Legal AF by MeidasTouch - The Marjorie Taylor Greene Hearing, January 6 Committee Bombshells, and More!
Episode Date: April 24, 2022Anchored by MT founder and civil rights lawyer, Ben Meiselas and national trial lawyer and strategist, Michael Popok, the top-rated news analysis podcast LegalAF x MeidasTouch is back for another hard...-hitting look in “real time” at this week’s most consequential developments. This week Ben and Popok discuss and analyze: 1. The Jan6 Committee’s upcoming June hearings on the Insurrection that one senior member claims will “blow the roof” off of Congress as it describes an “inside coup” led by Trump. 2. The DOJ adding a new lead prosecutor to head the Jan6 prosecutions, including leading the prosecutors focusing on Trump and his inner circle. 3. Marjory Taylor Greene’s efforts to avoid being thrown off the upcoming ballot for reelection as an insurrectionist, and her providing the first sworn testimony of any member of Congress about their role on Jan6. 4. Newly-discovered audio recordings confirming that Kevin McCarthy sought to have Trump resign for his role in the insurrection, and that Trump had confessed about his role in the attack on the Capitol. 5. Alex Jones being hit with over $1mm in fines by a Texas judge presiding over his defamation trial related to his denying that the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre actually happened, his filing for bankruptcy to avoid liability, and his contacting the DOJ to cooperate concerning the Jan6 criminal investigation. 6. A new lawsuit filed against Florida Governor DeSantis’ racist redistricting maps, adding 4 new republican seats while cutting Black representation in half. 7. The DOJ filing a new appeal to reverse a Florida Federal judge’s decision last week finding the CDC’s Mask Mandate to be illegal. DEALS FROM OUR SPONSORS: AG1 by Athletic Greens: https://athleticgreens.com/legalaf Aura Frames: https://auraframes.com/legalaf Remember to subscribe to ALL the Meidas Media Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://pod.link/1510240831 Legal AF: https://pod.link/1580828595 The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://pod.link/1595408601 The Influence Continuum: https://pod.link/1603773245 Kremlin File: https://pod.link/1575837599 Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://pod.link/1530639447 Zoomed In: https://pod.link/1580828633 The Weekend Show: https://pod.link/1612691018 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Congressmen Jamie Raskin says the January 6th committee revelations will blow the roof off the house.
Marjorie Taylor-Green insurrection hearings in Georgia are broadcast live. We break it down.
The Kevin McCarthy tapes, audio recordings from Republican leadership conference calls following the insurrection
exposes Kevin McCarthy as a liar and exposes him saying he would ask Trump to resign after
saying him saying that was fake news, a total liar.
Alex Jones puts info wars into bankruptcy on the eve of the Sandy Hook defamation, jury trial on
damages delaying the case, will justice be served, the Department of Justice files and appeal.
On behalf of the CDC challenging the Florida District Court order prohibiting the mask
mandates in public transit and civil rights groups sue Florida officials for their racist and partisan
Jerry Mandarin created by governor death Santas the most consequential legal news of the week
This is legal a f Ben micelle is joined by Michael Popok Popok the
Popokian how are you doing today?
I am doing great.
I got, I'm all energized after watching hours
of Marjorie Taylor Green.
And I know our followers and our audience
are ready for us to dive in this week.
And, and you got me fired up with that intro.
Let's go.
We're gonna take a deep dive into what happened
in the Marjorie
Telegrin case.
Many people are saying Ben Popak, tell me, what was this hearing?
Is this a jury trial?
Is this a civil case?
Is this an administrative case?
Like what was I watching?
By the way, you were probably watching it on the Midas Touch
livestream feed.
Midas Touch will be doing more live streams
like that of consequential hearings.
We had about 30,000 concurrent viewers, about half a million people tuned in on the Midas feed
alone thus far. And I think it was an important aspect to add to the Midas repertoire of the services
and content we deliver. I think one thing we should ask the audience tonight on live chat is whether they would like one or three of us,
you mean Karen, to do some sort of live analysis
during some of these seminal trials of the century type matters.
Because we're willing to do it if people are willing
to watch us do it. Well, I think that would be a great addition as well. Popox, let's get into it.
Let's take it in reverse order to start. Let's talk about the civil rights groups, who these
Florida officials for their racist and partisan, gerrymandering maps. We talked about this before
that the Republican legislature in Florida proposed racist, Jerry Mander maps
and for governor DeSantis.
He said, whoa, whoa, whoa, not racist and partisan enough for me.
True.
I'm going to veto those maps unless you make those maps even more partisan and racist.
You know, Florida is an interesting state Pope, we've discussed it before because they have specific constitutional amendments that have anti-political gerrymandering provisions, not just the constitutional
protections of the anti-racist gerrymandering embodied in the Voting Rights Act of 1965, which
the Supreme Court has eroded. We've covered in detail the erosion, the attack on the Voting
Rights Act of 1965 on the Midas Touch Podcast, a long line of attacks from the Federalist
Society spanning many, many, many years, basically trying to declare the United States free
of racism such that the judges should not be scrutinizing the legislature's decision-making
and making the maps.
There used to be a process actually called pre-clearance.
And up until 2013 was taking place and the pre-clearance was that you had either the DOJ
or a three-judge panel.
It means what it said, they would pre-clear the maps before a map would be approved.
It would have to go get approval by the government to say, is that map racist or not?
The formula was challenged in 2013.
The Supreme Court struck down the formula which struck down pre-clearance, which basically said,
legislatures go and pass whatever maps you want and let shift the burden away from the legislatures.
Let's put the burden now on civil rights groups to have to sue.
But then with the Supreme Court did to try to screw the civil rights groups is basically
say, whoa, whoa, whoa, civil rights group, you're suing way too close to an election.
This is called the Purcell doctrine.
And now we can't do anything as the Supreme Court.
So we're just going to let those maps
stay in place because it's way too close to the election or the Supreme Court says we shouldn't really
be challenging what the legislature's doing, the legislature seems to be doing a fine job. But
you add to the mix here in Florida, these anti-political gerrymandering provisions in addition to the federal issues and you have a real mess on your hand.
So, um, DeSantis, uh, you know, told the legislature, you know, basically by, you know, like a dictator,
passed my map. He drew it himself. They passed his map and the civil rights groups now have sued
immediately and now we'll go through a process where it's in state court.
They're challenging it based on a number of factors including this state law.
You know, Popeyes, this map should be struck down, you know, but I ultimately fear that
as we go to the federal processes, what's the Supreme Court going to do?
What are the federal courts of appeals going to do following those really bad federal
precedents?
I think the state courts are going to do the right thing here, but ultimately is the outcome
going to be one, are these maps going to be struck down?
And two, are they going to be struck down in time for the elections?
Because what's at stake here is that DeSantis has redrawn the map to specifically remove
two districts represented by black Democrats.
That's what they did.
That was the purpose of it.
So it's a swing of about plus four to Republicans
and it's blatantly racist.
So Popeye, what's going on here?
Well, the good news is it's gonna be litigated
in Leon County up in Tallahassee,
which is, as you've noted,
is a better forum for the challenge to this map.
I want to make this clear,
the Republicans in the legislature in the State House
of Tallahassee have completely abdicated all responsibility
and have now just genuinely reflected to the idol
of the Santas in every way, shape and form.
He has taken over that government NA, as you said,
in a fascist or dictator
way. We'll talk about it on another podcast, what he's done to retaliate against Disney
of all things and exercise it. It's First Amendment right to challenge his don't say gay.
He's now retaliated against him this week by taking away their tax, their tax status and
their ability to run the government in and around and the property in and
around where Disney World resides. That's another example of 65% of the of the legislature in Florida
being controlled by the Republicans and therefore controlled by DeSantis. They are so
a supplicant to DeSantis that they just turned over completely and abdicated the map making
responsibility for redistricting directly to the governor's mansion. They didn't even try. They said,
you know what? They literally delegated it back to the governor. You send us the map that you
want us to pass and will pass it. And that's exactly what they did this week. And that map, as you pointed out, completely halves black representation.
It and retaliates against two very high profile, democratic, black democratic leaders in Florida,
including Val Demings, the former police chief of Orlando, who sits in Orange County and
trying to eliminate or gerrymandor around her district.
The good news is I have a reasonable modicum of confidence in the Leon County slash Tallahassee
state court judges, who are often a burr in the saddle of the governor de Santis, because
they're not overly Republican, although it's the northern part of the state, and that's that part of the state is very Republican.
So I think it's a better chance than not.
Here's a Pope-Pock prediction that this judge, and I have to look up who exactly has been
assigned to this case, and we'll talk about it on Wednesday or the next pod.
They will strike this down under the Florida constitutional provisions that you mentioned and the US constitutional provisions.
