Legal AF by MeidasTouch - The Origins of Legal AF
Episode Date: March 18, 2021On the kick-off episode of Legal AF, hosts MT founder and civil rights lawyer Ben Meiselas and legal wiz Michael Popok, discuss the “origin story” of their legal and trial work together, including... First Amendment and social media cases for MeidasTouch involving Fox News and Kelly Loeffler, Republicans (the GQP) using “cancel culture” to silence critics and attack the free press, and the legality of “blue” state efforts to suppress minority voting under the Voting Rights Act. Later, Ben and Michael take on the ethics of Big Law firms hired to shill for Trump, including McGuireWoods’ secret work to root out anti-Trump staff at Voice of America. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Legal AF, the A stands for Analysis and the F stands for Friends.
We are your legal analysis for friends.
Ben Myceles, managing partner of Gerigo's and Gerigo's and you of course know me as one
of the founding brothers of
Midas Touch and here with my colleague and great friend, managing partner of
Zupano Patrichius and Popac, Michael Popac. How you doing Mike? I'm doing great
then. I just found out you're managing partner of your firm. I like that too.
Exactly. You know, if you say it enough times, it becomes true. It's kind of my philosophy.
And so I think even when I was in law school, I was saying I was the managing partner of
my firm when I was the paralegal. Yeah, I was the managing associate of my firm for a
long time. But you know, one of the things I want to talk with you about is of course
our new show. I want to talk about our legal careers
and our backgrounds and what led us to do this show.
And then of course, I want to start getting into
some of the legal news and the format
that this show is going to take.
And so I think it's helpful if we just introduce
how we met each other, Michael, and then we can talk about our
background. So we met actually on opposite sides of a case. And I won't get into the case in
specifics, but I was on the plaintiff side of that case. You were on the defense side of the case. It was a highly contentious litigation
over controversial facts.
But through that case,
I think we were able to achieve what is rare these days
in law, but what occurred many decades ago
or what we believe occurred many decades ago,
or that could just be the law they tell us.
When the legal progression was first created. But we developed a friendship,
we developed it into a great friendship and a very, you know, incredible working relationship,
where we do a lot of cases together. Yeah. Yeah, that was a, that's a nice highlight to our,
both of our careers and it's unique. We're both very tenacious advocates and trial lawyers representing our
clients interest. I was in house global head of litigation for Wall Street firm. You were on the
other side as you described taking on one of our subsidiaries, high profile subsidiaries,
and a high profile case. And while we fought tooth and nail about the case,
we always kept it on very professional levels.
And I think we developed a deep abiding respect
for each other in our approaches to the case.
And when I left that Wall Street firm,
I decided to return to private practice,
you were literally one of the first phone calls
that I made because of our friendship
and my admiration for you and what you were accomplishing.
And I think it started something like this. Ben, I'm going back into private practice.
And I don't know if you remember your response to that.
What did I say? You said, Popoq, you're going back to private practice. We want to work with you.
You want to try cases with you. It was literally like that.
I think I was sitting in my study,
just trying to figure out my next steps.
I have an even decided yet on the law firm
that I was going to join with partners in Miami
that I was going to join forces with.
And you were right out of the gate.
Let's find ways to work together.
And from there, it really is developed into a one of the most rewarding
aspects of my return to private practice, frankly, has been working with Garragus and Garragus,
working with you particularly, and watching you from day, it wasn't day one, it was day two
of Midas Touch. I said, what is this Midas Touch that I just saw, that you launched?
What's that all about?
I think you had, what was the number you told me you had
at the moment that I made contact with you over Midas?
We maybe had a few hundred followers at the time.
Maybe.
It was probably very late March.
We're almost celebrating the one year anniversary
of Midas Touch.
We're about 11 months and 17 days into it right now.
But to your credit, you were one of the very first people.
Maybe I was your first call when you returned
to a private practice, but you were the first person
who believed in Midas Touch.
And early on, we would do these style podcasts. We would post small clips of them on Twitter
and other social media and they would get a few hundred views. Now the whole videos get millions
of views. But you were there from the very beginning giving great legal analysis and you developed
quite the fan base very early on amongst the Midas Touch followers who kept
on saying when's Popeye coming, when's Popeye coming back?
I remember once on something as esoteric as the emoluments clause of the U.S. Constitution,
I got like a million tick-tock views.
Hey, at that moment, I didn't quite know what tick-tock was. I thought it was for, you thought it was for preschool kids to do dance routines in the middle of the street.
I didn't realize there was going to be a following that would watch really hardcore analysis
of constitutional and legal issues that were sitting on that site.
So that was fun. And I don't know if you remember, we even had people in my law firm
write very interesting
articles on artificial intelligence and all sorts of other cutting high concept legal concepts
that you posted on what was then your might as touch website.
