Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Trump MASSIVE $83 MILLION LOSS at Trial is JUST THE START
Episode Date: January 28, 2024Trial attorneys Ben Meiselas and Michael Popok are back with a new episode of the weekend edition of the LegalAF podcast. On this episode, they debate/discuss: next steps in the E Jean Carroll $83 mil...lion dollar verdict against Trump for sex abuse, defamation and punitive damages including appeal; the upcoming Judge Engoron order against Trump for up to $500 million to be issued next week in the NY Attorney General Civil Fraud case; Trump’s efforts to distract from his terrible legal week by baselessly attacking Fulton County DA Fani Willis; all 12 judges of the DC Court of Appeals rejecting Trump’s appeal of the gag order against him in the stayed DC Election Interference case, and so much more from the intersection of law, politics and justice. DEALS FROM OUR SPONSORS! Nom Nom: Go Right Now for 50% off your no-risk two week trial at https://TryNom.com/LEGALAF Liquid IV: Get 20% off when you go to https://Liquid-IV.com and use code LEGALAF at checkout! Miracle Made: Upgrade your sleep with Miracle Made! Go to https://TryMiracle.com/LEGALAF and use the code LEGALAF to claim your FREE 3 PIECE TOWEL SET and SAVE over 40% OFF. Fum: Head to https://TryFum.com/legalaf and use code LEGALAF to save 10% off when you get the journey pack today! SUPPORT THE SHOW: Shop NEW LEGAL AF Merch at: https://store.meidastouch.com Join us on Patreon: https://patreon.com/meidastouch Sign up for the MeidasTouch newsletter: https://meidastouch.com/newsletter 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
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The jury has spoken an 83.3 million dollar verdict against Donald Trump in the E. Gene
Carroll defamation case.
7.3 million dollars in compensatory damages.
11 million dollars in reputational damages and drop in that hammer, 65 million dollars in punitive
damages against Donald Trump.
As I said, a total of 83.3 million dollars you see right there, E. Jean Carroll with
her lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, leaving the federal courthouse victorious, Justice prevailed. Donald Trump was defeated.
Will Donald Trump now stop tormenting E. Gene Carroll as he was even doing during the trial?
And now that this verdict has been entered, Alina Habba's out there whining. What happens
next will break down the process of if Donald Trump appeals,
he's going to have to post a bond, what's that going to look like?
We will keep you posted on all the updates.
Next, we also expect that Donald Trump will get hit with another verdict next week in the range of $370 million to $500 million
in the New York Attorney General's civil fraud case.
And he will also be banned from ever doing real estate
business again in the state of New York.
And Goran, Justice and Goran,
the judge presiding over the case
is expected to make his final ruling this
upcoming week.
And just in time, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals issued an important ruling on a
case involving Martin Schroekeli, remember that guy?
Farmer Bro and the decision by the Second Circuit there has now become persuasive and
powerful precedent that I think will defeat
Donald Trump's chance of ever succeeding if he tries to appeal the judgment in the New
York Attorney General case that's about to be entered.
So Michael Popak, we're looking at about a half a billion dollars in judgments against Donald Trump as you and I predicted here on legal AF which will likely
Be entered before
February 1 should also be noted that the financial monitor
Who's been overseeing Donald Trump's finances in connection with the New York Attorney General Civil Fraud case?
connection with the New York Attorney General's civil fraud case,
retired federal judge Barbara Jones, just in time as well, sent a letter to Justice Arthur Ngoran, a
14-month report, a 14-month look back on her review of the Trump organization
with massive red flags that she is informing Justice Ngoran of, we'll talk about the implications of her letter. Donald Trump desperate for a distraction
filed a motion to disqualify Fulton County District
attorney, Fawney Willis.
He joined, Trump always joins these things late, right?
Like after the evidence and facts have now come out
making it increasingly clear that this whole thing with Vaughan Willis is much to do about
Absolutely nothing they like unsealed divorce records
It showed absolutely nothing and it's all this MAGA nonsense then Donald Trump goes you know what maybe now
I should join in the motion to try to disqualify and get her dismissed
try to disqualify and get her dismissed, because Donald Trump's a loser
and he likes to whine about losing
and his timing is always the worst.
Also, all of the judges,
including the right wing judges
of the DC Circuit Court of Appeals
unanimously rejected Donald Trump's petition
for an en banc re-hearing of the gag order that was imposed on him by federal judge
tanya chutkin in the dc criminal case then affirmed mostly by a three judge panel in the dc circuit
court of appeals donald trump said hey maybe can like all of the judges now of all the judges who
comprise the dc circuit hear this and all of them were like, none of us want to hear this, please go away.
But still, the three judge DC circuit court
of appeal panel that is hearing
the absolute immunity appeal by Donald Trump,
they have not yet ruled,
which I was expecting this past week,
this next week would be the latest. I would
have expected that to drop. So we'll see if they issue their order regarding Trump's
absolute immunity appeal next week. But Popa, could you imagine if they deny Donald Trump's
absolute immunity appeal next week? Judge Ngoran enters a close to a half a billion dollar order judgment against
Donald Trump, the Eugene Carroll verdict, and all of that happens before February 1.
A lot, a lot, a lot, a lot happened.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Donald Trump's not the only one that tries to time his filings in order to, for maximum
impact. I am sure, I am sure Judge Angoron,
with special delight, is putting the finishing touches now on his, um, whether it's 300, 400,
500 million dollar decision against Donald Trump and to ban Donald Trump from the real estate
industry for life in the New York civil fraud caseud case now having seen how Judge Kaplan handled
his courtroom.
We'll go into that in detail during the one week trial.
Donald Trump acting out and flouting the rules again in the courtroom, but a jury standing
by ready to punish him.
The whole jury, the whole trial of Eugene Carroll was about sending a sufficient punishing message through
punitive damages to stop his misconduct for which Donald Trump in the courtroom, outside
the courtroom, and during the trial could not help himself but continued to perform misconduct
in front of the jury, which only led to a much higher, I believe, much higher amount
than they would have had.
He just played nicely in the sandbox and colored within the lines.
When we get there, Ben, we'll talk about on the three judge panel thing.
Yeah, that's got to come out.
I'm beyond tapping my foot on this one.
It is obvious to me when we touch on it, when we get to that segment,
that that three-judge panel on absolute immunity in the D.C. Court of Appeals led by Judge Pan
and then Judge Childs and Judge Henderson are struggling to get the votes around how they're
going to deny Donald Trump's appeal. I don't think the struggle that we're watching in the sense that it hasn't come
out fast enough, the decision, the struggle is not over. There's a holdout and there's maybe a
majority to find absolute immunity for criminal conduct while somebody's in office. The struggle
is how to write this and how to thread the needle and get all the votes together for a combination of jurisdiction.
Do we have jurisdiction?
And then a combination of, and then do we need to send it back
to Judge Chutkin for anything?
Or can we just declare once and for all there's no absolute immunity?
They're struggling with it knowing the historic moment.
We're watching the struggle in the sense that this is why the order has not come out.
Once we see the order, you and I and Karen will be able to pick through it and we will know exactly what the conflict
was and how it was resolved by way of this majority decision that we're waiting on.
I think you and I both agree that the outcome will be Donald Trump does not have absolute presidential immunity. But to your point, the delay is likely being caused
by these technical issues, the jurisdictional issues. Do you have to remand for certain
technical questions to be answered by federal judge Tanya Chuckin as to each specific act or can you just kind of
sweepingly just say this absolute immunity thing is just totally without merit.
Those types of questions are probably what's being discussed but I have no doubt or I feel
very confident I should say that they're all in agreement or at least the majority of the
panel is what you need is in agreement that there is no absolute immunity.
We'll get to that a little later.
To your point on Judge Ngoran, I just think he was waiting for that report.
He asked for that report from retired Judge Barbara Jones.
