Republicans on it, it didn't
follow the requirements, the whole thing should be ignored.
No federal judge and the Supreme Court has implicitly endorsed the Gen 6 committee's
authority and legitimacy in its other rulings against Donald Trump,
just as Judge Carter did in ordering the Gen 6 committee subpoenas be enforced against John
Eastman and ultimately against Donald Trump. I think that'll end up there, but you're so right
on timing. I mean, that's why it was only a gallows humor joke that I said at the top of the podcast,
which is, lawfare? What's the lawfare? Everybody that's been convicted in the last month are Democrats.
That's the lawfare? I mean, if lawfare was really a thing, Menendez would have walked
by the way, Menendez was prosecuted by Senator Menendez from New Jersey was prosecuted by
Donald Trump's Department of Justice in 2017 and walked out the wood front door because that
jury got hung on another bribery scheme and another corruption scheme and he skated by.
But that was Trump's prosecution. The one that nailed Menendez is Breon Pierce in Brooklyn
under Biden and Department of Justice led by Merrick Garland. That's how that
went down. And Hunter Biden, special counsel, right. Let's talk about the special counsel for a minute.
Assuming we're you and I are in agreement, I think I'm sure we are, that the 11th circuit is going to
reverse her. I don't know which panel of the judges are going to do it. And they'll do it, I think,
relatively soon. They brief the issues related to the investigation very, very quickly, not like the DC Court of Appeals. I think we'll
get a ruling this summer, then an appeal, and the Supreme Court's not doing anything
until they get back from summer vacation in October. I mean, they can make emergency rulings
in the meantime. But the 11th Circuit, I think, and I'll double check this at a break, I think Clarence Thomas
sits over the 11th Circuit, if I'm not wrong.
I'm going to double check that as the judge responsible for the circuit.
I'm going to double check that.
If I'm wrong, I'll come back and tell you.
If I'm right, I'll tell you that too.
But the thing I want to talk about after our next break, Karen, is what happens with all
the other defendants who are convicted by some special counsel,
including a guy named Hunter Biden, what happens to them? I mean, we know he's gonna file, Trump's
gonna file this same motion and put it squarely in front of Judge Chutkin. I'm sure, I'm sure,
surprised he hadn't done it yet. And she's gonna have to then make the decision up to the DC Court
of Appeals. and we will have competing
appellate courts there. But there's hundreds of people that, or dozens at least, that have been
prosecuted by special counsels, not just this one. What happens to them? Do they say, hey,
it's an invalid prosecution because the guy that was on the other side of me wasn't real.
He was illegitimate. He was rogue. Talk about all that and we'll talk about what
Joe Biden's going to do about the United States Supreme Court as part of his new agenda moving
forward. Both a constitutional amendment that he's seeking, more seats, do something about the
immunity, do something about this decision about special prosecutors and special counsel. We'll
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the screen to get a free gift with your order today. Welcome back. We're going to talk about
other people who were convicted successfully by special counsels, special prosecutors. There's a special counsel that's being called for
by the Senate Democrats against Clarence Thomas
and to investigate him.
And others have been convicted by him.
I wanna hear from our resident former prosecutor,
Karen Freeman McNiflo about the next steps
now that we have that ruling besides the obvious,
which is the 11th Circuit appeal that Jack Smith has
announced that he's gonna be taking.
And of course, as we're going on the air,
we also learned that unfortunately
the president has contracted COVID.
He was gonna appear in front of a Latin rights group
in Las Vegas, but has had to now postpone it
because he has contracted COVID.
So the wheels of justice continue to roll.
So can't catch a break, right, Karen?
Cannot catch a break.
It really is just crazy to me that he now has COVID
during all of this.
Yep.
Well, I wish it were all.
Well, at least it's July and not October.
There's more time on the clock for everybody.
So that's a good thing.
Talk to me about what do you do if you're a defendant who got convicted by a special
counsel now that Aileen Cannon has made the only ruling in America that says that that
position is invalid?
