Legal AF by MeidasTouch - The Scales of Justice (?) Move Slowly
Episode Date: May 30, 2021On Episode 10 of LegalAF (#LAF), MeidasTouch’s Sunday morning law and politics podcast, hosts MT founder and civil rights lawyer, Ben Meiselas and national trial lawyer and strategist, Michael Popok..., examine why in Ben’s world the “scales of justice” (?) move so slowly (inside joke alert) while discussing the looming criminal indictment of the Trump Organization, Trump and his family by a New York state special grand jury based on Trump tax records obtained through a divided, 5-4 Supreme Court ruling. While Ben and Michael are at it, they discuss in detail the special qualities of the grand jury process in the American legal system. Of course, no #LAF podcast would be complete without a deep dive into Rudy Giuliani and his 18 cellphones and laptops about to be closely reviewed by a special master to be appointed by a federal judge to determine if any of the materials are protected by the attorney-client privilege from disclosure to the prosecutors investigating him for his role in the firing of the US Ukrainian ambassador. The “Legal Analysis Friends” next discuss former Ambassador Sondland’s attempts to have former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the Federal government pay the $1.8 million in legal fees he racked up testifying to the House Intelligence Committee that Trump illegally withheld millions of dollars in US aid to Ukraine in order to force them to open an investigation into Joe Biden’s son Hunter during the Presidential election campaign, that later led to Trump firing the Ambassador. Hooded Justice and Velvet Hammer then turn their attention back to, where else, Florida, and explain why Governor DeSantis has the First Amendment and its protections exactly backward with his new law prohibiting social media companies, like Twitter, from banning (i.e. deplatforming) users for bad behavior like Trump. Ben then takes the #LAF listeners through the law of Presidential pardons leading to the SDNY prosecutors and judge having no choice but to drop Steve Bannon’s criminal prosecution arising out of his fraudulent “build the wall” charity. Finally, and ending on a “politics makes strange bedfellows” note, Ben and Popok discuss why the current Department of Justice is arguing in federal court that that even though Trump’s forcibly removing protestors from Lafayette Park to allow him to have a “clean” photo op on his way to a nearby church holding an (upside down) bible was a bad thing, a court should not interfere with decisions by the Executive Branch around how to provide security and protection to a sitting US president. Easter egg alert: Ben drops a little “Federalist Papers” knowledge on Popok, and Popok reminds Ben that scales of justice don’t move forward and back, wheels do. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Midas Touch Legal AF podcast.
Ben, my cell is of Garragos, a Garragos joined by Michael Popak of Zupano, Patricia and Popak.
If it's Sunday, it is legal AF.
I am loving Sunday Legal a F's Pope.
I think the suits who we were perturbed with
for moving our Wednesday podcast to our Sunday.
I think they knew what they were talking about, huh?
Yeah, there was a lot of hand-wringing over that,
but more importantly, that we love Sundays now
and dropping on Sundays.
And I love the new bumper there. If it's Sunday morning, it must be legal AF. But more importantly, that we love Sundays now and drop it on Sundays.
And I love the new bumper there.
If it's Sunday morning, it must be legal AF.
Our followers seem to like Sunday.
And how do we know?
Because they're getting a lot of downloads off of Sunday Monday Tuesday.
So I'm in.
I'm fully down with our following in the footsteps of historic news shows, newsworthy shows
on Sunday and John
Oliver on Sunday night. We'll slot ourselves right in there.
People want the law, raw, injected into their veins on Sunday morning and popok and I
are happy to be your law junkie enablers. Let's get into it. I want to start, Pope, by talking about
the federal judge in New York who ordered something called a special master, weird words,
but it's a legal term, but ordered a special master to review Rudy Giuliani's electronic devices.
Let's just rewind briefly a few weeks or months at all blends into me back.
But sometime fairly recently, the feds rated Giuliani's apartments.
We saw his son doing the Don Jr. routine in the press conference saying,
it's totally unfair that the feds have raided my daddy's home
and took his cell phones and took his records
but they didn't take Hunter Biden's laptop.
And of course, we joked about Rudy Giuliani's son
being a complete fool and buffoon.
But there are serious records at play there.
The investigation is into Rudy Giuliani's interactions with foreign governments, including
but not limited to Ukrainian individuals, to try to set up Biden, to try to get information
favorable, acting as an unauthorized foreign agent and probably not just limited to Ukraine
to try to influence and tamper with elections in the United States. So the feds conducted a raid
and connection with that investigation. The investigation is probably into other illegal conduct, too.
But what does it mean now, Popak, that there is a judge ordering a special master. What is a special master? What does this mean?
Yeah, we're reopening the legal AF law school program right away, top of the show, special master.
Let me separate for our listeners because you got to have a scorecard to follow all of the Giuliani
prosecutions. There are actually two that are going on in New York, one in the Eastern District of
New York, US Attorney's Office, which is based in Brooklyn, and the one we're talking about here, which
is in the Southern District of New York in Manhattan.
They're similar, but not exactly the same investigations.
The one in the Southern District of New York focuses on what you and I referred to the
last time around or a couple of shows around as paid a play.
The question is whether as you hit on,
whether Giuliani was an unregistered lobbyist
for the Ukrainians in their efforts to remove
the then US, Ukrainian ambassador, who they hated
because she was an adult and she wouldn't do their bidding
and that she wasn't in with the Trump program.
So the question in this investigation,
that was the subject of the 6am raid
that caught 18 cell phones in computers.
By the way, how many cell phones in computers do you have?
You have 18 cell phones in laptops?
No, I think individuals with two sometimes
raise red flags to law enforcement
and significant others, but that's another story.
And so that's the investigation, Southern District. The investigation Eastern District is slightly
different. It just started, or it was just announced a few weeks ago. That one is whether Rudy
Giuliani was an unwitting stooge or a willing participant in the Ukrainian slash Russian effort to influence the election results and
tip the results towards Trump.
So that's the investigation.
So now we've got Judge Oaken in the Southern District of New York who's faced with the
Giuliani lawyer saying, it's unfair.
There's 18 devices.
Plus they caught, they caught cloud.
They went into the cloud about a month or two before the rate
apparently and got all of his cloud, all of Julianne's cloud-based materials. So the lawyers are of
course apoplectic on behalf of their client because while he's a lawyer and he was the lawyer for
Trump and there's attorney client privilege and confidential information that may be buried in
there. We don't want the prosecutors to get it unless somebody else takes a look at it.
So the judge usually does one of two things.
He either does or she does what's called
an in-camera review of the material,
where the judge, him or herself, actually looks at it,
reviews it and then makes a decision in
confidential, in secret.
It's called in-camera.
Or they turn it over to a special master,
which is what you're alluding to.
And here, the special master is appointed by the court.
It's deputized by the judge to serve a discreet purpose.
In this case, reviewing all of the materials
that are on the 18 cell phones, laptop, tablets,
and whatever, and in the cloud for Giuliani.
Plus, there's a lawyer that worked with Giuliani who hasn't
gotten a lot of publicity.
Her name is Victoria Tonsing.
Her phone was caught in the raid as well.
That phone's going to be reviewed.
And the special master here is usually a very preeminent lawyer in New York, in this case,
because we're in New York.
Could be retired judge.
Or a retired judge.
