Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Trump’s LAST DITCH Scheme IS DOOMED to Fail
Episode Date: June 12, 2024Michael Popok —a practicing NY lawyer—explains Trump’s unlikely path to have his criminal conviction overturned on appeal in New York, when he can actually take his appeal, the likelihood that N...Y’s highest court will even be interested in such an appeal, the timing of the appeal late process, and whether the Supreme Court will bail out Trump. Head to https://TryFum.com/legalaf and get a FREE GIFT with the JOURNEY PACK today when you use code LEGALAF Visit https://meidastouch.com for more! Join us on Patreon: https://patreon.com/legalaf Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown Lights On with Jessica Denson: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/lights-on-with-jessica-denson On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This is Michael Popak, Legal AF.
It's time to talk about Donald Trump's appeal chances.
Is he going to take an appeal?
What's it going to be an appeal on?
Is it going to be reversed his conviction by the appellate court?
Which appellate court?
Are we talking about the state appellate court or the federal appellate court?
And when can he appeal?
And what happens to his sentencing as a result?
I'm going to break it all down for you right here on this particular hot take. Special shout out to
Stavis, he did a very nice job as also a practicing lawyer in New York in the New
York Times op-ed piece about the appellate procedure in New York. I'm gonna
break it all down for you here. First, Donald Trump has a conviction
obsession. He can't stop talking about the conviction on the campaign trail
just to switch over to politics as part of law and politics here on our legal AF hot take.
And so that obsession, he talks about it constantly, the lawless conviction, the witch hunt, the
kangaroo court, disparaging and undermining the validity of 12 jurors in New York that
took time out of their busy lives to serve their civic duty
and listen to the evidence and convict him.
And that obsession, of course, while it may work to foment and whip up his red meat base,
it doesn't do well with the swing voters.
And that's what a lot of Republican operatives are worried about.
In other words, keep talking about your conviction, Donald, because all you're doing for making
sure that you're going to get the votes you are already going to get, you're losing votes
that you need in order to win the election.
Good on him.
Let's switch places now, switch and talk about the appeal.
Donald Trump and his proxies, Steven Chung, his spokesperson, Alina Habba, even Todd Blanch, when he gets the
opportunity as his lawyer, talks about his great likelihood of
success on appeal. Let me shoot that down right now. The chances of Donald Trump
reversing his conviction are slim. Slim to none. Just to give you a statistical
backdrop, only 5% or so of New York convictions are reversed on appeal. It's not impossible.
There are certainly convictions that are reversed on appeal, but 95% of convictions are either not
appealed or they're affirmed on appeal. So that's the steep mountain that Donald Trump has to climb,
5% chance. And then you have to have reversible error, error in the record that led as the appellate court
determines directly to the conviction.
Reversible error, not harmless error in contrast.
Reversible error means the person would not have been
convicted but for this error that happened during the trial.
Something about the indictment,
something about the crimes that have been charged,
something about evidence that was let in
or shouldn't have been let in.
Something about a certain type of testimony,
something about a decision by the trial judge
in exercising his discretion to dismiss certain counts
or not dismiss certain counts,
allow certain witnesses or not allow certain witnesses,
make decisions about if Donald Trump testified,
what he could testify to, those types of decisions.
Now, the Sixth Amendment of our US Constitution
does not guarantee a perfect trial.
There's no such thing as a perfect trial.
I should know, I put on 35 of them in my career.
It's not a perfect trial that you're guaranteed.
It is a fair and impartial trial.
Those two things are different.
Error happens every moment, every day, in every trial.
If it's harmless error,
meaning it did not lead to the conviction,
it's just part of the, you don't get a perfect trial,
you get a fair trial, you know, mix.
What's an example of a harmless error?
You know, during the, this was in Stavisavis' op-ed piece in the New York Times,
and it's a good one. It's a good example. When Stormy Daniels took the stand and testified,
a lot of sordid, gory details about the sex related to her and Donald Trump and about her fear
potentially that she wasn't able to leave
and that she was being physically prevented
from leaving the room suggesting
that this was not consensual sex.
