Legal AF by MeidasTouch - The Gutting of the Voting Rights Act
Episode Date: July 4, 2021On this very special 4th of July episode (No. 15) of Legal AF, MeidasTouch’s Sunday law and politics podcast, hosts MT founder and civil rights lawyer, Ben Meiselas and national trial lawyer and str...ategist, Michael Popok examine Chief Justice Roberts continued assault on fairness in the election funding and voting process. First, Ben—podcasting from "outer space"—and a very terrestrial Popok explore the Supreme Court’s right-wing majority and Justice Alito’s gutting of the Voting Rights Act (VRA) and the 15th Amendment, in finding that Arizona’s new voter suppression laws making mail in voting harder, and disenfranchising accidental wrong precinct voting, are constitutional. Ben also observes that Alito’s "five factor" analysis to be used in future VRA cases addressing the time, method and means of voting, is not only "made up," but will be used to kill what’s left of the law the next time around. Popok gives Ben a “Pop” quiz on which chief justice from 200+ years ago set the course for how the Supreme Court operates today. Next, the LAF co-hosts dissect Chief Justice Roberts’ majority decision finding that California’s attempts to regulate charity fraud through disclosure of major donors is overbroad and violative of the First Amendment and its freedom of association clause, allowing even more dark money to flood into our electoral system. The co-hosts round out the Supreme Court review with a look at decisions this term that address social rather than political and electoral issues, including a decision to leave in place a lower court’s ruling that discriminating against transgender people by forcing them to not use the bathroom that aligns with their identity violates the 14th Amendment and Title IX. SCOTUS' inconsistent approach to social and religious issues this term is also discussed. Next up, a topic of the LAF law school students have been waiting for: Cosby and the 5th Amendment, where Ben and Michael respectfully disagree on what Cosby was promised by prosecutors before he sat for a civil deposition, and debate whether the 5th Amendment is more important than any one celebrity defendant, no matter his crimes. And of course, no LAF podcast would be complete without a hard look at NY’s indictment of the Trump Organization and its long-time CFO on 15 counts of tax fraud, the existence of a Trump “second set of books,” and what it may mean for the Former 45 and family in the near term. Easter Egg Alert: Back by popular demand, more Popok Paper Crumpling! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Midas Touch legal AFBA stands for analysis and the F stands for friends.
Your legal AF hosts bend my cellus broadcasting from apparently outer space right now and Michael
Popak of Zupano, Patricia and Popak.
And I'm from Garagos, Garagos.
And I say outer space because Popak, I don't know if you know this about me, but I am a
big hater publicly of Zoom backgrounds.
I talk shit about it for no reason.
When people have Zoom backgrounds, I make fun of them. But right now, I found
a zoom background where I'm in outer space. And I like it. And I'll tell you why I think
I'm self-conscious of my background. You know, I taped these legal A.F.s in the office
room that I've been delegated by my girlfriend. I had the office space in our spot and then she took the
office space over and kind of moved me here to kind of a half closet, half office space.
I was doing a business call the other day and someone really kind of talked shit about
it and I had it on speaker phone and my girlfriend heard them speaking shit about the location
and she's like, see, I told you.
And I'm like, no, you're the one who moved me to begin with.
So I'm self conscious.
I got this great background.
I'll take a screenshot for everybody.
So all of the might as mighty can see it.
But anyway, Pope, I'm talking too much.
How are you today?
I'm doing great.
And the last time, well, I always say coast to coast and cover to cover.
Now I'm going to say coast to coast, cover to cover and interstellar.
And we're going to use a clip from this to put it online because then how everybody
isn't intrigued.
Also the last time you told this story about your girlfriend and the room next store,
she was using a lot of power tools which concerned me for various reasons as to what she was
building or what she was up to.
Oh, of course, and it was all good.
I think it was a table in the other room.
That's, I guess I'm oversharing on this legal AF
a little bit already, but one of the things about me
as well is although I give great legal information
and I think I'm pretty good lawyer practicing. I cannot build
anything. When we have to bring in those IKEA tables, when we went and we purchased like an
outside patio from a place a few months ago to assemble, you might as well been telling me I was building the Martian
Rover because those instructions I could never figure out.
And it was funny because we hired somebody to build it.
I would have paid the guy like 1500 bucks because it seemed like the hardest task ever.
And at the end of it when he was done with it, he quoted me $120 and I was like, I gave
a great tip, I was so
grateful. And then my girlfriend, so cheap, she was just like, then mostly everyone can build
something like that. You should not think that that was an incredibly impressive guess.
My legal intern built my entire reception area, proud to say, and she did a great job.
Different sides of the brain, but the sides of our brain that you all care about
is not the side of the brain to build your table
because that's not why you're listening to this podcast,
listen to build a table podcast for that.
This is legal AF where we cover this week,
so the most recent legal news,
and of course there's some great legal news.
This week and also some challenging and difficult
legal news that we need to confront.
So in this legal AEP, we're gonna speak about
the Trump Corporation and Alan Weiselberg being indicted.
If we did not cover that,
y'all would be like, what in the world
is the purpose of legal AEP?
So we're gonna hit that.
We're gonna talk about the Cosby Supreme Court ruling that basically set Cosby free.
We've heard about Supreme Court rulings that overturn lower court rulings,
but a ruling that just completely overturns it and says, you know what?
Not only did the trial court get it wrong, you shouldn't even been charged.
Well, at least it was the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.
It was the Pennsylvania, it wasn't Florida for once.
And let's start where we're going to start, which is some Supreme Court rulings.
We're going to talk about some difficult decisions involving voting rights and difficult meeting, really gutting voting rights, making it easier
for anonymous donors to inject dark money into the political processes.
And we're going to talk about a good situation where the Supreme Court, again, was not intervening
in a dispute over transgender rights in favor of a transgender man at the
time a high school student who wanted to use the boys' bathroom and was being told he
had to use the nurses' bathroom.
And so it was a win for transgender rights that the Supreme Court was not going to hear
a case in the lower courts held, but let's get into these voting right cases.
And we turned to all places Arizona
where the fraudet is taking place.
And this Supreme Court ruling involved a dispute
in Arizona, Bronovitch, versus the Democratic National Committee.
versus the Democratic National Committee. This was a challenge to basically to volunteers helping people vote who are working hard.
I don't want to, I will use the term that you heard out there, but this is the idea of the KPP
or as PopoX says, the QD Pi kind of talking points version of it when they call it
ballot harvesting, you know, which is really a volunteer going to homes and people are
working hard and saying, hey, we can help deliver the ballots for you. You have to vote,
you have to seal, you have to have an under penalty of perjury. There was zero evidence whatsoever that there was
any fraud in this process that the volunteers were somehow
forcing people to vote in certain ways. But there was a state
and Arizona state limitation on that. And so this case
addressed, whether these states can make these types of limitations.