I think it evolved into something else.
But at the time, you know, Jordy was looking for content and we were supplying these articles,
you know, at a pretty rapid pace. And he was making them look great with all sorts of graphics and all
sorts of things.
So, I've been a big believer of both you, your brothers, might as touch, you know, how
you described the business model, the political aspect of it, the counterweight, the Fox news
is, and the news, Max's of the world.
I mean, I don't know if you ever envisioned that rocket ship taking off as quickly and counterweight to the Fox news and the news maxes of the world.
I mean, I don't know if you ever envisioned that rocket ship
taking off as quickly and as successfully as it did,
but I was certainly hopeful that it would.
And I really wanted to be an early supporter
and adopter and a big promoter of it.
And of course, you've been a big supporter.
You've been our lawyer as we've been threatened
with numerous lawsuits and have been involved
in numerous lawsuits in our very early stages.
But just so those listening out there,
you know, no, your background, my background.
So they know they're not just talking to two people
playing lawyers on legal AF podcast.
If you can give the Cliff Notes version of where you went to law school and very briefly, you know, your career
trajectory that brought you here today. Yeah, I'd be happy to do that. And I'll
do it briefly. It's always difficult. Even for lawyers and trial lawyers to talk
about themselves, but I'll give it a go. So I started my law career at Duke Law
School in North Carolina. And right after that, when I graduated, I started my law career at Duke Law School in North Carolina and right after that when
I graduated I started with two very large what we call Wastreet law firms, global law firms
based here in New York and worked in both white collar criminal defense and general litigation
and securities litigation primarily on the defense side.
I've been until you and I connected while I've done
fair amount of plaintiffs work, I've been mainly
defense oriented, which I think is the reason you and I
work so well together on our plaintiffs side cases.
And then from there, I went down to Miami, because I really
wanted to be a trial lawyer when I grew up.
And accomplishing that in New York at these major firms
is really not a
not a goal, not a dream for most people. If you're in New York at a major firm and you try
one case in your entire career, you're doing okay and that's not how I for saw what I wanted to
do with my life and my career. So I went down to Miami and eventually I was with a very well-known firm in based in Miami in South Florida.
And before I was all set and done, I tried over 40 cases,
trial, jury trials, federal trials, state trials,
arbitrations all around the country.
And then about five years ago, now it's about six years ago,
I was invited by a major Wall Street client of mine to come back
to New York
and to be the global head of litigation and all things employment related for this 15,000 person
company that's, you know, I won't mention the name, but it's very, very well known. And, you know,
that was a new opportunity for me, a new challenge for me.
They wanted me to build from scratch
and in-house trial team.
What I got there, they were handling
none of their cases in-house by themselves.
They all had outside counsel.
By the time I left the team that I built night
were handling over 70 cases worldwide.
We tried 23 cases in four years, which for those out
there listening, that is a tremendous body of work and trials. They were arbitrations, they were
state and federal cases all across America. We had a very good track record. I think we were,
I don't know, 19 and 4 or 23, you know, Tom Brady type numbers.
And but I really accomplished all that I wanted to accomplish there, having built that team from scratch,
being a senior executive at a company.
And I was chomping at the bit to get back to full-time trial work.
That's my passion. That's what I'm, that's my talent.
And so I decided after four years to return to private practice.
And that's when
you and I connect because we had met on that case. And, you know, I reached out to people
like you and I decided, yep, there's a need for Michael Popok to return to private
practice. There's a lot of great cases. And I'll say it for the listening audience. You
gave me the first case for the new firm
of Zampano Patricius and Popeyes.
In fact, a week before we opened our doors,
you and I had filed that case in federal court in California
with my firm name under your firm name.
And my partners in Miami were like,
how did you get a case already?
We haven't even opened the doors.
I said, well, the magic that is Ben,
Ben, my Salis and Michael Poghawk, what can I tell you?
We've worked on a lot of great cases since then,
the abbreviated version of my career
and let's people know me for might have touched
a lot of listeners generally know my story.
I went to Georgetown Law.
It was a civil rights litigator,
litigated some of the most
contentious high profile police shooting police brutality and misconduct cases, particularly in the
Fresno Bakers field area. Did lots of catastrophic personal injury cases. I still do catastrophic
personal injury cases. Michael Popak still does catastrophic personal injury cases and civil
rights cases. So part of what we're going to be talking about
on the show are cases that we are actually working on.
And we will invite listeners, if they have issues,
if you have cases, if you know people
who have been injured or you wanna just pick
our brain on issues, feel free to reach out to us.