In other words, another sex crime by Donald Trump,
having already been a judged of a sex crime
in a civil context in the E. Jean Carroll case
for abusing her sexually.
That was the problem.
But that's another one of
those examples of it's error for the judge to have allowed that or for that testimony to have been
elicited. It is harmless error because it didn't lead or couldn't possibly be argued that it led
to his conviction, Donald Trump's conviction. They didn't convict him because they didn't like that
one comment that Stormy Daniels made about the nature of her sex with Donald Trump. That's harmless error. If
it's error at all, again, reversible error is the one that leads to the conviction. Should Michael
Cohen have taken the stand? The answer to that is yes. Should a mistrial have been granted by the
judge when he didn't grant it? Was his decision not to grant a mistrial, was that an error? If
that is an error, that's reversible error.
The judge making a decision to allow the indictment to go forward with the two crimes joined together in order to make this into a felony. Business record fraud in New York,
as everyone now knows or should know, is a misdemeanor in New York. However, if it is attached to a second crime,
if there is an intent in making the business record fraud,
if there is an intent to commit another crime
or conceal the commission of another crime
by unlawful means, then you have a felony.
So that is where Donald Trump will likely try to argue for reversible error,
that the judge allowed the second crime and he charged the jury on the second crime, which is
New York election interference, meaning that Donald Trump tried to bury the Stormy Daniels affair by a payoff,
which was an illegal campaign contribution,
improperly and never reported
under the Federal Election Commission Act,
the federal election crime,
or it was a tax issue because it was listed improperly
on the books and records of the Trump organization,
thumbs up on that, as a legal expense to Michael Cohen.
That is where they're gonna try to pick at the thread
and unravel this prosecution and argue
it was a reversible error to allow the judge,
for the judge to allow this case to go forward
with that as the second predicate act.
Now let's unpack
that for a minute. First of all, any argument that Donald Trump wasn't aware
of the criminal charges against him and therefore couldn't mount a proper
defense, that was sort of taken away by Judge Mershon who in the middle of
February in a 20 or 30 page decision laid out exactly what the indictments charges were against Donald Trump
and what he had to defend against. So that takes away the argument that, well, we couldn't figure
it out from the indictment. We didn't know. And then it seemed to be a little bit wishy-washy
during the presentation of the evidence. We didn't know exactly what the crimes were being
charged with. That was sort of taken away. The knees were cut out from under that argument in mid-February by Judge Marshawn in issuing this very substantial substantive ruling
about the nature of the crimes. So the only issue is going to be whether the,
there's two stops on the appellate train in New York. First stop is the appellate division
first division. Let me try it again, because I'm a member of it, I should get it right.
The Appellate Division First Department,
the Appellate Division is the intermediary appellate court
in New York, and then the state is divided into regions
or in divisions, and the First Division, First Department,
if you will, for New York covers Manhattan.
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You have as a criminal defendant who's lost,
you have an automatic right, mandatory right to appeal
to the first level court, right?
The appellate department first,
the appellate division first department, right? That's goingate department first, you know, the appellate division
first department, right? That's gonna be where he's going as a matter of right.
And they're gonna have to look at these issues. Now, we know Donald Trump's gonna
throw everything at the wall and see if anything sticks. He's gonna raise all the
errors that he says the judge Rashad made, but the focus here, the only one
that really will probably, that the
court will find interesting, the appellate court will find interesting, is about the second crime
issue and whether it was properly charged, if it was properly proven. Of course, you always have
the fact that 12 jurors did unanimously fine against 34 counts against Donald Trump.
So that's going to be the laser focus. Now, if they decide, which I believe they will,
that the second predicate act of this particular crime, an intent to commit another crime or
conceal the commission of a crime and then having that knit in with the federal election crime or
the tax fraud crime, that's going to be proper. Then if they decide that, really,
the appellate opportunities for Donald Trump have just narrowed considerably, because the
chances of getting that second appeal to the Court of Appeals is even narrower. That is not mandatory.