And the court didn't just reach the issue in this case, but set forth a four or five point
test that kind of went a little bit above and beyond, which is, Popok will tell you,
you know, Boads not very well for democracy, challenging these discriminatory voting rights measures
that we now see across the country.
Popeye, I'm a bit looklicious.
I'm talking too much in this podcast.
It's your turn.
It's because I'm in outer space.
You're literally high.
You're in outer space right now.
Feeling a certain vibe, right?
Right.
And you and I have showed our age.
I'm older than you, but you've showed our age. They don't call it outer space anymore. They call it space.
Well, you know, as a litigator at my firm, I age and dog year. So I think I'm about 20 years older
than I hope. So let's talk about what happened in Arizona. We're going to talk about what happened
in California. We're going to couple those two things together on the attacks in our election system.
And it really comes down as you and I anticipated last week and the podcast, even before that.
This is rapidly becoming, as he's desired, the Roberts court.
Roberts, as he's done certain things well, like preserve Obamacare and on some social issues,
like transgender rights and other discrimination against the LGBTQ community.
So on those issues, he comes out okay, but he has had ever since he was a lawyer in the
Reagan administration, he's had a hard
on against voting rights and the voting rights act.
So legal term.
Legal term.
Yeah, I've probably got to use one.
And so 10 years ago, he gutted, he was in the majority, that gutted section five of
the Voting Rights Act, which had the Department of Justice supervising certain
historically prejudicial and biased states
in there the way they run their elections.
That was good.
That Shelby County vs. Holder?
Correct.
So that's good.
Now he's got his hands around the Voting Rights Act
in section two, which is the only thing left in the Voting Rights Act,
which was passed if people remember the movie about Malcolm X,
I'm sorry about Martin Luther King and the crossing of the Pettit Bridge.
That was to get the Voting Rights Act passed by Congress,
and it was amended later on.
The only thing really left in terms of its teeth to support this 15th amendment, which
we don't talk about too much, but the 15th amendment, which is really important, was passed
after the Civil War in order to protect the right to vote by freed slaves at that time.
Of course, it's been applied beyond that to all minorities who are subject to bias and discrimination.
So the Voting Rights Act supports the 15th Amendment
through section two.
It's the same section that the Department of Justice
used last week when it filed its case against Georgia.
It has become toothless under the current ruling.
A sensibly was addressing two recent laws passed by Arizona, which was
done under the guise of voter protection, voter fraud elimination, which we know what
that means, voter suppression, and an attack to things that you've mentioned.
One of them is the collection of mail-in ballots by people.
So when you're housebound, you're a nursing home,
or you work 22 out of 24 hours
and you can't make it to the polls,
who gets the deliver that ballot
to the proper election official?
And the Arizona law criminalizes
by saying that if you're not the caregiver,
an immediate family member, a person in the household or an election official,
you can't deliver a ballot if you do it's a crime. So that means a law-biting citizen that wants to help their neighbor,
whose housebound or in a nursing home, make sure that their ballot counts as committed a crime under Arizona law.
The second attack on the means and methods and manner of voting has to do with wrong
precinct voting, which is exactly what it sounds like.
It's where you think you're in precinct 72 and you show up at 71 and the election official
takes your ballot, that ballot is canceled out and disenfranchised by Arizona.
And you think, well, how hard a problem is that?
Well, I saw statistics that out of the entire country,
an all wrong precinct voting, which happens one third of it happens in Arizona.
So one third of wrong precinct voting happens in Arizona. So one third of wrong-preasing voting
happens in Arizona.
Now, the argument is either that the precincts
are really confusing.
And so the information that's being given out to people
to show up at the right polling place is confusing.
And that falls indiscriminately or discriminately
on Native Americans, blacks, and Hispanics, and others.
And that's the argument that this
is racially biased in its application disproportionately.
And so Alito got the majority decision.
He was given to him by, I'm sure, Justice Roberts.
And he established a test, basically watering down to next to nothing the voting is right the voting is act
So he established five factors as you will pop with the paper. Oh, sorry
I think we keep that in the pod the last time we took it out of the pod
But the last time I did it the clip got a ton of views.
Like the little shifting notes right by that mic.
All right. So the Alito five back to the Alito five days in the pod
stays in the pot. Alito five factors looks at the law as to time,
matter, and place of voting, which which Alito declared as the first
time the Supreme Court has ever looked at the Voting Rights Act versus that type of restrictions on voting.
And he says, you have to look at this in its totality. You have to look at the size of the burden on voting. You have to look at the deviation from the standard methods of voting in place in 1982. So you have to take a time machine back to 1982
when the Voting Rights Act which last amended.
And you have to say, is the new restriction so out of the norm,
so aboriginal that it wouldn't have been considered in 1982,
sort of a weird standard?
Three is the size of the impact on the voting.
So you look at statistics.
Four is, you have to look at the voting system as a whole.
How many different methods of voting does the state have?
Mail in, early voting, walk into your precinct,
all absentee voting, you have to look at all of the voting
in its totality.
And fifth, you have to look at this, what is the stated policy that the state is addressing
or allegedly addressing?
And Alito went through the entire factors and said, no, we're fine with all this.
Let me break it down right there.
I hope I can for one second.
So Alito, for all the people listening out there, just made this shit up.
Okay.
These five factors, which are now the law, how did it come about?
Like literally made up, I mean, and so that's one of the things when we talk about, like the law,
it's why it's a practice of law and not a science of law, because now those five factors that Popat just described based on the Supreme
Court saying that is now the law and that doesn't come from a statute. That doesn't come
from when the Voting Rights Act was actually passed and those things enumerated. That is a activist judge in 2021, making it up, and notice when you actually go through
those made up standards, what will happen?
In this case, it basically upheld the Arizona restrictions.
And in all future cases, most likely, in almost all circumstances, it also will.
Because the states are always going to say, look, the strength of our interests are high,
you know, where a state in terms of opportunities to provide that the state provides for other
forms of voting, they're going to say, look, on election day, you can vote.
And look, we have voting from this time. And look, there still is early voting taking place
in terms of the size of the burden imposed.
It's like the argument saying,
well, look, sure, there are black water fountains
that are right next to the white water fountains.
What's the burden here?
All you have to do is go to those water fountains.
It's the rare.
It's just a two minute difference.
And so when you go through all of those factors,
like the key factor is its disparity
on the impact of different racial groups.
That is the point of why there should be a one factor test.
If this is a racially motivated racist law,
the inquiry should end.
You shouldn't have to balance that on the scales of justice against four racist standards.
I agree with you.
They reversed engineer a series of factors so that they can apply it in future cases to
almost never find a voting rights act violation.
To your point and for our listeners,
so they have some historic perspective,
the right-wing judges would have normally said
when they don't want to disturb a law
that they find supportive of their values,
they would say, we're not legislators, we're not Congress.
We don't make law, we apply the law.
Well, the law that Congress wrote said, you look at the totality of circumstances in
order to determine if there's a violation of the Voting Rights Act.
That's all they said.
Alito and his gang of five decided to say, let's put five factors onto that.
