Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Trump FINALLY CONFESSES he got HELP from Russia, STUNNING FILING
Episode Date: November 29, 2023Trump just admitted that the Russians helped get him elected in a recent court filing AND that on the last 19 days of his presidency he made Jeff Clark, a co conspirator in Georgia and DC, THE ATTORNE...Y GENERAL. Michael Popok of Legal AF, unpacks the latest filing by Donald Trump to try to delay the March 2024 trial, and the accidental confessions and admissions in it, that only strengthen the department of justice’s case against him. Get up to 50% off for a limited time when you go to https://shopbeam.com/LEGALAF and use code LEGALAF at checkout! Visit https://meidastouch.com for more! Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown Lights On with Jessica Denson: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/lights-on-with-jessica-denson On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is Michael Popok, legal AF. Well, it's finally happened. Donald Trump is finally admitted that the Russians got him elected in 2016.
And he has put into think, what am I talking about? I'm telling you, it's in a new filing and emotion to compel that was just filed this week by Donald Trump's lawyers in the DC criminal election interference case against Donald Trump.
election interference case against Donald Trump. Why did they say that?
Well, they were arguing that they needed to see documents related to foreign interference
that may have happened in 2016 and 2020, because Donald Trump now suddenly is the defender
of election integrity.
The person who single handedly has been trying to suppress the vote and stop Americans from
having, uh, having, uh, their vote counted is now the protector of the vote.
He was just trying to stop the Russians, the Iranians, the Chinese, and the Cubans from interfering
with the election because he just wants to be fair and square and whoever wins or loses,
except when he loses and then he wants to stay in power and cling to it anyway, shape
or form. So in his filing in which he asked for a series of documents, categories of documents that
have no relevancy whatsoever to his defense.
Let me repeat that.
The stuff he's asking for this late in order to avoid trial and march has no bearing on
his defense.
And I'll tell you why.
One of the things he said he needed is he needs information about the 2016 election
because there's evidence that he's read that the Kremlin through RT America TV, which
was controlled by the Kremlin and Putin was instituting a campaign of disinformation to try to influence the
hearts and minds of voters to get them to vote for, I guess, the winner, the winner of the
2016 election was Donald Trump.
So if you just put two and two together, Donald Trump is now arguing that he is entitled
to information to determine how the Russians got him elected.
I mean, there's no other way
for me to interpret this. I'm going to read from the brief just so you don't think I'm crazy
or making it up. So in their motion to compel, whether arguing to the judge that they need
information about foreign influence related to the 2016 election. They say on the bottom of page seven of their brief,
the declassified version of the 2016 election, ICA, which is a,
Russia Activities and Intentions Report, that in that report, they described RT America TV
quote, a Kremlin finance channel operated from within the United States
to execute a quote Kremlin directed campaign to undermine faith in the US government and
fuel political protest.
In other words, the Russians got Donald Trump elected.
He wants to get to the bottom of it.
It's only other way to put that.
Would you denounce what happened in 2016 and would you warn him to never do it again?
All I can do is ask the question.
My people came to me, Dan Coats came to me, and some others they said they think it's
Russia.
I have President Putin.
He just said it's not Russia.
I will say this.
I don't see any reason why it would be.
I will tell you that President Putin was
extremely strong and powerful in his denial today. And what he did is an incredible offer.
He offered to have the people working on the case come and work with their investigators
with respect to the 12 people. I think that's an incredible offer.
You might be wondering, to 2020 and the 2020 election and whether Donald Trump believed or
didn't believe that there was election interference in terms of fraud.
It was always fraud, not election interference.
Fraud in the vote, hardware, software, vote flipping, ghost votes, dead people voting,
multiple votes, outcome determinative fraud in the election that got Joe Biden elected.
Now he's flipped course and said election interference sounds a lot like
tampered voting. I'll, I'll just talk about that. Maybe nobody will notice,
but we noticed here on the Midas Touch Network that those two things are not the same,
although they've been conflated by Donald Trump in his recent filing.
And then my other favorite point in the briefing is to compare Donald Trump admitting, admitting
that Jack Smith's indictment is the pillars of it, supporting it, upholding it are every
major intelligence law enforcement and attorneys in the government at the time,
and even now, in their testimony, evidence, advice, and analysis supports the indictment.
But that should all be ignored according to Donald Trump because we should just trust
his independent judgment, like 100 million Americans do.
I'm not making that false equivalency up. On one hand,
they make another admission that they probably didn't want to make is that the indictment
is well supported by facts, evidence, analysis, information of key people in government that
are all at odds against Donald Trump's testimony. But we should ignore all of that in the magical thinking of Donald Trump world and just
take Donald Trump at his word.
Then he'll get to the bottom.
There must be fraud.
This is like, you know, this is like Commander Quique in the Kane Mutiny.