What do you do?
Yeah, if you're a defense attorney, you're going to write a motion to set aside the verdict
and you are going to, or I guess I say that with Hunter because he
hasn't been sentenced yet.
Or if you've been sentenced, you'll appeal and you'll basically say, look, you know,
there's a federal judge, the federal district court who cites the Supreme Court Justice
Clarence Thomas saying that this is invalid and I,, you raise your hand, and you say, me too.
And you appeal.
And you try to get your case thrown out because of it.
I mean, it really does put cases in jeopardy for anybody,
for absolutely anybody who wants to make mischief, right?
Anybody who wants to make mischief, right? Anybody who wants to make mischief, any other judges who want to follow Eileen Cannon's,
follow her ruling and what Justice Thomas said.
I mean, it's just stunning to me what this does to all
the other cases potentially.
And hopefully most judges will say she's lawless,
because this has been appealed before,
this argument has been made before
and nobody has entertained it, nobody.
But of course it gets put in front of Judge Eileen Cannon
and she finds it so interesting
that she invites strangers who aren't parties to the case
to brief it and to give oral arguments.
And then, you know, Justin, then she doesn't rule on it.
And Justice Thomas sees an opening to talk directly to her
and knowing that that motion was pending,
knowing that she hadn't ruled on this very issue
and wrote that concurrence,
which was talking to Judge Cannon directly.
And so I think every other defendant out there
who's ever been prosecuted by a special counsel
is gonna seek to use this to get their case thrown out,
including Hunter Biden, right?
And it puts, the problem is it puts Joe Biden in-
The Biden administration in a bad spot.
Yeah, in a terrible spot.
I was just going to say puts him puts puts, you know, his father, who's also the president,
who's also the head of the Department of Justice in a terrible spot to be able to say, you
know, here to be able to say no, you know, actually, this is it's okay that you prosecuted
my son, but it's not okay.
You know, Donald Trump gets away with it. It's just it's it's an untenable prosecuted my son, but it's not okay, you know, Donald Trump gets away with it
It's just it's it's an untenable situation. It really really is. Yeah, I want to see what the
you know, we'll have to see what how how much the hunter Biden people and the
The Biden campaign people are gonna have a conversation about some of that but we'll will
And I just to square the circle here,
as my colleague confirmed, Justice Thomas is the Supreme Court justice responsible for the 11th
Circuit, as I suspected, and that makes his canon currents even more nefarious because he wasn't just speaking to any
old judge he was speaking to a judge like a boss speaks to an underling I am
your your 11th circuit Supreme Court justice justice cannon and this is just
cannon see one day she could be justice cannon at the rate she's going. But how does that work? And this is what you should do. But how does that work, Pope Pock?
How is it that he decides over the 11th Circuit as opposed to the full panel?
In other words, how does it explain how that works?
Well at the top of each term, the Chief Justice assigns, and usually keeps them in place, a Associate
Justice to be over one of the 11 circuits plus the Federal Circuit, so there's 12.
He takes the Federal Circuit for himself, and then he carves out among the other.
Well, he has others besides that one.
So he then distributes the 12 or 11 left among the nine, meaning some have more than one.
And he generally plays politics.
He puts the more, let's put it this way, the blue states get the three liberal progressive
justices, Sotomayor, Katanji Brown Jackson and Kagan, and the more red ones get the rust.
And that's the way it works. So New York is Sotomayor and California is, I think, Kagan.
Katanji Brown Jackson?
Is she Katanji Brown? Or is it either her or Kagan?
I think so.
Yeah. And Chicago, you know, and so that's how they do it. And so the red purpley states like Florida, get
somebody like Clarence Thomas, which means that the shadow
docket now we're back to the shadow docket when there is an
emergency appeal, it first goes through the justice assigned to
that circuit, they can either make the decision on their own,
or refer it back to the full panel.
