Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Trump Plans BACKFIRE and Jack Smith is READY
Episode Date: May 14, 2023Anchored by MT founder and civil rights lawyer, Ben Meiselas and national trial lawyer and strategist, Michael Popok, the top-rated news analysis podcast Legal AF is back for another hard-hitting look... at the most consequential developments at the intersection of law and politics. On this week’s edition, the anchors discuss: (1) E Jean Carroll and her team considering new defamation claims against Trump for his statements on CNN; (2) Jack Smith evaluating for his prosecutions Trump’s Jan 6 and Mar a Lago classified document statements on CNN; (3) Trump’s efforts to secure more favorable jury for his Manhattan DA 34 count felony trial and delay justice; (4) Smartmatic’s efforts to subpoena the Trump Campaign to support its $2.7 billion dollar defamation case against Fox; (5) Former special prosecutor Mark Pomerantz taking the 5th Amendment during his interview with Jim Jordan’s judiciary committee; and so much more. DEALS FROM OUR SPONSORS! ZBIOTICS: Head to https://zbiotics.com/LegalAF to get 15% off your first order when you use LEGALAF at checkout. RHONE: Head to https://rhone.com/legalaf and use code LEGALAF to save 20% off your entire order LOMI: Head to https://lomi.com/legalaf and use code LEGALAF SUPPORT THE SHOW: Shop LEGAL AF Merch at: https://store.meidastouch.com Join us on Patreon: https://patreon.com/meidastouch Remember to subscribe to ALL the Meidas Media Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://pod.link/1510240831 Legal AF: https://pod.link/1580828595 The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://pod.link/1595408601 The Influence Continuum: https://pod.link/1603773245 Kremlin File: https://pod.link/1575837599 Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://pod.link/1530639447 The Weekend Show: https://pod.link/1612691018 The Tony Michaels Podcast: https://pod.link/1561049560 American Psyop: https://pod.link/1652143101 Burn the Boats: https://pod.link/1485464343 Majority 54: https://pod.link/1309354521 Political Beatdown: https://pod.link/1669634407 Lights On with Jessica Denson: https://pod.link/1676844320 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Donald Trump defames E. Jean Carroll after being found liable in federal court.
So what happens next?
Donald Trump's attempt to delay the Manhattan District Attorney's criminal case has backfired
and let's also give an update on what's going on with that Jim Jordan and
Maga Republican led judiciary committee,
subpoena and deposition of Mark Pomeran's,
the deposition actually just took place, well sort of.
George Santos, Maga Republican who lies about everything
and is also a criminal both in the United States of America
and an international criminal
was criminally indicted by the Feds last week.
Let's talk about those charges and what to expect.
Donald Trump's CNN debacle has given special counsel, Jack Smith, a treasure trove of evidence,
especially evidence going to Donald Trump's knowledge and criminal intent and just because Fox settled with Dominion doesn't mean that they're out of hot water yet.
The smartmatic lawsuit taking place in a New York court house is still in full effect against Fox and smartmatic has just subpoenaed the Trump campaign
to get information about the relationships there with Fox.
We'll talk about all of this.
And maybe some more on this episode of Legal AF,
Michael Popok back from his Popokian vacation.
Everybody's thrilled that your back will see more hot takes
from you and wanna give a special shout out to my mom and to all of the Midas mighty moms out there. It is my mom's birthday. So happy birthday mom.
I love you and a big shout out to all the mothers watching this as we approach mother's day as well. Happy Mother's Day. We know that the Midas mighty mamas are the
best in the world. Pope Pocka, where are you?
You, I'm doing great. Do you remember once early on in our tenure as podcasters? I did a remote
podcast with you from my mother's where my mother lives in Georgia and her back in her backyard patio with really bad internet.
Do you remember that?
I remember the technological specs would be totally
unacceptable for a modern day legal AF,
but I do remember that.
I remember you were outside in that courtyard area.
The wind was blowing.
You had the little mic.
I remember exactly where you were.
My mom is so proud. I mean, proud, mama's. My mom is so proud of what you and I care and do
because she's been there obviously from the very beginning. You know, the ones where we were
getting 200 views total and we were high-fiving each other. She's just been and I showed her
those episodes and my mom lives in a home unfortunately. she's in a wheelchair for a long, long time.
But I show her the videos when I go visit her and it's her favorite viewing.
And it's really nice that we have loved ones in our family that are so supportive because
we couldn't do what we're doing if we didn't have people in our lives that support us and
let us go off into dark rooms and podcasts and record things, taking away quality time from them.
So you and I are both very, very lucky as is Karen.
And very lucky for all the Midas, mighty moms out there, all of you watching on YouTube or listening on audio.
Let's just be real.
It's because of women who have saved America from Donald Trump. And really, none of
this is possible without you. You've you've saved our democracy and continued to save our
democracy. Let's get right into the show. So, you know, earlier in the week, Popak, you
had called when you thought this jury verdict was going to be handed down, right? The closing arguments took place on Monday, and then we had very, very, very quickly on Tuesday,
quicker than I thought. I'd love to get your take. I thought we'd get it maybe late Tuesday,
but like they basically went to jury deliberations, maybe had a little bit of lunch, and like within
an hour, they had reached the decision that Trump was liable of sexual abuse and
defamation and came up with the money award of
$5 million and to me that was quicker than I anticipated so first let's just talk about that and your overall
Reflections final reflections on that trial and then let's talk about what happens moving forward.
But Popeyes, let me tell us to do you.
Yeah, the jury did a masterful job in weighing the evidence.
We've always talked about the civil standard preponderance
of the evidence, the balanced scales at the beginning
of the trial, the feather in favor of one or the other party.
And when you have, as you said, Ben in the past,
I like we make self-referential statements on our podcast.
Remember when we said earlier, well, Ben,
you know, you said earlier,
it's not just the preponderance of the evidence,
it's all the evidence is on the side of E. Jean Carroll
because of the 11 witnesses,
it was 11 witnesses for E. Jean Carroll
and non-Fortontal Trump.
He had painted himself into the corner
because he's been lying from the beginning that he didn't know her. It was a hoax. He wasn't there. So he has no alibi.
He couldn't play because he said he wasn't even there and he doesn't know her. So once he did that,
kind of all of the rest sort of fell into place. They had obviously made an early decision
knowing that their client was never going to testify, that they were going to have to do this
through cross examination, the defense.
Some of the newspapers put up headlines.
Trump puts up no defense.
It's not exactly, he put up a defense, but he did it through cross examination of E.
Jane Carroll's witnesses.
There's very few documentary or video or audio pieces of evidence that came down to the
credibility of the witnesses.
And since E. Jane Carroll not only did an amazing,
courageous, masterful job in fighting off a caveman cross examination by Joe Takapina
that pissed off, obviously, I can say it now, pissed off the jury. The jury was, the jury
was for E. Jean Carol and against Donald Trump, probably from the opening statements that were made by the, you know, this competing stark contrast between those two lawyers
and all of that.
Now, my favorite kind of tidbits leaving the trial,
now that the jury has returned that verdict
and you and I joked, I thought,
and it went exactly the way I thought,
I thought they would pick their jury for a person,
order lunch, which I thought was the most complicated decision of the day, who got the tuna wrap, who
got the hamburger, and then they were going to vote really quickly on a straightforward
jury verdict forum and reach their decision. And they did it in under three hours, which
is a record time. Now, the reason that Donald Trump were going to pick it up in the later
segment is so concerned about taking his criminal case away from a jury, is because of what just happened
with this Manhattan jury, meaning all the jurors were chosen from Manhattan, from that liberal
Biden Democratic Bastion.
And he doesn't want that.
He wants a federal jury.
We'll talk about the differences when we get there.
And he had his lawyers, at least Susan Neckless,
the criminal lawyer we know,
sat in for jury selection of the E. Jean-Karrel civil case
just for that reason.
Now, once the jury returned the verdict,
we have, and awarded her the $5 million in all of that.
We had the inevitable appeal.
He's got no real grounds for the appeal.
He doesn't like certain of the evidentiary decisions
that the judge made.
Judges are given tremendous latitude
in making decisions about what evidence comes in,
what witnesses testify, what topics are covered.
They're given a broad, broad, you know,
broad, broad birth to do what they want to do in that area.
And again, just to remind everybody, no one is entitled under the law, under the Constitution,
to a perfect trial.
You just have to be a fair and just trial.
And so there can be errors that are made along the way, even by this judge.
You know, a comment here, a comment there, an instruction given or not given to a jury.
But it has to be reversible
error. It has to be something that's so impacted. The jury's verdict that without that, it
would, it tipped the scales improperly in favor of one party or the other. And we watch
this trial closely and no one who's a, who's a seasoned court watcher or trial lawyer,
like you and me, Ben or Karen, thought there's any reversible error that's been committed.
So he'll file his notice of appeal. He'll have to put up that bond that you and I talked about
in order to stop the enforcement of the $5 million judgment, which is a judgment right now.
And I haven't seen whether he's posted the bond jet and maybe you know that part.
