Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Prosecutors file MAJOR STIPULATION in Trump Case
Episode Date: August 9, 2024In a breaking development in the Trump DC Election Interference criminal case, Special Counsel Jack Smith just revealed to the court that he continues to consult with all DOJ division heads and DOJ le...adership to reach a consensus on what position to take on the Supreme Court’s immunity decision and has asked for 3 more weeks to report back to the judge on it. Michael Popok analyzes why it’s taking the DOJ and Jack Smith so long to make its decision, its impact on thousands of other cases now and in the future, and why it does not actually cause any real delay to the case after all. Keep American farming going by signing up at https://MoinkBox.com/LEGALAF RIGHT NOW and listeners of this show get 2 FREE Steaks in your first box! Visit https://meidastouch.com for more! Join the Legal AF Patreon: https://Patreon.com/LegalAF Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an ad by BetterHelp.
What are your self-care non-negotiables?
It's hard to make time for the things that keep you healthy,
but being consistent with self-care is like working a muscle.
And when life gets crazy, that muscle keeps you strong.
Therapy is the ultimate self-care,
and BetterHelp makes it easy to get started
with affordable online sessions you can do from anywhere.
Never skip therapy day with BetterHelp.
Visit BetterHelp.com to learn more.
That's BetterH-E-L-P.com.
Make your nights unforgettable with American Express.
Unmissable show coming up?
Good news.
We've got access to pre-sale tickets so you don't miss it.
Meeting with friends before the show?
We can book your reservation.
And when you get to the main event,
skip to the good bit using the card member entrance.
Let's go seize the night.
That's the powerful backing of American Express.
Visit amex.ca slash y-am-ex.
Benefits vary by card, other conditions apply.
So Michael Popak, Legal AF.
We've got a late breaking development
in the DC election interference criminal case
against Donald Trump with the Department of Justice
asking Judge Chutkin for a three week delay or extension
in order for them to inform her through a joint report
with Trump's lawyers on their position
about how the July 1st immunity decision,
Trump versus the United States
coming out of the Supreme Court,
how that maps onto the indictment in the DC election interference case, what survives
in terms of allegations, facts, operative facts, and what survives in terms of counts,
criminal counts.
Now, it was a little bit surprising that Jack Smith's team was not prepared to deliver their joint
status report as ordered by the judge on the 3rd of August.
She said to everybody, get together.
We've been sitting around for over a year.
We've been waiting since July 1.
So just submit to me a joint status report by the 9th of August and on the 16th of August,
a week later, let's all get together and have a conversation about how to move this case forward.
You would have thought that with the July 1st date, already here on August the 8th,
they've had five weeks for the Department of Justice already to put together their plan.
In fact, the fact that they filed a day before the joint report was due indicating in their request to the judge not that they're having a dispute
with Trump's side, but that they're having internal deliberations among the
various entities. The other Department of Justice components, as they said in the
filing, indicates that there is a little bit of a struggle
going on, a little bit of sausage struggle going on, a little bit of
sausage making going on on the Department of Justice side because Jack Smith needs to consult
with other branches, if you will, other departments, components of the Department of Justice. I assume
that means he's also consulting with Main Justice, with the attorney general, with the deputy attorney general,
and others to see how, because what the Department of Justice has to be concerned about is to be
consistent and the law that they're about to make, because this is going to be precedent
and how it sets up the next appeal. This is going to be precedent that's going to bind the hands of
future Department of Justices and attorney General's and special counsels.
They want to get this right.
As my grandfather used to say, they want to measure twice and cut once.
They don't want to do it wrong, haphazardly, haste makes waste.
