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Jack Smith

Trump doomed himself by 'describing the document' he held in recording: legal expert

Donald Trump was slapped with a second indictment in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case this week, with special counsel Jack Smith alleging a conspiracy between the former president and two of his staffers to destroy security surveillance footage that showed them moving around boxes of documents at the Florida country club.

But it's even worse for the former president, noted longtime federal prosecutor Andrew Weissman on MSNBC Friday evening, because the new indictment also revealed Smith is in possession of the highly classified Iran war plan document Trump was allegedly waving around and boasting about at his New Jersey golf club — which limits his options of a defense severely.

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Trump showed 'mob boss' behavior and will be convicted if claims are proven: WaPo reporter

Donald Trump is acting like a "mob boss" around the concealment of his stash of highly classified national defense information, argued Washington Post investigative reporter Carol Leonnig on MSNBC Friday.

This comes after special counsel Jack Smith dropped a superseding indictment against the former president and two of his aides, alleging a plot to destroy surveillance footage that caught them in an obstruction of justice scheme.

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Trump says he was 'told' that Mar-a-Lago security tapes were not 'deleted in any way'

Donald Trump on Friday claimed that the security recordings at Mar-a-Lago, which make up part of the new charges he's facing in the classified documents criminal case, were not deleted – or so he was told.

Trump, who was recently hit with a superseding indictment in the Florida matter and is currently facing other criminal and civil charges, posted on his own social media network that he doesn't think any information was deleted from the videos. Trump is currently facing allegations that he attempted to erase security footage that may have shown attempts to hide documents, and coordinated an effort to do that.

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'I have already won': Trump suggests Senate impeachment acquittal means Jack Smith can't retry him

Donald Trump on Friday questioned the special counsel’s authority in investigating him in connection with his efforts to overturn the 2020 election – and said he'd already been tried and acquitted of the crime.

In a social media post, he suggested his acquittal in the 2021 impeachment by the Senate precludes Jack Smith’s probe.

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Trump will take 'legal offense' on the road to whip up supporters against Jack Smith: reporter

Former President Donald Trump, already anticipating a new round of indictments from the federal January 6 investigation, was unexpectedly hit this week with a superseding indictment in the Mar-a-Lago classified document case, alleging he leaned on his body man Walt Nauta and a top Mar-a-Lago maintenance worker, Carlos De Oliveira, to destroy security footage that showed them concealing boxes of documents from federal investigators.

His next move, reported MSNBC correspondent Vaughn Hillyard, is likely to be working to increase the vitriol of his supporters in opposition to the criminal justice system.

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Trump will go full-blown 'fascist' as his legal problems worsen: journalist

Former President Donald Trump's legal problems went from bad to worse on Thursday, July 27 when special counsel Jack Smith expanded his prosecution in the Mar-a-Lago documents case.

Trump was already facing a 37-count federal criminal indictment, but Smith added more charges. And another co-defendant, Mar-a-Lago employee Carlos De Oliveira, was indicted.

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Mar-a-Lago worker identified in indictment as ‘Trump Employee 4’ named by CNN

A Mar-a-Lago worker referenced in a superseding indictment filed against Donald Trump Thursday has been identified by CNN as a man who oversaw the estate’s surveillance camera footage.

The network said Friday two sources had named the worker as Yuscil Taveras, an information technology employee. He has not been charged with any crime.

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Judge hands Trump a victory and blocks subpoena targeting Melania's emails

Donald Trump won a victory in court when a New York Judge blocked a pair of subpoenas targeting emails sent by his wife, Melania, CBS News reported.

Manhattan D.A. Alvin Bragg's office sought to obtain the emails in regards to his investigation into Trump's alleged falsification of business records, involving hush money payments to porn actress Stormy Daniels. The judge, Juan Merchan, ruled that the subpoenas were overly broad in a decision released Thursday.

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Jack Smith probes claims that Trump privately 'sneered at the ridiculousness' of Sidney Powell's theories

After he lost the 2020 presidential election, former President Donald Trump embraced conspiracy theories espoused by attorney Sidney Powell, who herself got them from a woman who claims she has the ability to speak with the wind.

However, Rolling Stone now reports that Trump privately "sneered at the ridiculousness" of Powell's ideas, which involved the late Venezuelan dictator Hugo Chavez designing voting machines that would be used to steal an American election seven years after his death in 2013.

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Jack Smith's team tries to head off possible new Trump trial delays: report

On the heels of a superseding indictment that has increased Donald Trump's federal charges from 37 to an even 40 in the classified documents case, special counsel Jack Smith's team of investigators has told Judge Aileen Cannon they see no reason it should result in a new trial date delay.

In a column for MSNBC, legal analyst Jordan Rubin suggested that Cannon might attempt to bump the Trump trial in Florida next year due to the newly filed charges of failing to return government documents, obstruction of justice, and for a “presentation” of classified information shown to a non-authorized person.

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'House of cards is coming down' for Trump as henchmen reveal election lies: columnist

Rudy Giuliani has admitted that he lied about two Georgia poll workers committing election fraud, and a columnist thinks that could send Donald Trump's Jan. 6 defense crashing to the ground.

The former New York City mayor conceded that his claims about Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss were "false" and "defamatory," which he admitted as part of a legal gambit in the lawsuit they filed against him.

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Trump flips out on 'radical lunatics' attempting to 'destroy our country' as charges pile up

Former President Donald Trump is lashing out at special counsel Jack Smith – again.

In a Friday morning rant on his Truth Social network, the former president rehashed arguments he's made about his multiple indictments being part of a political ploy by President Joe Biden and the Democrats to derail his 2024 candidacy.

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'Explosive' revelation in new indictment will be hard for Trump 'to explain away': legal expert

According to former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti, the information contained in the superseding indictment against Donald Trump that was filed late Thursday contains an "explosive" revelation that the former president will be hard-pressed to blow off when he goes to trial in a Florida courtroom next year.

On Thursday, the former president was accused of instructing staffers at his Mar-a-Lago resort to delete security camera footage related to storerooms where stolen government documents were being held.

The new filing means Trump is now facing 40 charges and, according to Mariotti, one revelation contained in the filing is nothing less than "explosive."

RELATED ARTICLE: Prison playbook: How Trump could run his campaign – and the nation – from behind bars

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