But the first stop on the train is Clarence Thomas
for 11th Circuit coming out of,
so it's not just he's over here
and he's just whispering sweet nothings to her.
He's like the guy.
Now, because networks like ours and others have
for the last two years called out the
shadow docket, they've stopped using it as much.
Sometimes they use it occasionally when it's not that controversial.
But if it's anything that's like smacks of any kind of controversy, they've been rolling
it back to the full panel to see if there's enough votes to grant the writ, grant the
cert, grant whatever.
So that's sort of a quick and dirty.
So you're saying that Justice Thomas,
if Trump appeals this up, let's say the 11th circuit reverses,
you're saying that Trump can appeal it up to just one judge?
No, he'll ask for a full appeal, but he'll
ask for emergency appeal on an interlocutory basis
without full briefing. And Thomas can
decide to grant it and, and then take it up. And then it
goes to a vote within the Supreme Court, and they can
decide on full briefing or argument. And all of that it's
normally comes normally that issue arises more when there's
like an injunction, or a ban or a block of a ban that has to be put in place.
But this isn't really that. This is a dismissal of an indictment.
So you're right, when it gets to Thomas, he can't like,
Oh, I affirm it and it appeals over. That's not how that would work.
But it will start with him and the writ will be addressed to him. And then I just even
he I believe as I've he's done it himself will refer it over to the full panel. If there's
four votes or five votes, they'll take the appeal. If there's not, they'll say the 11th
circuit decision stands. They don't have to take the appeal by not taking the appeal of
the 11th circuit stands. And that is the end result could just be a per curiam decision,
you know. And if the 11th circuit keeps it you know affirms no doesn't reverse.
Ken Jacks is this something Jack Smith can appeal all the way.
Oh yeah oh yeah and as you noted I think in something else maybe maybe when we oh you
ban me and you jumped on to talk about this and a hot take to talk about this
You rightly pointed out that thank God she did it now without having made any rulings
Because it's not so but there's not so much race judicata or law of the case
It has to be traveling with the case to the new judge
The judge can sort of make decisions sort of a new which is good because we never liked any of her decisions leading into this
but um
That's where my prediction was wrong, but I thought when I read the immunity decision I thought three things were gonna happen number one
She was gonna rule everything is immune right that he's immune from everything and fruit of the poisonous tree
so number one and
number two
Dismissed because the special counsel.
And number three, I thought she was gonna do
a nationwide injunction.
But so I got one and three wrong.
So she didn't make as much mischief as she could have.
I mean, she really would have tried,
she could have done that.
And by not making that substantive ruling,
hopefully she gets kicked off the
case that all these bad rulings aren't stuck with the case and the new judge
can kind of reset and, and, and try this case.
Of course.
I liked your two.
I went with two with you because I thought that is a way to get rid of the
entire case, including against Walt Nauta and Carlos, the only be Yara
whoever's name is the other co-conspirator. including against Walt Nauta and Carlos de Olibarra,
whatever his name is, the other co-conspirator. And that's ended up, what she,
depending on her entirety of her 93 pages of make-weight,
that's exactly, lightweight making make-weight
is a bad combination.
But hopefully the Levin circuit,
which I have a lot of confidence in,
will do the right thing and get this case back on track.
But again, this is gonna to think about the timing.
This is July, even if they hold oral argument and issue a ruling in August,
then there's an attempted appeal that gets sat around for a while.
Now it's November.
And then what?
Mar-a-Lago never, as we said, it was DOA when that ruling came out one way or
another, at least until after.
And if people were looking for yet another reason to vote against Donald Trump, it
would be that he's going to, as you said, he's going to kill all of these federal
cases on his first moment in office with a stroke of a pen and with his attorney
general, whoever fill in the blank, that's going to be, let's talk about things we,
we can do and what the president can do
to address an out of control, rogue,
Supreme Court that has so changed and made imbalanced
the three co-equal branches of government.
