Legal AF by MeidasTouch - SHOCKING New INDICTMENTS in Trump CONSPIRACY and MORE
Episode Date: December 7, 2023Defense attorney Michael Popok & former prosecutor Karen Friedman Agnifilo are back with a new episode of the midweek edition of the Legal AF pod. On this episode, they debate: updates in the NY Civil... Fraud case; developments in the DC election interference case; developments in the civil trial for defamation damages against Rudy Giuliani; new indictments against Nevada GOP leaders for their role as fake electors, and so much more at the intersection of law, justice and politics. DEALS FROM OUR SPONSORS! GREEN CHEF: Head to https://GreenChef.com/legalaf250 and use code legalaf250 to get $250 off! AURA FRAMES: Visit https://Auraframes.com/LegalAF and get $30 off their best-selling frames with promo code LEGALAF AG1: Go to https://drinkAG1.com/LEGALAF and get 5 free AG1 Travel Packs and a FREE 1 year supply of Vitamin D with your first purchase! SUPPORT THE SHOW: Shop NEW LEGAL AF Merch at: https://store.meidastouch.com Join us on Patreon: https://patreon.com/meidastouch 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 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 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In the New York Civil Front Case, Trump has already suffered a series of losses in the
last week.
The gag order to stop the Trump side from bashing the judge's law clerk is reinstated
by an appeals court.
Trump's team got basic appeal procedure wrong to obtain a fast track appeal to the highest
court and put a fork in it, the defense case is about over, with Trump and Eric electing
not to testify again for the defense,
sensing I am sure that they will be on the losing end of the civil fraud case come January.
We break it down. Jack Smith has informed the trial judge in DC election case,
that he intends to use Trump and his co-conspirators' words and actions against them at trial,
with special 404B evidence to show common plan
intent, lack of mistake and to prove Trump's criminal intent.
We break it down.
What is 404B?
You'll know at the end of this podcast.
The Federal Civil defamation jury trial, the District of Columbia against unindicted
co-conspiratory number one, formerly known as Rudy Giuliani, starts in about 10 days.
Why is the trial only about damages?
And how big a check will the jury write for election workers Ruby Freeman and Shay Moth?
Moths.
Why is this a jury trial at all instead of the judge just deciding?
Why is Rudy the only remaining defendant?
And why is the judge so annoyed at Rudy and his lawyer we discuss.
Finally, now the Ken Chesbro, disgraced Trump lawyer and Georgia felon has likely testified to the grand jury in Nevada.
We have new indictments of fake electors there, including the former heads of the GOP in Nevada, joining Michigan and soon Arizona.
We discuss all this and so much more at the corner of law politics
and justice on the midweek edition of the legal AF podcast with Karen Friedmanek Diffalo and me
Michael Pope-Pock Karen. I got a I got a question for you.
Yes. Are you thinking of launching a yet another edition of legal AF?
The ladies edition?
Well, I've seen that. Is it though? Does that that sounds like the NBA versus the WNBA?
We're all peers, but is it true? You and Daniel Perry? We're testing the waters. We're, you know,
doing a few here and there. You know, we're, it's a little, we'll see. We'll see. The restaurant's still a self-dopening today. For now. For now.
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For now. For now. For now. For now. For now. For now. For now. For now. For now. For now. For now. For now.
For now. For now. For now. For now. For now.. Let me let me lead with that. That's the better headline. We get tremendous, tremendous, beautiful support.
You know, we share with each other when we catch something in a chat or an email or a text.
One of us gets that is complimentary because it helps balance off some of the other trolling that
happens. But occasionally we criticize for grammar or we pronounce states names wrong or names
of people wrong.
And all I can say is, I don't know, we're trying.
We're like a garage band.
We're doing the best we can on the limited budget we've been provided to bring you that
analysis in real time as quickly as we can.
And sometimes we make mistakes, but we're human.
I guess what people like about the show.
Speaking of humans, that's a great segue.
Speaking of humans, let's talk about the New York civil fraud case.
And let me frame it and then punt it over to my illustrious partner.
In this all things law, I was at crime, partnering crime, partnering law in order would be better.
Karen Freeman, I can't follow.
So Donald Trump didn't like that.
He got gagged and his lawyers got gagged because he likes to bash and a misogynist
way doesn't care that he puts somebody's life in jeopardy.
The principal law clerk that works for the judge.
There's no other way to put it.
He must get up in the morning and brush his teeth and think, how can I attack this poor
civil servant on a daily basis, accuser of crimes and being unethical, because I'm losing
in the courtroom.
When he got gagged, like enough, put a sock in it, you know, show some decorum, you know, you
know, show some respect for the dignity of the process and all of that. You know, he
was happy for about a minute when they were successful in getting a administrative, like
a duty judge, a duty judge that's assigned to take in on appeal and
kind of emergency relief.
And they got, they pulled Justice Friedman again.
And Justice Friedman has been wrong twice related to Donald Trump and said, yeah, I'm
going to stay the gag order until the full merits panel of the first Department of Panel
Division can rule on it.
And I'm not sure I see anything wrong with attacking the law clerk.
We were like, what?
And so that just led Leticia James to send in pages and pages and pages of declarations
in affidavits and exhibits showing how the threat assessment has gone up so terribly against
a judge and Goron and against the principal law clerk that the Department of Public Safety has had to intervene and protect them.
And then a four-judge panel, full merits panel, four justices of the Appellate Division First Department reversed what the Judge Friedman had done and reinstated the gag order, both on Donald Trump and his lawyers, while in the background,
we still wait for the DC court of appeals in the criminal case there to decide whether
Judge Chatkins gag order should be upheld.
And so all these things are going out at the same time.
So that was the result.
And then why don't you take it from there. There's been reporting about how clueless Chris Keiss and Cliff Robert are.
And I mentioned this in a hot take that I did about just basic appellate procedure and
how it works that at the first department as they showed up breathlessly at the clerk's
office trying to get their papers filed which were bounced to get to the higher court,
the court of appeals in
New York on the issue.
And in the meantime, going back to the trial judge, Judge Engoron, because the case, I've
spent seven minutes, six and a half minutes talking about everything except for the merits
of the case, which is sort of what Donald Trump wants.
I've just been talking about the law clerking, gag orders. And it's taken away valuable time to talk about what's
going on in the courtroom in a civil
fraud case where a judge holds Donald Trump's
business future and past and dollars in his hand.
So why don't you take it from there, Karen, and fill
everybody in about what you observed.
And where do you think this goes from here as we move
into a closing argument in January?
Well, we're deep into the defense case, right? The prosecutor rested.
They've had over I think 45 trial days at this point
and we're in the, I think fourth week of the defense case
and they have been putting on witnesses,
a lot of experts and bankers and various individuals.
And it was widely expected that Eric Trump was going to come back as well as Donald Trump
were going to come back and testify on their case in chief, their defense case.
And you know, for people who aren't familiar with civil law and how it works and I'm new
to it. So I find it fascinating how
different it is from criminal law. You know you might say well I don't understand in Eric and
Donald already testify why would they be coming back and the way it works in civil cases and not
in criminal cases this is completely different and, is you can't call the opposing
counsel in a criminal case, or the opposing party, I should say, in a criminal case, on
your direct case, because they'll take the fifth.
They have a fifth amendment right against us, incriminating themselves, and so it's not
done ever.
And they would testify if they want to put on a defense, and then they would waive, you know, but that's their own choice.
So they'd be waiving their Fifth Amendment privilege
and then the prosecutor cross-examines them.
Well, in civil cases, it's fascinating
because they have depositions already.
So they've already questioned them.
They know what they're going to say.
Again, in New York, you don't have criminal depositions
and so you can make a decision whether or not you want to put them on the stand know what they're going to say, again, in New York, you don't have criminal depositions.
So you can make a decision whether or not you want to put them on the stand and you would
essentially cross-examine them because by law they are hostile because they are a party
opponent.
So, I found it fascinating that they were cross-examined, but then their lawyers didn't talk to them or speak to them or ask
them questions.
And I asked you about that, and you educated me that, and I appreciate it very much,
that the reason that's done is because they wait until, and they tell their side of the
story and what they want to say on their case, because when there's a motion to dismiss
at the end of the government's case, you don't want to have added to that by providing evidence, right?
You wait until your case.
And so that's where we are.
And so everybody's expected that they would come back and give their side of the story and testify.
The way Don Jr. did when he gave his Trump organization television commercial
and touted all the various properties
and talked about how great they are
and fond over his father who he called a genius
and his ability to work with real estate
and transform it was like watching an artist work.
I mean, it was just one of these like gag may moments
that happen sometimes in trials.
And but apparently what happened was they asked,
they asked Judge Angoran to delay their testimony
until after the pellet courts rule on this gag order
that you were just talking about,
the gag order that they are appealing.
And Judge Angoran turned to the government and said,
what do you think? And they said, no way. And Judge Engoron said, no way. And so Eric, so far,
has chickened out and decided not to testify. And all the reading I've done is that Trump is still
scheduled to testify on December 11th, although I know you did a hot take saying you don't expect him to testify
given this information. Do you have other information that I haven't been able to find?
Yeah, I think the reporting that I'm saying is that Trump's not testifying again,
but Donald, I mean, especially now that they've ruled that he can't...