And I think when we hear about Judge Ngoran's order, yes, the headline is
going to be the amount somewhere between $370 million, but with pre-judgment interest and
penalties, it'll probably look closer to $450 million, $500 million. But I think that what's
going to be talked about a lot, and we'll go through this when we talk about the Judge and Goran section and his potential ruling, there's going to be a lot of discussion on his
view about Donald Trump's ongoing behavior of fraud, the persistent systemic fraud that was
identified in Judge Barbara Jones' report, Trump's ongoing behavior. And I think some of the big headlines
are going to be that Donald Trump, even during the trial,
posed a systemic threat to the financial system
as evidenced by reports by the monitor.
And that brings us, and it's a nice segue
to talk about what happened in the E. Jean Carroll
defamation case because
rarely do you see somebody on trial that in a criminal case continues to commit the crime
while they are on trial or in a civil case which the E. Jean Carroll case was a civil case
for monetary damages. Do you see a person who's on trial for defamation continuing to
defame and continuing to behave in the way that they were accused of?
Most defendants, even when they did the underlying act, try to at least pretend that they didn't
do that or they don't act like that and they're not going to keep on giving evidence
to the person that's suing them or give evidence to the prosecution. But this was such a unique
situation where during the trial, Trump would be posting defamatory statements about E. Jean
Carroll. E. Jean Carroll's lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, would then be showing it to the judge and saying,
I want to admit this into evidence and then it would be admitted into evidence.
Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, he just did it again.
When?
Just now.
Moments ago, you witnessed the defamatory statements live in real time in this court.
So no doubt that was a major aspect of the jury's verdict.
And Eugene Carroll's lawyer, Roberta Kaplan and Sean Crowley made
that very clear in their closing arguments as well that that's what was going on and
that's why you needed to send a message.
Here are my takeaways, Popak, and then I want to throw it to you.
Number one, the entire defense by Donald Trump's through Alina Habba was horrifying, was sickening,
was disgusting. Alina Habba went there during the
opening statements and closing arguments and argued, E. Gene Carroll should be happy. This is what she
wanted. Donald Trump gave her what she wanted, fame and attention. So really, Donald Trump is the
victim here, which is the routine that these magas do
on their right wing networks. But that's a horrific argument. That's like horrific thing in a court
of law to say. It's horrific to say anywhere. But she tried to bring that maga, Trump cult stuff
into a court and it didn't play and say the victim of a rape should be happy because her rapist gave
her fame and keeps giving her fame by defaming her.
And Eugene Carroll's lawyers said what I just said to the jury.
How horrifying!
Can you believe that that's what they are actually arguing to you today?
That's what they're arguing to Trump's behavior in the courtroom, storming out, speaking under
his breath, showing contempt for the jury, walking out before the jury walks out, just
acting like a complete maniac in the courtroom.
Three, Alina Habba was just the worst lawyer ever from every aspect of it.
She was not likable and she was incompetent.
She couldn't do basic things
like introduce evidence. She doesn't know what admissible evidence even is. She doesn't
know how to lay a foundation. She couldn't perform the most basic functions of being
a lawyer.
Four, as I mentioned, evidence created during the trial. Five, the judge controlling the courtroom and showing a roadmap for how
you control your courtroom.
When Donald Trump tried to speak out loud, Judge Kaplan would yell at him and say, be
quiet Mr. Trump, this is my courtroom, understand what I'm saying, be quiet right now.
And Donald Trump would listen and he would put Donald Trump in his place over and over again
and would not let this become a circus-like environment. And finally, number six, E. Jean
Carroll, her courage and the competency and just exceptional nature of her lawyers, Roberta Kaplan
and Sean Crowley, who were A-plus lawyers and delivered just an incredible opening and closing.
How much money is it going to take to make him stop? You're gonna have to
decide that because he needs to stop this behavior. Those are my takeaways.
Popak, let me throw it to you.
Well, yeah, I agree with everything that all the five things that you just said.
You've got a judge, you've got a collision here between a federal judge with, empowered
and with all of the endowed with all the powers of federal judge who knew who his enemy was
in the sense of a defendant that was going to act out, was going to be
contemptuous or contumacious, was going to be disrespectful to the process, to the system,
to the administration of justice, to the jury, and everybody else knowing that.
Because of what happened, we all had a dress rehearsal back in April and May, a similar
but not identical trial, but about liability, about whether E. Jean
Carroll was raped by Donald Trump and the jury of nine people in May found that she was.
The only issue for this jury, which seemed to be a concept lost on Alina Habba and on
Donald Trump
was not about liability, was not about anything other
than how big of a check for punitive damages would be written.
And when you walk into a courtroom
and you're the defendant in a case where the jury
needs to determine if they are going to throw the book at you
and award punitive damages having already been instructed
day one, including during jury selection,
that by the judge, that this is a case about the amount of punitive damages, if any, that you are going to award.
You are to assume that Donald Trump raped, sexually assaulted Eugene Carroll, and that he defamed her
in the 2019
period when he was president and thereafter.
And you were to take all of that into account,
including his intent to harm her with prejudice against her,
with animus against her.
Those are the factors that the jury had at its disposal
from the moment they walked into a courtroom.
And you and I have talked a lot about on legal AF
over the last three and a half to four years
Our faith in the jury system
And we saw it play out here
I know that Robbie Kaplan the lawyer for Eugene Carroll is now on on network television
Hopefully we'll get her back on the podcast again
It's also to cleric her faith in the jury system that they sent a message to bullies everywhere
That they will be held
accountable. And if you try to do, this is now the second example of this with Rudy Giuliani
a couple of months ago, also acting out in front of a jury, doing things inappropriately in real
time that was brought to the jury's attention, continuing to defame the people for which he was on trial for same thing, defamation damages,
punitive damages included, and the same result. He got $148 million hit from a DC jury. This one,
by the way, right on the money, not just what we predicted, but right on the money of where a jury
needs to be in order to have its jury verdict upheld ultimately through
a trial and an appellate process I'll talk about in a minute.
That 65 million impugnative damages against the 28 million in actual damages, if you will,
is so perfectly calculated to survive an appeal.
I know all these nutty MAGA people are up on social media saying,
she'll never see one cent. You're right, she's not going to see one cent. She's going to see
whatever the total is for $83 million worth of cents. And that is going to get paid. The process
now that people should understand as we manage expectations or set expectations, is that that judgment will become final in
about 30 days. Sure. Alina Habba is going to file a motion for remititer or vacatur,
which means to have the judge take away from the jury and lower the number or eliminate
the jury verdict. Lewis Kaplan, Louis Kaplan, the judge,
having watched Donald Trump act inappropriately
and teeter on the edge of contempt and mistrial
for most of this case or all of this case
is not lowering the number.
He also has the power to raise the number, by the way.
So Lena Habba, when she asks for less,
look for Robbie Kaplan to ask for a bit more and see what Judge Kaplan does in terms of it.
Now, I don't think he takes it away from the jury.
I think he's going to affirm and confirm the jury award.
Once he does that, that judgment becomes final and they can go enforce that judgment and show up with a sheriff at bank accounts,
which we know where they exist because the Barbara Jones Monitor has has you know, we know where all the bank accounts are
Unless they file an appellate bond
To take another appeal like they did in the first case for the 5.2 million
But this time it's not just coming up with cash
You know which is chump change and I mean literally chump change because he's taking it off the chumps that support him
That Donald Trump that never pays for his own, doesn't pay for his own bills and legal bills or
bond posting.
But that was 5.2 million plus interest, plus another 10%.
This is more.
This is 83 million.
So he's either going to have to get and go through the monitor to get it ultimately, supply
proper financial statements, oh, what a tangled web we weave,
to a bonding company and try to get a 10% bond and only have to put up 8.3 million,
or let's say 10 million, and then have the bonding company be on the hook for the rest.
I don't know what bonding company knowing that Donald Trump is committed persistent fraud in
the state of New York as a judge by a judge is going do a bond for him, or he's gonna have to come up with the 83 and change
plus another set of interests,
probably closer to 100 million,
and put it into the court registry
in order to stop the enforcement of that
while he takes what will ultimately be a losing appeal
to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals
on his way to the Supreme Court again
on whether he had absolute immunity.