Now although they had five weeks to kind of figure it all out internally, let's be honest,
the Department of Justice is a big giant
organization and it doesn't always move in lockstep. And there are different departments
within civil and criminal, different heads that would have to be consulted. I am picturing a giant
boardroom, sort of like on television, where there are these various heads of civil and criminal departments
within the Department of Justice or divisions, and they're being consulted and writing memos
about how a certain position, a certain sentence, a certain way that they're approaching the immunity
decision as precedent can backfire on, for instance, the Jan 6 cases that have already been done and the Jan 6 cases
that are yet to be done criminally
in the DC election interference case.
Think of it this way.
There have been well over a thousand prosecutions
leading to hundreds and hundreds of convictions
and indictments of Jan 6 people, but they're not done.
And it's not only the immunity
decision on July 1, it's the companion decision that came out a couple of days before in US versus
Fisher in which the same 6 to 3 majority let the Jan 6 defendants off the hook from being prosecuted
under obstruction of an official proceeding as a crime. So they got to deal with that too. And they got to think about what that means in the future. For the future Jan 6th insurrectionists, the ones they
haven't caught yet, the past Jan 6th insurrectionists, and the next, God forbid, Jan 6th insurrection.
And so you've got to go around a table and you've got to get input from all these various components.
In fact, I'll read you the order in a minute or the request in a minute.
Jack Smith says, I have to, as special counsel,
consult with these various components
in order to reach consensus.
And they haven't yet reached consensus.
He says in his motion,
those discussions, of course, have been underway.
I'm sure they've been underway since the oral argument
back in April or before.
But he's telling the court, we're not ready. I'm not ready because
it's easy for Trump and his lawyers. Trump and his lawyers, all they got to do is go, what do you
think? Okay, let's do that. They're done. They don't have to worry about precedent. They're not
running a four level chessboard where every move has an impact and a consequence on another move. The Department of
Justice is. Not just the 2024 Department of Justice, the 2025 Department of Justice,
the Department of Justice under a future Kamala Harris presidency and administration.
Because they can't just selfishly decide now. What they decide could just be great for them
right now at the moment, but they have to think
about the repercussions, the domino effect of the position they're going to take with Chutkin and
how that affects all the other cases now and in the present. A complicated decision. And that's
all you're hearing in Jack Smith. I don't know what the other reporting is on that, but that's
all sort of that I heard. Let me read to you from the actual decision so you know where I'm coming from.
And it's very short. I said decision. I mean the actual joint report. It's a joint report
because they both filed it, but it's really Donald Trump not opposing. Here's what it says.
The government, which is Department of Justice, continues to assess the
new precedent, that's Trump versus US, the immunity decision. Although they don't mention
Fisher, we know they're doing that too. That they're continues to assess the new precedent
set forth in the Supreme Court's decision in Trump versus the US, including through consultation
with other Department of Justice components. That's the civil and criminal divisions
within the department that exist and the leadership there
thinking forward and back prospectively and retroactively
about what this decision means.
And it's taken a minute.
And he cites to a particular provision of the Code of Federal Regulation. Again, only Aileen Cannon
in Florida in the Mar-a-Lago case believes that the special counsel is a figment of our imagination
and has no jurisdiction or constitutional authority to prosecute. Then how does she
explain provisions of the Code of Federal Reg regulation that talk about the special counsel, which was passed ultimately by Congress.
The code of federal regulation, section 600.7a says, a special counsel shall comply with
the rules, regulations, procedures, practices, and policies of the Department of Justice,
including consulting with appropriate offices within the Department of Justice with respect
to establish practices, policies, and procedures of the department. In other words, we don't want a rogue special
counsel who's not mindful of the institutional history, the institutional procedure, the
institutional precedent of the Department of Justice, because he's of the Department of
Justice. Despite being a special counsel, he's not independent from, he's an employee of and has to make decisions
in consultation.
He can't be out there doing his own thing
and making Jack Smith law,
he has to make appropriate precedent
that will now bind the hands for the Department of Justice
and the position they take and think several moves ahead.
So I'm sure there's appellate lawyers sitting around
that table who are helping make the decision
because they're worried about the record
and the precedent that's being set.