A pair, I don't, I still, for the life of me don't understand
that they've ruled that he can't, I still for the life of me don't understand why the gag order preventing him from bashing, that's all, that's all that I want to be clear.
The gag order in the District of Columbia is broader.
That has to do with targeting witnesses, co-defendant was no co-defendant in DC.
Witnesses and members of the criminal justice team, prosecutors, their staff, investigators,
and the like, and targeting them in social media and in other statements by Donald Trump
or his proxies, ones that he controls.
This one's even narrower.
This is in a civil case.
Don't bash docs, attack, talk about the functions of, or the behavior of conduct of my law clerk.
And to be clear, I am not here suggesting that if Donald Trump or his team had a legitimate
appellate appeal reversible error type issue, that they shouldn't have the right to preserve
the record and make a record for the appeal.
The way that we'll have a little legal AF breakout session
on a pelvic practice.
At the trial level where the record is made,
that's the record meaning the judges rulings,
the evidence, the testimony, the transcript of the hearings
and the trials and all of that,
comprise and the filings, pleatings and other discovery
and other things that are on the docket of the case, so to speak,
are comprised the record. That becomes the record on appeal that gets transmitted to whatever
appellate court is the next stop on the train. It literally gets transmitted the entire package.
It gets numbered one through whatever the last page when you stack it up in one big pile. So, joint appeal appendix or appendix, you know, one to 5,000.
That's how it's referred to in briefing.
And you send it to the appeals court.
And if you have an issue that you want to preserve for appeal, you mention it at trial
to give the trial judge the first opportunity to make the decision, because that's what you're
supposed to do, to preserve it.
And if the judge rejects your position, you can go further and make a proper about what
the evidence that's bit or the issue that you're being precluded from talking about would
have shown and you can make a proper not for the judge who's probably already made up their
mind, but for the appellate court.
And you can point to that, I made a record. The record, they made
a record. It's now become what I call the Nihatik a broken record about the principal law
clerk. We got it. You think she's Chuck Schumer's girlfriend. You think that she's because
she's a Democrat. She can't be fair. You think because in response to ridiculous arguments
being raised by Alina Haba, the lawyers or Donald Trump,
and she rolls her eyes or puffs that that indicates reversible error. That she's doing her job as the
principal law clerk, handing notes and assisting the judge at the trial of fact in a 10-week, 12-week,
14-week trial where he has to keep everything straightness head in the record. Great, you made the record.
That doesn't mean, first of all,
not only does it mean that you have to keep raising
the issue every, oh, another note,
another eye roll, another comment,
another social media post by the law clerk,
you made the record.
And to do it after the record has been made,
which was it was made a long time ago, five, six weeks ago,
then it just becomes abusive, unethical conduct by people that are supposed to be
officers of the court in a courtroom.
And that's where we are now. We've crossed past, well passed the line of making a proper record if that was their
intention into the world of abusive, harassing conduct that has no place in the court system of New York.
And that's what the Appellate Court has been saying by reinstating the gag order.
I don't know what that has to do with Donald Trump or Eric Trump or anybody's decision to
testify or not. They're just looking for an excuse not to testify. Because obviously,
now we're in minute 15 of our podcast talking about what's going
on inside.
It's not going well.
Experts for Donald Trump that have no basis in fact in the record of the case or in
relevancy tied to issues about materiality, intentional fraud, and the amount of the
ultimate recovery by the people if they prevail.
They have nothing to do with it.
Most of those people were destroyed by their own reports in cross-examination.
So take the Trump experts off the board.
The bankers didn't help him either.
He promised Trump, you'll see my bankers, do what you're bank loves me. They love me. They love giving me money as much as I want, regardless
of how much I have in the bank. Wrong. You have a disconnect in a mismatch between the
front of the house and the back of the house and a bank. The front of the house is the
banker. They're salespeople. They're just selling all day long. They go on golf trips
and junkets. They take their clients to Scotland to go play links courses, look it up.
And they shower them with gifts and presents because they just want the business.
I want the biz.
The back of the house has compliance and underwriting requirements and review of assets and due diligence
requirements in order to run a bank.
And the underwriters are the ones, not the bankers are the ones that set the
amount that they want as security and pledge collateral for alone.
We want 2.5 billion in that worth, real net worth, not cookbook that worth.
We want 500 million in liquid assets.
And that's what you have to have.
It's binary.
You either have that number or you don't.
It's up to Trump world when you don't have that number,
when your real balance sheet is closer to one billion,
which we'd all love, I wouldn't want that,
suck that on my bank account.
But that's the one billion.
It's not two and a half.
So that would limit the amount of money
that he'd be able to get from a Deutsche Bank.
So we're not here to suggest that Deutsche Bank's bankers didn't love him.
I'm sure they did.
He was a well. If you're a billion or more, you're a well.
The question is, are you Moby Dick?
Are you two and a half times that in order to get the money that they were given?
And that is the issue. They keep missing. It's like they're putting on two different cases,
which is...
Let me just finish that point,
and I'll turn it over to you,
which is terrible for Donald Trump,
because the case that matters is the civil fraud case
and the amount of the remedy dollar amount
that's gonna be awarded by this judge.
Sorry, Karen, go ahead.
No, no, I was just gonna say,
what I thought was interesting or weird was the bankers
who testified that Deutsche Bank bankers who testified, the Deutsche Bank
bankers said, look, financial statements are estimates.
So as a result, we do our own due diligence.
And in fact, here, we adjusted the numbers downward.
We adjusted it from 4.9 billion to 2.6 billion.
Doesn't that prove the fraud?
Didn't he just say? Because it's about the fact that they submitted false fraudulent documents.
I was like, that to me is the proof right there.
Right.
The delta between, we gave John Trump a haircut off the number he gave us, but the problem
is the number was so high that the haircut wasn't deep enough to match the act, right?
Isn't that your point, Karen?
To match the actual $1.5 million net worth.
He didn't have 2.7.
He didn't have 4.5.
He had one point, something.
If you were honest about the value of Mar-a-Lago,
the Trump Tower, 40 Wall Street,
and all the other pieces of property
that make up his balance sheet.
And that's what the, some people I boot- boot tuning in late might be thinking, is that what this
case is about?
This is exactly what this case is about.
The statements of financial condition reflecting the assets that Donald Trump can claim ownership
of and what if the numbers were true or false?
It's easy.
You know, if you go pull the balance sheet for Microsoft, for Apple, for name your favorite
company in America, it's relatively easy. So if you go pull the balance sheet for Microsoft, for Apple, for name your favorite company
in America, it's relatively easy.
There are there's cash on hand, there's assets that are valued under generally accepted
accounting principles, which is which which have due diligence as part of it because there's
auditors that are involved, not auditors that that leave the scene screaming, we can't trust
the numbers of our client, but real auditors.
And therefore the public in making investment decisions can rely on
them. And that's why we don't have cases where a major company in America is
cooking the books. We do in a mom and pop shop basically a family business, which
is all this is a family office, which is all this is. That's a thing that's a
New York thing, right Karen? Family offices.
Yes, exactly.
So many people are.
It's interesting.
Yeah, there's a lot of people who work for family offices.
All that means that's code for, we're rich,
we have a lot of money, and we have an office,
and we invest our money and take care of our properties
and our various holdings, and that's the family office.
And right, and the family office, this is just a glorified family office, the way that
the way that that's run, and they didn't have the controls in place.
This is my family office, by the way.
This is my office.
They didn't have the, the family office in the Trump world doesn't have the controls in
place to be a legitimate business.
And that's why persistent fraud is often found in places like that and not in places like
publicly traded companies because publicly traded companies don't have all their executives
with their last name, same last name, and they actually take their position seriously.
And they are control officers and they know what that means.
And they're skilled, qualified and trained to run that to run those operations.
Those different operational parts of that.
That's not here.
That's not what Donald Trump wanted.
Donald Trump wants to wake up in the morning and go, I'm a five billionaire.
Let's go borrow money today.
Get my guys on the phone.
I mean, that's fine until you get a New York attorney general and combined with the most robust
series of laws in the, I would argue, in all 50 states to go after persistent fraud exist
in New York since 1956, which is the 63-12 executive law that we're under right now.
So let's say Trump comes back.
All right.
So is there any, do you have any,
what's your view about, what are the odds,
so let's do odds making here?
What are the odds in your mind that Donald Trump
prevails on any of the remaining six counts
and or is able to limit the amount of money
that is taken away from him and companies dissolved
when the trial is all over. Through Judge Engor. So I think after the government puts on a rebuttal
case, if any, and Judge Engoron has his, here's the closing arguments mid-January, and then gives his decision that will likely be written.
I believe he is going to throw,
I think he's going to acquit,
if that's the right word, on at least one charge.
I really do think, especially now that you've got all these
bankers saying that it didn't make a difference,
we didn't rely on them, we did our own due diligence.
And the reason I think Judge Engoron's going to do that is because Trump's entire appeal
is going to be based on the fact that Judge Angoran was biased, that he's partisan, a
best law clerk, that he wasn't listening, he didn't have an open mind, that he was 100%
had his mind made up, that he didn't listen to the evidence, and the perfect way to
inoculate that and immunize that argument is to show that he did listen to the evidence and the perfect way to inoculate that and immunize that argument is to show
that he did listen to the evidence and he didn't just
give the government everything that they wanted.