Alina Hava, you did a great job on your hot takes and we'll talk about it more here.
It just is this constant harangue that she used, that she intoned and berated the jury with
about a First Amendment and the blame the rape victim and the blame The the the rape victim had it coming in other words and the rape victim is profiting from this and and you shouldn't give her more
Money she's made so much money because she was raped by my client
I mean this is just mind-boggling bad and the jury which as I started my my
Analysis here juries hate being lied to,
being found that you're inauthentic
and that you're talking down to them and patronizing them.
And I assure you, having worked with juries for years,
this jury despised Alina Habba,
despised the muttering, unhinged,
ramblings of Donald Trump.
Alina Habba was shot down by the judge
in front of the jury half a dozen times
for doing things that were inappropriate,
including being warned that she was teetering
on the edge of sanctions and contempt.
Juries follow the leader, the leader being the judge
wearing a black robe.
They look for direction from that person.
That's their boss, if you will,
while they're sitting there doing their civic duty.
I'm sure they had a lot of respect for for Judge Kaplan. And when when a judge looks at a lawyer and says,
your effort up in my courtroom, juries take notice. And when you're trying to calculate punitive damages, as you said,
Ben, that defendant should be like a halo. Should they should be wearing like their best clothes and look prim and proper and just shut the F up in court
unless you're testifying at that moment.
But that's not Donald Trump's approach.
He already had an example of what not to do
with Rudy Giuliani and what a jury could do in response.
But that didn't stop him.
So he took a $5 million judgment from the summer
and he by his own misconduct
and his lawyer's misconduct, turned that into an $83 million judgment with a brand new jury
in New York. One last comment, Ben. Merrick Garland should get credit also here for what he finally did
in terms of taking the position ultimately that there was no presidential immunity that would allow the United States to intervene in the case,
to take Donald Trump out and therefore seek the cases dismissal. There was a period for about a year we were wondering what Merrick Garland was going to do with the E. Jean Carroll case. If he had stepped in and said, well, that looks
like it's inside of presidential immunity and his scope of authority to have made those comments
while he was president of the United States. So for future precedent, we're going to step in.
That would have killed this case in its tracks and set a terrible precedent that the D.C. Court
of Appeals and Supreme Court are dealing with now about immunity for civil and criminal acts of Donald Trump.
So shout out to Merrick Garland.
We would not be talking about an 83 million dollar judgment for Eugene Carroll if he had,
if he had asserted, if you will, presidential immunity and taken Donald Trump out of this case.
You know, it's a hyper technical immunity
issue which we could write hyper-technical textbooks about
it. Suffice to say, there's a statute called the Westfall Act where the Department of Justice
can assert that underlying conduct falls within the course and scope of presidential duties
and therefore substitute in the United States as a defendant or party in the case
in place of the government official.
Bill Barr tried to do that as the facts developed.
Merrick Arland ultimately decided not to do that.
But because Alina Habba was so incompetent, she could have independent of that process asserted absolute presidential
immunity as an affirmative defense, independent of what the Attorney General would do or not do,
to still be able to try to make that argument. She failed to basically check the box and put that
sentence in the answer, which you would literally just
say Donald Trump here by asserts absolute presidential immunity.
So when that issue more recently went before the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, they
laughed Alina Habba out of court and said, yeah, you're about three years too late for
this.
And also in Alina Habba's press conference that she had after the trial concluded where she
was whining about things like, the judge wouldn't let my experts in, the judge wouldn't allow
the dress to come in, the judge wouldn't all blah blah blah.
The reality is that Alina Habba waived all of those things.
She based on her bad lawyering or Donald Trump's decisions, they never turned over the DNA on time, which
they could have done and they could have made that an issue. It would have related to the
first trial, not this trial, but they never turned that over on time. She waived the expert.
She didn't file the declarations on time. She didn't designate appropriate experts. It
was disqualified because she just didn't follow the most basic fundamental rules of
civil procedure.
And it was clear when she was in trial that she's just a very incompetent person and Trump
surrounds himself with incompetent, yes, people like Alina Haban.
Afterwards, she posted something like, let's go, Maga!
This is not the end of this.
We're just getting started.
Just getting started with what?
Losing more. I could only hope that she takes a more robust role on all things. Donald Trump. Final thing I want to mention.
Federal Judge Lewis Kaplan gave a warning to jurors. He's treated this case like a mob boss case, like a mafia case.
There's no, you had El Chapo in front of him. He said, do not. I'm going to give you a warning.
You can do what you want to do here, ladies and gentlemen of the jury. But I would suggest strongly
you tell nobody ever that you served on this jury because you could be in danger. So do
not tell anybody. And the way he conducted his court, federal Judge Lewis Kaplan was that of a
mafia trial. So, Popak, to your point, Donald Trump will now have to post a bond.
Eugene Carroll, unless Donald Trump doesn't post a bond, if he doesn't post the bond,
Eugene Carroll can start collections right away.
If Trump posts the bond, it stays the collections, pending the appeal.
Trump will inevitably lose the appeal.
That may take a year to kind of work its way through the courts but in terms of when I would expect E. Jean Carroll to be paid as it goes
through the appeal process on both cases I mean you're probably talking about in
12 to 18 months to about two years you know she'll get paid but Trump is going
to have to pay that money he's not gonna be you know he's not gonna be able to
wiggle out of this one I think you and I both agree.
When we come back, let's talk about what's going on with the New York Attorney General
civil fraud case. We expect a verdict to be reached there in order by Judge Ingoran or Justice Ingoran.
Next week, we'll talk about the amount. We'll also talk about this report by retired federal judge Barbara Jones about
her 14 month review of the Trump Organization where she found errors and inconsistencies
and omissions and phantom loans all during the past, you know, 18 month period or 14
month period where she's been overseeing it. Just in those 14 months alone
while the lawsuit is pending. We'll talk about that and more. Let's take our first quick break.
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We are back live on legal AF. AF, we expect next week that federal, sorry, Justice Arthur
Ingoran is going to issue his order.
The New York State Court Judge, Justice Arthur Ingoran,
will issue his order after the significant trial that took
place before him.
That was a bench trial.
It was not before a jury, although for all of
Donald Trump's complaining that he would have liked to be before a jury, Trump keeps on losing
over and over again whenever he's before juries. But Justice Ngoran previously announced that he
was going to release his order sometime before February 1st. New York Attorney General, Letitia James is requesting approximately $370 million
in damages against Donald Trump and the Trump Organization,
also requesting injunctive relief
to stop or bar Donald Trump from ever conducting business
again in the state of New York,
especially in the real estate sector, and seeking a five-year
ban on Don Jr. and Eric from being involved in real estate.
New York Attorney General Letitia James has already prevailed regarding her prior claim
as to the dissolution of the Trump Organization, where Justice Ngorong ruled in the favor of the New York Attorney
General's Office that based on the systemic and persistent fraud and the fact that there
were no disputed facts that the Trump Organization would be dissolved, that's currently under
appeal, but that's pause while we wait for Justice Arthur Ngorong's order here as to
the remaining causes of action,
which include the disgorgement,
the return of ill-gotten gains.
That's what disgorgement is.
Return of that money that you basically took improperly
from the state of New York based on your conduct
and to that, Letitia James is requesting $370 million,
but when you add the pre-judgment
interest at approximately 9% or 10% per year compounding, you can get up to around $500
million when you add up the total of the interest, plus penalties, plus the $370 million New
York Attorney General, Letitia James, is requesting there and we expect that
order to be handed down next week. So two major developments though in this past week
that I think are very worth reporting, both are going to be helpful to New York Attorney General
Latisha James and also helpful to Justice Arthur and Goron in crafting an order that will survive appeal.
First, there was a Second Circuit Court of Appeal decision that was reached in a case
involving Martin Schroekeli.
You remember Martin Schroekeli?
He's the farmer bro.
He went to jail.
He testified before Congress and invoked the fifth and he had raised the prices of various
pharmaceutical drugs like the anti-parasitic Dariprim to like thousand percent higher than
it should, you know, than it should have been.