And there's a number of retired judges,
including Judge Gleason, who was very involved recently
in other evaluations like that when they were thinking
about dismissing charges against one of the Trump
co-conspirators, one of the former general colonel.
And so it'll either be Gleason,
or it'll be another retired judge.
There's a number of them in New York.
They're with law firms.
They bring in law firms to help them.
And so that's going to be done.
They're going to report to the judge directly
about what they found on those things.
The lawyers are going to be able to argue for or against it
being provided to the government.
But let's just bottom line this.
This material is going to the government. And then's just bottom line this. This material is going
to the government and then it's going to be used in the prosecution, likely of Rudy Giuliani and
others. The special master process was also famously used in the investigation related to Michael
Cohen, who at that time, you know, was Trump's lawyer. Now, there could have been two paths here. There could have been the search warrant path or the government could have subpoenaed, um, Giuliani.
The search warrant being issue are based on judicial findings of probable cause supported
by detail affidavits, which are under oath statements, to believe that evidence of violations of specified
federal offenses would be found at the locations to be searched. So that information is seized
by the feds. And the objection that Giuliani's legal team here is raising is Giuliani is a lawyer.
So you've you've sucked up too much information.
There may be attorney client privilege information, so we think that the documents that you've
received should not be reviewed by the government unless some neutral party looks at it.
To be clear, the Giuliani party didn't even want a special master, but the Giuliani party didn't even want a special master. But the Giuliani party and his lawyers
were asking for was they were saying that really the war and should be quashed or what should
have happened here is that Giuliani should have just been subpoenaed, that Rudy Giuliani
should have had the opportunity himself. Trust Rudy Giuliani is what Rudy Giuliani's
lawyers essentially were arguing here. Let him look through
his 18 cell phones and his 32 laptops and let Rudy Giuliani turn over to you the government. What
Rudy Giuliani claims is relevant and responsive to your requests. And the government obviously,
yeah, if you put it that way, it sounds really reasonable. And so I wanted to break it down for those listening to see what the real kind of dispute
was here.
And the judge, federal judge, US District Court Judge Paul O.K. and Manhattan basically
said, no, we're going to do the special master process.
And again, one of the things the special master is going to look for too.
As we mentioned this on a previously Galae.
There are exceptions
to the attorney client privilege. One, you wave that privilege when you start you as the
client wave it, when you talk to third parties or when there are people copied on emails
who are not lawyers. And then there's also something called a crime fraud exception. The lawyer
can't be the criminal. The lawyer can't help you with your crimes
and then you claim an attorney-client privilege.
And by the way, just to break down
what attorney-client privilege is,
attorney-client privilege means that if I'm representing
a client, the presumption is, is that nothing.
And a very strong, sacred presumption
is that those communications are completely confidential.
The other side, third parties, third parties, the media, the government is almost always not
allowed to delve into communications between a lawyer and their client.
That's long as long as the communication is for the rendering of advice.
If I'm shooting the shit with my lawyer, or it's not ultimately for the rendering of advice. If I'm shooting the shit with my lawyer, or it's not
ultimately for the rendering of advice, that's another exception. Now, courts hate that one, but that
is the way the attorney-client privilege runs. Yeah. And also, though, you waive the privilege as well
if you are engaged in the criminal conduct. So what the special master is,
it's this neutral person who looks at the documents
who's not the government and not the subpoenaed party
or the party that's subject of the search warrant,
in this case Rudy Giuliani, and the special master looks at it
and it makes rulings and basically says,
these documents are not subject to any privilege
or these documents are subject to certain privileges
and shouldn't be produced.
So we will keep you updated on that investigation. And you know, my own prediction is unfortunately,
the scales of justice, the scales of justice move slowly, but they do ultimately move in
the right direction. And that's the fortunate part here that I think
Rudy Giuliani will again be subject to a robust, let me clean that up for our followers.
The wheels of justice move a certain direction. Scales of justice probably go left to right.
But I think your point is made. You know, when I said scales too, I was thinking to myself too, as I said the word scales.
I thought I was talking about like, I'm like, is scales like am I talking about snakes?
Like it was a very, I was trying to think if that was even an expression.
And I was thinking of snake scales because Rudy Giuliani so inspires.
Before we leave to go to our next topic,
just to remind our listeners, this is the office,
the Southern District of New York,
which is prosecuting the US Attorney's Office.
It's already in an awkward position.
You Rudy Giuliani used to be the US Attorney
for the Southern District of New York
before he became the mayor of New York
and before he became whatever it is he's currently,
which is none of those things.
But, you know, it's, it's, I can't think in modern history, at least in the last hundred
years, where a former United States attorney is being prosecuted by his own office.
I completely agree, but we're also in a situation where we had the former guy for four years who was running a racketeering
operation from the White House. And so strange changes have emerged since the days of Federalist
paper number 64 when Alexander Hamilton opined that the president so chosen will always be
someone who's reputation for integrity inspires and
merits confidence. You like me just throwing out better.
This number 64 references. I had to be demiself after scales of justice are moving in a
slow direction to reassure listeners that the captain is still in charge of this flight. So listeners have
learned two important things. They've learned about attorney, client privilege, right?
They've learned about special masters. I should say three things. They've learned Giuliani
inspires me to start thinking about snakes. But let's move on and talk about former US
ambassador to the European Union, Union, Gordon Sondland, who
has sued Mike Pompeo, former secretary of state and big piece of shit, for $1.8 million
in impeachment legal bills.
In this federal filing, Ambassador Sondland says that he was promised in connection with testimony that he was given that the
you'll talk about what that is in a bit, that he was told that the government was going
to cover his legal fees.
He claims those legal fees are $1.8 million in legal fees, which we'll talk about that seems
like a high number to me, even though I do think sunlin should be reimbursed for some legal fees.
But Pope, I tell us what's going on here.
Yeah, let's remind everybody who Gordon, Sonlin is.
He's a wealthy businessman owned a chain of motels and hotels in the Pacific Northwest,
I believe, which of course renders him qualified in the Trump administration to become the
ambassador to the European and not like the ambassador to the European Union.
And not like the ambassador to Lichtenstein or something.
This is the ambassador to the European Union.
It's kind of the top three ambassador ships.
Can they send them to like, you know, Swaziland or something?
It's crazy.
Anyway, he obviously was not that qualified.
He was a Trump acolyte at one point.
But look, he got caught up in the whole Trump
Ukrainian Hunter Biden barisma scandal, which to remind our followers, Trump held back a
few billion dollars in aid to the Ukrainian government in return for them agreeing to open
up an investigation in the Ukraine against Hunter Biden's involvement
with the oil company in the Ukraine called Burisma.
So it's called the Burisma scandal.
And the question in the testimony
before the House Intelligence Committee
that Sunlin testified to as an ambassador,
as a sitting ambassador,
was whether there was a quid pro quo.
See now Ben, I can bring out some Latin
in my part of the segment.
So Quid Pro quo is, is there has there been an exchange
for one thing for the other, you know, in this transaction
with something a Quid Pro quo?
So the question for the House Intelligence Committee
is, was Trump holding back the aid money to the Ukrainians
in return for them agreeing to open up a investigation against his
rival in the election, Joe Biden and his son. And Sonlin was in on phone calls and had conversations
with Trump and was in a perfect position to testify truthfully about whether there was a quid pro quo.