And so if he doesn't give them the remaining six charges,
I don't think that makes a difference one way or another.
They've already found the big charge, right?
The big one and the damages, I think, are going to be
significant in addition to
monetary damages. It's going to be a huge, huge, huge penalty, but I also think he's not going
to be able to do business in the state of New York anymore. He's going to have to sell off many of his,
or dissolve many of the LLCs or other companies that he's set up that hold many of the LLCs or other companies that he set up that hold many of the licenses and the
businesses that he has here in New York. That's my prediction of how it's going to go. What
about you?
Yeah, I know. I just want to check in with you. It's very similar to what we said a few
weeks ago, but now having seen more evidence, I wanted to see if your position changed.
I think you're right. I think that there's enough evidence.
And on the lower scale, not criminal, a preponderance of the evidence for the litusia james and the
people of the state of New York to prevail at everything remaining.
But why not?
Why not throw them a bone and suss out?
Maybe the remaining counts are insurance fraud, books and records fraud, which are all crimes, by the way, financial statement
fraud and conspiracies around those things, other three things.
And so, sure, throw them a bone.
I think it'd have to be because the conspiracy and the underlying count issue, I think you'd
have to throw two bones.
So maybe he says, I don't really see the insurance fraud.
If there were one, if I were to pick one from the Karen Friedman Ignifalo world,
which I agree with, I think he may toss the insurance one.
Because again, that's the one.
There's not a lot of damage there.
There's not a dollar amount that could be
discouraged from insurance.
But it does give him, like you said,
that prophylactic insulation from being said,
well, how biased was I?
I dropped
one of your counts, you know, and all of that. And so we're going to keep watching. I think
without any of the Trumps testifying, even if Donald comes back, I think the case is about baked.
There may be a short rebuttal case the way it works as Karen alluded to it.
Petitioner, plaintiff, state went first then and they went for a long time, 25 witnesses,
thousands of pages of documents and exhibits, hundreds of thousands of pages. Then we bid in the
defense case for the last several weeks. And then at the end, the attorney general gets the last
word and they decide to put on what's called a rebuttal case. They can. I've done them.
It depends.
I'm of two minds.
You never want to give up the opportunity of the final word, but if you think we've been
here, it's exhausting.
We've been here for 12 weeks, and we weren't really damaged because the rebuttal would
have to literally be a rebuttal to what you just heard in the defense.
And the experts were terrible for Donald Trump.
The bankers weren't any better. You know, even when they put McConion to cry his way through his testimony or
Patrick Bernie, I'm surprised he's still employed
Who said that he was told by you know, Weiselberg for Donald's rubbed to change the numbers
You know, what are you gonna rebut?
But they could they may take a day to do a quick rebuttal. If they have someone from Deutsche Bank,
if they have someone from Deutsche Bank
on the other side of the fence,
that could be pretty crazy.
You could bring in rebuttal,
you could bring in, you're right,
you could bring in rebuttal witnesses.
Unless you feel like you're gilding the lily,
you and I have done this.
If you think you're way up on points,
although it's never enough,
because you never know, especially.
And I would still do it just to show that it's not true. I just, for me's never enough, because you never know, especially. And I would still do it just to just to show that it's not true.
I just for me, but again, I'm used to having to prove my case beyond a reasonable
doubt.
Right.
And so you better work out that point.
Right.
You better work out that point.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You definitely have to run up the points on that theory.
But you also have a slightly frustrated and go on, you know, look, eight weeks ago,
before they started the trial, it's hard to believe, beginning of October,
and go on turn to the New York Attorney General's lawyers the day after he granted some rejudgment in their favor and said, do we really even need a trial?
Like, I'm ready to go to remedy. And they said, no, judge, we think we have to try all six of the counts
and we're in because the remedies that we're asking for are drastic. We got to make a record. Okay. But I think like the lawyers
to shut their pie holes and let him start writing his order. I think he's already written
a lot of his order and do the oral argument and then hit print. And as I joked in a hot
take, I'm sure you have to or maybe not yet, I've finished oral arguments, and then have the judge go, okay, here's my decision, like, wow.
Didn't change a word from when we started arguing.
They rip it off in hand at you.
So I may not do that, although he's quick.
You know, they got on him about the summary judgment
being ordered.
They went to a pellet court to force him
to both rule on the summary judgments
and delay the trial to give him more time.
And six hours later, he issued his 30 page order on summary judgments and said, see you
Monday for trial.
So he's, this is already written.
I would say right now, three quarters of this order, one way or the other, is written already by the
judge.
And it's all, well, you know, the proof of the pudding is in the tasting.
We'll see what happens the last week or so.
Well, it makes sense because a lot of it's going to be, you know, the facts, the allegations,
this is the prosecutor, the plaintiff's case, this is the defense case.
I mean, a lot of it summarizes it.
So as you go, it makes sense that he would, you know, populate it with things that happen as it's going in his, in his, in his, in his, in his, and who's populating it. So as you go, it makes sense that he would, you know, populate it with things that
happen as it's going in his in his in his or his popularity. And who's populating it? The principal
law clerk and her staff. Exactly. She is. Yeah, she has a job. I know people think they they
they made her into such a cartoonish figure as they attack her and body shame her and misogynist
and anti-Semitic and sexist and all of that. She got a job to do and every day she goes through the record at the end of the day and she
points and marks the places in the transcript that just going to end up in the order.
You know, just mind boggling to me. It's also mind boggling that they can't find the lawyers for
Donald Trump who are not in who are not New York lawyers by training. I'm sorry, they're just not.
They can't find their they can't find their butt with two hands.
They just, they are just,
they run down to the first,
I run down to the first department.
They run down to the first department
and they get with Chris Kaesol frustrated with the clerk.
We're here, we're here to file an emergency.
We want a one judge, yeah, they want the one judge again.
One judge, justice, to let us expedite it,
go to the court of the fields of New York on the gag order.
And the lawyer, another courtroom staff,
because the principal law clerk's the lawyer too.
The lawyer for the first department comes out and says,
yeah, but that's not procedurally correct.
Well, what do you mean?
There's got to be a way.
He says, yeah, it has to go to the full
for justice panel that just ruled against you and they have to decide you can't get an emergency judge right now
To just pull them out and sign the order. Oh, what do you mean?
He got all the reporting was he got people went down there and reported on this the criss-ciss got all upset
Chris is always upset
In this case. He's upset with the judge
He's it's of travest, the travesty of justice.
We can't bash the law clerk.
I assure you, never in his 30 year career in Florida as a lawyer has ever had a temerity
or the balls to bash a Florida state judge, Florida Supreme Court justice, when he argued
in front of the Florida Supreme Court as a solicitor general in Florida or any of their
staff. when he argued in front of the Florida Supreme Court as a solicitor general in Florida, or any of their staff, I assure you, he has never,
until he got into bed with Donald Trump ever did that.
And yet he comes to my and your city,
and our bar, and tries to crap all over the process
because his client has his hands up his backside.
Who's his local council?
Who prohac Vichet him in?
Cause, you know, local council.
The proper in Rhode Island.
Because I mean, I try cases,
I handle cases all over the country and all over the state.
I did a trial in the far reaches of Upper New York state.
And I'm barred in New York, I can practice there.
I hired local council because there is nothing like local counsel.
They know every courtroom is different, every judge is different, every DA's office is
different.
Just the way they do things and there is nothing.
This would not have happened.
They would not have screwed up this appeal.
They had someone who knew what they were doing
and knew how to practice in New York.
It just doesn't make any sense to me.
They're like a keystone cops of lawyers and layering.
Just in a serious case like this
that they wouldn't have someone who practices right here
in the first department.
It's almost malpractice to me.
Yeah, it's interesting. She says she's a member of the New York state bar,
Alina Habba. The people on the street don't agree. But I,
I'm not sure about that. And if she doesn't practice regularly in New York,
look, it's hard to practice in New York. It's hard to pass the exam. And it's
hard to practice. We have a thing called the CPLR,
which is all about our civil procedure. It's unlike any other state. Most states follow and
model themselves after the federal rules of civil procedure. And it's sort of when you look at the
local, if you look at the Florida rules, for instance, of civil procedure, the Chris Kais is used to,
and you look at them next to the federal, you know, you can see they're pretty close. New York, New York's got this Byzantine thing for the 1930s that we've been, you know,
you and I still pull out the book. Where is that in the CPLR? Let alone the appellate
rules. So anyway, we'll continue to follow, like you said, the Keystone cops and what transpires in New York will turn next in our podcast to Jack Smith getting ready for trial.
In March, has some filings to do and some evidence he needs to identify in advance.
Special 404B evidence, which has a special quality. And Karen and I will break that all down.
Along with some developments in the Rudy Giuliani trial,
go to jury trial, just on damage,
just how big of a check that he's gonna have to write
to Ruby Freeman and Shay Moss in the middle of December.
Christmas comes early to Shay Moss and Ruby Freeman.
And then finally, Nevada, Nevada, Nevada.
It's all about elect fake electors,
who also were heads of the GOP in Nevada.
Now being indicted
based on their activities in the 2020 election.
All that and so much more.
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from green chef all right let's talk about um speaking of sizzling let's talk about Jack Smith
Donald Trump's lawyers might not realize
they're going to trial and march
and are doing everything they can
in the District of Columbia case to avoid it.
