Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Trump in FEAR with FINAL DAYS before Verdict
Episode Date: May 26, 2024Ben Meiselas and Michael Popok are back for the Weekend edition of the top-rated Legal AF podcast. On this episode, the anchors discuss and debate: (1) the Trump criminal trial as it moves to closing ...arguments and jury deliberation next week; (2) the release of new damning evidence against Trump in the Mar a Lago case, as the Special Counsel moves for a new gag order to stop Trump from claiming he was the target of an FBI assassination attempt; (3) the Supreme Court allowing the “bleaching” of black voters through racial gerrymandering, and so much more at the intersection of law and politics. Join the Legal AF Patreon: https://Patreon.com/LegalAF Thanks to our sponsors: Henson Shaving: Visit https://HensonShaving.com/LEGALAF to pick the razor for you and use code LEGALAF for 2 years worth of free blades! Fum: Head to https://TryFum.com/legalaf and get a FREE GIFT with the JOURNEY PACK today when you use code LEGALAF Beam: Get up to 40% off for a limited time when you go to https://shopbeam.com/LEGALAF and use code LEGALAF at checkout! 3 Day Blinds: For their buy 1 get 1 50% off deal, head to https://3DayBlinds.com/LEGALAF 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 Coalition of the Sane: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/coalition-of-the-sane/id1741663279 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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We are heading into closing arguments, Michael Popak, in the Donald Trump
criminal trial in Manhattan for falsification of business records.
This trial has moved expeditiously.
We probably could have had summation last week, but for Donald Trump requesting off or purportedly
Barron's graduation, there are a few other delays here and there,
but this trial has been moving, I think, at a pace that many
didn't believe that we would be potentially getting a verdict
in this upcoming week.
And look, I want to talk about the prosecutions case I want
to talk about whatever it is that the defense was doing when they called the
MAGA lawyer Robert Costello and they called the defense lawyer Todd Blanche's
paralegal I don't know it was a tale of kind of competent,
sharp, effective lawyering by the prosecution, staying on script and
telling a cohesive story that they outlined in their opening statements.
And then contrasting that with, I don't even know what the defense was, was
even trying to make as their defense.
I want to get your take on it, but it certainly wasn't cohesive or coherent to me.
I then want to talk about the release of previously confidential documents that have now been
made public in the federal Mar-a-Lago
document case before Judge Eileen Cannon, which she's completely
derailed the trial date in that case.
One of the things Donald Trump's been doing also with Judge Cannon
is he will file these frivolous motions to dismiss, but he will
attach a confidential discovery to the public
filings that he wants to release in public to kind of spread half truths and propaganda
and mislead.
Because he views if he puts it on the public docket, he could take confidential records
and make them public and Judge Eileen Cannon will order that they be released. So this new batch of documents relating to the search warrant executed
on Mar-a-Lago for Donald Trump's frivolous motion to dismiss on due
process grounds was very damaging to Donald Trump. I mean you have photographs
of Waltine now to Donald Trump's assistant or valet, like actually moving the documents.
You see him moving the documents
right before the search,
right before the subpoena return date,
when the FBI and Department of Justice show up
in early June, on June 3rd of 2022.
And you see him moving that.
Then we've also
learned that through the release of these documents that there
were additional classified, highly sensitive records that
were still in Donald Trump's like bedroom and closet areas
following when the search warrant was executed in Mar-a-Lago in
August of 2022 that had to be turned over in late 2022 and 2023.
So you're like, why would Donald Trump want to make this public?
But one of the things that Trump and MAGA were pushing was the standard use of force policy by the FBI
and Department of Justice that exists in every single search warrant.
It's just a statement of the policy by the FBI and Department of Justice regarding the
use of lethal force and when it cannot be used in connection with the search warrant,
Donald Trump and MAGA started saying, look, this proves that President Biden was trying
to kill
Donald Trump and Merrick Garland ordered the assassination. Such dangerous,
dangerous lies. I want to talk about that with you, Michael Popak. And
speaking about just dangerous, dangerous behavior, I mean, Justice Alito is, are we
gonna learn every single day he's got some new home and some new flag?
Apparently he's like living the lifestyle
of the rich and famous as well
and these lavish mansions.
And he is flying these appeal, this appeal to heaven flag,
which is a right-wing extremist flag
that was seen at the insurrection.
Such a bizarre flag to put up.
He previously had the inverted American flag at his Washington, DC residence.
Are we going to find out that there are more homes and more flags?
And meanwhile, now this goes to his inherent bias and just his lack of moral authority,
lack of character, to be putting it
nicely for him to be issuing these rulings in Popock on Thursday. He issued another ruling with,
he led the, he wrote for the court a six to three decision where the right wing extremist on the
Supreme Court upheld the gerrymandering in South Carolina where the South Carolina
legislature just moved basically 30,000 black voters from Charleston to other voting districts
so that they cannot vote in the first congressional district but diffuse their votes in other
congressional districts. And Justice Alito, despite the fact,
Popak, that there was a whole trial that was held in South Carolina before a three-judge
federal court panel that heard all of the evidence about how racist the gerrymandering was,
Justice Alito said, you should have just believed the legislature. The legislature said they did it for political reasons, not racist reasons.
That's why they moved the 30,000 black voters to not vote in the
first congressional district.
You should have just listened to them.
That's the guy flying the inverted American flag and the, you know,
and the other extremist flag.
So we'll talk about that and more on this episode of Legal AF. And, you know,
this is one of these episodes, Popak, of Legal AF that is historic. I think where we are today,
as we're recording this live, think about where we could be next Saturday. Think about it. The corporate media is so not preparing
people for the fact that it is likely, and again, we can't get in the heads of the jury,
but that based on all of the evidence that's been there, that Donald Trump can be convicted.
He can be found guilty. I think that's the likely outcome. So we'll
talk about that and more. But Popak, how are you doing, sir?
I'm doing great. I was just thinking about what you just said about historic moments.
Could you imagine if you and I didn't found Legal F four years ago? And things like Supreme Court justice flying upside down flags of the opposition
against democracy weren't spoken about and examined and magnified the way we do it. If
we didn't have this program to talk about the Trump on trials, things that people said would
never happen, that he'd never be indicted, that he'd never be in a courtroom, that he'd never be prosecuted, that he'd never be potentially convicted.
What if we didn't have this network, this show, talk about these things and to not manage
expectations, set expectations about how our justice system works civilly and criminally to address violations of our
Constitution and the attempts to overthrow democracy. Think of the three
stories that you and I just strung together for today. It could have been, we
could have done multiple variations of three. But these are indicative of why we do this show,
to talk about the likely conviction of a former president for his own bad criminal conduct,
a Supreme Court that is not only ethically challenged, but has lost its integrity in its role as one of the three co-equal branches of our government.
And then talk about what is happening. We have to shine a light on an out-of-control federal
judge that has lost completely control of an important case to the American people to be adjudicated,
not to be procedured to death, not to be motioned to death, not to be continued to death,
not to be, let's not make a decision so I don't have to worry about an appeal to death.
The American people on every side of the aisle and no aisle deserved a trial of Donald Trump
before the election to
decide whether it was thumbs up or thumbs down and they were voting for a criminal or not. I'm
okay if people want to vote for a criminal. It is their right, even a convicted criminal,
but it is also our right to know whether he is and not have Judge Cannon be a pawn of Donald
Trump, which is all she has become,
and to deny the American people the right to know whether he is exonerated or guilty
of espionage.