So he got up on the stands 17 hours in the Senate or in the house,
uh, giving his testimony. And he testified that in his view, there was a quid pro quo that there
was a trade off. If they, the aid would be released when, when Ukrainians would play ball with Trump.
Of course, Trump hated that testimony. Sunlin had tried to avoid giving the testimony
for as long as he could.
He forced the house to subpoena him.
But finally, he sat in a chair.
He was prepared by lawyers,
apparently some ridiculous amount of time
because he testified 17 hours.
And if they charged him $1.8 million
for preparation for a two days of testimony.
That is an ungodly sum of money.
But I think it would come out to Pope, if there was about 120 hours of legal services rendered
to prepare him, which is a lot of, that's a lot of hours to prepare someone for a 17
hour here. I mean, that would, that would be about $15,000 an hour to a lawyer.
Now granted, what happens in these situations is that the law firms ultimately have multiple
lawyers who are in the room.
But at the end of the day, you're really paying
just to have three or four schmucks just sit there, you know, doodling their thumbs, you
know, you know, in a room. I mean, it's only one person, usually who can talk at a time
for conversations to, to be civil. But here's the thing, Popeye, I do think at some point
that there is this idea of indemnification. We've talked about it,
I believe, on prior podcasts, but generally the idea is sometimes there's indemnification
in contracts, and sometimes there's indemnification by law. But the basic idea of a, of a, of a
indemnification is that certain types of workers or people who are doing something
in furtherance of their superiors and employer, a government entity, in furtherance of those
acts who is sued because they're engaged in furtherance of the acts, either contractually
or the employer, or the government, that the government
will cover their fees. And in many cases, even cover judgments or verdicts or things
because if they're being told to do these things or if they're acting in furtherance
of it, the law or contracts would view, hey, it's kind of unfair that they should pay.
Let me take it once up further. Certain positions would not be filled unless the people
in those positions were given a demnification
for future suits.
For instance, members of boards of director,
officers and directors of corporations,
people that sit in government.
They are not gonna do this on their own dime
if John Cue Public or Jane Cue Public suits them.
They wanna be, or they incur expenses in
that official role.
They want to have that entity, the government, the corporation, or whatever, the other company,
pay for the attorney's fees.
That's how we ended up here.
And when I, you know, talking about indemnification, sometimes there are not already laws or presumptions
of indemnification. So often when I'm doing contracts for my clients or high profile clients, whether they're
doing books or movies or they're involved in commercial enterprises, I will want to make
sure in my contract that I have the other party, the corporation agreeing to indemnify my client for
the wrongs and negligence, if things are happening with if a product doesn't turn out the way
the product is supposed to be, I will say corporation, you need to be the one who is responsible
for paying if in fact my client ends up being sued.
But I think it's also worth reflecting here,
people go $1.8 million, wow.
You've probably have seen when you're going through
any major metropolitan area, these names,
they're often two names, such and such and such.
And you see them and I don't wanna trash any specific firms
here, although I would fucking love to, but I'm not going to I don't want to trash any specific firms here, although, you know, I would I would fucking love to
But I'm not going to do it on this pie. I worked that I worked at a few of them
And you see him when you're in the city like they they often have their names on the buildings
and the
entire business model
Is often billing at ranges on the low end
$500 an hour with partners now charging $2500
an hour and sometimes more, putting a ton of lawyers on a case like Ambassador Sonlands.
And then just doing a ton of stuff, you know, whether it's, you know, billing for research,
but the research is people reading, you know, having associates just read books
all week that talk about the history of ambassadors. And I'm not saying this is what happened here,
but this is the type of shit that actually does and actually does go on. Read, you know,
you have a partner assigned the associate. Read me all of the books about ambassadors
and the history of ambassadors used to sign another associate. I need a complete
memorandum on the history of the European Union. You tell the third associate, I need you to give
me every example of indemnifications in 1776 in the United States history. And that's how you get
absurd hours. So really when you talk about the $1.8 million fee, you're probably talking
about an invoice that from whatever these law firms are that reflect thousands of, you
know, thousands of hours, which, you know, is crazy. And so look, at the end of the day,
I don't like fucking Pompeo. I think Pompeo is one of the biggest, you know, is criminals,
you know, you know, out there. I'm not a fan. It's my opinion of Pompeo. But at the, but at the end of the
day, to me, the 1.8 million seems like an overreach for what took place. I mean, if you
told me that Sonlin should be reimbursed 300, 400 K, I would still say that's high, but
I would say that makes that that would make a little more.
Let's do a plug for us early. If it was the law firm of my Salis and
Popak, we don't undercut my feet, Popak right now. We would, we would don't undercut.
I would do it cheaper than 1.8. Half of the one eight. You and I could do it in half of
the one eight. And he was, he would have been as well prepared as he was by this law firm
and their ten associates.
But let me just connect one last missing dot before we leave this segment to connect the
indemnification Pompeo and Sonlin for our followers and listeners.
I said earlier that corporations and businesses by their charters, by their governing documents, by their contracts,
will often provide indemnification
in order to induce or incentivize people
to serve in those positions.
The government doesn't generally indemnify.
The US Constitution does not talk about indemnification.
And there's very few,
there are a few federal statutes that allow for it,
but the ambassador ship is not one of the positions that automatically gets in temptation, which is why the case is Sonlin
versus Pompeo.
Why Pompeo?
Yes, Secretary of State gets sued all the time in their official positions for having
done something related to foreign policy, but he's being sued personally by Sonlin,
because Sonlin claims that Mike Pompeo made him a personal promise to it that his
attorney's fees would be paid for if he ended up testify. And as a fallback, just in case Pompeo
comes in and proves under a contract theory or some other oral agreement theory that he did not
make that promise or he's not authorized to make that promise. Sonland has also sued as a fallback to U.S. government,
which is the current U.S. government,
because he'll say that Pompeo was an agent of the U.S. government.
He promised him that he relied on that promise.
He incurred the million eight, which he's already paid.
It's in the lawsuit.
He's already paid his law firm, the 1.8 million.
He's seeking to have reimbursement from Pompeo out of his own pocket
or the federal government as it fall back.
It's just so, I mean, the 1.8 number is really, I needed Delv deeper into the law firm.
And I want to report back to our listeners, you know, I don't just want to start talking shit about large law firm without knowing specifically who built this guy 1.8. I have
some ideas, but I'm not throwing them out.
If you're a US ambassador, you have not, I have not identified popaka that shows I'm not
going to start guessing which law firm was was was response.
In the future, if you're a US ambassador, reach out to the velvet hammer and hooded justice
and will will help for less. Exactly. Moving on to a tech group which has sued Governor Ron DeSantis in Florida over,
the headline is the social media bill, but it's really an unconstitutional trash law that governor DeSantis pushed through Florida legislature and signed, which is to retaliate
against private companies, private social media companies for enforcing their own terms
of service by not allowing people on their platforms who engage in hate speech or otherwise
violate the terms of service.
When this bill was passed, Popak and I said, we thought this bill was unconstitutional.
We thought there was going to be a lawsuit because guess what?
I thought Republicans have always been the one saying that the government should not intrude on private businesses and people's ability to enforce their own private
rules.
But sure enough, you know, the new GQP party is the all about government intrusion into
the lives of corporations, into the lives of women, into the lives of
families, you name it, they want to get into your home and tell you how you need to act.