That's what legislators do.
That's what Congress would have done. If
they wanted that to be the test, Congress would have written it into the law. They didn't.
And for this Congress, to with a straight, this Supreme Court with a straight face, to
look the American people in the eye and say they're not making law and they're not gutting
the Voting Rights Act, is it disservice and is disingenuous?
I think Justice Kagan said it best in the dissent.
And here's what she said, Obama appointees, she said.
What is tragic here is that the court has,
yet again, rewritten in order to weaken
a statute that stands as a monument to America's greatness
and protects against its basis impulses.
What is tragic is that the court has damaged a statute designed to bring about the end
of discrimination in voting.
Those words right there, you can't say it more directly other than to say Alito is a fucking racist and the majority
just abolished all of our abilities to address the systemic racism in voting that millions
of Americans fought and marched for in the past.
And here's an important thing when we think about laws in general.
Elena Kagan, Justice Elena Kagan, Obama appointee. She has a view of things right there,
which I agree with, but under her view, unlawful,
a law violator, illegal, what her view is
and what the Alito court says is now the law. So for all those people, yeah,
but I mean, what Alito said in the Roberts court, what Alito said leading that, that
majority opinion, that is the law now. That's, that's it. And so when all of you out there,
you know, or you had friends or wherever goes, yeah, you know, we talk about some of the
podcast plot. Yeah. I wasn't going to vote for Hillary Clinton because blah blah blah blah. Here you go
Here you go this this one's free this one's for you
But this is why you got to fight harder and harder and harder because the law isn't this
You know scientific thing that we look under a microscope and say it's the law
It's made by men and women and people. And we have to
avoid in the words of K-Gin right there, our basis impulsies. That's what we're fighting for.
And meanwhile, you have a law like this that will allow humanity, will allow Americans who want
to harm the right to people to vote?
You know what the most disgusting thing about reading the decision was, and it's not just
the leader.
This is the six people that are the right wing on the Robert's Court, on the Supreme
Court.
They all believe, because you've seen it time and time again in their decisions over the last 10 years, and in this last term, that there is no institutional racism in this country, that racism has been resolved, that there's no longer a need for the federal government to intervene in voting, to supervise voting, to worry about this in franchisement, that it doesn't happen any longer.
That's why things like affirmative action
are also under assault,
but we'll see that probably next turn.
And that is endemic to all of the members of that group
of six, and we're seeing it manifested in decisions
like this, and the most disgusting thing
about the decision is to have a leado
because he had to do it.
Give a recitation of the History of the Foding Rights Act
and biased in racism against primarily black and brown people.
He had to write that.
It was lip service.
But when he writes it, if you read it carefully,
it looks like he's talking about like a bygone era
where this stuff doesn't happen anymore.
Like America used to be a place where racial bias took over invoting.
Hello, it's still going on.
And your job as a lifetime of waiting to the Supreme Court is to protect the
underprivileged and the disadvantaged.
And that's what Kagan and Sotomayor in the next case talks about and they're
just sent.
And it's Earth shattering and it boasts terribly for the next term because as we'll tell our
listeners now, they're done issuing decisions.
We've exhausted all of the Supreme Court decisions for the summer now in July 2.
We're going into the July 4th weekend.
And now we're going to talk about the cases that they're going to be taking or have taken.
So when they start the new term in September,
and what it means, and if what this means,
and I'll save this next comment
or the development of it for the next segment,
if what this case in the case in California means
is that Roberts is concentrating his power
and that he is getting a
gorsuch and Kavanaugh to come along for the ride. Then all of those things that you and I
talked about, all the Kumbaya 9-0 decisions isn't a great and yes, actually statistically,
there have been more 9-0 decisions this year than in past years as a standard. It all is for nothing
when it comes down to the key issues that our followers
and listeners care about for next term, because they're just gaining strength and they're gaining
confidence and their ability to grab the votes necessary for the majority.
Yeah, and these are the issues that are central to our democracy and the survival of our democracy. I want to talk about the
next case, Popeyes. We actually talked about this case a few podcasts ago. This is Americans
for Prosperity versus, I believe it's pronounced, Bonta, B-O-N-T-A. And this case is in California. Americans for prosperity is a fake
group that was created by the Koch brothers for the specific purpose of
challenging a law that would enable them to give donations in these cases,
quasi charitable donations without revealing their identity.
And they created this group,
they got this case to go through the Supreme Court
with the idea of groups like the Koch brothers
and others want to inject dark money into politics, and
they don't want to disclose their identity.
And so we'll talk about this case while it has focused on a specific scenario in California.
Its ramifications about dark money and politics across the board are broader because the Supreme
Court ruled that in this case, this particular group, this Koch brothers-backed group, did
not have to disclose their identity and could have donated anonymously while influencing
the system. So, Popeyes, if you could just talk briefly about Americans
for prosperity and the implications.
And evil shout out to the Thomas Moore law firm,
which is the Koch, well, there's one brother left, one died.
It's the Koch brother go to made up law firm
that brings all of these conservative cases
in our listeners and go look them up and see, and see what's behind the Koch brother in this case.
So here we have Justice Roberts putting his impromotor on the change in the law again.
This is the same Justice Roberts who in 2010 was part of the majority, the five-four majority
in the Citizens United case, which opened the floodgate, the corporate dark money,
into our election system.
So this is just the second leg of the stool.
Him having voted there in 2010.
Now he's got his hands around anonymity in donations.
It applies to charities, but I don't see why wouldn't also
apply to PACs as we discussed at another podcast, California,
has a regulation on its books
that the Attorney General of your state
requires the charities reveal their big donors,
not publicly, but to the Attorney General,
so that they can regulate charities.
Why does that matter?
Because California has one thirdthird of the charitable donations
in this country go through charities in terms of volume of dollars in California. So it's an
important public policy for the state of California to make sure they regulate just like they regulate
pension funds and they regulate the stock market and things like that in California as well.
stock market and things like that in California as well. And so as you had predicted, because we'd seen the briefing, then, the Supreme Court used
a 1960s law that was precedent.
This is where they like precedent.
When they like precedent, they grab onto it and choke at the death, when they don't like
precedent, they won't follow it and they'll create new law.
So the law that they've latched onto, which makes you and I feel really, really uncomfortable,
is NAACP versus Alabama, which was as you want to give your little riff down that because
you had a nice one last time with you.
Yeah, look, the NAACP did not want to disclose the identity of its donors because they would get killed by the KKK,
and they would be subject to lynching. And so there was an overriding concern, a safety
concern about keeping donors anonymous because they would get killed. And that was the logic in that case. And here, appealing to that law,
the Koch brothers basically said,
look, if we have to disclose
that we're contributing to democracy,
we can be killed by terrorists.
Al Qaeda could come after us.
And ISIS could come after us.
And playing the victim of rich white billionaires being prosecuted
or being persecuted for giving donations.