But anyway, under the New York Attorney General statute that is used against Donald Trump. It was the same New York Attorney General
executive law used against Shrekely. Shrekely's appeal of the utilization of that law that
fined him around $65 to $75 million in disgorgement damages, whereas New York Attorney General
Letitia James is seeking 370 million discouragement
damages from Donald Trump and whereas Shrekely has been banned from the pharmaceutical industry,
New York Attorney General Letitia James is seeking to ban Donald Trump from the real
estate industry and from doing business in New York.
So Shrekely's appeal and Shrekely's case worked its way through the federal courts, not through
the state court system, but nonetheless, Shrokelly was challenging this executive law that's used
by the New York Attorney General saying it's unconstitutional, it's improper.
All of the arguments you'll expect that Donald Trump makes about this law.
Notably, one of the things that Donald Trump says too, right,
which is false, which we've dispelled is that
this law has never been utilized before.
They're targeting me with this law.
This is the first time New York Attorney General,
Atisha James, or New York Attorney General
has used it before.
That's not true.
It's been used actually quite,
with a great degree of frequency,
but it's been utilized a lot
by the New York Attorney General's office over and over again. In fact, but it's been utilized a lot by the New York Attorney
General's office over and over again. In fact, Donald Trump's own expert in the New York
Attorney General's civil fraud case testified in one such case that was brought by the New
York Attorney General. So this has been utilized before. So the fact that Shrek Kelly lost
to the in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals where they said, nope, we affirm the district
court's ruling that this statute by New York that's being utilized by the New York Attorney
General is proper, that the remedy here of disgorgement against Shrekely plus the permanent
lifetime ban from the pharmaceutical injury is appropriately tailored. That's beneficial
to New York Attorney General Atisha James.
If you've been following Legal AF, we've talked about it here in the closing arguments, the
New York Attorney General's Office referenced that case, but there had yet to be a ruling by the
Second Circuit Court of Appeals. In fact, it would have been very bad to the New York Attorney
General's Office if the Second Circuit struck down that law and said it was improperly used with Shrekely
But as soon as the Shrekely decision was just handed down
What did New York Attorney General Leticia James do like any really good lawyer?
immediately sent a letter to
immediately sent a letter to Justice Arthur and Goron
Informing Judge and Goron of the decision reached by
the Second Circuit.
Now, the Second Circuit is not the appellate division in the state court system.
It's in the federal system.
So this is not binding authority on Justice Arthur and Goron, but we call it in the law
persuasive authority and the fact that it's happening in a federal court in New York,
I would say it's powerful persuasive authority that shows that the New York Attorney General
has the authority. And it's a recent case to do the exact remedy that she is seeking against
Donald Trump. So the Shrekeli ruling, I think was a big one right there. And then we get this Barbara Jones letter.
The retired judge, Barbara Jones, the independent monitor
who was appointed after New York Attorney General,
Leticia James, prevailed an injunction back in 2022.
Judge Ngoranfam Trump was engaged in ongoing issues and ongoing financial imaginations
that required somebody to oversee what was going on.
And Popak, you read this letter by Judge Barbara Jones here.
This is an independent judge.
She was selected by Trump, both parties selected her.
This is someone with an impeccable reputation whose job was just to look through the books
for the past 14 months.
Her job is into, she's not a judge, right?
She doesn't make the ruling.
She just reports on what she sees and her letter says she's reviewed for the past 14
months.
I've identified certain deficiencies in the financial information that I have reviewed,
including disclosures that are either incomplete, present results inconsistently, and or contain
errors.
In addition, although while defendants have been cooperative, information required to
be submitted to me pursuant to the terms of the monitor, monitor ship order and review protocol has at
times been lacking in completeness and timeliness.
I have previously reviewed these items with the
Trump organization, which has often agreed to modify
the disclosures or implement processes that improve
accuracy, transparency, and the timeliness of their disclosures.
In other words, they're continuing to engage in this conduct.
And then you read this footnote popac that talks about footnote six, where they're talking
about inconsistent disclosures, incomplete disclosures, and errors just over the past
14 months.
Of particular note, I discussed the springing loan
previously disclosed as being between
Donald J. Trump individually and Chicago unit acquisition,
an entity related to the Trump Chicago Tower,
with the Trump Organization several times.
When I inquired about this loan,
I was informed that there were no loan agreements
that memorialized the loan,
but that it was a loan that was believed
to be between Donald J. Trump individually
and Chicago unit acquisition for $48 million.
However, in recent discussions with the Trump Organization,
it indicated that it has determined
that the loan never existed,
and thus it would be removed from any upcoming form
submitted to the Office of Government Ethics and would also be removed from subsequent versions of the MAML, which stands for Material
Assets and Material Liability.
So a $48 million phantom loan sounds like fraud to me.
And Popak, Judge Jones, it's not her job to say this is fraud or not fraud, just to flag
what she found
It's for New York Attorney General Leticia James to
Characterize it a certain way and the judge to make ruins
But this happened since the filing finally before I pass it to you before all the legal a efforts get upset
Popak was having some technical difficulties on his end, which is why I hogged this category
Otherwise I would share and let Popak speak.
So for anyone in the comments who are saying,
let Popak speak, I was doing Popak a solid right there.
I'm gonna let Popak take the full next topic
after we talk about Judge Barbara Jones to make up for it.
And does not have a Popak mute button.
I assure you, I had some technical difficulties
that's been outlined.
Oh, we've got good news that we can report right on target
and write about what Ben said to start the podcast.
Judge Angoran is gonna be issuing his order on Wednesday,
the court has announced of this week,
just as we said, waiting for the results of the jury,
the federal jury of the Eugene Carroll case
and waiting for this report that the jury, the federal jury of the E. Jean Carroll case, and waiting
for this report that we're going over in detail by former Judge Barbara Jones, Judge Engoran
is ready to having, I'm sure, as I said earlier in my analysis weeks ago, that he had most
of that order written at the time of the closing arguments a couple of weeks ago that went
terribly for Chris Kice, the lawyer for Donald Trump, and was just waiting to see if there
was anything that he had missed in 11 weeks of trial, in dozens of witnesses, in the experts,
so-called experts by Donald Trump
and in the thousands of pages of exhibits that he,
and yes, shout out to his principal law clerk,
that he and his principal law clerk sifted through
and coordinated and analyzed for the 11 weeks.
It's not judges that are the bench trial judges
and not the jurors for fact-finding.
Don't wait until the very end in order to start drafting or coming up with their
final judgments. They are every day, they are noting things in the daily transcript of that trial
about things that will be important to their ultimate decision,
and they're making notes and taking notes in real time that end up getting weaved into their order.
So it shouldn't come as any surprise that a couple of weeks after, less than a couple of weeks
after the oral argument, he's ready to issue what I expect would be a 15, 20, 25, whatever
page single spaced as only Judge Engoran can do, order against Donald Trump upwards, upwards,
I think closer to the 500 million that you talked about. And now he's got, the judge has even more
fodder and firepower because even though the persistent fraud findings are for a period of time and not
necessarily up to the moment, the monitoring as a remedy that he installed and will continue,
obviously, to keep in place to make sure that there are controls over this New York corporation
unless and until the time when they are dissolved,
which is a separate matter, I guess at the appellate court level.
This only gives the judge, and I'm sure he will cite to it, that even today, an organization
that Donald Trump still heads, and for which his children are still officers and control
officers is not being honest and truthful and forthright nor have proper controls in his children are still officers and control officers
is not being honest and truthful and forthright
nor have proper controls in place in the company
even at the moment, even to the moment.
And that demonstrates that they have no interest or desire
to run that organization in a way that's consistent
with New York law and the judge's findings.
And to your point about the law that the Schrokelly case,
I always get his name screwed up,
Farmer Bro case that the Second Circuit came down with,
although not directly on point,
it does talk about the powers of a New York attorney general
or attorney General to seek
both discouragement and industry banning. That law that she's using has been on the books since
1956. Jacob Javits, for which there is a convention center named after him in New York, before he
was a senator, was an attorney general and he got that power back in 1956.