They're waiting on a gag order to be reinstated,
I would presume, by DC, but in the meantime,
there's a case to be tried.
And as part of that case,
there's a rule of evidence that Karen, trial lawyers
like Karen and me like to refer to as 404b literally is a rule of the evidence code, which
talks about a certain special quality of evidence that's being used not to show that somebody
because they did something bad in the past. They have a propensity to do something bad
in the future, but it can be used to go to the heart of this case
against Donald Trump, which is common plan,
intent, criminal intent, lack of mistake,
and it burdens and all of that.
So I know Karen, you did a nice breakdown of it
with Donu Perry.
I'll recently, it's up on one of our hot takes
that's running right now.
So why don't you lead off on this one?
And then I'll fill in the couple that I found really interesting that I did some hot
takes on.
Yeah, sure.
So in the state, we called this MOL-MOLE-IN-E-UX, the French spelling, but it's a Rule 404B
federally, as you said.
It's basically the same thing.
And it's essentially, you're not allowed to put in evidence
of propensity of criminal activity. And it seems almost counterintuitive, right? Because if
if you're a serial burglar and you go and you commit burglary after burglary after burglary
and then you're caught doing a burglary, it seems like it would be probative, you know, to show that
that this is somebody who that's what they do, right? And unfortunately, that is not allowed in
because the prejudicial effect,
and that's the balancing test that the court will use
is they weigh the probative value against the prejudicial effect.
They'd say, look, just because he commits lots of burglars,
doesn't mean he did this one,
and you still have to prove your case
beyond a reasonable doubt.
But there is an exception to this kind of propensity argument.
And it's to go to prove up a particular character trait
or a particular point, like, as you said,
motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge,
identity, absence of mistake mistake or lack of accident.
And if you're going to introduce any of this 404B evidence, and 404B evidence is literally
anything that's an uncharged, bad act or uncharged crime.
And in this particular indictment, the conspiracy is very short, right?
The Jack Smith DC case.
It's from November of 2020 to January of 2021. So about
two months and in two of the charges it's even shorter actually. It's about a month, a month and a half.
It's a very short narrow conspiracy from from November of 2020 to January of 2021. One defendant
for charges and Jack Smith did it very very kind of tight for a reason and it
makes sense. So if he wants to bring up anything that is beyond that time
period, either before November or after January, he, one could argue that
that's an uncharged bad actor and uncharged crime. And what Jack Smith did was
said, look, even though much of what we're about to ask you to allow us to admit falls at different times, it's intrinsically part of the crime.
It's intrinsically part of the evidence. It's not extrinsic. And he said, but if you find that it is extrinsic to the crime, in the abundance of caution, we are going to serve notice of 404B evidence that we intend
to offer in our direct case as part of our case that we're putting on.
And that way, we comply with the notice requirement.
It has to be in writing.
And not only do we have to, not only does the law require you as a prosecutor to spell
out what it is, what 404B evidence,
what are the bad acts that you want to bring into your case, but you have to give the reason.
You have to say, I want to bring this in because in all of the past burglaries, he always
left behind a pink scarf.
And in this particular case, there was a pink scarf.
And so that was his signature, right?
That shows a common scheme or plan.
It shows his identity.
It shows his modus operandi.
That would be allowed in, to show that, no, this is the guy.
He's the guy who always leaves behind a pink scarf
because he's done it 10 other times.
And that's when you can bring it in,
because it's for that purpose.
It's not to show that he has a propensity to commit a crime.
And so that's how the judge looks at it.
It's entirely in the judge's discretion to allow it in or not.
And it's not appealable the way certain very limited things are appealable mid trial.
It's appealable only after the fact, meaning
if he's convicted, then he can appeal it in the normal course. He can't go up on appeal
prior to trial or during trial. If he doesn't like Judge Chuck Kinsley-Rooling, neither side
can do that. And that's called an interlocatory appeal, which they cannot take. The way they
can, the way Trump is doing in the presidential immunity and other constitutional arguments that he's making,
those last week Judge Chutkin immediately
after the DC Circuit in a civil case ruled
that there is no presidential immunity
in civil cases for former presidents
who were acting outside the scope of their job
within hours of that ruling Judge Chetkin said,
and there's no presidential immunity in criminal cases,
either.
And her 48 page ruling on that is like a novel
and worth reading for anybody who wants to learn
about presidential immunity and the history
of our country and Alexander Hamilton.
It's actually a great decision decision and I loved reading it. But in this particular getting back to
back to Judge Chutkin and the 404B evidence, I would categorize Jack Smith's
evidence in three categories that he wants to bring in. And one is historical evidence of his consistent plan of claiming election
fraud that was baseless. And that's sort of category number one. And there, Jack Smith
talk goes as far back as November of 2012, where Donald Trump issued a tweet saying that
voting machines had switched votes from Mitt Romney to Barack Obama's sound familiar.
And that was obviously a long time ago before 2020.
And he was already talking about this voting machine switch without any basis.
And then in 2016, he complained again without any basis of widespread voter fraud
and basically going on and on
about that again baseless but Jack Smith wants to bring that in as evidence to
show a common scheme of plan or plan of falsely blaming people for fraud in
election results and it also shows his motive and his intention and his plan to obstruct the certification of the 2020 election.
He also, in that same category, talked about, brought out some of his own words, Trump's own words,
where he refused, for example, prior to the 2020 election, he refused to commit to a peaceful transition if he lost, and that when loser draw with writing and everything else,
he still wouldn't commit to a peaceful transfer of power.
And I thought that was incredibly,
that will be incredibly powerful if it comes in.
The next category that I would say that he wanted to,
that Jack Smith wants to bring in,
had to do with Trump's knowledge that he lost the election
and his motive and his intention to try and steal the election.
And in that, he brings up several examples,
the fake electors for examples.
That's a huge, that's a huge, although that is definitely part of this.
He's talking, and so he will be allowed to bring that in.
I think that what Jack Smith wanted to talk about is things that he didn't mention in
the indictment, right?
He talked about stuff that happened, for example, text.
It looks like he got new text messages because he revealed, I think for the first time,
I don't remember seeing this.
It looks like yet a seventh now on indicted
co-conspirator that seems to be cooperating
because it's redacted in there, this election employee
in Detroit that I had not heard of before,
didn't know about.
So he seems to have obtained a cooperator
since the last
last indictment and potentially got a new, got this new evidence. And so that's why it's not in the indictment and why. I think he added it here in 404B evidence. As well as, you know, all of the time
he and Giuliani, for example, were talking about retaliating against
and retribution against, you know,
Shemoss and Ruby Freeman,
that brings us to the next, basically the next category,
which is where he attacks individuals, right?
He attacks pens, he attacks, Ruby Freeman and Shemoss,
and what Jack Smith wants to bring out
is the stuff that's happened
that continues to happen, right? And he wants to talk about, for example, you know, the
proud boys in 2020 when he said, you know, stand back and stand by, that was his way of
knowing and then seeing what happened January 6th, they want to bring out that he knows
that the people, his followers, commit violence. and so when they put on Ruby Freeman and Chey Moss
Who will testify and talk about the threats and harassment that they have
Suffered because Donald Trump singles them out
Jack Smith is going to use all of these other examples to show he knows what he's doing
He knows what his followers are doing and even after the select committee hearings
I thought this was really powerful even after the Select Committee hearings, I thought this was really powerful,
even after the Select Committee hearings that happened two years after Jan 6, where there were
video tapes of Shemos and Ruby Freeman talking about the horrific vitriolic death threats and racist
things that they encountered. Donald Trump, at that point, knew because he obviously knew,
because that was publicized and that was broadcast, he knew about that. And even after hearing
about that, he doubled down with his comments about them and recommended attacks on them
and posts in his truth social. And he even zeroed in on one of them writing that she's an election fraudster,
a liar, and one of the treacherous monsters who stole the country and that she would be in
legal trouble. I mean, you know, it's just outrageous. And Jackson said, like, this shows his plan
to silence his people and to silence those who come out against them, it goes to his knowledge that
the public attacks on people like Shem Osiru, Friedman, Mike Pence, etc. could forcibly
lead to violence and to threats and harassment.
And I thought it was a really, really compelling motion that I think that I think that he will win most of these, if not all of them.
Donia Perry, who was on with me, thinks that the judge may some of the Seamus Ruby
Freeman stuff, she thinks that the judge may limit because it is so prejudicial and
so compelling and so powerful. But I think it all comes in. What about you, Pope? What did you think?
Yeah, two that I like the most that of all the six or seven. I
don't I don't think I disagree with Donnie. I think there'll be some
Some limiting of some of these things the reason that we're talking about it just for our audience is
The reason that we're talking about it, just for our audience, is that you have to give notice of your intention to use this type of powerful, potentially prejudicial, having
to be balanced type evidence, especially when you're putting on evidence not of the actual
conduct that's been charged in the indictment, because that's not 404B.
Let me just wait for this. Let me just wait for this to pass.
Okay.
It's not, that's not 404b.
Actual evidence of the crime's charge,
the four conspiracy counts against Donald Trump.
That's just stuff that he did.
That supports that comes out of the indictment
and there are elements of the crime
and conduct consistent with the crime.