And then of course we got to get to Trump can't help himself and he's decided to defame
E. Jean Carroll again at the CNN town hall, which I was very, very worried about
because of the format of it being a town hall in New Hampshire filled with maga.
I thought not a great moderator, um, and she bore out my, my fear. I didn't think she lost,
I think she lost control of the moderation part. It's very hard to moderate a town hall to begin with.
And then 70 minutes of just pure, unvarnished Donald Trump,
but that has the impacts on the other segment
we're gonna talk about,
which is has he implicated himself
and at least two of Jack Smith's criminal investigations
by the comments that he made at CNN.
And now Eugene Carroll, does she have the right
to bring and will she bring is you and I
predicted on the last show with Karen will Robbie Kaplan her lawyer go after Donald Trump for him
attacking her once again at the CNN town hall. Yeah, you know, and just think about Donald Trump,
you know, he filed this notice of appeal and just to give you a sense of how
frivolous it's
You know going to be and why both Michael Pope and I think it's going to just be you know clearly rejected by the court of appeals is
He didn't show up to the trial
He wind about the fact that he got an unfair trial because he wasn't allowed to testify, even though he
was allowed to testify, and the judge gave him more latitude and leeway to testify than I've ever
seen given before, because the judge knew exactly the type of person Donald Trump was, and exactly
what Donald Trump was trying to do on appeal, claiming
that this whole process was unfair.
And so the judge actually went out of his way to make it not only fair, which he should,
but Trump got extra benefits that other litigants would never have gotten.
When your lawyer and officer of the court represents to the court that my client has waved his right to testify
the way Takapena said and the judge goes, I hear you saying that. However, I'm still going to give him
three more days to decide if he actually wants to testify. That never happens. I've never seen
that happen before other than in this situation and the judge was anticipating
just this.
The only person who would possibly have the right to an appeal would have been E. Jean
Carroll if the verdict somehow came out the other way because Donald Trump was making
extra judicial statements that were in clear violations of the court orders.
So while Trump was too big of a coward to show up in court, he was posting on his social media platform precisely the things that Donald Trump either did not actually introduce
into evidence as he had the right to do. So Trump wanted to introduce his DNA into evidence
and make an argument about the DNA. He had three years to do that. And he didn't do it.
And then he started posting about the dress,
the dress, the dress, and the DNA.
The same way he had the opportunity to testify.
He didn't.
And then wind.
They didn't let me testify.
They silenced me.
So that appeals absolutely going nowhere.
But Takapina did file the notice of appeal,
which will start about a one year or so process,
where it could be a little longer
where an opening brief is going to be filed. That's not what was filed yet. Just the mere
notice that this is the process that's going to take place. An opening brief, an opposition
to that, and then a reply brief, and then there'll be oral arguments probably sometime
about a year from now around this time. But Trump's gonna have to post a bond in the meantime of at least
$5 million or close to that to pursue this appeal and we'll let you know if and when that's been posted
But yes, then Donald Trump does that so-called town hall
I it was more of like a
Maggarelli with CNN and Chris Lick cheerleading, this kind of temporary burst of ratings, but it was like ratings of watching a fascist train wreck to ultimately destroy the credibility of CNN.
I'll say this, the Biden town hall though, in 2020, got significantly better ratings than this. I think that needs to be pointed out as well. But he just
tried to answer before you move on. Can I just comment about one thing on that?
CNN sent out Anderson Cooper to give his explanation as to why they it was appropriate.
I'll tell you what was inappropriate better. Although we like it, it may have been a treasure trove
you and I are going to talk about for the prosecutors because rather than saying, I can't comment on that because it's the subject of appending criminal investigation,
which I'm sure his handlers told him to say he can't help himself.
So he commented on everything that is the subject of appending criminal investigation.
But the way that CNN could have done this is not a town hall, put him in another format
where you have more control of over him, not where he talks for 60 minutes
uninterrupted, apparently, trampling over the moderator and becomes like you said, a rally-like experience.
It was the format that didn't help matters, but it may have helped matters coincidentally on the
prosecution side, so maybe it is the gift that keeps on giving. Well, you know, so helpful for E. Jean Carroll
in a future defamation case,
but when we say helpful for a case,
coming at great personal trauma to E. Jean Carroll
after winning this trial after having her name cleared
by a nine to nothing unanimous jury for Donald Trump
to immediately go in his social media platform
and then go
on the platform that CNN afforded him to defame her and then the audience laugh at her and
mock her as he mocked her and lied about her and then said the same exact things if not
worse things than he was just found liable for in the defamation case that was brought against him.
So what do you think about? Do you think they're going to file another defamation case, Michael
Popak? And if they do, because the jury has already reached a verdict and has made a finding that
Donald Trump sexually abused her, that he already defamed her, is it an easier, more expedited procedure now?
Yeah, and it's time for a World Breakout, a legal AF law school class on
collateral, a stop-all new concept. I don't think we actually talked about collateral
stop-all before. So let me just keep the see, keep the momentum going in our, where
we are in the case. The case that was tried that you and I've spent a lot of time talking about, rightly so,
was what we referred to as E. Jean Carroll II, Roman numeral II, because the act of sexual
abuse that happened as the jury found in the dressing room of Berkdorf Goodman, which
Donald Trump needs to remind everybody as I've always have, it sits between two properties that he owned.
Plaza Hotel directly next door, he owned it at that time, and Trump tower directly across
the street.
I mean, it's a prime location.
This is a half block that Donald Trump frequently walked and all of that.
I don't know why.
He just says ego can't help him from commenting about all the big building right next
store. Yeah, you own the big building right across the street.
That's why it happened there, Donald.
But the Carol one, which got stayed by the judge just a month or so before the trial,
which was misreported by a lot of media as, you know, there's a stay of the defamation
and civil rape case.
There wasn't.
It was a stay of the case related to any rape case. There wasn't. There was a stay of the case related
to any defamatory statements they were made
by Donald Trump when he was president.
And that issue, which has these legal constitutional issues
about immunity and executive privilege
and something called the West Fall Act, a statute
that governs and protects federal employees
and whoever's sitting in the White House at a given moment is considered employee number one, the United States, and they get the protection of that.
If they are acting within the course and scope of their duties, when they make a statement
or do some sort of conduct, his argument, Trump's argument was, you can't sue me for
the things I said when I was a president, when I was defending myself even though I defamed
her because I have a privilege around that.
That bounced up and down between federal appellate courts
and territorial or district of Columbia, appellate courts,
but finally right before the trial came back.
So she can now go after him on this issue
of defamation before another jury
about the statements that were made
after while he was president,
which is another set of damages.
She could get another expert to talk about
new damages that were made when that happened
above the five million.
She can't double recover,
but above and different than the five million.
So that case could be thought out like now
by the judge and by Robbie Kaplan, her lawyer,
and set that case for trial.
Discovery is done in that case.
And now let's talk about what do we do with the jury's ruling?
Can a party retry issues that have already been decided against them?
In this case, the sexual abuse that happened in the dressing room as a jury of 9 and
Manhattan found 9-0. So the doctrine of collateral, a stop-all, has four elements. You have to have
a valid and binding final judgment. We do. You have to have the same issue in case number
one in later cases. In this case, not the defamation, because that's already been decided. You can't
try that again. The defamation, the particular defamation in that case, not the defamation, because that's already been decided. You can't try that again.
The defamation, the particular defamation in that case,
not new defamation or old defamation, but that defamation.
But sexual abuse is now an issue that Donald Trump
is precluded from litigating again.
It is now forever more stamped for this
in every other future trial
that what E. Jean Carroll said
happened in that dressing room happened in that dressing room.
And he can't say it didn't.
He can't in a court of law as opposed to social media and a town hall.
He can no longer say to another jury that that didn't happen because that's over.
We skipped that completely.
The jury is instructed that a prior jury and a judgment found that that happened.
And then the last couple of elements of collateralistopel are, is the issue, that issue of what
happened in the dress room, is that essential to the jury verdict, the judgment?
Yes, of course, it was essential to that.
And is that issue being actually litigated in the new, in the second or third or tenth
case? And the answer to that would be yes, on future cases.
So he is lost forevermore, cannot litigate, can't put up a defense to the issue of what
happened in that dressing room.
Now the issue for the jury, the new jury in the future will be, was there defamation by denying
it?
And does that rise the level of defamation?
If it happened while the guy was president, they're gonna have to get into immunity
or the judge is gonna have to get into immunity issues.
If not, if not, there's no immunity issues,
he'll lose again because this is the family story.
And I don't know why he continues to do it.
I mean, I guess he thinks, well, I only got hit for five million.
I'll just keep doing it.
How many times can they bring a suit?
But you and I said on the Wednesday podcast, don't try full and mess with Robbie Kaplan and E. Jean
Carroll. And if he thinks he's going to keep screwing with them and they're going to walk
away, Robbie Kaplan's quoted in the Times two days ago, we are considering our options.
We know she got defamed again and we'll let you know in a couple days what we're going
to do, including about the Carol, the Carol one case.