We want this to be interactive and we want to be as
helpful as we can be. I led the Colin Kaepernick litigation against the NFL and some other
high profile litigations. Not only do I do litigation, I do a bunch of transactional
work and of course I started, might as touch a little bit longer than a year ago at this point, a little less than
a year ago at this point, almost a year as of March 28th, it was when we would have started,
and may we officially became a political action committee.
And through this relationship, we've been battling and having lots of legal battles through
might as touch.
I think as might as touch grew, people started coming after us.
And you were there, shoulder to shoulder with us.
And we should talk about some of those might as touched litigation histories.
So let's first talk about the Fox News season desist and our response to that.
Yeah, that, that, I don't know, that was the first one or Kelly Senator, then Senator
Kelly Lopler was the first one, but they came really one right after the other. It might
have touched got a cease and desist letter from Fox News and its lawyers claiming that the
now famous might as touch viral video, many of which use clips from Fox News using their own words against them
was somehow copyright infringement that might as touch didn't have the license to use those clips
didn't have the right to use those without compensation and should stop using them and take all those
viral videos that we're getting, you know, 1 million, 3 million, 4 million hits,
take them down. I mean, if certainly during the the election season, so we really know they were
doing the bidding for the Trump campaign. And we wrote back, I wrote back and with your help,
a very succinct letter that told them to go AF themselves, and more particularly said that the use of that material
is fair use under copyright law. It's fair commentary under copyright law that in the
world of First Amendment and social commentary that might as touch is allowed to use that
and to use it for their own purposes in parity or
criticism, social criticism, political criticism, and that they should go in short, jump in a lake.
And we've never heard from them again. And they certainly never heard from them again. And
just if you can, as we try to educate those listening to what these different legal doctrines is,
as we tell these stories.
Of course they'll know the First Amendment, you know, the freedom of speech, and we as
a political organization might as touch have a freedom of speech.
But can you talk to briefly the fair use doctrine and why political organizations like us and others and even documentarians often refer to this fair use to use footage of
things that are in the public sphere in our videos and why that's not a copyright infringement.
Yeah, so let's start from the copyright angle. Anyone that creates something of artistic value,
Anyone that creates something of artistic value, whether it's a play and a article, a news report,
a movie, some version of music, any of that instantly has a copyright that's owned in common law and maybe under federal law if they've registered it with the federal Patent and Trademark Office.
But you enjoy if you've created something a copyright. There's no doubt about that,
there's no argument about that. The question is can a second person use an aspect of your copyrighted
artistic expression for their own commercial use or other use. And what the law says is yes, if it's being done,
not just to make money, right?
You're not just copying literally
that you're the painting behind me
or the audio track and using it and just ripping it off.
But you're using it for some sort of criticism,
parody, social commentary, or the
like, because how are you supposed to make the criticism if in a fair open society, a first
amendment society? How are you supposed to do that if you don't actually use the clip?
And, you know, there's very famous cases, including, you know,
And there's very famous cases, including, you know, Hustler Magazine, and then now,
recently deceased Larry Flint at a very famous case
involving fair use, because he used the picture
of a very famous person, and he put him in a very anatomically
impossible position, I put it that way.
And that person, that religious leader took exception to it and argued that
he wasn't, that they had violated his copyright in many other ways. So what the law says very
succinctly is that you might as touch and others are allowed to show clips of things previously
produced in which somebody has a copyright. If the purpose of doing it
is commentary, criticism, satire, and the like, even if you make money off doing it.
So that was the Fox News. You sent them a letter. They ran away as soon as you did that.
Then we got the letter from Kelly Leffler, former Senator Kelly Leffler, aka Looting Leffler.
Tell us about that.
Yeah.
So same thing.
We got a very detailed letter from her law firm.
I think it was on behalf of Citizens for Leffler, claiming that the Looting Leffler video,
which was obviously driving her up the wall, right at the moment she was in a very contentious
and now losing campaign to Capricede in Georgia.
And we get this very strong season to sister letter
that we need to take down Kelly Loffler,
anything related to her, videos related to her
and that it was filled with the family,
that it was filled with the famitory material,
false material, I was really just using her own words against her. They just-
He used her words and then we used the clips of Janine Judge Janine
Piro and Tucker Carlson who had referred to her as a looter
when she was selling and buying certain stocks
for her portfolio based on the inside information she had received in secret, sent in intelligence
briefings. So we were using the words of Fox before they got their script together and they
realized, oh shit, we have to cover for her every second. And we can't be against her.
Yeah.
But that's their initial reaction was what most of the public's reaction
was in the early days of COVID.
Why are you selling and trading stocks off of inside information?
And she what live it, especially because we showed it was Fox news posts
who were saying that.
So we went after her.
We also exposed her law firm.
And I think that that law firm also
that represented her in that.