It's now, if you had one of these charts
where the circles represent the power,
it would be Congress in a small circle the supreme court
So the congress would be like a plum
Supreme court would be like a grapefruit
And the presidency would be like a watermelon
That's what that was supposed to be three co-equal branches of government with checks and balances. Forget it
Once you give absolute immunity or basically it's equivalent to the presidency,
then that's out completely because you've just,
and you say, and there was even a suggestion
during oral argument that pardons were okay
and self pardons were okay.
You heard Gorsuch, and now we know why,
because he's now completely over in the right-wing camp
with Thomas and Alito and Sam Alito. And so there's things that you can do in response. One of them
is, you know, AOC proposing articles of impeachment. They don't go anywhere unless the Democrats get
the House again. But that's out there and it's the right thing to do.
But then you have the proposal, which had to be fair, had been rejected by Biden once before with a blue ribbon panel.
But now he sees that, you know, he's got to start putting on brass knuckles here
and get that Supreme Court under control.
So what we've seen is the announcement is not formal yet, but he had a apparently had
a zoom conference call with the progressive Democrats and disclosed that he's ready to
follow the the analysis of Lawrence tribe professor out of Harvard constitutional law
professor that there should be a number of things that get done. One of them, an ethics code that sticks.
Secondly, more justices.
How many more, I'll throw it back to you on that.
Third is some structural changes that have to be done
through a constitutional amendment.
One, an independent federal prosecutor.
That's almost like a fourth branch of government.
That would solve this whole problem
that we didn't know was a problem until Aileen Canham made her ruling, but it would establish
a federal prosecutor who is independent from the executive branch. People who tune in from around
the country sometimes don't recognize or realize the independence of the Department of Justice
is by tradition, generally a democratic tradition.
It is not in the Constitution that they be independent.
They are a part of the executive branch. There's always been that anomaly.
It's no joke when we say it's the Biden Department of Justice.
It is. We don't say it as nefariously with conspiratorial tones as the Republicans,
but that is the truth. And if you want to resolve that, then you get a special prosecutor
out here who's kind of codified, but you have to do that by constitutional amendment. And
then what are the proposals, Karen? I'll give you the rest on immunity and pardons. Yeah, look, I mean, you know, there's
lots of other proposals in their term limits for Supreme Court justices, which I love. I don't know
why they get a lifetime appointment and, you know, and at the same time are essentially all powerful
and don't have to abide by any code of ethics.
So those are the two ones that really interested me the most was an actual code of ethics that
they have to abide by and term limits. Those are the two things that I thought are really important.
The timing of this is I 100% agree with you,
that sometimes you got to do this to be on the right side of history, even though you're not
going to, it's not going to go anywhere. But the timing of this is just less than ideal, because
it's coming now when, unfortunately, his political opponent's case was dismissed, and now he's calling
for it. I mean, he should have called for this a long time ago.
He appointed this panel, but he's such a kind person
and somebody who wants to try to find unity
and bring people together that he tries to do things
that aren't political hot button issues
that are controversial.
And unfortunately, the other side doesn't play that game.
The other side cheats on the game.
And I'm reminded of when Obama in the last year of his,
I think there was 11 or nine months left of his presidency,
he, Justice Scalia died and left an opening
before the Supreme Court.
And that's almost a year of a four year,
it's almost a quarter of his term, right?
And Mitch McConnell, who was the Senate Majority Leader
was like, you know, we're gonna wait
until there's gonna be a new administration.
Let's see who wins.
And because why?
Because of the Appointments Clause,
they have to, you have to have the advice
and consent of the Senate, whoever the president appoints.
And so, Merrick Garland, who was his choice,
was never confirmed by the Senate.
What did that do?
That let Donald Trump appoint
the Supreme Court justice, right, and made it a conservative justice. And then at the end of his
term, right, I think he'd already lost the election. It was like, or it was, you know,
right before the election, but it was like months to go, you know, like, or weeks to go. It was,
it was ridiculous. Well, Mitch McConnell, knowing that he lost the election
and there was gonna be a new president,
certainly didn't give that,
he certainly didn't stick with his same statement.