And then I'll leave it on this bed for my part.
I don't know if you saw, I would probably put it up on the screen.
Takapena, for all of his terrible, bad form in the courtroom,
1980s, 1990s conduct towards Eugene Carol,
he did go over to the table, to the council table and shake her hand.
And I guess she grabbed a Kaplan's hand. And appropriately, E. Jean Carroll got the last word.
And she reports that she said to Joe Takapina, he did it, meaning Donald Trump. And you know it.
And then he walked off and didn't say anything in the back.
So I love the courage and the bravery of E. Jean Carol
right to the bitter end,
even when shaking hands with her opponent
and saying, you know he did it, you know he did it.
You know, when you look at videos of Joe Takapina
from even 18 months ago,
when he would make these media appearances,
he kind of even looks like a different person.
He talked like a different person.
He acted like a different person.
And when people are brought into Donald Trump's orbit, the toxicity is actually contagious.
Trump rubs off on the people around him and they then take on that same kind of really
despicable persona.
And when Takapina would make these media appearances, the way he would act in court was not as a
lawyer representing Donald Trump, but it was as a lawyer pretending to be Donald Trump
with the same exact kind of mannerisms and lies and kind of just despicable
way of treating people.
And that's why I think a lot of the public, including us here, were very critical of him
as the lawyer.
Look, Donald Trump was entitled to have a lawyer.
Donald Trump's entitled to have a lawyer.
And I don't fault lawyers for representing clients, you know, and representing clients
accused of very, very horrible and bad things. That's part of the system. And there is not
necessarily in the civil side, but in the criminal side, a constitutional right to that.
And that is an important right that people have. And so I don't think we should just
attack lawyers because they represent bad people or people accused of doing bad things. However, when the lawyer then acts like the client and the lawyer
engages in the behavior, that's when it's utterly problematic. The next point I want to make is that
and you may have touched on this too, is that judge Lewis Kaplan will also likely be the judge.
Not just he will definitely be the judge of the other defamation case that's still pending,
but in a new defamation case, it would likely be a related case.
Judge Lewis Kaplan would be the judge essentially of all these federal defamation case that
E. Jean Carroll would bring. So the fact that Donald Trump keeps on attacking the judge
and saying, cl Clint in appointee and
the worst judge ever, a horrible human being, that's not going to make judge Lewis Kaplan
go, you know what, I can't be the judge anymore.
It's not going that way at all.
So this is the judge Trump's going to have on all of these eGene Carol defamation cases,
I believe there. And then just kind of turning to your point about the town hall and Donald Trump statements
there.
And kind of like what's he doing?
The Maga Republican movement, they don't stand for law and order, right?
And so what that means and what Trump's approach approaches is basically screw the courts, right?
Like like screw what the actual law is.
I'm a dictator and and and I'm an authoritarian.
I'm going to make the law.
So you know, even in this area, it's like, I don't care.
I'm going to defame her.
Who cares?
If I'm elected, I'm going to destroy the freaking courts.
Like that's that's where he's betting. I'm going to take over this
country and I didn't complete what I wanted to complete in those four years, which is just
making this an entirely authoritarian state. That's why, to me, it wasn't even an accident.
It wasn't like Caitlin Collins asked him these hard-hitting questions about his theft of classified
records and about how
he acted towards Mike Pence.
Trump's just like, I don't care what the law is.
I'm not trying to defend myself through what a legal defenses.
I'm trying to defend myself the way Mussolini and the way Hitler took over a country.
Like, I'm going to take over this country and then I'm going to destroy the Department of Justice. That's where I'm going with this and that's the messaging
that I'm putting out there. And that's what he did throughout that entire CNN debacle.
Let's talk about all of that and more. Let's also talk about what's going on in the Manhattan
DA's criminal case. But first, let's take this quick break. Let's take a quick break to talk
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percent off. Thank you, Zbiotics for sponsoring this episode. Welcome back to legal a f. Ben
myself is joined by Michael Popec a busy week also in developments in the Manhattan district attorney's criminal
case for those 34 felony counts of falsifying business records against Donald Trump.
There was a hearing that was held last week where the judge stated he was going to issue
a protective order and has issued the protective order and is ordering Donald Trump, I think on May 23rd, to have
to show up via Zoom and listen to the judge as Judge Juan Mershan, the judge presiding over
the case in State Court reads the protective order to Donald Trump. Donald Trump is going
to have to actually be there on Zoom. The judge is going to lecture him on what the protective
order is and the fact that he could be held in contempt of court if he violates that.
So that'll be interesting when that takes place on May 23rd.
But some other big developments as well too, Popeye, right?
Donald Trump trying to delay this case by filing a removal, but then this week the judge
who eventually the case got assigned to Judge Hellerstein had a response to that,
which I don't think Donald Trump's gonna be able
to delay this thing.
And then some developments with Mark Pomerance
and the lawsuit that was filed
by the Manhattan District Attorney against Jim Jordan,
and a deal was cut where Pomerance would testify,
but Pomerance would be able to potentially
invoke various privileges.
So what's going on here, Popeye?
Yeah, I want to first comment on Donald Trump's continued cowardice, which you've so properly
outlined before we got to the segment.
Donald Trump outside the courtroom and his lawyers outside the courtroom and Donald Trump's
lawyers inside the courtroom are usually
two completely different things.
That's what's going to get Donald Trump ultimately more in trouble because he's manufacturing
evidence in a good way for the prosecutors almost every day because he leads this outside
life outside the courtroom without regard to what happens inside the courtroom
or what his lawyers tell him or wish he would stop doing.
And the lawyers do the same thing.
You know, you've done some good hot takes on Alina Habba,
you know, who we'd never heard.
Anything she was as quiet as a church mouse
during the actual trial itself,
but she's a big loud mouth when she's on newsmax
and seeing that, I mean, on the
right-wing media.
Same thing, Donald Trump, same thing, Tekka Pina, same thing, all of his lawyers.
His real lawyers, like Jim Trusty and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, stay on message, stay on script, but they got a client who's completely out of control. So when Judge Mershon gets him on that video on the 23rd of May, because the judge said,
I don't care where he's at, we'll get a video link.
I want Donald Trump in front of me.
I'm going to read him the protective order and basically the gag order.
So he knows the dos and don'ts, the rules of the road to avoid me fighting him in contempt.
You know what Donald Trump doesn't do during that other than saying yes sir and no sir.
He doesn't do the things to the judge there in a courtroom that he does outside.
He doesn't attack the judge.
He doesn't call him a hack.
He doesn't go after his daughter.
He doesn't go after the prosecutors.
He doesn't say this is all a sham.
Like you and I have seen defendants and we've seen it in the Jan 6th defendants lose their
minds in court and start yelling at screaming at everybody. Donald Trump doesn't do that because he's a coward.
He knows he can't get away with it there. He'll be found in contempt. It's just interesting.
We have to constantly talk about as you and I do with Karen and the three of us do about
the outside, you know, red meat throwing, maga, dollar, grifting, Trump and lawyers, and what happens in these courtrooms.
Now, I have a slightly different take
on why he filed the notice of removal,
and it's not related to delay,
because frankly, notices of removal,
where we've all been involved with those on the civil side,
don't delay, because they're decided, usually it's decided without an evidentiary hearing on the papers relatively quickly after
their filed. It's either removed because it belongs in federal court or there's grounds
to suck it out of state court or there aren't. And that's normally not a delaying tactic.
I have a different theory. My theory is that the reason that they're trying to get it away from Mershon is they're
trying to get it away from a Manhattan jury that they just had a two terrible experiences
so far in the last year in front of a Manhattan jury.
The two main subsidiaries of the Trump organization, 17 count felony
conviction, Manhattan district attorney with a Manhattan jury in state court with Susan
Necklace on the receiving end of that as the as the lawyer. And E. Jean Carroll, we have
another federal, I'm sorry, well, in that case, a federal grand jury, which could have been
made up of people other than Manhattan people, but I think he's haunted a bit by what happened to the
17-count felony conviction in state court.
The difference between state court and federal court is not just judges and a system and rules
and law.
It's also a jury pool. In New York, the federal court, civil or criminal, is the
Southern District of New York. That's where Judge Kaplan sits on the civil side for E. Jean
Carroll. The random wheel that is created, the master jury wheel is what it's called in all
federal courts and for the Southern District. For, for New York, Southern District of New York, where his case could be tried if he's successful
in the removal, which he will not be, but if he were, would pick up seven counties for potential
jurors, where there has to be a unanimous jury. Most of those counties, New York, Bronx, Westchester, Putnam,
Duchess, Sullivan, Orange, and Rockland are Democrat. But if you see a map, we might put it
up here today of what New York look like for the election, even though we keep talking about
New York being a blue state, it's a blue state because the urban centers overvote for Democrats, but the rest of the state is red.
It's red and then blue heading down to Manhattan.
And that's what wins the presidencies and the governorships usually in New York.
But for those, there's at least three counties that he's searching for a jury, a juror
to find that have reasonable doubt and not convict him.