They also were hosting a transition
to Biden event later on,
which we were using to just show the hypocrisy
of these law firms.
And that's an interesting point too,
before we get to our Marjorie-Taly Green case.
Law firms have particularly come under fire
for their roles in subverting democracy.
I think that there's been a general view,
especially as someone who has a criminal
defense practice in the law firm. I think I'm okay with the concept. I don't think I know
I'm okay with the concept of allowing individuals who are accused of crimes to have representation.
That goes back to Adams representing the British
and President Lincoln representing people who are accused of crimes and people who eventually
were proven to be criminals. To me, the line was drawn is when you actually aided and abetted
the overthrow of democracy and subverting and using your powers as a law firm to subvert
democracy.
So we did a video at Midas Touch called Shame on Jones Day because Jones Day, a large,
very respected law firm, was helping out with some of these lawsuits, particularly one
of the Supreme Court, to throw out votes.
I believe that one was in Pennsylvania.
And even since we made that video, Jones Day, which is usually ranked amongst one of the
most powerful large law firms in the world, has muted and has precluded any comments on
their tweets.
And Michael, they're able to do that,
even though it's cowardly,
because they're private, they're private company, right?
Like there's no issue with them doing it,
even though I think the issue is
that they are complete cowards for doing it.
There's no first amendment issue presented.
Right. And why is that?
Yeah, we'll talk about it when we talk about
Marjorie Taylor Green,
because the first amendment is only a protection
that citizens have against the government,
the U.S. government doing something to a bridge
or interfere with freedom of expression
in the First Amendment.
See, a lot of people throw that term around.
Like, well, you've taken away my First Amendment
because I'm not allowed to do something
on my gaming platform because I'm not allowed to do something on my gaming
platform that I'm on or I've been muted by Jones Day unless they are acting under the color of
the federal government, which sometimes they are and lawyers like you and I make that argument
in a compelling way. But if it's just citizen dough against citizen dough, there is no first amendment
right that you have to your freedom of expression. It's only against government interference of that
improper interference of that right.
And that brings us to where we did bring a lawsuit, our third legal battle together and
made by this touching under a year against Marjorie Taylor Green.
Marjorie Taylor Green, the congresswoman from Georgia, who's stalked survivors of school shootings and
accused them of being actors and making up the school shooting.
This was a person who was elected to Congress. This is someone who's a close ally of Donald Trumps,
which just tells you how fucked up our political system is
that that takes place.
And frankly, that's the new face of the GOP.
I have friends who are conservative.
I respect people who have conservative values, but stalking children who survived and saw
their classmates die from school shootings and calling them actors.
That's the most radical view that there is.
There's nothing conservative about that.
That's crazy.
She also said that 9-11 was a hoax.
And I worked for an organization that is one of the major survivors of 9-11. So I took that very,
very personal. Yeah, she's out of her mind. She's a QAnon backed person. In the history of the
Congress, she may be one of the only people who ever got stripped
by vote of Congress of her committee assignments because the vast majority of Congress felt she
wasn't qualified to be in any committee at all, let alone the education committee, which is what
the Republican leadership decided they should put her in. So she's a denier of school shootings.
She believes their hoax, including Sandy Hook, right?
And yet they put her, they try to put her
on the education committee.
And the rest of Congress said, that's a bridge too far.
And they stripped her of all her committee assignment.
Yeah, that's barger, telegram.
So of course, might as touch as a political action committee,
as a group that is one of the most significant proponents of democracy today criticized her
for these viewpoints. And she responded by blocking us from her Twitter account,
and it became very apparent that this was just
the strategy she deployed, not just to might as touch,
but that when anybody would criticize her,
rather than try to debate these views,
rather than try to argue why she thought
these crazy views were valid.
It's always just a point that's worth mentioning
before kind of getting into that.
It's like when these Kevin McCarthy's talk about
you're canceling Dr. Seuss, you're canceling Dr. Seuss
and then he reads Green Egg and Ham.
No one has any issue with Green Egg and Ham,
but what the private organization,
the Dr. Seuss Corporation, as a private corporation
had issues with, is that there was some portrayals of the Asian community in very racist ways,
and black and brown communities in very racist ways.
And the Muppets show.
And so, if you, Kevin McCarthy has a congressman want to make the argument that you're in favor
of it, hold up the real pictures.
You know, Marjorie Taylor Greene, if you're going to do these stupid PR stunts that you do,
where you gaslight people, when the military of Guam comes and the National Guard from
Guam, men and women who serve our country, you know, heroically come to your
office to speak to you when you say that they're not even affiliated with the United States
and they're a foreign country and they come to speak to you.
You hide in your congressional office, right?
That's what she did yesterday.
She hid in our congressional office and she and she sent out an aid to talk to them.