Not in this case, in 10 other cases,
in a hundred other cases,
stretching out for the next 10, 20 years or a generation.
That's the considerations.
That's why it's taking so much time.
Moink is a meat subscription box company on a mission
to fight for the family farm.
They're located in rural America,
run by an eighth generation female farmer.
Their animals are raised humanely.
Their employees are paid a living wage.
And the quality of their product is better
than anything you'll find in a store.
Moink delivers grass-fed and grass-finished beef and lamb,
pastured pork and chicken,
and sustainable wild-caught Alaskan salmon
straight to your door.
Moink farmers farm like our grandparents did.
And as a result, Moink meat tastes like it should
because the family farm does it better
and the Moink difference is a difference you can taste.
Unlike the supermarket, Moink gives you total control over the quality
and source of your food.
You choose the meat delivered in every box,
like rib-eyes, to chicken breasts, to pork chops,
to salmon filets, and much more.
Plus, you can cancel any time.
Moink is helping save rural America.
I love it, and you will too.
Join the Moink movement today.
Shark Tank host, Kevin O'Leary called Moink's bacon
the best bacon he's ever tasted.
And Ring doorbell founder, Jamie Siminoff,
he jumped at the chance to invest in Moink.
Plus they guarantee you'll say,
Oink, oink, I'm just so happy I got Moinked.
I know I do.
And you will too.
Keep American farming going
by signing up at moinkbox.com slash Legal AF right now,
and listeners of this show get free hot rolls
in your first box.
It's the best hot rolls you'll ever taste,
but for a limited time.
Spelled M-O-I-N-K box.com slash Legal AF.
That's moinkbox.com slash legal AF.
I know I've seen some criticism about, oh, they just can't get their act together.
There must be infighting within the Department of Justice.
I don't think so.
I think it's 20 or 30 people from appellate heads and civil heads and criminal heads within
the department thinking through this on a five or six level chessboard about this case and a thousand other
cases now and in the future. It takes a minute. They go on to say, the Jack Smith team goes on
to say, although these consultations are well underway, sure, I'm sure they've been going on
since before July, the government has not finalized its position on the most appropriate schedule for the parties to brief issues related
to the decision.
I think it goes beyond that.
I think he's being coy, doesn't want to reveal the internal deliberations.
I think there's some fundamental discussions being had about what position ultimately Jack
Smith should take once the briefing schedule is in place, Because they can't go back and have another meeting.
Once he asks for the three-week extension to file his position, he has to have his position
done.
And that's the way, that's what's happening here.
The government therefore requests additional time to provide the court with an informed
proposal regarding the schedule for pretrial proceedings moving forward.
The hows, the whys, the contours,
the logistics, the briefing, and the position that the Department of Justice through the special
council is ultimately going to take. So they asked to instead of file something on the 9th,
yes, of August, the joint scheduling report together, let's do it at the end of the month on 830 and then hold a hearing on this sometime
thereafter. They're telling Judge Chutkid that they are available any day after August 30th and
then inform them that the defense, Trump side, is unavailable on September 6th and the week of
September 16th. But other than that, they're
available. All right, understood. I think this also gets Jack Smith over a couple of humps.
One, he knows that he's not getting a trial given how late the Supreme Court was in holding oral
argument on the last day of the oral arguments in April, how late they were in issuing their decision in July,
the last day they could issue their decision,
just stretching this thing out.
He knows now that it's impossible to have tried this case,
get this DC election interference case up and running
by the November election or even the inauguration.
So now let's just take our time and do it right
and measure twice and cut once. That's what we're watching
Similarly, we're watching that with Jack Smith in the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals with Judge Cannon
I had already predicted and I was wrong on this it happens occasionally that on the 11th Circuit
They were gonna take up the invitation from the court and ask for expedited briefing on Judge Cannon's dismissal of the Mar-a-Lago case
But they have't. They're
letting it play out through a September and beyond briefing schedule that will time this
thing out into October. That's at the 11th Circuit. Once I saw them do that, I'm like,
all right, they know they can't get either of these things resolved. They can't get Mar-a-Lago
resolved before the November election, and they can't get either of these things resolved. They can't get Mar-a-Lago resolved before the November election and they can't get ultimately
this Chutkin case back up and running before the November election.