In that case, Putnam County, for instance, he won Trump won by 9% over Biden, even when
Biden won the state.
Sullivan County, he won by 10 points, even though Biden won the state. Orange County, he won by a couple
of points. So there's, he's hoping for an orange county, Sullivan County, or Putnam County
person to be pulled into the jury pool and hope that he can get a hung jury or somebody,
or somebody that's going to find reasonable doubt in June. I think the 20, what is it, June, what, Ben?
June 15th, or no, 15th for the DA to respond,
the 27th for the evidentiary hearing.
He's gonna hold an evidentiary hearing.
I doubt he takes this into federal court.
He's told Mershawn in his order, Judge Hellerstein,
you do you, you do you, you continue to do you
in state court. I'm not gonnaershon in his order, Judge Hellerstein,
you continue, you do you.
You continue to do you in state court.
You set a trial, which is now set for either February or March,
which is also known as primary season of a criminal trial.
You set your trial.
I'll get back to you on whether the federal court's
going to take jurisdiction over this.
The argument that they've raised,
you and I talked about this a bit on a prior podcast,
the argument that the lawyers for Donald Trump is raising, to argue that they have the right
under the removal statute, to take the case into federal court, and to be clear, the court
would change if he's successful, not the prosecutor.
The prosecutor is still Manhattan, DA, Alvin Bragg.
The laws are still state law
violations. The only question is what jury, I mean the judge up until the jury, but what
jury would ultimately try the case. That's what's up for grabs. Sure, he was hoping for a Trump
appointee to be making these decisions and of course he didn't get it. He got Judge
Hellerstein instead who's the opposite of a Trump appointee, but under there is, he's a Clinton appointee, senior status judge that's almost 90 and has ruled against Donald Trump
ultimately and in favor of Michael Cohen on retaliation by Donald Trump against Michael when Michael
was making comments and social media and publishing books while he was still within the Bureau of
Prisons controlled by the Department of Justice.
So he's got the wrong judge.
They're gonna hold this here.
There he's got my prediction, and I wanna hear yours.
I've heard Karen's, Karen thinks it's possible
that the federal court could take jurisdiction.
Their argument is that Donald Trump repaid Michael Cohen
for the hush money while he was president
and that election law law federal election law crimes are
being implicated by the way that it's charged in state court.
And that is only something that should be ruled upon in federal court with federal preemption
and all of that.
I think this is a loser.
I think he's trying to get a better jury pool.
I think he's going right back to Judge Mershon and the Manhattan jury pool that he deserves.
Yeah. So these are New York state law criminal statutes. That's simple. It's not a complex
issue. By the way, Donald Trump, a professional rake stepper in his notice of removal, if
he's claiming that they're federal crimes as well, perhaps the
Department of Justice and the Feds should charge him with the federal versions of the
crimes.
Heck, they did it to Michael Cohen.
And one of the things Michael Cohen's been rightfully upset about is, and that's an understatement
is they should charge Trump with the same federal versions of these crimes.
So that's essentially what Trump's argument is that this implicates federal law.
Yeah, federal crimes, but you're not being charged with federal crimes.
You're being charged with state law crimes here in Popeye.
I'll give you, so it's not the Judge Hellerstein who ultimately got to sign this case, who
you just mentioned.
Judge Hellerstein is, I think, going to remand,
meaning send the case back, which he's already basically said,
it could, the proceedings can still be taking place
in the state court, but he will remand, send the case back
to state court where the proceedings will already be taking place.
I don't do not believe this case is going to stay
in federal court at all. I do have a friendly
disagreement with you though about Trump's ultimate reason for the removal because, you know,
I think you kind of hit on it when you were talking about the two cases because the first case you
mentioned in Manhattan court itself, the Manhattan jury pool and the Trump organization case where within
nine hours, the Trump organization was convicted on 17 felony counts and the Manhattan district
attorney's criminal case.
But the E. Jean Carroll case was in federal court, was in the Southern District of New
York.
Yes, there's a unanimous jury in federal court for civil unlike state court, but there is a unanimous
jury required in state court anyway.
So it's not like you're getting a bigger benefit in federal court there.
Trump in three hours was found liable by this federal jury.
I do get your point though that the jury pool is broader.
So for a criminal case, maybe you do pull a juror
from another county that could be more Trump friendly
than just say him and hat in jury pool.
But ultimately, I think what this was about,
and this is the next point we're gonna talk about
on this topic is Trump wanted this case
before a specific judge.
Trump goes judge shopping.
Trump's mind, very simple, you know,
and he just hits on certain
points. And Trump is the one who drives these things. So Trump remembers the experience
with Judge Eileen Cannon who took jurisdiction when she shouldn't have taken jurisdiction.
Now any other judge Trump probably would have drawn in the Southern District of Florida
would not have ruled away Judge Eileen Cannon did. It randomly got assigned to Judge Eileen Cannon in the case involving
the search warrant executed at Mar-a-Lago. And she took jurisdiction in a case she should
never have taken jurisdiction and it delayed things by about four or five months sort of
but not really. But it did delay things and create confusion until the court of appeals and the Supreme Court, and the court of appeals again, was basically like, okay,
you do not have jurisdiction.
What the heck are you doing?
Trump saw Judge Mary Kay Viscousill.
A judge he appointed rule in favor of Jim Jordan when Jim Jordan's basis for jurisdiction was that the Maga Republicans wanted to pass a law
that would immunize former presidents
from having any criminal liability and exposure at all.
Trump believed, what do I have to risk here?
If I could get in front of Viscousel,
maybe she'll grant a motion to dismiss.
Look what she just ruled for Jim Jordan. Maybe she'll just throw this whole case out.
So I've got a 10% shot or 20% shot, 10% shot
of drawing randomly Judge Viscousel.
Let me take my, I'll file a frivolous motion to remove.
Maybe I'll get this Trump appoint to judge.
Who knows, if it gets in front of her,
this case could just simply be dismissed and she'll accept jurisdiction or it'll be delayed, delayed, delayed, delayed
and that brings me though.
And that's why I think he ultimately filed it.
At first, he got judge Abrams and Obama appointee.
Her husband was on the Mueller investigation.
She recused herself and then went to judge Hellerstein and judge Hellerstein's been like,
do not delay this judge Juan Mershon
and state court keep going and doing what you are doing. We'll set an expedited briefing
schedule. I'll make a ruling on this in June and then we'll see what happens there. But
he's not going to accept the case and it's going to go back to state court. Frankly,
still is. But now, Pomeranso, I want to talk about Pomeran's though because it relates to Judge Mary K. Viscousel because
when the Manhattan District Attorney filed the lawsuit against, when Alvin Bragg filed the
lawsuit against Jim Jordan and the Maga Run Judiciary Committee, that case got assigned to this
Trump appointee, Mary K. Viscousel. Lots of people, most legal scholars and observers said, what's the jurisdiction that,
and that was your point too, Pope.
I guess no jurisdiction that the Judiciary Committee has
to try to interfere with what Alvin Bragg's doing
on the criminal case.
And then I told you, I said, yeah, you're right.
If you went by law and logic, I said,
this is a Trump appointee.
She's gonna to force,
she's going to force Mark Pomeran's to testify. And she did, but even in her own ruling,
she was like, but he doesn't have to testify on certain things if there are privileges.
And so what happened there, Popeye? Yeah. Yeah. You were right on that one, but I didn't
think the $5,000 that the feds had
given to the Manhattan DA's office and federal forfeiture funds, which is what it sounds
like.
Usually civil forfeiture when people do bad things and they also own property, a lot of
that property gets forfeited to the government.
Boats, planes, money, jewelry, something, usually gets sold if it's not used by the feds
for their other
undercover and other operations.
And that money is then a fund in different different state and federal organizations, usually
state organizations around the country can ask for money from it to fund things if they
need a new SWAT van for the police department or something related to COVID or this or that. And apparently, that DA's office took $5,000, not even Alvin Bragg, predecessor, and used
it for something, not even the actual storemeat Daniel's investigation, which is what this was
all about, but prior to that.
And that was the hook for the judge.
But now, it's fast forward, because some people have written in social media. What happened to that pomerance thing? Pomerance went in with a lawyer. They had already negotiated.
This was sort of baked before. When Alvin saw the writing on the wall with Judge Viscousel,
but he got to stay from the second circuit of pellet court in his favor, if you will,
that gave some breathing room for some negotiations between Jim Jordan and the lawyers, the general counsel
inside the Manhattan DA's office, the general counsel for the prosecutor to negotiate the
terms of condition, the rules of the road for that actual statement being given by pomerans.
And the rules were, yes, it would be under oath.
There'd be certain topics that would be off limits.