So all they do is hide, hide, hide.
So with respect to this instance,
that's Marjorie Taylor Greene blocked us
and we brought a federal lawsuit,
our two firms together might as touch V,
Marjorie Taylor Greene and tell us about that lawsuit.
Yeah, that's great.
And listen back on that last point,
the Republican party has so lost its way,
that it's so worried about cancel
culture and Dr. Seuss in the Muppet Show that it's lost its way as terms of conservative
values. I mean, I'm a Democrat, but as with you, I have friends that I respect that are
traditional conservatives and libertarians. And this is not that parting. But we should be careful.
One last thing for the followers of Midas Touch.
Don't be distracted by this smoke screen of the Muppet Show
and Dr. Seuss.
Because while they're doing that,
that is giving them cover while they're canceling voting rights
which we're going to talk about a little bit later in the show.
That's what we got to keep our eye on the prize is what they're doing about voting rights
in America and forget the Dr. Su's debate.
But as the Marjorie Taylor Green, after they blocked you, blocked might as touch, and this
is interesting for the followers, not just on her, actually not on her official Twitter
account.
She didn't really use her official Twitter account,
representative, Marjorie Taylor Greene,
for much of anything.
She tweeted on it once or twice a day
where the action really was, it is,
is on her personal account
that she had before she was elected
and then after, much like Donald Trump.
He barely used the at-codas Twitter.
He always used the at-real Donald Trump. He barely used the at-codas Twitter. He always used the at-real Donald
Trump Twitter even after he was elected. So the side issue here is, can the use of a private
Twitter account by a public official? Can that be protected under the First Amendment?
In other words, if she blocks might as what she did, even if it's on her personal account,
can that violate the First Amendment?
The answer to that under the case law, including some recent cases brought by the Knight Foundation
of Columbia against Trump and others, including AOC, is that a private Twitter account that's in the hands of a public official that's really used as
the official arm of the social media for that, for that public official can lead to first
amendment protection if they do something wrong.
The first argument was, what's my private account?
Well, that doesn't work when you're a public official. And we had a side-by-side comparison that we used both in the lawsuit with her lawyers.
And we said, she's tweeting twice a day from her public account. But from her private account,
she's tweeting every 20 minutes, including fundraising drives and campaigns and all sorts of horrible
attacks, inappropriate attacks on transgender and other policies in the Biden administration,
that is her official account for all intents and purposes
de facto.
And by blocking Midas Touch, the argument goes,
she has destroyed or prevented Midas Touch
from participating in the public square,
which is the equivalent of going into your local park, getting on a
soapbox and being able to speak freely in this country under the First Amendment.
If I take away your box and I gag you, I have violated, and I'm the government, I have
violated your First Amendment rights.
I do the same thing electronically in social media if I ban and bar you and mute you from my
official social media channel because you have the right might as touch does and others
to participate in that public square with a freedom of expression.
That's now been denied you because you've been electronically bound and God.
That's the premise of the lawsuit.
you've been electronically bound and God. That's the premise of the lawsuit.
And we should now talk about what real cancel culture is
because the irony is what Marjorie Taylor Greene was doing
as a government official who exercises the power
of the federal government was attempting to cancel
might as touch.
What is the concern of true
cancel culture is will the president of the United States or a powerful
government official who commands a military stand on a stage or use his Twitter
account to attack private individuals in foreign countries, cancel culture
often as a dictator, a Putin, a Kim Jong-un, actually picking people out and killing them.
And we were moving in that direction, frankly, with Donald Trump. Thank God he's not elected again because what
he was doing was using the weight and the faculties of the most powerful position in the
world of all history to target his enemies one by one and to affirmatively harm them and
cancel them one by one.
You just think about even in Mike, the course of my representation,
you know, with Colin Kaepernick, it was one of the very first examples.
I remember the day, very, very, very, a ton.
It was in Huntsville, Alabama, very clearly it was the art.
Huntsville, Alabama, Donald Trump gave the speech. I think it was September 20th of 2017.
Get that son of a bitch off the field. And that was one of the opening salvos and I'm going to
attack private individuals and use my power to do that. He continued to do that. We see in the news recently, the Trump working
with a law firm, McGuire Woods, to one turn voice of America. We'll talk about what that
is into his own propaganda arm, Aala North Korea, Aala, what RT, what Putin has in Russia, what North Korea has,
and to purge employees by utilizing a private law firm.
In this case, it was Maguire Woods to target enemies of Trump and people in there who were
disloyal to Trump.
That's what true cancel culture is, right?
Well, listen, you're exactly right. That's what true cancel culture is, right?
Well, listen, you're exactly right.
Let's give a further example.
You had a president at the time who used the language,
as you said, of despots and dictators.