Look at these pictures.
I mean, there's enough evidence in Mar-a-Lago to convict 10 people, let alone Donald Trump.
But again, we have to talk about this.
Yes, we take, I've had the pleasure of literally bumping into four
different fans and people in our audience in the last 36 hours in different locations. And each
one of them almost said the identical thing, which is it, without what we do, they would be
completely driven around the bend that we give them hope because we tell them what is
going on to contrast against mainstream media and other places where it's opaque and they don't know
what the heck is going on and they don't know who to believe and they've come to believe us.
I take that responsibility. You do. Karen does. We take it so with it's such a heavy burden that we
gladly accept to do this.
So I'm glad I'm here with you again.
You know, the corporate media coverage on the Manhattan criminal trial against Trump
has been nothing short of an absolute failure, an absolute disaster, often led by people
who are not lawyers who do not even know what this case is about,
pushing narratives that are just inconsistent
with what's actually going on in the courtroom.
And we pride ourselves on the fact
that we have multiple sources in the courtroom.
There are people affiliated with the Midas Touch Network,
like Harry Litman, who are there every single day.
We rely on also
other journalists and reporters who are there in the courtroom and we try to
paint the most accurate picture of what is going on in this case and what the
facts are that actually matters with the law in this falsification of business records case,
that as that name implies, it involves records.
It involves falsifying them.
And I think it's worthwhile as we talk about where we are in this criminal trial,
as we head into summation, is to tell you all about what Donald Trump said yesterday on his social
media platform.
This is Trump saying what he believes his defense is.
He goes, the bookkeeping error that I am being incorrectly and unconstitutionally prosecuted
for is the fact that a bookkeeper innocently and correctly called a legal expense paid to a
lawyer a legal expense.
In even simpler words, I called a legal expense a legal expense.
What the hell else would you call it?
A Biden inspired election interference hoax. exclamation point, exclamation point.
Now, Popak, here's the thing.
During the opening statement of Donald Trump's lawyer, Todd Blanche, Todd Blanche didn't say,
look, here's what went down.
There was the situation with Stormy Daniels that we admit took place.
There was the situation with Stormy Daniels that we admit took place.
Donald Trump was very embarrassed about it, but how it was going to interact with his family.
So he relied on professionals.
He did a standard NDA that he would normally do.
He's not a proud moment in his life.
And he relied on lawyers.
He relied on professionals and he relied on lawyers, he relied on professionals, and he relied on a bookkeeper.
And ultimately, there was a mistake that was made
by this bookkeeper who just input the entry in wrong.
And it should have said reimbursement,
but the bookkeeper made this error,
and the bookkeeper said,
"'Legal expense, there was no intent here.
"'It was a big mistake.
This has much to do about nothing.
We apologize for any inconvenience.
There may be negligence here, but this is not criminal.
That's not what was argued in opening.
In opening, it was that the $420,000 payment to Michael Cohen could not be a reimbursement because Trump
is cheap and he's stingy, so he would never pay $420,000 on a $130,000 payment to Michael
Cohen. No, the $420,000 was legitimate legal expenses for services that were rendered
by Michael Cohen. That's what the defense was saying that their case was going to be
about. And then Popak, they proceeded never to talk about that again. And they started
saying that's the cross-examination of Stormy, that she's a liar, the cross-examination of Cohen, that he went rogue,
and that these calls didn't happen.
But ultimately, the checks were signed by Donald Trump
to pay Cohen ultimately $420,000.
And when you say, where does that money come from?
How do you get that?
Well, Trump never called a bookkeeper.
The closest that was called to a bookkeeper was the former controller of the Trump organization,
Jeff McConney.
And when you look through his notes and the notes of the former CFO, Allen Weisselberg,
and you add all of the numbers up together, when add that payment to from that Red Finch consulting
company that was trying to manipulate polls for Donald Trump that Cohen claimed to pay
$50,000.
Although he testified, it ended up being more like $20,000, but he told Trump it was $50,000.
But that's how you got the—by the way, he talked about that in his books as well.
It's not new news. That's how you get the $50,000.
And then you take the $130,000 payment,
you grossed it up by multiplying it by two,
you do 180 multiplied by two, you add in a bonus there
and you get the $420,000 to the number.
And we see how that number came about.
You can follow the checks.
Michael Popak, as you're aware, Donald Trump in his election disclosure forms with the
Government Ethics Committee states in his 2018 report that these were reimbursements
to Michael Cohen.
In various lawsuits that Trump filed against Stormy Daniels.
He acknowledged that these payments were reimbursements to Michael Cohen because Donald Trump was
trying to enforce an arbitration agreement against Stormy Daniels.
So he wanted to be a party to the non-disclosure agreement and he wanted to be Denison, the
alias for him there.
And he said this was a reimbursal.
He admitted it's a reimbursement to Cohen.
A court has already found that it was a reimbursement to Cohen.
Trump posted on his social media,
it was a reimbursement to Cohen.
So finally, Popak, you get, after the prosecution rests,
and you get Michael Cohen on the stand
for 21 hours on the stand for 21 hours on
the stand and by all accounts for everyone in the courtroom who I've spoken to, who
I have so much respect for, people like Harry Litman who's previously clerked for two
Supreme Court justices, who was a leader at the Department of Justice, he says Michael
Cohen was unflappable.
And then so the prosecution rests, the defense calls a paralegal of Todd Blanch.
What a weird person to call.
If I'm the jury, I'm like, the paralegal of Todd Blanch?
Like, okay, are you going to call anybody else?
And then they call Robert Costello, who was the worst possible witness right there.
And I'll pause there to turn it over to you before talking more about Robert Costello,
or if you want to talk about Robert Costello. But Robert Costello tied this case up with a nice,
pretty ribbon and a bow for the prosecution. You would never get in Robert Costello emails
where he acts like a mafioso intermediary trying to shut down Cohen unless he took the stand like
he did. It was the most perfect person if you're the prosecutor to allow in. And so Popock, I know
the media was focused on these moments here or there that had
no real relevance or significance to the case. That's not to say there could be a rogue juror
who could hang this. Anything is possible. But if you look at all of the evidence I laid out,
Trump never said, oh, it's the bookkeeper error defense. He never went there. So,
what do you think? What do you make of all of this as we head into next week,
where I think a verdict is going to be handed down?
Let me take it from the jury charge. The jury charge, it's going to the jury before they start
deliberating to take the facts that they learned that were induced in evidence by the various witnesses,
20 witnesses for the prosecution, two witnesses for the defense, one being a paralegal who collated a bunch of Verizon telephone bills to establish that there were phone calls between Michael Cohen
and Bob Costello who was again, another lawyer testifying against a client at one point was
either Michael's lawyer
or somebody that he consulted with thinking he was his lawyer, when at the same time,
Bob Costello was really representing the true client in interest, which was Donald Trump.
We only found that out during the very artful masterful cross-examination by Susan Hoffinger
of Bob Costello, who's a MAGA lawyer, who's a pawn in a puppet,
who got dragged down voluntarily to MAGA Congress a week or two before his testimony in order to
suggest that in all his 40 years of practice, and he was a federal prosecutor a million years ago,
just like Rudy Giuliani was, that he has never seen a more, this is the new term that they've come up with
over on the right, lawfare, right?
