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Jack Smith

Trump supporters' 'warped bizarro world reality' exposed in new survey: political scientist

Former President Donald Trump's supporters have developed a worldview that is essentially the polar opposite of reality, argued political scientist Brian Klaas in a new Substack article examining the results of a new survey. These results, argued Klaas, give insight into a "warped bizarro world reality" that supporters of the former president has created for himself, even as he is facing criminal prosecution on several fronts.

But even more than that, Klaas said, the survey shows how dangerous it is for journalists to simply act as stenographers, detachedly reporting on claims politicians make without offering value judgements about their veracity — something that some political pundits have insisted is the best way to go about covering Trump and the GOP.

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Kari Lake insists Trump's outsmarting Jack Smith as charges pile up: 'Playing chess at the highest level!'

Failed gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake insisted Donald Trump was outsmarting special counsel Jack Smith despite new charges being added to the Mar-a-Lago case and an indictment looming in the Jan. 6 case.

The former president got hit with three new charges related to the destruction of evidence in the classified documents probe, but Lake told Newsmax the twice-impeached president had prosecutors exactly where he wants them.

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There are 'more nefarious reasons' Trump was keeping documents than what we know: Michael Cohen

Former Trump attorney Michael Cohen on Friday said that there's more to the Mar-a-Lago stolen documents case than meets the eye.

During an interview with CNN, the former Trump "fixer" said he doubted that Trump only kept top-secret government documents as trophies for the purposes of bragging rights, which appears to be the theory that special counsel Jack Smith's office is going on in its prosecution of the case.

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'Clearly a loser': Joyce Vance trashes Trump's latest ploy to manipulate Judge Cannon

Reacting to Donald Trump's request to be able to review top secret documents related to his federal indictment in a non-secure environment, former U.S. Attorney Joyce Vance claimed it should be a non-starter for U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida Judge Aileen Cannon who is likely aware it yet another stalling tactic.

Writing on her Substack platform, Vance pointed to a motion made by special counsel Jack Smith to make sure the documents are protected from prying eyes up to and during the former president's trial in a Florida courtroom and pointed out that Cannon has been trying to get Trump's lawyers and the Department of Justice to reach a compromise.

As she explained, Trump doesn't want the inconvenience of having to revisit the documents that are central to his now 40-count indictment in a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility (SCIF) by complaining it will interfere with his 2024 GOP presidential nomination campaign.

As she wrote, "He wants to be able to see it in the comfort of his own home. Trump still doesn’t get he’s not going to receive special treatment, unless Judge Aileen Cannon gives it to him. If she does on this point, look for Jack Smith to appeal immediately and win. Trump’s request flies in the face of clearly established law on handling classified documents—not exactly a shocker given the nature of this prosecution."

READ MORE: '2024 is going to be a you-know-what-show at the behest of Trump': Former RNC head

She then added that Trump's complaint, like many he has made, was done in bad faith as he attempts to drag the trial out even farther.

"Trump is making this argument, not because he thinks it’s a good one—it’s clearly a loser. He’s making it to set up an argument down the road that the trial has to be delayed even further," she explained. "Judge Aileen Cannon, if past is prologue, may fall for it. But the argument is tone deaf, a real failure to read the room, or at least the Special Counsel’s office."

She then predicted, "Donald Trump, self-described victim, has met Jack Smith, career prosecutor. And Smith isn’t buying it."

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New indictment forces Judge Cannon to let Trump tape into evidence

The new charges against Donald Trump will likely force federal judge Aileen Cannon to allow a damning audio recording into the evidence against the former president, a legal expert told MSNBC's "Morning Joe."

Special counsel Jack Smith secured a superseding indictment charging Trump with three new counts related to his alleged efforts to destroy evidence in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case, and the new charges make note of his recorded interview with a writer and publisher, for which two aides were present, discussing a "highly confidential" military record that he admitted he wasn't authorized to share.

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Jack Smith has a treasure trove of phones — and they could nail the conspiracy: Legal expert

Former President Donald Trump was hit on Thursday with a superseding indictment, alleging that he, his body man Walt Nauta, and a top maintenance worker at Mar-a-Lago named Carlos De Oliveira worked together to try to destroy incriminating security footage showing them concealing classified documents federal officials were trying to recover. The indictment also shows that special counsel Jack Smith is in possession of the Iran war plan document Trump was boasting about at his Bedminster golf club, eliminating his argument that he was just making empty claims based on bravado, and not really showing people classified information.