The general counsel for the Manhattan DA
would be able to sit there and object
and keep a watchful eye over it
to make sure that they didn't get into areas
that were inappropriate,
including their continued position
that everything, despite the fact that pomeranians wrote a book
called the People versus Donald Trump,
his fantasy of what his prosecution would look like, if he were the Manhattan district attorney,
which he was not. He was a special prosecutor that was brought in by the predecessor and then left
in a very noisy exit we've talked at length about because he didn't like the fact that Alvin Bragg
on his 90th day in office wasn't moving on the recommended prosecutions that he and another special prosecutor had made,
which wasn't his call, by the way, the people of the city, the people of Manhattan,
which I was one voted and they voted for Alvin Bragg not for Mark Pomeran. So in any event,
Mark Pomeran, despite the fact that he wrote a book, the position of the Manhattan DA's office is things that he learned while he was a special prosecutor in the office are highly
confidential. It should not be shared with the outside world, especially during the dependency
of an ongoing criminal investigation. That was their position. Pomerant's the writing on the wall
again for him with his own lawyer now represented by his own council issued a statement
Just before he gave his testimony in which he he told the world I have the right to protect the criminal investigation
I am going to I'm going to protect the criminal investigation. I've been instructed not to respond to the intricacies of what I learned
When I was a special prosecutor and if push comes to shove
I'm going to take the Fifth Amendment against self-incrimination and I'm not gonna answer questions that I can't answer or
I'm instructed not to answer by the General Counsel for the Manhattan D.A.'s office and after five or six hours
It sounds like a very frustrated
panel led by Jim Jordan didn't get much out of Mark, Mark pomerance.
But I have one open question for you.
It really has to do with my understanding of the Fifth Amendment and having, having counsel
clients in civil matters primarily about the application of it.
Generally, because we all talk about assert the Fifth, he asserts the Fifth, maybe he'll
assert the Fifth, but generally in order to assert a proper
assertion of the fifth amendment is when you is when you reasonably believe that you
could be indicted on a criminal matter because there's either an active criminal investigation
or something akin to it, which allows you to then assert the fifth amendment.
You know, you can't just assert it because, oh, maybe one day
sort of kind of, I could be criminally prosecutor. I'm not even sure what you'd be criminally
prosecuted for if he revealed these, the secret sauce over while he was there. It's a breach
of confidence. It's probably a rule, a professional responsibility and conduct and other things
related to prosecutors. I'm not sure it's a crime to do that. He wrote a book mainly on many of these same topics.
But here's a question, Ben.
If they don't like it and they find him in contempt, the Jim Jordan MAGA, you know, this
committee, and it's referred to the Department of Justice, which is a Biden led, Marigarlan
led Department of Justice, don't they have to find that that was a proper assertion
of the Fifth Amendment as a as a foundation?
Delph, it was a proper assertion. If you go into the statement that he
read, he says the following. Finally, the rule of law permits me to refuse to answer questions
that are not pertinent to a legitimate legislative function, or that seek information that is protected by the First Amendment's
guarantee of free speech under the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. I cannot be
punished for answering such question. There may be other privileges as well under the Fifth
Amendment to the Constitution, nobody may be compelled
to be a witness against themselves or herself in a possible criminal case. Shortly before
the publication of my book, the District Attorney's Office warned me that I could face criminal
liability if among other things I disclose grand jury material or violated a provision of the
New York City Charter dealing with the misuse of confidential information.
When we were before the United States District Court in April 19th, a lawyer from the Manhattan
District Attorney's Office said that my book, quote, exposed me to criminal liability.
While I'm certain I broke no laws, I'm not required to answer questions.
If my answers might be used against me in a criminal process,, if I had read that statement on my holiday,
I probably would have been able to answer my own question.
So, yes, it's ladies and gentlemen of our audience,
you have to have a fear that there is an outstanding criminal
potential prosecution against you.
But Mark did, because I had forgotten that the Manhattan DA had so warned him,
I was surprised at the beginning that the Manhattan DA didn't do more than write him that letter
and didn't go into court to try to stop the book. I know it's a prior restraint and there's whole
constitutional issues about First Amendment on that, but I thought the letter was a little bit weak,
but look, it's enough to scare the crap out of them and enough to invoke the Fifth Amendment,
and I'm sure that's what their General Counsel, Lisa, I forget her last name, I'll get it,
before this is over, made sure that that was asserted counsel, Lisa, I forget her last name, I'll get it before this is over.
I made sure that that was asserted.
All those Republicans came out so frustrated that Mark Pomeran didn't give them their testimony.
Let me give you the big difference here, though.
Pomeran showed up the information here that the Maggi Republicans are seeking is patently unlawful.
Pomerancin publishing that book made a mistake.
I believe he made a mistake in publishing that book,
the way he did and the timing that he did,
especially now that Donald Trump had given a deposition to New York Attorney General,
Now that Donald Trump had given a deposition to New York attorney general, Letitia James, and that treasure trove of information obtained in that deposition is now in possession of the
Manhattan District Attorney's Office.
And I believe they will be bringing the criminal case against Donald Trump for the things that Pomeran's wanted them to bring it earlier.
I just think the Manhattan DA's office had a different strategic plan.
But the main difference here is that Steve Bannon, Mark Meadows,
all of those people didn't even show up.
They did not respond.
They ignored the subpoena, or their lawyers said,
we're above the law. We don't have to show up. They did not respond. They ignored the subpoena or their lawyers said, we're above
the law. We don't have to show up. They didn't show up and then invoke any privileges at all.
And here, Pomeran showed up and vote the privileges. And, you know, they could, they could try
to hold him in contempt, but he has a constitutional right to do what he did. And as we learn more
about what took place there
We will of course update all the legal a efforts out there. Let's talk briefly about George Santos
Because I want to talk spend a little more time on the other topics and George Santos is such a loser that
He's not even worthy of that much time on legal a F
But look we've been talking about it here for a very long time that we thought
that not only is George Santos a everybody knows that he's a liar about everything and
should be, you know, summarily removed from his position in Congress, although Kevin
McCarthy relies on George Santos' votes and the modern day Maga Republican Party has
no spine and they are the party of people like George Santos.
I mean, they not just quickly recount light about everything
where he went to college, working at Wall Street.
That is, parents survived 9.11,
that his grandparents were Holocaust survivors,
that he was a volleyball star, that he played volleyball,
that he ran a charity, he didn't run a charity.
This is somebody who created a fake charity that wasn't a real charity and that prayed
on homeless military veterans by finding their sick pets and promising that he would do
a go-fund me account to raise money for their sick pets and Ray would raise $3,000 saying
that they were going to provide, he would provide life saving care.
It wasn't a real charity.
Santos would steal the money and then he would let the homeless military vets die.
I mean, and that is someone who was welcomed in to the modern day Republican Party.
But as we said, focus on the crimes here, focus on the crimes.
And all that stuff is disqualifying, but let's focus on the crimes.
And the crimes are, we have the fact that he lied on his disclosure forms in the House of Representatives.
And he would say that he had money that he didn't have and he would list income that was
false and he would list loans that he would give his campaign that were not actually loans
from everything he stated in his financial disclosures, essentially everything was false.
And the criminal, the 13th Count Criminal Indicament
out of the Eastern District of New York
focused on just a few of those misrepresentations,
specifically relating to him lying about his income,
both understating it in 2020,
and then claiming he was making $750,000
to a million dollars plus in dividends, which he was not making just totally lied
about that.
And he put that in disclosures.
That's a crime.
But they also focused on wire fraud.
He created this LLC and then would tell people
that the LLC was actually supporting his campaign.
And then he would take the $25,000 or $50,000 donations
he'd received and buy himself luxury goods
with those items.
And so that's wire fraud right there.
And then he engaged in crimes relating
to unemployment monies that were supposed to be made
available to individuals unemployed as a result of COVID,
as part of the CARES Act.
And he stole about $24,000 from that fund.
He was not unemployed.
He claimed he was unemployed,
and he stole $24,000.
Those were the main charges there.
I think we'll see a superseding indictment too
with more charges, but the Department of Justice
built their case, both the public integrity section
for main justice.
But this was really handled
out of the Eastern District of New York, Department of Justice Division. And I do think we'll see
a superseding indictment, though, with more charges. But I think they just wanted to make sure
they filed these charges because every time this guy walks around and, you know, and continues to engage in this
conduct is just, it's a, it's a national shame and embarrassment. And it's very analogous
to the fact that Donald Trump is a national shame and embarrassment. One other thing to
mention about Santos Popeyes, and if you want to hit anything there before we had the
next topics is that he also had to admit unrelated to the Brazilian authorities that he committed
those crimes as well.
And he avoided prosecution by admitting to fraud there.
So he is a convicted criminal internationally in Brazil.
He's admitted to that fraud.
Yet he still is Kevin McCarthy's position, we're not going to ask him to
resign. And he cast the key votes, by the way, on that could cause our country to default
on its debt and other horrific votes. He walks around with an AR-15 pin. I mean, really,
really disgusting.
Yeah. Yeah. So I was talking with a couple of criminal defense lawyer types in New York that no Breon piece, well, who's the US attorney for the Eastern District of New York in Brooklyn.
And they were struck by how strong in his press statement and press release, he was against
George Santos.
He said it was, it was a very aggressive set of statements about that this was a fraudulent
scheme and brazen misrepresentation.