I think this plaintiffs group of black voting activists who were the plaintiffs properly strategically chose
Leon County instead of the Northern District of Florida federal court, where a lot of those judges owe their political
fortune and their careers to Governor DeSantis.
And so they did an end run around that.
They said, you know what?
Let's go to Tallahassee and Leon County.
And let's see if we can get a better ruling on that.
Could it end up flipping over to a federal matter?
It could, but I think it stays for a long time in Leon County, but just to astral project into the future,
as you and I like to do, the Supreme Court of the State of Florida is very, very conservative,
right-wing, and most of them have been appointed by DeSantis or by Governor Scott, the other
fascist governor just before him. And I know a couple of the appointees
and they're nice people, but they are federalist society, right, right wing, a couple came out of
Miami, right, no, well, but that's, it's not going to be great at the Florida Supreme Court level.
And then they may, I think it gives the litigants the plaintiffs the right almost two bites at
the apple. Let's see how we do it, Leon County. Let's see how we do it.
The Supremes of Florida.
And if we don't like it, we'll flip over to Northern District of Florida.
And we'll file there.
Well, we will keep everyone updated on what is happening there.
And this is what the radical right extremist governors are want to do.
They don't want to play fairly. They want to cheat at every single turn.
And these stakes cannot be higher. We will keep you updated there. I want to talk about the Department of Justice this week as filed an appeal on behalf of the CDC, challenging the Florida district court order, which prohibited
the mask mandate. It was an injunction stopping the mask mandate declaring that the CDC did
not have the power to institute a mask mandate in the public transit. This was a ruling by a judge named Catherine Mazzell.
We all have kind of now talked about Catherine Mazzell
on prior legal AF.
So she was appointed, she graduated law school in 2012.
So she was a lawyer for about six to seven years
before she was nominated.
She was actually confirmed after Trump had lost. She was ranked
by a bipartisan group as being unqualified and kind of per se unqualified because she had
very little experience, almost no experience as a trial lawyer as doing cases or anything
like that. She only she only practiced for six or eight months in private practice her entire career.
If you want to call it that in the legal profession,
following law school bed was in federal clerkships
in the hermetically sealed chambers of judges.
She did three clerkships.
She did a six month stint or less,
I think at a national global law firm.
And that was it.
Now she's qualified to sit and make constitutional
and other life altering decisions
as a lifetime appointment to the federal bench.
So not only did she strike down the CDC's mass
rule and public transit, but she did a universal injunction.
She did a ruling that affected not just Florida,
but the entire 49 other states. But 49 other states. And so, you know, regardless of what your view
is on, you know, wearing masks, I'm going to put this out there, Popeye. Do I like wearing masks? Do I enjoy it? No.
Do masks feel itchy? Yes. Do masks feel uncomfortable on my face sometimes? Yes. But guess what? We're
in a global freaking pandemic. And if the minor inconvenience of wearing a mask based on the scientific data from the agency
that we've always trusted for telling us
how we stop the spread of communicable diseases
says in certain situations,
like public transit that's very crowded,
can you just wear this thing
and may make you uncomfortable for a little bit of time?
Hey, when you're eating, you could even take it off. When you're eating, you could take it off. You're make you uncomfortable for a little bit of time? Hey, when you're eating, you can even take it off.
When you're eating, you can take it off.
Just wear it for a little bit.
And for the radical right extremists who want to control the bodies of childbearing persons
for them to say, oh, this is an invasion of my right that you're making me wear a piece
of fabric over my mouth.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face. My body, my face. My body, my face. My body, my face. My body, my face. My face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face. My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face.
My body, my face. My body, my face. My body, my face. My body, my face. My body, my face. disinfection, sanitation,
and other measures in its judgment
that may be necessary.
In its judgment.
In its judgment that may be necessary.
So in Katherine, Mizell's big ruling,
I could break it down for you very quickly.
What she basically said is masks,
it's just the most bizarre logic in the world.
Like masks are not sanitation
was how she said. So therefore, the statutes had sanitation. The masks are not sanitation.
And the masks don't work, according to her own scientific views apparently. And therefore
I'm striking down the mask minute. And by the way, her ruling does not apply to this piece of,
to this period of time where there have been vaccines, you know, where things have gotten slightly
better with COVID. What her ruling is saying, even in the height of a global pandemic,
the CDC doesn't have the ability to do things like, like have met.
That's why this is a very good observation. That's a very, very good observation, because
if left on the books, you're right, her ruling would completely eviscerate the power of
the CDC person, you know, the head of the CDC, which has been delegated by
Congress under the statute, the public health statute that you just cited.
In the face of this pandemic or the next, I hate to break it to everybody.
We're not done with pandemics in our lifetime.
And there'll be other ones.
And it says specifically, as you read, as you read from it, that the CDC is authorized in it in the director's own
judgment.
So puts a tremendous amount of power and authority in the judgment of the agency to protect
the spread of communicable diseases from foreign countries by regulating, inspecting, fumigating,
disinfecting, and sanitizing. Now you we spoke about this provision a year ago on the rent
stabilization or rent eviction moratorium. And there was this same, this very same language
that was cited. And you and I had a hard time with, well, which one of these fumigation,
sanitation, applies to people not being evicted from their homes. A terrible event that we couldn't quite figure out language wise where that fit.
This one is not even a close call unless you judge myself and you pull out some dictionary
or you do what's called Google search because literally at one point in her decision, she
said, we need to go to the context and contextualizing of what the word sanitation means and sanitary.
And so I googled it. I mean, she didn't quite say it that way, but that's what her clerks did for her or the briefs for the opposition did for her.
And by the way, she ignored, I'll give you one example. A surgical mask is technically called a sanitary mask.
That is the technical term for a surgical mask.
So a mask obviously has a sanitary component to it.
She might not think it's sanitary
or she might have other aspects of the rule
that she thinks is wrong,
but to twist herself into knots,
to try to redefine what sanitary is
in order to say he doesn't have the ability or she doesn't have the ability as the director of the CDC to impose a mask mandate.
That is gymnastics of a level that, you know, that would be tens in the Olympics. I've never seen such a thing.
So, but then there was that moment and you and I talked about it offline about, well, why is the Biden administration just laying down for this? Because, you know,
Jen, Jen Socki got on and said, well, we're disappointed. We're going to evaluate. And every
airline within the three day period made an announcement, including in flight, that people could
drop their masks at that moment. And then we were like, we set it on the show, Ben. We said,
I wonder if they're going to appeal this. What are they waiting for?
And now they have the Department of Justice has filed. Now, the problem with the appeal location
is because because we're back to the Santas, because Judge myself sits in the northern district
of, no, sorry, the middle district of Florida in the Tampa area, all the appeals go to the 11th Circuit, the 11th Circuit, while not as bad as
the 5th Circuit Court of Appeal in terms of being right wing, is pretty conservative. I know a
number of the judges that started out in Miami and ended up being elevated by, let's say,
DeSantis to the Supreme Court of Florida. And then that's a stepping stone to the 11th Circuit when
it gets appointed by, when it gets appointed by that wherever the president is.
So a number of us 11th circuit judges
ultimately trace their political fortunes
back through DeSantis or through Scott.
And so I'm not that confident at the 11th circuit,
we're gonna get a great ruling.
But then of course we're off to the Supremes,
which, you know, on vaccine in the military,
they've sort of been in favor
of science and appropriate values, but on masks, they've been all over the map. So I don't,
what do you think the Supremes do about the mask mandate when it comes back to them?
See, I think with this area, when it comes to the CDC's rulemaking authority for masks in this discrete setting,
even with a radical right extremist court, for them to remove that power from the CDC would
be such a slippery slope, even for their radical right extremist agenda, because you're
basically saying that the organization that is there to help the safety in issues involving
interstate commerce.
States are the ones who are responsible for public health issues on a state-by-state level.
That's why all of these issues are always usually
like the governors in different states have different health mandates or mask mandates for
specific states. But when a disease can travel across the borders, that's really the only
area where the CDC actually comes into play. And so it's ability to make these rules is
actually very narrow, but it involves interstate commerce, but it's incredibly important.
And the ruling here that, you know, my, the last name is my zealot, it seems a little bit like my cell is so I'm a hard time getting over that, but her rule in a very narrowly circumscribed setting, if we say, well, the mask mandate was going to go out of effect anyway,
probably early May, based on what Biden's extension, they extended it to early May.
Things have gotten better.
It is a little bit odd that you can not wear a mask.
There's no mask mandates in pretty much any state inside anymore.
So why when I have to go into the airplane, do I have to wear it? Well, the CDC has said that
in public trends that that's a very unique setting, but I could see at least the argument of people
saying that doesn't really make all that much sense anymore. I can go into a crowded supermarket,
but not the airplane, but that's also dropping the, dropping the
mask for snacking as, you know, and, and there's no man, there's other problems too, right?