But things could get even worse, argued former litigator Lisa Rubin on MSNBC. Smith also has access to a huge array of phones used by and to communicate with the defendants, and could get irrefutable evidence from that alone.

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Trump lashes out at 'deranged Jack Smith' in first post since new charges in docs case

Donald Trump on Thursday took to Truth Social to lash out at President Joe Biden and special counsel Jack Smith after the latter brought additional charges against the former president in the so-called Mar-a-Lago classified documents case.

Smith, who had already accused Trump of improperly retaining certain documents, further alleged in the lawsuit that Trump was part of a cover-up after he had his aides move boxes of documents around, and away from the DOJ.

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Former Watergate prosecutor likens latest allegations against Trump to Nixon

A former Watergate prosecutor on Thursday likened the latest allegations against Donald Trump to what she witnessed investigating Richard Nixon more than a half century ago.

Assistant Watergate prosecutor Jill Wine-Banks during an appearance on MSNBC’s “The ReidOut with Joy Reid” called the latest allegations against Trump in the classified documents a “blockbuster” and suggested once the public learns more about the former president’s alleged misdeeds, even many of his most staunch MAGA supporters could turn on him.

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'Thug' Trump will promise co-conspirators a pardon to shut them up: Former Trump aide

A new superseding indictment secured by special counsel Jack Smith accuses former President Donald Trump of leaning on a pair of aides, body man Walt Nauta and Mar-a-Lago maintenance worker Carlos De Oliveira, to destroy surveillance footage that showed them hiding classified documents.

Some legal experts have speculated the new charges against De Oliveira in particular make him a prime candidate for prosecutors to flip. However, Trump has a secret weapon against that, suggested former White House aide Alyssa Farah Griffin on CNN Thursday: offering pardons in the event he is re-elected president.

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Trump Iran doc incident 'so much worse' with newly filed charges: legal expert

Former President Donald Trump has been hit with a superseding indictment in the Mar-a-Lago classified documents case, with special counsel Jack Smith alleging he pressured two subordinates to try to erase security footage on his property to obstruct federal investigators.

But the new indictment contains far more details that could be even more devastating for Trump. Former federal prosecutor Elie Honig noted on CNN that the indictment also makes clear Smith has in his possession the Iran war plans document Trump was boasting about at his New Jersey golf club — eliminating one of the only defenses he had to his actions there.

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'Feel the heat': Ex-prosecutor says new defendant will 'put pressure' on Trump's valet

Former federal prosecutor Renato Mariotti on Thursday suggested that the indictment against Carlos De Oliveira in the classified documents case against Donald Trump may reflect an effort by prosecutors to compel the third person to be indicted in the case to flip on a co-defendant.

Mariotti during an appearance on “The Beat with Ari Melber” told guest host Katie Phang that he believes special counsel Jack Smith views De Oliveira as a vehicle to get to longtime Trump aide and fellow co-defendant Walt Nauta.

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'Powerful incentive to cooperate': Ex-prosecutor says new Mar-a-Lago defendant might flip

The Mar-a-Lago classified documents case just got significantly bigger, as special counsel Jack Smith unveiled a new superseding indictment against former President Donald Trump, his aide Walt Nauta, and now Mar-a-Lago maintenance worker Carlos De Oliveira, alleging they hatched a conspiracy to delete security footage showing their concealment of boxes of top secret information.

One of the consequences of this, said former federal prosecutor Elie Honig, is that Smith has a new person to potentially flip.

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'Unusual': Ex-Jan. 6 investigator says Trump's main argument already dead in election case

A former U.S. attorney said on Thursday that an “unusual” aspect of a potential indictment against Donald Trump over efforts to overturn the 2020 election will make Jack Smith’s case tough to defend against.
Timothy Heaphy, who served as the lead investigator for the House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, said during an appearance on MSNBC’s “Deadline White House with Nicole Wallace” that the testimony of witnesses from Trump’s inner circle will likely undercut the former president’s argument that the case against him is based on political bias.

“Again, the bias arguments that you will hear from the (former) president himself and his attorneys are going to be very hard to sustain when you look at the loyalty with which those witnesses, his White House counsel, his own family, his campaign staff,” Heaphy said.

“These were people that worked very hard for him, yet they will be the star witnesses in a criminal trial. That is unusual, most of the time there is some arguable bias and there's some fodder for defense lawyers to work with when they're cross-examining witnesses. I don't really see that here, and that really is what strengthens Jack Smith's hand here.”

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