He literally said, I mean, it brought it,
it put a chill down my spine the first time I heard it.
And I never, I never recovered from it.
He called the press, the enemy of the people.
First of all, let's just bring this out,
put this out on the table.
The Russians and the Chinese have actively worked
on social media behind the scenes to foment
discontent in America, to drive a wedge between people
because there is nothing they would rather have than a destabilized America
where people are arguing with each other and they have been doing that in a brainwash campaign
for years, which also impacted the election.
So people that think they're not being manipulated by the Russian and the Chinese, who were working
day and night on social media, they love the attacks on Black Lives Matter that have been
brought by the Republicans.
They love the press being attacked on a regular basis, and the language of dictators being used
by the President of the United States,
because it destabilizes America.
They don't want America to get a vaccine.
They want America to be back on its heels.
And the fact that people have been manipulated
by the Russians and the Chinese
on their social media feeds for years
is something that's not talked about enough.
But to hear a president go after a governor like Whitmer in Michigan,
which led to her almost being kidnapped and killed,
and him not taking personal responsibility for that,
for him not taking personal responsibility for the capital attack, which is a cause and effect result from the language
he used moments before they launched that assault on on democracy is chilling that we had gotten that far.
But organizations like Midas Dutch or what you and I do for a living, we're on the front lines of making sure that
first amendment and freedom of the press is protected because without it we don't have a democracy.
There's no doubt about it. And speaking about the what despots do, you know, they have their arms
in foreign countries through kind of propaganda arms. You arms. Russia has RT. And what Trump was trying
to do with voices of America, and for those who don't know, voices of America is an international
broadcaster. It's funded by the United States Congress. It's the largest and oldest US-funded
international broadcaster. You may not know about V.O.A.,
your voice of America here,
because it's primarily intended for foreign audiences
across the globe,
but Donald Trump saw V.O.A. as a propaganda arm.
And so it was recently revealed that through a no bid contract,
a law firm called McGuire Woods,
which was paid as much as $3 million.
It's part of this confidential no bid federal contract.
I mean, just that fact alone, a confidential no bid federal contract.
Like you know, you're doing something wrong when you're getting a $3 million no bid
contract anonymously.
And it's not like, you know, some secret operation of like a B2 fighter jet
where you couldn't post the bid.
It's to work for voices of America.
And the idea was to basically pay Maguire
words, to pour over employees at Voice of America's records and social media communications,
compiling dossiers on the employees to basically purge anybody who was disloyal and to turn voices
of America into a propaganda machine to bolster Trump's image abroad.
We saw these, remember these press conferences where Benjamin
Netanyahu, who Trump would always called, baby, who himself is under their own version of a federal
prosecution in Israel. So Israel would not be at war with certain countries and they've always been
at peace. But then Trump would announce existing, he would announce peace deals where there was already
peace to begin with and claim credit for things.
I mean, he lined up like a bunch of these press conferences.
Do you remember before where he would have all the leaders, Jared Kushner would be there
and they would declare like a ceasefire and there was never fire.
Israel's been dealing with these countries forever and it has to be a fire. It has to be a fire in order to never fire. Israel's been dealing with these countries forever. And it has to be a fire.
It has to be a fire. It has to be a fire in order to be a cease fire. So is there anything illegal with
what McGuire Woods is doing? McGuire Woods, so everybody knows is like a Jones day in our world.
These are large two name or three name law firms with sometimes hundreds, but usually thousands of lawyers, they represent
large corporations, they pay young associates about $180,000 a year from the top law schools,
they take the best and brightest, then have them pour over just documents all day. It's like the,
you go to these top law schools, all you're doing is learning this incredible stuff.
You go to these firms and they literally just have you sit there
for a hundred hours a week, pouring through documents
to find whatever or to create arbitration clauses
to prevent people from having their day in court.
But anyway, McGuirewood is one of those two name firms,
but anything
that they have to worry about? Yeah, I think they do. And look, as a graduate and alumni of what we
call big law, right, I was at one of those two name firms. I was at SCAD-NARPS to start my career.
You know, I have to tell you, now having been a lawyer for 30 years and worked at what we call
the American lawyer does a ranking every year of law
firms.
We call them lawyers like you and I call it the Am law rank.
And these Am law 10, 20, and 50 size law firms, I have to tell you, they've lost their way.
There have been more stories in the last few years about the scat and arps of the world,
McGuire Woods, Jones Day for money taking on questionably,
questionable representations.
Unfortunately, my firm that I worked on,
an alumni of scat and was from page New York Times
with a scandal about the work they did
for the Ukraine government,
that in which they've paid tens of millions of dollars
to settle with the federal government
over their work there, Jones Day,
with the work that you described.
