Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Trump Co-Defendant Files Very AGGRESSIVE Motion in New Criminal Case
Episode Date: August 16, 2023Legal AF Co-Hosts Ben Meiselas and Karen Friedman Agnifilo discuss the new motion filed by Donald Trump’s former chief of staff Mark Meadows who is a co-defendant in the new criminal case filed by F...ulton County District Attorney Fani Willis. Go to https://eightsleep.com/legalaf and save $150 on the Pod Cover Remember to subscribe to ALL the Meidas Media Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://pod.link/1510240831 Legal AF: https://pod.link/1580828595 The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://pod.link/1595408601 The Influence Continuum: https://pod.link/1603773245 Kremlin File: https://pod.link/1575837599 Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://pod.link/1530639447 The Weekend Show: https://pod.link/1612691018 The Tony Michaels Podcast: https://pod.link/1561049560 American Psyop: https://pod.link/1652143101 Burn the Boats: https://pod.link/1485464343 Majority 54: https://pod.link/1309354521 Political Beatdown: https://pod.link/1669634407 Lights On with Jessica Denson: https://pod.link/1676844320 MAGA Uncovered: https://pod.link/1690214260 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Ben Myselis from Legal AF joined by the one and only Karen Friedman Agnifolo.
We got some breaking news that I want to discuss. One of the co-defendants, 19 total defendants
in the Fulton County indictment brought by Fawney Willis. One of those co-defendants, Mark Meadows, Trump's former chief of staff within 24, less than 24 hours
of the indictment, filed a notice of removal, seeking to remove the case to basically transfer
the case from state court in Fulton County, where it is currently filed to federal court in Georgia before the Northern
District of Georgia United States District Court.
Now there will be a proceeding in federal court to determine if the case should remain in
federal court as it relates, in this case exclusively to Mark Meadows, because he's the one who filed the removal,
or whether the case will be what's called remanded
or sent back to state court in Fulton County
where the indictments were brought.
I wanna bring in Karen Friedman and Agniplo,
but we've seen this very recently, right, when Donald Trump
in the Manhattan District Attorney case, the case brought by Alvin Bragg, where the Manhattan
Grand jury indicted, Trump used the same statute 28 USC, section 1442 and 1455 to try to
remove that case to federal court.
The federal judge who presided over it ultimately said
there should not be federal jurisdiction
remanded it back to state court with Judge Juan Mershon
and the argument that Trump made there
that Mark Meadows is making here.
And then I suppose Donald Trump is going to
try to file a similar motion to Mark Meadows here. And then I suppose Donald Trump is going to try to file a similar motion
to Mark Meadows here. Again, Trump's going to make the argument is that this invokes federal
law, federal immunities, federal statutes, and therefore there should be federal jurisdiction,
right? And Mark Meadows argues, I was just performing, this is the argument, routine,
chief of staff work, setting up meetings, coordinating calls, and all of that falls
within the ambit of the executive branch. We have in the Constitution what's
called a supremacy clause, and therefore this case should go before a federal judge, a federal jury instead of Fulton County.
What do you make of this motion?
And what can you tell us about this filing
and its broader implications?
So, element number one of a removal
is the person has to be a federal officer
at the time that they committed the acts that
they are being accused of committing.
And so only certain defendants in this 19 defendant conspiracy, Rico indictment would even
be eligible to make a removal motion.
Donald Trump for one, because in the case you just referenced, it was Alvin Hellerstein,
the federal judge, although he remanded it back to State Court, said you are a federal officer, even though you're
president.
It's a federal employee number one, I guess.
So Donald Trump would be considered a federal officer, Mark Meadows, and maybe Jeffrey Clark
also could potentially, but I couldn't really tell anyone else on the indictment
who could even make this motion
because they're not federal officers, most of them.
So that's number one.
Number two, the second element you have to meet
is you have to be acting under the color of federal law
or as your duty.
In other words, it has to be you're acting within your job or as the
in the context of your job. And in the Alvin Brad case, Judge Hellerstein ruled that that was
a personal matter, that he was paying off a lawyer, his personal lawyer, who had paid off a porn star who he had had in a fair
with. And so that was personal. It had nothing to do with his job as president. So he was not
acting under the color of his authority as president. And so that's the other argument. It
would have to be under the color of law. And the third element is you have to have a plausible federal defense.
And so of all the people in this who could assert removal in the Fannie Willis case, I think
Mark Meadows is the only one who has a chance.
I think Donald Trump gets remanded back down and so does anybody else who tries to make this,
because you're not acting within the color of the authority
of your job when you're trying to steal an election, literally.
So it's not like he was acting as president.
He was acting as somebody trying to remain president.
But Mark Meadows could potentially say, look,
I was just doing my job as chief of staff.
I was scheduling telephone calls and getting meetings, et cetera.
And that was under the color of my job.
And PS, I do have a plausible federal defense, which
doesn't mean it's successful.
It means he has one to assert, which is the, you know,
he, there's an immunity, he's immune from being prosecuted,
and there's the supremacy clause,
meaning the federal government trumps the state court,
so that you can't prosecute me federally.