There's no mandate that it be a K95 or N95 mask. It can be any old piece of cloth. But,
but you're right. Go on to your point about the Biden administration, not allowing it to
stay on the board.
What's at stake here is that for any future pandemic,
or whenever the pandemic occurred,
that the CD, that according to this order,
the CDC doesn't have the ability
to make very common sense recommendations in this area.
And every time the CDC wants to act in its capacity
to help public health on an interstate commerce level,
it will be struck down.
So it creates horrible and scary precedent and basically completely takes away anything
the CDC can do unless it's circumscribed into one of those like four things, like sanitation
and, you know, and those other things we mentioned.
Well, wait, wait, and just the last point, I joke to Pat it,
sort of gallows humor with Karen on Wednesday.
Basically, my cell, my cellist, my cell, whatever her name is,
the judge ruled effectively that the center for disease control
cannot control disease.
I mean, it is that simple.
And I'm sure she's been championed in all the places that you and I don't reside
and don't look like Fox News and things. I'm sure she's now some sort of champion of right wing
freedom, but it's a terrible decision and I'm hoping that you're right that when it eventually
leapfrogs the 11th circuit ends up at even this Supreme Court,
that they will not totally eviscerate the powers of the CDC in the midst of a pandemic or epidemic.
You know, I want to talk about Alex Jones and his bankruptcy in a second, but I do want to
mention this. I think it's very important how we message masks in general. I think it's very important how we message masks in general.
I think it's not that we love masks or that we want to put masks on everybody and that
there's some weird, bizarre, like, fetish-
That is.
involving masks that exist.
Like, I think that it's fair to say what I said at the beginning that nobody, you know,
that it's, it's, it's a pain in the ass sometimes to wear masks and it is uncomfortable
and it is difficult sometimes to see our children and people have to wear masks and we don't
get to see their beautiful smiles. I get that, but I rather have a minor inconvenience, you know, to make sure that I'm improving the
health and I'm helping out and I'm doing my part. Our ancestors have had to make far bigger and
broader sacrifices for this country than having to temporarily wear a mask when we're in crowded spaces.
And we need to really frame this radical right anti-mask agenda
as weird, as dangerous, as strange as it is, and as unhealthy, and as kind of disgusting as it is that these are actually very unsanitary human beings who, you
know, who want to spread diseases. It's a very strange, it's a very strange position.
Speaking of, speaking of weird unsanitary and really strange, let's go to Alex Jones.
Let's talk about Alex Jones and Alex Jones. Here's an interesting fact about Alex Jones
and I didn't realize. So Alex Jones, we've talked about these cases where the family members who lost
loved ones in the Sandy Hook massacre in Newton, Connecticut, They sued Alex Jones, because Alex Jones said that
their children who died and the families were crisis actors
and that Sandy Hook was where 26 people were killed
was made up and didn't exist.
And he repeated it over and over again on Info Wars and on his TV shows and his digital streaming
shows and the family member sued in Connecticut, family member sued him in Texas and Alex Jones
response to this litigation was basically that obstruction, hiding documents, not showing
up to depositions, just literally not responding.
What I was shocked about to learn in these bankruptcy filings, I'll talk about in seconds,
that he claims to have spent about $10 million on legal fees in connection with these proceedings
where he hasn't done anything and he hasn't showed up and he hasn't appeared for deposition.
So how the hell did he spend $10 million?
But what had previously happened because Alex Jones was not participating in these lawsuits
filed against him for defamation is that he was found to be liable.
He was there was a default judgment when someone doesn't participate in the litigation.
There could be a default entered against,
meaning you lose the case.
He's found liable and responsible
for his conduct in defaming these family members.
So what was left to be decided?
Just the damages.
How many, how much money would compensate the family for the horrific,
egregious acts by Alex Jones in brutally defaming them and saying that they didn't lose their
children and that they're acting and the trauma that he put them through. And in my view,
that is there's no dollar, by the way, that could ever compensate a grieving family for the torture.
the way that could ever compensate a grieving family for the torture Alex Jones put them through. But we're talking about tens of millions of dollars that a jury would likely award
these families. And punitive damages. There could be many, many multiples of that as we
talked about in the case involving Tesla last week. And so these family members suit Alex
Jones. They suit infowars. They suit a number of his other entities and his main kind of holding company that holds all of his intellectual property
is this Info Wars LLC.
So we were headed to a trial that was going to be taking place and next week, it's going
to be very soon.
And on the eve of the trial for damages, Alex Jones put info
wars, the company, the holding company into bankruptcy and filed
chapter 11 bankruptcy. There's a difference between chapter seven
and chapter 11 bankruptcy. I won't be labor and fully go into it
here. But we like to educate on legal AF.
So chapter seven, you really think of like an individual's liquidation bankruptcy. So all of these
non-exempt assets are basically sold off. Whatever is left is distributed to creditors. The individual
gets a blank slate. They get horribly dinged on their credit report for seven years as having
that bankruptcy, but all of their creditors are out and then that individual goes out
of debt. Whereas chapter 11 is a reorganization, usually of a corporation, where there's a plan
that's created with certain debtors. And then the then the debts wiped away and the corporation can then kind of
proceed and exist. And in these chapter 11 cases too, a United States trustee is appointed
and the United States trustee oversees the bankruptcy proceedings as well to make sure that there's
no fraud and that they approve the plan and that they could object to the plan before the judge.
fraud and that they approve the plan and that they could object to the plan before the judge. They represent the trustee represents the bankruptcy estate, which is an entity that is created
by the filing, which is the is the organization in bankruptcy is now in a state in bankruptcy.
And the trustee is the trustee over that estate in the dialogue with the judge over the plan
of reorganization,
the creditors committee, and all of that.
But you're right.
The goal here in a chapter 11 is that they come out,
it's called coming out of chapter 11,
and get to reorganize in order to be a going concern,
whereas as you said in chapter 7,
the entity is liquidated and no longer comes back.
So he thinks he's coming back.
He just wants to get all of the cram down some sort of debt plan.
So people take sense on the dollar or whatever money he has in the bankruptcy.
But you'll go on and talk about why the Department of Justice,
which oversees the trustee program and the families are so
concerned about this filing and are questioning whether it's a bad faith filing.
So we talked about bad faith bankruptcy filings before on legal AF.
Actually, in Texas, where the NRA filed for bankruptcy, and it was challenged as a bad faith
bankruptcy, that is what we will be seeing here as well with Alex Jones. He filed in the Federal Bankruptcy Court in Houston immediately the trustee representing
the US government who represents, as you said, the bankruptcy estate has raised serious
questions about the validity of the filing, wondering also why Alex Jones individually did not seek bankruptcy and did not file for bankruptcy
individually. You know, why the other entities that Alex Jones controls were sued did not seek
bankruptcy and was this just the sham filing because a bankruptcy filing stays. it temporarily stops and delays a litigation with that entity from proceeding until the bankruptcy
is resolved.
And so one of the other issues that comes into play here, though, too, in bankruptcy, though,
is a certain claim, dischargable in bankruptcy as well.
So if it is, if the claims actually proceed through a bankruptcy and it's not a bad faith bankruptcy
There's still another analysis that would need to take place of if it is intentional conduct
often like defamation or an assault or a battery or other types of
intentional torts like that as opposed to negligence
oftentimes those types of claims torques like that as opposed to negligence. Oftentimes those types of claims
are also not dischargeable in bankruptcy. But then you also go to the issue that Alex Jones
hasn't declared bankruptcy and the other entities haven't declared bankruptcy. And so there's
concern that's a bad faith filing. There's also concerns that Alex Jones is putting money in all these other entities and basically
engaged in all these fraudulent conveyances.
And so one of the things that the families have also been filing and are bringing is a
claim that there's fraudulent conveyance taking place under a Texas fraudulent conveyance
that you that Alex is hiding his money in shell corporations
and avoiding paying them.
Because the same thing.
Real money.
In 2019, $78 million from the products that he sold, he's lost some money since the filing
of it, but still, you know, that's like pandemic, you know, decreasing sales.
Anyway, like $58 million last
year in his products.
And this is more.
And this is kind of gloating, calling him, like he's the McDonald's of conspiracy theorist,
they called him something stupid like that at the hearing.
So Popeyes, tell us more about what's going on here.
Yeah, no, I think we impacted there pretty good.
No, and I think you did.
Then we'll talk next about him now at the same time and the same breath as trying to avoid
ultimate liability and playing a shell game with his assets with these fraudulent transfers
and putting the holding company into potential chapter 11 bankruptcy. While at the same time,
the entity under the holding company is being is about to go to trial and defamation and has already
been hit with a million dollar fine by the Texas judge. Everything's been filed in Texas by
these families from Sandy Hook because he resides in Texas. And it was just, you know, easier
not to fight over jurisdiction. And so they went where he lived and, you know, the federal
judge there, this, I'm sorry, the state court judge there has nailed him with a over a million
dollar fine, both him personally and another entity that is not in bankruptcy, but is related to the entity that is in bankruptcy.