When at the end of the day, we want to persecute to make sure that it's not far in money that's
come amongst other things, that it's not far in money that's finding its way into the political system through shell
corporations and through other entities in the United States.
And that the overall contribution scheme is fair and transparent.
Right.
And so Roberts latched on to that law, the NAACP versus Alabama, and basically said, this is a first
amendment violation on its face, the law requiring charities to disclose their big voters, because
the first amendment, and this is Robert's summary, because the first amendment also protects
the right of association, the right to being a club or a charity
or to associate with other people is also protected by the First Amendment, just as donations
are a form of expression that is protected by the First Amendment.
So you have freedom of association protected by the First Amendment on one hand, and then
you have what Roberts considered to be an over-broad statute, an over-broad law in California,
because he thought that there are less intrusive ways
to accomplish whatever the public policy is,
which is to regulate charities and make sure
that there's no fraud being committed.
He thought it was over-broadroad and they applied a standard because we're
opening up last law school here for a moment. They applied the standard not at strict scrutiny,
which is the highest level of constitutional analysis that the Supreme Court can use,
but one level down from that is called exacting scrutiny. And to pass the exacting scrutiny test,
a law has to be substantially, has to be a substantial
connection between the law and the public policy and not be so overbroad.
So using that lens or that razor, Robert said, nah, I don't like this law, it's overbroad,
it violates the first amendment on its face.
Could California with this guidance redo its law to come within the confines and not be overruled
by Americans from prosperity, probably.
But this boat's terribly again, if you couple the bookends of citizens united with American
prosperity, you know, put them together.
This is just going to be open the floodgates of dark money through charity impacts into
our system without the ability of a government to regularly.
Popoq talked about strict scrutiny, exacting scrutiny, and when you look for the Constitution to find specifically where those things are located in the Constitution,
I want you to look fucking nowhere because it's all made up, and none of that is in the Constitution. And these are
made up things again.
Did you say that?
No, but you, but when you see the building blocks of these issues and where these things
are coming from, I want our listeners to know how, you know, and the theme of this is that this is all man-made bullshit
and it reflects power dynamics. And it's very important that, again, going back to Kagan's ruling,
is that the law evolves positively so that our basis instincts as humanity can be curbed and that we can reflect on the past
problems and build a future of true prosperity, not a fucking sigh ops prosperity for America
run by billionaire so that they could inject dark money into our political system.
Let me just read for everybody out there who goes, wait a minute, is this what this is what the first amendment says? No. Let me just read to you what the
first amendment says. Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press
or the right of the people, people, peace, peaceably to assemble and to petition the government for
a redress or grievance.
That is what our framers wrote.
Everything else that Popak just said has been what the law has been made up over time
to be such that a billionaire winds about their first amendment right not to disclose who
they are as they use their billions
of dollars to manipulate our government so they can get more money for themselves.
So, let me gently and gendtimately push back ever so slightly on my coast, which is you,
with two observations. One, the entire role of the Supreme Court and our co-equal branches of government is effectively
made up by, right, made up by who, which justice made up what the Supreme Court's role is
in evaluating laws and deciding whether they're lawful or not.
Oh, don't give me like a quiz on it.
Chief Justice Marshall.
All right, so Chief Justice Marshall, before Marshall,
there was a Supreme Court, but it did not have the role
in American society or the three
co-equal branches of government until he declared
what the role of the Supreme Court was going to be.
And ever since, we've allowed.
So I'm with you, but if we didn't have a declaration
by a court, nowhere written in the Constitution to flesh out its role,
we wouldn't even have a Supreme Court doing what it's doing.
And some people might be thinking,
well, that might not be a bad thing.
But overall, if you look at the course of history,
it's important that we have a Supreme Court
that plays that role in a democracy.
But the second observation is,
there's many laws that you and I and our listeners love a lot
That are also nowhere written in the Constitution
abortion rights the right to choose things like affirmative action. Yes, they're under assault
But there are things that that under whether they call it the penumbra of rights or or right of privacy
Which is also nowhere technically in the Constitution.
It had to be a supreme court, not this one, a brighter one, a better one that didn't go
to their base instincts, but that developed laws that went beyond the four corners of
the Constitution.
And we like that when it, let's be frank, we like it when it when it aspires to our higher ideals.
We hate it when things right in front of our very eyes like it like a train wreck are being gutted.
Yeah, and I would just push back ever so ever so gently back at you, which I never said it wasn't,
it wasn't made up at all.
I just wanted people to know that it is made up and that it is bullshit and that these
laws that are being applied and these various tests are ways to justify appealing to our
basis, our basis instincts possible, and not the higher ideals.
And the things that you mentioned, when we talk about the concepts of equality, when we
talk about what freedom is, all of those things you mentioned, whether it's the right of
a woman to choose, whether it's the right of people to be free from slavery, whether
it's the right of people to have equal rights.
Those are things that I think are truly embedded in the Constitution, either expressly or
impliedly, in where we need to be going as a country, but the ideas of a strict scrutiny
versus exacting scrutiny and applying that
to these specific back patterns.
In the Koch brothers instance,
I mean to me is problematic for a lot of reasons,
but I think it is to show people
going back to exactly what Kagan said.
It is important that we have justices on the Supreme Court that want to create a situation
for equality for all.
With these rulings, we don't want them creating a billionaire oligarchy like you have in Russia or other places and to permit laws like in the first case we discussed that will harm minorities.
But the Supreme Court did, I suppose, do a good thing by defaulting by doing nothing. Not defaulting is probably not the best word by not taking a case.
probably not the best word by not taking a case. And this case was Gloucester County School Board versus Graham. I alluded to it earlier about a transgender man wanting to use the men's
bathroom at that time. It was a high school student. So it was the boys' bathroom in high school.
He was told he had to use the nurses bathroom or the women's bathroom.
It worked its way through all different court systems, but it was ultimately in the fourth
circuit, which ruled in favor of the man.
In this case, the Supreme Court, there was another case that we talked about on the past podcast
too, which supported transgender rights. The Supreme Court let the Court of Appeal forth
circuit decision hold. And so it was a victory for transgender rights and that ability for
him to use the men's bathroom, not being overturned, which, yes, it's a victory,
but it should be viewed as something that he should be able to do.
And the treatment, the fact that the Gloucester County School Board would exhaust so much
resources to force this high school man at the time, you know, in the boys' bathroom,
to force him to go to the, to use the nurse and then made it a federal issue to go after him.
I could only just imagine the amount of just pain and suffering that this man went through just trying to yearnate.
Yeah, I'll tell you though, from our perspective, you're my perspective on our listeners.
This term on social issues, everybody's head is just spinning because we can't figure
out where the center of gravity to continue your interstellar mission here, where the center
of gravity is for this Supreme Court.
And we've talked about a number of these cases.
Let me see if I can just sequence them.
You've got cases like this one in which,
and the one just prior to it, in which transgenders cannot be,
transgender people cannot be told what bathroom to use,
or in sport.
