The Daily - A Law Used Against the Mafia — and Now Trump
Episode Date: August 15, 2023On Monday, former President Donald J. Trump and 18 others were indicted by an Atlanta grand jury, with Mr. Trump and some of his former top aides accused of orchestrating a “criminal enterprise” t...o reverse the results of the 2020 election in Georgia.Richard Fausset, who covers politics and culture in the American South for The Times, explains why, of all the charges piling up against Trump, this one may be the hardest to escape.Guest: Richard Fausset, a New York Times correspondent based in Atlanta.Background reading:A grand jury in Georgia indicted the former president and 18 allies on multiple charges related to a conspiracy to subvert the will of voters.Here are the latest developments in the investigation.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
Today, a Fulton County grand jury returned a true bill of indictment, charging 19 individuals
with violations of Georgia law arising from a criminal conspiracy
to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in this state.
On Monday night, Donald Trump was indicted for a fourth time since leaving office,
this time by a local prosecutor for his attempt, along with 18 alleged co-conspirators,
to overturn the 2020 election results in the state of Georgia.
Specifically, the indictment brings felony charges against Donald John Trump,
Rudolph William Louis Giuliani, John Charles Eastman.
I spoke with my colleague, Richard Fawcett,
about why of all the charges now piling up against Trump,
this one may be the hardest for him to ever escape.
It's Tuesday, August 15th.
So Richard, it's almost 1 a.m. on Tuesday morning because grand juries don't care about newspaper deadlines
or journalists' sleep schedule.
So I'll spare you any small talk and just jump right in.
I want you to give us an overview of this
fourth indictment against Donald Trump, which we got just about two hours ago.
Sure. This is a state of Georgia indictment that charges former President Trump and 18 of his associates and allies of a really broad range of crimes, all of them in an effort to
overturn the election in Georgia. And in a lot of ways, Michael, it is exactly what the prosecutor
here in Fulton County, Fannie Willis, sort of insinuated, if not promised, which is that
she is very fond of the RICO statute, the racketeering statute in Georgia,
that allows prosecutors to tie together all kinds of different crimes and actions in one big package
and show that there's an organization that exists to carry out a corrupt scheme.
And that's, in fact, exactly what she did here.
There's a really interesting passage in the very front of the indictment that explains
what this corrupt scheme was.
And if you'll give me one moment, I'll find it for you.
The introduction states, defendant Donald Trump lost the United States presidential
election held on November 3rd, 2020.
One of the states he lost was Georgia.
Trump and the other defendants charged in this indictment
refused to accept that Trump lost
and they knowingly and willfully joined a conspiracy
to unlawfully change the outcome of the election
in favor of Trump.
That conspiracy contained a common plan and purpose
to commit two or more acts of racketeering activity
in Fulton County, Georgia,
elsewhere in the state of Georgia, and in other states.
So right there, you have, in very plain language, a real narrative.
It's the story, according to these prosecutors,
of a group of people who got together at a set period of time
and committed a number of acts in furtherance of a corrupt aim,
which was to overturn the very narrow election
loss of Donald J. Trump in Georgia in November 2020. Right. You had warned us that this would
be the district attorney's approach in this case where we talked to you about this investigation
many, many months ago. But just explain racketeering, Rico, as a legal concept,
how it applies here and why it seems so central to this
indictment? Well, very often the way we see racketeering used by prosecutors, it's a way to
tie a bunch of people working together toward a common nefarious goal and hold them all accountable
up and down the chain of command. And we saw this in the context of the
mafia, where you would see people getting arrested for extortion. But then once they were arrested,
perhaps convicted, some other low-level foot soldier would come along and commit an act of
extortion. The shot callers remained somewhat immune. In the case of Rico, you can show a jury a pattern of illegal activity
committed very often by a group of people, and you're able to start holding people accountable
who may not have their fingerprints on the messiest pieces. And that's exactly what we
saw here. That's exactly what's alleged here, that there were people on the ground who were
committing acts in furtherance of this conspiracy in Georgia, but then there were much higher placed
people who were alleged to have been also involved in planning these crimes and directing these
crimes. So you see these 19 people indicted, and the first person named in the indictment is Donald
John Trump. Right below him is Rudy Giuliani.