So let's take our time.
I think that's what we're watching as well.
So that's the first thing we're watching.
And I also think they want to keep an eye on what goes on on September the 18th.
In the ultimately, they'll have the benefit of what goes on with Judge Murchon on September 18th
in the sentencing.
So, they'll file their joint report on August 30th, and by the time they all get back together
with Chutkin, Donald Trump may already be sentenced for 34 counts in the New York State
proceeding, which sort of changes the weather in the room and gives the Department of Justice,
I think, a little bit more leverage because that
glass ceiling has already been broken with the conviction of Donald Trump several months ago by
the jury in New York and now the sentencing by Judge Mershon. I think the rest is just there for
the taking for the Department of Justice. So we'll continue to follow the next development.
I assume the judge is going to grant this and give the lawyers and
particularly the Department of Justice time to finish their internal marinating on the issue
and working their way through this giant, almost unfathomable universal size decision-making tree,
come up with a position about how this immunity should be mapped onto the indictment and what they should do next
about it and then bring that to the, and the judge will approve that. And then sometime, as I said
before, in September, late September, mid September, before October 1, the judge holds a hearing and they
figure out how they're going to conduct the ultimate substantive analysis about the immunity decision,
how she's going to do it, the briefing she's requiring, maybe an evidentiary mini trial
that she's requiring about the evidence that's presented by the Department of Justice,
and then she can make her ultimate ruling. Again, managing expectations, pump the brakes.
This is going to be tight, this process now, especially now that we've just lost three weeks
to get it done before the November election.
And it may be secretly something the Department of Justice, you know, so they're not continuously accused of lawfare and weaponization of the Department of Justice.
Maybe they're like, you know, well, let's just get over the election.
Because now, you know, it looks likely that Donald Trump's going to lose and we'll be swearing in Madame-Elect President Kamala Harris. See, all that, at the intersection of law and politics, all of these things,
these moving parts, even though the prosecutors all say that they're not looking at the political
calendar, they don't look at the calendar in other cases, they're looking at the calendar in
other cases and they're looking at the political calendar. Of course they are. And how all this comes together and how the weather
changes for them and what they have to do next and how they respond to it and all of that.
We'll continue to follow that intersection of law and politics. The only way we know how without
blowing smoke or sunshine right here on the Midas Touch Network and on Legal AF, the leading
podcast at the intersection of law and politics. We founded it four years ago,
Ben, Mycelis and me to cover just this kind of moment. And we're doing it, Minus Touch Network,
YouTube, Wednesdays and Saturday night, 8 p.m. Eastern time, we live record. And then you can
pick us up on audio podcast platforms of your choice. And Wednesdays, I do it with Karen Friedman
and Nick Niflo. Saturdays with Ben Mycelis,
and I do hot takes like this, I don't know, about every hour right here on the Minus Touch
Network. You can help free subscribe and get us to 3 million independent subscribers for free.
We're building this network with our bare hands. Get us there, I think, now before Labor Day,
not before Election Day. I said Election Day before, but make an honest man out of me.
Make it happen.
We're only like 50, 60,000 away.
You could literally be the three millionth free subscriber.
So until my next hot take, until my next Legal AF, this is Michael Popak reporting.
Heary, heary.
Legal AF Law Breakdown is now in session.
Go beyond the headlines and get a deep dive into the important legal concepts you need to know
and we discuss every day on Legal AF.
Exclusive content you won't find anywhere else,
all for the price of a couple of cups of coffee.
Join us at patreon.com slash Legal AF.
That's patreon.com slash Legal AF.