Not warfare, lawfare, the legal system being used
and weaponized against Donald Trump,
talking about gaslighting.
So, oh, Michael Cohen was a client of mine,
and he's a liar, and Donald, and Alvin,
and it was just a series of questions asked
by Elise Stefanik in
which the only response was yes, that's true. Yes, that's true. That's yes, that's true. All
these talking points from America. That Bob Costello, the one that Rudy Giuliani used to be
a colleague of in the US Attorney's office, but they ended up getting sideways over a million
dollar bill and Costello had to sue Giuliani. The Giuliani, the Costello that went
into the grand jury as the only witness after Alvin Bregg led him in to talk to the grand jury
prior to the indictment of Donald Trump. And the grand jury was like, yeah, okay,
no, we have the evidence for indictment. That Bob Costello, the Bob Costello that against the wishes
of his own lawyers as reporting has brought out, Donald Trump
wanted on the stand to give the final word, basically his own summation through Bob Costello,
except I guess they forgot about all the terrible emails that Bob Costello had written to his
law partners about Michael Cohen, in which he said, who's this fucking asshole? Sorry,
Legal AFers. Does he know who he's playing with? The most powerful man in the
world, right? His true client revealed Donald Trump. Now I see why it was a white knuckle
moment for Todd Blanchard, who's doing terribly in this case, as is Susan Necklis, because
they didn't want to put Bob Costello on. For what purpose? We were kibitzing at your wedding
about whether Bob Costello was going to be called. And I said to our group, no way. First
of all, he's
not a prescipient witness with knowledge of anything relevant to the case. You can't call
one witness to comment on the credibility of another witness, which is all he was apparently
being tried to do. I was surprised that Rashawn actually let him take the stand on that particular
issue of whether Michael Cohen is telling the truth or not. But that's what they did.
But it was a high wire act and for the defense, it had failed. And that was the last witness
that went on in front of this jury before they're now going, that was it. Now they went
dark, they got sent home early because the judge did a good thing. He decided that because
of the weird Memorial Day calendar, we would just sort of end trial for the jury Tuesday
and pick up again the following Tuesday or so
with jury charge, they're gonna get charged,
take about an hour, and we'll talk about that in a minute,
and deliberations, I'm sorry,
what we call summations or closing arguments,
jury charge and then deliberation.
So we're going to have something, verdict, hung jury or whatever, and I think verdict
in favor of prosecution by the end of next week.
In terms of the charge conference, it went all for the prosecution, as it had to under
the law in New York, particularly the defense tried to argue two things. They tried to argue a
defense for which they put on no evidence. And they're just gonna like have
a free-floating defense go to the jury, which is not how that works. You have to
have a defense that ties to something that was developed in evidence. And
Emil Bové for Trump knows better. And he tried to argue again reliance on
counsel, presence of counsel. everything Donald Trump had counsel involved, whether it was counsel working for the National
Enquirer or Michael Cohen. And the judge says, there's no evidence of that. I've already
rejected that. You raised it late. And nothing got developed after the fact in the trial
that would allow you to have that defense. So no. Then they tried to argue, well, there
has to be two crimes. We keep talking about this at length
because it's important in New York. In order to get to felony level, it has to be the bookkeeping
fraud, which is the books and records fraud, as Donald Trump likes to minimize it. Well,
it was just a bookkeeping error. We only heard from an accounts payable supervisor,
and we heard from the controller, and neither one of them can we chalk it off to bookkeeping error.
It was more like direction from Alan Weisenberg and Donald Trump and Michael Cohen.
But in any event, there's a little tricky thing here.
You have facts have to match your defenses.
So they tried to argue the lawyers for Donald Trump that the second crime after the books
and records fraud crime has to be specific
and the jury has to have unanimity about that, what the crime is, the second crime. We've always
said from the indictment forward, this is interesting. What is the second crime? Is it the
election interference because we kept calling the case the election interference trial or is it tax
fraud because they took a business deduction for legal expenses when it wasn't really? Because you don't
get to deduct payoffs to the person you had sex with. That's not a thing in the IRS code.
You can go look it up. So what was it? And we were always like, Karen reminded us it doesn't have to
be anything in particular. And certainly it doesn't have to be an indicted charge, and they don't have to prove the second crime, so to speak, or even what the
second crime is, just that it was in furtherance of a second crime. And they have done that for
the prosecution. So they wanted, the defense wanted the judge to instruct the jury that you have to, as a group, as all 12 of you, have to be consistent and
unanimous about which crime it is. So if seven thought it was election fraud and five thought
it was tax fraud, no go, no felony. And the judge says, that's not the law. So, little girl,
get a problem with your argument. That's not the law in the state of New York. So seven can find one crime and five can find another or can break down another permutations,
and that's okay. And therefore, you have a books and records fraud in furtherance of a second crime
to be determined by the jury, not an undited second crime of their choice based on the evidence
that's been presented
and based on what happens in summation. So that's a win and a wind at the back of the prosecution
going into this defense. And I agree with you, although I did have an interesting back and forth
with Karen during the midweek, I thought their opening statement, 20-minute literally opening statement by Blanche was
terrible. I thought that it didn't explain at all to the jury the narrative, the thematic of what
they thought the evidence was going to prove. She said, well, I think it's fine. You don't even
have to do an opening, which is true. You don't want to tie your hands if you're
on the defense because you got to see what the evidence is actually presented. But you knew what
the evidence was going to be based on the dump on you of all the evidence. You heard the opening,
the prosecution went first, at least in the opening. I think they were remiss in doing the
20-minute thing. You're right. At nowhere did Blanche ever say, for instance, that because they
can't concede the things that Donald Trump won't let them concede, that he's a bad guy
that slept around outside of his marriage and then try to pay it off because he was
worried about losing the election.
That's what they should have said.
And then you could walk the line.
Now I'm talking like a defense lawyer.
Then you could walk the line with the jury,
where the jury of New Yorkers who are really sophisticated
and have really thick skins would go over their coffee
and hard roll, they go, yeah, that sort of makes sense.
Okay, that's not a crime.
But that's not what they were left with
when you have a client who's got his hand up your backside
and makes your mouth move,
which is what Donald Trump's doing with the lawyers a blanch and necklace. I mean, I'm not defending them. They're allowing
it to happen. They sacrificed their professional independence and compromised it for him. That's
between them, their maker, and the Bar Association at the appropriate time.
But in terms of the presentation of the evidence, who presented to
the jury throughout the case and through opening, and I'm sure during the summations, a coherent,
logical, internally consistent legal theory and thematic that matches the facts, the prosecution.
Could there be somebody on there? They keep pointing to the two lawyers. Oh, the two lawyers.
Okay, let's talk about two lawyers for a minute. They're not trial lawyers. One's a corporate
lawyer and the other one works for hedge funds. So yes, they went to law school,
but these are people that particularly chose not to go to court. And I'm not sure,
they're not the jury for a person. So yes, sometimes the jury looks to lawyers as like
when they're in the box or in the. So yes, sometimes the jury looks to lawyers as like in the in when they're in the box
or in the deliberation room as, you know, added guides and everything.