But there was a lawsuit that was filed, so we were right, Popeyes. So tell us about this lawsuit. Right. Yeah, Republican, you're right, other Republican thing.
They're always in our bedrooms, but not in our boardrooms.
And there is a tremendous breach between the Republican Party and big
business right now, which is remarkable. We'll talk about it on other shows. You know, this
whole attack on woke companies like Coca-Cola, now Home Depot and other companies who have decided
that what the Trump administration did and has done, especially January 6th forward is just wrong federal. Yeah, if you're a company and you go, we do not support Trump's insurrection.
You've got the Ted Cruz's and the DeSantis saying, all right, really?
We're coming after you corporations.
We're not going to give you those tax breaks anymore.
I mean, they just saved blatantly now.
They only like the gut.
They only like big business when big business was quietly just funneling
trillions of dollars into the Republican party's coffers.
But when, when they also had what we call social responsibility or corporate social responsibility,
which now have them take positions against things like Georgia and Florida and Texas's
voting restriction and voter disenfranch voter disenfranchisement laws, disenfranchisement
laws. Now the Republicans are all up in arms about why aren't they just quietly giving
us money and staying out of policy. So now we move forward. The Santos, Governor DeSantis
has gotten the First Amendment exactly backwards. He believes that the First Amendment means
that he to promote the First Amendment rights
of the citizens of Florida, can tell private social media companies, which are the equivalent
of the press of publishers and the like.
At least that's how most Supreme Court cases and other cases come out.
He's going to tell them who they can be in business with, who they can allow
and what they can and can't say on their own social media platforms. He has it
bass accords. The First Amendment protects the social media companies as if they were publishers,
as if they were newspapers of old from government interference telling them what they can and can't say, whether it's under the doctrine of prior restraint, which we'll talk about at another time related to media, where you can't have a chilling a law that has a chilling impact on the power of free speech held by social media publishers or newspapers. So that's what this law does and to sum it up, the law that he just signed, which he claims is against censorship of big tech. He's framed it as Silicon Valley
versus the Florida citizen. And it does a number of things that are really chilling, which
are really fascist in their approach to private enterprise and private social.
He's trying to shut down, let's be clear.
He wants to shut down Twitter because it banned Donald Trump.
By any time you ban anybody or you do not allow hate speech on the platform, they want to as the government censure, punish, penalize, Twitter, $250,000 or more
for each violation and basically try to put social media
companies out of business and quote,
the act is a full frontal assault on the first amendment
and an extraordinary intervention.
I don't know if I actually said full frontal. The act is a frontal assault on the first amendment and an extraordinary intervention. I don't know if I actually said full frontal.
The act is a frontal assault on the first amendment in an extraordinary intervention by government
in the free marketplace of ideas that would be unthinkable for traditional media, booksellers,
lending libraries, or newsstands according to the lawsuit and think about that. Ignore my full
frontal. I don't know what the
fuck I was thinking there, but but let's get really into what they were saying. Could you imagine
a government saying, we don't like that book. That book is not saying the things that we want to
say. That book is critical of Trump. Let's get rid of that book or of a traditional media saying,
we don't like the way MSNBC is talking about, you know,
these ideas and giving, you know, and giving opinions. We want them totally removed. And so that
is what is that issue. Now, this is what was particularly chilling Popeye as well.
DeSantis's press secretary, Christina Poussha on Thursday said the following,
Secretary Christina Poussa on Thursday said the following
Constitutional to support and support of the the bill she goes
Constitutional protections are not a one-way street. Okay. protect us, the people from the government, you know, it is, it is to protect people from government overreach.
Well, that in many ways, those kinds of protections are one way streets.
Well, that's that's that's why I started my my my part of the segment with he's got it
completely backwards. We're supposed to be protected from overreaching of the government,
whether in state or federal form related related to our First Amendment expression, in this case, the
social media first amendment expression. And again, not the, not the belabor of the point,
but that press secretary is backwards. The ultimate evaluation tool that the Supreme Court of the United States is going to use
against the law like this is what we call strict scrutiny.
It's the highest level of justification analysis that the court uses when it sees a law
that burdens a fundamental constitutional right, in this case, there is no higher constitutional right
than the First Amendment, as far as I'm concerned.
So Strix scrutiny is that the Santis
and his attorney general for the state
standing in front of a Supreme Court one day
is gonna have to argue some overarching policy
that overcomes, which he doesn't have,
which overcomes the free expression of the First Amendment.
This is all political theater.
This is, as you said, this is him bowing and genuine
flexing to the idol of Trump,
because Trump got banned.
You know, I just saw a stat yesterday, his blog,
which is the replacement for Twitter,
is pulling less than PetSmart or PetFlow,
one of the pet or dog blogs.
So he's doing terrible in his replacement social media.
So this is just the Sanctus with Trump's hand firmly up
to Sanctus's backside like a puppet,
doing his bidding so that he can set himself up
for the race in, in, uh, in four
years. It's really, it's such a waste of, of, of Florida taxpayer dollars to have to defend this
indefensible, uh, case, which is the chilling impact of fascist impact on our first amendment rights.
No, where I want to see Trump's hands, Pope, not firmly up anywhere. It's not an image I wanted in my mind, my pure mind.
I want to see him behind his back.
Yeah.
I want to see it, sir.
You are, is that that Trump does this, sir? Someone came up to me and said, sir, it was a honor. I wanted, I want to say, sir,
you are under arrest, put your hands behind your back. Um, and we are getting closer
to that day based on the micelle is horrible.
And now the scale of justice, um, move slow because they're scales. Um, and they're not supposed to, but the scales of justice move slow because they're scales. And they're not
supposed to, but the wheels of justice here certainly are moving. And we learned this
week that a criminal grand jury has been emp out of his tax fraud, his potentially
racketeering operations, also arising out of his fraud and deceitful tax returns and his
misreporting of income and just generally lying about everything his entire life. I mean, we
basically overcomplicate
what these charges are. But
at the end of the day, Donald
Trump has lied about everything
he's lied about how much money
he has. He lies about the money
he has for insurance claims. He
lies on his taxes. The whole
thing has been a whole
fugazzy and a scam from day
one. And Trump's kind of that
made off white collar fraud punsy
scheme or age right now, where the chickens always come home
to roost for these low life scum financial criminals.
And Trump's at that age anyway.
But certainly all of the, it certainly
took on a higher profile to have a president of the United States to
say the least being Bernie made off.
But things are the walls are closing in on Trump.
And we hear about this grand jury and in paneling a grand jury.
So to be clear Pope, I want you to go through this a bit. But at state and local levels, criminal charges can be brought by either a grand jury indictment and here a grand jury has determine that evidence is legally sufficient and that
it provides reasonable cause to believe that the defendant has committed the crime before
it can issue an indictment. The specific grand jury at issue here is composed of 23 citizens,
16 of which must be present for it to hear evidence. 12 of them must vote to indict.
In Manhattan, special grand juries are convened to hear evidence on particular long-term matters
and work for longer terms than routine grand juries.
Vance's special grand jury is set to meet here three days a week for a period of six months, and they can vote to extend.
And according to Vance's former chief assistant,
Daniel Alonso in an interview with the Wall Street Journal,
quote, special grand juries are common
when state prosecutors get to the point
where they are ready to seek an indictment.