That's how long that's been on the book.
So if you don't like the way New York Corporation Law works,
or you don't like the power of the attorney general,
such as the NRA that incorporated
in the early 1910s in New York,
or Donald Trump's organization,
who was father incorporated in New York in the
1950s and 60s then you move out and you go to states like the Santas land in
Florida if you don't like that where you don't have to worry about an attorney general going after you because they don't go after anybody
Especially them on the Mago world, but if you're gonna stay in New York
This was always been a power in fact part of the power of disgorgement was was
embodied in a case involving the Trump Organization and Trump University.
And so, you know, and the ability to declare persistent fraud and the powers that flow from that. So for Chris Keist to continue to get up, you know, they have this broken record.
You know, Alina Habba can't stop saying, it's almost like a Tourette's. She can't stop saying First Amendment.
Everything is First Amendment.
First Amendment right to defame Eugene Carroll.
First Amendment right for Mike Lyon to say anything he wants
that pops into his head in a courtroom.
First Amendment right for me to speak
and not be banned and barred by the judge.
And Chris Keist, the same thing.
Everything there is you can't, discouragement is not an appropriate remedy. There's no power to
discourage by way of the New York Attorney General. Look, Chris, I know you don't practice in New York
regularly. You're a Florida lawyer. And therefore, you know, I would expect you to be more expert in
Florida law, but you don't know what the heck you're talking about when it comes to the New
York Attorney General. And if that's going to be your appeal, when the judge nails your client and continues to
cite to judge Jones's monitoring, where she actually said, buried in this 14 pages, but
she actually said, I wasn't really charged with figuring out whether they're committing fraud
or not. And I haven't been hired to do that. And I can't
attest that they're not continuing to commit fraud. I can tell you there's control problems. I can
tell you they make non material errors, including the 48, the, the $48 million dollar Phantom Loan
issue that, that they haven't come back to me on certain of the errors that they switched using a statement of financial condition and
started using this MAML, this material assets thing without getting lender approval. I don't
know if that's proper or not. And there's still doing transactions behind my back that
I have to then find with my team and report to you. This is not a report card that you want
if you're trying to convince a judge
that you're on your best behavior
and you shouldn't be dissolved
and you no longer need to have a monitor over you.
I mean, listen, I'll be frank.
I've been involved with an organization
and it happens in financial services
that has had sort of other outside agencies
that have wanted to put monitors over them.
And for a short period of time
over certain parts of their business.
And you better make sure you get a clean bill of health
and straight A's on that report card,
or you're gonna just buy a lifetime monitor.
And until this company is either put out of its misery by the judge's
order affirmed on appeal that it should be dissolved because it can't operate in any
way other than in a criminal way, in a fraudulent way, then they're going to have this monitor
in place for as long as possible.
You know, you go back to the Eugene Carroll case, he can't stop.
That was one of the themes of Roberta Kaplan's close and Sean Crowley's closing argument.
You have to make him stop.
He's incapable.
There could be other trials.
He won't stop doing it unless you make him stop engaging in this defamatory behavior against his rape victim, right?
Here in the New York Attorney General's civil fraud case,
it's a financial argument like that.
He's incapable of not committing fraud.
He continues to commit fraud over and over again
and just can't be stopped.
So Judge, we have to use this law,
which was just affirmed by the Second Circuit
because even during the period of the lawsuit,
they kept on doing it.
And again, while I think one of the headlines here
is going to be the number,
because the numbers always get lots of headlines,
whether it's 370 million
with penalties and pre-judgment interest, $500 million.
We're going to be at half a billion dollars in judgments against Donald Trump by next
week where he's going again to have to post a bond in New York, like he's going to have
to post a bond in the E. Gene Carroll.
But look for, I'm looking for for Popeye the other aspects of Justice Arthur
and Goron's order, where he's going to talk about this continuing fraud and what's going
to be done about it. Yes, he's ordered the dissolution. Yes, Trump will get banned from
doing real estate in New York. But I suspect, just like you and I suspect that in E. Jean Carroll there may be another lawsuit that's filed an injunctive
Junction to ban Trump from saying these things based on these verdicts another defamation case
I think very quickly we could have another
New York Attorney General
Investigation in case opened up like immediately because of that report that we are just talking about right now.
Not now, Ben, before you move on on that note, she's about what Tisha James can walk and chew gum
at the same time. She's about to put the NRA out of business under the same set of statutes right now.
You know, while the case was dark against Trump, she started her case, not with Judge Angoron,
but with another judge,
but in the same New York State Supreme Court. And her team can put on two major cases at the same time. And NRA and Wayne LaPierre are going to be barred and banned from ever doing business
in New York again. The NRA tried to already move to a different state and reincorporate in Texas,
but there still remains power of the New York Attorney General
and the NRA, which we thought was impenetrable
and no harm could ever come to it in a case.
Watch Leticia James in the same year
as New York Attorney General take down Donald Trump
for half a billion dollars,
put him out of the real estate business
and do the exact same
thing to the NRA.
And like Trump, some of the key witnesses against the NRA were the NRA's own people
who talked about the private jets and the yacht known as illusions that all of this
money that was being donated to the NRA by people that the NRA grifted off of,
similar to the way Trump griffs off MAGA, were being used private jets, family trips,
black car services, high-end gifts for friends and family. I mean, all of that stuff, the parallels
there are uncanny. And then someone like LaPierre was going to whine and go, oh, they're targeting
me. You're just committing systemic and persistent fraud. And we're going to talk about Georgia in a bit where there's like
no evidence. Don't get me wrong. I think when you're talking about, excuse me, language, no
evidence against Folton County District Attorney Fawney Willis to try to disqualify her. And as
I've said to you, I said it's probably not a great look, but there's no evidence there.
I wanted to keep, I wanted to say, where's the evidence?
If there's bad evidence that gets released, I want to share that with the legal AFers
out there.
But I hope as you look through our presentation of these cases, especially as some of these
cases are now reaching part of their conclusions, whether it's the defamation case or whether it is the case
in the New York Attorney General's civil fraud case.
I hope what you find though,
is that we haven't misrepresented
what the underlying facts and evidence are.
I believe the jury was gonna reach the verdict that it did
because that's where the facts and evidence were.
I believe that the judge in Goran's gonna reach this because that's where the facts and evidence are. I believe that the judge in Goran's gonna reach this
because that's where the facts and evidence are.
But it's a very fact-based detailed analysis
that leads to these conclusions.
So let's talk about what's going on
in Fulton County, Georgia,
where you have a bunch of magninonsense attacking
Fulton County District Attorney, Fawney Willis.
Talk about that.
And let's talk about what's going on
in the DC Circuit Court of Appeals.
And then we'll go from there.
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Welcome back, we're easier. Welcome back.
We're live on Legal AF.
I want to talk about all this I consider to be MAGA nonsense in Fulton County, Georgia,
where they were attacking Fawney-Willis.
I said on the last show, I thought that creating any ability for MAGA to attack you in ways that can be avoidable. I think, from my own
perspective, it's like, why even give them an issue? You know where they're going to go with
these things. It's going to create distractions where they can be avoided if they can be avoided,
avoid them. It has nothing to do with the underlying
merits of the prosecution, but then why even create the issue to begin with when I think
it's avoidable. Now, Donald Trump is joining the motion by Michael Roman, of his code defendants in the case to try to disqualify and
dismiss the
Disqualify phony willis and get the case dismissed popock. I ate up a lot of the New York case while you were having some technical difficulties
So as promised, I'm gonna give you this whole topic to break fresh from Georgia where I was visiting my mother So I feel very to give you this whole topic to break. Fresh from Georgia where I was visiting my mother,
so I feel very well prepared for this.
So we had reported earlier on Legal AF
and you and I did hot takes on it that Mike Roman,
who as you touched on was what I like to refer to
as the fake certificate mule,
bringing the fake certificates
from the seven battleground states
and wending their way through even members of Congress
to try to get to Mike Pence and pressure him.
He was the election day coordinator for Donald Trump.