And Mark Meadows is tricky because Thai Cubs,
who was a White House lawyer, has been saying he's confident 100%
that Mark Meadows is cooperating with Jack Smith. And he was just on CNN earlier tonight saying
he was 100% sure that Mark Meadows is cooperating with Jack Smith. And certainly one would
surmise that he's cooperating because he's not listed as a co-conspirator in the indictment, right? He's not listed even as an unnamed co-conspirator
or an unindicted co-conspirator, right? So, and you would think he would because he was so
involved in so many of the schemes and planning, etc. He's also an excellent witness, right?
He's the guy on January 6th,
who was on the phone with Trump all day
and Cassidy Hutchinson testified before the select committee
that she was saying, Mark, do something,
make him stop and he was on the phone
and she testified he was on the phone saying
he's not gonna do anything.
So he's a great witness for Jack Smith
if he were going to do anything. So he's a great witness for Jack Smith if you were going
to cooperate. But the issue that I have is is why then is he indicted in Georgia? Why would his
lawyer and he has a really good lawyer, right, Mr. Turewilliger? He has a really good reputation.
Why would he negotiate cooperation for Jack Smith, but not for Fanny Willis. That makes no sense. A good
lawyer normally if you're cooperating in one case you'd cooperate in both and the reason I'm
because otherwise what doesn't make any sense, right? You know, because think about it logistically
in order to cooperate in a federal case, you have to admit to everything you've done, right? They
don't just give you a pass. You have to actually swear under oath and admit to all your crimes.
And under Jack Smith's theory of the case, Mark Meadows is a
co-conspirator and has committed lots of crimes.
So he would have to admit them on the record.
And so those statements could be used against him in any
state court case.
Unless, A, he's either not cooperating.
And so that's why there is this disconnect.
Or B, his lawyer thinks that the supremacy clause,
actually, he has a legal argument here
that he can't be prosecuted
and that he thinks this case will get dismissed.
Because otherwise, it actually makes no sense to me
of how he could be cooperating with Jack Smith
and then be, but then be prosecuted here
in Fanny Willis' case.
In this motion, Mark Meadows goes on
and they list actually and put the the counts that he is charged
with and the acts in the conspiracy that he's charged with. And it says that he, you know, they
actually quote it. And, you know, honor about November 20th, Trump and Meadows met with the majority leader in Michigan.
And so it talks about his work in Michigan and making the Donald Trump made false statements
there.
And then it says on November 21st, Meadows sent a text message to United States Representative
Scott Perry from Pennsylvania asking for a phone number. And then on November 25th, Trump and Meadows and Giuliani and Jenna Ellis and other unindicted
co-conspirators met with a group in Pennsylvania at the White House and discussed holding
a special session of the Pennsylvania General Assembly.
Now that's I think a little more than just arranging a phone call, right?
And so that's one where I think he's got some exposure because that's obviously, that's
not just setting up meetings and arranging phone calls. That's actually holding a special
session where they're going to not accept the electors, the legitimate electors and put
in false slates of electors.
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And then you've got another one on December 1st,
Trump and Meadows met with John McAtey
and to prepare a memorandum, outlining a strategy for disrupting and delaying the joint
session of Congress in January 6.
Again, right there, that's criminal, right?
That's not making a phone call or setting up a meeting.
And then on or about the next one, December 22, 2020, Mark Meadows traveled to Cobb County
Civic Center in Georgia and attempted to observe the signature match audit being performed
there by law enforcement officers from Georgia, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation and the
Georgia Secretary of State. And then it goes on to say that others prevented Mark Meadows
from entering into the space where the audit was being conducted.
And then on the 23rd of December, Trump placed a phone call
to Georgia Secretary of State, Chief Investigator Francis Watson,
that had been previously arranged by Mark Meadows.
And during the call, Trump falsely said he won the election
by hundreds of thousands of votes.
And then on the 27th of December,
Mark Meadows sent a text office to a text message
to the Georgia Secretary of State Chief Investigator
Francis Watson that said,
is there a way to speed up Fulton County Signature
of Verification in order to have results before January 6th, if the Trump campaign assist
financially?
Then January 2nd, Trump and Metta's committed the felony of solicitation of violation of
oath of a public officer.
So this is where it goes from being just an overt act of a conspiracy into one of the crimes that you're required to commit.
It's called a RICO Act, and that's for the RICO case. And here, he's being alleged to solicit
the violation of oath by a public officer in violation of Georgia Law, section 16-4-7, and 16-10-1,
of Georgia Law, section 16-4-7 and 16-10-1, by unlawfully soliciting requesting Georgia Secretary of State
Brad Raffinsberger to engage in a conduct constituting the felony offense
of violation of oath of a public officer,
by unlawfully altering unlawfully adjusting,
and otherwise influence certified returns of presidential electors.
And then again, the last one talks about Donald Trump and Mark Meadows committing the crime
of solicitation of violation of the oath of public officer again when they on January 2nd
when they on January 2nd called Brad Raffinsberger,
and again, similar to what I just read
in the other one. And so this is the conduct that he is charged with.