This whole shell game of assets, the families to not be left with the peric victory of
a giant judgment, but a paper judgment that they can't enforce because they can't find
his assets.
That would be just adding insult to injury again.
So they're trying now to cut them off at the pass by objecting to bankruptcy filings,
because they assume he's doing it for a reason.
He's doing it so he can pull out his pockets and say, yeah, I have no money.
And the money that you're going to get a judgment against one entity, but then how are
you ever going to go and pierce what we call pierce the veil and go through all of my other entities to get into me.
Now fortunately, he's a named defendant in these cases, but he'll say, I don't have any
money in my own name.
I have a thousand LLCs and in corporations, and I'm sure he does, in which his house is
in one, his car is in his another, you know, his retirement fund is in a third is whatever.
I'm sure he's got everything he thinks bulletproof locked away.
And now these, it's now not, this is what you and I do.
It's not just winning and coming out with a judgment
and celebrating.
It's now collecting on that, if you're on the plaintiff's side
and getting and connecting the money to the victims.
And that's a whole other art that's not taught in law school
that you and I have mastered
and do every day on behalf of our clients.
That's the next step.
So while he's doing that,
knowing that, and I'll transition here for us,
knowing that Ali Alexander, his close buddy,
is already giving testimony to the grand jury,
knowing that his number one lieutenant who helped
attacked it was the first one in to the capital attack has already been arrested and is facing
a and facing trial knowing all of that he has come forward with a letter to the department of
justice saying, Hey, I was at the Willard hotel and I was on the ellipse and I helped I helped
organize certain things related to the attack.
I'm willing to come in and give you my testimony
in exchange for 100% full immunity,
get out of jail free pass.
When would you like to meet with me?
So let's talk about what you think about that
and why he's doing it.
You know, our system is built, I think, fortunately, but also we see the unfortunate side on good faith
dealings and following the law.
And with these, you know, actors, these people who play the role of villain, who simply have no regard whatsoever
for our legal process, we really see how it could all be manipulated.
I don't want to be labor this point, Popeyes, but it may be worth just mentioning it here
because I feel like it's a bit related as well. Donald Trump filed some supplemental
briefing in a BS federal lawsuit he filed against Tish James to delay her civil investigation
taking place against the Trump organization, Trump and his family members for all of their
against the Trump organization, Trump and his family members for all of their fraud in their valuations
and of their different entities
and the investigation that she's doing there.
And that is to delay and slow down her investigation
as no good faith basis to even be filed.
This is at the same time she,
Tisch James is seeking a contempt order against Donald Trump
for not turning over documents and Donald Trump basis.
I don't have the documents.
You're asking me for documents.
Actually, it's the Trump organization
that has the documents.
I don't have the documents.
Then you go to the Trump organization,
they go, we don't have the documents.
This organization has the documents. And so why I'm mentioning all of that is that you have people
who don't follow the rules of the litigation and don't follow. And so how do you take what
is even happening here by Alex Jones in any way seriously.
Him approaching the government for immunity,
that's probably more PR stunts for his TV show.
I got a son of a sh**.
The way for him to, you know,
you have to be so careful as the government
even dealing with him because the investigation
by Merrick Garland and the DOJ has been airtight
almost no leaks whatsoever.
The moment Alex Jones starts talking to them, the leaks that are occurring are from Alex
Jones and people like Ali Alexander leaking the people who they are talking to.
That's not coming from the DOJ that Alex Jones is talking to the DOJ.
Alex Jones is leaking that he's talking to the DOJ. He's doing that to promote himself,
to distract what's going on from Sandy Hook. And ultimately, the DOJ may not care at all about
giving this guy immunity. And they probably would never give a guy immunity. And he's floating
in out there to New York Times reporter. So to answer
your question directly, a bit of a circuitous way is that he's the one in my view who's leaking that.
I don't think there's any serious, you know, views of ever giving him immunity. But I think he's
also trying to, in his own way, blackmail people on his own, you know, who people, his own co-conspirators to help him out,
to give him more money, to protect him. That's what's going on there. And then what we see with
Sandy Hook is just more delays by him and he in his own way with $10 million in legal fees.
And he defaulted on the case. It tells you that he's spending his money on lawyers likely creating the
shell companies to hide his assets versus actually litigate the case.
That's his plan and his strategy.
And we see that, you know, we're seeing it here in a very glaring way, but stuff like
this happens a lot with wealthy people.
So you're, I 100% agree with you.
I think this is all a publicity stunt.
First of all, the prosecutor, and I
want to talk about a new prosecutor
who's joined the Department of Justice team
and why it's really, really important.
And we'll answer the question that many of our audience
have asked, which had been until about a month ago,
and we reported on the Department of Justice
and the grand jury process in Washington, about what is the Department of Justice and the grand jury process in Washington
about what is the Department of Justice doing
beyond the 700 that they're prosecuting
who actually participated in the insurrection
that attacked the Capitol.
What about the planners?
What about the organizers?
What about Trump?
We have some answers to that,
and I think our audience will be happy about it,
and it's kind of nestled within the Alex Jones reporting.
Just to remind everyone, Alex Jones was at the ellipse.
Alex Jones helped plan the ellipse speech for Trump.
Alex Jones participated in the ellipse.
Alex Jones was at the Willard Hotel,
which was their bunker that he and banan and Giuliani and Powell and others.
Flynn came in and out of on Jan 5 in order to organize all of the what Jamie
Raskin is now called and we'll talk about next. The the inside coup led by the president of the
United States against the vice president and Congress.
Because that is how the JAN-6 committee is going to present this.
And Jamie Rasking gave us a little bit of an insight to that.
We'll talk about the next segment.
What was Alex Jones' role?
The JAN-6 committee has concluded.
And Alex Jones just reminded everybody, testified in front of the JAN-6 committee.
Now, he says on his info wash or whatever it is
that he took the fifth a hundred times, but he answered some questions. So he already went in
and what is the linkage between Alex Jones and all of this? It's the following that he
Carolyn Ren, WREN, a Trump aid who worked in the Trump organization, Cindy Chaffion,
who worked in the Trump organization, Cindy Chafein, who helped organize the First Amendment Praetorians and their security detail around the ellipse, and Julie Fanceli, who is an
heir to the public's super market fortune.
That group, Alex Jones at the top of that group, financed 80% of the ellipse events.
That's one.
The second thing is that we learn from the reporting off of Alex Jones saying, if you give me
full immunity, I'll give you whatever little information I'll provide to you, is that
Thomas Windom, WIMDOM, a very successful federal prosecutor based in Maryland.
It's now reported as been added to the Department of Justice team and he will oversee the entire
Jan 6 investigation as the front line as the line prosecutor.
There's two groups of prosecutors that are working simultaneously who will now report
into Thomas Windom.
One is the group that we've all heard about
and you and I have reported on for the last six or eight months.
That's the group of prosecutors
that are investigating the Gen 6 riot
and everybody that was involved, the Gen 6 riot.
Then there's the second team of federal prosecutors
who are looking at the conspiracy case
and that's the case that gets closer and closer to Trump
and his inner circle, and the related issues related to the forged and fraudulent electors
in the battleground states and that submission. And those two teams are now being supervised
by a brand new prosecutor who have been brought in to work with the different departments of
the Department of Justice, the National Security Division of the Department of Justice, for instance, to try to decide when
and whether to prosecute people like Donald Trump. And so the good news is, for those that said,
they're not doing a darn thing, they are. And whether it's exactly at the level that the Gen 6 Committee is. Remember, the Gen 6 Committee are not prosecutors.
They are not presenting evidence and evaluating evidence
on a prosecutorial scale.
The one that Karen talks about with me a lot on the Wednesday
podcast of beyond a reasonable doubt
and the exercise of prosecutorial discretion.
They don't have to.
We don't want them to.
They're on a completely different standard of preponderance of the evidence. And that's what they're going to present
in June during the hearings. And that's what they're going to deliver the Janskis 6 Committee
in their report before the midterm elections in the fall or the late summer. But that's the
Alex Jones thing. I think you're right.
He's starting a fire in the corner
in order to distract from all of his bankruptcy problems
to make himself relevant,
to continue to generate money in the cash and his pocket.
And there is no way that Thomas Windham,
the new prosecutor, or anybody else in that team,
another prediction is gonna give him immunity
to get any information out of him
because they have what they need
against Alex Jones from his tenant from Owen Shryer who was his first lieutenant who worked on info
wars who's going to jail to Alex to Ali Alexander who seems more worried about his personal liberty
than than I think Alex Jones does. They'll do it without him. Thank you very much Mr. Jones for
your offer, but we
pass. And I think that's what we're going to see in the next set of reporting related
to the Department of Justice.