And he rushed through Amy Coney Barrett.
Now, thankfully she's turning out to be
not as bad as the others and has a mind of her own.
And even in certain things, doesn't let them go as far as they
want, which is a good thing. She's still extremely right-wing, but she's not as bad as the others,
in my opinion. But it's like we play by different rules. And I say this over and over and over
again, it would be one thing if we had an actual disagreement on facts, right? And it's like we play by different rules. And I say this over and over and over again. It would be one thing if we had an actual disagreement
on facts, right?
And it's like, well, I believe in fracking.
I don't believe in fracking.
And I think it hurts the environment.
Whatever.
OK, let's talk about it.
Let's talk about what it means.
And people can have an intelligent discussion about it
and disagree about it.
But when you're cheating and not playing by the same
rules, it's not fair, right? And the other side is going to always win because they're always
cheating. They're always doing things the way they want to do things and the rules apply to them
differently. And that is to me what is so frustrating about the Supreme Court and everything that is going on here.
And that is what's so frustrating that they constantly are getting away with.
And so, Joe Biden, I say this in the context of Joe Biden, is because he's such a decent, law abiding kind person who believes in decency and believes in trying to bring people together
and trying to really do things the right way keeps getting outplayed by these people.
The Supreme Court is just making it easier and easier for that to happen.
It's literally stacking the decks.
I mean, they've removed power from the agencies
in the Chevron case,
where they overruled the Chevron deference doctrine.
They've literally removed any authority of agencies
and given it to who?
The courts.
They have literally made it so that presidents
are above the law.
It's a special position. It's a special position.
It's a special thing that nobody else has.
And they're consolidating the power there.
And the fact that they can pack the courts the way they can
and get away with these rulings that are just,
the history, stare decisis,
and interpreting the law
coldly versus being an activist judge just is is where we are right now and it's dangerous
and it's uh it's terrifying we are headed toward an autocracy and um and if anyone thinks this is
anything but that they're not paying attention.
And every single thing we talk about here is exactly that.
And so Joe Biden, I very much applaud him for doing this.
It is the right thing.
He should recommend that these changes be made.
And if nothing else, at least there will be a record
that this is what should be done and this is the right thing to do.
The panacea for this is relatively straightforward and simple. It's blue up and down the ticket, up and down the ballot on November the 5th.
If that happens, all of our hand-wringing about the Supreme Court and the 6-3 supermajority can quickly become a 5-4 progressive majority almost overnight or within a year or two
if the right person is in office. If Joe Biden and the Democrats are back in power,
things like the constitutional amendment to remove the immunity that was just blankedly granted by
the Supreme Court will become law. It will promote it, it'll be on the ballot.
People will, I think thinking adults,
will think that's a good thing to have
and to get away and take away the pardon power
from the presidency.
But it has to be a constitutional change
in order for that to happen.
Packing the court, good idea.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, FDR,
thought that was a good idea.
Scared the crap out of the New Deal Supreme Court and made them approve all of his New Deal legislation
ultimately. And so, you know, I like a 12-person court, 14-person court, sure, why
not add three or four more on there. But, you know, there's always that
unintended consequences, the wrong hands that could
also run the other way, but you know I think adding more than nine is a good
thing. Lifetime appointment is not a good thing for that particular body. It does
imbalance, as I said you got the lemon, the grapefruit, and the watermelon problem
that you didn't have before and it would solve that. But you got to have the right people in office in order to execute on these plans of
term limits and structural changes and a fourth branch of government in the form
of an independent prosecutor body that doesn't currently exist. So it is a we
can accomplish this. It's not like putting a camel through the eye of a needle. This is not hard if we can pull together
and pull ourselves together and prevail in November.
And if not, we know what it looks like other than that.