He didn't hold back against them.
They know they've got the evidence that the George's Santos is ultimately dead to rights.
And as you said, there's three separate frauds that they brought relatively straightforward,
not a lot of moving parts.
There's a number of things that are identified in the indictment that not by name,
by company one, by investment firm one, by person one,
but the New York Times has done a good job
at identifying who that is.
Company one that's listed in the indictment
is likely redstone strategies,
a Florida limited liability company set up by George Santos
as a phony 501 C4 social welfare charity not related not supposed
to be related to politics in that way, which one of his campaign operatives who's also
identified as person number one, a friend and consultant for George Santos who led the
fake fundraising effort at Santos's direction.
According to the indictment, directed people to donate money there,
especially donors who had already maxed out
on the federal limit of contributions.
But there's no technical limit on 501C4,
which has all sorts of tax deduction
and IRS treatment implications,
which is why they get the benefit of that.
If it's legit, this one was not legit.
So one donor in particular donated $25,000 already being over the limit to give George
Santos any more money, sent it over to this redstone strategies owned by Santos, thinking
that it was going to be used for campaign ads and other things related to the campaign.
And then because you always follow the money when you're a federal prosecutor or a prosecutor,
they had already gone and gotten the credit card statements
of George Santos, the bank statements of George Santos,
and found and figured out that right after he got that money,
he went and used it for personal rent,
luxury items, luxury clothes, luxury goods,
just like in Brazil.
Same guy, just bigger fraud, bigger scam, bigger Ponzi. And so they were able to square
all of that. So that's, that's one. The other entity that is listed as investment firm number
one, which goes to the unemployment fraud, where he claimed in COVID that he was unemployed for
a period of time, went at the exact same period of time, he was drawing a hundred and twenty thousand dollar a year salary from a Ponzi scheme SEC shutdown entity in in Florida
called Harbor City Capital, which was already shut down by the SEC for for doing bad things.
And that one, he was drawing a salary at the same time.
They have the deposits into his bank account.
At the same time, he was telling the his bank account at the same time he was telling
the New York State Unemployment Commission and Department that he was unemployed drawing a salary,
I mean drawing unemployment insurance benefits from that period of time. So that's of course a fraud.
And then he had to figure out Santos had to hide all of these frauds. It wallpaper all over all
of them. So he misled, he falsely stated on his, as
you said, bad as House of Representatives disclosure form, both the ones that he did when he ran
unsuccessfully two years earlier and the ones when he ran successfully about where his money
was coming from, because he needed to hide all of that. The other person that's obviously
a cooperating witness, especially according to the New York Times investigative reporting.
That's not mentioned by name, but as a name as the term of art is used in grand jury
indictments, a person known to the grand jury is likely Ray Tantillo.
Ray Tantillo, a Long Island auto dealer, right before the election, Santos brokered between
donors that were that liked him for whatever reason because he's a liar and they liked him
Brokered the sale of a 19 million dollar yacht a boat
And I happen to know the family that he bought the boat from in Miami because I litigated against the husband
Who's a lawyer in Miami that also has a business that's very successful?
So it's it's already publicly disclosed that myra Ruiz
very successful. So it's already publicly disclosed that Myra Ruiz is the seller of the boat, the wife of John Ruiz, bought by Tantio for 19 million and that of commission went to
George Santos, which got pumped into his election. That's where some of that money that
we couldn't figure out. How did this guy work in four years ago for direct TV, trying to make sales, making no money in hour.
How does he have money to pump into his, because he broke her donors to try to grift off
of them at the same time?
So that Ray Tantillo is cooperating with the feds, according to reporting by the New York
Times, against Santos, whether whether the person who is his political operative, his henchman, for
collecting up all this money is cooperating.
If that person isn't, they better be because he's going down and he's going to take all
these people with him at the exact same time.
So I assume, at least two cooperating witnesses, they've got all the bank records and statements.
And I love when he says in his press conference conference Santos, I'm gonna vindicate myself.
I'm gonna clear my name and Matt Gates,
this is what happens when, you know,
the prosecutors don't go after people.
Matt Gates told me that I should vindicate my name
and this is America and I have,
I don't know how you vindicate bank records.
I don't know how you vindicate a credit card statements.
I don't know how you vindicate a card statements. I don't know how you've
vindicate a timeline that
clearly establishes that you've
stole money from donors under one
pretext and spent it on luxury
items. I don't know how you clear
your name. That is called wire
fraud. That is called male fraud.
And you'll go to jail. Let me just
end my my piece on this. For those
that say, get him out of the
Congress. He's not going anywhere.
As you said, Ben, even though he's given up or had taken away from him, all of his committee
assignments, he's still a vote that McCarthy needs on a very slim majority in that house.
I did a long time ago on a hot take. There is an ethics commission, but it's been
defunded and defanged by the Republicans. And it can't do anything. There's an ethics commission, but it's been defunded and defanged by the Republicans.
And it can't do anything.
There's an ethics committee, which is separate from the independent ethics commission that
is also now controlled by the Republicans.
And unless he's convicted, which it would take about a year, even going at warp speed
to get to trial
and all these other things.
And the only way to take them out is gonna be,
he loses the November 2024 election
and isn't seated in January of 2025
because it'll be a close call with how fast
Breon piece can get this case to trial.
You know, can he do it in six months?
I mean, maybe.
They did some of the Jan 6 stuff really quickly, but I think it'll
be a year out and the fastest thing that we can do is the voters of the third district
that he represents take them out.
But in the meantime, we're going to have to suffer having a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, uh, uh, crim, you know, potential criminals subject to his day in court, sitting
and serving in the US House of Representatives.
Yeah.
And it's not a both sides issue.
If this was a democratic member, I guarantee you the modern day democratic party in the
house of representatives would say, see you later.
This is humiliating and embarrassing.
This person's got to go or at the very least
Hakeem Jeffries would call out the person and say the person absolutely needs to go
But that's not who Kevin McCarthy is. I'm with you. I don't think this case goes to
trial before
2024 and I think
Ultimately, he's going to lose significantly and then be, um,
criminally, ultimately the charges are going to pile up. I think he's going to serve
very serious jail time, you know, because he thinks that he's, you know, they all put
themselves in the image of Donald Trump. Donald Trump's going to be held accountable.
I know that people are very frustrated as am I about the pace that it's
taking. But Donald Trump, because he was elected to the position that he was in 2016, he has a lot
more immunities and claims that he could at least assert than somebody like a George Santos.
And Santos is going to go to jail for a very, very long time. I think Trump is as well. Let's talk about Donald Trump and the treasure trove and smoking gun evidence that Special
Council Jack Smith has just been handed after this debacle of a town hall or whatever you
want to call it.
And then let's briefly talk about smartmatic and there's a pin of the Trump campaign.
And I think there's some relationship between those two things there as well.
We'll talk about that, but first let's take this quick break. This is Michael Popok from Legal AF.
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and use promo code legal AF at checkout. Welcome back to legal AF. I've been my cellist joined by
Michael Popak back from his Papaki invocation. So earlier in the episode we talked about this
debacle. I don't even want to call it a town hall because a town hall implies some objectivity and a cross section of a population that is diverse
and may be asking kind of tough questions. And that's just not what this was. They brought
in 400 Maga Republicans who laughed and mocked sexual abuse victims, laughed and mocked
as Donald Trump made a mockery of our law.
It was really disgraceful, Caitlin Collins.
She did do some minor pushback.
She was not up for the task.
It's a very hard task, but CNN did her no favors
by making it that format.
You also had that situation there where Donald Trump
would kind of lurk over her.
A lot of the Hillary Clinton debates.
The whole thing was, you know, truly traumatic for the nation to see that.
And that's one of the reasons CNN engaged in such journalistic malpractice is their
search for ratings, which will backfire, ultimately the trauma that that causes the
nation as well to see him make a mockery of sexual abuse after being found liable nine
to zero in our court of law, making a mockery of our laws and our democracy, making a mockery
of us defending our allies, you know, basically, you know, again, showing that he's Putin's
puppet. I mean, horrific things to that transpired.
But look, there are some moments there that I think will be actually very helpful for
special counsel, Jack Smith's investigation for Fulton County District Attorney, Fony
Willis's investigation.
I want to hear your take, Pope, but, you know, he basically admits to stealing the records,
which we know he does.
And he goes, basically, I could do anything I want to do when it comes to classified records.
And he goes with the, it's automatically declassified.
I took him.
I took him.
I could take him.
They automatically get declassified.
He continued to say how he's not sorry at all or apologetic about pens that pens did the wrong thing.
And Trump spread the disinformation and the criminal conspiracy, the overall scheme that
he was engaged in the green bay sweep of trying to have state legislatures overthrow the
free and fair election.
He talked about the call with Brad Raffensberger, which he said was a perfect call again, and
then Liden said that he never said, find the votes, but that he thought that that was perfectly
acceptable.
You put this all together, and I think it demonstrates Donald Trump's intent.
It goes to his men's rey.
He's aware of the common plan and scheme, right?