He's in a load of hurt with Ken Chesbro,
a now disgraced and convicted felon
former lawyer for Donald Trump,
now testifying around the country against Donald Trump
and the fake elector scheme that he helped invent
and Mike Roman's role in it. So he's got a lot of problems. And so what they've come up with,
with his lawyer, Ashley Merchant, is to file several weeks ago a motion which tries to drag
Fawni Willis and the indictment and the prosecution down into the mud and drag it through what looks
to be a nasty divorce proceeding involving her special counsel, special prosecutor,
Nathan Wade, and his soon-to-be ex-wife who cheated on him.
And I only know that from what I've now learned, unfortunately, from the unsealing of the
divorce records.
So in order to...
So people might be thinking,
who cares whether he's getting a divorce or not? And the bad look or optics that you and I have
talked about, and I did a hot take about this, is that Fawnie Willis looks like she's going to have
to admit that she's in some sort of outside of work relationship or friendship that Friendship Plus
has traveled with Nathan Wade and they've gone on some relatively inexpensive
cruises together and maybe went to wine country in Napa Valley together. I really don't care.
None of that is a ethical dilemma for a prosecutor when you're having a relationship with somebody
on that side of the V. It's not like she's not like a movie where she's having a relationship with somebody on that side of the V. It's not like she's not like a movie
where she's, you know, having a relationship with the defense lawyer and they've compromised the
prosecution in some way because they're whispering to each other pillow talk. This is the person
that works for her. So as Karen and our colleague said, is it an HR problem? I don't know, maybe.
Is it a prosecutor grounds to dismiss the indictment
problem? That's the problem with MAGA. They always go too far. They don't just want it
to squalify Thauney Willis and Nathan Wade. They want to dismiss the indictment as a result.
It's great because they always hand it easy out to the judge like McAfee, like, okay,
let's start from the beginning.
I am not dismissing the indictment rendered by,
and I think this is what's gonna happen
in mid-February at the hearing,
rendered by a proper grand jury in Georgia
on the backs of a special purpose grand jury
that lasted for four months,
that listened to copious amounts of evidence
and decided to issue an indictment. And I haven't heard anything. This is where I think he's
going to go. I haven't heard anything other than besmirching the reputation of the prosecutor
and commenting on her choice of boyfriend that would undermine the validity and sanctity
of that process or the resulting indictment. Now, should Nathan Wade at this point
continue on the case or has he been compromised
because of this attack on him
and by extension, Fawty Willis?
If somebody's gotta go, it should be Nathan Wade
for many levels of reasons.
And she can replace Nathan Wade. We, and justice can't replace Fulton
County District Attorney Fauney T. Willis, who was elected by the people to do a job, and by all
accounts, including our own, is doing a masterful job in going after Donald Trump. The new argument
that Donald Trump's lawyers have raised, you said weeks late joining the me too of
the Mike Roman filing
Which is they don't like the speech that Fonnie Willis gave to the
Historic historic black church on Martin Luther King, Jr. Weekend in which without naming names
She called out her critics,
claimed that she was, and I agree with her, that she was being attacked and her judgment
was being attacked for hiring Nathan Wade for having him work under her or with her
on the case because she's black and her judgment's being questioned and he's black and his judgment's
being questioned and he's black and his judgment's being questioned. And so she raised this kind of racial thing,
from literally from the pulpit
of a black church during Martin Luther King weekend.
And so that gave Steve Seydow, the lawyer for Donald Trump,
along with Jennifer Little, hold that thought
on Jennifer Little,
because she's embroiled in the Mar-a-Lago case
as a witness against Donald Trump. Leave that for a moment. But she did sign the pleadings that were just filed. There is a provision
under the normal rules of ethics. There's nothing wrong with dating somebody you work with. In fact,
I even posited on my hot take that if anything, based on how little he's charged on this case,
given the scope of it, I think he's working harder and for less money because maybe he's charged on this case, given the scope of it, I think he's working harder and for
less money because maybe he's having a relationship with Fondie Willis.
I don't think it runs the other way.
I don't think he's slacking and or overcharging the taxpayers of Georgia because he's in a
relationship.
I think he's working his three piece suit off on this case. And
if he's only charged $700,000, I mean, not to compare and contrast, Fondi Willis with
Jack Smith, but she's got a 30 count indictment against 15 people and has fought off federal
court, federal court, federal appeals about federal removal statute and has gotten four
convictions already and
10 or 12 people already states witnesses flipping on Donald Trump. She's not a great job. It's always he but there is a provision
Again, this is optics more than anything else that judge McAfee is gonna have to sort through Georgia ruled professional conduct
3.8 special responsibilities for a prosecutor says in little G that except for
statements that are necessary to inform the public of the nature and extent of the prosecutor's
action and that serve a legitimate law enforcement purpose, a prosecutor should refrain from
making extra judicial comments, meaning outside the courtroom, that have a substantial likelihood of what?
Heightening public condemnation of the accused.
That's not what she did.
She didn't get up on the bully pulpit or the pulpit of this church and say, and Donald Trump is a racist
and i'm going after him and he hates black people, future jurors of folton county, and that's why i'm
And he hates black people, future jurors of Fulton County. And that's why I'm prosecuting him.
And he's disgusting.
She didn't do that.
She defended herself.
And he's saying that she is blowing,
talk about balls and gaslighting,
that she, Ronnie Willis, is blowing a racist dog whistle
against Donald Trump to whip up a prejudice against him
by the future primarily possibly all black or
mostly black Fulton County jury against him because that's what he's worried about. Now,
look, let's put this in context. There's not a person of color prosecutor or attorney general
against Donald Trump that Donald Trump has not called a racist completely misunderstanding and misapprehending what the term racist means.
Okay, so Fawney Willis, even before this came out, racist.
She's black, I'm white,
and I'm getting prosecuted because of that.
Okay, no evidence of that whatsoever.
And she didn't indict Donald Trump, the grand jury did.
Alvin Bragg, New York Manhattan District Attorney, who
happens to be Black, who got a conviction, 17 count against
Donald Trump's organization for tax fraud a year and a half
ago, and now has brought the Stormy Daniels Business Record
Fraud case.
Racist.
I'm white.
He's Black.
I must be prosecuted because I'm white and he's Black.
Leticia James, New York Attorney General,
who we talked about at length during this podcast and throughout the course of Legal AF in the last year and he's black. Leticia James, New York attorney general who we talked about at length during this podcast
and throughout the course of legal AF in the last year.
She's black, I'm white, that must be the reason
I'm about to lose my business and be banned from the industry.
It's always somebody else's problem
and if they're black, God help us.
It's because they're racist and he's white,
not because of his misconduct as indicted by
multiple grand juries
Grand jury Mar-a-Lago indicted him
Grand jury Fulton County indicted him grand jury district of Columbia indicted him grand jury
Manhattan for Manhattan Stormy Daniels indicted him
Right. This is four different grand juries that have indicted him in three different states.
Or yeah, three different states, four different locations.
Sorry.
It's all because he's white
and the prosecutors are black.
I mean, MAGA, you know, and I read,
and you do a great job of always catching up on all
and scrape at all the social media posts
from all the wackadoos that are
in the MAGA party. I mean, the comments that they make about the justice system and E. Jean
Carroll's disgusting and she's a liar, the justice system has gone to hell and, you know,
woo, MAGA 2024. I mean, I don't even understand what they're talking about. And neither I don't think do the independence
at the middle of this electorate.
He's not making, I'm gonna say this
and I'll wrap up Georgia.
Donald Trump is not making any new voters.
Okay, yes, he is animating and activating the MAGA base
who can only vote one at a time at once
Okay, except when they commit voter fraud the that's that's that's them
But has he created any new ones to overcome the electoral advantage of the presiding the the current president and his and his track record? No, in my view no and in our our
Moderates and independents more likely to vote for Donald Trump now.
No, absolutely not. You know, we just have to, you know, we're buffeting up against this age issue with Donald, with Joe Biden, which is quickly turning in his favor based on the performance, unhinged
performance of Donald Trump. So look, back to Georgia. Do I think that under this rule, she has violated this special prosecutor rule by making statements on the pulpit of the church? No.