The January 6th committee hearings, as you mentioned, Michael Popack will start in June
and Congressman Jamie Raskin says, the revelations at these hearings, quote, will blow the roof off the house.
We're going to talk about Jan 6th updates and we're going to talk about the Marjorie Taylor
green in surrection hearings.
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I have two or a frames in my house.
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You have one two Popeye.
It was so easy to put the photos. You have one, two, pop up. It was so easy to load the photos in there.
It looks beautiful in the past when I had these frames,
like when I tried ordering them years ago,
like the quality didn't look good,
and it just didn't,
I didn't, it didn't look good in my house.
This looks great.
Everyone complements it.
I'll tell you one thing about Oregon,
I'm glad they're back as a sponsor
because I liked them for the very beginning.
It is that app, that's their, that's their better mouse trap.
That app they have is so seamless, is so easy to use that I'll be out at an event or, you know, some life experience where there's a photo.
And it's just so easy directly from your photo library to go to the app and immediately send it to your frame by time
you get home, it's already rotating on your frame from the event you just left. It really is,
I think, for that market of digital frames, I think this is the best one out there because of that
app. The best. All right, let's get into it. January 6th committee updates. And then let's talk about the
Marjorie Taylor Green insurrection hearings. First January committee updates. As I mentioned before,
I read those ads, we have a congressman, Raskin says, quote, the revelations we will be discussing in
June are going to quote, below the roof off the house.
I believe this is what the insurrectionists were trying to do.
There's irony there. The January 6th committee has now interviewed approximately 850 individuals
who gave statements under penalty of perjury and one individual who did not give
a statement under penalty of perjury
and likely for good reason
because he wouldn't be able to withstand
the most basic of questioning, although he is a trader
for his a trader and a coward, Kevin McCarthy.
And the recent revelations after Kevin McCarthy
completely denied, I never told Donald Trump
that he should resign.
I would never make a comment like that.
Well, those revelations were printed in a new book
written by two New York Times writers.
That was leaked in connection with the book. Kevin McCarthy said, I'd never said
that. That's fake news. And then immediately after, guess what drops on Rachel Maddow,
the tapes get dropped by New York Times, where Kevin McCarthy was speaking with
Republican leadership on a conference call as it was January 10th.
And what did he say?
He said, I am going to speak to Donald Trump and tell him to resign.
I think Donald Trump should resign.
That was one tape.
The other tape that was revealed was he said that Donald Trump, by the way, tapes are a
terrible thing for liars.
Absolutely.
And the other thing he said that Donald Trump told him
that Donald Trump believed that he was responsible
for January 6th and that he was at fault for January 6th.
Those two things are on tape.
We will keep talking about that each and every day
at Midas Touch and Legal AF.
But that's like atomic bomb level evidence, Popocht does.
Do you think people fully understand the implications of that
or is that just lost in the noise of the Republicans
or a fascist traitorous party
and that they're corrupt criminals
and that's just who they are right now?
It gets lost in the noise,
which is why the brothers podcast
and all the other podcast in the stable of might as touch are so important because we bring it front and
center. We're not going to stop talking about that. You're not. We're not going to stop
talking about the link between Jenny Thomas and all of the QAnon and all of the cultists
that that attacked the Capitol and her and her her marriage to to Clarence. We're not going
to stop talking about these things, but they not going to stop talking about these things,
but they want us to stop talking about these things.
This would be the equivalent then.
What you just described would be like if there was
an audio tape of Benedict Arnold at the time betraying his country.
I mean, this is the level that we're talking about.
And I'm sorry, and you're exactly right.
It gets lost in the transom and the morass
of all of the digital feeds that could plug
into everybody's head.
As you talked about the competing chihuahas
that are out there and or the direct mainline feed
into the arm, I think, is another way you put it,
which I can't do.
Yeah, for those who are just tuning in to legally
after the first time with people're not too sure what was
what Popeye is talking about is the way the media presents
things is this false competition where you elevate two sides,
one democracy, one fascism, as though it's just a normal
Democrat Republican conversation, and you have two
chihuahas talking at each other like, and you have two Chihuahua's talking at each other,
like, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
and that's how 90% of the mainstream media does it.
The largest platform mainstream media Fox News,
though they're just injecting fascism directly
into the veins of India.
Yeah, they're mainlining the vein.
Now, here's what I thought was the most interesting
about and most heartwarming, I guess that's the word as a true believer in democracy and a protector of our republicas.
We are on this show and on the other shows is Jamie Raskin gave a preview of what the June hearing is going to be and the presentation.
He's not my alma mater.
Georgetown. He gave it at at a Georgetown conference on religion and law. I forget the topic as a guest speaker. You
didn't hold back. They're not gagged. They have not gagged themselves. They feel they have to talk
in the public in advance of the delivery of the report to be a counterweight to what Trump does
every day and meadows and and McCarthy and the rest of them. And I'm glad about that.
I'm glad that they're out there talking about their report.
And Jamie Raskin, who's kind of the lead prosecutor
for the Jansix Committee, he said,
point like this was an insider coup,
the likes that we've never seen were a president
to cling to power,
had a coup arranged against the vice president against Mike Pence and against
Congress in order to create the framework for first the insurrection to be used as a cover for the
coup, then use the insurrection act of 1807 to to put down rebellion, which rebellion means democratic voices, to
take then control, to throw the entire thing to the house under the 12th Amendment, an
amendment we never talk about, and to have Mike Pence do his bidding.
And the most chilling thing that Raskin said to him, that he's heard out of 800 interviews is that the Secret Service
agents reported that Mike even Mike Pence sensing the coup, and this is Raskin's view,
refused to get into a car to be whisked away from the Capitol, knowing that his place
to stop the coup was to stay in the capital. And the quote from
Raskin, from the Secret Service agent, is that Mike Pence told to get in the car by the Secret
Service agent said, I am not getting in that car. He, Raskin said, that's the most chilling
six words he's heard out of the entire set of testimony. And he took that to mean that the light went off in Pence's head that Trump was trying to get Pence
out of there and order for this chaos to ensue for the insurrection act to be invoked
for Marshall law. We're going to talk about that next with Marjorie Taylor Green for
Marshall law to be invoked. And for this president desperate to cling on to cling to power
to try to overthrow the legitimacy
of the Biden win.
Because what were they trying to do as part of their plan?
And we talked about this with John Eastman, who I believe were co-conspirators, were all
of these traitorous Republican senators who were objecting to the certification process.
You know, there's a weird law on the books.
Obviously, the Constitution is the president of the Senate,
the vice president counts, the electoral votes,
and it's a ministerial act, right?
Where they just literally counted and say,
the states have submitted it.
Here's what the state said.
The Electoral Count Act of 1887
is this very strange law that was passed, which is very vague.
But what it basically says is it gives the power to members of the House and Senate to object
to the certification.
And if there's a certain level of objections, if the majority of the House and Senate
sustain the objection, agree with the objection. If there is a new slate of electors that's approved by the state government, those electors
could replace the electors where the objections were sustained.
And, and state houses are controlled by Republicans by and large.
And so they were, the states were submitting the fraudulent electors that they sent to
the National Archivist for processing, which then went to the House.
And so the idea was, was that the Republican senators were going to object to the legitimate
electors, the Republicans, senators and House of Representatives, was going to object to
that. And because though the governors,
who Trump, that's why Trump was threatening the governors
of the Republican States to support the unlawful electors,
but because that didn't happen,
the plans switched and hinged on Pence,
basically saying, based on the objections,
I don't have the ability to certify
the result.
So you take Pence out, you risk him out, you throw the elections into chaos, the ideas
it goes to the house of representatives, and it goes to the story, the state legislatures are the ones and the
state houses would ultimately, you know, decide. And if the state houses in these areas where
there were disputes, which leaned Republican, then it would overturn the election in favor
of Trump. But they needed pens to get in that car. He refused.
They needed pens to get into the car. And needed pens not to engage in the ministerial act
as the vice president. Had pens just simply said, hey, there's way too much confusion here and
got into the car, the United States of America would be likely an authoritarian country,
we would have a civil war. That's what would have happened. That's how close it came. And that's why they had
backup plans to including killing Mike Pence. That's why it was hang Mike Pence was the plan when
it was clear that Mike Pence wasn't going to go along with the plan. The Republicans knew this,
Kevin McCarthy knew this. That's why on January 10th, Kevin McCarthy said I'm going to call
President Trump and tell him to resign. That's why in the audio tape, Liz Ch 10th, Kevin McCarthy said I'm going to call president Trump and tell him to resign.
That's why in the audio tape, Liz Cheney, Kevin McCarthy, the Republicans are talking about the 25th Amendment.