His lawyer in that letter they sent a few weeks back to
the House of Representatives to the Maga Republican Controlled Intelligence Committee because
they were trying to get them to intervene. They basically wanted act like the defense,
the lawyers, I think, were previewing is that Trump didn't know any of this. Trump, you
know, Trump, you know, if anything, it was just sloppy record keeping
and there was just mistakes that were made,
but Trump's not even aware of all of this
and Trump demonstrates here
that he's not only aware of it,
but he's directing all of it and he thinks he can do it.
You can do whatever you wanna do,
which he's wrong about.
What was your takeaway here, Popeye?
Yeah, he's in big trouble.
He cannot take instruction. If anybody's, if anybody's
giving him advice and counsel, they're either giving him terrible advice and counsel, or he is
just blowing through it as only Donald Trump, the narcissist, eco, maniacal person can do.
Because anyone who's a lawyer worth his salt and Jim trustee say what we want about him and he has an unpopular
client and one that doesn't listen to him but trustee's reputation before he took this case and
Representing him was pretty solid pretty stellar. He actually worked with Jackson Smith
And they were friends even though they had a different divisions under the Department of Justice prior to all of this and Tim
Parlatore will put him in a slightly different category, but,
you know, they're either not telling him, look, don't comment. You're going to get questions.
You just got convicted. You just got a judgment against you by a jury. I'm a sick convicted
about sexual abuse. Yesterday, you're going to get asked questions about it. Let's prepare
on what you should say about that on the civil side so you avoid future liability.
If anybody had that conversation with him,
he allows anybody to have that conversation with him
because you got to be able to speak truth to power.
It was ignored.
On all the pending criminal investigations by Jack Smith
and Fannie Willis and the Manhattan D.A.'s office,
I know the council was when you go on there
and you're asked questions about it,
A, don't say anything.
Just say, I would love to say it,
you know I'd love to say it,
you know me, I'm a truth teller,
but I've been told by my lawyers, I can't say anything.
If you can't say that,
then at least follow the script
of being consistent with things that we have said
in the courtroom or to the outside world.
And he couldn't even follow that.
I mean, he gives a lot of grief as to his Yahoo's that follow him and all these people
of the town hall meeting.
It looked like Jerry Springer died last week.
It looked like an episode of Jerry Springer with the whooping and the hollering and the machine engine being embarrassed about who they led into that town hall and how it
ended up being a laugh track, a laugh soundtrack like it was a like a 1980s sitcom of every
punchline of Donald Trump like he was at some sort of rally. But having said that, at
least beyond message, he says that Biden is daughtering,
and can't complete a sentence,
or can't deliver a video without a script,
which is a lie, Donald Trump we know,
because we have the outtakes, did have a script,
and was working off of it when he made his Jan 6th video.
But stay on message.
Tim Parletor, just a week or so ago, along with Jim trustee, we have a copy
of the letter, set the 10 page letter to the House Intelligence Committee, trying to beg
the Republican House Intelligence Committee to take control, whatever that means, of the
Mar-a-Lago investigation. And they took the position that it was a hectic departure
from the White House. I don't know why, he knew, maybe because he refused
to admit he lost, so he didn't do any planning
about the departure.
And there were boxes everywhere, and it was rushed
to get out, and things got thrown in there,
and he didn't know about them, and it was inadvertent at best.
That's not what Donald Trump said at the town hall.
At the town hall, he said, I took him.
I didn't take him by accident.
I had every right to take them.
I, and I may have showed classified documents to people.
Like he admitted that he, he says,
I don't know if I did, but I could have.
I was allowed to, that's false under the law.
The, I took them and there was my right to take them.
That's false and an admission that he retained documents, classified documents
that violate at least two statutes that I can think of, including obstruction and the SB
Nage Act, showing documents that are classified, another criminal violation. He said, I never
made a secret out of taking the boxes. That's a lie. And why would then which you have somebody like Walt
Maddow, your valet, your body man, move boxes away from the area of storage when you were
negotiating or whatever your lawyers were doing with the Department of Justice about the
turnover. He kept saying Ben, and hope why would you have your lawyers submit declarations
under penalty of surgery, stating that you don't have the documents. Right. Right.
Right. This is not consistent with somebody that thinks he's done nothing wrong. This is consistent
with a guilty heart and a guilty mind. He also had this weird verbal tick bed. I don't know if you
picked it up. I was traveling. I didn't watch the video, but I've now read the transcript. There's
a written transcript that CNN has put out. He kept saying, well, we were negotiating with NARA,
the National Archive. We were negotiating. We were well, we were negotiating with NARA, the National
Archive. We were negotiating. We were negotiating. We were negotiating. Negotiating what? You stole
the documents that were top secret and classified at least a hundred. It's not your right to
negotiate for their return, like they're a hostage, and you've got to show proof of life
and change for a ransom. And we already know there's testimony that he wanted something in exchange.
He wanted the Hillary Clinton server files or the Hillary Clinton, whatever
files in return for, because again, as you've always said, transactional and exchange,
right? A quid pro quo, Zelensky.
I won't give you the $450 million weapons deal unless you open up
an investigation against Hunter Biden and Joe Biden.
Oh, wait, this is Donald Trump.
He's always cutting a deal.
He's a really, a middling, real semi-failed, I'll say it out loud, real estate developer,
a casino operator.
Okay, think about those industries that the majority of the electorate voted
him into office when the rest of New York who knew him well and grew up with him. I grew
up in the New York New Jersey area, watch them since I was a child.
Let's be fair, wasn't the majority of the electorate? It was the electorate.
It was the electoral college. Well, that's why that, that's why that the electorate be the electoral college.
But in any event, this, this is the guy that gets it.
He kept saying this, negotiating, negotiating, negotiating, it was negotiating.
You shouldn't be negotiating.
The fact that you're admitting that, that you've retained things that you thought you're
entitled to, which is inconsistent completely with the 10 page letter that his lawyers just
try to set up for him a defense
of innocence of no culpability blown out of the water by Donald Trump. Look, Jack Smith
gets a lot of flak, including sometimes on this show because they, the people think he's
moving too slow or the wheels of justice are not grinding fast enough or hard enough or
on the timetable that we would all like. But every day, I've said this before and so of you, every day that Donald Trump remains
a free man, but subject to criminal investigations is another day that Donald Trump says something
or does something that helps the prosecution.
Now eventually, you got as Karen is likes to say, you can't have analysis paralysis.
You got to like prosecute when you think you got your case, your eyes,
your teeth crossed, your witnesses lined up, your evidence lined up on your cases.
And whether you're doing one at a time, Mar-a-Lago and the other,
Jan 6, the other two issues, are you doing them all together as a package deal
to present to, to present to America, and which Jack Smith has to do.
Let's all remember, we keep calling it the Jack Smith
prosecutions, but he has to make a recommendation
to America, and who has to either accept
or reject it case by case.
And then if he rejects the prosecution,
he has the answer to it to the House Judiciary Committee
and the Senate Judiciary Committee,
but that's for another day.
But that was on Mar-a-Lago.
We talked about Eugene Carroll and all the bad things
he said about her, which will likely lead
to another defamation case.
And then on Jan 6th, he did it again.
He refuses to acknowledge that he did anything wrong.
Everything is perfect.
Every email and tweet is perfect.
He never accounts for the missing three hours
where he sat in the
dining room watching gleefully as his people attacked the Capitol, attacked Mike Pence
and went after elected officials. In fact, he continued to lie about things that we know
from the Gen 6 committee about what he did and the statements that he made and the timing
of those statements. You know, even down to the National Guard blaming Nancy Pelosi for the National Guard when his own
acting Secretary of Defense has already, Chris Miller has already testified that Donald Trump never
gave the order to release the National Guard. And that's where it has to come from. It has to be
the commander in chief. But we had no commander in chief on Jad 6th.
That everybody knows it.
So just as you and I and the Midas mighty
are going through carefully the video
and transcript for the town hall,
so is Jack Smith and the investigators
to add that to the indictment.
Just as we've seen when he was on Twitter,
Donald Trump's tweets being used against him,
his social media truths being used against him,
statements that he's made at rallies, at speeches,
at press conferences, at interviews,
all being cut and pasted,
literally into the body of the indictment
or the pleading, we are going to see this again.
Mark our words here, whatever today's data is, I've lost track after the vacation. Mark our words, things that
happen in the CNN town hall are going to make their way into Faudiwellis and or Jack
Smith's written indictment.
And then finally, let's just turn to this smartmatic lawsuit against Fox, right? This defamation case is still going on. Fox is not out of
significant exposure after settling with Dominion for $787.5 million. Smart
Maddags demanded over $2 billion in states. They're not going to settle for anything less than
and states they're not going to settle for anything less than dominion. And that's the floor they call it in their ongoing lawsuit. But a lot of developments in this
marty case as well. You know, there was a judicial hearing officer who I guess deals with
discovery disputes before the actual judge rules and some of these New York state cases. I don't
practice day to day in New York state, but in reading the orders, it seems that
this judicial hearing officer and the smartmatic case limited the discovery
that they were able to get and the judge judge Cohen, who's the you'll start
hearing more about, who's presiding over the smartmatic defamation case, was
going along
with what the judicial hearing officer was recommending until the dominion settlement and then the
judge there's like uh uh like we saw what happened in dominion smartmatic should be getting
basically the same discovery that dominion got in Delaware we should not be limiting that here
at all and it's having a ripple effect, what went down
in Delaware's superior corn and the settlement
that Dominion got.