And you have a number of high-powered lawyers connected to the president.
And then you get down the list to some very obscure people.
Like who?
Well, one that really stands out is a woman named Trevion Cutie, who has called herself a publicist for the rapper Kanye West.
She's a not very well-known person. She's somebody who is alleged to have traveled to Georgia with the purpose of intimidating
a Fulton County, Georgia elections worker right before the certification of the votes in Washington
to try to pressure her to admit that she had committed election fraud, which was all just a
total canard. But you see the range.
You see us go from trivia and QT kind of at the bottom
to Donald Trump about as high toward the top as you can get.
Right.
So as with the mafia, the idea is to get the foot soldiers,
the political operative on the ground,
somebody many of us have never heard of,
and work its way all the way up to top lawyers
and the former president himself. Exactly. And even though everyone in this indictment is charged
with more than one count of violating more than one Georgia criminal statute, they're all charged
with RICO. They're all charged with racketeering. It's a very serious crime in Georgia. It carries potentially five to 20 years
in prison or a fine. And it's the kind of penalty that can force people to consider flipping and
cooperating with prosecutors. This may be the very beginning of a very drawn out drama in which you
see some of the people further down the food chain buckling to the pressure and helping prosecutors get the people up the food chain that they
probably want more. I want to pause on that. Should we understand this indictment in its
enormous scale, 19 defendants, as being an effort to get perhaps the lowest level people in that
list of 19 to cooperate with the DA
to testify against your Rudy Giuliani's
and your Donald Trump's?
Is that what this may ultimately be about?
I think prosecutors always want
in a conspiracy style charge like this
to see if they can pressure the small fish
to get the big fish.
We don't know if it's going to happen,
but it's something that you definitely see in a big kind of gnarly case like this.
Got it.
So the racketeering framework of this case is clearly what differentiates it
from the last big indictment that we all just witnessed against Trump,
which was the federal indictment by Special Counsel Jack Smith of Trump
over his efforts to subvert the 2020 election, which feels otherwise kind of similar, except it was about just one person, Donald Trump.
This is much, much bigger, and it casts a much, much wider net. Is that right?
That's absolutely right. And I think it's really worth thinking about the comparison between the
latest Jack Smith case that charges Donald Trump
with election interference and the Fulton County case, which does the same under state law.
You have the Jack Smith case, this federal case, which charges just one guy, Donald John Trump.
It appears to be built to be a case that will be very narrow and very fast. One guy, try to slam
it into the courts as soon as
you can. Don't lard it up with other co-conspirators, although maybe down the line we'll
see that. But right now it looks like Jack Smith wants to just go bang, bang, bang and make this
thing go as fast as he can. I think for Fonny Willis, and I think we discussed this before,
how she likes RICO because it allows jurors to see the whole picture and the whole story. It
allows prosecutors to introduce a lot more evidence than in other kinds of trials. And you
get this big sprawling story that they can chew on. But there is a potential downside here. By
going so wide and including so many defendants, you could really see this case slowed down as it
moves through the courts. You could also see a lot of confusion in a jury because you have so many different elements of this scheme laid out. It's not a simple story at this point. It's a very complex story.
So what specific evidence does this district attorney lay out in the indictment to support this sweeping claim of racketeering? Well, it's a really remarkable cache of evidence, and it includes everything from tweets from Donald Trump to evidence of false statements made before legislative bodies, which can be a crime in Georgia.
But you can really see how many different ways the Trump team was trying to make something happen here in Georgia when the numbers didn't add up for their candidate.
You had President Trump making phone calls, pressuring phone calls to Brad Raffensperger, the Georgia Secretary of State.
Famously. Famously. You have, of course, this scheme to seat 16 pro-Trump Republican electors who would vote for Donald Trump and deliver the 16 electoral votes from Georgia to Donald Trump, even though
Donald Trump lost.