That's why there's Steve Scalise, who's a big Trump supporter publicly, but privately, we have the information of him saying that Trump should be removed from office. But you have this cowardice, this obsequiousness, this traitorousness of the Republican party,
whereas this is what they're saying privately.
This is how fascism and authoritarianism is created by people like Kevin McCarthy doing
just that.
I'm sorry.
There were people behind Hitler's back in his inner circle that we're talking
negatively about him, but they never stood up to him. And we know what happened historically
from that. So if that is the preview for what and that was just one comment where where Jamie
Raskin summarized, you know, a year's worth of investigation by saying it was an insider coup
led by the
president against the vice president of Congress and ultimately the American people.
And the six most chilling words are those of of of of of Pence get strapped in.
You think you got a half a million people that watched the Midas touch Twitter feed or
Twitch feed of Marjorie Taylor Green?
Wait, do you see the numbers?
And if we do the live commentary about it,
when the week long or more hearings in June start,
I might have to take a sabbatical
just to sit and watch these with you.
Hope, you may have to hold you to that sabbatical,
but that's what's going on there.
Those are the big Jan six updates.
And lawmakers are looking at the Electoral
Counter-Akk Act again.
They are looking at the Insurrection Act again.
These things that are being used by,
you know, as the Constitution was stress tested,
seeing where these points of weakness were
that tried to be unlawfully exploited by Republicans.
And as David Carter, federal judge in California, that tried to be unlawfully exploited by Republicans.
And as David Carter, federal judge in California,
said, this was a coup in search of a legal theory.
And the legal theories they searched for,
one was the electoral count, act of 1887 that I discussed.
The other was the insurrection act that you discussed,
you know, and trying to
pervert and destroy our Constitution. That's why when these radical right extremists hoist
up the Constitution, the flag in performative ways, they use the flag, the radical right
extremists to beat and kill police officers. That is how they use the flag. They use the
constitution to allow guns to spread rampantly in our schools and allow school shootings
and protect conspiracy theorists like Alex Jones. That's not what our constitution is
for. That's not what the values and they don't want to take respond. The people that
vote for that party by large and I have friends that are that do that. Do not want to take responsibility for
the moral and ethical issues and dilemmas that are created by voting for a Trump. They
don't want to acknowledge that they are responsible for the first time in 200 years for the for
Congress to have to reconsider changes to martial law, to the
insurrection act of 1807, to the Electoral Count Act. These are civil war era law in our
books that I would have thought I would have went to my own personal grave undisturbed in
the last 200 years. I did not think we would have a presidency that would require a reevaluation
of the law of the land after the assassination of President Lincoln and the combination of
the Union again after the Confederacy. And they're okay with that. They fly their Trump 2024 flags.
I've got them in my neighborhood. I ride by them. I see
them on their trucks, but do they ever think about the implications for the survival of our democracy?
Because they have pledged allegiance to a madman. And I hate to be cruel, but just for a moment,
I think I've earned that right. I don't know how old Trump is. What does he push
in 80? And I know I was going to say, well, Biden's older doesn't matter. Eventually, and soon,
because that's the way longevity works, Trump's going to be dead. Trump's not going to be alive
because he's going to die of natural causes. I don't know if he's going to be 85 or he's going to be
90. And then what? And then what? Are they going to wait around for his coming back his resurrection?
I mean, he's going to be gone in a very short period of time, five years or 10 years, not
soon enough for me, but eventually he'll be gone. And what are these people going to do? Who is going
to be their new Messiah that they're going to follow towards fascism? That's the scary part. It's not
that we've now identified Trump
and have him in a box
and are starting to pin him down like Gulliver
in all of these prosecutions.
The question is, who is the next one?
Is it de-Santis?
Is it whoever?
And that is why Midas Touch and the Midas Mighty
are so important.
Because we've already, Trump is a returning the page
on Trump one way or the other.
He doesn't win in 2024, but who comes next to follow in his footsteps and pick up the mantle
from these people that have supported him? And that's why you have to call it out. And you have
to condemn it. And you have to stand up. And you have to be a leader if you truly care about our democracy. Because it is obviously the heir apparent is DeSantis.
DeSantis is smarter than Donald Trump.
He's a Saviour political maneuver.
He's a Saviour executive than Trump.
Trump is not a good executive.
And you have Governor DeSantis who clearly has authoritarian leanings who is increasingly
acting like a dictator within the state.
And that is how he will desire to run the country.
And that's why we have to call it out at every single turn.
So let's talk though about the Marjorie Taylor Green and Syrac션 hearing.
It streamed live on the Midas Touch YouTube channel in addition
to some other places where it was live. And a lot of our viewers, a lot of listeners
wanted to know what was I watching? Like what was this proceeding? Well, it was an administrative
proceeding before a judge by the name of Judge Charles R. Bedro, Jr. who was in the office of the state
of administrative hearings for the state of Georgia. He's an administrative judge. So it's an
administrative hearing before an administrative judge to disqualify an individual from being
judge to disqualify an individual from being Popeyes.
You're raising a coffee up. I got a point of order.
Point of order.
He's going, the only thing this administrative judge can do,
and we're gonna talk about the whole thing backwards.
He can make the explanation, Popeyes.
He can make a referral to Brad Ryan.
Yeah, I hit the point, Popeyes.
I gotta go there, but the hearing is to disqualify.
And what you have no faith in people
talking knowing the law.
I have so much faith in you that every Saturday,
I show up, that finger showed no faith.
I put, I don't have a yellow card.
You put a finger in your face.
I have, it was the right finger.
It was for those that don't watch this on YouTube,
it was an appropriate finger. I just wanted to make sure the people know it's a report
recommendation to the secretary. Exactly. Okay. He makes a report or a furl to the secretary of
state Brad Raffinsberger who can accept or reject that referral because the Secretary of State in Georgia oversees the electoral process.
That's why Trump threatened Brad Raffetzberger and said, find me 11,000 blah blah blah votes
because Raffetzberger oversees the election process. So what does that mean? That means even if this
judge found one way or the other, the recommendation would still go to Brad Raffinsberger who could accept
or reject that recommendation. And so that's a weird process. It is a weird process. I mean, there's no,
it's not, this is not in a normal court. It is not in a federal court. It is not in the Georgia
traditional state court systems. It's not in front of a jury, that's not what this proceeding is.
The 14th Amendment Section 3 has really never been litigated before, which basically says
if you're an insurrectionist, you can't run for office or you'd be disqualified from running
from office.
There was a subsequent law that gave immunity to insurrectionists of the civil war
that they could go back and run for office, that gave them immunity there so that we could heal
as a nation purportedly back in the, you know, back in the late 1880s. So that law was passed.
And there's been a dispute amongst federal courts, whether that law, which granted immunity,
if you want to call it immunity, for insurrectionists of the Civil War, for Confederates to run for
Congress.
If that applied to insurrectionists in the future, a Georgia federal court found that that
law does not supersede the Constitution, and that it was not meaning, did not give immunity to future
insurrectionists, that future insurrectionists, they could be challenged.
And then the court and Madison Coffearns Challenge in North Carolina, that judge found that
this immunity was given to all future insurrectionists, but that's being challenged in the appeals
court there.
So because of the ruling and federal court
in Georgia saying that all future insurrectionists cannot have their ability to run for office
challenge, we had this administrative proceeding. Now administrative proceedings happen a lot to
challenge maybe someone's qualification, maybe someone registers for the wrong party or whatever.
And no one hears about these administrative hearings. They don't, they're not widely attended. maybe someone's qualification, maybe someone registers for the wrong party or whatever.
And no one hears about these administrative hearings.
They don't, they're not widely attended.
That's why if you noticed the room it was in, I heard people saying, like, that looks
like the back room of like, you know, whatever.
I'm like, yeah, it's a weird room at the DMV.
That's like the hearing room with the DMV.
Exactly.
It's a weird location.
It's a weird proceeding because people don't know.
It hasn't been said whether the 14th Amendment section 3 is self-activating. Is it Congress's
job to disqualify its own members? Is it a federal judges job to disqualify? Is it if
somebody is convicted? So, but all of those issues, those legal issues are actually still in play.
And that's what Marjorie Taylor Greene's lawyer was arguing too, even though they're in
this forum, is that this forum still doesn't really have the right to make the ruling that
the forum's going to make.
But these civil rights groups, these pro-democracy groups, You know, I think we all agree that Marjorie Taylor-Green
is incendiary, is hateful, is a horrible representative
of all of the values of the United States of America.
I mean, she's harassed, surviving victims
of school shootings.
She's claimed that 9-11 is a fraud.
She talks about anti-Semitic things all the time,
Jewish space lasers, horrific, horrific,
hateful, hateful rhetoric that's coming out of there.
She has not been criminally prosecuted
under the sedition statute yet.