Do I think Scott McAfee is going to kind of scrunch up his nose a bit about their relationship and maybe suggest that Mr. Wade needs to exit stage left? Maybe. Is he going to dismiss the indictment in the middle of February because of all this,
or assign a new special prosecutor?
No.
Is Governor Kemp, despite getting pressured by the GOP,
Republicans in Georgia, some of which
are the ones that are being investigated and indicted
for involvement in the fake elector scandal,
is he going to succumb to that pressure and take her out?
No.
And I think in terms of the trial calendar, though, we're not going to see a faunty T.
Willis-led prosecution trial of Donald Trump, you know, before late summer, and it's not
going to conclude before the election day when people vote on November 5th. There's
only two cases that have a shot of doing that you and I've talked about at length
A jack smith's case if it gets up and running by may or june
We could conclude based on the speed of federal cases and with a jury verdict prior to november
Um, and I don't think there's anything in the doj manual that's going to stop him from trying that case that that in the box
department of justice rule that's going to stop him from trying that case, that in the box Department of Justice rule,
that's about starting a criminal investigation.
That's not about trying a case about one
that's already ongoing.
So I don't think that's going to be implicated.
And then the one that you and I like,
and of course Karen loves from her old office,
which is the Stormy Daniels case,
which is going to trial on March the 24th,
probably by itself and will conclude
within eight weeks or nine weeks after that with a jury verdict.
So in terms of just kind of verdict, verdict criminal case and where we're going with all
of this, you know, you have the Eugene Carroll verdict, $83.3 million against Donald Trump.
Next week, we should have the New York Attorney
General verdict against Donald Trump in the range of $370 million to $500 million. Then
we'll have a criminal case in March. We'll probably reach verdict by what? Late April
before May. I think you'll have Donald Trump as a convicted felon.
He will continue to be whining about all of this.
At the end of the day, Popak, as you just stated, this is independent grand juries.
Grand jury one in Fulton County, grand jury in Florida, grand jury in Washington, D.C.,
grand jury in Washington, D.C., grand jury in Manhattan.
And then you didn't even mention the actual juries in some of the cases.
Like an actual jury convicted the Trump Organization of over a dozen felony accounts last year,
and you had Donald Trump's CFO plead guilty for tax fraud, Allen Weisselberg.
You had a civil jury who heard the sexual assault
allegations against Donald Trump in a federal trial back in May and found
that Donald Trump raped Eugene Carroll and found Donald Trump defamed
Eugene Carroll. It's actually assaulted E.G. Carroll. The judge made it clear it's
the same thing as rape in the universal sense of how the word is used. New York
just has a technical definition.
Another jury heard what Donald Trump did, observed him on a Friday, issued a verdict in the amount
of $83.3 million. So consistently over and over and over again, in these situations,
pop-up where the facts and data matter, juries are coming to the right conclusions, and we here at Legal
AF are following that data and following those conclusions.
And Popak, you mentioned independent voters and how they're all observing this.
This is why though MAGA Republicans are talking about the border over and over and over again. It's worth mentioning
right now, although we've done broader hot takes on it, the Supreme Court ruling that basically
overturned what the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeal had done, which was preventing the Biden
administration from removing this barbed wire fencing that was leading to the deaths of migrants.
It was killing human beings.
It was killing people.
And there's a way, I think, and President Biden agrees, to be tough on the border while
still preserving our values as Americans and not killing people and separating families
and torturing individuals. And one of the things where politics meets law at the intersection of legal AF is this
Senate deal on the border, which is the toughest border to bipartisan Democrats and Republicans.
President Biden working with people like Senator Langford and Murphy and Sinema and people
we may or may not disagree with who have come together, Romney, Schumer, all coming together and putting together like the toughest border bill that
really addressed everything on a bipartisan basis.
And what does Donald Trump do?
He orders the Republicans to kill this deal.
The whole day, he's been posting to Maga Mike Johnson and others, kill this deal, do not
do the deal.
And meanwhile, what's going on in Texas?
You have Governor Abbott and all these Republican attorney
generals and governors basically trying to trigger
like this PR scene where Biden sends the federal government
in to remove the barbed wire fences.
And then Governor Abbott puts his own forces
against the Biden federal forces
and there's this conflict at the border.
And they're trying to create these stunts
and in an adult way,
President Biden's kind of rising above that
and saying, hey, I'm trying to reach a bipartisan deal
to actually address this solution. And all you Maga Republicans are doing is trying to create these stunts and
this kind of lawlessness. And by the way, when you have Amy Coney Barrett and Judge Roberts,
the two right wing judges, justices on the Supreme Court, align with the other justices
appointed by Democratic administration. So it was a 5-4 decision and then a Texas governor
Republican Maga Republic government was I'm not following the law of this Supreme Court
And in fact, I'm putting my own
National Guard and I'm gonna treat my National Guard like it's my own militia and arm them against the federal government
I mean, I think independence, I think most Americans who
crave normalcy and are solution-oriented, like I am, I go, hey, look, there's a bipartisan solution.
Don't we want a solution? I go, oh, wait, no, Donald Trump doesn't because he's telling people
that he thinks it'll be good for his election if he whines about the lawlessness, if he whines about the lawlessness.
And that's what this is all about, just the whining over and over again.
So I wanted to mention that Supreme Court ruling in Texas connected to the Senate border deal
and connected to the broader point you were making there, Michael Popak,
about these kind of independent voters.
But I'll save the rest of that for the politics show.
Let me just briefly talk about what's going on in the DC Circuit Court of Appeals.
You predicted this, Popak, but a fairly easy prediction to have made that the DC Circuit
Court of Appeals...
Although you challenged me when I did.
The DC Circuit Court of Appeals rejected Donald Trump's request for an unbunk hearing.
It's spelled E-N, space-B-A-N-C.
It's a Latin term to hear the full panel
of all of the judges who comprise
the DC Circuit Court of Appeals.
You can basically petition on extraordinary cases
that they hear the decision by a three judge panel, right?
So the way it works is federal judge, Tanya Chutkin,
made the ruling imposing a gag order a
Three-judge panel by the DC Circuit Court of Appeals which kind of supervises the district court Judge Tonya Chutkin They mostly affirm the gag order some aspects of it
They modified but they mostly afford affirm the gag order on Donald Trump
Trump goes to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals
The full panel and says hey hey, right wing judges,
you want to help me out here?
Maybe we can hear this.
And every single one said no.
None of us want to even have a hearing on this, rejected.
So Donald Trump loses yet again.
And then we talked about it.
I want to make a point about it.
I'm going to give you the full opportunity to just kind of be, and then finally the DC
Circuit Court of Appeals panel, as we talked about at the outset, they have not yet reached a decision
on the absolute presidential immunity question. My prediction was it would happen before February.
So, you know, next week I would be putting it at the outer perimeter of my prediction of when we
would get a ruling by Thursday,
but that's kind of the outer perimeter of mine.
If it keeps going to the following week,
I'll start probably having a little bit of concern
of what's going on.
And even if they ultimately were to rule
that absolute immunity does not exist,
which I think they will ultimately reach that conclusion,
the delay is going
to cause a problem if this keeps getting pushed further and further up. But Popak, I'll let
you finish up with kind of everything else on that topic.
Yeah. No, I didn't have much more than that. I think you hit it well. On the three judge
panel, I am concerned. I thought it would come much faster. I said five days out of
the way that hot bench was against John Sauer for Donald Trump.
I really thought they had already coalesced having read the briefs around where their decision
making was going to be. And Judge Pan is such a forceful power even among the three that I
thought she kind of get this together quickly. Yes, understand historical importance of the
decision about declaring for the first time that there is no absolute immunity for
criminal conduct of a then president. We don't want that precedent on our books and for our
history. But she's having a harder time. As you said, as we both said, they're struggling internally.
But eventually, the perfection can't be the enemy of the good enough. She's got to get this order out because I think everybody believes that the DC court
of appeals level, based on prior rulings against Donald Trump from our indication of
where their heads are at there, that it's important that the American people know whether
Donald Trump is a convicted felon or not before November 5th.