It's a remarkable story.
And you have some really interesting charges related to those efforts.
And then you have this really bizarre chapter, which largely
went down the day after January 6th, whereby a group of data experts hired by the conspiracy
theorist and Trump-aligned lawyer Sidney Powell and some other pro-Trump people visited this
rural county 200 miles from Atlanta called Coffee County. And they copied all of the very sensitive elections
data down there. Wait, they just walked into an election office and somehow got a hold of all
the internal election data? Yes, it was a very pro-Trump county and some election officials
in that county let them kind of come in and do what they did.
The woman who was the director of elections in the county at the time, who's charged in this document, had been saying online that somehow the machines didn't work and was kind of raising the possibility that bad things were happening there in Joe Biden's favor.
None of it turned out to be true, but this team came down and copied all this
data. And it's a pretty serious and sensitive breach. And of course, the indictment alleges
it constituted a violation of Georgia laws as well.
Hmm. Richard, based on how you described racketeering, the elements of that evidence
that seemed to fit that description is that this was activity
that involved the guy at the top, Donald Trump,
but a tremendous amount of it,
in fact, the majority of it,
was being conducted by people
under the former president,
by lower-level people,
including folks walking into an election office
in rural Georgia
trying to steal election data.
That's what makes this, in the eyes of the district attorney, Fannie Willis, racketeering.
Yes, that all these people were committing acts in furtherance of a big conspiracy.
And they may not have all known one another.
In fact, they didn't all know one another.
Donald Trump probably didn't know a number of them by name.
But in a RICO case, in many cases, it doesn't matter.
They were all working together at a certain period of time
and essentially formed a kind of an organization.
And they had this kind of corrupt endgame.
And as a result, everybody gets wrapped up in this one big RICO charge.
Right, because what they share is a common mission.
That common mission is to overturn the election.
And that, according to this indictment, was illegal.
That makes them all basically part of the same organized criminal unit.
Exactly.
We'll be right back.
Richard, you've been reporting on this investigation for months.
So now that the indictment's actually out, I'm curious, based on your reporting and all the conversations you've had with legal experts, whether this case is seen as strong,
especially given the racketeering framework,
or if it's seen as risky, given its ambition and breadth,
and how experts think about its strengths and weaknesses
relative to all the previous indictments against Trump.
Well, the district attorney has tremendous experience
with the RICO statute. She hired the leading RICO expert in Georgia to help her with this case. They collaborated on previous RICO cases, some very high profile ones. There's one specific case with some public school teachers who have been cheating on standardized tests that was very successful, although very controversial.
cheating on standardized tests that was very successful, although very controversial.
She knows how to use this statute, and it's going to be very helpful to her and her team as they go into trial. But the reality is, I know we don't like to use the word unprecedented at the New York
Times, but I mean, just really go back and try to find the precedent for a local prosecutor who has
brought state charges against a former president with, you know, a case that
reaches into the Justice Department, into the campaign of the presidential candidate, and then
far beyond onto these very sort of strange tentacles of an alleged scheme. Right. It's kind of a classic
legal David versus Goliath. I mean, this isn't virtually until now unknown local prosecutor
taking on the president of the United States. Yeah. And I mean, this isn't virtually until now, unknown local prosecutor taking on
the president of the United States. Yeah. And I mean, critics of our justice system will say,
wait a minute, you know, the prosecutors like Fannie Willis have tremendous power,
perhaps inordinate power if you listen to them. So it sets up a really fascinating fight and
it's just really hard to go back in history and look for anything like it. So I hesitate to say it's going
to be a slam dunk or it is a strong case. It's a weak case. I think we're all kind of sailing out
into waters that we've just never been in before. And another thing to keep in mind about this case
is that a president can't use his pardon power to wiggle out of a state conviction in Georgia.
So in some ways, I think sometimes
we fall in the trap of thinking a federal charge is really super important. A state charge is just
a little bit lower because the federal government's bigger than a state government or whatever.