And so this was a administrative hearing saying that she engaged in insurrection
conduct. And therefore, this judge, this administrative judge should issue a referral
to disqualify her. It's a weird process for me as a lawyer, Popeyes, too, because I'm
used to in court cases, depositions, to dismiss, hearings, you know, and this
was kind of like, all right, just go for it.
Yeah.
Like, like she shows up, but she shows up at a sun, sun dress, swear in the witness.
Let's go.
So that's the background procedurally of what took place.
So then you have this hearing where the judge would make a referral at the end of the day.
The hearing took place. It lasted a full day. It was streamed. There is now post trial briefing
that's going to take place next week. And then the judge is going to read those briefs and then make
the recommendation. And ultimately,
Raffensberger can accept or reject the recommendation to disqualify
Marjorie Telegram. So that's the framework. Popo, you want to go into what
you saw at the hearing. Yeah. Yeah, I'll do a little bit more on the framework.
So the different states do different things. And if you're in Pennsylvania,
that kind of challenge doesn't go to the Office of Administrative
hearings in Pennsylvania, for instance, it goes to the board of election, and the board
of election convenes, for instance, there in another states a hearing and does the hearing.
Georgia, basically, any time there needs to be an evidentiary process, an evidentiary hearing where evidence is presented,
witness testimony is presented, concerning any level of administration or any level of
agency decision making in the state of Georgia, they've put it all under the office of administrative
hearings, they call it Oath. And so there's
a judge. And that judge normally hears things like, oh, you lost your dog license. Oh, you
can't be a barber or a cosmologist anymore. Okay, let's, let me hear from you and let me
hear, oh, your firearm went off too many times and you're getting fine for that. Okay,
let's, and that's a 20 minute thing. And then they make either a recommendation
or they actually sometimes have the power
to make a ruling in the election law area.
The administrative law judge does the evidentiary hearing
developing the evidence makes a report and recommendation
to in this case, the secretary of state
for the final decision.
So in fact, the judge, Boudreau,
and I'll talk about him in a minute,
a number of times he
reminded the participants, both lawyers and other people that were in the gallery, many
of whom started to applaud when Marjorie Taylor Green came in, so the room was packed with
her supporters, including Matt Gates, from some reason, who decided that he should sit
at council table because that's a good thing.
Matt Gates on your side, he assumed to be going to jail for child endangerment
and child prostitution trafficking.
But in any event, he kept reminding,
Judge Boudreau kept reminding people,
this is not the Supreme Court,
and you're making oral argument there.
I am here on an evidentiary hearing.
Stop with all the objections.
Let's get the evidence out so I can make
my report recommendation.
And he was pretty even handed in that.
All right, here's his background.
I looked at him. I looked him up on LinkedIn.
He says, first thing about himself,
he's a musician and a composer.
He went to Harvard.
He went to Duke undergrad.
And for 38 years, he's been a tax lawyer
until he retired recently.
So this is, you know, first amendment versus
election law, the 14th amendment. This is not this guy's gig. He's a smart guy. I mean, I'm not
a 38 year tax lawyer. It's not an idiot, especially given his credentials. But this is not what he's
been trained for. He'll do the best he can possibly do. Now, I want to talk about the two lawyers
that were on either side. I know one of them by one degree of separation,
and then we'll talk about the other one.
So Andrew Chelley, who has a very successful firm here in New York,
I know through a mutual contact.
He used to work for a former governor in New York
as the chief of the Civil Rights Division
when that governor was Attorney General,
when he was Tisch James.
And so that's where Andrew Chelley got his start.
He's about my peer.
I think we're one
year off in law school graduation. And his firm is dedicated in New York to civil rights law,
first amendment law. It's very similar to what you and I do. He's represented the Tribune company.
He's done voting rights cases and all of that. He's on behalf of the organization, the group of
people that are challenging her eligibility or her disability to be on the ballot.
On the other side is James Bop, B-O-P-P.
We've talked about his cases before
because he has represented Madison, Cautorn.
He's represented, he's filed briefs against abortion rights.
He's a former district attorney general
or a deputy attorney general for the state of Indiana. He's a big member
of the federalist society. And the only cases that his law firm take are on the right, right wing
of the party in supporting everything that we've talked about. SBA, he's in favor of SBA.
Dobbs, he's he sends an amicus briefing. So he represents all these people like Marjorie Taylor Greene. And in fact,
at one point in the proceeding, he wouldn't let her answer a question because he's been involved
with President Trump and the exercise of executive privilege when they asked her, did you talk
to the president about him imposing martial law under the insurrection. And she responded, I don't recall, as if, and I saw a tweet
of yours been, as if that's such a commonplace thing that the president talking to you about
martial law, you may forget that within the last year, like you forgot what you had for breakfast
last Tuesday, totally not credible as an advocate. And the things that she said,
that she did not recall,
despite having the tweet of the video,
the interview presented to her by Chelly,
who was cross-examining her, is mind-boggling.
Did you like the tweet about the way to take out Nancy Pelosi once and
for all to put a bulletin ahead?
Oh, I don't run my social media.
I don't really don't know.
I don't really know who did that.
Did you once say that the FBI was involved with a false flag event and they were involved
with staging the insurrection?
Oh, I don't recall saying that.
And of course, they play the tweet of the video where she said that.
Did you once say it was a false flag event and it was Antifa or Black Lives Matter that were staging the insurrection and not
actually who it was. I don't know. I might have said that. And then she brings up her QAnon theories
about, you know, Black Lives Matter and Antifa, all the same thing. So she spent an incredible
amount of her three hours
of testimony denying that she knew anything,
even in the face of these things.
Now, for those that were questioning this
on your Twitter feed or on your YouTube feed,
perjury, what about perjury?
Yes, Georgia has on its books, on its penal code,
a perjury statute, which is at 16-10-70, which says that if you're in
a judicial proceeding and you do not tell the truth about a material issue that is the
point of the question, then you can go to jail for between one and 10 years.
But that has to be a referral that's going to have to be made off of maybe the administrative
law judge to the prosecutors to prosecute the crime of
burgery, if they can prove, if they can prove burgery, I'm not sure this judge is going
to find that. Now, I do think that when the briefing happens next week, the post hearing
briefing, I think it's on Thursday, and this judge ultimately makes a ruling relatively
quickly because the absentee ballots for mayor going out with her name on it.
Can he comment on the testimonial evidence and the credibility of the witness? Absolutely. I mean, judges do it all the time. I did not believe the veracity of the witness
who had taken the stand in their own defense. They say that all the time.
Is this sort of mat lock, southern, you know, federal, you know, tax lawyer, retiree musician?
Is he going to go out and alimmon say that? I want to manage expectations. I don't think so.
What do you think, Ben? I don't think he's going to find her
perjury. I don't think he's going to find her in contempt. I don't think he's going to find her perjury.
I don't think he's gonna find her in contempt.
I don't think he's gonna disqualify her.
I don't wanna be the bearer of bad news
because I'll tell you where I genuinely think
there's good news for democracy.
I think there's great news for democracy
in what's going to happen in June
with the January 6th Committee, with
850 witnesses that they've interviewed and that they have the goods.
I think what we're seeing, you mentioned federal prosecutor Wynman from Maryland and the
increasing efforts by the DOJ to rise, to increase to the top of the food chain of who is involved in the
insurrection.
I think one of the issues when you have these quasi-judicial proceedings like Marjorie
Taylor-Green that don't involve the same level of why is discovery important in a case?
Why do we have subpoena power?
Why do we have these authorities?
Is because when you were questioning Marjorie
Taylor Green, all they basically had were her public statements, her tweets. And while she
showed that she's a liar, while she showed C's evasive, while she repeated the conspiracy
type things over and over again, and what she didn't recall is completely preposterous.
And you can make a big issue in an out of it as a cross-examiner.
Wait a minute, Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Are you telling me here that this was just to be clear, this was your first term as a
member of Congress?
Isn't that correct?
And you had a conversation with the president. Is that a big deal for you to
have a conversation with the president? And you can't recall one way or another if you
spoke about declaring martial law, you don't remember that. That's not a big deal to you,
Miss Green. That's just something that, you know, you would forget that's something. And
jurors, tryers of fact, listen to that. And as you said, Pope, you would forget that's something. And jurors, tryers of fact, listen to that.
And as you said, Popeye, you would say that's impractical.
That's incredible.
We don't believe that.
That witness has no credibility.
I've interviewed individuals.
I won't get into the nitty gritty of the cases
because I represent plaintiffs against defendants
in some really horrific, disgusting cases
where I'll put on a witness,
I'll put on the defendant,
and they'll say, I don't remember it.
And I'll say, so did it happen more than once?
I don't remember.
Did it happen more than five times?
I don't remember.
Could it have happened more than five times?
I don't remember.
Could it happen a hundred times?
I don't remember.
Could it have been five hundred times?
And then I'll get with them.