And McGuire Woods, who gets $3 million
to basically be a stooge and a tool
of the Trump administration to create an enemy's list
at the VOA to purge it of people that were not pro-Trump.
How is that an appropriate role for a big law law firm
with ethical, ethics, ethical guidelines, boundaries
and rules of professional conduct?
It isn't.
And big law has lost its way because like a shark
that has to move in order to survive,
big law has to continue to bring in these tremendous revenue streams
in order to pop up their infrastructure and to pay all those 180,000 or
$500,000 associates.
And there's only so many document productions that you can staff 20 people on.
And so they're always looking for ethically questionable revenue streams.
And this is how they get into problems.
If every lawyer that runs those firms would take out on a yearly basis, the rules of professional
conduct that their bar license is tied to and review it.
And remember that this is a profession that is found in on ethics.
They would turn down this work.
It wouldn't even be questionable.
I tell a personal story that's a little bit numerous.
I had to take the bar twice, once in New York
and then five years later in Florida when I moved
because most states, there's no reciprocity,
you have to retake the test.
So there's two parts of the test
for those that are out there listening.
There's the practical side, which is substantive law
that you need to know to pass the test.
And then there's the ethics, the ethics test
that you have to always take.
And so when I was a young lawyer
and I hadn't started my career yet,
I got my ethics score and I got my substantive score
into your work and I passed.
And in four or enough five years later,
after I've been in practice for five years,
exactly what you would have thought happened happened.
My substantive score went up because I've been in practice
and I understood the law a little bit better.
But my ethics score went down a couple of points because things that looked absolutely
unethical when I was a young lawyer as I got older, I was like, no, maybe if we get a
waiver, maybe there's a way to take that case and it just shows you.
It's not that I became more unethical as time went on.
It's just you do lose your way a little bit.
You have to remind yourself, you and I look at a case
and we go, that's not right, that's not ethical,
that's black and white.
But these big law firms, because of tremendous economic pressure,
lose their way in the thicket of ethics.
And this is how they end up, we end up being able to tell
these terrible stories.
There's going to be liability for the choir woods. There's going to be ethical
investigations led by bar associations about the proper role of law firms, many of which
sided with Trump. Look, you want to be a Republican-oriented law firm and just represent Republican
causes. This is America. You're allowed to do that, but you can't cross the line and become an arm of
voter suppression and continue to challenge proper and fair elections in an undemocratic way
just because you've been hired and given a retainer. That's not the proper role of a professional
legal law firm in this culture. And I want to get into that, Michael, as the last topic
before we wrap up our first legal AF.
And for those listening on our future legal AFs,
now that you know our background,
we will be digging deeper into more stories.
We'll be the overall format.
I thought that the first one was important that you get to know,
Michael, you get to know me, you get to know me,
you get to know our background,
you get to know the cases that we did together
through might as touch.
We can talk about some other cases
that we are working on together,
but I do not want to give away all of that
on the first podcast.
So you're gonna have to keep on listening
and follow some of our top cases,
including our ongoing case right now.
It's definitely West, which I will just tease.
And I will leave you to listen to on the next one where we talk about, but going to the
last point, voter suppression, we talked about law firms aiding and abetting voter suppression.
There are corporations who are now stepping up, particularly in Georgia, Coca-Cola, Home Depot,
who are opposing these efforts, but the less than that,
the GOP, who I now call the GQP,
who everybody should call the GQP,
the less than that Dave learned, apparently,
is not, is how do we make it, is not how we actually open up the vote to people.
It's how do we make it more difficult?
They looked at what happened on January 6th and said,
you know, that was bad because everybody could literally
see it.
So now let's work behind the scenes to let her
as suppress the vote and to prevent people
from even having their day in court.
What they're upset about is they didn't do a good enough job
to preclude people from voting in the first place.
That is the sick lesson the GQP has learned.
So in Georgia, there are and many states from Arizona,
Michigan, literally there have been hundreds of
hundreds of pieces of legislation.
It seems that what the GQP is doing across the country while the Democrats are trying
to get individuals relief, and this is just the fact.
The Democrats are trying to get people relief.
Democrats are trying to get you stimulus checks to try to get infrastructure done.
They're trying to get vaccines out.
Like, that's just a fact of what it is.
You may want to debate with me is the cost.
Do high is the cost.
That would be a normal Democrat conservative debate.
We could have the debate on costs.
But what we shouldn't have a debate about is that we need infrastructure.
We need vaccines.
But we need, we need relief for people who are become homeless. But what the GQP is fighting for our bills
like this one in Georgia, two bills in Georgia that would have sweeping changes to voter access,
including stopping no excuse mail and voting, curtailing early voting on Sundays,
limiting access to drop boxes and restricting early voting hours.
Go back to that.