But the evidence may be too complex or lengthy
to present during the normal four week term.
Vance's prosecutors have already reportedly notified at least one witness to prepare
for grand jury testimony.
And I want to give a shout out to the Hill, particularly Kimberly Well, an opinion contributor
who helped lay out a lot of that information.
Popok, where are we?
All right. So let's tie it all together with some of our other podcasts
including last week.
We talked last week about the New York State Attorney General
joining forces with the Manhattan District Attorney
in an unusual joint investigation.
So Latisha James's, the Attorney General James's office
has loaned two lawyers, two prosecutors,
two, I'm gonna call them at Hatten District Attorney
because Cyrus Fantz is soon to be replaced.
We're having an election here in about a month.
But that office, Manhattan DA's office
is leading the special grand jury process
with the help of two colleagues
from the New York Attorney General's office
helping them put it on.
And as you said, they could have skipped this whole process and just indicted Trump by way
of what's called the information. But frankly, at this complexity level, and with the high-profile
targets, the entire Trump organization, which means the entire family, Trump. It really is best practices for a prosecutor
like in the Manhattan D.A.'s office
to put his evidence or her evidence up in front of a jury
and a grand jury and let them help decide the proper charges
and how the evidence is going to be presented.
It also helps the prosecutor's office long term
to do a sort of a pressure test of their
evidence in advance so that they're stronger in prosecuting the ultimate case at trial.
That's why grand juries are often used instead of the much easier information process.
The special grand jury in New York, as you just mentioned, Ben, is distinct from the regular
run of the mill, garden variety grand jury that sits every few months
and just prosecutors run on there with less complicated,
less high profile matters and they walk out,
in most cases with an indictment.
There's an old joke that a prosecutor
can probably get an indictment against a ham sandwich
if it's done properly.
So this bodes terribly for the Trump organization
that they've now moved to a point
where both prosecutors, state, the New York Attorney General,
and the Manhattan District Attorney
believe that there's credible evidence
that a crime has been committed.
And all remember, the wheels of justice
or the scales of justice,
or the feet of the chickens coming home to roofs,
move slowly, whatever we're going to say today. The, the, um,
Vance's office, I mean,
hadn't district attorney got the tax returns for the entire Trump
organization, like a year and a half ago, through multiple processes with
the US Supreme Court.
So you know what though, Popo, I looked at that and what shocked me too. I forget this was how close
Vance was to not getting those records. And if Comey Barrett was in place then, if she had been
appointed to Supreme Court, Vance would not have gotten those records. I went back and I read the
opinions and I read the dissent. It was five
four at the time because Rook Vader Ginsburg was alive. Chief Justice Roberts wrote the
opinion of the court, the way it works is when there's a majority vote, there's one writer
who often writes the opinion of the court. There's often then dissenting opinions that are written.
Some of the other judges may want to put forward
to some other ideas and either give concurring
in parts of opinions, dissenting in parts of decisions.
Why do judges Supreme Court judges do that?
What's the point of doing a dissenting opinion?
Well, you write dissents hoping that you get the majority
and you're setting forth what you want the opinion to be.
This was always the crazy part to me about the law.
It's really shocking when I think you break it down this way.
When there is a five to four opinion on a legal issue, what that technically
means is that four of the smartest people, or they're supposed to be to become in the
Supreme Court, but four of our most exalted jurists have a view of the law that is wrong and unlawful.
Okay, that's just a shocking thing about law
because people wanna look at law like it's a science.
But when we talk about law as a practice of law,
that's one way of looking at it, it's a practice,
but it's also part of power,
part of the evolution of who we are as a people.
It is not a foregone conclusion that you have the rights that our Constitution affords us.
You look at other societies and other extreme examples of the Taliban, the laws in Saudi
Arabia, you know, the laws in other countries. Those
are laws that are made by people too, where their top jurists reach five four, well, they
probably don't even have opinions, they make decrees, but they reach opinions on facts
of the way society should be. So when we talk about a five four opinion, it's four people are wrong in our violating the law
at the end of the day. So that's from what I agree with you. And let's remember
George W. Bush won and became president. And for two terms because of a five four decision
of the US Supreme Court concerning that election. Gore is not president because he didn't get one more vote
on the US Supreme Court.
And I'm sorry for interrupting your flow there
before, Popeye, but when I went back to look at that opinion,
you have Justice Alito writing for the dissent
whose basic opinion is is that the president,
a sitting president, not only should never be charged with the crime,
but shouldn't be subpoenaed by states because according to Justice Alito, in that opinion,
now would be harassing the president.
According to Justice Alito, in the opinion, the president of the United States never sleeps.
And so as subpoena is distracting the president, would be totally improper. That was what four
people, Alito and Thomas, that's what they said in the opinion.
This about a president who spent 275 days at his golf courses all around the world, but
also to bring it home. That same Supreme Court, while it allowed Manhattan District Attorney to get a copy
of the millions of pages of tax returns, which was the beginning of the end. If Trump goes to jail,
the beginning of that process, the first nail in the coffin was that Supreme Court decision
allowing the account, forcing the account to turn over all of the tax records. But in the same breath, that Supreme Court denied the ability of the House investigatory
committee to obtain almost the same tax records because that they went with.
They found a way to distinguish.
But I think it's certainly worse for Trump.
That was a real pure victory for him to say, yay, my records aren't going to
the house and the Congress won't drive me crazy. But boo, it's going to a state prosecutor
in the state of New York was looking at crimes. That was worse for him.
No doubt. And, you know, people have said Congress, you know, that's a political process true, but Congress, of course, did have the right as part of its impeachment
powers to preclude federal government office holders from holding governments again, which
is not purely political, you know, which when you have a criminal racketeering president
like Donald Trump, that is something you'd want to impose.
But now it's in front of a criminal process. It's in front of a criminal grand jury.
And it would be my expectation, Poe, Pock,
that when a grand jury isn't paddled like this,
the outcome, we kind of have a timetable now, right?
But when the outcome is gonna be,
I think we should all mark our calendars.
Right now, it being May of 2021. So what, right now it being, you know, May of 2021.
So what? We got June, July, August, September, October.
So I'm counting my hand.
What do you say? Does that forget a month?
No, no, no.
No, no, no.
We'll get an indictment within the next six months
for two reasons.
One, they empatel these special grand juries
for about that length of time.
They're going to just for our followers.
That grand jury, which is citizens, which have, who have jobs, who have lives,
who have families are now going to have to commit at least three days a week of their lives,
eight hours a day with a lunch break to sitting and listening to evidence presented by the prosecutor.
The defense team is not in the room.
The defendants are not in the room. The targets, the defense team is not in the room, the defendants are not in the room,
the targets the Trump family is not in the room.
It's just the prosecutors and the grand jury
and a judge who just sits and keeps an eye on things
procedurally, but it's the grand jury
which serves the purpose of vetting the evidence
and they will do that three days a week
for the next straight, for the next six months or so
before they'll be asked by the prosecutor to return an indictment on a number of fraud charges
against Trump and other members of the Trump family slash organization and employees.
And the big difference just to sort of end it on this inside baseball for our followers that love this kind of stuff,
is that there's a big difference between the state, the state grand jury process and the
federal grand jury process.
