RawStory

Jack Smith

The Georgia indictments are the most likely to bring lasting change for local elections

A lot of ink has been spilled this week pointing out the differences and similarities between the two sets of indictments that former President Donald Trump faces for his efforts to subvert the 2020 election.

Special counsel Jack Smith’s federal case is highly narrative. He is creatively interpreting older law to apply to completely unprecedented behavior from a public official in the United States, requiring storytelling and chronological framing to explain the applicability of the laws. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’s charges in Georgia — though vast in number and diverse in scope — have far less of that and don’t really require it. The crimes described by Willis, or at least most of them, are simply more straightforward than the crimes described by Smith.

And part of the reason for that relative simplicity is that elections are local and governed by local law. The offices that carry out elections are county and state offices, and the officials who can most meaningfully be influenced to violate their legally required duties are county and state officials. There are more applicable crimes in this space because there are more applicable laws in this space.

Keep reading... Show less

Judge Aileen Cannon could use new Trump complaint to hamstring Jack Smith: legal expert

Even if it ultimately falls apart, a complaint by Donald Trump's lawyers about the impropriety of second secret grand jury investigating the stolen documents at Mar-a-Lago could hand U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida Judge Aileen Cannon another opening to delay the trial of the former president.

That is the opinion of one legal observer who spoke with the Daily Beast.

Keep reading... Show less

'Seems like a coverup': Mark Meadows may face more legal trouble after censoring Trump book

MSNBC legal analyst Neal Katyal suspects a coverup after former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows deleted damning information about Donald Trump from his book.

According to ABC News, Meadows confirmed he had no knowledge of Trump's alleged order to declassify a trove of documents before leaving office. ABC News also reviewed an early copy of Meadows' book, written before he deleted passages that reflected poorly on Trump.

Keep reading... Show less

Judge Cannon may be removed 'if she continues to make questionable rulings': former prosecutor

According to former federal prosecutor Glenn Kirschner, he is amazed that special counsel Jack Smith has not asked that Judge Aileen Cannon on the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida be taken off the Donald Trump Mar-a-Lago documents case.

The controversial Trump judicial appointee has been under intense scrutiny over her past rulings favoring the former president and Kirschner claimed there is enough already on the record to ask for her removal if she refuses to recuse herself.

Asked by MSNBC host Katie Phang about how Cannon is handling questions about whether indicted Trump aides Walt Nauta and Carlos de Oliveira should have access to secret documents as part of their defense, the former prosecutor was skeptical.

"I do not want to be unkind but I do not think she will manage them well," he replied. "

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to run for office?

"She has a track record, unfortunately, that involves the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that she abused her judicial discretion; doing something that the law does not allow to the extreme benefit of Donald Trump," he stated. "Katie, I maintained the minute I saw those appellate court opinions that her impartiality can reasonably be questioned. The federal law provides that if a judge's impartiality can reasonably be questioned, that does not mean that she can't be fair, she can't be impartial, but if there are reasonable questions that can be asked about her impartiality, she is required under federal law to recuse herself, to remove herself."

"I'm still a little surprised we have not seen a motion to recuse filed by [special counsel] Jack Smith and his prosecutors that may still come if she continues to make questionable rulings," he added. "I have a feeling, Katie, that the documents case is on a slow train to nowhere, at least as compared to the federal prosecution of Donald Trump in D.C., the RICO prosecution of Donald Trump and so many of his co-conspirators and co-defendants in Georgia."

"Frankly, perhaps, even the criminal prosecution of Donald Trump in New York for all of his falsification of business records," he suggested.

You can watch below or at the link.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump facing 'perfect storm' of threats in Georgia case: Jen Psaki

Donald Trump is facing multiple criminal cases, but the one that recently landed in Georgia presents "unique" challenges for the former president, Jen Psaki said on Saturday.

Psaki, who a month ago correctly predicted that the second Jack Smith indictment would be about more than just Jan. 6, spent time in the Biden administration before joining MSNBC. She said Trump's indictment in Georgia can be traced back to an "obsession gone wrong."