This is specifically to target the record, the turnout of black and Latino voters.
Go back, let's go back to that for a minute.
And I agree with you.
Florida has a similar thing going on.
And what our followers need to understand is there's always been a tension between the
Republican Party and the Democratic Party over voter turnout.
Because the historically, the more voter turnout there is, the more likely a Democrat wins.
Always, the Republicans have always been a narrower party, a party that has that difficulty
winning national office, notwithstanding the Trump anomaly.
And whenever you have high voter turnout, you normally have a Democrat
win, when you have lower voter or voter suppression, you have a Republican win. And they've learned
that lesson. And so what they've done is, and it targets minorities, and Georgia in particular,
is really calo attack, a racist attack on black voters. As an example, there is a very successful concept
in every state, which is called souls to polls.
And that is bringing buses to churches,
primarily black churches, in places like Georgia and Florida,
and making sure an early voting that happens on a Sunday,
that the voters get to the polls and that they vote.
Why does that scare the crap out of the Republican party?
Because those people generally vote Democrat.
So how do you suppress the Democratic vote?
You don't allow churchgoers on Sunday to vote early.
It is despicable.
It is a ball face attack.
There is no justification other than voter suppression and black discrimination to eliminate
Sunday voting, period.
And what we hope is that Congress with the Senate resolution number one, and the House
resolution number one, if it gets passed in the Senate, it's already passed in the House,
will totally change voting as we know it in America,
allowing for the complete expansion of early voting,
mail voting, voting in all different types of ways,
Sunday voting, longer voting hours, more voting hours,
no more gerrymandering, which eliminates
or creates districts that discriminates against minorities
and make sure that white congresspeople get elected.
If that bill gets passed,
that should counteract all of these state by state attempts
to undermine the voting rights act and undermine voting.
And then we've got the Supreme Court,
which we'll talk about on our next show,
which is considering what to do about the Voting Rights Act
and Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act,
which goes to whether restrictions on voting
harm minorities,
which is the core purpose of the voting rights act
is to avoid that.
The Supreme Court is currently considering
whether certain states have violated section two
of the Voting Rights Act.
So we've got all this going on right now
that we're gonna have to closely follow.
States trying to change their voting laws in order to suppress the vote. The federal government trying to cut
them off at the pass by passing the Senate bill number one, make it, make it into law,
which will totally eradicate the state's ability to control local elections and the Supreme
Court ruling on the Voting Rights Act about whether all of these things or any of these things are constitutional.
And ultimately, for me, you know, and why I became a lawyer, is I want to fight with ideas.
I want to fight for what I believe in.
And, you know, we talk about what true cancel culture was under Donald Trump.
We talk about true cancel culture, the GQP trying to suppress votes.
That rigging, that cheating is antithetical to what a debate should be in a democratic society.
At the end of the day, we should put forth our views,
you know, and all of these views, if they were, I say this on the Midas Touch podcast, which is,
if you presented the infrastructure bills and vaccine distributions and COVID relief and
a $15 minimum wage, as referendum items, 75, 80% of Americans support these bills.
And at the end of the day,
if you have bipartisan support of the people,
those ideas at the end of the day is what should prevail.
And what we shouldn't have is people
rigging the system and cheating.
But that's why you have myself,
you have Michael Popak, you have legal AF,
always here to hold people accountable.
So I think this was a great first episode.
I don't want to give away too much of our stories, but it was great doing this with you, Michael.
It was great after kind of starting this almost a year ago now with the audience that we
have to have gotten this far.
We appreciate everybody.
The legal AF, we're going to be doing once a week for now.
We're going to be dropping these on the Midest Touch Podcast
channel.
Eventually, we're going to be moving off the Midest Touch channel.
But we wanted to connect with you
through this already built-in audience.
Any last words, Michael?
No, I think it's great.
You and I started, like you said a year ago,
it's amazing what you've done with Midas Touch.
And I'm just so honored to be a part of it.
And we put words into action.
You know, it's easy for, I think that's
the distinguishing feature of you and I
as commentators and analysts on legal AF.
And the difference between us and the other legal podcast
just to talk about them for a minute is that that you and I are work a day trial lawyers
that do this for a living.
We're not just talking about our cases
because they're interesting to us.
We're talking about cases that you and I are doing
that are on the forefront and the cutting edge
of some of the most important, first amendment
and other civil rights issues in America.
And you and I have the perspective
of not just being talking heads,
but going into the courtrooms of America
of representing the Colin Kaepernick's of America
on issues that are so important.
And as you said, holding people accountable
not just blather on a podcast,
as interesting as it is,
but actually you and I leave these little Zoom boxes
and these rooms
and we go out into the courthouses of America and make new law and hold and speak truth to power
and hold hold our sign it up.