And so they seem to be, the court seems to be okay with upholding versions of
transgender rights. Okay. Then at the same time when it comes to religious expression and
transgender rights, they found, no, we had a case in Pennsylvania just recently where
they said, well, but we don't want LGBTQ foster parents. It's okay of Catholic
charities discriminate against them. So you have to sequence that in there with the social
position of this court. Then at the, in the same breath, because they whipped out all these
cases, these like the last gasp of cases for this term, all the last couple of days, the same
time they didn't take up the appeal and therefore let's stand the ruling in favor of this transgender student.
They also had a florist out, I think, in your neck of the woods who didn't want to make
a floral arrangement in same-sex marriages and led by the same lawyers who had brought
the case of the baker just three or four years ago who didn't
want to make a cake for same-sex unions. In that one, the Supreme Court ruled seven and two
in favor of the Baker and said he didn't have to be forced against his religious conviction.
But then just now this week they said the florist could be found to have violated
somebody's simple liberties because she didn't make flower arrangements.
They are all over the map.
And the problem I have with the court is that I almost get the sense.
I want to get your opinion on this.
I get the sinking feeling and the sneaky suspicion that one of the things
Robert thinks is going to appease people and make them feel like it's not always going to be a six to three on important issues is that he throws a bone.
Now and again on social issues like transgender rights and the Obama care ruling and the florist who doesn't want to make a flower arranger arrangement is committing a civil rights violation.
arrangement is committing a civil rights violation, while saving the heavy artillery for the bigger picture matters that he drags the court along with the other five over to the right. What do you think about that?
You know, I think that we could be reading too much into declinations of cases because as we know the percentage of cases that the Supreme Court takes is an
extremely low number. I mean, I'm trying to look up just for just for reference like the
amount of cases that are taken.
And while you do that for our listeners, you have to have four of the nine justices have
to agree to take a case.
So in the case that we just talked about, the one about the transgender rights, they didn't
get enough.
In the flower case, they got two people that wanted it.
Actually, in the transgender case, Thomas and Alito both voted to bring the case up to
the Supreme Court, but couldn't get two more of their brethren to go along with them.
Yeah, and put it this way,
what would your guest be, Popok?
Like, like less than,
oh my guess of what percentage end up at the Supreme Court?
What would your guest be?
How many cases go to the Supreme Court?
What's the denominator, the total amount of appeals
that end up at the Supreme Court?
The denominator, what we're doing, some real numerators, the number
aiders, we're doing every case filed in America or the cases that are on appeal.
The cases that are on appeal, how many cases do you think the Supreme Court takes a year?
Total number or percentage?
Total number?
The court accepts, we'll ruin this
denominator numerator. About, you're right, about 150 of the more than 7,000 cases that it's
asked to review. So yes, there could be a disproportionate amount of media attention on a hot button
media attention on a hot button case kind of issue. And then there's a whole story that is built around it.
But what I do think that we are seeing, though,
as the Supreme Court allows their core issue,
which I think is gutting the Voting Rights Act.
And we talked about why to allow and enable legislatures, particularly
white legislatures to fix is not the right word, but to address their shrinking numbers by coming
up with laws that are going to go through these standards and tests that
we talked about to allow basically their racist conduct to permeate.
And I think what we've seen is we've had legislatures and court rulings all pushing things
in a positive direction.
And I think what we're seeing at the most basic level is, hey, for all of these
laws out there, go and pass these, you know, these voting rights laws, go and pass, you know, laws
that may be discriminatory. And we're going to let you do that as a Supreme Court. We're going to
empower you and give you the tools to do that. So we don't have to come back and hear these cases in the future. That's what
is more concerning as they're allowing these racist statutes around legislatures to form
and empower themselves that ultimately have these problematic outcomes. But I hear you,
but I think on a case like this, it's hard to know if that declination was trying
to send a message or it was one of the 600 or rather the 6,850 cases that are rejected
and just not one of the one 58 they took this.
Yeah, we're going to talk on a special podcast about the Supreme Court, this term overall,
but one of the troubling things I find just with the way
it's been playing out with the six versus the three,
is that I just find that this Supreme Court is out
of lockstep with most of America.
That most of America is much more moderate,
much more liberal, and much more accepting
than the Supreme Court.
If you, this Supreme Court has almost been teleported
from another time, it's like the 1930s or the 1940s
and they're subjecting their ideals
and their rock ribbed, I know you hate conservative,
right wing values on a society that's ever changing.
That's getting more minority diversity.
That's getting browner and that's a good thing over time.
Where children growing up today who have multiple parents in their life or people they consider
to be their parents is fine that they when they have transgender
Friends that's totally normal for them and then I got a court that's like stuck in the 1940s
And I'm gonna say some scary shit right now because my whole theme here has been that
You know these laws and and everything are bullshit. They're made up. They reflect
the power. They reflect power structures. And we've taken for granted growing up and
being a part of these generations of equality and celebrating these things. But take a look
at Iran. Take a look at the government of the Islamic Republic
of Iran, which is led by Supreme Leader Committee. Like, look at that. I bet you see the images
from before the revolution of where the Iranian people truly were. You know, and you see the fashion, you see the culture,
you see where it is,
and in a very small group of people who come in,
and it's kind of, you see these similar trends
across the world, the Taliban, you know,
and again, extreme examples.
But you know,
Shanghai before the Chinese Communist came over and took over,
was a cosmopolitan city up there with Paris and Rio and New York, and now look at it.
Small groups of people who are radical and very frequently male,
wanting to impose beliefs that they themselves don't even follow, but
to feel morally superior and focused on sheer power, subjugating the land to all of these
rules, you know, and pop up. Like it is not hard to fathom. Had Biden not won.
Had you had another Trump presidency
and more Supreme Court justices.
What if it was nine, oh, all Trump appointees?
And you had, yeah, maybe Roberts would sometimes side with,
he's somewhat, you know,
he could have somewhat normal decisions sometimes.
But what if you were getting eight, one or seven, two opinions
that's to spend the constitution? What if you get decisions eight one or seven two opinions that suspend the Constitution?
What if you get decisions that basically, you know, interpret all, you know, interpret
all these laws as saying, you know what, we're in an emergency crisis.
The president should have the powers of a dictator basically.
That's what happens in Germany.
That's what happens in Italy.
And so I know I'm wondering there, but like, and I don't want to mean to scare you out there, but that's why we have to fight for these things
every day, like it, like it matters. And that's why we talk about the Supreme Court
the way we do because it is that critical. And you've seen in these opinions,
the type of impact it could have. And they're smart about it too. The five
factor bullshit test is like a magician a little bit. If we didn't
break it down for you, go, those factors. But when you explain the factors, it's subtle.
But it's subtle and it will always you towards allowing discriminatory voting rules in these
various states. And the timing of it is sinister and not coincidental. And I want to move from that kind of nightmarish monologue I just did, you know, to, you know,
to other nightmarish organizations and people who are not too dissimilar.
