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Jack Smith

Mueller prosecutor says Georgia and feds will hit Trump for threatening Raffensperger

As another Donald Trump indictment looms, former FBI general counsel Andrew Weissmann said that he thinks the state and federal government will file charges for threats made to former Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.

Speaking to MSNBC on Tuesday, Weissmann, who previously served as special counsel Robert Mueller's senior prosecutor, explained that, based on a target letter sent to the former president, he's expecting charges to include intimidation.

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Recent Supreme Court decision could help bury Trump in Jan. 6 case: constitutional law experts

Harvard Constitutional law professor Laurence Tribe and former federal prosecutor Dennis Aftergut came together to pen a Slate column explaining how a recent Supreme Court decision could make it a lot easier for prosecutors to use Donald Trump's tweets against him.

Among the many things Trump did ahead of Jan. 6 was send out a number of threats-by-tweet to Vice President Mike Pence as the violent mob made its way through the U.S. Capitol, they wrote in the article that was published on Tuesday.

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Don Trump Jr. laughs out loud as he says father faces 'jail for over 450 years'

Donald Trump Jr. let out a chuckle on Monday as he noted that his father could be sentenced to prison for 450 years.

During a podcast on Tuesday, Trump complained that the Department of Justice was focusing on the former president instead of the current president.

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Here's who could be indicted alongside Trump -- if DOJ decides to take down the whole conspiracy

There's a debate within the legal community on whether Donald Trump's co-conspirators will face indictment, or whether the former president is the only target for special counsel Jack Smith.

Trump claims to have received a target letter indicating an imminent indictment, and prosecutors appear to have evidence to charge Trump with obstruction of an official proceeding and conspiracy to defraud the United States -- which NBC News correspondent Ken Dilanian told MSNBC's "Morning Joe" suggests others could also be charged.

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'Far-fetched' to think Trump would be indicted before co-conspirators in Jan. 6 case: legal expert

Donald Trump appears to be on the brink of a third indictment, this time for his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss, but a legal expert cautioned that those charges might be on hold until next month.

Special counsel Jack Smith's office just obtained thousands of pages of documents from former New York City police commissioner Bernie Kerik, who helped Rudy Giuliani look for nonexistent evidence of fraud, and MSNBC legal analyst Joyce Vance told "Morning Joe" that prosecutors are continuing to interview witnesses as part of their sprawling investigation.

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Eric Trump: Jack Smith is probably looking in 'Barron's underwear drawer'

Eric Trump threw a fit about the special counsel investigation into the Jan. 6 attack in a discussion with Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) on Newsmax Monday evening.

"We saw it with Ukraine. We saw it with [Judge Brett] Kavanaugh. We saw it with every other hoax," said Trump. "Now we've seen it. You know, civilians ... we're seeing a criminality all over the country. They are doing anything they can to take down my father."

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Trump's ill-timed firing of cybersecurity chief post-election could be 'valuable' evidence: law professor

Former President Donald Trump is facing likely imminent indictment in the January 6 investigation by special counsel Jack Smith, and the decision could come down in a matter of days. And one of the significant episodes that could legally implicate Trump in a deliberate plot to deprive people of their rights, said New York University law professor Ryan Goodman, is his move to fire cybersecurity official Chris Krebs after he vouched for the security of the 2020 election.

This comes on top of the context that Smith is investigating a meeting from early 2020 in which Trump privately praised election security measures, just months before calling those efforts fraudulent.

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'The table is set': Legal expert reveals the 'signals' he sees that Trump is about to be indicted again

A prominent legal expert said Monday that a second federal indictment against Donald Trump is all but a done deal.

Harry Litman, a former U.S. attorney and deputy assistant attorney general, said during an appearance on MSNBC’s “The ReidOut with Joy Reid” that “the table is set" for the indictment.

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Jack Smith may not be done with indictments — even if Trump gets charged this week: expert

Former President Donald Trump appears increasingly likely to be indicted in the Justice Department special counsel investigation into the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. But that might not be the end of it — a number of associates and supporters of Trump also have potential legal exposure, from far-right legal advisers like John Eastman to false electors in states all over the country.

According to CNN legal analyst Paula Reid, the investigation could continue well past the indictment of the former president — with more hearings and witnesses building a case against even more people.

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Jack Smith probes Oval Office meeting at which Trump praised election security: report

Donald Trump praised election security enhancements during a February 2020 Oval Office meeting that special counsel Jack Smith is investigating, CNN reports.

Trump, who later in the year made baseless claims that the 2020 election was stolen, praised his own administration’s efforts that led to the expansion of paper ballots and support for security audits of vote tallies at the meeting, the report said.

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Mark Meadows knew Trump lacked 'remotely sufficient evidence' to overturn the election: legal expert

Over the weekend, news broke that the Justice Department is scrutinizing a joking text message that former President Donald Trump's Chief of Staff Mark Meadows sent to his son, making light of the administration's efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election at the exact same time he was pushing conspiracy theories to senior DOJ officials to try to get them to lean on various states.

This is massively significant for two reasons, said Tom Dupree, a high-ranking official from the George W. Bush administration's Justice Department, on CNN Monday. First, Meadows' silence has triggered speculation he may be cooperating with the DOJ in its investigation into Trump and, second, this is clear evidence even Trump's own inner circle didn't believe the lies they were pushing.

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Mueller prosecutor predicts Trump indictment will come 'tomorrow or Thursday at the latest'

Former senior prosecutor for Robert Mueller, Andrew Weissmann, said on Monday he believes there's "a distinct possibility" that Donald Trump's legal team has met with the Department of Justice to appeal against their client's possible indictment, and that charges involving Jack Smith's Jan. 6 investigation could be unsealed imminently.

"Seems like a distinct possibility that we will learn today that the Trump defense team has presented appeal to DOJ re the Jan. 6 charges; and then upon the rejection of that appeal, Jack Smith will seek the indictment tomorrow or Thursday at the latest in DC," Weissmann tweeted Monday afternoon.

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Trump's social media attacks on Jack Smith could 'violate' D.C. court rules: former FBI lawyer

Former President Donald Trump continued his assault on special counsel Jack Smith and other prosecutors that work for the Department of Justice Monday – and his Truth Social attacks have reached such a degree that former Robert Mueller prosecutor Andrew Weissmann thinks that the Washington, D.C. courts will act if Trump is indicted.

"Let's remember that he is out on bail in not one, but two criminal cases," Weissmann said about Trump. "One in Manhattan. One before Aileen Cannon, as you noted. And it's also important to note that if he's indicted in D.C., D.C. has, as part of its standing order, free press, fair trial rules that limit what a defendant can say that could taint a jury."

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