This is an interesting case where it's a really serious problem for the president. If he gets
reelected, he might have the ability to pardon himself if he's convicted in federal court but
in Georgia he just can't go there so this could pose a very serious threat to him and his freedom.
Right because presidents cannot pardon themselves for state level crimes whereas in theory they can
pardon themselves for federal crimes and I guess by the same token when it comes to a federal
federal crimes. And I guess by the same token, when it comes to a federal prosecution,
a president can take over the Department of Justice and just get rid of it. You're saying,
I'm guessing that that's not possible with a local case because the president has no power over a local district attorney. Yeah, it's a really interesting expression of the way our federal system works, that the states run their own justice systems, and it just really limits the powers of what even the president can do.
remain, no matter how long it takes. And as you said earlier, Richard, given how big a case it is,
given how many defendants there are, how many delay tactics they all might deploy, it could take a very long time for this to ever reach the trial phase. But once it does, there's really
nothing that former President Trump or future President Trump can do about it.
I think the limitations of the president's power when it comes to this case has got to be a problem that's looming just like a tremendous dark shadow over President Trump's consciousness when he contemplates this case in Georgia.
What happens next in this case?
19 defendants, do all of them now turn themselves in?
Do all of them show up in court together?
Are all of them going to be on trial together?
That is going to be a very, very crowded courtroom if it is.
Well, we're going to see a lot of people roll into Atlanta.
We think that a number of them will be booked at the county jail which is known in and around
Atlanta and in a lot of hip-hop lyrics because we're in the hip-hop capital of the world
ostensibly as Rice Street so a lot of people are going to go to Rice Street to get booked it is
far from Mar-a-Lago and in many ways they're going to be fingerprinted they're going to have their
mug shots taken the Secret Service may intervene and change the way some of this
works for President Trump, but the sheriff here has said he expects the president to have his
mugshot taken. We expect him to come to court and plead not guilty. And then after that, before
trial, we expect a lot of efforts by President Trump's attorneys and perhaps other attorneys
to try to derail this case and prevent it from going to court at all.
So, and this is before we get to a drama, like a multi-week, multi-month jury selection,
and then a trial. So we're really in for the long haul here, potentially.
But what Fannie Willis said in her news conference tonight is that she wants to try all 19 of these defendants together and that her plan is to ask that a trial starts within six months.
And if Funny Wheels gets that timetable,
then her trial will be competing with, perhaps occurring in parallel with three other criminal trials
involving the former president.
Yeah, it's a huge, complicated pileup of legal cases.
It's going to be of great interest to us to see how the court systems lay out these various trials.
But what we do know is Donald Trump is going to be spending a lot of time in court in the coming months.
Well, Richard, thank you very much. We appreciate it. Thanks, Mike.
In a statement on Monday night, Donald Trump's presidential campaign accused District Attorney
Fannie Willis of being, quote, a rabid partisan
who chose to charge Trump in the middle of his presidential campaign in order to keep him from
winning back the White House. A few hours later, during a news conference, Willis countered that
claim, saying, quote, I make decisions in this office based on the facts and the laws,
adding that, quote, the law is completely nonpartisan.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
In a landmark ruling on Monday, a state court in Montana ruled in favor of 16 young people
who had sued the state for supporting the fossil fuel industry.
The plaintiffs, ranging in age from 5 to 22, argued that Montana's permissive approach to
fossil fuels had violated their rights because the state's constitution guarantees a, quote,
clean and healthful environment. The judge agreed, striking down a state law passed earlier this year by Montana's
Republican-controlled legislature that prevented the state from considering the climate impact of
new oil, coal, and gas projects. The ruling is a major victory for climate activists who have
filed similar lawsuits in several states, and against the federal government.
Today's episode was produced by Ricky Nowitzki and Rochelle Banja,
with help from Alexandra Lee Young.
It was edited by Rachel Quester, Patricia Willans, and Michael Benoit,
contains original music by Rowan Nemisto,
and was engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.