Could it have happened a thousand times, a million times? I go, so as you're sitting here today, you don't remember if you engage the Nat Act one time or one million times
You know and you play that out and you look at the judge you look at the jury and that doesn't that's not a logical explanation
Sometimes you have to prove cases just on that theory
So why don't I think though I listened to all of the evidence that came out.
I think Marjorie Taylor Green
is absolutely an insurrectionist.
Okay, I do what I do.
And do I think that she wanted for that conduct to occur?
Do I think all of her pre-conduct,
all of her ginning up her base?
Did I think that did it?
Yes.
But in my view, I think you have to
be like criminally convicted of the statute. I think you have to have, I think you have
to have either the DOJ convict, you have to have, and you know, because again, where I get worried in this area
is that, and I shouldn't be worried, it's the way it shouldn't be, but we know that the
Republicans operate in bad faith. What I worry is that it will just open up the floodgates,
where you're just going to have every member of
Congress in the future will be challenged because if they make a statement or if they say
something, the Republicans are going to make them sit in a hearing and then you're going
to get in front of a judge, an administrative judge who is more like a Ali Alexander, who may disqualify candidates.
And they're not equal.
Like Marjorie Telegram's conda clearly
is antithetical to our constitution
versus what they accuse people on the other side of.
I just worry that the process itself
is with limited discovery, doesn't achieve the ultimate
outcome.
And I know people may not like me to hear that.
I love the, I love the idea of cross-examining Marjorie Taylor Green.
I love the idea of holding a mccountable, you know, I just, I wonder, I have that concern
Popeye. Yeah, I don't disagree with, I have that concern, Popeye.
Yeah, I don't disagree with you.
Let me put it another way.
It is important to hold people accountable
and call out their bullshit
and when they participate in insurrections
to put them on trial for it one way or the other.
So do I think the plaintiff's groups
and the cellies of the world that are bringing these
cases are doing God's work. I do. It's important to have put her through that process. Do I think this
is the actual process where she's going to be declared an insurrectionist under article 14 section
three of the U.S. Constitution in the back of the DMV? I do not. Now, Congress can censure her. I can't
even remember right now. Was she censured by Congress for any of this? I don't think so.
I think a lot of this, I don't, was she been? I think she was previously censured by Congress
and then they removed her from the education committee. On the committee. But not, but I don't think related to the insurrection.
Right. So she wasn't even censored by her own political body,
because they don't have the balls to do that.
Let alone prosecuted yet for insurrection.
And then you've got that, that interesting issue,
that academic issue you and I have debated,
not to bait it because we're on the same side,
about there's not one person who's been charged with with the crime and it is a crime of insurrection. So, dishes conspiracy, yes, obstruction, yes.
So, it's, but, but to your point and to the point I'm making, continue to hold their feet to the
fire, take the moe Brooks, take the go-sars, take the Marjorie Taylor Greens, and go through the
processes to have them denied their
right to be on the ballot.
Even if it now, it'll have one or two effects, it'll either make them chased and make
them not participate in the next insurrection, we hope, or it's just another fundraising
drive for Marjorie Taylor Green.
And then the other reality I hate to be the bearer of bad news is that even if Marjorie
Taylor Green came off the ballot in the northern
District of Georgia, we're not turning that corner that Trump won by 32 points into a blue
District in our favor in Georgia. So yes, we all don't like she's she's the Congressperson. We love to hate
Okay, because she's so blatantly and acutely
to hate, okay, because she's so blatantly and acutely, everything that we think is wrong with the Republican Party and the QAnon fueled Republican Party.
But she'll just be replaced.
It'll be next man up with another person.
The challenger, the Democratic challenger has zero chance of winning in that district.
Well, I wouldn't say a zero chance, but I would say that it is a significant
upheld fight. And Marcus Flowers is actually a good candidate. He's raised a lot of money.
The area though is an area that elected Marjorie Taylor Greene. And so how do you defeat
where there's a great deal of support for that version of QAnonism. It is a real, real problem that exists there.
And then you have the issue of,
if the judge makes a disqualification referral,
and then that goes to Brad Raffensberger,
even though Brad Raffensberger was targeted by Trump
and extorted by Trump,
and Raffensberger probably does not think highly
of Marjorie Taylor Greene would be putting it lightly.
You know, does Raffensberger say that I think
that this was the process for disqualifying
or do I think the process was if Congress wants to do it,
if DOJ wants to do it, if she's criminally prosecuted
in the state for insurrection, it's a criminal process that she's found
to be an insurrectionist by a jury.
And then the jury's finding then has effect
under the Constitution as it.
But I'm with you, Popeye.
We got to hold these people accountable.
I do applaud the lawyers for holding her accountable,
but I do think it's a very, very, very uphill battle.
She's not gonna be found guilty of perjury.
She just isn't, so I want people to know that that's not going to happen.
And when she's saying, I don't recall, I don't remember, that happens every day in court
with witnesses who are being accused of things.
And you as a skilled lawyer have to make it clear that that witness doesn't have credibility.
It's a jury instruction, the witness's credibility,
what they remember and what they don't remember.
You can do things like the lawyers were doing there,
refreshing the recollection with the document,
is this what you said, impeaching the witness
by showing that the witness said that,
oh, you don't remember, put up exhibit three,
put up exhibit seven, put up exhibit 15.
You did say that, correct?
That's what you said.
But you can't force the witness to say,
oh, now I remember, they can just say,
I don't remember, and then you show the documents
and you leave it to the person who's making a ruling
to say, well, that person's a liar.
I don't believe them.
But that's the overall kind of summary there
of what happened in the Marjorie Taylor Green case.
And I do wanna leave on this positive note.
Like, here's what's going to happen.
Like, I think that these hearings,
the Jan 6th hearings in June,
are going to be among the most impactful, meaningful, historical,
game-changing events that, you know, it's almost like if you think of an international
perspective, no one realized the courage and strength of Ukraine.
And then once you saw Zelensky in action,
and once you kind of saw it,
it was a game changer of kind of a framework.
And even you saw Tucker Carlson, you saw Fox News trying
to spin it, trying to downplay Zelensky,
trying to prop a Putin, but you couldn't.
The facts were a tsunami. It was
overwhelming. That's what we're going to see in June with the Jan 6th committee. These facts
are going to be overwhelming. There's going to be public hearings. There's going to be the release
of the findings. Every single day, that's going to be the focus. And people are going to leave with the only conclusion
that could be drawn is that Trump is guilty,
Trump's inner circle is guilty,
and that's gonna be important for the election,
but it's gonna be more important for the democracy,
for the safety and safeguarding of our democracy,
the work that Jen Six can be made.
Let me make two quick observations, One historical. I was nine during
the Watergate hearings, nine. I still remember them. Okay, so if I remember the Watergate hearings
as a tiny Popaki in the tiny nine-year-old, can you imagine what this is going to do to a generation
at every age level about our democracy.
And I think that was a teaser from Jamie Raskin
about what's going to be presented.
But we know from having watched the impeachment hearings
by many of the same people here,
that there are deniers out there within that party
that are going to say this is political show theater,
political show trial, that none of this is true.
How they're going to deny 800,
it's hard to believe there are 800 people
that had personal knowledge of the assault on the Capitol
on the attempt at a violent overthrow
in an inside coup.
It's hard to believe that there's that many people
that have that knowledge.
And one last thing in the presentation,
because I want people to,
I want to start coaching them
about frustration levels.
There's gonna be a certain group that's never gonna crack
directly around Trump, even when you hear
of Ancestestifying or this one's,
they're jarrered, went in or this or that.
They don't need, and we don't need,
if we were the prosecutors or defenceless,
we don't need every bit of evidence in order to reach logical
conclusions and make a and make a case. There are times when
circumstantial evidence, when inference, when you get to the one yard line or
one inch yard line of the football field, but you don't have that last piece
to punch it in, but you know,'s going to happen next and that's okay.
It's okay that Trump will never testify to the Gen 6 committee. It's okay that Meadows will never testify.
It's okay that all of these people will take the fifth amendment. They have enough visual evidence, documentary evidence, recordings, text messages, emails, and then the testimony of 800 people
to tell an effective truthful story, a real truth that others can deny, but it doesn't
change the fact that it happened.
And I think you and I are, there's things that we don't even know yet.
And I'm hoping the Department of Justice knows that we're going to hear for the first
time in June.
Have you checked out store.mitustouch.com to get all of your mightest merch to get all
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That's store.mitustouch.com to get all of the merch. Thank you. Everybody for
listening to this edition of Legal AF. It is always a pleasure and an honor to be joined by my
co-host Michael Popak, delivering the most consequential legal issues of the week to you all. We're so grateful for you, our legal AF supporters,
our legal AF students, our legal AF friends. We'll see you next time on legal AF.
Shout out to the MidasMighter.
you