But even they should be able to pop through this this this noise of the of the Trump defense,
all they're going to say in their summation and they go first this time, and then the
prosecution goes last, which will be on Tuesday, we'll be riveted by that.
All they're going to have to say is there is no Trump Tower conspiracy, even though
you heard from two-thirds of it.
You can't believe David Pecker, I don't know how they can possibly say that.
You can't believe Michael, you can't believe a word Michael Cohen says.
He doesn't know whether he's coming or going.
And you didn't hear any evidence that suggests that Donald Trump himself did anything wrong,
and he's the actual criminal defendant here. You know, it's some version of that. And then the
jury's gonna be like, well, and then the prosecution going last will say, let's walk through the
evidence. Click. Let's talk about David Pecker, what you learned from David Pecker. Bop, bop,
bop, bop, bop, bop, bop. Let's go Stormy Daniels, let's go the three insiders at the Trump organization,
accounts payable lady, executive assistant lady, let's get the publisher out here, you
heard from the publisher about Donald Trump, let's Michael Cohen, I mean they're just going
to click, click, click, click, click, check, check, check, check, check, text, text, text,
text, deck, let's play the audio of the secret recordings of Donald Trump.
You know, this is going to go like two hours, two and a half hours, something like that. And then that's it. Then they rest. And the
jury gets the case, right? And gets charged and then get the case. And I think then if they're
still doing this dark thing on Wednesdays, which I don't know why,
I'm not sure they don't, I'm not sure.
I think the jury's going to be deliberating on Wednesday.
Yeah, that was only because the judge had things to do, but he's only presiding over a jury
deliberation. So they'll go Wednesday and they'll get the case Tuesday afternoon, charge, maybe
Wednesday's first time of deliberation. And so I don't know, Wednesday night, Thursday morning, I see this as a six to eight hour event, one way or the other. I know
there's 34 counts, but they really break down as whether he did it or he didn't
do it. If they believe Donald Trump did it, both crimes, he goes down for all 34.
I've heard some speculation that well, Eric signed some of the checks, but I don't think anybody
thinks that Eric Trump did that. He woke up one day and thought it was a nice idea to pay back Michael
Cohen. So I think they either buy it hook, line and sinker what the prosecution's selling, or they
don't. And he's either exonerated or he is convicted. The only question is, and apparently they're not,
and this is the last thing I'll say on this point, Ben,
they're not getting an alternative charge
to find for the misdemeanor as the lesser included offense
versus the felony.
We had speculated earlier that they may,
if they really wanted to help out Donald Trump
in the defense, they would at least let the jury
find a misdemeanor,
which would be like no jail time. And he could just do all of his ranting and raving about,
I took the misdemeanor because, but they're not even doing that. So this jury is light on, light
off, binary felonies or nothing. And that's what they're left with. And I don't know. I mean,
I make predictions. Sometimes they're right. Sometimes they're wrong. I'm usually right. So are you. I think he gets convicted. What do you think?
I think he gets, look, I don't think he's going to get acquitted. I could say that with a great
degree of confidence. I think he will either be convicted or I just don't know if there's one
rogue juror or two rogue jurors out there. From all that I'm hearing in the courtroom,
lots of people do not think that there is anyone
who at least is showing signs of being like a holdout
or showing the type of demeanor you would expect.
I understand all the jurors,
but not really even like in cliques,
they're taking it very seriously.
They're distancing themselves like two feet apart
when they walk in.
They're not socializing, not typical things we see
with jurors, because they're very, very focused
from what I hear.
It's why, Popak, I'll give my prediction
of when I think there's going to be a verdict
and when I think it's gonna happen.
It's slightly different than yours,
but let's wait for after this break
and I'll give you my prediction.
Let's take a quick break.
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So we are back live on LegalAF.
Michael Popok, your prediction,
you thought it would be around six to eight hours
of deliberation.
I think if this was not a case involving Donald Trump
as the criminal defendant based on the evidence
that's out there, I'm with you.
I would even say perhaps shorter than six to eight hours.
I think given the historical moment,
I think based on everything I've heard from people
in the courtroom, just
on how serious and deliberative and poker face these jurors seem, I don't
think that they will reach a verdict regardless until Friday.
I could even see them wanting to go over the weekend and even, uh, finish
their deliberations Monday morning.
I'll tell you why I'm wrong. I'll tell you why I'm wrong.
Because I forgot something. Karen told me something on Wednesday with our audience that I was wrong.
The way it works mechanically, it's going to take much longer because they're going to ask
for replays of the way New York works. They don't get the transcripts. They got to have a
court reporter read back witness testimony.
They only get exhibits when they ask for them
or they can have the whole dump put in the room.
There's just a creaky, slow presentation process issue
in New York State Criminal Court
that doesn't exist in federal.
So you're right, that's gonna add on
like a couple of days onto my original prediction.
I forgot how slow
Materials get delivered back to the jury when they ask questions
That right there is how you win a debate ladies and gentlemen of our legal am jury He's got it. I just got a dazzle you with my
Taps out. It's probably
Karen made a very good point on midweek.
I just forgot it.
Right.
Um, well there, there you have it.
So I, I can see it going until I think Friday will have a
verdict by the end of Friday.
I would not get too concerned until Monday afternoon.
I would start feeling like, is there a holdout of Monday afternoon. By Tuesday, I would start getting
worried that that it's hung on Tuesday. That's how I would view it. I want to talk about...
One last thing. We'll be able to report along the way. We do get a
little communication from the jury and we'll be able to report on it. They ask
questions and notes and it goes to the jury, to the judge. Judge decides with the lawyers whether
they're going to answer the question and how they're going to answer the question. So we'll,
so you have to read some tea leaves with some notes. They ask for certain pieces of evidence
and playback of certain evidence. So it won't be completely dark. It won't be a black box. You and
I and Karen and others, we'll be able to talk about and try to help make predictions based on where it is,
as opposed to, in other words, it's not like picking the pope, where they go away for five
days and you wait for the smoke to come out the top. Or as Karen put it, the two buzzers,
we have a verdict. We'll know some things that we'll be able to speculate on with reasonable
We'll know some things that we'll be able to speculate on with reasonable confidence along the way. And if the jury does have a problem or one or two holdouts, we'll get the judge giving
them what we refer to as an Allen charge to require them to continue to deliberate until
they're exhausted. And I think if you hear that, we have a verdict, I would be shocked.
I'm running down.
I would be shocked if it was acquittal.
And so if you hear, I would put good money on
that that would be a guilty verdict
if the jury is able to actually reach a verdict
and not be out.
I'm gonna do something for us
because I can get down to the courthouse
in 15 minutes by subway.
Soon as we were close,
if we get, because what happens is the jury, let me just talk about it because we've done,
you and I have waited on verdicts, where you get the phone call. And then there has to be the
complete reassembly of the defense team, the prosecution team, the jury has to come back.
It takes a minute. It's not going to be like instantaneous. Like they don't shoot it out by tweet or by X
or whatever social media from the deliberation room.
So by time that whole Kabuki theater gets reassembled,
I'll have time to be able to try to catch Karen
to run down to the courthouse
and see what the heck is going on.
And then we can do some interviewing
with some people on the street,
depending upon the result.
Let me give us the framework now of what's going on though.