I want to talk about Bill Cosby and Donald Trump.
I may as well be talking about very similar people for obvious reasons
that our listeners know.
But let's talk about this Cosby decision briefly.
I remember when the Supreme Court in Pennsylvania issued or their highest court issued the decision
overturning the conviction of Cosby letting him go.
And I had it read the order when I first got the call,
you know, and someone said,
hey, did you hear about that?
You know that happened?
I go, no, but I can probably tell you how it happened.
It was because there was a non-prossecution agreement
that was purportedly entered into by Cosby
and the Montgomery County DA in 2005.
First cast. and the Montgomery County DA in 2005. Bruce Kasper.
Yeah, who, that name should sound very familiar
because,
Kaster, Bruce Kasper, the Montgomery DA,
was the Trump impeachment lawyer.
So if you heard that in, but where did I hear that?
He was the idiot rallying on the floor
and making a fool of himself.
He was the individual that entered into this oral arrangement with Cosby, purportedly
saying that he would not prosecute Cosby to allow Cosby to testify in a civil case,
so that Cosby could testify without invoking
his fifth amendment right against self-incrimination.
This whole deal is very weird.
And one of the things that I have to remind myself
sometime is this was a secret deal between the Montgomery
County District Attorney and Bill Cosby in 2005. It was so secret that there's no paperwork
around it, which could resolve what the actual deal is. That's one of the craziest things
about it is that there's no email that actually confirms what the deal is. No, but there's a press release.
Wrong.
Wrong.
No, that's not wrong.
Well, let's battle.
There are different interpretations over a press statement that was made.
And over time, Bruce Caster has made numerous different statements.
And on the press release that you said, Bruce
Castor once said, well, that just meant that I wasn't going to talk about it in
the future, not that he wasn't going to get prosecuted again in the future. But
then Castor testified actually at the Cosby trial and stated that it actually
was a firm non-prossecution agreement, but there's actually a great Philadelphia
inquire article that talks about it.
I know the press release you're referring to, but he's taking four or five different positions
since 2005 regarding the implications of what that was.
I thought we had our first fight already on this podcast, we're having our second one.
All right, I like it.
I read the decision. I don't know about anything other than what's in the record that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court relied on. So let me do a little exploder here so that everybody
understands the Fifth Amendment, the Fifth Amendment's application in a civil case,
and then the statement that was made, a press release where the press
statement that was made and why it was made by Bruce Castor and why the Supreme Court
of Pennsylvania felt like it was a beaten switch against Cosby and why they could not then
prosecute him based on the same by the statements that were made in a civil deposition. Caster made a evaluation as a prosecutor,
who exercises prosecutorial discretion they all do,
not to bring a prosecution against Cosby
based on Andrea Constance testimony and her facts why?
Because in this is in the record in the case,
he believed as the prosecutor
that she had a credibility problem because she waited over a year to report what had happened to her.
She waited, she got back to Ontario where she lives. She reported it to the Ontario Authority
a year later, also between that one year when it allegedly happened and the time that she reported it
She had had a lot of contact with Cosby both in person and by phone and this all came out in the record
And so Caster was like I don't believe I have a shrug enough case based on the evidence to bring this case
He believed and this is what he's testified to, that the only justice that she was able
to get was if she had a civil case against Cosby with a lower burden of proof, the civil
burden of proof instead of the, beyond a reasonable doubt burden of proof.
And in order to get what he believed, Cosby to testify in order for her to have her civil
case, he had to publicly declare what you did in a press conference
that he did not have enough credible evidence
to bring a case against him.
Why does that matter?
Because in a civil case, a person can assert
the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination
if there is a reasonable belief
that there is a prosecution lurking out there against the person. If you don't have a
prosecution pending against you or likely to be brought against you, you cannot assert the
Fifth Amendment in a civil proceeding. Now, even if you have the right to assert the Fifth Amendment
in a civil proceeding and not a criminal proceeding, the court is then usually instructing the jury that they can make an
adverse finding, an adverse inference against the civil litigant who asserts the Fifth Amendment.
But again, if there is no prosecution, if the sovereign, in this case, the prosecutor,
declares that there's no case against you, you cannot assert it. And if you did, the civil
judge would have told him, I'm sorry, you're going to have to answer that question,
not assert the Fifth Amendment.
This is what Castor testified.
And there's email exchange between Castor
and the second prosecutor who was his number two,
who took over and said, okay, I've seen the civil deposition.
I see what Cosby is admitted to.
That's enough, I'm going to prosecute him.
And Castor wrote his number two and said, you can't do that. I already made a commitment and a press statement
in order to encourage him to drop the Fifth Amendment and testify. You can't bring the criminal case.
You can bring a criminal case independent of that, perhaps based on one of the other 100 women
who have testified that this happened to them too, but you can't do it
with constant and you can't do it based on the civil deposition. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
agreed and you always say, Ben, words have consequences and words have meaning. And the Supreme Court
and its decision spent a lot of time talking about the weight of a prosecutor's words. They're not
just a normal participant
in the criminal justice process. When they say something, it has to have value. And if you rely on
it on the other side as the criminal defendant, then if you, okay, I'm going to testify now because
I just got told I'm not going to get prosecuted for Andrea Constant, for that particular matter,
I have immunity if you will for that matter for that particular matter. I have immunity,
if you will, for that matter. He did it. He believed that he had that. Caster has testified
that that was his intent of the press statement. And in return, Cosby did something. Now, look,
let me make it clear. I think Cosby's a scumbag. I'm pretty sure he did all of those terrible
things that people have accused him of, but we also have a Fifth Amendment in this country,
and we also have constitutional protection
even for really bad people.
And so I happen to agree unfortunately
with the way the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
has analyzed the case.
That's not to be confused with me agreeing
that Cosby's a great person or that he's innocent.
It's the opposite, but I am a protector of the
Constitution in my own way. And I did believe that the analysis that was given was accurate.
I agree. It was a horrible outcome for justice generally in this case for the victims of Cosby, who seeing Cosby go to jail after getting away with his sexual
assaults, molestations, drugging women for decades.
It was a devastating tragedy of a situation to see this man walk free. The evidence that I saw was overwhelming
at the trial and was disgusting some of the things that he did. But Popo, you're right.
The Supreme Court on the basis of a deal was made, the government, at that time, the Mount
Gummary County DA, made a deal with Cosby and Cosby's lawyers that Cosby
would not be prosecuted. If you remove Cosby and you remove the sexual
assault, which was the basis of the prosecution.
And we just talked about John Smith who was given a deal that he would not be prosecuted
if he did something by the government.
Then he did that thing, and then five years past, then he was prosecuted by that same government,
simply because a new person was elected in that position,
we would say, if the facts were not these egregious facts, we would say,
and I'd ask you, the listener of the question, and put it on a law exam,
should John Smith be prosecuted? You would go, of course not, they made a deal,
saying they would not prosecute him.
You know, it's an oversimplified version of what happened, but that's what happened here.