The intermediary appellate court is going gonna have to decide that they need guidance from the court of appeals.
It's not an automatic right to get an appeal
to the highest level court in New York,
the court of appeals.
You have to get permission
from the intermediary appellate court.
And that's probably unlikely.
Only if it's something that they think
there needs to be clarification
about this particular body of law
and the use of this body of law by future prosecutors and that type of thing. But
short of that they don't even take the case at the appellate at the highest
level of New York. It kind of dies right there at the intermediary appellate
court where most appeals do die in New York. They get resolved at that first
level intermediary appellate court, and they never get any higher.
That's unlike other states where you have a right
to go to the Supreme Court of that state, for instance,
for other reasons.
But New York, it's a much narrower path to appeal.
And then you've got, I just want to address quickly
this argument that keeps getting floated by Todd Blanche
and other people around Donald Trump,
usually ones who are not appellate lawyers, which is that there's a chance for the United States Supreme Court
to weigh in.
First of all, they're not going to weigh in unless and until there's a decision by the
highest court of that particular state.
So if it never gets to the Court of Appeals in New York, the likelihood of it ever getting
to the Supreme Court is almost zero.
But let's say it did get to the Court of Appeals. Even then, there has to be a fundamental
United States constitutional issue
that at least four of the judges originally see
as being presented by the conviction of Donald Trump.
This is not a case where there is executive privilege.
This is not a case where he was even president
during the time. This is not a case where there is immunity or supremacy clause issues. And those are the ways
that the Supreme Court finds a way in as a hook into a case. So that while they can try some sort
of writ of habeas corpus and jump over and have the United States Supreme Court take an appeal,
that is even a narrower path and the chances of that are
well under one percent. It's infinitesimal. And so while they talk about it because it gives them a
lot of, they get a lot of mileage out of it, they block the sun with these arguments. In reality,
they're not going to get a United States Supreme Court decision or involvement, not even with this MAGA right-wing six to three United States Supreme Court.
So it's going to likely die with a loss for Donald Trump at the intermediary appellate
level of the first department.
Now timing, let me just end the hot take on timing.
The Donald Trump can't take an appeal, emergency or otherwise, until the
judgment of conviction is entered by Judge Mershon, which hasn't happened yet. There's been a verdict
of conviction, but a judgment of conviction when it makes him an officially convicted felon is on
July 11th at the same time of the sentencing. At the sentencing hearing where Judge Mershon will
mete out a sentence that fits the crimes,
and I've done other hot takes and so have other contributors about the range,
from probation community service all the way up to a top of 20 years and everything in between,
that's all on July 11th. Then that whole set of decisions, the judgment of conviction,
along with the sentencing, kind of come together in a package and that can be appealed from by Donald Trump,
as I said, as a right, as a right mandatory appeal
to the first department.
That takes a while.
The sentence will likely be abated or stayed
until the appeal happens.
The appeal could take over a year or more.
And I don't really see a purpose for him,
especially if the sentence has been stayed,
which the judge is likely to do, frankly.
He's not gonna remand him immediately,
even if there's incarceration involved,
given his first time offender
and not necessarily a violent criminal,
although we all like him to go in.
It's unlikely that's gonna happen.
So he'll stay out.
There'll be a full appeal on briefing.
It's probably not gonna be until a late 2025 event
when we get a final briefing and an opinion,
a decision by that appellate division.
And then he'll have to try for another appeal.
We're talking about a 2026-ish
final resolution of the conviction of Donald Trump and his sentencing. That's just the way it's going
to be. And even if it now if he ends up getting somehow restored to the presidency, he's then
going to argue that he can't be bothered with any of these appellate issues while he's in office for
something that happened before he was a president and then the appellate courts are gonna have to decide whether and
that could go to the United States Supreme Court whether that those
proceedings can continue if the off chance that he somehow gets restored to
the presidency. We'll follow it all just like I did there on Midas Touch YouTube
channel and on Legal AF and after hearing this description on this outtake now
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So until my next hot take, until my next Legal AF,
this is Michael Popak reporting.
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