This, as you said earlier, is a trying to bring over the wall into the courtroom, evidence of prior conduct,
historical, historical conduct, evidence, testimony, statements, videos, and the like,
to try to aim at an element of the crime that has been charged.
And that's what we're doing here, and that's why we're talking about it, because you have to
get, you can't sandbag the other side, you can't surprise them or the court and try to just,
some people might be thinking, like, well, why don't they just do it in March? Yeah, I got to do
all this stuff in advance. First of all, there's a pre-trial order that schedules out
when filings like this are due.
And believe me, if Jack Smith didn't have to give
Donald Trump's lawyers notice of this, he would not
and he would save it for trial as a surprise.
The rules allow for the litigation of the issue
and the resolution of the issue well before trial
so that the jury's minds are blown with some of this information.
The two that I took away that I found really interesting because it's again an example
of the more evidence that we're learning.
We are not even at the tip of the iceberg of what was listed in the indictment.
Donald Trump is shadow boxing because all he knows is what's been dumped on him, which
is the, of course, the one terabyte of information, the two tractor trailers worth of information,
but doesn't know which of those are going to be used against them particularly yet.
And he's got to, he's got to try to figure out what the case is against him.
Of course, prosecutors have informational advantage because they know exactly the testimony and the clips
and the evidence and exhibits that they're going to use against Donald Trump.
You always have that kind of informational asymmetry between the two sides of government
and the defense side.
And here, we, but we're learning, and when there's a mandatory filing in the court process,
like we just had, that's when we start learning
the kind of the curtain gets pulled back. The hood gets opened and we get to see under
the hood as do some more evidence that and how the prosecutors see the case. It's like
going shopping in a supermarket. No two baskets are the same when you're waiting in line in a
supermarket and you look over at your neighbor's basket, I assure you it is not identical to yours.
And so you can put this the building blocks of this case together in different ways. What turns
one prosecutor on might turn off another. I mean there's some fundamental things maybe 80%
if carrying out our hands as a prosecutor
for a prosecutor on the file, so to speak, about 80 or 90% of it might be exactly the same
as Jackson, but there's always that difference, right, of prosecutorial discretion and things
that they light on and they think from their past experience would be successful in front
of a jury in a case like this one.
And so that's what they're trying to build right now.
What we learned, for instance, was,
and I outed him already, because it's obvious who it is,
there is an unindicted co-conspirator
that's listed as one of the 404B potential
pieces of evidence against Donald Trump,
who interfered in the Detroit vote counting
and suggested or argued that there should be a riot of Trump supporters and
others clashing in front of the streets in front of the count when he learned that Trump
was going to lose.
As soon as they learned that Biden was winning election night, two things happened in Detroit.
One is the actual counting office got flooded with people that were supposed to be poll watchers
who are instead just doing all sorts of ridiculous challenges to try to gum up the works and
throw sand in the works of the legitimate vote counting that was going on.
And in the streets outside of the vote counting center in Detroit, there were, I wouldn't
call them a mob, we have a video clip, we may be able to run tonight, but there was,
you know, like a group of people
And there were a group of people on the other side and what Boris Epstein and that's who I'm outing right here in a myotic
Who was a political consultant and a lawyer for Donald Trump still to this day
Involves with every decision making that Donald Trump does in civil or criminal cases went so far as the hire for Donald Trump, the current lawyers that he has, Chris Kaisenthal Blanche.
That Boris Epstein, who's identified in the 404B as an employee of the campaign, a campaign
employee, he's listed in the indictment as unindicted co-conspiratory number six, a political
consultant.
There's only one political consultant slash campaign employee who is an unadidated
cook and spiritual and that's Boris Epstein can't be the lawyers, even though he is a lawyer.
He doesn't really operate as one, but it's not it's not Ken Chesbro, Sydney Powell, John
Eastman, Jeff Clark, or Rudy Giuliani. It's Boris Epstein. And so Boris Epstein on behalf
of President Trump at the time, then President Trump,
tried to cause a riot in Detroit to stop the count.
I said in one of my hot takes, people who tune in late might think I'm reciting last season
of succession.
Spoiler alert, I'm not.
This is what they tried to do.
And Jack Smith wants to present that to the jury, along with evidence that they purposefully flooded
with a goon squad into the vote counting to try to stop the vote count.
Justice Boris Epstein is alleged to have done in the indictment on Jan 6, where he Rudy
Giuliani and Donald Trump to try to stop the vote count related to the electoral certification, tried to do a pressure
campaign using the violence of Jan 6, i.e. that riot, to stop the vote count. Never heard that before.
Begs the question, why is employers ever dying in chains and shackled and why is it in an
orange jumpsuit and why hasn't he been indicted? That's for another day at another hot dick. I have
a theory about that. Has to do with keeping the March trial date at all costs. So that I thought was fascinating.
And I thought of it as a trial lawyer, the power of the power of that being presented to a jury
at the right moment in time in a trial. It would just be breathtaking. It would just change
the weather in the room for that particular day, day,
whatever of the trial against Donald Trump, putting aside all the lawyers and all the vice
presidents that are going to come and testify against Donald Trump. That kind of he tried
to start a riot as soon as they realized that they were losing, which goes to the intent
of Donald Trump, the criminal intent that he knew he had lost on election night was trying
to do everything he could to avoid the peaceful transfer of power even then.
That's one.
The second one is, as you mentioned, not only is Donald Trump complaining about voter fraud
since like 2012, arguing that there was vote flipping somehow software hardware for Mitt
Romney votes that went to Barack Obama. But on more
than one occasion, he's refused to acknowledge that he would agree to a peaceful transfer
of power. And there's two clips in particular, and I did it on a hot take that's coming up
soon, that they mentioned by name, in which during the debate with Hillary Clinton, he was
asked by the debate moderator in 2016, Chris Wallace, will you right here in front
of the American people?
Will you commit to a peaceful transfer of power the way we've done in every year of our
republic going forward?
We'll see.
I'm sorry, we'll see is not an answer.
What do you mean we'll see?
Well, the ballots, the ballots got to count the ballots, don't know about the ballots too
early, can't commit. And to which Hillary Clinton responded, that is a, I try to think of her
word off top of my head. We have a clip of it. She says something along the lines that
that is an abomination. That is hard. That's the word that this that is horrifying. What
my opponent for the presidency just said about is not supporting the peaceful
transfer of power.
And then there's a clip from September of 2020, two months before the election with the
kind of the aftermath of the Black Lives Matter protests and other issues in our, in some
of our big cities that summer.
A fresh on everybody's mind. A reporter asked Donald Trump at a press conference
where all he wanted to probably talk about was Amy Coney Barrett being picked
the next day of the Rose Garden for Supreme Court Justice. He got asked with
the riots in red and blue states and blood in the streets. Will you commit
here right now, Mr. President, to a peaceful transfer of power?
And instead of saying yes to kind of quell
people's emotions about it,
he threw gasoline on it and said the opposite.
He said the ballots, you gotta get those ballots thrown out.
And if the ballots thrown out,
there won't be a transition.
There'll be a continuation.
Right, he'll stay in office.
Now, that's easy to unpack.
He didn't like it.
His side didn't like the mail-in and absentee ballots that were being used in all states,
including in blue states, because of COVID.
And people probably not wanting to wait in line, shoulder to shoulder with their neighbor
during a pandemic, yet finding a way using absentee and mail-in ballots, which are as secure as any
other way of voting.
Donald Trump only voted by absentee ballot for many of the years that he voted, if he
voted at all, that that was the way to balance the health risks in the pandemic with the constitutional
right, fundamental right to vote.
But for Donald Trump, the ballots, too many mail-in ballots because he wants to suppress the vote
because he wants to disenfranchise because if you suppress the vote and disenfranchise in September,
you don't have to worry about a vote count on the other end that's against you in November.
So there was a lot packed into that statement. And for Jack Smith, he wants to put that in front of the jury and
show, see this is the common purpose in plan. This is the intent,
and show see this is the common purpose in plan. This is the intent, claim to power, never transition,
always claim the ballots are wrong, always claim.
There's fraud in the election and try to stay in office.
That goes to criminal mine and criminal tent
for Donald Trump and he'll play if he wins on that issue
in front of Judge Chuck and he'll play those clips
for the jury as part of that overall presentation.
So for me, you do the good category thing
and I kind of drill down on two in particular.
Before we move on in the pod, anything else on the 404B,
which, but just to leave it at this,
the notice comes in, Trump has another opportunity
to argue against it.
Maybe I think there's a reply brief notice thing.
And then Judge Schatz and Chuckings
are gonna go thumb up up thumb down on these categories of
Information and evidence outside of the actual elements of what's been charged in the indictment
Yeah, the only other thing is that struck me was you know Donald Trump is arguing that he wants to strike the language of
Jan 6 and the attack from the indictment if you recall
He doesn't like that in there.
And Jack Smith was like, well, not only are we not,
are we objecting to that, I want to show that you actually had a motive
and intent for that exact same thing to happen on January 6th
by introducing evidence of how you characterize the rioters and the insurrectionists,
how you have openly and proudly supported them, all of these individuals who criminally participated
in the obstructing of a congressional certification that day, including suggesting that he's going
to pardon them if reelected, and that he has conceded that he had the ability to influence their
actions even during the attack, right? As he said to Caitlin Collins on CNN in that town hall,
you know, when he said my listeners, my followers listened to me like nobody else.