There's got to be a second key, you know, to get the strawberries.
There's got to be two keys.
Huffrey Bogart. That's not my Huffrey Bogart, but that was Huffrey Bogart.
Right. There's no second key, right? Strawberries all got eaten by everybody on
the ship. Sorry, it's the movies from the 1950s. So I'm not doing a spoiler alert.
Back to Trump, though, he says in his, on page six of the motion.
He says he admits that the indictment
is supported by these pillars.
Think about the support structure here.
The indictment endorses the alleged views
of senior White House attorneys.
That's a pretty good group.
That's a group Donald Trump picked,
vetted, put an office, rely on people with titles
like White House Council, Deputy White House Council, assistant to the Deputy White House
Council. You know, those people, uh, here's another pillar that undergirds the indictment.
Senior leaders of the Justice Department. Okay. So they also support the indictment. And
who are they? Oh, you know, Bill Barr, the acting attorney general, Jeff Rosen, the deputy acting attorney
general that worked for him, you know, everybody in the Department of Justice in Trump's
Department of Justice in Trump's White House, everybody except maybe Jeff Clark who's
a indicted, co-conspir or in Georgia and an unindicted Coke
and spirit or in DC.
Maybe he doesn't agree, but everybody else sounds like a pretty good foundation for the
indictment.
So far, don't you think that Trump's conceding to, but I'm not done.
He also says that the indictment is supported by and the allegations of it by the intelligence community, the entire intelligence community of the United States, the CIA,
the FBI, the director of national intelligence, Homeland Security Intelligence, the intelligence
bureaus and agencies of every aspect and arm of the armed forces in branch of the armed
forces.
You know, that intelligence community.
All in favor of the indictment against Donald Trump's position.
And then finally, the Department of Homeland Security, cybersecurity and infrastructure,
security agency, known as CISA, and its director at the time Chris Krebs who got fired by Donald
Trump.
Right.
The one agency who in its name has the integrity of the election as its remit, as its mandate,
determined that it was the safest, most fair election and the integrity of the election
was upheld than any other election in American history. But that's to be ignored.
That's on page six.
On page four,
Donald Trump wants you to believe
that that should be all ignored.
And instead, let me read it to you
because you won't believe it.
He says, and I quote,
the indictment in this case reflects little more than partisan advocacy designed to sabotage President Trump's leading campaign for the 2024 presidential election.
Again, there's not a shred of evidence that that's true.
And not one quoted in their motion, either, or in an affidavit or a declaration or a piece of paper,
they go on consistent with the improper and elaufal goal.
The special counsel's office has chosen to rely on the views of witnesses who aligned
with the Biden administration's political viewpoints and to treat those biased opinions
as objective and irrefutable truths regarding the integrity
of the 2020 elections.
Stop right there because they go on and list on page nine, who he's talking about, about
the witnesses, the views of witnesses.
Yeah, the views of the intelligence community, the entire department of justice, White House
council, and the Office of Cybersecurity and
Election Integrity.
You know, those people, they all have ours next to their name.
They were all Republicans.
They were in Democrats.
Now suddenly, they're aligned with Biden's political views.
Not one of them are serving in the Biden administration, not one of them served in the Obama
administration. They only served in the Biden administration, not one of them served in the Obama administration.
They only served in the Trump administration.
So I don't even understand that sentence, but it gets better or worse.
This is my favorite part of the brief, 37 pages.
It was not unreasonable at the time and certainly not criminal for President Trump to disagree with officials
now favored by the prosecution and to rely and step on.
Now here's the point where you think in the brief, they would list a lot of counter facts.
Other people, well, maybe the Attorney General was against us, but the Deputy Attorney General
wasn't, or maybe the Cybersecurity Head Director was against us, but the deputy Attorney General wasn't, or maybe the cybersecurity head director was against us,
but the deputy director wasn't,
or the Department of Justice,
or this person, but his second in command,
no, there's nothing after this sentence,
except for more words written on a page by a lawyer.
And so it says, and
certainly not criminal for president Trump to disagree with officials now favored by
the prosecution. And to rely instead on the independent judgment that the American people
elected him to use while leading the country. Okay, take a giggle break, take a laugh break, because that's
their case. How do I know? It's in the first page, first paragraph, that audience. That's
supposed to be your roadmap paragraph for you. Tell the judge exactly where your case is
going to go. What you got on your side. And if you had anything on your side other than ridiculous, meritless, baseless, uh, comments,
you'd put it right there.
You'd attach a graph or a chart or a list or a bunch of affidavits or some testimonial
references to show that, you know, it's just not you behind a keyboard with nothing else,
right?
Uh, that you're not just, uh, you know, all hat and no cattle, as they
like to say, in certain parts of the country, you know, like Manhattan. And that's, that's
it, guys. I'll go through other aspects of this, but it's the independent judgment. The
American people elected him to use versus the entire weight of intelligence, law enforcement, data collection, everything,
evidence that support the indictment.