And that should be the motivating factor
for everyone to early vote, register to vote now.
Early vote wherever you can because the earlier you vote the better.
In case something comes up, in case it's a crappy weather day, the day of your election,
you know, election day, November 5th. Mail-in vote, absentee vote, whatever your state allows,
follow the rules really, really carefully. I just got a notice and got invited to be part
of the Florida Protection Squad for the Democrats
to help with outside the polls and do things that I can do,
even though I'm not registered in Florida any longer.
Some people are lawyers, some people aren't,
and people can do that.
Even if you're not a lawyer,
you can join democratic organizations that are made to protect voting,
and there's a role for you. And it's a very exciting and interesting way to be involved.
I've done it a number of years in a row, and I can't tell you how rewarding it is to be at a
precinct and be right in the thick of things as people are voting and making sure that voting is
done properly. These are all the things that
we can do that we ask people to do here on the Midas Touch Network. And we have a,
this is the reef where all of this type of fish hang out, right? People that are pro-democracy, pro-voting, don't make voting harder. Not fraud, nobody wants fraud. We're talking about voting and
taking advantage
of extended hours for voting for people who work
and can't get there at certain times on November the 5th.
And then doing something about the United States
Supreme Court rebalancing, recalibrating
that delicate balance of three co-equal branches
of government that our founding fathers
and our framers put together that has been torn asunder
and ripped to shreds
by this United States Supreme Court. There's something we can do about it. We're not going
to sit down for it any longer. And we've got a president who can help lead us there.
Karen, why don't you come on back for a minute? So I always like giving you the last word. It's
always something interesting, memorable, impactful to our audience. So what do you got?
always something interesting, memorable, impactful to our audience. So what do you got?
I should know because you always do give me the last word. I should be more prepared. But you know, look, the one thing I will say is one of the reasons I love doing this show with you
show with you is our audience and how engaged they are. And I always feel like the audience is,
they express, they're very interactive
and express a lot of comments to us,
whether it's in the comment section right now,
or whether it is through the,
on YouTube people leave comments
or whether it's emailing directly to us
or on Twitter or whatever it is.
And I'm always so surprised at how much
we all need each other.
We're like a community that we all feel similarly.
We share the same frustrations we share.
We're very like-minded, not just in terms of policies, but in terms of how we're all
feeling about the moment and what's going on.
If that is the way people are, if how we feel is how other people are feeling, I just want
to say how much I appreciate that I'm part of a community because this could
feel very isolating where we are right now, feeling like it's why is it that the other
side keeps winning, frankly, and keeps catching all these breaks and having the Mar-a-Lago
case just get dismissed. It know, it's just, it's just
crazy, right?
The immunity decision, et cetera.
And it can be disheartening and it can be scary and terrifying when you see the results
of voting red, frankly, right?
You see women's rights being taken away and you see a lot of scary things that are happening.
And so to have a community to come together
and know that you're not alone, I will say means a lot to me.
And so for that, I am extremely grateful to be here
every Wednesday.
And I really do appreciate the engagement.
And I try to appreciate the engagement. And I try to
read every comment. I try to take the advice you know, that
people give whether it's you know, the glare in your glasses
to other other pieces of advice that people are very kind in how
they and how they give it. And because it means a lot, right?
It's it's a it's hard. It's hard to be in this time right now.
And so I just want to thank everybody and talk about how lucky I feel to be here and
part of this community.
Appreciate you support the show.
Mistrial is a sister podcast anchored by Karen Friedman and Nifilo.
Legal AF Patreon, patreon.com slash legal AF for some exclusive videos and then supporting
whatever we do, wherever we do it here on the Midas Touch Network.
So we've reached the end.
There we go.
There's Patreon.
We've reached the end of another episode, midweek edition of Legal AF.
And so we're going to do a shout out to the Midas Money and the Legal AFers.
We'll see you Saturday, Ben, my cellist and me.