A federal prosecutor gets a little bit of a pass and he's able or she's able to present
evidence, including hearsay evidence, to that grand jury to get an indictment.
So somebody can say, I didn't actually hear somebody say that,
or I didn't actually read that document,
but I was told by someone else that this happened.
That's okay in federal grand jury world.
It's not okay in New York State special grand jury.
All evidence has to be presented by first-hand knowledge,
what we call precipiant witnesses who have first-hand knowledge
because of their five senses of that event
have to actually testify live in front of that grand jury
to support the evidence that's being presented for indictment.
A lot of our listeners asked,
why is it going to have to take six months? Can you explain it to us? Why do we have to wait in the six month process? Can it happen already?
Trust me. We want it to happen, but remember the scales of justice. Remember the way those scales.
She, you know, the scales of the scales of justice if the analogy is to shedding scales. I can see that being the appropriate analogy here.
Yeah, well, do it this way because I know we're going to get Twitter, Twitter comments tweets on us.
Think about this. As I just said, if the prosecutor has to and and they do present first-hand witness knowledge testimony to a grand jury,
and they do present first-hand witness knowledge testimony to a grand jury.
Given the size and scale of the potential criminal enterprise,
that the enterprise fraud, that they're
going to charge Trump and all of his family members with,
you're talking about dozens and dozens of witnesses
that are going to have to come in and testify against,
a lot of them against their will.
They're going to be subpoenaed, criminally subpoenaed to appear before a grand jury.
Some of them will be prepped by the prosecutors, but mainly be prepped by the prosecutors.
But even them are, many of them are not going to be willing participants in this process.
So maybe you get one witness a day, maybe you get two witnesses a day.
You're also talking about hundreds of thousands,
if not more, of exhibits, documents that are going to have to be presented to the grand jury
up on screens and in hard copy. This is a trial. It's a one-way trial. The prosecutor gets to do it
without any pushback from a defense team on the other side because that's the way our system of
justice works in terms of indictments. The defense has to wait until actual trial to put on their case.
But they're going to have to put the prosecutors, dozens of prosecutors,
you're going to have to put on dozens of witnesses and hundreds of thousands of documents
in a six-month period of time. It sounds like a long period of time. It really isn't.
And if this goes the way every court watcher, including Ben and I think,
there's going to be an indictment
of one or more Trump organization members,
including the former president for fraud,
whether it's mortgage fraud, loan fraud, insurance fraud,
some fraud, and if they tie all the frauds together
and they get three frauds within a time period,
then they'll bring what's called the little racketeering act case
against Trump on top of all those fraud claims, which gives the prosecutor even more criminal
punishment, more fines. And so that's the racketeering angle, which the prosecutor will
may attempt to get the grand jury to return a racketeering
charge against the entire organization as a corrupt enterprise.
Yeah, and the racketeering charges were famously brought against mobsters, Mafioso, and that's
how they are treating the Trump organization as though it was a mocka. I, you know, it's a podcast, Pope, but now I see our listener. Yeah, I see you. I see you smiling now.
I know that segment has made you pump your fist. You have a big smile
on Sunday. And this is why you love legal AF. f boy, not selling you bullshit here. At the
end of the day, this is real. I'm telling you, Trump is going to be indicted. Trump is
going to be indicted. Happy Sunday. And here's what Trump said. And here's how you know he's
angry. He projected a response to news about the grand jury. Trump said, this happens in failed third world countries exclamation point on his stupid
blog.
The most incredible thing is just the way he projects because he's the one who turned,
first of all, I don't like the term third world countries.
I think it's very pejorative.
So I want to put that out to begin with, but he turned our country into a third world
country. The images that you see across,
you know, in certain countries across the globe, mass deaths and, you know, depravity and
government corruption, that was Trump in a nutshell. So while I've got you smiling
and before we go on to talking about some of the final other cases of the week.
This is always the time where I like to plug my own law firm and Popox law firm.
And we've been getting a lot of comments and we respond to all of them.
All of the emails that you send us, if you ask us legal questions,
we do our best to respond to answering legal questions.
But where we really want to respond and where we want to be helpful is to let you know.
And we always let you know this. You know this now, but let's think to us. We are practicing trial
attorneys who handle high profile top level cases across the country. And so if you are a victim of
sexual harassment, if you are a victim of
police brutality, if you know someone who is, if you've gotten victim of police brutality,
if you know someone who is,
if you've gotten involved in a catastrophic injury,
that could be a car accident,
it could be being rear-ended,
it could be something horrific and horrible
that happened to somebody that you know
in a workplace incident or any type of injury.
These are the cases where I help victims and I help them get their
justice on a day-to-day basis. And that's what Popoq does, too. We handle business disputes. I
represent founders and companies who are removed from their positions, who are owed money for their
shares, who don't get it. But I have a love for representing someone who's being bullied
by a larger, powerful organization, represented victims in Catholic church, sexual assault cases
and corporate cases where CEOs are executives that horrible things to people who work for them. So
feel free to reach out to Popoq and I if you have a case, if you think your friend has a case, have your friend reach
out to us. Have your family member reach out to us. If you think that there is a, if
there is a case, and we will respond, we'll let you know our thoughts. We do medical
malpractice cases. We do negligence cases. We do class action cases. My email address is benatgaragos.com. That's
B-E-N- at G-E-R-A-G-O-S.com. Send me an email about your case. I'll let you know what I think.
Popak, plug your email address.
Okay. It's M for Michael. Popak is my last name, P-O-P- z for z for p for pter law dot com. And just
to reinforce, I think that's what sets this legal and political affairs podcast, apart
from our competitors is too strong of a word, the other podcasts out there. Ben and I practice
law for a living. Ben and I are trial lawyers, national trial lawyers
who've handled high profile and other types of cases
on behalf of people who need justice.
And we're not just academics, we're not law professors.
We don't take this from an esoteric approach.
We take it from a real life, roll up our shirt sleeves.
We've been in the courtroom.
We've been against prosecutors.
We've been in front of juries.
We've been in front of judges and arbitrators.
And have gotten tremendous results on our behalf.
And I think if you like our show,
you'll love what we do when we're actually handling
a case for you because we're not only tremendously focused,
but we bring this combination of commercial
and business background and extraordinary depth
of legal training and practice
and a track record of success.
And people know who we are when we're on the other side
of a case.
So, I think this is a great opportunity for us
to not just, we love sitting here for an hour,
talking about all of these things.
And it's thrilling for us as it looks like it is for people that download us.
But we work for a living.
And Ben has accurately described our practices.
And a lot of times he and I work together.
We look forward to continue to do that through this show and otherwise.
Let's take a trip back to Southern District of New York.
It's not a coincidence that we go to Southern District
of New York a lot.
It's in Manhattan.
A lot of stuff goes down in Manhattan.
A lot of businesses conducted in Manhattan.
So there's a lot of jurisdiction that's based in Manhattan.
That's one of the reasons that you
have so many cases out of DSDNY. And you also have a federal prosecutor's office there
with a stellar reputation of taking on some of the biggest, most high profile criminal cases.
One of those cases, of course, was the Steve Bannon money laundering case on August 17, 2020,
a grand jury in the Southern District of New York returned an indictment. See, now you're
listening and you know what a grand jury is. You know what that process was. It means a group
of people were in paneled. They went through the evidence in on August 17, 2020. In New York, they returned an indictment against Brian Kofaj, Steve Bannon, Andrew Battalato
and Timothy Shea, who were the defendants alleging they conspired to commit crimes of
wire fraud and violation of federal law and money laundering and violation of another
law.