Which one are you going to pick?
Did you know that poor sleep can cause weight gain, mood issues, poor mental health and
lower productivity?
Sleep is the foundation of our mental and physical health
and performance in our days.
Having a consistent nighttime routine is nondegosable.
What I don't get enough sleep, trust me.
You don't want to be around me the next day.
Introducing Beam Dream.
You know we've been raving about Beam's Dream Powder.
They're healthy, H Koko for sleep.
And today my listeners get a special discount on Beams Dream Powder, their best selling
healthy Haku Koko for sleep, with no added sugar.
Now available in delicious seasonal flavors like Cinnamon Koko, Seasol Caramel, and white
chocolate peppermint.
Better sleep has never tasted better.
Dream contains a powerful all-natural blend of Rishi, Magnesium, Elfine, Militonin, and
Nano CBD to help you fall asleep, stay asleep, and wake up refreshed.
A recent clinical study revealed Dream helped 93% of users wake up feeling more refreshed,
and 93% reported that Dream helped them get a more restful night's sleep.
Just mixed beam dream into hot water or milk, start or broth, and enjoy before bedtime.
I've personally tried beam dream.
It certainly lived up to the hype, it was delicious, and just a lovely night time routine,
and secondly and most importantly it helped me fall asleep and stay asleep.
Find out why forms and the New York Times are all talking about beam, and why it's trusted
by the world's top athletes and business professionals.
If you want to try Beams best-selling dream powder, take advantage of their biggest
sale of the year and get up to 50% off for a limited time.
When you go to shopbeam.com slash legal AF, the discount is auto applied to checkout.
No code necessary.
That shop B E A M dot com slash legal AF for up to 50% off.
So besides the fact that he agrees that Putin got him elected and that he's got nothing
to support his position that Joe Biden is trying to interfere with the 2020 election by
manipulating the special counsel.
What else is he interested in getting?
And what else did I learn?
Well, there's one other revelation that finally got resolved in writing in the papers that
has always been a mystery.
And that's the status of Jeff Clark, the unindicted number four,
Co-Conspirator in DC, and the indicted Co-Conspirator in Georgia.
He was a low level five or six down the chain assistant attorney general.
Wasn't a deputy, just an assistant who all of a sudden in December and January,
just before Trump left office,
he leapfrogged over and got promotion after promotion in the last like 15 days of the administration.
The Jan 6th committee thought, and it's in their report, that Jeff Clark was offered the job
of acting attorney general. Of course, he was never confirmed in the late December early January time period, but
that was never confirmed.
It is now in their filing, they talk about on page 11 that there was a classified briefing
to Coke and Spiritor 4, who for some reason, I think if they say his name, they think they're
going to burn.
And so they never say who it is they think they're going to burn.
And so they never say who it is, but I'll tell you it is Jeff Clark by the director of
national intelligence.
So national intelligence director conducts a briefing with what I thought at the time
was a number seven attorney in the office.
Nope. On page 11, they say that that guy, the Jeff Clark, was quote, the acting
attorney general in the meeting. Okay. Even the Jan 6th committee couldn't figure out
he was the acting attorney general. We knew he was offered the job by Trump, not that he
took it. So according to Donald Trump, on Jan 1 of 2021, he was on his fourth attorney general,
and at least three in the last year and two in the last month.
And this only 19 days away from his going out of business sale and the moving trucks
pulling up to the White House.
In that last gas, you know, as the, as they're circling the drain of the trumpet, trumpet
administration, you know, they make an attorney general out of Jeff Clark, who sits for intelligence
briefing. And then he writes or revises the letter that he's about to write on behalf
of Donald Trump
using the Department of Justice and Justice as a weapon to places like Georgia telling them hold on on
Certification hold it hold it. We think there might be fraud
There's no way that whatever he was told in that national defense information
briefing would have led him to conclude that there was fraud
But we got another concession by Donald Trump in the filing.
And then there's a series of other things I'm going to leave for another hot take in
which they raise issues about maybe there was cyber hacking, maybe there was foreign
state sponsored cyber hacking, breaking into computers, Maybe there was software, malware.
I'm like, okay, I've heard about all these things before and
nothing.
There's no connection for that anywhere in their papers.
Now is the time to the election fraud that they claim happened.
There's no link.
It's just like, hey, we think it's interesting.
We read about solar wins, the malware that may have been used by a foreign country. And we just think it's fun. We read about solar winds, the malware that may have been used
by a foreign country.
And we just think it's fun.
We should go look and see maybe something happened
in the voting machines.
Come on.
Really?
It's just now a laundry list of whatever you read
in the paper.
That's what we're left with.