As we head South before Judge Eileen Cannon.
Y'all may have heard the Trump and kind of MAGA propaganda that they're saying,
oh, based on this use of force statement that was in certain documents that were unsealed,
Trump's been posting over and over again that Biden ordered FBI agents to assassinate him.
So false and such a dangerous statement to make.
It puts also the lives of the FBI agents at risk.
If they're basically being called murderers, it puts Merrick Garland's life at
risk. It puts President Biden's life at risk.
I mean, a real horrific lie.
And so what is Trump and one of these magas even kind of talking about?
Well, there's a standard use of deadly force protocol that exists in connection
with every search warrant execute, whether it's at Mar-a-Lago or elsewhere,
that just lays out the conditions where use of different types of force, including lethal force,
can be utilized. And that's part of a packet that's often turned over as part of discovery in criminal
cases, as part of discovery that usually remains confidential. Now, Donald Trump filed before Judge Eileen Cannon, his preferred Judge
de Jure, a motion to dismiss based on violations of due process and making
claims that based on the way the search warrant was executed, that he was
unfairly targeted, completely frivolous.
It's not even the right forum and venue to make these types of challenges.
If you wanted to make challenges of an unlawful search and seizure, you would go in front
of the magistrate.
And by the way, these proceedings, these issues were already litigated before where the 11th
circuit overturned Judge Eileen Cannon when Trump was trying to sue the Department of
Justice and the United States claiming that the court should exercise equitable jurisdiction
back in 2022 during the first round of Judge Cannon cases. But what Trump does is he files
these frivolous motions. He attaches to them confidential discovery he wants released in the
public. And then he tries to get Judge Eileen Cannon to make the disclosures of these things in the public. And then Jack
Smith has to try to stop her. Jack Smith's successful on some things where
she thinks she's gonna be reversed. Other times she discloses things publicly. And
from the recent batch of disclosures that were made by Judge Cannon. We got these photographs of Walti Nauta
from the Mar-a-Lago surveillance footage
that shows him holding these boxes
as he was moving classified documents.
I mean, folks, what are in those boxes are nuclear codes
and nuclear secrets, not codes, nuclear secrets, war plans, highly
sensitive classified information at the highest levels and this Waltine Nauta,
Trump's valet who gets him diet cokes, is moving the most highly sensitive
documents two days before the FBI and DOJ show up in response to the subpoena that was issued in May.
Then there was supposed to be voluntary cooperation by Trump, but instead of voluntary cooperation,
that's Trump's guy, Waltine, now moving the boxes to hide him.
So ultimately, when the Department of Justice got those photos and they saw what was going on,
they knew they didn't want to execute a search warrant. So ultimately when the Department of Justice got those photos and they saw what was going on,
they knew they didn't want to execute a search warrant.
They wanted voluntary cooperation, but Trump continued to obstruct over and over again.
So a search warrant finally had to be executed at Mar-a-Lago.
And with that search warrant comes a lot of the standard forms and standard kind of filings that exist.
We also know from some of the documents that were released that there were numerous other
documents, at least six other documents, classified documents that were discovered after the search
warrant was executed at Mar-a-Lago, when the search warrant was executed in August of 2022.
And then in like December, Trump's lawyers contacted the
department of justice and said, Hey, we have these other documents.
Also we discovered like in his bedroom and in his closet.
So that would be damaging information that's being made public.
But Trump didn't care about that because those are just facts.
Trump doesn't think corporate media is going to report on the facts.
Trump cared about he wanted this use of force policy out there,
which is the standard use of force policy so he could spread on Fox
and the New York Post and elsewhere this horrific lie
that he was targeted for assassination.
Now, when the FBI executed the search warrant
in August of 2022, they made sure
that Trump wasn't even there.
They coordinated with Secret Service
to make sure it would be done in an orderly fashion.
They actually read the documents.
Trump got more rights and benefits
than anybody else in the execution of a search warrant.
But Trump wanted to show the standard
use of force policy documents and say, look, they were trying to kill me. Biden's a threat to
democracy, not me. He's trying to kill me and then rely on corporate media pushing that out or just
not telling the truth and propaganda media pushing that out.
So that's what Donald Trump did. Now, the development from last night on Friday is, and Popak, I know you did a
hot take on this as well, is that special counsel Jack Smith sought an expansion of
the conditions of release, if you will, a gag order on Donald Trump to stop him from issuing false statements
that are endangering the agents who executed the search by posting all of these false statements.
Jack Smith's office is asking a federal judge to place a gag order on Trump that would limit his
ability to comment about law enforcement that searched his Mar-a-Lago resort.
And from Trump to make false statements saying that he's being targeted for
assassination because it is placing the law enforcement officers life at risk.
I think two things are important here from PO-PAC and I want to get your
take on what special counsel Jack Smith filed last night.
I think one, this is just an important document that needs to be filed.
It's the first time I think we've really seen a more robust gag order before
Judge Eileen Cannon even being requested.
But I think that Judge Eileen Cannon, you and I will talk about this.
I think that the likely outcome is for Judge Eileen Cannon to reject this,
at which point, Special Counsel Jack Smith can then, I think,
go to the 11th Circuit and then bring in all of the other
misconduct by Judge Cannon. And I think it actually
accomplishes
both goals for Jack Smith, that he needs this gag order,
but I think he knows that Judge Cannon is not going
to provide any gag orders on Donald Trump.
I think she'll reject it, order a hearing,
and then I think we go into the 11th Circuit finally,
and I think this is a way that Trump
may have overplayed his hand.
Let's talk about that and more,
but let's take our last quick break.
Oh, before we take the break,
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All right.
Where we last left off special counsel, Jack Smith last night on Friday, filed
for this expanded conditions of release, which is essentially a gag order on
Trump for making false statements about agents trying to kill him.
I think that this is brilliant. One, it's necessary.
But two, I think when Judge Cannon makes the wrong move here, or even if she doesn't move in a timely manner,
and she's known for lots of delays, then Jack Smith has an opening right now to the 11th Circuit. Finally. What do
you make of all of this, Michael Bopak? Yeah, Mar-a-Lago was sort of quiet for a long, long time.
And we were like, what's going on down there? And then she postponed the trial indefinitely.
We're like, okay, not much reporting going on. We'd forgotten a little bit. There were still
motions to dismiss that were still out there. Walt Nauta was still pushing to have things dismissed. There were still hearings going
on and there were still Donald Trump being Donald Trump. The unsealing part was really
interesting because we had always suspected that, and you and I reported on it, that when
Evan Corcoran, the lawyer for Donald Trump at the time of the search warrant and the
subpoena, when he got his or Donald Trump's attorney client privilege
stripped away from him,
because the judge, Judge Beryl Howell,
boy, there's a judge I miss,
who presided as the chief judge
over the original grand jury and the subpoena process,
search warrant process,
or at least the subpoena process
related to Donald Trump and Mar-a-Lago,
we were like, wow, she,
because it was all confidential and secret and sealed. Wow, she stripped Evan Cork, Evan Corkin has a turnover 50 pages of
single space notes about his mental impressions of his client. There's an audio tape that he
recorded of his own thought process about his client and Mar-a-Lago. What are you kidding me?
What could possibly, could the judge have heard in the evidentiary hearing that would have
let her to do that?