And the indictment sets forth what took place to remind you in December of 2018
through a crowdfunding website. These individuals initiated an online funding campaign to generate
approximately $20 million to build a wall along the southern border in the United States. Guess what?
It's all bullshit because all of these people in Trump's orbit are bullshit.
It was a money laundering operation and ban and all these individuals were involved. Well,
January 19 of 2021 when Trump pardoned all of his inner circle and cronies, one of those
people who were pardoned was Stephen Bannon. I guess the irony here is that none of the
other individuals were pardoned for doing the same exact things that Bannon, I guess the irony here is that none of the other individuals were pardoned for doing
the same exact things that Bannon was accused of. So Trump left Brian Calfage, Andrew
Baudelotto and Timothy Shay, completely on the hook for the same exact acts. But Stephen Bannon was
pardoned. So as a result of the pardon, the power being an absolute power enshrined in the Constitution
article two, quote, the president shall have the power to grant reprieves and pardons for
offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment. In a case, United States
versus Klein back in 1871 confirming that the power is, quote, granted without limit.
And therefore, the executive can reprive
or pardon all offenses after their commission, either before trial during trial or after
trial by individuals or by classes conditionally or absolutely and without modification or regulation
by Congress. And of course, in the part and the part of Nixon, there wasn't even a case
file. So you could pardon somebody when there's no even case
pending for crimes that were committed or potential crimes that were committed before the pardon
was ever issued. And so in this specific case, because a ban in was pardoned, you know, the
government had to concede that the case had to be dismissed against bad and the government and the Biden DOJ didn't want to dismiss this
against, against, and by the way, it wasn't the Biden DOJ who brought the case against
bad and actually it was the Southern District of New York. It was actually during the Trump
administration, the SDNY, who brought those, who brought those underlying charges.
There was some kind of procedural maneuvering here where the government just wanted bad
and dismissed, but not the underlying indictment against bad and dismissed.
They just didn't, the government just said, look, we could take away bad and as a defendant,
we agrees dismissed.
But symbolically, judge, just don't dismiss the underlying indictment.
And the judge said, I can't just remove somebody's name from a docket as a defendant,
without I have to dismiss the case. So I'm sorry, government, but what the judge did say and did
make clear is that by pardoning someone, it does and assume or infer that the person was guilty because there's
no need to pardon somebody if they didn't commit an underlying
crime. And they cited a specific case in New Jersey, cook
versus freeholders of middle sex New Jersey. This was a New
Jersey case and a
Supreme Court case as well, which basically stand for and this is what the New Jersey Supreme Court
noted. Part and implies guilt. If there be no guilt, there is no grounds for forgiveness. Popoq,
did I just steal your thunder? Did I sum up this band in case? Could you, is there even anything for
you to say? And it's right about it. It's in case? Could you, is there even anything for you to say
and you're right about that?
It's so funny.
We would do this for so long.
I'm thinking, what is he left me in this description
of this band in case?
But I think I got it.
So look, the Southern District of New York,
which we've talked about, which is my backyard,
and where I practice.
As we've talked about, there's really two or three places
where you and I are always going to talk about cases coming out of one of them is the district of the DC circuit,
which is in Washington DC, which covers all of those political litigation type matters.
And then the Southern District of New York, because generally they are some of the finest
prosecutors sit in New York and sit in the Manhattan D.A.'s office, where in this case the Southern
District of New York, and that's where people get prosecuted
if there's a connection to that jurisdiction. So Judge Torres certainly made the right decision.
She had no choice given the pardon power and the pardon to reprieve and to pardon somebody.
But I do think it is interesting that Trump either threw him through a mistake because you remember there was this crush of pardons literally his last week or day or hour.
I think he was pardoning up until the night before.
The respect he was going to pardon the whole Trump family and pardoned himself.
And there was a whole scholarly discussion, including with his own lawyers, as whether he could
pardon himself and that of his family for, as you said,
crimes that had not yet even been indicted, like the ones that are going on in the special
grand jury in New York State against the Trump family.
And they ultimately concluded whether he could or he couldn't politically, he wasn't going
to.
So it's really weird that he did not also pardon the three other people, call fash, Paul
Delato and Shay, because the case is just going to live on.
The only thing I got to think of in terms of evil genius when it comes to Trump
is that if he's going to continue to act like he's going to be a candidate
four years from now, which he will.
He'll keep that flame alive to give himself some relevancy to do these rallies and all of that.
He'll try, I guess, to use the continued prosecution
to argue for his immigration policy against Biden
and the border issues.
So one part I thought, oh, that was really sloppy
on the part of the pardon committee that worked with Trump
that they didn't throw
everybody in there. But I think at the end, he probably is just going to try to use it
to his own political advantage, the continued prosecution of the others who put money in
their pocket instead of quote unquote, building the phony wall. So, you know, again, it's just
another corruption, a corrupt act on behalf of Trump that hopefully when the
scales of justice continue to grind forward, it will lead to his indictment.
I want to talk now just about the, this is our last topic or is it our last topic? It is our
last topic. Just gotta, gotta keep, gotta keep the listeners on their feet, Popeye. I mean, they could probably look at the time frame and predict this is the last topic. Just gotta keep the listeners on their feet, Popak.
I mean, they could probably look at the time frame
and predict this is the last topic,
but gotta always be the wild card here.
That's what Hooded Justice is always about, right?
I mean, what else would you have in it?
This is a interesting one where the DOJ
is seeking to dismiss loss, the current DOJ under Biden, seeking to dismiss
civil rights lawsuits filed by protesters against Donald Trump and other kind of federal law
enforcement. For what took place at Lafayette Square, and of course we know those scenes where
place at Lafayette Square. And of course, we know those scenes where Trump ordered law enforcement, you know, his
protection detail, the military, to attack peaceful protesters at Lafayette Square.
We saw those horrible images so that Trump could go out and take that photo up in front
of the church holding the upside down
Bible. He believed that was to protect straight. I mean as I even talk about that, you know, I think about
you know, all that was happening about a year ago to this day.
You know, he think I just thinking about last year, man, with from the pandemic to the uprisings.
It was a really, really crazy year.
And just even talking about it now,
it just, I think about it, I get chills.
The hair of my arms.
Well, look, if you did, let's look at the silver lining.
If there was no pandemic, I don't think there's a might as touch.
There's definitely not a might as well.
And if there is no Trump administration in all of the post Trump criminal prosecutions,
I think you and I would be doing a 10 minute show once a month called legal AF. I'm not sure
under underboring Biden, which I say is a compliment. I'm not sure we have a show.
You know what, though? I would gladly. And I say this as much as I love might as touch
much as I love our show. I would gladly have no Trump and no authoritarianism, no
Marjorie Taylor Greene's and QAnonism and just be the anonymous, not the, I wasn't fully
anonymous. I mean, I had high profile cases before, but
things require it. And that, you know, you, me might as touch those listening, we had
to answer a call because of this crazy shit that was happening in our world. And, you
know, never thought in a million years, I would be a political person or that, you know, never thought in a million years I would be a political person or that,
you know, we would be having these types
of conversations every day.