And even talked about certain individuals, he even has talked about specific individuals,
he wants to pardon, who committed seditious conspiracy and violent assaults on the cops like
Enrique Tariyo, right?
He said, I want to tell you he and other people have been treated horribly and called them
hostages, political hostages.
I'm sorry, but he's not a political hostage.
He's in prison. And you know, just the way he plays
that Jan 6 prison national anthem at his rallies and calls them all hostages and supports them all,
that was, I think that's going to be very powerful evidence that Jack Smith is going to introduce.
Yeah, I think as I said, either last week or on a hot take,
there's just an entire team working for Jack Smith.
That's just scrubbing and scraping.
All of Donald Trump's social media, his statements,
his rallies, his interviews, his debate performances
for testimony, for adverse testimony that they can use against him.
We've said it from the very beginning. Donald Trump thinks he's winning because he's out there
raising money on the backs of lies and thinks he wins the new cycle. So he's going to win the trial.
And it's the exact opposite. It just provides more fodder for a very skilled prosecutor
and a trial team to find the things that will hang in with his own words. And that's
who we're watching now. Rudy Giuliani, going to trial, but not in the case that people
would want at this moment, in the District of Columbia, presided over by Judge Barrow
Howell, formerly the chief judge who was responsible for administrating all of the Jan 6 trials. There's been over 900 either plea, either convictions
by plea or by bench trial or jury trial in the District of Columbia. And she was responsible
for administrating a lot of those when she was the Chief Judge. Now, as just a federal,
as a regular federal judge, she's got cases in front of her like,
the defamation case brought by Shay Moss and Ruby Freeman,
mother daughter team in Georgia,
Fulton County speaking of election vote counting,
and there is a trial coming up in December.
And then finally, we have new reporting today,
new information today, a couple of things.
You got Nevada having indicted,
likely on the backs of some testimony
of a former Trump attorney, a bunch of fake electors, all the fake electors in Nevada,
including those in leadership with the GOP in Nevada. And we got oral argument in Colorado
about the 14th Amendment and whether it, Section 3, and whether it bans Donald Trump from being on the
on the ballot in at any time primary or in the general election because he engaged an insurrection or rebellion against the constitution will cover all of that. But my second
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aura frames. That's what we have going for us today on legal AF. But Rudy Giuliani is
not going to be doing any of that. He's not going to have any money to do any of that because he's going to lose a lot
in this defamation case that's going to trial in december
ruby freeman and shame off settled out with some other right wing media
people like o a n and others leaving really julie and he
who defamed and docks them mercilessly, as that's the Donald Trump,
claiming that they committed voter fraud.
They, the running, the running thematic there
for the Trump organization and the campaign,
and their lawyers like Sydney, Palo, Rudy Giuliani,
was that in Fulton County, which is 80% Democrat,
that's the place where you commit fraud, where it's 80% Democrat, that's the place where you commit fraud,
where it's 80% Democrat, right?
And then the vote counting in Atlanta,
when Ruby Freeman and Shay Moss
with a low paid or no paid job of counting votes,
doing their job,
counting ballots, putting them into optical readers,
taking discarded ballots, putting them in the lockboxes
under their desk, and doing it all over again,
Rinssen repeat, no, to Donald Trump, discarded ballots, putting them in the lock boxes under their desk, and doing it all over again.
Rinsen repeat.
No.
To Donald Trump, who mentioned it during his perfect phone call to Brad Raffinsberger and
to Rudy Giuliani on his podcast on Fox News and anywhere else, and anyone else who would
listen.
This was part of a voter fraud because they were taking fake ballots for Biden,
Biden ballots and stuffing the ballot box electronically
or otherwise, with votes that got dropped off
in suitcases and briefcases that were from China
that whatever else were made up stuff,
that on a thumb drive, on a thumb drive
that Ruby Freeman and Shay Moss were passing back and forth
to each other and taking votes from under the table and putting them into the machine, which is true if you run the video backwards,
which is what they did because actually the ballots were going from the table to the
box, not the other way around.
The Georgia Bureau of Investigation did a full investigation of this as did the Secretary
of States Investigative Body, Investigative Branch, and completely cleared Ruby Freeman and Shay Moss
of any voter fraud whatsoever.
The thumb drive was a breath mint.
That was being passed between the two of them,
and there was nothing untoward or improper,
or fraudulent done by them at all.
They're heroes, they're patriots,
doing their civic duty, and we know it
because it was all caught on film.
Because there's cameras.
None like Donald Trump who tried to drown, bury, burn,
his video cameras at Mar-a-Lago to hide his misdeeds.
These video clips actually exist
and were reviewed by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.
That didn't stop Rudy Giuliani and Donald Trump
despite that from continuing to claim
that they committed voter fraud.
It got so bad that they actually two at least three of the Kochin spirit doors in Georgia
went after Ruby Freeman, including woman named Kutie, Kutie, who used to be a stylist
for Kanye West and black voices for Trump leader, Willie Floyd, and Ray Smith, a reverend who cornered Ruby Freeman,
even bringing her to a police station
to try to coercer, to admit to fraudulently admit to voter fraud.
And that's part of the conspiracy of which Donald Trump
is also tagged in Georgia with Ruby Freeman at the center.
But Ruby Freeman and J. Moss have a civil day in court
to because they were docks because they were almost attacked
physically.
They had to move from their house for protection.
And so they sued Rudy Giuliani.
And Rudy Giuliani did so many things wrong.
And you'd almost have to think
that Rudy never was a member of the bar.
That he was, like it would make a lot more sense
if this was like my cousin Vinnie instead of my cousin Rudy,
where he didn't know the rules of the procedures
he'd never been in federal court before.
I've never been at the big city before.
I'm not all these things work.
But he has a lawyer.
Well, even if he didn't have a lawyer,
Rudy Giuliani is a lawyer for 40 years
in the federal court practice.
So how you are so terrible at being a participant
in the process, that you completely
flout the authority of the judge.
You refuse to provide any of the documents
that you're required to provide.
You refuse to participate in discovery process.
You get sanctioned three times for attorneys fees for over half a million dollars. And then when the judges had enough,
enough Rudy, you lose your ability to defend the case and you get a judgment against you
on liability. How does his lawyer allow it to get to that point? If this was your client,
more than one lawyer. He's got an out of control client that's not, I mean,
unless you bail out, which, you know, some, some tried to, you know, you, you, you,
you know, your client is his own worst enemy. There's not much you can do. Other than
to say, wasn't me, judge, don't sanction me, sanction him. And
that's not what happened today. When he was supposed to show up in court today,
and he didn't show up and the judge was like,
what the heck, you were supposed to be here
and the lawyer was like, oh, that was me, that wasn't him.
Well, that one, that one, he took the bullet,
but where, how we got where we are,
where lawyers are getting screamed at
by the federal judge, this federal judge
has been more than patient.
She has, she has been, her orders have been violated, half a dozen times by Rudy Giuliani important ones and it's gotten so bad that even when she gave him the last chance
To turn over his financial records about his revenue from his podcast
How much money he makes so that the jury has an idea for punitive damage is how much to award if they're going to award any at all
He missed the deadline to do that.
And the judge says, if you don't give this information
within a week's time, I am going to give an instruction,
an adverse inference instruction to the future jury
that tells them that as a matter of law,
they are instructed to conclude
that Rudy Giuliani is trying to hide his money
to suppress his net worth, sound familiar,
except it goes the other way for Trump,
in order to avoid punitive damages
and for good measure that he's not allowed to talk at all
about anything related to liability case.
He's just has to stand there and take it for damages only.
Now Rudy, hearing all of that, decided,
well, my best place to avoid a huge jury, a huge
award is with a jury, is with a judge.
So he argued in the last minute, there's no jury involved here, even though the judge
has already decided that there's going to be a jury.
And that there's no jury.
It really not a damages.
That's a judge thing, not a jury thing.
And the judge says, well, you know,
you may be writing certain circumstances,
but I'm the trial of fact and I want help.
And I want a jury to handle the fact finding
related to the damage amount.
And so we're having a jury trial.
See you guys on whatever day this was yesterday or today
in my courtroom.
And she has ordered him to be there
for every event in the case since.
And he didn't show up today
and what happened with the judge KFA. The judge got very upset, you know, and basically,
you know, it was head scratcher how Giuliani did not show up for this and how he
didn't, how he didn't, you know, he wasn't here to agree to the things that he's
supposed to agree on because the trial starting next week and, you know, he wasn't here to agree to the things that he's supposed to agree on
because the trial is starting next week. And, you know, look, a lot, this is fascinating to me
because, you know, the amount of incompetence that is going on in addition to trying to,
I actually, I don't even know what the strategy is. I can't wrap my head around this
because, and maybe it's because Rudy Giuliani
was such a big figure, larger than my figure in New York for years and years and years, I just can't
believe that he's gone from being, you know, a kind of a, he was America's mayor after 9-11, right?
In addition to being a United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, you know,
someone would say the most prestigious US attorney's office in the country.
He's gone from that to the, you know, to having the press conference outside of the four
seasons, you know, whatever that place was.
Like a landscaping.
And growing up.
Yeah.