And it's allowing Smartmatic now to conduct a lot more
discovery.
And to follow the trail, that Dominion left everybody
when ultimately Dominion settled that case before trial.
And one of the most recent things that Smartmatic did in addition to prevailing on a motion to expand the scope of discovery,
they sent a subpoena to the Trump campaign. And look, we've now, and one of the reasons
they did that, right, is we've seen through the dominion lawsuit and the Abby Grossberg
lawsuit. She was the executive producer who worked at the Tucker
show and before that, the Maria Barteroma show, who sued Fox for sexual harassment, retaliation,
discrimination, intimidation. She's been providing these pre interviews where you see like Trump
administration officials with Maria Barteroma and others before these shows, basically like,
we don't really have any information or evidence about this, but just push January 6th.
Just talk about the January 6th.
We need more attention on January 6th.
So no doubt that's one of the things that SmartMatics
looking for there.
But I ultimately think SmartMatic may also want to try to
request the deposition of Donald Trump.
And it'll be interesting to see, I think this is the first step to that.
And I think ultimately they may get a deposition of Donald Trump, but that's to be continued.
Anything else you want to add on smartmatic Popeye?
No, I practice in New York.
So the judges either use what's called a judicial secretary, law secretary, which oftentimes are people that want to be judges in the future.
And they run a lot of the courtroom before you get into the courtroom.
But in this particular part of New York, they use, especially cases that will have complex discovery issues,
a discovery referee or hearing officer.
As you just know, it was appointed early on in the case to help judge Cohen sort out what he knew was going to be because he's got eyes and he's watching
what happened in Delaware on these things.
Sometimes it's called a match of straight, a federal courts often use a match of straight
judge for discovery issues.
And this is that sort of equivalent of referee or a hearing officer related to it.
And that's how we learned, as you said, about this April, Sopena, and we're just hearing
about it now. And then once that subpoena is served on the
Trump campaign related to everything Fox, everything fraud allegations in the election and everything
smartmatic, the subpoena has been issued and served. And the third party, in this case,
the Trump organization, the Trump campaign, can move the court to either what's called
quash the subpoena, meaning have it be rejected and not be enforceable or narrow it or limit
it in some way as the time or subject matter and that's everything.
And that's going to be that battle that's going to go on next.
They've also, we've talked about it on prior podcasts and hot takes.
They've also smartmatic subpoena bill bar.
So they're going after the hot button people in and around Donald Trump and Donald Trump
ultimately.
And if they can make out a case that citizen Trump, he likes to call himself the president
of the United States and and the CNN moderator
gave him that courtesy, which I think he's already forfeited the right to continue to be
called the president of the United States when he's addressed.
But citizen Trump doesn't have any privilege or protections or anything like that.
He might have a couple of things he'll try to assert, but he can just be subpoenaed for
deposition.
Like anybody else, he can argue that he doesn't have any relevant knowledge. And it's a burden on him and it's a rassing.
But you know, I'm not sure he wins that in Judge Cohen believes that there's merit to
the case. It believes that it's it survived already a motion to dismiss. And for those
that are wondering, why is this on a so much slower track talking about wheels of justice
than the Delaware case with Dominion,
which led to the settlement, but a $1.6 billion, very similar, very, very similar cases.
They, I was going to say they copy each other, but if imitation is the sincerest form of
flattery, then Dominion should be flattered because a lot of what they did is in the smortmatic
pleadings.
But that's in New York State Court.
And as we've said before, Delaware moves very, very quickly because it's a place where business
law is developed and businesses look to have certainty.
And the only way to get that is to do things quickly.
So things go in rapid pace down there.
It's a rocket docket when it comes to companies and corporations that are Delaware corporations like Fox.
This one's in New York and New York it's like on a normal track and on a normal track
means we're going to do a year of discovery maybe a year and a half.
This case is going to be like a 2025-2026 event.
But I thought a very I'll leave you in my comment on this Ben.
I thought it was very interesting'll leave you in my comment on this, Ben. I thought it was very interesting
watching the progression of Fox corporation, Lockland Murdoch and others and their press statements when they're reached for comment because now they spend about three-quarters of
their statement talking about the damages, not the liability, talking about that damage number,
oh, $2.7 billion, so big, so improbable.
You know, chilling effect in our First Amendment rights,
they do very little now after dominion
in saying that there's no liability,
that they're gonna win on defamation,
that they're gonna win,
that they were just neutrally reporting
about smart-matics involvement with a phony conspiracy
that was made up in the favored imagination of people like Sydney Powell and others, and
linking them to Dominion and linking them to Venezuela and to China and to Hugo Chavez
and to this poor other guy that Fox settled with, they said was the leader, a businessman
for Venezuela who was the leader of this fake,
non-existent, magical thinking conspiracy.
So they know they're going to lose on liability.
The law in New York is almost the same as the law in Delaware.
In fact, the law of New York applied in a certain aspect in the case down in Delaware related
to defamation because of where it was done.
So they know they're going to lose.
So the only thing they're left with is the damage.
The damage number numbers so large
They'll never get that number, but you know what if they want to avoid amen back We're this back to a theme of this show a men hat and jury
Not federal
jury picked in Manhattan with dozen skew Fox
May and knowing what happened down in dominion with a judge who knows what happened down in Dominion with a summary judgment process just like what will happen?
It will happen in New York just like it happened there with all these emails and all these all these
Witnesses now fired like Tucker Carlson and others the case for the case for smart medic up better not worse
It's stronger than Dominion at this point because what's happened in the wake of dominion and they'll be the beneficiary of it.
The number goes up for settlement.
They're going to settle this case, but they're not going to do it this year because they
just took a giant hit on their on their financials.
They're already in a lost position for the year, you know, based on where they were the
year before.
So they're not going to do it again in 2023 and totally take their stock while they
try to maybe sell the company, which we've talked about and sell the assets.
And then maybe they'll make that payment in 2024
when they see how they're,
if their revenue recovers from the departure of Tucker Carlson.
And maybe just maybe the Manhattan case will be televised.
We'll see, in Delaware, Superior Court, imagine that, right?
That Fox would have to cut that check for $787.5 million to Dominion because they wanted
to avoid a trial there that was not going to be televised.
And then they still have to go through the same trial with Rupert and Locklin and all
of those and a fired Tucker Carlson now testifying and all those individuals
and it would be all on TV the judge on that last point Ben.
That's why it's almost assured to me that they're going to settle.
They're just not going to settle and take another hit in this year's finances.
This is where business and law and politics all come together.
They're gonna take that,
they're gonna take that right down on their finances,
but in 2024, they have to settle the case.
They know what happened down there.
It scared the crap out of them
and what really scared the crap out of them
are even the emails that you and I didn't even know about
that were redacted, blackened out when they were filed
about Tucker Carlson, that so scared filed about Tucker Carlson that so scared
them about Tucker Carlson, they fired the guy. You think they'd carry him at least long
enough until they got through the smartmatic process, but they couldn't even carry him because
they knew those were going to see the light of the day. And smartmatic has those same,
those very same text messages and audio clips. But now you got a Tucker Carlson, they can't control because he's not aligned with them
any longer, testifying effectively against them
in smartmatic.
It's crazy.
Well, where law and politics and business
and common sense and where it all meets also is right here
on legal AF, it's been such a pleasure sharing this this weekend legal AF with you, Popak and all the legal
AF was out there.
We covered a lot of topics, wheels of justice, keep turning in the right direction.
It's going to be a very, very busy summer for us.
So I'm glad to have Michael Popak back from Popyes and vacation time. And we will be here covering the latest updates
and making sure that we break down
and ways that make sense.
A bunch of these legal cases that people tried to make way
more confusing and way more complicated
and way more inaccessible than they actually should be.
So thank you all for watching. This episode
of Legal AF, make sure you hit subscribe on our YouTube channel. We're on our way to 1.5 million
subscribers are very close to hitting 1.2 million. That's 200,000 new subscribers since
about late was a late March when we hit the 1 million mark. So that's going at a great pace.
But let's hit 1.5 million by this summer.
We're almost in the summer.
So make sure you hit subscribe, share this channel,
tell friends, family, colleagues, co-workers,
anybody you know about legal AF, subscribe on audio.
If you just watch on YouTube for audio listeners,
subscribe on YouTube if you just listen to audio.
Go to store.mitustouch.com for the best pro democracy gear, 100% made in the USA, 100%
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Thank y'all for watching this.
We'll see you next time on Legal AF.
I'm Ben Myself as joined by Michael Popak, shout out to the Midas Mighty.
you