It never, it never occurred to me, you know, 18 months ago.
But here we are and I'm glad that you, me,
might as touched those listening, answer the call.
So, Popo, why here is the Biden DOJ seeking to dismiss
a lawsuit against Trump. And I would say, here's my initial hint. I know you know the answer. I shouldn't be calling it the Biden DOJ. It was called the
Trump DOJ because Trump had a different view of the DOJ Jay, what the deal, Jay has been historically. It is the DOJ. It's the Merrick Garland. It's Merrick Garland, our attorney general's
department of justice. And here's an example in lawyers like Ben and I talk about this a lot.
Sometimes cases make bad law where they have the possibility of making bad law.
And even though I'm sure the people in the Department of Justice find it odd to be in
a way defending the prior administration seeking the dismissal of a suit against it, related
to the security measures that were taken in Lafayette Square,
they're not worried about that.
They've made two arguments.
They spent an entire day in front of this judge
and just to bring, for those that want to follow it more online.
The bad law that the DOJ is worried about making
relates to the security that's provided to a president.
And while I don't think anybody who watched the imagery
of the US military, including one of the joint chiefs
of staff being present in the clearing of Lafayette Square,
which is that park that sits for those in Washington
between the Hay Adams Hotel and the White House.
There's a park in the middle.
And it's a park of public square.
It's a place where people often go to protest
to exercise their First Amendment rights.
They were doing it on that day.
It happened to be the day that Trump wanted
to do political theater and go with, as Ben said,
with an upside down Bible over to the historic church,
the church of, I don't know, 30 presidents.
It's next to the park, adjacent to the park.
And so he used in a heavy-handed, fascist way,
a combination of black helicopters,
local police, capital police,
to clear the square from the protesters
and first amendment rights exercises
because he wanted to have a clear shot,
a walk, a stroll to the church,
uninterrupted so he could use it for his campaign purposes.
That's not what the DOJ today is worried about in terms of law being made, and they argued
it in the motion to dismiss before the judge.
That's not their worry.
Their worry is that what should be preeminent
is the ability for the federal government to protect the president and not be and not have
groups like the ACLU and others sue to interfere with what they would like to be reasonably unfettered
right to protect the president. So this is about protecting the president, not
the former occupant, but any occupant into the future. They've also basically told the
judge this suit is sort of silly because Biden is not Trump and these things are not going
to happen again in the future. So you don't have to worry about like an injunction to stop
future bad acts because under this president there aren'tunction to stop future bad acts because under this president,
there aren't going to be future bad acts.
So that's another grounds to dismiss.
But that's why they're just worried about bad law that they'll get stuck with off of
the Trump heavy handed, trying to get the church conduct.
And they don't want to get stuck with really bad law and not be able to protect President
Biden or future presidents in the future.
Yeah, and look, Trump would tell Barr what to do.
Use the DOJ as the Trump's personal law firm, and they would pursue criminal investigations
at Trump's personal injury
lawyer.
I think they sued individuals who would write unflattering books about the Trump administration
and seek monetary damages from them, but that's not-
It was a very messy law firm.
It was a very busy, private law firm at taxpayer expense.
You know, and it was a very disgraceful period in a DOJ Department of Justice that had a proud
tradition. We talk about Trump projecting. I mean, him turning a independent,-run proud institution into his own deep state, his term, his own little
mini-fiefdom that would attack political enemies, going back to what I said before.
This is what happens in third world countries. That's literally what happens when you look at other countries using
a law and law enforcement as a arbitrary tool of power irrespective of constitutional protections
and other countries.
Yeah, they call themselves democracy or constitutional democracies, but the Constitution don't mean
shit.
And in the United States, the Constitution
always did. And that's why it was discouraging, though, to be a lawyer, frankly, during the Trump administration, because everything you studied in law school, it didn't matter anymore.
There was no real precedent. There's no real laws. It's all bullshit. And you go, whoa,
what did I study for? What is this? All you have to do is be on the
right side of power in a particular situation. And that's the law under the Trump administration.
And thank gosh, that Trump was no longer here because I'm telling you, while there was
an ability to stand up to him for more years, it would have been totally destroyed.
There wouldn't have been illegal AFK, you and I would be political prisoners.
No, we'd be like, we'd be like the social media influencer in Belorussia, who was intercepted
right, intercepted by the Belorussian government and on a flight and kidnapped off of a hijacked
off of a plane. It would be like that.
But, you know, just to tie it to your to your brothers in your show, I know you like to have
multiple personalities. And today you're Ben Legal AF, but I know during the week you do a lot
of great political things and political commentary with your brothers. It's not that I'm worried about
now the Trump is out of him getting reelected.
I don't think he gets reelected.
He may try to run, but it's one of his acolytes.
Somebody who's been kissing the ring or the backside of Trump to try to get elected, whether
that's DeSantis or one of these other people that feel beholden to Trump.
And Trump was so out of his mind and so
violative of all of our norms,
constitutional norms as a president,
and really like a child just tested the limits
and went beyond the limits and the guardrails
that were set up in our constitution
that we're having difficulty even now recovering from.
I don't want somebody else in that chair behind that desk
who feels that Trump is his role model
for how to misbehave as a future president.
So I know we just got Biden elected along with Kamala,
but our work is not done.
And if we allow either at the midterms or beyond,
including for the next presidential race,
if we don't get Biden Kamala or whoever's running then, I assume it's going to be them. If we don't get Biden, Kamala or whoever's
running then, I assume it's going to be them. If we don't get them reelected and we allow
a Trump follower, a QAnon follower to get elected again, we are going to be right back in
the pickle that we just got out of.
So might as touch listener, you've learned today about special masters in demnification, attorney, client, privilege, attorney fees in the
way large law firms are structured, federalist paper 64,
grand jury processes versus information and what the grand jury
processes looking like in the Trump grand jury assembled by
side bands, first amendment constitutionality and the law going
after social media by DeSantis and other GQP members, concurring and dissenting opinions
in the Supreme Court, the Racketeering Act, parted power, the way the DOJ operates, not
a bad minus touch. Legal A.
And the scale of justice, move and grind.
Yeah, I'm gonna get a lot of crap for that one for some time.
But in the meantime, I want to also wish on this memorial day weekend,
I want to thank our service members for their sacrifice.
People that I think early on, I've shared this,
but one of my best friends from college was a Navy SEAL.
He lost a number of friends and every memorial day,
I see his posts and I also reflect on that in
the sacrifices by our service members here in
Abroad who sacrificed daily and those who have lost their lives, fighting for
our freedom, fighting for our democracy and my heart goes out to all families
that have lost loved ones in you know in war and in combat. And my grandfather was a B 29 tail gunner and
the B 29s. And growing up and hearing his stories and hearing those brave soldiers who fought
with him and who lost his lives. I reflect back on those childhood memories in Florida
where he where he lived at the time and when he would tell me about my dad was army so go army.
And so may all of your memorial days spent with your family
bring you happiness but also make sure you take the day as well to reflect on its core purpose,
to remember our service members who have lost their lives fighting for our freedoms.
This has been another edition of Midas Touch Legal AF, Ben Myselis, Michael Popak thanking you
for making Midas Touch Legal AF the top legal podcast in the country. Thank you so much. We'll see you same time, same place next week.