And so his lawyer and he is making the argument
that he should be immune from state prosecution and that he has a
plausible federal defense here and that this case should be removed. And so if any of these
defendants do get removed into federal court, then those defendants will proceed on their own
in federal court. Fanny Willis will still be the prosecutor.
And the reason they want it removed is because the jury pool will pull from greater than
just Fulton County, which is a blue county.
And they will reach into red counties and they want the red churrs.
So you just broke down, I think every argument we are going to see in the brief,
the motion for remand is the next motion that gets filed and something like that. The order is
removal happens. That just took place. The grounds for removal were asserted in the motion by
Mark Meadows. Lawyer, which you just stated. The next move is from Fulton County District Attorney Fony Willis to request the remand.
Remand, then you will see an opposition filed by Mark Meadows, then you will see a reply
by Fulton County District Attorney Fony Willis' team.
You'll almost certainly hear about an oral argument taking place, not
always, but I think there will be one in this and then there will be a written ruling
as well.
And so there are those three key elements here for the removal in a case like this one.
Federal officer, I think Mark Meadows checks that box too, though, was his conduct within
the color of his official duties.
He's going to say, I was just being a chief of staff, Fulton County District.
He says, no, you were violating your constitutional duties.
You wanted to destroy the Constitution.
How could you be working in official duties?
Absolutely not.
And then you get to the third prong.
And if you don't even succeed in the second, you still have to succeed in the third.
Is there a plausible defense under federal law being asserted?
Meadows will say that he's got immunities under the supremacy clause, and Fulton County
District Attorney Fony-Willis will say again, absolutely not.
You are trying to overthrow our democracy.
Prong 2 and 3 is where Donald Trump failed in his attempt to remove the Manhattan
District Attorney case. That's where federal judge Alvin Hellerstein said absolutely not.
I'm remanding the case back to state court. So that's why the Manhattan District Attorney
case is proceeding in criminal court right there. And also if you want to think of some relationship
here, I think Fony Willis will cite this case as well. Some of the civil
cases brought against Donald Trump in the district court in Washington, DC, before federal judges
like Judge Amit Mehta and even the DC Circuit Court of Appeals there, where the courts have basically
held that Donald Trump's conduct during the January 6th insurrection would not provide
him with the immunities that people who are Donald Trump's disgrace the executive branch,
but people who hold the title president would be entitled to sweeping immunities if they're
engaged within the course and scope.
But the fact that Trump's conduct in Washington, DC,
relating to the insurrection was held not to be within the scope, that will not,
that's not precedent. It may not even be strong persuasive authority, but at least
it's another case out there that Fulton County District is already phony. Will
as can say, look, no defenses there. That should be the same case here, and try to analogize the two right there.
But that's what we've got going on in Fulton County,
the first big move, aggressive move,
by Mark Meadows, I think making a statement also,
doing that within the first 24 hours.
He technically had 30 days to do it,
but he just did it right away, had it prepared,
anything final Karen before we could do. Yeah, so I just want to say one other thing. So interestingly,
he keeps saying in this that he wants the charges dismissed because of the
supremacy clause of the United States Constitution, which doesn't usually,
doesn't really make sense in the context of this because it really should be,
he really, it really, be, um, he really,
it really, it just makes a, it gave scratching my head thinking, why does he keep saying that
in here, right?
Why does he want to dismiss because of the supremacy clause?
But then there's footnote number two where he says, Mr. Meta will submit a separate motion
to dismiss at a later date, which more fully sets forth the facts and law supporting dismissal. And so it leads me to surmise one other possibility
that I hadn't thought of until we were sitting here
and talking about this, which is perhaps he is cooperating
federally, and he pled guilty to all of this.
And that is why he is saying the supremacy clause
when I give you the full,
the facts later, you know, let's get it into federal court first. And then I'm going to
do a more a fuller motion to dismiss under the supremacy clause because if he already
did plead guilty to all of this and to this conduct, there is an argument that the supremacy clause would apply and that
Fonny Willis would be precluded from also prosecuting him and he would be immune.
So that could be what's going on here because like I said, he put it in a footnote and when
you read footnotes, you sometimes get the best information.
And he said, I'm going, we'll submit it
in a separate motion to dismiss at a later date, which
more fully sets forth the facts and law supporting dismissal.
So he doesn't, maybe he doesn't want
to signal that he's cooperating, but that's the card
he has up his sleeve.
Because like I said, that the lawyer, Mr. Turelliger,
has a really good reputation.
He would never have not negotiated it. So I think that could be another possibility here.
Well, to be continued, we'll keep you posted as we learn more here on the Midas
Touch network and on legal AF. Now consider yourself all experts in the removal process and remand process under state and federal law
and bed micelle is joined.
By Karen Friedman, Agnifolo, make sure you subscribe to Legal AF and check out MidasTouch.com
for all the latest updates and breaking news stories here in the Midas Touch Network.
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