And that's what the Supreme Court ruling was about. And if you want to go back and blame anybody,
you know, I think you have to go back and you have to blame the DA for making a deal at that time. But I will say this, in 2005, there were very different views and wrong and incorrect.
We've evolved since 2005 and the views about people like Cosby and supporting victims.
It should have been more robust supporting victims, but that
didn't exist at the time.
And the prosecutor at that time thought they would not get a conviction in 2005.
And if you believe the prosecutor, and I don't, but if you believe the prosecutor, the
prosecutor at that time claims that they
thought that through the civil case, that was the best way that they thought that some
justice could come for the victim and that he thought he was going to lose the case.
I don't think he would lose the case.
I think he should have pursued the case.
It's that archaic and harb thinking that allowed Cosby and Weinstein's
and other predators to go free,
because these prosecutors wouldn't go after.
And Epstein, because if you recall,
Oh, God.
Acosta, who eventually went into the administration
of Trump as the labor secretary,
he was a US attorney in the Southern District of Florida, and he cut
a deal with Epstein back when he could have shut him down 10 years before he got eventually
prosecuted and put in jail.
But he could have shut him down earlier and he declined to prosecute Epstein then and
cut a deal.
And that led to the fall of Acosta.
But look, too. of a cost of, but look to the difference there in Epstein though, is that that deal, the
case wasn't regarding the same victim and the same counts that were subject to that deal
and there was clarity about what that deal also actually was and and it's contours, and the new case that was brought, there were
statute of limitations that allowed certain cases to be brought within a significant period
of time, and new victims and other cases were identified where those charges could be brought
by a federal prosecutor. So what do you think about this?
There's been over, I don't know, like a hundred victims
who have come forward about Cosby.
A number of states, including yours, California, and my New
York, have extended the statute of limitations
for sex violence and crimes like this.
Maybe one of these hundred or somebody else
who's now gonna be so pissed off by Cosby and his lawyer
gloating, I mean, literally gloating coming out of prison,
his lawyer said aloud that even women in this country
should be thrilled that justice has been done.
I mean, that's just how 10-year they are,
which could lead to other people coming out of the woodwork. And with the longer statu limitations, he may not be
out of trouble. What do you think?
I think that the way Cosby spiked the football after a technicality win is not, is it will
potentially inspire exactly what you were just talking about
Popeye because there was no need to do that. He was certainly not innocent and to
kind of claim innocence when that's clearly not what the Supreme Court said.
You know, to me is a real, you know, is a real issue for him.
And it's a real issue for everyone.
I mean, it was really messed up to do that.
And I think that he will, I do think that.
I mean, I think what the prosecutors want to weigh against that is he's 83 years old.
And by the time you get through a prosecution, you may be, you know,
and I don't know what his health situation is, but by the time you prosecute and sentence him,
you know, will there even be, you know, a point given his age in his health condition? But
I think there is, but that's, you know, something that a prosecutor may be
edition, but I think there is, but that's something that a prosecutor may be considering right now.
And finally, I know we kept you.
This was like, as we're really developing legal AF, I feel like we're that the program
where they like keep the real red meat at the end.
We've made you listen to our analysis of all of these Supreme Court cases.
You've seen Popock and I bicker a little bit on this podcast. I think that's because I'm
broadcasting from outer space, as I mentioned, from the beginning. And I've had a new
found sense of human awareness now that I'm above earth with a perspective on planet earth. But here we are, Popax.
Popax says that he predicted and he did predict that the Trump company and Weiselberg would be
indicted. The funny kind of offline joke that Popok and I said is,
and we'll see what a good legal AF listener you are.
I thought Popok went one step further on the last legal AF
and said he thought Trump himself was going to be indicted
this week, which I said Trump would be indicted in November,
but I'll give Popok an A-minus on his prediction scheme.
It's pretty nice.
I think it's an A.
It's an A plus.
I'll give Popok an A plus on predicting accurately, and it's an incredible prediction.
Popok's predictions are pretty much 100% on the Midas Touch podcast. That the Trump company in Weisselberg would be indicted.
It was a 15 count indictment.
Popochi want to just break us through.
In some in substance one.
Yeah, and I want to rehabilitate, not me,
I'll talk about that later.
I want to rehabilitate the indictment,
because of course all the Trump accolades and sons of Trump all jumped on and said, oh, that's it. That's all they
got. Fringe benefits. Who cares? Okay. Let's put this in perspective.
Siveants and Latisha James brought the case that they have at the moment, not the case
that they desire in the future.
That grand jury is still empaneled
and is still listening to evidence.
And there is no reason why.
And in fact, I am quite confident
to continue with the Popaki and Predictions.
I am quite confident that there were the Popakists.
The Popak, yeah.
Although they've all gone team Popaki and we'll go with,
I think your breggioady came up with that, that with a symbol. I have like a hand symbol really
It's a spock thing. I like it, but the
These the next indictment it's called a superseding indictment, which is what it sounds like this indictment is fine with a 15 counts
There'll be another indictment that will supersede this one and we'll have counts, hopefully against more people like the former 45.
They brought the case after two years of looking at
and examining the tax returns and the daughter-in-law
of Weisselberg who has been cooperating publicly.
I don't know, look, Grand Jury is a secret process,
but we know it because she's been on every talk show
talking about how proud she is to have who have cooperated with the federal government
and the New York, I'm sorry, the Attorney General in New York and the DA in New York
in against her father-law, her future, her ex, sorry, her ex-husband and ultimately the Trump
organization. And she, and she had a million, I'm not making this up, a million pages of financial
documents that happened to be in her garage that she turned over to the prosecutors. So they brought And she, and she had a million, I'm not making this up, a million pages of financial documents
that happened to be in her garage that she turned over to the prosecutor. So they brought the case
that they have right now. Say what you want about Sy Vance as the prosecutor, but he is conservative
and he brings the case that he has. Alvin Bragg, who's going to start in a few months, will continue
with, with the Attorney General's Office to continue to bring new cases,
new claims, and new people into the case. And so it's not a fringe benefit case. That makes it sound
like it's a jaywalking case. The allegations in the indictment, which is based on proof that was
provided and evidence provided to the grand jury, is that there were two sets of books at the Trump Organization.
They kept meticulous records that the grand jury
has now seen of entries concerning Weiselberg, the CFO,
and all of the money that Trump gave him,
not in cash, not in salary,
where payroll taxes and federal and state taxes
would have had to have paid by the Trump
organization and by the individual receiving it. But was paid directly to private schools,
the apartment that was leased for him, the rent, the the the Mercedes for his wife and himself
that were leased for him. And Trump just wrote a check literally himself.
There are sign checks with Trump's signature
for all of these events,
totaling a couple of million dollars over 10 years.
But they didn't just do it and like,
oh, it was an accident.
It was a accounting mistake.
It was an IRS thing.
They kept a set of books that listed every dollar
that went to Weiselberg that was off the books
and for which taxes, state, local, federal were not paid
and payroll taxes, which would have been
the trunk or organization.