Keep reading... Show less

Trump allies are raging about 'rat' Mark Meadows in group chats behind his back: reporter

Former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows has long been suspected by both outside observers and members of Trump's inner circle to be cooperating with prosecutors over the plot to overturn the 2020 presidential election — and Trump's associates in particular are privately raging and branding him a "rat," said Rolling Stone politics reporter Nikki McCann Ramirez on Friday's edition of MSNBC's "All In."

This comes as Meadows, who managed to avoid charges in the federal Jack Smith probe, was indicted as part of the Georgia racketeering case into election interference in that state — and fights to have that case removed to federal court.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump attorneys mocked for requesting 2026 date for January 6 trial

Attorneys for Donald Trump on Thursday requested an April 2026 trial date for the former president to face federal charges stemming from his sweeping effort to overturn the 2020 election.

If accepted, the request from Trump's legal team would place the trial date close to a year and a half after the 2024 presidential election—and more than five years after the January 6, 2021 insurrection. Trump, who has been indicted four times this year, is currently the frontrunner for the Republican nomination.

Keep reading... Show less

Jen Psaki pounces on Trump's lawyer problems

Reacting to Donald Trump canceling his Monday press conference on Georgia election fraud and delegating it to his lawyers to present it when he goes on trial in Fulton County on racketeering charges, MSNBC host Jen Psaki ridiculed the former president for creating more chaos for his legal team.

During an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe," the former White House press secretary noted the massive turnover among lawyers the former president has employed, many leaving because they have trouble getting paid.

With host Joe Scarborough laughing in the background as Jonathan Lemire explained "There's a theory here that Donald Trump, as we know, has trouble retaining good counsel, partially because he doesn't pay them and some of them end up testifying against him. His lawyers signaled 'We're going to quit if you do this because you're going to make our lives harder.' His advisors were doing the same, you can say, 'If you get there and say the wrong thing it's going to put you in more legal jeopardy.'"

POLL: Should Trump be allowed to hold office again

Keep reading... Show less

'Buckle up': Watergate lawyer says Roger Stone’s 'day is coming'

Former Watergate prosecutor Nick Akerman warned Roger Stone that the strong arm of the law isn't far off.

Akerman was speaking to Jason Johnson on Thursday, who was filling in for MSNBC's Ari Melber, when Johnson replayed a clip of the bombshell documentary that exposed Roger Stone's role in the Jan. 6 attack and in proposing the idea of fake electors.

Keep reading... Show less

Legal expert: Trump has little margin for error in his public statements

Donald Trump faces a delicate balancing act between as a presidential candidate who wants to speak his mind and a criminal defendant who has to watch what he says, a former prosecutor said on Thursday.

Former Chief Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Karen Friedman Agnifilo during an appearance on CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360” said the difficult parameters within which Trump will have to operate in the coming months figures to present challenges for the former president.

Keep reading... Show less

Here's how Trump just contradicted himself in seeking 2026 trial: Legal expert

Donald Trump in Thursday’s request to have the start of his federal Jan. 6 election conspiracy case pushed back to 2026 contradicts the former president’s own claim, a legal expert said.

The contradiction reflects the “peculiarity” of the brief Trump’s lawyers filed Thursday in their request to have the trial’s start date delayed, NYU law professor Ryan Goodman said during an appearance on CNN’s “Erin Burnett OutFront.”

Keep reading... Show less

'Good luck with that': Legal experts react to Trump’s bid for 2026 trial

Donald Trump’s request on Thursday that the start date of his federal Jan. 6 election conspiracy case be pushed back to 2026 drew swift reaction from legal experts on social media, and if the early consensus is any indication, the former president’s ask is going nowhere.

The former president through his attorneys in court filings on Thursday asked the federal judge presiding to start the proceeding in 2026.

Keep reading... Show less

'Moral turpitude': Bill Barr hammers Donald Trump

Former Trump Attorney General Bill Barr delivered one of his harshest criticisms to date of his former boss on Thursday, accusing Donald Trump of “moral turpitude.”

“You know, you don’t get immunity for two years in the run-up to an election just by saying, ‘Hey, I’m a candidate,'” Barr told Fox News’ Neil Cavuto.

Keep reading... Show less