Well, now we know.
Because it just got unsealed as part of this whole process
that you described.
And here's my favorite part from the unsealing.
This is from Judge Beryl Howell
that we did not know about, but we suspected.
About what you described as the box movement
and the fact that Donald Trump, that genius,
that mental genius from the University
of Pennsylvania, forgot he had cameras everywhere and video recordings. And this is what the judge
concluded after hearing the evidence. The government urged that this scramble to Mar-a-Lago in the wake
of the June 24th phone call reflects the former president's realization that the removal of the boxes from the storage room
you're watching it here was captured on camera and his attempts to ensure that any subsequent
movement of the boxes back to the storage room could occur off camera, Howell wrote, Judge Howell,
this theory draws support from the curious absence of any video footage showing the return of the remaining
boxes to the storage room, which necessarily occurred at some point between June 3, 2022,
when the room had approximately X amount of boxes and the execution of the search warrant
on August 8, 2022, when the agents counted 73 boxes. In other words, they had to go back,
but there's no video of it.
So then the government had already alleged that that's when Nauda rearranged his travel
schedule to come back in a panic to get together with Carlos.
This is where the conspiracy happened.
Carlos de Oliveira, in an attempt to delete the surveillance footage using Yusele Taveras,
who was an IT worker, but became lead witness for the prosecution and avoided being
indicted as a result and all of that. So that all came out just like in the last day or
so and we're like, oh, now we see why Evan Corcoran and the judge concluded that it was
more likely than not that Donald Trump committed a crime related to this. Back to your other point about the assassination attempt. Okay,
and I want to reiterate and reinforce a couple things that you said. Let me first explain what
August is like in Florida, having lived there for 20 years. Unless you have to be there,
and I was practicing law down there, you try not to be in places like Palm Beach County in August,
because it's like being on the sun. And so Donald Trump is notoriously never at Mar-a-Lago in August,
and the feds knew that because he's got Secret Service protection, and he decamps for West, I'm sorry, Bedminster in New Jersey come around February or March
when it starts to heat up in Florida.
He's never at Mar-a-Lago.
They knew that, he knew that.
And we already had reporting at the time that Evan Corcoran and Christina Bob and Jennifer
Little were representing Donald Trump at the time, that they made contact
with the Department of Justice and they asked to actually be at Mar-a-Lago since their client
wasn't there on purpose, it wasn't by accident. He purposely wasn't there when they executed the
search warrant. The Department of Justice didn't want him there. If they wanted to assassinate him,
they would have went to Bedminster.
But they didn't because that's not a thing where the Department of Justice and the FBI assassinates people that they're executing search warrants on. In fact, in the history of the Republic,
that's never happened, ever. Okay? And Waco doesn't count with David Koresh. So back to Trump,
he's gone, they
coordinate Evan Corcoran and the lawyers want to be in the room.
They are told no, this is when we first learned of the video.
They say there's video cameras. Can we watch on video? You and I
heard at the time, we're like, there's video cameras? That's
interesting. And the FBI was like, no, you know, click, you're
not watching a video either. And that's was like, no, you know, click, you're not watching a video
either. And that's how this whole sort of ball of wax first started rolling and
against Donald Trump. And now back to your original, your last point, which is
what to make of this filing. Now, if it were filed with Barrel Howell, it was
presiding over the search warrant in this period, this would be a no brainer
or any other judge.
This, they would expand the gag order to include,
don't accuse the FBI of assassination attempts
against Donald Trump.
With Cannon, I can already hear her.
I can already hear her pontificating.
This is interesting.
This is fascinating.
Let me have a hearing and hear more about it.
Like she just held a hearing last week on Wednesday
or this past week about whether the special counsel
was properly appointed through an appointment process
or whether he's invalid.
That's already been decided over and over again
by even this United States Supreme Court.
But yet I think it's fascinating.
Let's have a hearing about it.
So she's gonna have this hearing
about something that should be a no-brainer.
It should probably be done on the papers
without the need for a hearing.
And then she's gonna step in the bucket.
Although, as we've said,
she's hypersensitive to being reversed.
And so maybe like she did with Ben, like she did with the
the issue about her revealing witnesses, grand jury witnesses, without redacting
them, even though it took her six weeks to figure it out, maybe she'll think,
hmm, I should just expand the gag order because I don't want anything. I don't
want to give the prosecutor a ticket to the 11th Circuit. Now apparently during that hearing
that I just talked about that was in two parts, the reporting from the room
because it's up in Fort Pierce with very few people in attendance, is that the
judge admonished one of the prosecutors who was getting very upset because the
judge was mischaracterizing his arguments and
he was like, that's not what I said your honor and she said just I'm going to counsel you to come
Down. I mean the prosecutors are getting upset
Understandably so because of how she's at be how the judge is acting and handling this case and mishandling this case.
And it's just ironic to me that the one time
that they show a little ire,
and their hair stands up on the back of their neck
a little bit,
she's the first one to shoot them down,
yet watch the Trump lawyers in every proceeding,
appellate, Supreme Court, trial court,
be totally disrespectful to the criminal justice system.
So I think I'm 50-50 here.
Cannon could grow a brain in time
and realize that this is a trap.
Trap, right?
There she is.
And say, aha, they wanna get the 11th Circuit,
I'm not gonna let them.
I'm just gonna have a stupid hearing
and I'm gonna just expand it and tweak it just a little bit
And then he doesn't have it or you know, like you said, maybe she does step forward and step in it
And then yeah, he's gonna he has to file it. He did Jack Smith. He has to take an appeal if she screws it up
And the 11th circuit will slap her back
The question is does he add in all the other things
that she has done for the last year and a half,
or almost two years, to mishandle and misadminister this case
to try to get her reassigned?
And that is, you know, your guess is as good as mine.
Here's how I think it plays out,
and I'm getting very granular with this prediction.
Judge Cannon's been known to try to delay things
and schedule hearings far in advance.
So I think she tries to delay it.
I think special counsel Jack Smith then requests
that this be dealt with in an expedited way, right?
This is urgent.
This is a request because the lives of FBI agents
and DOJ officials are being threatened
by Donald Trump's behavior.
So I think that she doesn't address it.
I think then special counsel Jack Smith can have an avenue right there
based on her delay to potentially go to the 11th circuit or to get a
writ or to finally take some action.
That's what I think is going to happen. It's not done at least
right now under the pretext of an emergency application, but I think that
when she canons it and takes a long time, I think that this is not something that
can be pushed months in advance and I suspect that's what she will end up
doing, but we will see.
Popak, I wanna talk though about this decision
end of last week, six to three decision
by the United States Supreme Court.
Look, it's fairly easy to condemn and criticize
Justice Alito and Clarence Thomas,
and specifically Justice Alito, I mean Clarence Thomas,
this week, Justice Alito, although Clarence Thomas and his concurring opinion,
um, uh, to this ruling talking about, uh, how critical he was of Brown v.
Board of Education, um, which struck down the separate but equal policy.
Yeah.
I would put worse than hanging the flags of, inverted flag and then the right-wing extremist appeal to heaven flag.
But look, Justice Alito seems to identify, not seems, let's just say he identifies with insurrectionists, the turning the United States of America into a theocracy.