I'm instead of the four seasons with, you know, another one where he has that, that, that
hair dye, you know dye dripping down his face.
And now he's in this case, he's just this can't be a strategy.
He's just screwing up at every single turn.
He's not doing anything he's supposed to be doing.
And now, so the latest one was he asked that there not be a jury.
He said, I want just a bench trial, not a jury trial,
because otherwise, the jury instruction
that you're going to read is going to be,
is going to say that this was your only,
the jury's only to consider damages
because he's already been sanctioned.
He's already been found a default judgment as a sanction,
not even a default judgment the way the way, you know, there's no sort of like the way
Judge Angora did in the Trump case saying, you know, I've looked at all the papers and I
think, you know, the plaintiff wins on the papers basically, the papers and all the record
before me.
This isn't a substantive win.
This is a win because of all of the things you
just said that he has not done. And, you know, it's this willful, willful discovery misconduct.
And, you know, he said basically that, that, that what that would prejudice me in front
of a jury. So I just wanted a judge trial and the judge basically said, first of all, the seventh amendment
guarantees the right to a jury trial in a civil case. And why should the plaintiff lose that right
under these circumstances? That would be extremely unfair. And PS, Rudy Giuliani, when we went over
the jury charges, you didn't even object to that one. So now you're objecting, like at the, you know, the 11th hour, it's like, it just seems like his lawyer isn't paying attention and he is just not getting involved at all in this case, but to what end?
I mean, I just don't understand because he's going to, for sure, be found 100% liable and the damages are going to be, you know, the two most compelling
witnesses in the Jack Smith cases are going to be Ruby Freeman and Shay Moss, right? They are, when they testify about what has happened to them, you know, there's not going to be a dry eye in the house and
the same thing is going to go for the Giuliani trial, right? And all of the things that Giuliani said and did about him. And, you know,
I loved, the one thing I did love that I wrote down that, that, that Barrel how I wrote,
he said, you know, the irony of this assertion must be highlighted, given the many opportunities
Giuliani was afforded to comply with his discovery obligations, but to no avail. And
the further opportunities Giuliani was afforded to be heard on any adverse instructions
to be given to the jury, but he consented to those instructions.
And Giuliani's own discovery misconduct necessitated the entry of default judgment against
him, and this court will not reward him for conduct that has already resulted in significant
prejudice to the plaintiffs.
I mean, you know, it's like I just love the way
he phrase that and look, you know, he only has himself to blame and, you know, and then
he doesn't show up today. I mean, I just, the whole thing makes no sense to me how this
is going to go down and how, why this is happening. And, you know, the other question
we were talking about, you know, why have a few questions about the trial for you, the civil lawyers? I love learning from you.
Um, is first of all, it's going to be a jury of eight people. Why eight, not 12, right?
How do you get the number of, of jurors, um, in a civil case? And does it have to be unanimous?
And I'd love to hear, because I love learning from you in these circumstances.
I think you're on mute. Okay, so we're doing jury. All right, so you need between six and 12, and usually the parties, whatever the standard practice is for that courtroom. I've never done
eight. I've done six. I've done nine. And I've done 12. Eight's an odd number, not literally.
It's an even number that happens to be odd.
Generally, it comes from court practice
or consultation with the lawyers that are involved
about how many that they want has to be over six.
Usually it's under 12.
Eight's a weird number.
You read eight because eight, yeah, okay. So all all right so it's eight and in terms of
that it's worry it's like agreed upon well it's statutory between the numbers of six and 12 and
then you can sort of pick what you want in between there and satisfy the requirements. As to, for criminal, it's generally unanimous. For a federal civil,
last time I did a federal civil, I needed, I don't think it's a majority. I think you have
to get, when we go to the next, when you're chatting through the next one, I'll double check about the issue of a unanimity for it.
I might be confusing with the state requirement.
Well, that's why legal AFS great.
I'll figure it out and I will report it.
So we'll follow that trial closely.
It's gonna be tens of millions of dollars awarded
and putative damages by this jury against Rudy Giuliani. And as you and I joke before the show, you know, I think Ruby Freeman and Shay
Moss would like living on the Upper East Side of New York in a condo that Rudy used to
own, or in Florida, in near Mar-a-Lago. I think those are both beautiful places for that.
One question you and I talked about beforehand, and I'd love to hear your thoughts because I don't understand it is
Why they didn't sue Donald Trump? Why did they just sue?
Giuliani I even asked ahead of time. I was like did I miss it was I forget what happened to it because
Logically to not suit when you again when you read what happened to them and who did it?
It was very much Donald Trump and Rudy Giuliani. It wasn't just Rudy Giuliani.
So why they didn't sue Trump, I don't get it. I think these lawyers made a tactical decision
that they did not want to go through. Look, we're three years into an immunity decision, two and a
half years into an immunity decision in DC court of appeals about whether Donald Trump can have civil
liability to the outer boundaries of his office in under the KKK Act for the injuries to the
Capitol Police, Metro Police, and to the elected officials that were running for their lives
during Jan 6th. And the answer just got answered last week.
That issue got raised in the E.G. and Carol case,
as well, and that just got decided or sort of decided,
half decided recently.
And so I think this is not having spoken to these lawyers,
but these lawyers looking around having
sued the media company and gotten a quick settlement and having sued Rudy, coming right off
of that issue of whether Donald Trump's statements are inside his scope or color of his authority
or his campaign or in chief and he's outside, they're doing this kind of pro-se, they're
doing this pro-bono, maybe Maybe a contingency certainly a contingency fee
And you know, you have to pick your you have to pick your battles and the battle that they didn't want is to fight through
Donald Trump and all the immunity issues and Donald Trump's bullshit making a circus as we've seen in I mean what bigger sir he didn't even go to E. Jean Carroll
and it was a circus.
He went to the civil fraud case and it was like the circus like I've never seen as a child.
And so you know what you know what they've avoided in DC they've avoided the circus and
they got Rudy off by himself for him to crap his own diaper which is all he's done since
he's been a defendant in the case and gotten his already lost the case.
And they haven't had a go through the Trump bullshit.
I think if that is the reason, they didn't forget.
It's not because they forgot.
They didn't go, hmm, who are we missing here?
Somebody made a decision in consultation with the client that they didn't want to pick
the fight with Donald Trump and have to be the firm to have to prove whether he has immunity or not for that particular set of actions when
there are all these other low-hanging fruit they could go after. That's the only explanation because
the lawyers are very, very good and the firms are very, very good. I hope that's the explanation.
Yeah, no, I hope that's the explanation. What else do you think? The other thing it could be,
to be honest, is now that I represent clients. I'm not. But I'll say it. The other thing it could be, to be honest, is, you know, now that I represent clients and
I know what goes into the thinking of certain clients, I wonder whether they were afraid
because when you go after Donald Trump, look what he's done.
Look at how he doubles down.
Look at why there's an aging Carol too.
I mean, look at what he does to people.
He's a bully in chief and he got death threats. I mean, look at what he does to people. He's a the bully in chief and he got, they
got death threats. I mean, those were real. And I just hope he didn't silence them and
make it so that they were actually too afraid to bring the case against him. That would
be a shame.
Yeah. I don't know. Knowing that Wilkie Farring Gallagher, which is a major firm at a New
York, it is not going gonna be afraid of Donald Trump.
Now, maybe they're firm.
No, not the lawyers, not the lawyers.
I'm talking about the plaintiffs.
Oh, you're talking about Ruby Freeman and Shay Moss.
Yes, yes, I'm talking, I'm not talking about the lawyers.
Of course, the lawyers aren't afraid.
I'm saying, I wonder if the plaintiffs were like,
I can't go through that again.
I can't go through that again.
Well, the point you're making is a good one,
which is this is a client decision ultimately.
So whether the law firm decided,
look, the path of least resistance for us
to get you the money and connect you to money
is to go after people not named Donald Trump.
But it also could have been,
I don't want to say Donald Trump,
I already law must lost my house.
I had to have law enforcement sitting outside my house
and I don't need Trump,
although Rudy is a part of Trump world,
but not directly
taking on the cult leader.
I like that.
I think that's a very good potential analysis.
One day, maybe we'll have the lawyers for Wilkie Far on the show and we can ask them.
Let's turn our attention on that one.
Let's turn our attention now to breaking news today in Nevada.
A lot of states, Michigan, Arizona, Nevada, the battleground states are looking not Florida,
because if it's governor, are looking at the fake electors and whether they were criminally
liable for impersonating real electors and other things that are on the statute books
for individual states, because if they thought they were going to get away with it,
just participate in the conspiracy that's been, that it's at the heart of at least two
criminal indictments, one in Georgia
and one of the District of Columbia,
they got another thing coming.
And so it took a long time.
I think many of these attorney generals
that are now handling these cases
that are going after them,
waited to see what Jack Smith would do,
what the Jan 6th Committee would do,
what Fonney Willis would do, and
then when the dust settled, they're finally getting around in 2023, late in 2023, to get
their indictments.
Now, the advantage to waiting is a lot of the work has been done for them.
A lot of the heavy lifting has been done for them by Fony Willis and Jack Smith in their
indictments, and in the witnesses that have been disclosed.