In order to do that, since Judge Chuckin's already
signaled in her most recent ruling,
finding that Jack Smith is not in contempt
for having to continue to progress the case in a certain way.
But she did say that, you know, while I thought seven months
was enough time, six months is not enough time,
and five months is not enough time for Donald Trump
to prepare his case.
And this case has been on ice, and a pen has been placed in it for over a month
since the filing of the notice of appeal.
So they got to get off the stick here and get this out.
If there's any hope, okay, March is gone.
There's not going to be an early March trial involving Donald Trump and Jack
Smith, just not happening.
Alvin Bragg, yes, poetic justice.
He's first to indict, first to try a case. Great.
We'll take any, at this point, we'll take any criminal trial that's available at the moment.
But we want this trial to get started and off the ground in May, June, May, June. And that's,
we're getting up there now. Forget Alien Count. And that case is not happening. And Judge Chutkin's
not going to wait for that case. And to just clarify
one thing that I see sometimes raised in chats, DMs and other
things to me and to the others. There is no world in which there
are simultaneous criminal cases against Donald Trump. Due process
won't allow that. And constitutional rights of the
defendant won't allow that. So whatever case is up and running,
that case has to run to conclusion.
And then there's a gap, a little bit of a gap
before the next trial starts.
So March 24th is Stormy Daniels.
That, it takes a little bit longer to pick a jury
in New York than other places.
And so you're talking about eight weeks, March, April, May.
And now suddenly, hopefully, Chuckin's ready, May, June.
Forget about Cannon. She's done, Mar-a-Lago is not getting tried this year And now suddenly hopefully Chuckins ready May June forget about cannon
She's not Mar-a-Lago is not getting tried this year because of these other problems that we just talked about and then stormy and then
Fawnie Willis not because of her who she's going to Napa Valley with that's not the reason but her case would not even be
There wasn't even be a thought that it would get tried before August and she's already said it's gonna take her seven or eight
Months to try that case so forget it that so that note
There's no no up or down vote if you will prior prior to that and the one comment
I'll make about the on bunk is
That that does have an impact on
The Supreme Court should Donald Trump now decide to take the gag order issue
Which I'm not sure he's going to do up to the United States Supreme Court, should Donald Trump now decide to take the gag order issue, which I'm not sure he's going to do, up to the United States Supreme Court?
Because, yes, the US Supreme Court will review this sort of de novo, if you will, certain aspects of it. But there is now a 12-0 vote, if you will.
zero vote, if you will. No one on the district, on the DC Court of Appeals, no one wanted to hear
this on bonk and thought that the three-judge panel led by Judge Millette got it wrong. Not one. You needed a majority to just even hear it, right? You needed seven to vote for it, which would have
been almost impossible. And then even if they wanted to hear it, which would have been almost impossible.
And then even if they wanted to hear it, they still have to, on the merits, they have to
decide something.
He didn't get any that wanted to hear it.
And that will resonate with the United States Supreme Court if and when Donald Trump decides
to take an appeal, which I don't think he's going to take, given that he's, in fact, he's
losing regularly on immunity issues and gag order issues.
And I'm not sure he needs, although,
you know, I think the running theme on legal AF the last few weeks is his legal team is terrible,
does not give him proper advice, or he is his own strategist between him and Boris Epstein.
They make terrible decisions that no normal litigant would make. No normal litigant would think to
take an appeal on the, given
his track record so far and his losing track record.
You know, I'm on with Anthony Davis this weekend on a weekend show and Anthony posited,
he's still the Teflon Don.
There's still things that, you know, he can get away with it.
I said, I don't see that anymore.
I mean, he's lost on immunity time and time again.
He's lost on gag orders.
He's lost on jury verdicts.
He's been indicted four times.
He's not gonna go 91 and 0, yeah,
on his indictments, on his felonies to win this case.
We are seeing justices, and I'll leave it
on Robbie Kaplan's comments about E. Jean Carroll.
We are watching the justice system at its best
and a jury system at its best.
It takes time. I've got a case that's like nine years since it was filed that hasn't gone to trial yet.
It happens, but we'll continue to hold people accountable.
Here on Legal AF, we don't blow smoke or sunshine. Ben and I certainly don't. Karen and I don't.
About what we do.
Yeah, Ben and Popeye don't either either. Pope, you know, they say
the greatest trick of the devil that the devil ever played was convincing the world that he did
not exist. I think the greatest trick that authoritarians and people like Donald Trump have
ever played is convincing the world that they don't lose. Donald Trump's a loser. He loses over and over again. Everything he's
touched, he's not a builder. He's a destroyer. He's bankrupted every company he's touched. You go back
to his history from the 70s and the 80s. It's filled with litigation and losing litigation, losing over and over again. And he would lose
in Atlantic City. He would screw over contractors. They would sue him. He would try to delay
it. He would end up trying to settle with them. Loser, loser, loser, loser. Yet because,
I don't know, he speaks like a petulant third grader about being a winner over and
over again.
He goes, I'm a winner, I'm a winner, a winner.
Just keeps on repeating that.
It's a very strange thing that that's instilled in the psyche, but authoritarianism and the
propaganda behind it has always hoisted these types of people up to make it feel like their victory is inevitable
and to make everybody else feel that there's just nothing you can do so you just have to
accept the inevitability of that.
Those MAGA tactics that we would see and call out and expose in authoritarian abroad and
historically and look down upon has reached our shores.
And it's really sad to see you talk about independence. I talk about even mainstream Republicans,
independence, the pro-democracy community needing to unite right now against this threat.
But for everyone, you know, to your point when you said Anthony Davis positive that this is the Teflon done, this is a loser.
This is a weak, unhinged, weird loser of a person who whines.
He wasn't there when the verdict was taken.
He storms out of courtroom.
His behavior is that of a loser.
You want to talk about courage.
You want to talk about winners. You want to talk about winners, you want to talk
about real power. Look at E. Jean Carroll. Look at her lawyer, Roberta Kaplan and Roberta Kaplan's
partner, Sean Crowley. You want to talk about winners? Look at Judge Kaplan, who has respect
and dignity and controlled his courtroom. Those are the values of the United States of America, not
this MAGA mess. And as we talk about the intersection of law and politics, that intersection is
so critical right now where you have this movement in MAGA that's built on trying to
rip to shreds and tear down this delicate tapestry, these norms, these values
that form our legal system, why you went to law school, why I went to law school, why
we love our country, why we love our legal system, while we recognize its flaws and shortcomings as we look to improve them.
MAGA looks to just destroy it and replace it basically with Rudy Giuliani at the Four Seasons,
whatever it is next to the porn shop and the whatever.
And that right there is something that we all who love our laws, who love our democracy
need to be united on. So tomorrow,
for all our legal A.F.ers, I did and I'll announce it here. I did a 30-minute interview, Michael
Popak, with former Arkansas Governor, Asa Hutchinson. We spoke for 30 minutes about democracy,
the state of our country, and I'm announcing it here for, I announced it on our Patreon first, and now I'm announcing it here for everybody could watch, and it's
going to be a 10 AM Pacific.
And we really spent a long time going through issues where we disagreed, where we agreed.
And I wanted to show how we can set aside differences and truly have a debate with civility. So I'm so proud to release that at 10 a.m. Pacific, one Eastern tomorrow.
So make sure everybody checks that out.
MidasTouch.com slash newsletter.
That's where you can check out our new newsletter.
Subscribe for free.
You'll get emails from me and my brothers, other contributors.
Maybe Popak will have you send a letter out
to all of everybody on that newsletter list,
mitestouch.com slash newsletter.
Folks, it was a good week for justice.
Let's keep this momentum.
Popak, Karen Friedman, Agnifalo, myself
and all of the contributors here
at the Mitestouch Network will be here with you each step of the way.
Thank you all for your support.
Thank you for being a part of this pro-democracy law and order community.
And we'll see you next time on Legal AF.
Shout out to the Midas Mighty.