I'm not using hyperbole. This is what Justice Alito wants to turn the United States of America into a theocracy. I'm not using hyperbole.
This is what Justice Alito wants to turn
the United States of America into.
He's been clear about it.
He gives speeches abroad
where he talks about these concepts.
He wants to eliminate the separation of church and state,
but utilizes the First Amendment to basically say,
everybody has a free speech right
to discriminate
against each other and laws that stop discrimination would be discriminatory
against religions and so that's who Justice Alito is but we've got this
decision right here in Alexander v South Carolina 6-3 decision where the Supreme Court says it was the right-wing
Supreme Court, the six right-wing justices, the three liberal, but I don't like this terminology
anymore, the three justices who were appointed by democratic administrations, democratic presidents
who want to uphold the law or in the dissent and the majority of the court
upheld the South Carolina legislature's racist gerrymandering that removed 30,000 voters from
the first congressional district, 30,000 black voters from the first congressional district,
and moved them into other districts so that the first congressional district controlled
by MAGA Republican Nancy Mase stays a safe MAGA Republican seat by shifting where black
voters are able to vote and that they can vote in the first congressional district.
Now, the state legislature said that they are permitted to engage in political gerrymandering.
They're not allowed to, the Voting Rights Act prevents it from being racist gerrymandering.
But they said, look, this was just being political. And it just so happens that when we
politically gerrymandered 30,000 black voters were taken out of this specific district and
disenfranchised from voting in the first congressional district now
There was a full trial the way we talk about, you know
The Trump criminal trial there was a full like civil trial before a three judge panel because these voting rights act
challenge cases go before three judge federal panels and in a
go before three judge federal panels. And in a unanimous three to nothing decision,
the three judge panel said,
they heard all of this evidence about how the legislature,
the staffers were looking at the race of people
and they were focused on like racist criteria.
And they said, look, the evidence is overwhelming
that what was intended here was racist gerrymandering.
And you're just saying that it was political gerrymandering as a pretext for what you really
were designed to do, which was overwhelmingly be racist and disenfranchised black voters.
So anyway, this went up to the United States Supreme Court and Justice Alito, he reached
the conclusion and said, well, actually, the district court that heard a whole trial,
you're wrong.
You need to just believe at face value
what the legislature said.
And if they said it was political,
that should really much, that should end the inquiry.
This is what is exactly in the ruling.
You did not credit that there could be good faith intentions
and you attributed bad faith to the legislature
and you should have attributed good faith to the legislature
and just believe them when they said it was political
in nature and not racist in nature.
So now the South Carolina district is subject to this racist gerrymandering
for good now until the next census.
But Popak, I'll throw it over to you.
More significantly, what Justice Alito did here was give a roadmap
to other state legislatures on how to do racist gerrymandering,
violate the Voting Rights Act, to other state legislatures on how to do racist gerrymandering,
violate the Voting Rights Act, but now just follow Alito's guidance
and say, look, this is our good faith view, it's political.
And so, yeah, I want to talk a little bit about the flags, but the flags are symbolic of who these people are
and this right-wing, theocratic, racist regime that we are.
Oh, and then in the concurring opinion,
you got Clarence Thomas who says,
and what we can't do is act the way the 9-0 Supreme Court did.
He criticized Brown v. Board of Education,
which overruled separate but equal and ushered in the civil rights movement. And Justice
Thomas, who's a black justice, said that the Supreme Court
exercise too much extraordinary powers and Brown v. Board and
should not and it was a judicial overreach in Brown v. Board of
Education. That's what Clarence Thomas is saying. That's the
ruling. I just report on it. Michael Popock. Patreon.com slash legal AF.
Good night everybody. Let me see what I can pick up with. The the bleaching of
African-American voters continues in the South and it's condoned by the MAGA
Supreme Court. You kept saying 30,000 people were transferred. It's
worse than that, the numbers. 62% of black voters that were in the first district were transferred
to Clyburn's sixth district, making it even blacker, her district even whiter.
And then we don't have another African American majority district in South Carolina.
And we don't have a map, a congressional map that matches the census in terms of power. And we have
disenfranchisement. And once again, the Voting Rights Act lies and tatters at the feet of this
particular Supreme Court. And if you don't think voting matters, elections matter, six to three, and
a concurrence, as you said, by Clarence Thomas that hates affirmative action, although he
was the product of it. He hates anything that relates to the Voting Rights Act and helping
black people. You know, there was a legacy that he was supposed to fulfill in replacing,
at least indirectly, the great Thurgood
Marshall and he's just failed at every term. And then you've got the week that we find out
that Alito is a closeted insurrectionist who literally flies the flag of the anti-democracy
movement to try to have Trump steal the election in two of his houses,
one being sort of near me in Long Beach Island, New Jersey. He's a former, people forget where
he came from. He wasn't hatched out of an egg or landed from another planet, although at times,
I think he has. He was a New Jersey Supreme Court justice before he was picked to be on
the United States Supreme Court. and just waiting and lying and wait
with Clarence Thomas until he got enough numbers in order to do what he's doing here, which is to
insert judicial templates and decision-making rules that are not anywhere in the Constitution,
which is what they love to do when they do judicial activism,
when you hear them not talking about the record, these right wing, not talking about the facts
below, run, run for the hills, because all you're going to see now is just an unmoored
Supreme Court that's just going to do legislation from the bench about what they would like
to see happen, having nothing to do legislation from the bench about what they would like to see happen,
having nothing to do with the record below. As you said, when you have a three-judge panel
in South Carolina, the deepest part of the South, okay, who come up with after hearing,
and the way these cases work on districting or redistricting off of census is that you hire experts and they do empirical studies.
And they give variations on a theme of maps
that could be generated by a partisan but not racist
state legislature.
And they go through, it's almost like Stratomatic,
where they just run the
permutations over and over again by a computer. And they basically say it's a statistical
impossibility for them to have come up with this map and transferred 62% of the black people out
of this district if it wasn't for racial gerrymandering and the bleaching of African American voters,
which means you are disenfranchising them, which is exactly the thing the Voting Rights Act and many of the constitutional amendments that came out of
the Reconstruction era were meant to avoid. But this Supreme Court has completely chipped away
at the Voting Rights Act, which was signed into law by Lyndon Johnson and the Democrats back in
the 60s. It's one of the great society things that Lyndon Johnson accomplished in his one term.
Much like Joe Biden is accomplishing so much
in his one term and will go down equally
with Lyndon Johnson as being a great president,
especially when it comes to domestic policy.
Same thing for Joe.
Then did it shock anybody that this bookend imagery
that we have of Alito writing this,
allowing, as you said, giving license and permission for future
racial gerrymandering, and you just call it partisan. And you
can just say, well, is that our fault that all the Republicans
happen to be white in our state? That's not why we're doing it.
We don't we don't care about white supremacy. We care about
we're in we're, you know, we're in control in the House,
so in the Republic, so we want all Republicans.
Is that really what you're doing?
Not when the empirical data says it's impossible
for you to have come up with that map,
except for trying to disenfranchise and dilute
the power of the vote of black voters in your state,
and therefore disenfranchise them.
Now, I had a
little bit of hope because last week they did find a map to be so offensive. Even this Supreme Court
was like, yeah, that's too far for us. No, that map's not happening. But the Supreme Court map has
literally, as you said, provided a map or a template for future primarily red, MAGA, southern, and other states to do the exact same thing. Hey, that's a great idea.