For instance, one of the reasons I'm sure that Nevada, Grand jury, indicted all of these
members of the GOP and Nevada for being fake electors is because Ken Chesbro, the now
felon former Trump lawyer, architect with John Eastman of the fake electric scheme, got permission 10 days ago to go to Georgia,
sorry, to go from Georgia, leave Georgia, and the conditions of his release, and go to states
like Arizona and Nevada to cooperate and DC. They were listed by name. And then, whoa, low
and behold, there's a grand jury in Nevada
right after Ken Jess broke visits that indicts those GOP members.
Tell us what you know about the indictments there and then we can touch on Colorado as
we end the podcast.
Yeah, well, the big news coming out of Nevada, right?
The Attorney General, Aaron Ford, announced that six Nevada's, I know you say Nevada,
I'm from California and in California we say Nevada or at least I grew up saying Nevada and I'm
sure there are a lot of people who are cringing right now but that's how I learned it.
Anyway, that they falsely represented themselves as state electors in 2020.
And, you know, look, if you, it just to remind everyone there was Republicans in seven different
states, right?
Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, and Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, who hatched
the fake electors scheme and pretended to be the duly elected and qualified electors, right?
And then these documents were sent to the United States
Senate as well as the archivist.
And it was done as if they were the legitimate electors.
And Michigan and Georgia, if I already filed criminal charges
because of this scheme, Fani Willis and Georgia,
did the big sweeping rico case that in addition
to charging some electors charge the lawyers church Trump and
Others in the scheme. They were 19 total and in Michigan
the attorney general there only
Indicted the fake electors. They didn't go up the food chain if you will and Nevada seems to have
Gone has seems seems to have followed Michigan's
lead and
indicted six Republican fake electors,
including the chairman of the RNC in that state.
And you know, each person was charged with two felony charges.
I think they carried a max of one is five years,
the other is four years.
The charges are offering a false instrument for filing and uttering a forged instrument
by submitting fraudulent documents to state
and federal officials.
So that's when they submitted the fake electors,
the slates to the archives and to the Senate.
And the Attorney General opened this investigation
a mere few weeks ago, despite previously saying they
were unlikely to do so because of the fact that Chesbro is cooperating and has made the
difference.
So this is huge that they're going to be held accountable.
And that is, that that's happening now.
When this came down and in preparation for the podcast,
I went back to the Jack Smith indictment just to just remind
myself what the allegations are in Nevada.
And you know, Jack Smith goes state by state.
There's a whole section on the states and the fake electors
and he goes in alphabetical order, you know, Arizona and Pennsylvania,
Wisconsin, Michigan, you know, whatever, it's in alphabetical order,
but there's no Nevada in there, which I thought was very strange because why isn't there
a separate section for Nevada? But it is mentioned in the indictment, it's just not a separate
section. Anyway, so it's just interesting to me that the conduct there, perhaps, is not
quite as egregious as in other states, or maybe the Trump wasn't as involved there as he was
in the other states. Who knows? But there's clearly a case. It was clearly part of the
part of the common, you know, part of the scheme, the plan, you know, given the fact that Chesbro was
able to provide this information and this testimony that was the key to being able to indict this case.
So, um, so I think. So I think there's other investigations
and other states going on as well.
I think Arizona has an open investigation
and there's rumblings that's same with other states.
So finally, people are starting to be held accountable
for this scheme.
And just again, to remind everybody,
the defense here is going to be,
we're allowed, we were allowed to do this. In fact, there's precedent for it in the 60s,
in the Kennedy election in Hawaii. It was so close that they did a, Kennedy's people put together in a case slate of electors, if you will.
In case it turns out when they actually
recount the votes, he wins.
They didn't submit them as the actual electors, though.
They just had them there, just in case he won.
And in fact, he did win.
And so they ended up using those electors.
So they actually turned out to be the real electors.
So it's just a matter.
But so that doesn't mean you can lie and put in a fake slate of electors. So they actually turned out to be the real electors. So it's just a matter, but so that doesn't mean you can lie
and put in a fake slate of electors,
because these weren't just in case electors.
These were actually being held out
as the legitimate electors in an effort
to try to steal the election from Biden.
Yeah, Nixon and Hawaii and Kennedy are apples and oranges.
They first called the state for Nixon, and there were electors that stepped up.
They then recounted and called the state properly for Kennedy, which helped put them over
the top.
And then those electors, that's different than certifying that your electors are the real
electors, sending them to the sending them to the national archive,
the judge of your state and to Mike Pence to try to get them to be recognized as the real
electors. That didn't happen. They love that Nixon versus Kennedy case, except they totally
just stored it and mistayed it, which is usually pointed out. And we're going to watch,
we're probably not going to cover it too much detail today, because we're just, we want to really re-through it.
But Colorado is holding oral argument at the Supreme Court level in Colorado about whether
the 14th Amendment Section 3 applies to Donald Trump as president, really the sole issue
for them on appeal, because the only issue that the trial judge we think got wrong is that the 14th Amendment section 3
doesn't apply to a former president. Everything else she found, the engagement in insurrection and
rebellion against the Constitution, she found all that as a matter of fact and her fact-finding,
but then sort of fumbled, we think, on the interpretation of legislative history. And what the framers wanted about the 14th amendment
in the reconstruction period after the Civil War,
in which there were lots of loyalty tests
in different step-aik than the different statutes,
as the Union tried to be reconstructed,
put back together again after the Civil War.
And so the question is, was Jefferson Davis
able to run for office after having left the
union and become the first president of the Confederacy?
Would it have applied to him or not?
There's a lot of debate, literally legislative debate at the time about its application to
rebel like Jeff Davis.
And that all applies here.
The Supreme Court were getting the reports of the oral argument,
is trying to, I think they understand they got to make this decision before, well, before
this particular election. But there still seems to be a debate in the oral argument that's,
that's just wrong about what is the insurrection or rebellion. Because I can tell from some of
the questions and answers that are being given, that they're still focusing on Jan 6th, and like, where they armed, where they armed,
he controlled them.
I'm talking about the people that attacked the Capitol,
the more than 2,000 people.
That is not the insurrection or rebellion
for the 14th Amendment analysis.
And everybody who's a constitutional scholar
and everybody that's looked at the issue,
like Michael Ludic, the former federal judge
and federalist
society lion has said that it's just read the provision. It's an insurrection rebellion against the
Constitution and the Constitution was rebelled against and by Donald Trump when he refused to the peaceful transfer of power
Not when he participated in one way or the other and giving the command to attack the capital.
That's different.
And but it looks like they're all,
they're still kind of running through some
of confusing dialogue at the Colorado Supreme Court level.
But we'll report on that more in some hot takes.
Ben and I'll pick it up on this,
the weekend edition of LegalAF
because we've reached the end
of the midweek edition of legal AF.
I do it every Wednesday for the last three and a half years with Karen Friedman nickname
below.
And then every and for four years, with Ben, my cell is hard to believe these these
time has passed only a month.
I can't believe it's been that long.
Has it really been that long?
Yeah, March will be four years.
For what we call the beginning of legal AF,, it started as, we can, legal roundup, legal
update.
I forgot we called it, it was terrible, whatever, whatever you can find it on YouTube, it's
terrible.
But that was the beginnings of LegalAF, it's like those early, it's like that first episode
pilot of Star Trek, you know, from the 60s that they had to redo because people didn't
like it. Then we redid it and people people liked it.
But there's ways to support the show.
First of all, where do you find us?
Right where you're watching,
exclusively on the Midas Touch Network, free free subscribe.
I never thought I'd say this number.
Help them get that two million free subscribers of crazy number,
but they're going to get there.
They're going to get there because you're going to hopefully free subscribe
because you like the content of shows like League of L.A.F. and all the other
podcasts that are on the network and content creators that are on the network. And this is all
free what I'm talking about. Then go over to all the audio podcast platforms that you like, whatever,
we're there. We're at every one of them. There's not one that we're not on. Go listen to us. That's
all you got to do. It's free also. Listen, watch, watch, listen, same show, watch the hot takes, pick us up on the playlist on the mic, on the mic,
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and participation, and interaction, and comments, and thumbs up, and it all helps with the algorithm.
It keeps us on the air.
And that's what we ask for.
Maybe one day we'll have a Patreon account.
We talked about it.
Another way to do it, you can get some free exclusive stuff from the legal AF leaders. We might try that in January with some
other developments in legal AF land. But for now, this is the way to do it. And then
if you want to fly your flag of legal AF, we have merch. Here it is at store.mytustouch.com.
They're not free, but they're reasonably priced. We've got some
great t-shirts, we've got coffee mugs, I think, still, and some other things. You can mix
and match the logos with the t-shirt colors and the style and all of that. It's some amazing stuff.
And then just support us, the leaders of Legal AF who collectively have, I don't know, 75 years
of experience or more in the courtrooms that we talk about. Uh, you know, we do hot takes, you know, because we have fast moving stories that can't wait until Wednesday and Saturday, and we want to do earlier.
And we put these hot takes up on the legal, on the Midas Touch platform.
Um, and if you want to find, well, I only like Karen.
That's fine. I only like Ben.
But, but, Pop, hope, you can go over to playlists
and you'll find our body of work, our library of work for our individual hot takes about legal
issues that are interested to us and we hope will be interesting to you. But this is the end of
the podcast. Until next Wednesday for Karen and me signing off, shout out to the Midas Mighty and the
Legal Aethers.