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Jack Smith

Trump's 'fake electors' are likely to avoid prosecution in Pennsylvania — here's why

Sixteen people in Michigan who served as so-called “fake electors” for Donald Trump are now facing state-level forgery charges, but similar prosecution appears unlikely here in Pennsylvania as the investigation into an alleged plot to overturn the 2020 election ramps up.

The Keystone State was one of seven won by President Joe Biden where groups of people gathered to submit votes for Trump instead. The plan to organize those electors is part of a federal investigation led by Special Counsel Jack Smith, which appears to be nearing criminal charges. Prosecutors in Arizona and Georgia, two states with “false electors,” are also investigating the plan.

But unlike Michigan, Pennsylvania’s alternate electors are unlikely to face criminal repercussions because of an important legal caveat they added to their document.

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‘Most unusual’: Legal expert confounded by Fulton County DA's suggestion she isn’t coordinating with Jack Smith

A legal expert on Monday called Fulton County district attorney Fani Willis’ recent statement indicating she isn’t coordinating with special counsel Jack Smith “most unusual.”

Ryan Goodman, an NYU law school professor and former special counsel at the Department of Defense, during an appearance on CNN”s “Erin Burnett OutFront” called the lack of coordination a head scratcher, suggesting it would serve the interests of both prosecutors to collaborate and share evidence.

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Jack Smith's prosecution of war criminals has readied him for Trump’s tactics: experts

Before being named the special counsel tasked with investigating Donald Trump, Jack Smith in his role as an international war crimes prosecutor gained unique insight into the authoritarian leader’s playbook for beating criminal charges that the former president is currently using, a geopolitics expert writes for The New York Times.

Smith, during his work at The Hague and at the International Criminal Court, was involved in the prosecution of political leaders who sought to shield themselves from justice by rallying their supporters with the threat of violence or unrest.

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Mar-a-Lago employee 'almost certainly' flipped against Trump in classified docs case: legal expert

A Mar-a-Lago employee targeted by investigators in the classified documents probe has "almost certainly" flipped against Donald Trump, according to a report.

Yuscil Taveras has been identified in an updated indictment as "Trump Employee 4," who received a target letter when the former president from special counsel Jack Smith when Trump first got indicted in June. While it's not entirely clear whether he's cooperating with prosecutors, legal experts say there was plenty of evidence that he's talking, reported Salon.

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'Talk is cheap': Joyce Vance pours cold water on Trump lawyer Habba's defense strategy

During an appearance on MSNBC on Monday afternoon, former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance slapped aside comments made by Donald Trump attorney Alina Habba who maintained her client can't be charged with obstruction of justice because he never deleted Mar-a-Lago surveillance videos.

Habba, who no longer represents the former president in criminal cases, having been moved over to acting as counsel for his Save America PAC, took to Fox News on Sunday with host Shannon Bream to push back at new charges filed by special counsel Jack Smith.

After MSNBC host Chris Jansing shared a clip of Habba stating her case, Vance was asked to weigh in and was brutally dismissive, starting out with "Talk is cheap."

"Is that a viable defense, Joyce?" the MSNBC host prompted.

"Well, talk is cheap when you're on television and you have the ability to say anything that you'd like to," the former prosecutor began.

"That is a pretty fact-free analysis of the situation," she continued. "The reality is that the government's pleadings reflect what the government believes it has evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt in court. And that evidence is very clear when it comes to obstruction of justice."

"The facts are, in essence, not challenged that the former president held onto documents, refused to turn them over and the government had to execute a search," she elaborated, "and now more details are emerging about events depicted on videotape, showing movement and documents that surfaced in Bedminster with Trump saying out loud that he was aware he no longer had the ability to declassify information and wasn't even sure he should be showing it to people in the meeting where he waves around the battle plan for Iran."

Turning back to Habba, she continued, "You know that is sort of 'good luck with that' sort of defense for Alina Habba; great perhaps for Trump and in the court of public opinion. Not very likely to succeed in a court of law."

Watch below or at the link.

MSNBC 07 31 2023 13 09 44 youtu.be

Jack Smith urges Aileen Cannon not to further delay Trump's trial: report

Jack Smith is urging the judge in Donald Trump’s classified documents case not to let extra charges filed last week push back the former president’s trial date.

Trump is currently set to stand trial beginning on May 20 next year, but his former attorney Thomas Parlatore said Sunday that extra charges brought last week, combined with the indictment of a second codefendant, could delay it until after the election.

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'Violence, malice and menace': Columnist warns Trump's threats must be taken seriously as walls close in on him

With two criminal indictments already on the books – one in a federal courtroom in Florida, the other brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg – and two more reportedly imminent, one political analyst suggested people keep an eye on Donald Trump's increasingly violent rhetoric as his legal problems overwhelm him.

In his column for Salon, Chauncey DeVega noted that the former president had no problem whipping up his supporters when he merely lost the 2020 presidential election and now, with jail time possibly on the horizon, there is more at stake for him.

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Trump taunts GOP rivals by calling upcoming presidential debate an audition for his VP

Taking time out from raging at special counsel Jack Smith for conducting multiple investigations into him, Donald Trump taunted his rivals for the 2024 Republican party presidential nomination.

On Monday morning, after writing "the 2024 Presidential Election [is] arguably the most important Election in the history of the USA," the former president all but claimed the GOP nomination for himself four weeks before the first Republican Party debate, which he reportedly will boycott based upon an assortment of reasons.

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'Ready to go': Fani Willis says her investigation into Trump is complete

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is ready to announce the outcome of her investigation into Donald Trump’s involvement in the effort to overturn the 2020 election result in Georgia.

“The work is accomplished,” she told CNN affiliate WXIA. “We’ve been working for two and a half years. We’re ready to go.”

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'Everybody is laughing': Trump goads investigator digging into Biden's classified doc case

Former President Donald Trump goaded the federal prosecutor tasked with looking into President Joe Biden’s classified documents case – telling him on Sunday that the world is laughing at him.

“Everybody is laughing at Robert Hur, saying he is not tough like Deranged Jack Smith,” said Trump in a Truth Social post.

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'Real consequences': Report warns Trump could use Truth Social to 'inflict real-world damage'

Donald Trump’s Truth Social platform could be weaponized to become the former president’s most powerful tool against his enemies, Forbes reported Sunday.

Already hosting almost daily messages from Trump railing against perceived attacks from the Department or Justice, Jack Smith and many, many others, Forbes’ Matt Novak wrote that it wouldn’t take a huge step for him to use it to mobilize his own army of followers to act.

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Mar-a-Lago surveillance worker sent target letter by Jack Smith: CNN

A surveillance worker at Mar-a-Lago was sent a target letter by Special Counsel Jack Smith’s team investigating classified documents kept at Donald Trump’s Florida estate, CNN reported Sunday.

Yuscil Taveras, who oversees the property's surveillance cameras, was sent the letter after Trump was indicted in June. The worker has not yet been charged with any crime.

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Trump lawyer Habba buried by MSNBC legal analyst for spreading baseless 'legal PR'

MSNBC legal analyst Lisa Rubin blew off comments Donald Trump lawyer Alina Habba made on Fox News Sunday morning in which she tried to dismiss obstruction of justice charges related to the attempted destruction of Mar-a-Lago surveillance video that led to a superseding indictment from special counsel Jack Smith.

Speaking with host Erin O'Hearn, Rubin made a point of noting that Habba is no longer being used as a courtroom attorney for the embattled former president which allows her to make outrageous statements that lawyers who are preparing to defend to appear in court wouldn't dare to make in public.

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