Let's take 62% of the black people and put them into an all-black district and eliminate
another black district from our state. And that's great. And then you have the mismatch.
Then you got Clarence Thomas, who has the balls, the brass ones to say in his concurrence,
you know what I don't like? I don't even like that we're talking about this.
This seems to be a political thing.
This isn't something that we should even be
getting involved with.
This is something for legislators to do.
This is, we shouldn't, this political questions, come on.
It's only political questions when they,
and they find it unsavory that they're getting involved
in it when it doesn't go in their direction.
And so these maps have been used already in South Carolina in 2023. They will be in 2024 anyway because they took so long, the Supreme Court, and dragged their feet. The UNI are even reporting
on this in the 20 whatever of May, the end of May. At the end of the term, as we're waiting on all
the abortion decision, the immunity decision, the we're waiting on all the abortion decision, the immunity
decision, the Jan six crime decision, the gun decision, are all going to come floating.
You and I and Karen, we're going to be exhausted over the next week as all of these opinions
come out.
Like in the shotgun approaches, they all then high tail it out to their paid junkets, primarily
the Republicans overseas and otherwise, paid
by MAGA Republican donors. That's the season we're about to enter now that the term is
over. And this is now just one of the ones that we're reporting on. There's a half a
dozen more that you and I are going to have to do hot takes on and jump on as they get
developed. And so this appearance of propriety that the justice system is fair and doesn't have
its big fat thumb on the scales of justice, you know, again, with Alito with his flying the flags
of insurrection at both of his homes, you know, and trying to blame the wife. You can't blame the wife
for the second one. You know, I don't know, the dog ran it up the flagpole. I mean, I don't really understand this. I know that town.
He passes that flag every day. That flag went up because he wanted it to go up, that pine tree flag.
And that is him declaring to the world. Imagine if you and I rode by as we were going to the
Supreme Court. We're driving down past, you know, taking the turnpike down to New Jersey. I see that
house. Okay. The Google Maps or Earth tells me that's Alito's house turnpike down to New Jersey. I see that house. Okay.
The Google Maps or Earth tells me that's Alito's house. I go down to his house in Virginia. I see that. And I'm going to argue in front of them. I mean, I want an
advocate at the next term to call out Alito if he's sitting there in a case and
say, I have to ask something of one of the justices. Am I getting a fair shake
here? Can you give me a fair shake, given your political bias
that's been expressed on your flagpoles?
Can you?
Now, I know everyone's like,
oh, the decorum of the Supreme Court,
hollowed grounds.
I want somebody to do that
because he needs to be called out.
The Senate Democrats are doing it, right?
They're moving forward investigation of Alito.
They want to start with a meeting with Justice Roberts about the ethics of this or the lack of ethics of this. That'll lead
because they have subpoena power. Durbin and Whitehouse are gonna end up issuing
subpoenas. They want to find out what happened here, how it happened. They're
gonna call Roberts over to talk about it because they're in charge of funding so
they have the right to do that. And then we're going to see, I know there's a censure motion that's been raised by Representative Cohen that's floating around,
and then hopefully somebody will draft an articles of impeachment. Even though it'll die in the House,
I think it's important to the American people that it actually be debated on the floor about whether
Sam Alito can get away with this or not. This brazen, just flying the
flag of insurrection while he's presiding over. And the other thing Durbin and Whitehouse are
asking for, Ben, is that he recused himself right now, even though the opinion is probably written,
about the two Jan 6 cases that have yet to, opinions have yet to been issued. One, the
immunity on Donald Trump still hasn't been issued yet, even though we're almost here like a week away from the end of where they go away
on vacation. And secondly, the decision on whether the obstruction of an official proceeding,
which didn't have Donald Trump in the name of the case, but it applies to him, is going to apply to
Jan 6th insurrectionists, or there needs to be a hearing about whether it gets stripped away from Donald
Trump's DC election interference case. He should accuse himself.
As should Clarence Thomas. They won't. And that's where we are.
You know,
one of the things that you see consistently with these MAGA Republicans,
the MAGA Republican justices, the politicians,
they don't even own their own issues.
They like to say, well, you know, it's just a flag that has a unique history.
And, you know, it has a naval connotation back during the Revolutionary War.
And I'm an outdoorsman, so I kind of like pie cones.
And so I'm really, you know, just like stop with the gas lighting.
And it's why it's so important, though, when the country is not knowledgeable
on how courts work and what's up and what the evidence is.
These magas are able to execute their predatory conduct. But when you call it out, and it's
look, it's an everyday popak sometimes an every hour task with them because they overwhelm
you with their lies and their deceit and their gaslighting. You got to call it out each and every step of the way.
And why I'm so confident right now though,
in the direction of our country,
despite all of this kind of crap out there,
is because of this Legal AF community,
because the Midas Mighty community.
And the same way that Fox started in 1970s and
generationally built basically a weapon of mass disinformation, we need to do
the opposite and build a way to mass educate and to provide as much
information and data and get back to truth and get back to fact. And so there
is a daily effort that we have
Where we got to call out and do rapid response and get the stories out every day
but there's a generational task that all you legal a efforts are involved in with us and it's really incumbent upon you and
the community and to share this knowledge with people and
and the community and to share this knowledge with people
and to take what we teach and then teach others and show others and let people know
and show them the portions of this
so they can see it for themselves
and they can go through the facts and the cases
and the evidence and we could have real intelligent fact
based evidence based conversations.
So if you wanna to continue that conversation
in Professor Popak's law class, unaccredited,
but it would be exactly what a Popak law class
would be like, go to patreon.com slash legal AF.
I hear people really love geeking out with Popak.
If you ever wanted to be in a law class of like my law class that I teach when I'm at USC or a law class of Michael Pope, I go to P a T R E O N.com slash legal AF. And it helps support the growth of this show and helps support the growth of this independent media network.
patreon.com slash legal AF Popeye anything you want to say before we just one thing one thing we you and I and legal AF of might have such had a nice profile in the New York Times during the week
but our listeners and followers are right they were wrong in the way they categorized might
have touched they were doing an article on how the Trump trial and
Rashaan is being covered by the various news networks and they and but they
decided to do it with left and right and with right they had like Breitbart and
Washington Times and then they got to left and they led with Midas Touch and
us and they ran a video that I had done a month or so ago at the start of the
trial. Love the coverage,
which is great that the New York Times recognized us. I had a feeling that video was used because
I mentioned the New York Times a number of times in that particular video. But our audience is
right. We're not left in that way. We're pro-democracy, as you like to say, but it didn't fit into the box the way
the reporter had framed it. I get it. Sometimes they want to fit us into a box, but you and I,
Karen, Legal AF, and Leigh Midas, we don't fit into a box. The box that we fit into,
if you're trying to fit us into one, is that we're pro-democracy. So don't tell me that we are the left-wing Breitbart or the left-wing Newsmax.
Just say that we call it like it is down the middle.
Yes, we're Democrats.
I'll fly the flag of being a Democrat, but that's not our approach.
And yet we have to get boxed in order for the news media to report on us.
So I appreciated the article, but I think we're pro-democracy.
We're not left.
Oh, I agree with that 100%.
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