So they're dead to rights because there's the second set
of books.
And why does it matter?
Because the thing rots from the head.
You have the CFO, the most senior apex financial officer who's responsible for every number
related to the Trump organization and the hundreds of companies that it owns and operates under
it.
You have him committing tax fraud along with the Trump organization based on those financial records.
So, look, they brought the indictment to continue to squeeze Weiselberg because they'd like him to cooperate.
They tried to do a pre-indipment, which you and I have had clients where we've dealt with
them pre-indipment with prosecutors and we're able to cut a deal. It happens.
But if they don't, they have to be squeezed harder.
So now they're squeezing him with an indictment.
They're still holding out hope that Weiselberg flips
the way Cohen ultimately did.
Your buddy on your other produced podcast, Michael Cohen,
and that Weiselberg flips on Trump.
If they don't get him to flip, which will speed up
and accelerate the prosecution against the former 45,
and maybe we hit the November deadline that you've set,
then they're just going to have to do it the old fashioned way
by bringing in other witnesses and other documents
and keep that grand jury going five days a week,
you know, 360, you know, five days a week, 24 hours a day
until they get a new superseding indictment. And that's going to happen too. And what I said in the last podcast
is I had said, you're right, that I thought Trump organization, Weiselberg, and probably
45, however, when you and Dan Lust eyes bugged out of your head, I thought, well, maybe
I overdid it. So let me dial it back a bit.
Definitely Trump organization, definitely Weiselberg.
And sometimes soon in a superseding indictment Trump.
So I got on your bandwagon with Trump.
But I'll tell you, there was a reference to unindicted
co-conspirator number one within this indictment.
Who many suspect was former guy 45. And so he was in the indictment, who many suspect was former guy 45.
And so he was in the indictment.
So you can using exacting scrutiny or strict scrutiny,
I could basically say, and applying my five factor test,
I could basically say, Polpak was correct
using the Ben-5 factor test.
But basically, Weiselberg wasn't cooperating here. And the prosecutor said, really? You don't think we're to do it. You sure you don't want to talk to us? Okay. Here you go.
You can be facing 15 years in prison.
Boom, we're going to make you walk.
We're going to take the photo.
We're going to make this a really shitty rest of your life, basically.
But, you know, we're not going to, we're still going to show you our weakest hand right now.
We're going to do it.
We're going to do it.
We're going to do it. shitty rest of your life, basically. But, you know, we're not gonna,
we're still gonna show you our weakest hand right now
because this is not, as Pope Hock said,
the strongest hand that the government has.
There's a criminal grand jury that is still out
with respect to Weiselberg.
What, the smart prosecutor would be doing would say,
look, that was 15 count.
We could do 150 counts if we want to, but do you want us to spare you?
This is what I think is going on.
What about Mrs. Weiselberg?
What about Mrs. Weiselberg?
Yeah, we want, you know, and so I think they basically, you know, sometimes I'll give you an example, you know, sometimes Popak when you and I file a complaint or a lawsuit, you could file a lawsuit that shows everything
or you could file the lawsuit that has a little bit of information, but signals to the other side that this is going to get much
nasty or if there's not a resolution, but I'm not trying to put all of our cards on the
table.
I think that's what's going on here.
And this is sending a message to the other Trump execs who all have Trump as their last
name, Don Jr.
Ivanka Eric, To Weiselberg's family, to others in the Trump organization, and
they know that more indictments are coming.
Super seating indictment.
I think former guy, as I said, will be indicted in November.
And I think we're going to hear about it about the same way.
Think about a week or two weeks before we're going to find out and we're learning about side-vances style and he will give former guy an opportunity
to respond to about why he shouldn't be prosecuted in a
week. The same way he did with Weiselberg, former guy is not
going to respond. And then there's going to be an indictment
there. And I think and two last points on that one, we're
back to statute statute limitations running.
There's also pressure on Sive Ants' office to have brought
claims because some of them were going to fall off the
continuum as being time-part.
So they had a hurry on some of the things that they found.
Remember, Trump successfully kept them at bay for two years
before he was able to get his tax returns.
That's two years off the Statute of Limitations clock.
So they had a hurry to bring these charges before they were going to be time-barred.
That's one. The second thing related to the indictment is, I think this is just a
year's Popok prediction again. We're back to Popok's predictions.
I think this is just a year's Popok prediction again. We're back to Popok's predictions.
Sidevance, I think, was fine with bringing this sized indictment
at this moment based on the evidence
that was presented to the Grand Injury.
He may, he may wanna let Alvin Bragg
who's going to be the first black district attorney
in Manhattan's history in 200 years
to bring the superseding indictment
and make that ultimate decision against Trump.
Why?
Because as a professional courtesy,
he may want to let Alvin Bragg have a role
in shaping the clothes that Alvin's going to be wearing,
right, this wardrobe that's being made for him.
Look, I took over for other people too.
And if you can, you want to be involved in the decision-making
because you're going to be stuck with the result.
And Si may be not only consulting with Alvin,
but Alvin's really not a prosecutor yet in the office,
so that would really be appropriate.
But he may want to let Alvin make the ultimate decision
as to the Trump indictment of former 45. And that would be when Alvin takes
office. That's pure speculation, but I know how these things work in transition time between an
outgoing prosecutor and one that's coming in. Michael Popak, thank you for spending this weekend
with me. Thank y'all for listening. You could choose to be anywhere in the world today and listen to any other podcast radio station musical actor choose to not listen to anything at all and we are grateful that you spent this past hour plus with us. hope we've broken down for you the critical Supreme Court decisions.
We've answered your questions about Cosby and we've talked about the indictment of the
Trump organization and Weiselberg. We've hope we made you smarter. We've hope we put a smile
on the face while doing so. And Popak and I to be able to as friends and as colleagues to be able to spend an hour plus on our weekend having these conversations with each other and with you is a true blessing. of legal AF. We are going to have a special edition, as Pope
Pock mentioned, a little bit earlier in this podcast, where we are going to
analyze this entire past Supreme Court term. How excited are you to listen to
that? And of course, if you have any legal issues, if you've been injured in a car accident,
if you've been any other personal injury, you, friend, family, colleague, been injured
in a catastrophic injury, have an employment case, you've been sexually harassed, sexually
assaulted, been abused, have any legal claim, have a case that's out there, have a big business
dispute, if you're the founder of a startup and you've
been cut out of that startup, if you have a case and want a consultation with me and Popock,
my email is benatgaragos.com. That's B-E-N- at G-E-R-A-G-O-S. That's B-E-N- at G-E-R-A-G-O-S and Popok with Z-R-E-Mail.
It's easy. It's M-POPOC-PO-P-O-K at zplaw.com.
And as we end, let's wish all of our listeners a very happy and safe
Fourth of July, because we are patriots first.
Thank you for listening to this weekend's legal AF.
Thanks for fighting for democracy.
Thank you.