And then on the Gen 6 Committee report,
which they want more information about, they reference
that the Gen 6 Committee report talked about Russian, Chinese, Iranian, Cuban attempts
to influence the outcome of the election.
But again, this is that conflating of concepts. Donald Trump was fraud guy, not Russian trolls are trying to make you vote a certain way
guy.
And now he's claiming, no, no, it was all the same thing.
I was really involved with that.
Look, let me just concede something up front, right?
For credibility sake. There is no doubt that Russian, Iranian, Chinese, Cuban,
and other even allies use this information campaigns in order to put fellow Americans
at each other's throats. They do. They foment this content in this country to weaken us.
We're not. It's just that we're gullible.
People sit on their computers all day long and they think they're in a chat room with
one of their buddies, you know, who's like-minded.
And they're really in a chat room with a troll who's Chinese operative or Russian operative.
And they're using campaigns and flashcards and subliminal messaging and all of that,
like the Nigerian candidate, in order to get you to vote a certain way.
That is for sure.
That has been going on for decades.
We do it in other countries.
That is a different issue that needs to be addressed so that
social media is sort of scrubbed of attempts by foreign
interference, state-sponsored foreign interference, state-sponsored
terrorism, and state-sponsored disinformation campaigns to get involved with our voting
system.
I agree with that.
That's nothing to do with Donald Trump.
He wasn't, when he was making his phone calls to election officials and elected officials
around the battleground states, and he was calling Georgia and Arizona and Nevada and talking to the speaker of the house
and, you know, any kind of legislator or election official, he could get his hands on.
He wasn't saying to them, you know, the Chinese did this to me.
The Russians did it.
You know, they flipped votes.
That's not what he said.
Some of it's recorded like in Georgia.
What he said was, there was some sort of mischief
in the voting machines or software.
And there was fraud in the voting.
And that contributed to him losing.
That's why the other guy got seven million more votes,
not for some other reason.
And so what's going to happen? Let me sum up this hot take with this 37 page brief at
the last minute, tried to lay the election in front of Judge Chutkins. It's not going
to work. And I'll give you the blueprint for it. She just ruled earlier on the week on
their request for quote unquote missing Jan six documents
from the committee.
She first said there aren't any missing Jan six documents.
That's one, two, you've had all this time to tell me what in particular from the Jan six
committee, you didn't get the government has already told me what they've given you
with a catalog.
And I don't see anything missing.
So tell me what it is.
You had your opportunity, but you didn't do that.
Then that's a problem.
And no, I'm not going to give you the video versions of the witness testimony by the Jen
Sixth committee because Lord knows what you'll do with it.
She's already ruled about relevancy and they're having to show and make out their burden, carry their burden, to show a connection
between the information and a defense or relevancy in the case, and they haven't. Same thing here.
Just because they're characterizing it as a motion to compel asking for what's called
Brady or exculpatory material from the Department of Justice doesn't, through a feat of alchemy,
convert this into a fishing expedition.
Just go ask for whatever you want.
Solar hacking never had any connection to the voting.
Sure.
2016 election about a 2020 issue.
Sure, why not?
Now, we're beyond why not?
Let's go rummaging through the drawers of our government. Why don't you tell us every,
you know, every informant in the FBI that was at Gen 6. The answer to that is there were a lot of,
there was a handful of informants that were participating in the Gen 6 insurrection, but they weren't
there at the best of the FBI. They were just there as citizens and also happened to have been
informants and drug and violent crimes.
But they were exercising their own first amendment, right?
And the like.
And that's the lack of intellectual honesty that's often missing or present, sorry, in the
Trump filings.
It's the hallmark of the Trump filings.
It's just lawyer, blather, talking point,
pom card points they want to make over and over again without a shred of evidence,
without a shred of corroborating information. And that's what judges like Judge
Chutkin, when they throw them out, say, you didn't carry your burden. Where's your evidence?
It's completely unsupported. And now we're in that world. We're in the world of evidence. We're evidence-based in our justice system. We're document-based. We're information-based,
analysis-based, witness, testimony-based. We're beyond the independent judgment of Donald Trump
to crown himself King and stay in power, which is what he basically said in his brief.
I'll continue to follow on hot takes like this one, everything and
anything Donald Trump does at any time in any of the cases, civil or
federal, criminal or state around the world, including in London,
only one place exclusively on the Midas Touch Network on this
YouTube channel. And on hot takes like this one at the intersection of law,
politics and justice.
Join us every Wednesday and Saturday at 8 p.m. Eastern time on the YouTube channel for Midas
for a podcast curated that we call legal AF. It is what you think.
So my next hot take give me a thumbs up on this one until my next legal AF,
see a Wednesday and Saturday. This is Michael Popak reporting.
Hey, MidasMiddy. Love this report. Continue the conversation by following us on Instagram.
At MidasTouch to keep up with the most important news of the day. What are you waiting for? Follow us now.
you